The Twentieth Century’s most benign leaders
Most people would agree on the Twentieth Century’s most evil leaders with relative ease. The benign ones are harder to agree upon.
We’re so glad Mike Berners-Lee has caught up with us on climate change
People should confront their family members who read news from “nefarious” sources, suggests the environmentalist Mike Berners-Lee.
Ooooh, gosh, isn’t the Prime Minister being manly. And tough!
Despite the frisson we all feel for the straight-talking from the toolmaker’s son.
The retirement age should be 80
There are things that are logically true and yet somewhat difficult politically. This is just another of those reasons why we’re not wholly enamoured with politics as a way of running things.
To explain that Ukrainian minerals deal
Ukraine is believed to have vast mineral reserves, including 19 million tonnes of graphite and a third of Europe’s lithium, both of which are used in batteries, as well as large deposits of rare earth metals, used to produce electronics used in everything from iPhones to fighter jets.
After the Rose Garden 7 - Defence
Trump and his crew have shone a harsh light on European defence, showing it up as dysfunctional, all the way from boots on the ground through budgets to production capacity.
Perhaps Net Zero simply isn’t worth doing?
Are there benefits to heading off climate change?
Revisiting the political cycle
It seems that the political cycle has changed. It used to be thought that after left-leaning governments had broken the economy by reckless spending, the UK public would elect right-leaning ones to fix it.
Another reason Gary Stephenson is wrong
In fact, another one of those reasons why everyone talking about the wealth distribution, wealth inequality, is wrong.
Time to look again at a flat tax in the UK
The ASI published ‘Flat Tax - the British Case’ by Andrei Grecu in 2004. It aroused much debate at the time and now, with the prospect of a radical incoming government, it is perhaps time the case was made again.
How does increasing trade barriers reduce food prices?
A landmark deal clinched between the UK and EU to remove checks on food exports will add £9bn to the UK economy and lower food prices, No 10 has said, as the last-minute agreement was secured early on Monday morning.
How to denannify the state
An incoming UK government that aims to reduce the nanny state of excessive government intervention in personal choices might pursue reforms in several key areas to roll it back.