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Thursday, June 22, 2023

A NYT Reporter’s Deleted Tweet Shows How the Media Became the Pentagon’s ‘Plumbers’

Last month New York Times international correspondent David Philipps offered a mea culpa.

“I just deleted a tweet that lacked nuance,” the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner wrote.

Philipps, who in 2022 received the top award in journalism for his reporting on previously undisclosed US military strikes that killed thousands of civilians in Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan, was walking back an observation made following the arrest of 21-year-old Jack Teixeira, the Massachusetts Air National Guardsman accused of leaking state secrets. Philipps noted the Times had worked “feverishly” to assist the Pentagon in identifying Teixeira.

“Ironically, if the same guy leaked to the NYT, we’d be working feverishly to conceal it,” Philipps wrote in the deleted tweet.

In an odd twist, the Times had gone from publishing state secrets to helping the government conceal them. 

Publishing state secrets is an old game, one the New York Times knows well. 

In 1971 the Grey Lady published classified materials — the Pentagon Papers — showing that the government was lying about the Vietnam War. Papers leaked to the Times by antiwar military analyst Daniel Ellsberg revealed that America’s foothold in the war-torn country was much worse than the public had been told.  

While the Nixon administration — which secretly created a team of “plumbers” to plug the leaks — argued the documents were a threat to national security, the reality was they were primarily an embarrassment to the government. As R. W. Apple Jr. wrote in the New York Times a quarter century later, the Papers “demonstrated, among other things, that the Johnson Administration had systematically lied, not only to the public but also to Congress, about a subject of transcendent national interest….” 

Tapes from the Oval Office of a June 14, 1971 conversation between Nixon and aide H.R. Haldeman confirm the assessment that government credibility was what was truly at stake. “To the ordinary guy, all this is a bunch of gobbledygook. But out of the gobbledygook comes a very clear thing,” Haldeman told Nixon. “You can’t trust the government; you can’t believe what they say… .”

One can argue that the Times was right to publish the Pentagon Papers, which exposed the government’s lies about Vietnam. Or one can argue it was wrong, since it undermined the war effort. 

What’s clear is that the Times was fighting to expose the government’s secrets, not protect them.

There are similarities between the Pentagon Papers and the Teixeira leaks. While it’s debatable whether the leaks put national security (or Ukrainian security) at risk, it’s clear they are an embarrassment for government officials. 

The documents “suggest that the Ukrainian forces are in more dire straits than their government has acknowledged publicly,” the New York Times admits. The Associated Press, meanwhile, noted that “at least one of the documents shows estimates of Russian troops deaths in the Ukraine war that are significantly lower than numbers publicly stated by US officials. Under a section titled ‘Total Assessed Losses,’ one document lists 16,000-17,500 Russian casualties and up to 71,000 Ukrainian casualties.”

This is a very different picture than what Americans have been told by military officials. For example, Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, publicly stated Russia had suffered “significantly well over” 100,000 casualties in Ukraine.

Why the government would wish these documents to remain secret is obvious. But why would The New York Times and the Washington Post, which also assisted the Pentagon in its hunt for  Teixeira?

It’s not because the papers are squeamish about publishing illegally obtained documents. The Times does this all the time. So does The Washington Post, which received a Pulitzer Prize in 2014 for its reporting on the National Security Agency’s illegal mass surveillance program, like the Times did in 1972 for the Pentagon Papers reporting. 

So why are these same papers now hunting leakers?

Again, it’s not because these leaks are a threat to national security. As journalist Glenn Greenwald points out, both the Times and the Post have been running stories like crazy on Teixeira’s leaks. 

The real answer comes down to incentives and gatekeeping. The government and media get to decide what leaks are appropriate, what gets published, and what gets prosecuted. It’s a symbiotic relationship that serves them both.

The US government, the Times notes, classifies tens of millions of documents every year. These documents tell stories. And a small, select group of people — journalists, editors, publishers, and government officials — get to decide which stories get told, and which stay concealed. Former CIA officials like Frank Snepp have publicly discussed how The Agency™ plants stories with journalists to shape public opinion. In return for planting stories, journalists are often given access to documents, tips, and exclusives.  

