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Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Well, it certainly looked like Marx, didn’t it? Except for the technology part, that is. Maybe we can morph this into a discussion on how the various “schools” would interpret the present morass, meaning the Austrian, the Monetarist and the Keynesian.
I don’t have anything in terms of fake Ayn Rand quotes, but she was enjoying her day in the sun here on Piggington’s recently.
Or, you could hijack your own thread and we could talk about sharks again. Or the effects of the New Wave movement on musical stylings in the late 1970s and early 1980s and whether or not it sounded the death knell for old school Punk.
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Well, it certainly looked like Marx, didn’t it? Except for the technology part, that is. Maybe we can morph this into a discussion on how the various “schools” would interpret the present morass, meaning the Austrian, the Monetarist and the Keynesian.
I don’t have anything in terms of fake Ayn Rand quotes, but she was enjoying her day in the sun here on Piggington’s recently.
Or, you could hijack your own thread and we could talk about sharks again. Or the effects of the New Wave movement on musical stylings in the late 1970s and early 1980s and whether or not it sounded the death knell for old school Punk.
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Well, it certainly looked like Marx, didn’t it? Except for the technology part, that is. Maybe we can morph this into a discussion on how the various “schools” would interpret the present morass, meaning the Austrian, the Monetarist and the Keynesian.
I don’t have anything in terms of fake Ayn Rand quotes, but she was enjoying her day in the sun here on Piggington’s recently.
Or, you could hijack your own thread and we could talk about sharks again. Or the effects of the New Wave movement on musical stylings in the late 1970s and early 1980s and whether or not it sounded the death knell for old school Punk.
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Well, it certainly looked like Marx, didn’t it? Except for the technology part, that is. Maybe we can morph this into a discussion on how the various “schools” would interpret the present morass, meaning the Austrian, the Monetarist and the Keynesian.
I don’t have anything in terms of fake Ayn Rand quotes, but she was enjoying her day in the sun here on Piggington’s recently.
Or, you could hijack your own thread and we could talk about sharks again. Or the effects of the New Wave movement on musical stylings in the late 1970s and early 1980s and whether or not it sounded the death knell for old school Punk.
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Well, it certainly looked like Marx, didn’t it? Except for the technology part, that is. Maybe we can morph this into a discussion on how the various “schools” would interpret the present morass, meaning the Austrian, the Monetarist and the Keynesian.
I don’t have anything in terms of fake Ayn Rand quotes, but she was enjoying her day in the sun here on Piggington’s recently.
Or, you could hijack your own thread and we could talk about sharks again. Or the effects of the New Wave movement on musical stylings in the late 1970s and early 1980s and whether or not it sounded the death knell for old school Punk.
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Here is link to The Atlantic article by Megan McArdle identifying quote as a hoax (not Marx). Enjoy.
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/01/faux_marx.php
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Here is link to The Atlantic article by Megan McArdle identifying quote as a hoax (not Marx). Enjoy.
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/01/faux_marx.php
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Here is link to The Atlantic article by Megan McArdle identifying quote as a hoax (not Marx). Enjoy.
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/01/faux_marx.php
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Here is link to The Atlantic article by Megan McArdle identifying quote as a hoax (not Marx). Enjoy.
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/01/faux_marx.php
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Here is link to The Atlantic article by Megan McArdle identifying quote as a hoax (not Marx). Enjoy.
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/01/faux_marx.php
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Amazingly prescient quote, isn’t it? Interesting use of the word “technology” in a quote dated 1867. What sort of “technology” or “technologies” do you suppose Marx was referring to? Toaster ovens? BMW 5 Series autos? Laptops? You just don’t get the sense that the word “technology” is antediluvian when it comes to our favorite 19th century German econo-revolutionary.
I’d also be curious to see the cite specifying the page and paragraph where this quote is found in Das Kapital.
“Workers of the World Unite!”
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Amazingly prescient quote, isn’t it? Interesting use of the word “technology” in a quote dated 1867. What sort of “technology” or “technologies” do you suppose Marx was referring to? Toaster ovens? BMW 5 Series autos? Laptops? You just don’t get the sense that the word “technology” is antediluvian when it comes to our favorite 19th century German econo-revolutionary.
I’d also be curious to see the cite specifying the page and paragraph where this quote is found in Das Kapital.
“Workers of the World Unite!”
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Amazingly prescient quote, isn’t it? Interesting use of the word “technology” in a quote dated 1867. What sort of “technology” or “technologies” do you suppose Marx was referring to? Toaster ovens? BMW 5 Series autos? Laptops? You just don’t get the sense that the word “technology” is antediluvian when it comes to our favorite 19th century German econo-revolutionary.
I’d also be curious to see the cite specifying the page and paragraph where this quote is found in Das Kapital.
“Workers of the World Unite!”
Allan from Fallbrook
ParticipantDan: Amazingly prescient quote, isn’t it? Interesting use of the word “technology” in a quote dated 1867. What sort of “technology” or “technologies” do you suppose Marx was referring to? Toaster ovens? BMW 5 Series autos? Laptops? You just don’t get the sense that the word “technology” is antediluvian when it comes to our favorite 19th century German econo-revolutionary.
I’d also be curious to see the cite specifying the page and paragraph where this quote is found in Das Kapital.
“Workers of the World Unite!”
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