Google Reader (1000+)

“The secret of success is making your vocation your vacation.” ~ Mark Twain

Google Reader (1000+)

“Writing comes from reading, and reading is the finest teacher of how to write.” – Annie Proulx (via theparisreview)

Google Reader (1000+)

“The Russian polymath Mikhail Bakhtin, one of the titanic minds of the twentieth century, though too neglected now, believed that in a dialogue the position of primacy is with the person who listens rather than the one who first speaks. After all, he said, we do not speak unless we anticipate a response; and we shape what we say in light of possible reactions. If the listener, even if only an imagined listener or our own image of our Self, were not there, we might not speak at all, and if we did we would speak very differently than in fact we do.”

Question everything.

2011-11-15_16

The Rule of Law

Quote of the Day| Library of Economics and Liberty

A free circulation of labour from employment to employment involves an incessant competition between man and man, which causes constant quarrels,—some of which, as we see in the daily transactions of trades unions, easily run into violence; and also a constant series of new bargains, one differing from another, some of which are sure to be broken, or said to be so, which makes disputes of another kind. The peace of society was exposed in early times to greater danger from this source than now, because the passions of men were then less under control than now. ‘In the simple and violent times,’ as they have been well called, ‘which we read of in our Bibles,’ people struck one another, and people killed one another, for very little matters as we should think them. And the most efficient counteractive machinery which now preserves that peace, then did not exist. We have now in the midst of us a formed, elaborate, strong government, which is incessantly laying down the best rules which it can find to prevent trouble under changing circumstances, and which constantly applies a sharp pervading force running through society to prevent and punish breaches of these rules.’ We are so familiar with the idea of a government inherently possessing and daily exercising both executive and legislative power, that we scarcely comprehend the possibility of a nation existing without them. But if we attend to the vivid picture given in the Book of Judges of an early stage in Hebrew society, we shall see that there was then absolutely no legislative power, and only a faint and intermittent executive power…. I.13 (paragraph number)

iPhone Megaphone

Miss Moss

Past 25 Years of Consumer Spending

Past 25 Years of Consumer Spending

Renewable Energy

Renewable energy: An energised industry | The Economist

Understanding South African schooling (1992)

 

Look for the outlier

Human Development Index: Deconstructing development | The Economist

You cannot kill us all.

“If you want to go to war . . . I must be honest and admit that we cannot stand up to you on the battlefield.  We  don’t  have  the resources. . . . But you must remember two things. You cannot win because of our numbers; you cannot kill us all. And you cannot win because of the international community. They will rally to our support and they will stand with us.” – Nelson Mandela speaking to a group of Afrikaner generals. 

Sparks 1996.  Tomorrow Is  Another  Country:  The  Inside  Story  of  South Africa’s Road to Change. University of Chicago Press.

Rationale for Apartheid…

“It was but yesterday that the Afrikaners wrested from British impe-

rial occupation the right to be a nation, to be independent in part-

nerships with their countrymen of British stock. And today, with

this  battle  that  is  all  of  Afrikaner  history  hardly  fought,  the

demand comes that they submit to a new imperialism, not this

time to the weapons of Europe, but to the numbers of Africa. The

answer, not unnaturally, is no. Unlike the English in India and the

Dutch in Indonesia, the Afrikaner has nowhere else to go. For him

there is no Britain and no Holland to return to; for him no central

shrine of national existence to survive the death of the outposts.

On the soil of Africa he, and with him his history, culture and lan-

guage, stay or perish.” –  Schalk Pienaar

Source: Sparks, Allister. 1990. The Mind of South Africa. Boston: Little, Brown p208

In Fiske and Ladd 2004 “Elusive Equity” – the book is downloadable for free here

 

In(equality)justice

“A similar lesson emerges from a classic experiment conducted by Franz de Waals and Sarah Brosnan. The primatologists trained brown capuchin monkeys to give them pebbles in exchange for cucumbers. Almost overnight, a capuchin economy developed, with hungry monkeys harvesting small stones. But the marketplace was disrupted when the scientists got mischievous: instead of giving every monkey a cucumber in exchange for pebbles, they started giving some monkeys a tasty grape instead. (Monkeys prefer grapes to cucumbers.) After witnessing this injustice, the monkeys earning cucumbers went on strike. Some started throwing their cucumbers at the scientists; the vast majority just stopped collecting pebbles. The capuchin economy ground to a halt. The monkeys were willing to forfeit cheap food simply to register their anger at the arbitrary pay scale.” (from here)

Why do inequality and injustice rile us so much? It seems that we have an in-built sense of fairness and justice. Perhaps in equality we find justice…

Best stats question ever…

Best statistics question ever