These are the gatekeepers. Jack Teixeira and Julian Assange are gate crashers. They threaten to destroy this delicate balance. By dumping state secrets on Wikileaks or Discord that are not approved — even if sensitive information is redacted to protect national security — people like Teixeira and Assange disrupt the whole system of “controlled leaking.” 

This is why the Washington Post and The New York Times “worked feverishly” to identify Teixeira, and it’s why they treat Assange as a pariah. It’s not so much that these leaks are a threat to national security; what they truly threaten is this monopoly on state secrets, which has the power to conceal not just embarrassments but atrocities

There’s an age-old saying: uis custodiet ipsos custodes (“who guards the guardians”)? It’s a question central to constitutional democracies and government more broadly, and it gets at the rub of state power: how do we hold those in power accountable when they have all the power?

We often think of the Fourth Estate as one of the great bulwarks against government tyranny and protector of freedom. “Our liberty,” Thomas Jefferson famously observed, “depends on the freedom of the press… .” 

This is what makes the media’s new role as a defender of state secrets so troubling. 

While there are commendable journalists like Philipps dedicated to truth and government accountability, the role of media appears to be shifting to what economist Murray Rothbard described as Court Intellectuals: servants of the state “who win their place as junior partners in the power, prestige, and loot extracted by the State apparatus from the deluded public.”

By assisting in the apprehension of Teixeira, the Fourth Estate shows it’s not very interested in government transparency or accountability. The media are happy to play the role of plumbers, so long as they maintain their perch.

This article originally appeared on AIER

Jon Miltimore
Jon Miltimore

Jonathan Miltimore is the Managing Editor of FEE.org. (Follow him on Substack.)

His writing/reporting has been the subject of articles in TIME magazine, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, and the Star Tribune.

Bylines: Newsweek, The Washington Times, MSN.com, The Washington Examiner, The Daily Caller, The Federalist, the Epoch Times. 

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

A NYT Reporter’s Deleted Tweet Shows How the Media Became the Pentagon’s ‘Plumbers’

Vintage Photos - Oestreicher (1209-1212)

See the previous post in this series here.

I had the opportunity to pick up a huge batch of slides a while back. These pictures span from as early as the late 1940s to as late as the early 1990s. These came to me second hand but the original source was a combination of estate sales and Goodwill. There are many thousands of these slides. I will be scanning some from time to time and posting them here for posterity.

Getting your pictures processed as slides used to be pretty common but it was a phenomenon I missed out on. However, my Grandfather had a few dozen slides from the late 1950s that I acquired after he died. That along with having some negatives I wanted to scan is what prompted me to buy a somewhat decent flatbed scanner that could handle slides and negatives, an Epson V600. It can scan up to four slides at a time with various post-processing options and does a decent enough job.

This set continues a large batch of slides that originally came from an estate sale and appear to have belonged to a locally well known photographer (or perhaps a friend or family member) from the Spokane Washington area and later Northern Idaho named Leo Oestreicher. He was known for his portrait and landscape photography and especially for post cards. His career started in the 1930s and he died in 1990. These slides contain a lot of landscape and portrait photos but also a lot of photos from day to day life and various vacations around the world. Here's an article on him from 1997 which is the only info I have found on him: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/1997/jan/04/photos-of-a-lifetime-museum-acquisition-of-leo/

Many of these slides had the date they were processed stamped or printed on them. I've found that in cases where I could verify the date, that this date has typically been the same month the photos were taken. In other words, I expect that in MOST cases these photos were taken relatively near the processing date.

Click the link below to also see versions processed with color restoration and Digital ICE which is a hardware based dust and scratch remover, a feature of the Epson V600 scanner I am using. There are also versions processed with the simpler dust removal option along with color restoration.

The first photo in this set is dated August 1957 and features what appears to be a newly built two-car garage. Not so new now I guess. The second photo is from a 1958 wedding. Other photos from this wedding have showed up from time to time in previous sets. The third photo is labeled "Prestwick" and was also probably taken in the 1950s. It's not immediately obvious to me what "Prestwick" refers to. This looks like an airport and there is a Glasgow Prestwick airport in Scotland... The final photo is not labeled or dated but looks to be from the 1950s also based on those cars.













The entire collection that has been scanned and uploaded so far can also be found here.

