Tuesday, July 05, 2011
China's Hard-Money History - Dan O'Connor - Mises Daily
China's Hard-Money History - Dan O'Connor - Mises Daily: "Trade and commerce between the Chinese and the people of Europe was very minimal until the 1600s. But despite being relatively isolated from each other, the people of these two far-off lands all adopted identical ways for conducting commerce — they used gold and silver as the preferred medium of exchange. Most importantly, gold and silver did not circulate throughout China by edict of the emperor or some central authority. The Chinese chose gold as their money because gold and silver have moneyish characteristics."
Peer Review and "Pal Review" in Climate Science | Patrick J. Michaels | Cato Institute: Commentary
Peer Review and "Pal Review" in Climate Science | Patrick J. Michaels | Cato Institute: Commentary: "What about if my professional advancement is dependent upon climate change monies (which applies to just about every academic or government climatologist)? I'm liable to really like a paper that says this is a horrible and important problem, and likely to rail against an author who says it's probably a bit overblown. May God have mercy on any manuscript that mentions the rather large elephant in the room, which is that we probably can't do much about it anyway."
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