Archive for June, 2017

Albert Einstein’s Letters on God, Communism and Israel Go up for Auction – kgw.com


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Albert Einstein's Letters on God, Communism and Israel Go up for Auction
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Albert Einstein's Letters on God, Communism and Israel Go up for Auction. Letters signed by Einstein himself have gone up for auction and are expected to go for at least $20,000. Keri Lumm (@thekerilumm) has more about the fascinating correspondence.

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Albert Einstein's Letters on God, Communism and Israel Go up for Auction - kgw.com

Einstein’s Letters to David Bohn on Israel, God, and Communism Auctioned – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Photo Credit: Courtesy Winner's Auction

A collection of five letters dated 1951 to 1954 written by Albert Einstein to quantum physicist David Bohm is being auctioned next week by Winners Auctions in Jerusalem. Bohm was a colleague of Einsteins who fled to Brazil in 1951 to avoid testifying before the House Un-American Activities Committee.

According to Winners, the letters express Einsteins intimate views on God, McCarthyism and the fledgling Jewish State.

In one of the letters, Einstein writes that renowned Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyers remark is characteristic of the present mood in the US, and it reminds him of Germany during the reign of German Emperor Wilhelm II (who started WWI). Niemeyer, a declared Communist, sheltered some party activists in his office after they had been released from jail.

Einstein also notes in the same letter that he had recently published comments regarding the interpretation of theory in a volume published in Paris in honor of French physicist Louis de Broglie s sixtieth birthday, and in a number of pages in the Born volume, a copy of which he had sent to Bohm a week earlier.

In another letter, Einstein notes that he is happy to hear about developments in Bohms affairs and offers to help him however he can. He also writes that If God has created the world his primary worry was certainly not to make its understanding easy for us. Ive felt this strongly for fifty years.

A third letter, written in 1954, from Prof. Einstein to Prof. David Bohm discusses the frustration felt by isolated intellectuals, investment in research and development and employment opportunities for scientists in Israel.

In the typewritten letter, signed by Einstein with corrections in his handwriting, he discusses Bohms frustrations, specifically in regards to his stomach issues and the lack of an intellectual environment in Sao Paulo. Einstein empathizes with Bohms feelings and understands why Bohm is interested in moving: The first difficulty could be overcome by a reliable cook, but not the second one. Therefore I can understand now why you so eagerly wish to escape from there.

Einstein suggests that Bohm wait to receive Brazilian citizenship, because he does not foresee a quick change in the political approach to Bohm on the part of his native country, the US. Einstein suggests that a rule that applies to the stock market is also applicable to university life dont show that youre desperate for a position, so that your value doesnt fall in the eyes of the employer. What is offered for sale is falling in price, Einstein quips.

He also suggests that Bohm publish articles in the countries to which he is interested in moving. In regards to Israel, Einstein notes that Israel is an interesting, intellectual creature, but has limited opportunities. It would be a shame to move there with the intention of leaving at the first possible opportunity.

He also agrees with Bohms fears regarding Ireland. Therefore, despite Einsteins empathy with Bohms frustrations, he suggests that the best thing to do right now would be to wait patiently and enjoy life in Brazil as much as he can. Einstein is surprised that the Brazilian government is not making serious efforts to encourage higher studies which is an absolute necessity for the technological development of the country; in contrast with the Japanese approach of the 19th century.

Prof. David Joseph Bohm (1917-1992) moved to Sao Paulo, Brazil after being suspended from Princeton University and was appointed Head of Physics in Sao Paulo University. As Einsteins letter indicates, Sao Paulo lacked the intellectual environment appropriate for Bohms studies and he wished to leave the country. Despite Einsteins suggestions, Bohm moved to be a visiting Professor at the Technion in Israel, and two years later moved to England where he worked in the universities of Bristol and London.

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Einstein's Letters to David Bohn on Israel, God, and Communism Auctioned - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

University Starts ‘Marxist’ Class On Harms Of Capitalism, Ignores Communism Killed 100 Million – Fox News

By Ryan Girdusky, Red Alert Politics

The University of Wisconsin-Madison has decided to create an entire class about the harm and injustices created by communism throughout the 20th and 21st centuries.

Just kidding.

Instead, the college is creating a class about how capitalism generates harms and is irrational in ways that hurt nearly everyone, reported The College Fix.

Dr. Erik Olin Wright teaches the graduate course Class, State, and Ideology: An Introduction to Social Science in the Marxist Tradition, which instructs students how to challenge and eventually transform society.

It doesnt take an advanced masters degree to understand that the history of the world is harsh and brutal. Prosperity and wealth arent the status quo. However, they stem from the creation of free-markets, stable governments, law enforcement, and property ownership which have been very rare over the course of human history.