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

PC Magazine (October 17th, 1989)

PC Magazine (October 17th, 1989)

PC Magazine was one of the most popular and long lasting PC magazines, at least in the U.S. Ultimately, it suffered the death of most other computer magazines as they were essentially replaced with the Internet. The October 17th, 1989 issue includes:

Up Front

  • Inside - An overview of the contents of this issue.

  • Letters - Reader letters about Type Director, the NEC ProSpeed 286, form letter software, the history of the fax, Amax 386 computers, MCA vs. EISA, and more.

  • Advisor - Questions answered about auto-rebooting from within a batch file, creating plots with an HP LaserJet, adding a floppy controller to have more than two floppy drives, and using COM ports beyond COM2.

  • First Looks - Previews of new software, including HP's NewWave, Finesse desktop publishing software, the HP LaserJet IIP, PC Paintbrush IV, FastLynx, and What-If Analyst for Lotus 1-2-3.

  • New and Improved - A look at new products, including an car power adapter and external battery charger for the Compaq SLT/286, Pacific Page (a cartridge to add full postscript capability to LaserJet printers), the Omnifax PPI (sends faxes to a laser printer), and more.

  • Pipeline - Lotus and Symantec plan Deskmate versions of their products; AT&T plans online service to compete with CompuServe and Prodigy; Okidata and Hewlett-Packard plan slower, cost-reduced printers.

  • Bill Machrone - Unix based 386 computers and LANs are starting to replace minicomputers and terminals.


Table of Contents from the October 17th, 1989 issue of PC Magazine

Cover Story

  • Presentation Graphics - A detailed look at presentation graphics software, including SlideWrite Plus, Graph Plus, Harvard Graphics, Kinetic Graphics System, Lotus Freelance Plus, Xerox Presents, and The Graphics Gallery Collection. Eventually, PowerPoint would come along and destroy them all.

Features

  • Graphics - A detailed look at clip art software and libraries, including ArtRight Image Portfolios, Arts & Letter Graphics Editor, Bitfolio Computer Art & Symbols Library, Click & Clip 500, ClickArt Series, Clip3D Library, Corel Draw!, DeskTop Art, Freelance Maps, Harvard Graphics Accessories, Pages with Impact, Metro ImageBase, Micrografx ClipArt Libraries, PicturePak, Presentation Task Force, and ProArt Professional Art Library.

  • Lightweight Laptops - A detailed comparison of laptops that at the time were considered Lightweight. Models looked at here include the Datavue Spark, Toshiba T1000, Bondwell B200, Sanyo MBC-16LT2, Epson Equity LT, Zenith MinisPort, Toshiba T1200, GRIDLite XL, Sharp PC-4602, Datavue Snap 1+1, Zenith SuperSport, GRID 140XT, NEC UltraLite, Sharp PC-4641, and NEC MultiSpeed HD. The Zenith SuperSport, for example, weighed in at over 13 pounds.


Table of Contents from the October 17th, 1989 issue of PC Magazine (continued)

Productivity

  • Lab Notes - The second part of a two part series on the communications capabilities of OS/2, including a terminal emulator example.

  • Utilities - A look at a utility that can dim your VGA monitor and also provides a screen blanking screen saver.

  • Environments - Part one of a series on mixing text at graphics. This part focuses on the OS/2 Programming Interface.

  • Power Programming - The second part of a series on programming the 386. This part looks at converting existing programs to 32-bit protected mode.

  • User-to-User - Creating temporary files with unique names in batch files; naming files using high-ASCII characters; using the BREAK command; and more.

After Hours

  • Prodigy - Prodigy, an online service that is a joint venture between IBM and Sears, provides a graphical interface.

  • LiveWire - A PC expansion card that extracts stock market crawl data from the Financial News Network via cable or satellite.


Back cover of the October 17th, 1989 issue of PC Magazine
Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2023/06/21/pc-magazine-october-17th-1989/

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Electronic Gaming Monthly (September 1999)

Electronic Gaming Monthly (September 1999)

Electronic Gaming Monthly was near the top of my list when it came to video game magazines. By 1999, the industry had consolidated somewhat compared to what it was a few years ago. Sega, Sony and Nintendo were the only real players. The September 1999 issue includes:

Features

  • The Dreamcast is Here - A look at the Sega Dreamcast, initial round of games and Sega's plan for the future. The Sega Dreamcast would have been released days after this issue hit the stands.

