
“Have a great day!”
”World Without Love”
“Have a great day!”

[LIVE]: Open Mic – Anyone can stream with openmic
The last third of this broadcast is a jeremiad against the schooling system in the United States, including a recommendation of a book with which I do not necessarily wholly agree, but which I find usefully thought–provoking : How to Survive in Your Native Land, James Herndon, 1971. We get there by way of some updates on my activities, reflections on democracy in various countries, and a consideration of the “precautionary principle”. (More discussion of the gold standard will have to wait.)
Heraclitus tells us that we can never step in the same river twice, so although you are surrounded by voices proclaiming that that the world is coming to an end, do not be deceived. The inevitability of change means that it is every bit as just, or unjust, to speak of beginnings as of endings. It is, perhaps, only natural to be afraid of the colossal opportunities that are even now opening out before us, but if we seek to shun them, we will only get changes we like less. Also, a bit more about the gold standard (hopefully I will finish with that next week) and erroneous ideas about “intrinsic value”.
Mail call! Did Russia actually launch an ICBM with no warhead against Ukraine? The Steppenwolf Plan for disarmament. And, more of the story of the gold standard : Isaac Newton enters the picture.

“Have a great day!”
“Be cool or be cast out” Skip to 7 mins 30 sec in. overslept
“Have a great day!”

In which my motivations for reading selections from an annotated version of the Treaty of Versailles are, perhaps, revealed, and the vexed question of German War Guilt is examined ; along with an attempt to introduce some of the basic concepts of banking and currency, with the intention of eventually explaining the various things that might be meant by a person referring to “the gold standard”, and the contexts in which these meanings arise.
What is good in life? (wrong answers only) — oaths of fealty, and the question of how far self–interest actually predicts human motivations — immigration, and what it has to do with Don Quixote. And the Preamble and Chapter I of the Charter of the United Nations, for those requiring a refresher.