Posted inArticle

Onward Blogging Soldier

Phil Carter, of Intel Dump, has been moved from the ready reserves and into the 101st Airborn, with orders to deploy in three weeks. Wow. Around the blogs, much is made of the 101st Fighting Keyboardists, and some of us are quite fond of demanding that war supporters enlist (a line of logic I find […]

Posted inArticle

Batman Begins

Like good people everywhere, I spent last night in a dark room watching Christian Bale kick unbelievable amounts of ass. The verdict? Batman Returns is undeniably the best Batman film ever made, and is probably one of the best action flicks I’ve ever seen. First, I’m a comic geek. Not so much anymore, but for […]

Posted inArticle

Unocal in Red

I’m not particularly concerned by the Chinese government’s bid (through CNOOC Ltd., which they control 70% of) to buy Unocal. If they offer a better deal than Chevron, why not? Worries that Chinese ownership somehow compromises our national security strike me as way overblown. If we and China ever get to a point where we […]

Posted inArticle

Corn For Plastic

The nice thing about high oil prices is that they make new technologies more cost-effective. Take Cargill, a company that has figured out how to replace petroleum in manufacturing tasks with corns and biomass, and is suddenly able to do it on the cheap: When Cargill launched its factory in 2002, its pellets were far […]

Posted inArticle

In Defense of Popular Friends

Fortuna has a good post on the crucial issue of high school dynamics, particularly the cool friend/less cool friend relationship, that ends saying: Every time I see one of those movies I wonder if anyone who makes them thinks about what it’s like from the other side. If you have a friend who is cooler […]

Posted inArticle

Why? Me Worry?

This article, detailing the results of a simulation focusing on oil crises, is worth reading for an idea of why people are concerned about peak oil. My excellent guests from the Oil Drum gave you a nice rundown this week, but hearing it from Gene Sperling and former CIA directors James Woolsey and Robert Gates […]

Posted inArticle

Screw the Market (It’s What the Market Wants)

Henry Farrell and Matt Yglesias have launched into a fascinating discussion on the relative merits of market taking and market making political approaches. Market taking is identifying a current and understood desire and exploiting it. When Microsoft jumped into the video game sector, it was a market taking move — they knew folks wanted video […]

Posted inArticle

What A Rove Wants

It’s been nice to see Democrats respond to Rove’s remarks in much the same way Republicans responded to Durbin’s. That Rove unleashed a smear with treasonous implications certainly helps, but the bulk of the credit has to go to a party newly uninterested in being smacked around. This, however, was not all our idea. It […]

Posted inArticle

And Now, Back To Me.

Thousand thanks to the wonderful guestbloggers who filled in this week. You can find them at their normal haunts, Scott Lemieux at the excellent Lawyers, Guns and Money, Prof Goose at The Oil Drum, Shakespeare’s Sister at her eponymous site, Matt Holt at The Health Care Blog, and the Jew at the Jewish Blog. Also, […]

Posted inArticle

The Jewish Blog

Thanks Ezra for the opportunity to post here for a while along side such talented guest bloggers. Read my stuff at The Jewish Blog. Check out some of my past posts if you’re interested in understanding: The Solution to Oil Shocks Why the West had the industrial revolution instead of the East Why Ancient Piracy […]

Gift this article