  • No Longer Fantasy - A look at the upcoming Final Fantasy movie.

  • Turok: Rage Wars - A preview of Turok: Rage Wars by Acclaim for the Nintendo 64. This was a first person shooter with an emphasis on multiplayer.


Table of Contents from the September 1999 issue of Electronic Gaming Monthly

Departments

  • Editorial - The Dreamcast is set to hit the streets with 24 solid games available on day one. Is this the biggest game launch ever?

  • Letters - Readers write in about the Dreamcast, Perfect Dark, survival horror games, megabits vs. megabytes, and more.

  • News - Final Fantasy movie coming to theaters; limited edition Pokemon game coming for the Game boy; Resident Evil 3 demo included on some copies of Dino Crisis for the PlayStation; Mario 64 sequel not anticipated until Dolphin (GameCube) release; bleem! PlayStation emulator hits stores (requires a Pentium 166MMX); Pac-Man Fever album re-released on CD; Nintendo reveals 64DD plans for Japan; and much more.

  • Gossip - Various rumors, including a possible Dreamcast version of Driver, a possible Dreamcast version of Soul Reaver, Michael Jordan returning to video games, PlayStation 2 to be used as a "set top box", Dreamcast could emulate PlayStation, and more.

  • Previews - Previews of upcoming games including for the Dreamcast: NBA Showtime, Vigilante 8, Street Fighter Alpha 3, The King of Fighter: Dream Match 1999, Shenmue, Fighting Force 2, Ecco the Dolphin, South Park: Chef's Luv Shack, Seven Mansions, Virtua Striker 2, Espion-Age-Nts, virtual On, Giant Gram All Japan Pro Wrestling 2, and Super Producer; for the Nintendo 64: Pokemon Snap, Mario Golf, WCW Mayhem, Rainbow Six, StarCraft, Hot Wheels Turbo Racing, Turok: Rage Wars, Resident Evil 2, Hercules, Winback, and Kyojin No Sohin; for the PlayStation: Final Fantasy VIII, Crash Team Racing, Suikoden II, WipeOut 3, Madden NFL 2000, NFL GameDay 2000, Spyro 2, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, Medal of Honor, Dune 2000, Wu-Tang, You Don't Know Jack, Metal Gear Solid: Integral, Tomb Raider: The Last Revelation, WCW Mayhem, Lunar 2: Eternal Blue, Silhouette Mirage, Thrasher, Sheep, Urban Chaos, Detonator Gauntlet, NBA ShootOut 2000, NBA Basketball 2000, Mag 3, Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition, Test Drive Cycles, SuperCross Circuit, Knights of Carnage, Major League Soccer 2000, NHL Championship 2000, NHL FaceOff 2000, Vegas Games 2000, Romance of the Three Kingdoms VI, Konami Rally, Monkey Magic, Rugrats, Bass Landing, NCAA Final Four 2000, Vagrant Story, Rival Schools 2, Geppy-X, Assault Suits Valken 2, Oreshika, Roneco's Great Adventure 2, Ichi Geki: Hagane No Hito; and more.

  • Power Tools - A brief look at various video gaming peripherals including the Tilt Force 2 PlayStation controller, Tilt Pak (N64), Data Deck (PlayStation), Boomerang 64 (N64), CH Products Gamestick (PlayStation), GameShark Pro (PlayStation), Xplorer FX (PlayStation), and more.

  • Review Crew - Reviews of some of the latest games including:
    • Nintendo 64 - NFL Blitz 2000, Command & Conquer, Duke Nukem: Zero Hour, Mario Golf, Monster Truck Madness 64, Pokemon Snap, The New Tetris, Tonic Trouble, and In-Fisherman Bass Hunter 64.
    • PlayStation - Chesmaster II, NFL Blitz 2000, Driver, Evil Zone, Jade Cocoon, Konami Arcade Classics, NFL Xtreme 2, Rising Zan, Sled Storm, Soul of the Samurai, Tarzan, and Tiny Tank.

