Recently, I was revisiting Fichte’s The Closed Commercial State in hopes of obtaining any other information that I might have overlooked when I read it for the first time from a while back. In a post I wrote from a… Read More ›
Work-Standard
Update (8 June 2023)
Due to a major medical appointment yesterday, I was not able to write anything substantial for today. I am planning to have something written tomorrow and getting it posted to the Blog before the end of that day. For now,… Read More ›
Philosophical Questions on Pan-Germanic Socialism
A lot of these questions were already being raised in the historical discourse of Pan-Germanic Socialism’s theoreticians. I personally feel that some of them can be reapplied to the context of Mainland China, from the reigns of Mao Zedong and… Read More ›
On the Predecessors of Pan-Germanic Socialism
Bogumil and I are convinced that Pan-Germanic Socialism did not begin with Hitlerism. Hitlerism, if anything, has been proven to be an aberration, a deviation from what Pan-Germanic Socialism was supposed to have been. These racialist and antisemitic tendencies associated… Read More ›
Update (5 June 2023)
Would it surprise people that, thanks to Bogumil from ARPLAN, I had discovered the origin point of Pan-Germanic Socialism in the German-speaking world? Would it also surprise people that one of the lasting achievements of Pan-Germanic Socialism’s forebearers has nothing… Read More ›
Social Networking: Digital World-Cities of the WWW?
Last year, while trying to research the concept of the Shopping Citadel and its related variants, I began to come across a number of references to the 1960s Counterculture, Silicon Valley, and all the research that later went into the… Read More ›
Feminist Economics for All – Open Americas
It may seem obvious to a layperson that failing to support an economy’s labor force must come at a cost. Yet conventional economic models render nearly invisible – or simply wave aside – a dimension of inequality that pervades economic policymaking… Read More ›
Economics, Coins, and Barter: Medieval Money Matters | Cat Rotator’s Quarterly
We live in a money economy, more or less. That’s pretty new for most people. Even in the 1600s, a lot of business was done by barter. However, as Adam Smith pointed out in 1776, it’s hard to make change… Read More ›
“Could Soviet women be regular housewives?”
Note: Several months ago, I wrote about Soviet Woman on ARPLAN. I just did not expect to learn that the Russian culture and lifestyle publication Russia Beyond featured an article on the same subject yesterday. Women in the Soviet Union… Read More ›
You must be logged in to post a comment.