Duly Noted: Nuptials in Moscow

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About selective judgment of whether sanctions work. Nuptials in Moscow: Allah’s Brides find the Real One. Being willing to see what there is and then acting upon it.

1.You are in for a surprise if you recall the divergent versions of what has been advocated by the same people about “sanctions” to be applied to discipline derelict regimes.

In the course of the last decades, we have heard a lot about the desirability and effectiveness of punitive measures short of war. It is obviously possible to have opposing opinions regarding whether sanctions work or not and if they should be applied against a certain country or should to be shelved. Neither the “yes” not the “no” position is completely without merit. By itself, the “withdrawal of international love” will hardly overthrow a system we want to punish or pressure. Sanctions – economic, diplomatic, and cultural – do not have the decisive effect of the guillotine when used to chop off heads.

Switzerland as an Example for the World

Economists, political scientists, reporters and pundits spend too much of their time looking at dysfunctional societies and trying to explain why there are poverty, joblessness and hopelessness. In many ways, Haiti is easy to explain - no rule of law and 200 years of corrupt and incompetent governments. Switzerland is the polar opposite. It has almost no corruption and has the rule of law with honest, competent judges and government administrators. The question should be, "What can we learn from the Switzerlands of the world about how to do things right" rather than, "What is wrong with the Haitis of the world?" Switzerland manages to run a smaller government as a share of gross domestic product than the United States and most other countries while providing a higher level of service, security, prosperity and freedom. How does it do that?

The Invention of the Violin and the Spanish Guitar

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While we can say a great deal about Greek musical theory and the general place of music in Antiquity, we can say much less with certainty about how ancient Greek music actually sounded like. They created a complex system of notation that was partly remembered in medieval Europe but which is nevertheless rather different from the one that was developed during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance period. Both Plato and Aristotle stated that instrumental music was inferior to vocal music, a view that predominated until the Enlightenment. The Greeks had percussion instruments similar to cymbals or the tambourine.

Against Nihilism: Julius Evola’s “Traditionalist” Critique of Modernity

With the likes of Oswald Spengler, whose Decline he translated for an Italian readership, and Jose Ortega y Gasset, Julius Evola (1898 – 1974) stands as one of the notably incisive mid-Twentieth Century critics of modernity. Like Spengler and Ortega, Evola understood himself to owe a formative debt to Friedrich Nietzsche, but more forcefully than Spengler or Ortega, Evola saw the limitations – the contradictions and inconsistencies – in Nietzsche’s thinking.

Duly Noted: Run While You Can

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Raise taxes and lose across the board: the IRS shows how. Euro troubles: run while you can. Those nasty populists. Distorted perspectives that are politically correct.

1. Congress’ decision to revise the US’ hefty tax code deserves attention. The measure is aims to squeeze money from declared American owned investments if the fund is managed by foreign entities. The regulation puts an additional burden on foreign investors by forcing them to disclose everything about their American clients. For aliens investing in the US is becoming more costly and complicated. These measures against a target group that has no lobby should be big news. They are not because, as also this legislation proves, the US is an insular country. That since Pearl Harbor this impression is caused by an error does not seem to impress anyone.

"Peace Process" as End-Stage Jihad

Mind-boggling how quickly the Jerusalem housing project sent the stars into re-alignment over Israel to shine down now on a new, official US vision of the Jewish state as an drag on US interests in the world, even to the point of endangering the lives of American troops.

Germany Awakes. Rules of the Game Are Changing in Europe

At its spring summit, currently being held in Brussels, the European Union is expected to present a rescue package for Greece, consisting of a joint EU-IMF solution. However, even if the EU succeeds in finding a solution, the crisis surrounding the euro has revealed that Germany is no longer willing to put EU interests before its own.

Democracy and Universalism

Authors James E. McClellan and Harold Dorn in their book Science and Technology in World History claim that Newtonian philosophy was a major force behind the European Enlightenment which followed it. “Ironically, with his mystical speculations largely hidden until the twentieth century, Newton may be fairly said to be a founding father of the Enlightenment, that campaign of reason against superstition and irrationality that arose in France and then spread across eighteenth-century Europe and America.” The concept of the “clockwork God” inspired by the success of Newton and his successors at explaining the orbits of comets and planets influenced philosophes such as Voltaire and Montesquieu. Many scholars wanted to apply this progress in the natural sciences to the social sciences as well:

Yoghurt and the Indo-Europeans

My essay on lactose tolerance and its relationship to the Indo-European expansion triggered some discussion. As I mentioned in my previous history of beer, according to authors J. P. Mallory and D. Q. Adams the Proto-Indo-European lexicon which has been carefully reconstructed by European scholars through generations of comparative linguistics contains words which indicate a diet that included meat, salt, dairy products and the consumption of alcoholic beverages such as beer, mead and possibly wine. The word for “honey” is of particular interest as both the Chinese and the Uralic words for “honey” appear to be loanwords from Indo-European. Although sheep and goats can be milked, the abundance of terms for milk products in the proto-lexicon suggests the more intensive exploitation of cattle for milk, yet it has so far proved difficult to establish exactly when milking began in Eurasia:
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