The gamblers are ecstatic: the stock
market is having its best quarterly rally since 1933!! . . . you know, when the
country was on the skids, there was high unemployment, Keynesian economics was
artificially inflating prices by backing money with enormous amounts of
government debt and concentrating economic power in the State, the Spanish
Civil War was about to start, the Japanese were about to invade Manchuria, Hitler
had just come into power, and the country was about to enter the “Depression
within the Depression” . . . what was there to worry about?
Okay, plenty, but here are some news
items that might brighten your day:
Join us in the Happy Revolution. . . |
. . . and sign up for Smile while you're at it. |
President Reagan with the Task Force Report |
• On Thursday of this week Norman Kurland attended an event
at Georgetown University, “The Myth of a Universal Islamic State.” Speakers concentrated on demonstrating that,
according to the Quran, there is no mandate for a universal caliphate or
anything else such as radical Muslim extremists are demanding. This makes sense, for even the concept of a
Nation-State is a relatively new concept on the political scene, being a little
over two hundred years old at most. A
number of the people there sounded very interested in the Just Third Way.
Dr. Norman Bailey |
• This past week we received a copy of Redmond FitzGerald’s Cry Blood, Cry Erin (1966). It wasn’t exactly what we were expecting —
it’s an early “coffee table book” — but still very useful as it provides photos
and other illustrations dealing with the struggle for an independent Ireland.
• The first draft of our book dealing with a Just Third Way
“take” on the Easter Rising in Dublin, Éire, in 1916 is finished, and is now in
the first revision stages. The working
title is What th’ Hell are Th’ Up to Now?,
from playwright Seán O’Casey’s description of the “attack” on the General Post
Office in Volume III of his memoirs, Drums
Under the Windows (1945), in which he recalls an old man muttering, “half
to himself and half to an elderly, thin lady beside him . . . ‘What th’ hell
are th’ up to now? . . . Somethin’ brewin’? Ma’am, there’s always somethin’ brewin’. I’m seventy, an’ I’ve never known an hour that
I didn’t hear tell of somethin’ brewin’.’”
• As of this morning, we have had
visitors from 52 different countries and 52 states and provinces in the United
States and Canada to this blog over the past two months. Most visitors are from
the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, India, and Sudan. The most
popular postings this past week in descending order were “Thomas Hobbes on
Private Property,” “Aristotle on Private Property,” “The Purpose of
Production,” “The Crisis That Need Not Be, I: A System Designed to Fail,” and “Socialist
Delusions, Capitalist Illusions, XII: Popular Capital Formation.”
Those are the happenings for this week, at least those that
we know about. If you have an
accomplishment that you think should be listed, send us a note about it at
mgreaney [at] cesj [dot] org, and we’ll see that it gets into the next
“issue.” If you have a short (250-400
word) comment on a specific posting, please enter your comments in the blog —
do not send them to us to post for you.
All comments are moderated, so we’ll see it before it goes up.
#30#