  • Review Archive - A brief overview of EGM's last 100 reviews from issues 115-121.


Back cover of the September 1999 issue of Electronic Gaming Monthly

Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2023/06/14/electronic-gaming-monthly-september-1999/

Why Energy Is Becoming Less Reliable—and Less Affordable—All Around the World

In the book Green Tyranny—a fantastic history of the environmental alarmism movement—author Rupert Darwall lays responsibility for the beginning of this movement at the feet of the Germans and the Swedes.

In 1967, a Swedish scientist published the first ever “theory” on acid rain. Four years later, Bert Bolin, a Swede who would go on to chair the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), wrote the first-ever government report on acid rain.

It was a typical government report. Ninety pages long, it starts out with certainty: “The emission of sulfur into the atmosphere . . . has proved to be a major environmental problem.” Fifty pages later, however, Bolin admits to some doubt when he says, “It is very difficult to prove that damage . . . has in fact occurred.” Nevertheless, the government report concludes decisively, “A reduction in the total emissions both in Sweden and in adjacent countries is required” (emphasis added).

It was in Germany where environmentalists and antinuclear activists entered into holy matrimony. Scaling back on nuclear power, making life difficult for owners of fossil fuel power plants, and subsidizing unreliable and inefficient solar and wind farms has been Germany’s consistent policy in the decades since. The result has been skyrocketing energy prices and an increasingly unreliable electrical grid. German engineers—having designed a bit of redundancy into their system—had historically never had problems with their electrical grid. However, by 2012, the country experienced one thousand brownouts. In 2013, that number was up to twenty-five hundred, and it has continued getting worse since. As a result, Germany’s industrial base, always a world leader, has been sadly declining as businesses choose to leave the country in search of more reliable electrical pastures.

In 1988, the IPCC was established during a meeting in Geneva, presided over by many of the same characters who’d been leading Sweden and Germany’s environmentalist movements during the preceding decades.

One of the primary tasks assigned to the IPCC is to issue periodic “assessment reports” about the state of global climate change. These reports are hundreds of pages long and can be extremely technical. For attention-deficit-challenged politicians and journalists, these reports are issued with an accompanying summary. As a matter of routine, this summary mischaracterizes the substance and even the conclusions of the actual report. It is also regularly subjected to political meddling; for instance, when the IPCC issued its fifth assessment report in 2014, the German delegate to the IPCC insisted that language related to a pause or hiatus in the rise of global temperature be removed because “it would confuse German voters.”

Moreover, the leaders of the environmentalist movement have historically been wrong on just about everything. For laughs:

  1. 1989—the UN predicted that entire nations would be “wiped off the face of the Earth” by rising sea levels by 2000.
  2. 2006—Al Gore said humans may have only ten years to save the planet from “turning into a total frying pan.”
  3. 2018—Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez declared that the “world is going to end in twelve years if we don’t address climate change.”

Despite all this, the emotional pull of “save the world” propaganda remains powerful, and the environmentalist agenda marches on.

One of the biggest goals of this agenda has been to get us off fossil-fuel-generated electricity and onto wind-generated and solar-generated electricity. Admittedly, environmentalists have been extremely successful at installing large numbers of wind turbines and solar panels. They’ve been stunningly unsuccessful, though, in the pursuit of their primary goal of “getting us off” fossil fuels.

Despite massive growth in the generating capacity of wind and solar farms, fossil-fuel-powered electric plants remain an irreplaceable component of reliable electrical grids. Wind and solar power, as technology currently stands, cannot adequately substitute for power from fossil fuels. This is because wind and solar power suffer from the insurmountable problem of intermittency—wind turbines don’t work when it’s not windy, and solar panels don’t work when the sun’s not shining.

Some have suggested that we could build large-scale battery storage facilities that, on sunny or windy days, could be used to bank excess electricity for later use and thus overcome this problem. Elon Musk recently even floated the idea of building a large-scale battery storage facility powered by wind and solar farms. It was going to cost $5 billion, require more lithium batteries than currently exist in the world, and be capable of storing about five minutes of United States’ electricity demand. Large-scale battery storage is simply not yet viable.

Another fun fact about wind and solar power and battery storage is that storing electricity in batteries is ten thousand times more expensive than storing oil in tanks or coal in piles.

