The UK Labour Party in the late 20th century was shaped by two historical events in British economic history. The 1970s and the Death of Bretton Woods in particular saw the discrediting of Keynesianism as a practical methodology of governing… Read More ›
Third Place
Update (9 October 2023)
As much as I would like to write something today, I cannot do so at this time because I have an important errand to run. This also applies to reposting content from other WordPress blogs, so that too will have… Read More ›
John Stuart Mill: Philosophical Missing Link to Neoliberalism’s Modes of Production?
In The Work-Standard (3rd Ed.) and to some extent The Third Place (1st Ed.) and Work-Standard Accounting Practices (1st Ed.), I described how the Values and Prices of everyday goods and services are evaluated under Neoliberalism. The significance of providing… Read More ›
On Federalist Nationalism and Foreign Ideologies
America has had a long and interesting relationship with religion throughout much of US History. This country is comparable to that of Germany: A Protestant nation with notably large Roman Catholic and Jewish populations. After all, one of the motivations… Read More ›
Update (6 October 2023)
Assuming nothing suddenly changes my schedule today, my plan is to write a Blog post or two for The Fourth Estate. It has been a while since I last spoke about Hamiltonianism in some serious length and I would also… Read More ›
The Government Shutdown Was Narrowly Avoided (For Now)
As I have become more political over the years, one of the things I have noticed over the years is how important it is to keep our government open and functioning. Last night, the government shutdown was narrowly avoided, at… Read More ›
Great academic opportunities: 11 calls for papers, 10 jobs, 5 PhD fellowships, 4 visiting posts, 3 postdocs, a grant
Dear ES/PE community members, find below an abundant list of great academic opportunities: 11 calls for papers for conferences (some are fully or partly funded) and special issues, 10 job openings, 5 PhD fellowships, 4 visiting opportunities, 3 postdoc positions,… Read More ›
Literature similar to “Der Arbeiter”
While researching what others have written regarding Ernst Jünger’s Der Arbeiter, I found out that one of the contributors to the Ernst Jünger Translation Project Substack had recently made a reading list of various works that are either similar to… Read More ›
Inflation has popped back up. Does this doom the Yes vote?
It’s a bad time to run a referendum that asks Australians to think about other people, to be generous, to embrace the risk of change. Inflation has popped back up. Does this doom the Yes vote?
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