I try to mention Mises when it fits the occasion. I have found that
having some sort of grasp on core economics ideas makes it easier to
understand why a lot of things done, and called news, happen as they
do. Mostly silly decisions made for silly reasons from a very poor
understanding of why things happen in an economy. But you have to
admit.... it can be entertaining.
I am still working out how Open Source fits into it all. OS, self
interest, and it's developing economy....
Roger
On Jun 29, 2005, at 2:05 PM, Eric "Shubes" wrote:
Roger,
It appears that you and I have a lot in common. I didn't think very
may people knew of Mises. The content there is must reading (imho),
and there's a ton of it. Many entire books are available online there.
J wrote:
> www.worldnetdaily.com some news and some political commentary
> www.lewrockwell.com economic and political
> www.antiwar..com Great site, don't let the name get to
> you (one way or the other) - lots of international happenings -with
> some real depth.
> www.mises.org economic type things
> www.dailyrotation.com GREAT site suggested by Jean -
> technology issues
> Except for the Daily Rotation,(thanks Frenchie) I have followed
> the others for over 4 years, and some a lot longer
> Roger Jonasson
> On Jun 29, 2005, at 8:03 AM, Eric Shubes wrote:
> Josef Lowder wrote:
>
>> Where do y'all look for news on the web? I generally scan the
>> headlines at usatoday.com, and it provides a pretty good
>> overview, but everybody seems to be so enamored with pretty
>> graphics that web pages take way too long to resolve for dial-up
>> users (and most news websites seem to be in varying degrees of
>> radical, liberal, left- wing extremist for me). So, I'm looking
>> for some alternate news sites to check out. Suggestions?
>>
>>
> I've been enjoying http://www.worldnetdaily.com for 6+ years now.
> Not necessarily the fastest, but it is largely text and I like
> the content. Be sure to turn off pop-ups though!
>
--
-Eric 'shubes'
"There is no such thing as the People;
it is a collectivist myth.
There are only individual citizens
with individual wills
and individual purposes."
-William E. Simon (1927-2000),
Secretary of the Treasury (1974-1977)
"A Time For Truth" (1978), pg. 237
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