In Philosophy, the most common conceptions of Currency were entertained by two predominant Theories of Money, the “Commodity Theory of Money” and the “Credit Theory of Money.” Those two Theories of Money helped contribute to the rise of the Fractional-Reserve… Read More ›
Politics
On State Budgets and Parliamentary Budgets (Pt. II of II)
After paying all State Expenses, remaining State Revenues are added to the State Budget. From here, the Council State is able to allocate its State Budget to any part of the Socialist Nation. The SSE, the VCS Economy, the Reciprocal-Reserve… Read More ›
Cuban Missile Crises at 60
The cold war chill I caught as a child is directly connected to events that happened sixty years ago today. The Cuban Missile Crisis gave me a case of nuclear jitters that have stayed with me ever since. Now, just… Read More ›
Back To Work!
When I bid adieu to my government-work career 13 years ago, opting to cash in on retirement pensions, I knew that the regimented style of life I’d engaged in for decades was one I’d be remiss to discard entirely. I… Read More ›
On State Budgets and Parliamentary Budgets (Pt. I of II)
The Work-Standard (2nd Ed.) routinely employed the terms “State Budget,” “State Revenue,” and “State Expense” within the broader discussion of the LER (Life-Energization Reciprocity) and LERE (Life-Energization Reciprocal Electrification) Processes. The “State Budget” described therein and in The Third Place… Read More ›
On Taxation of Kapital and Geld
In Production for Profit, the goal of taxation policy is to acquire a source of Kapital as tax revenue for the Parliament. Since this Mode of Production places greater emphasis on privatized commercial firms, it is inevitable for taxes to… Read More ›
On Premature Deindustrialization
Today, the lines between Liberal Capitalism and Conservative Socialism are being drawn as the Left-Right Political Spectrum continues its protracted collapse. As the world continues in this third decade of the current century, the birthing pains of another state of… Read More ›
Compact Magazine: Vanguard of Conservative Socialism?
The term “Conservatism,” like the term “Socialism,” is a contentious one inasmuch as the definition is always determined by the Weltanschauung of the person describing it. For “Socialism,” I argued in The Work-Standard and The Third Place that the term… Read More ›
The world at war – again
It is 83 years this weekend since Europe crashed into war, beginning a global struggle that did not end until 1945 and which resulted in estimated deaths topping 75 million, many of them civilians. The Second World War was the… Read More ›
Book of interest: Michael Lind, “The New Class War”
Michael Lind (not to be confused with the military theoretician and paleoconservative Robert Lind) is a professor of public policy at the LBJ School of Government at U. Texas, Austin. He’s not a movement conservative or libertarian, but his book… Read More ›
You must be logged in to post a comment.