Tuesday, December 14, 2004



There's a saying that students at Aston University don't graduate: it just takes them three years to find their way out the building As any psychologist knows, lives are not compartmentalised that easily

Invisible Hands & Markets: Which is why historically low are in fact too high
There is a ghost that hangs heavy over the days of our economic lives we are about to fall on harder times. Though most folks move through the December days oblivious to it, some people say they can actually see it. And they see it everywhere:

Americans who were 20 in 1980, when double-digit inflation was at its most destructive, were barely old enough to appreciate what was happening. Yet, those people (now 44) are older than two-thirds of the population. They have no memory of rising inflation. As for declining inflation, its benefits have occurred in a gradual and almost invisible manner. We haven't paid much attention. Our economic debates blame or credit high-profile presidential policies (Reagan's tax cuts, Clinton's budget surpluses or Bush's deficits) or focus on more dramatic upheavals: the Internet or globalization.


The End Of the Age Of Inflation
• · Exclusive I was a key figure in allowing the swindle to take place by providing middle-man services between pipelines and politicos
• · · The 6 Myths Of Creativity So Risk Averse He is Suicidal
• · · · The non-profit, non-partisan advocacy group Judicial Watch has posted a searchable archive of financial disclosure reports for all Supreme Court Justices and Appellate Court federal judges. Judicial Watch
• · · · · New Blog Co-Authored by Nobel Prize Winning Economist and Federal Circuit Judge Becker-Posner Blog
• · · · · · The unexpected successes of a Cold War development project