Form: Question

  • GAME DAY Let’s Play A Game Today: Natural Law Court. In today’s game, pick a top

    GAME DAY

    Let’s Play A Game Today: Natural Law Court.

    In today’s game, pick a topic, event, or person that is in conflict with natural law, name who you would prosecute (can be fictional) and lets see if we can successfully prosecute that case.

    (PS: Please do not waste my time trying to be cunning or funny. you won’t be either, just tedious. lol )


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-22 09:34:00 UTC

  • “Curt: When Will the Next Correction (collapse) Occur?”

    —“Curt, when do you think is the next economic / financial crisis slanted? Somebody I know well and trust, who got out of dodge last time around, is expecting it to be less than 18 months out, as indicated by the inverted bond yield curve. Is this accurate?”—- Moritz Bierling I have been saying that it looks to me like 2017-2020 since 2006. And that we would have some vast reorganizational catastrophe between 2020 and 2025. I was paying a lot of attention prior to the crisis, and so I was spot on (within 30 days) of estimating it correctly. Even the 2014 return. (I was conversely waaaaaaaaay off on China, which I thought would run out of options by 2010, but is deftly managing their equilibration and converting to totalitarianism before their great correction). I am not paying close enough attention to patterns today, so your friend is probably correct. I don’t need greater precision for my work. The reason being that I’m trying to provide “what to do about it” in advance – although still behind schedule. My understanding, and my strategy, is that we will see convergence in the next 24 months and that will begin the next ‘great wars’ era, because (a) the civil unrest will occupy the west, and (b) world powers in waiting will seize the opportunity, (c) both because they can afford to, and (d) because our ‘model’ (democracy) will have been proven wrong, so they will ‘advance’ under a sense of ‘moral authority to right a tragic wrong’. I think it is extremely unlikely that I err. Why? Humans always pursue available incentives. (PS: 1) I can tell by the loans being generated that we are at the limit of possible credit expansion and I suspect the bond yield is reflecting it. 2) I can tell by the absolutely certain future direction of oil prices that this will coincide with and partly drive the rest of the outcomes I anticipate.) Apr 19, 2018 12:19pm

  • “Curt: When Will the Next Correction (collapse) Occur?”

    —“Curt, when do you think is the next economic / financial crisis slanted? Somebody I know well and trust, who got out of dodge last time around, is expecting it to be less than 18 months out, as indicated by the inverted bond yield curve. Is this accurate?”—- Moritz Bierling I have been saying that it looks to me like 2017-2020 since 2006. And that we would have some vast reorganizational catastrophe between 2020 and 2025. I was paying a lot of attention prior to the crisis, and so I was spot on (within 30 days) of estimating it correctly. Even the 2014 return. (I was conversely waaaaaaaaay off on China, which I thought would run out of options by 2010, but is deftly managing their equilibration and converting to totalitarianism before their great correction). I am not paying close enough attention to patterns today, so your friend is probably correct. I don’t need greater precision for my work. The reason being that I’m trying to provide “what to do about it” in advance – although still behind schedule. My understanding, and my strategy, is that we will see convergence in the next 24 months and that will begin the next ‘great wars’ era, because (a) the civil unrest will occupy the west, and (b) world powers in waiting will seize the opportunity, (c) both because they can afford to, and (d) because our ‘model’ (democracy) will have been proven wrong, so they will ‘advance’ under a sense of ‘moral authority to right a tragic wrong’. I think it is extremely unlikely that I err. Why? Humans always pursue available incentives. (PS: 1) I can tell by the loans being generated that we are at the limit of possible credit expansion and I suspect the bond yield is reflecting it. 2) I can tell by the absolutely certain future direction of oil prices that this will coincide with and partly drive the rest of the outcomes I anticipate.) Apr 19, 2018 12:19pm

  • What would happen if we followed the german model, and required urban apartments

    What would happen if we followed the german model, and required urban apartments (condos), be suitably sized for full family residency?


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-19 09:39:00 UTC

  • What would happen if we prevented renting in cities the way we prevent renting i

    What would happen if we prevented renting in cities the way we prevent renting in suburbs?


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-19 09:35:00 UTC

  • What percent of losses of any force, will cause their retreat (or to just stay h

    What percent of losses of any force, will cause their retreat (or to just stay home)?


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-19 09:34:00 UTC

  • Simon Ström: so wait. wait. Why does it look like the shared dna between late ic

    Simon Ström: so wait. wait. Why does it look like the shared dna between late ice european neolithic hunter gatherers moves from the balkans/greece into the eastern med rather than the other way around?


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-18 09:37:00 UTC

  • Curt, what’s your take on the Flynn effect? It says that IQ has gone up in the p

    Curt, what’s your take on the Flynn effect? It says that IQ has gone up in the past decades. How does that fit with the narrative that since the end of the 19th century IQ (in the West) has decreased?


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-17 19:50:00 UTC

  • I mean, the cosmopolitan counter-revolution against science is ending right? Fas

    I mean, the cosmopolitan counter-revolution against science is ending right? Fascism is gradually taking hold. Nationalism gradually taking hold. Marx, Freud, Boas and the Postmoderns falsified, and Dawin, Spencer, and Nietzsche were right.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-04-15 21:31:35 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/985631747261026304

  • Good Books on Russian Art and History

    Russian history was fairly heroic before the (((Soviet))) era. It’s the american west with worse weather against more advanced peoples with even more viscous traditions. I studied history first, but I studied art history second, and it was art history that helped me understand the different peoples of this world more so than any other. Economics explains why things happen but art gives you insight into the soul of the people and what inspires them. So this …. russian aesthetic … frames my understanding of them as ‘we few against the world’. So there are very good books on russian art history. And just skimming through them is probably important. This is the best ‘textbook’ I’ve seen: 1 – A History of Russia – by Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, Mark D. Steinberg 2 – The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia, by Peter Hopkirk 3 – The Icon and the Axe: An Interpretive History of Russian Culture by James H. Billington 4 – Medieval Russia’s Epics, Chronicles, and Tales by Serge A. Zenkovsky 5 – While Shakespeare is undoubtably the best poet, the best Novels and Plays in Christendom are the Russian – bar none. The great works of the russian novelists are well known. So, I see russians as a small poor people, in a hostile territory, struggling to overcome the barbarians. My view of russians is fairly heroic. That they made a terrible mistake with (((stalin and trotsky))) is something I see them escaping – slowly. The problem is it probably can’t be done domestically better than putin is doing it. His mistakes have been largely international. And he’s right. Russia emerged from the (((bolshevik))) era by return to her origins. And the west is continuing to fall for the (((cosmopolitan lies))). Apr 07, 2018 12:56pm