You are currently browsing the Armchair Economist weblog archives for the day November 3, 2007.
- General post (802)
- April 3, 2008: Armchair Economist gets a much-needed update
- April 3, 2008: Ghost of Herbert Hoover
- April 3, 2008: Are you smarter than a high-schooler?
- April 3, 2008: Katrina hero: Wal-Mart
- April 2, 2008: No Child Left Behind
- April 2, 2008: The poverty hype
- April 2, 2008: Oil profits
- April 2, 2008: Don's response
- April 2, 2008: Oil refinements
- April 1, 2008: My profile
Archive for November 3, 2007
Midlife crisis
November 3, 2007 by Tom Armstrong.
This WSJ author wants to know if his Facebook friends are genuine. The piece is worth reading just the entertaining lines, such as:
Having reached the ripe age of 35, I didn’t expect to confront the kind of delicate social dilemmas usually associated with emotional teenage girls. Who are my friends? Should I befriend people I don’t know? Why does everyone have more friends than me?
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Are you a quant?
November 3, 2007 by Tom Armstrong.
Found this link on Mankiw’s blog–very funny.
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Don’s words of wisdom
November 3, 2007 by Tom Armstrong.
I always enjoy reading what Don B. has to say at Cafe Hayek. Here’s a letter he just sent to the Baltimore Sun:
You again call upon government to force us Americans to reduce our emissions of CO2 (”Green and right,” November 2). And like nearly everyone else demanding further regulation of markets in the name of environmental protection, you overlook the fact that the very markets that you want to restrain save millions of lives annually by making people’s living environments cleaner.
For evidence, read Margo Thorning’s essay that appears today just inches from your own editorial. In “Ending energy poverty,” Ms. Thorning reports that “About 1.3 million people - mostly women and children - die prematurely every year because of exposure to indoor air pollution from burning biomass for fuel.” These deaths happen routinely in developing countries because people there have so little access to electrification, internal-combustion engines, and mass-produced consumer goods that they must burn biomass in their homes. So in developed countries – whose denizens enjoy ready access to electric heating, home delivery of fuel oil, and other life-saving wonders - the capitalism that people loudly fear might raise global temperatures a few degrees over the next several decades silently yet effectively saves thousands of lives each and every day.
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