Gorbachev draws a comparison between the Berlin Wall and climate change talks. He argues that there is a wall comparable to the one that separated the capitalist and communist world; namely, the wall separating the people’s wishes for a climate deal and politicians’ efforts. The comparison between the Cold War and Climate Change (aka Global [...]
Archive for November, 2009
Dismantling and Erecting Walls
Posted in Uncategorized on November 19, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Siegel on Obama and Lincoln
Posted in Uncategorized on November 15, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Quite the uneasy stretch.
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Why should the president drawing on a great American figure like Abraham Lincoln be a cause for concern? It should worry us because you can admire Lincoln’s achievement in freeing the slaves and keeping the Union together, but also be horrified by his bloodlust in doing so, and his sense of [...]
Rushkoff on Murdoch vs. Google
Posted in Uncategorized on November 10, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
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Railing against “content kleptomaniacs” like Google, Microsoft, and Ask.com—which effectively syndicate News Corp. content without paying—Murdoch even suggested he might put up walls that prevent the stories in his papers from appearing in Google searches at all.
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And it’s not as if Google is in this merely for the public good. Google makes [...]
Neda Scholarship
Posted in Uncategorized on November 10, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
The scholarship is fine; the opposition to it is ridiculous.
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The Iranian embassy accused Oxford of abusing Neda’s case, insisting, as the government has repeatedly done, that the young woman’s death was suspicious and was still being investigated by police.
In a reaction to public pressure, the government of Mr Ahmadi-Nejad has claimed that a sophisticated [...]
Rogoff on The Great Recession of 2008-2009
Posted in Uncategorized on November 6, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
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The Great Recession was turbo-charged by a financial crisis, making it a far more insidious affair that typically has far more long-lasting effects. As Carmen Reinhart and I argue in our new book This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly , the Great Recession is better described as “The Great Contraction,” given [...]