Wind and solar farms have clearly added nothing of value. But it’s worse than that—they actively work to our detriment. For an electrical grid to work reliably, the supply of electricity must be constantly equalized with demand. If power plants are generating more electricity than is demanded by consumers, the electrical grid can be overloaded, and critical infrastructure can be catastrophically damaged.

On the other hand, if supply is unable to keep up with demand, the result is blackouts and brownouts. To deal with this physical constraint, power plants have historically been designed to serve two complementary purposes: baseline-load generation and variable-load generation. Given that a certain amount of electrical demand can be taken as constant, baseline generators are designed to operate reliably and inexpensively to meet that demand. Spikes in demand are handled by variable generators.

Wind and solar power function as neither. As opposed to baseline-load or variable-load generators, wind and solar farms are random and unreliable generators of electricity.

It’s true that on sunny or windy days, they can produce massive amounts of electricity. The problem is that this drives up supply regardless of demand—so when demand is not sufficiently high to account for the power generation from wind and solar farms, variable-load and even baseline-load power plants must throttle down their power generation to protect grid infrastructure from overload.

For baseline-load plants especially, which weren’t designed to operate that way, the negative effects on maintenance and equipment lifetimes are significant. In real time, we are seeing the reliable portion of our electrical grid wearing out faster than it otherwise would.

The state of Texas makes the point. Texas holds the title of being the number one wind state in the US. For years, officials have been pouring billions of dollars into the installation of thousands of windmills across the state. To connect these wind farms to the grid required thirty-six hundred miles of transmission lines. Just the cost of those transmission lines was greater than $6.5 billion. The reliable portion of Texas’ electrical grid was starved for funds to pay for this political misallocation of resources.

As a result, routine maintenance has increasingly been ignored, and emergency maintenance has become more and more routine. When Texas was hit by a winter storm in the winter of 2021, it caused an unexpected increase in winter electric demand. Unfortunately, at the time, a number of critical power plants were down for emergency maintenance, the grid was unable to keep up, and hundreds tragically died.

As if all that weren’t enough, there is also the corruption and crony capitalism aspect of wind and solar. During times when wind and solar farms are ramping up supply, the wholesale price of electricity naturally falls. This leads to the owners of coal and natural gas power plants making very little money or sometimes even losing money on windy and sunny days.

On the other hand, because politicians want to force wind and solar power to work regardless of market realities, wind and power farm owners earn a subsidized rate for the electricity they generate regardless of the wholesale rate. Owners of wind and solar farms are therefore insulated from the consequences that their arbitrary and politically incentivized production of electricity has on the market.

To make this point one final way, in places where solar and wind power are pervasive, both the quality of the electrical grid and the cost of electricity rank poorly against places where solar and wind are scarce. Germany has increased its wind and solar generating capacity by thirteen times from 1999–2012; they’ve also recently announced the shutdown of their last nuclear power plant, and their cost per kilowatt-hour has risen to nearly fifty cents.

In the Carolinas, we pay between six and ten cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity. Households and business owners would no doubt be hard hit if their power bills were to increase by five to eight times. Unfortunately, that seems to be the direction we’re going. In North Carolina, we pay 18 percent more for electricity than do our neighbors in South Carolina, simply because North Carolina politicians insist on increasing solar production, while South Carolina remains primarily reliant on fossil fuel and nuclear power.

Certainly, there are very real problems related to the current state of things. However, the problem is not that we’re facing fossil-fuel-induced climate change so bad that drastic action is necessary to “save the planet.” Rather, the problem we’re facing is the reaction to this alarmism, which is leading to the degradation of the electrical grid we depend upon for our modern lifestyles.

A promising path forward in finding a solution to this problem is found in Alex Epstein’s great book Fossil Future.

His book’s overall thesis is that our strategy should be to pursue a change in rhetoric. To do this, we should frame our arguments about this issue from the standpoint of what is best for human flourishing.

On that front, he lays out three facts:

  1. Fossil fuels are a uniquely cost-effective source of energy.
  2. Cost-effective energy is essential to human flourishing.
  3. Innumerable  people are suffering and dying for a lack of access to cost-effective energy.

