In my latest National Post column, I ask why Canadian women aren't trusted by the government to protect themselves.
Very interesting Washington Post piece about the security of the Internet and the "Internet of things" largely based on Linux, given the eccentricities of Linux' founder and the incentives that don't operate when people are giving stuff away rather than selling it. Read that alongside Ted Koppel's piece (in Thursday's National Post among other places) about the vulnerability of America's power infrastructure (and ours, I assure you) and you might well conclude with Woody that "This is the perfect time to panic."
But don't worry if you miss it. You'll get another chance.
In my latest Rebel video I talk about the invention and first use of the electric chair. https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=41&v=JNgnS1EsVwI
Ottawa is a strange place. But the trial of Mike Duffy is weird even by its standards, as I explain in C2C Journal in the only format that seemed suitable to the occasion.
In my latest National Post column I argue that people who believe in “evidence-based decision making” shouldn’t believe gun control would reduce the murder rate in the US or anywhere else.
Episode two of my "Reality University" podcast is now available, on Thomas Sowell's A Conflict of Visions and the deep intellectual roots of political disagreements. I'm pleased to say Reality U has hit the "New and Noteworthy" section of the iTunes store. So please tune in, turn on and drop in.
My latest Policy Options post asks what we are supposed to do if the Court gets it wrong. Answer: Nothing. And that's not a good response.
In my latest National Post column I criticize the notion that we can find the answers to moral questions in a math textbook.