Therefore, rather than insist on working to scale back our consumption of fossil fuels, we should actively seek to increase it—especially in the poorest parts of the world.

Beyond this brilliant thesis, Epstein’s book is a fantastic scientific and historical refutation of all things environmentalist alarmism. Perhaps the best example of that is his demolition of Al Gore’s infamous “hockey stick” curve. First, he demonstrates clearly that Gore’s graph, which shows Earth’s temperature as being constant for centuries only to spike up since the Industrial Revolution of the 1850s, is false. Second, he demonstrates that there is a hockey stick curve that is true and that people should be stupefied by—the graph of human flourishing over time.

For centuries, human flourishing had been flat in terms of life expectancy, standard of living, access to electricity, and caloric intake. Only since the 1850s, when humanity started burning fossil fuels, has all of this changed. Since then, we’ve seen human flourishing—by any measure one would choose—spike up in exactly this same “hockey stick” fashion.

In conclusion, market economics leads to business owners making informed and calculated investments in things like LED lighting technology for purposes of raising their bottom line as well. Market economics will also lead to the development of a robust and reliable electrical grid. Political economics, on the other hand, leads to corruption, cronyism, an electrical grid on the verge of failure, higher costs of energy, and a top-down “solution” to a fake crisis that is causing diminished human flourishing.

Just like everything else, in the case of energy efficiency as well as energy production, it is best to trust the market.

This article originally appeared on Mises Wire.

Jared Wall
Jared Wall

Jared Wall is currently employed as a Sales Engineer working for Southpoint Solutions based out of Fort Mill, SC. Follow Jared at jaredwall.com where he shares semi-regular anecdotes from his decade+ career in energy efficiency via his email newsletter.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

Why Energy Is Becoming Less Reliable—and Less Affordable—All Around the World

Vintage Photos - Oestreicher (1205-1208)

See the previous post in this series here.

I had the opportunity to pick up a huge batch of slides a while back. These pictures span from as early as the late 1940s to as late as the early 1990s. These came to me second hand but the original source was a combination of estate sales and Goodwill. There are many thousands of these slides. I will be scanning some from time to time and posting them here for posterity.

Getting your pictures processed as slides used to be pretty common but it was a phenomenon I missed out on. However, my Grandfather had a few dozen slides from the late 1950s that I acquired after he died. That along with having some negatives I wanted to scan is what prompted me to buy a somewhat decent flatbed scanner that could handle slides and negatives, an Epson V600. It can scan up to four slides at a time with various post-processing options and does a decent enough job.

This set continues a large batch of slides that originally came from an estate sale and appear to have belonged to a locally well known photographer (or perhaps a friend or family member) from the Spokane Washington area and later Northern Idaho named Leo Oestreicher. He was known for his portrait and landscape photography and especially for post cards. His career started in the 1930s and he died in 1990. These slides contain a lot of landscape and portrait photos but also a lot of photos from day to day life and various vacations around the world. Here's an article on him from 1997 which is the only info I have found on him: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/1997/jan/04/photos-of-a-lifetime-museum-acquisition-of-leo/

Many of these slides have the date they were processed stamped or printed on them. I've found that in cases where I could verify the date that this date has typically been the same month the photos were taken. In other words, I expect that in MOST cases these photos were taken relatively near the processing date.

Click the link below to also see versions processed with color restoration and Digital ICE which is a hardware based dust and scratch remover, a feature of the Epson V600 scanner I am using. There are also versions processed with the simpler dust removal option along with color restoration.

The photos in this set appear to be much more recent than any of the others I have come across so far. I would say they are probably from the late 1980s or early 1990s based on clothing and the 35mm camera the woman on the left is holding in the second photo. The first photos feature a canon that I am guessing is from a civil war battlefield as the second photos is of a Confederate grave. I tried to read the name but I can't quite make it out. It looks something like Isaac J. Woweley but I'm certain the last name is wrong. The third photo shows someone swimming in a creek/river. I don't know where it was taken but it reminds me of a place I went to once in North Carolina. The final photo shows a man standing in from of some sort of informational display...probably about the Confederate graveyard or battlefield featured in the previous images.













The entire collection that has been scanned and uploaded so far can also be found here.