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University Starts 'Marxist' Class On Harms Of Capitalism, Ignores Communism Killed 100 Million - Fox News

Liberal Geographer: California is Descending into Socialism – Breitbart News

However, he warns, if California follows the socialist model preferred by its wealthy, liberal political class, it will have to expropriate that same elite to pay the cost, which fleeing middle class families cannot afford.

Kotkin writes:

The new consensus is being pushed by, among others, hedge-fund-billionaire-turned-green-patriarch Tom Steyer. The financier now insists that, to reverse our worsening inequality, we must double down on environmental and land-use regulation, and make up for it by boosting subsidies for the struggling poor and middle class. This new progressive synthesis promises not upward mobility and independence, but rather the prospect of turning most Californians into either tax slaves or dependent serfs.

[C]ombating climate change has become an opportunity for Brown, Steyer and the Sacramento bureaucracy to perform a passion play, where they preen as saviors of the planet, with the unlikable President Donald Trump playing his role as the devil incarnate. In following with this line of reasoning, Bay Area officials and environmental activists are even proposing a campaign to promote meatless meals. Its Gaia meets Lent.

To these burdens, there are now growing calls for a single-payer health care system which, in principle, is not a terrible idea, but it will include the undocumented, essentially inviting the poor to bring their sick relatives here. The state Senate passed the bill without identifying a funding source to pay the estimated $400 billion annual cost, leading even former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa to describe it as snake oil. It may be more like hemlock for Californias middle-income earners, who, even with the cost of private health care removed, would have to fork over an estimated $50 billion to $100 billion a year in new taxes to pay for it.

In the end, we are witnessing the continuation of an evolving class war, pitting the oligarchs and their political allies against the states diminished middle and working classes. It might work politically, as the California electorate itself becomes more dependent on government largesse, but its hard to see how the state makes ends meet in the longer run without confiscating the billions now held by the ruling tech oligarchs.

Read Kotkins full essay here.

Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He was named one of the most influential people in news media in 2016. He is the co-author ofHow Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.

P.S. DO YOU WANT MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS ONE DELIVERED RIGHT TO YOUR INBOX?SIGN UP FOR THE DAILY BREITBART NEWSLETTER.

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Liberal Geographer: California is Descending into Socialism - Breitbart News

The UK Election Means Voters Want Moderation, Not Socialism – The Federalist

The United Kingdom election returns had hardly begun coming in when conventional wisdom started to form. A day later, it solidified. The elections demonstrated the renewed vitality of hard Left, progressive politics in the English-speaking world.

Even if Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn had not exactly won, he had shown how the Left could win. He had road-tested the kind of politics Americans had seen at work last year in the Bernie Sanders campaign. And he had proven that style of politics would prevailif not this year, then surely in the near future.

There is a certain truth to this narrative. British Prime Minister Teresa May made a grave miscalculation, lost her majority in Parliament, denied herself another three secure years in power, and will probably be gone as prime minister by late summer. But a closer analysis of the election exposes significant flaws in the conventional narrative. American conservatives should indeed study the British election closely. They should not, however, be disheartened by it. It offers them valuable lessons on how to remain in power, and how to use the power they hold.

To begin with, its important to understand that while the British Conservative Party (the Tories) lost their majority in Parliament, they still remain in office and will likely continue to govern the nation. Before the election, they held an absolute majority in Parliament, of 331 seats out of 650. They lost 13 seats, dropping to 318, some eight votes shy of a majority.

But within a few hours, they began forming a coalition with a traditional ally, the Democratic Unionists (DUP) of Northern Ireland. That party won ten seats. The Tory-DUP alliance would thus control a majority of 328 of the 650 seats. To be sure, that majority is slender, and could suffer attrition as members of Parliament (MPs) died or left office. But a majority it nonetheless is. And it would permit May to retain her prime ministership and the Tory Party to rule.

Furthermore, Labours success should not be overblown. It remained well behind the Tories both in numbers of parliamentary seats (262 versus 318), and in the popular vote (roughly 40 percent to 42 percent). The Tories share of the popular vote actually climbed by more than 5 percent, although the Labour share increased by nearly 10 percent. Although Labour picked up a substantial net gain of 32 seats, its gains came at the expense, not so much of the Tories, as of smaller third parties, especially the Scottish Nationalists, who lost a net of 19 seats (of a previous 35) in all.

Even without further analysis, these results hardly suggest a massive rejection of the Conservatives. Rather, they indicate that Britain may be returning to something more like a two-party system, with smaller regional or special interest parties giving way to bigger parties that have broader, national appeal.

Labour also seemed to have made gains because Nigel Farages party, the UKIP, had disappeared. UKIP existed to promote Brexit. With that achieved, the party basically folded its tent. Forecasters had mistakenly predicted that UKIP voters would migrate to the Tories. But many did not, voting for Labour instead. That is crucial: it suggests that many pro-Brexit, nationalistic voters voted for Labour for economic reasons, given that Britains exit from the European Union seemed assured.

Here, then, is one important lesson for American conservatives: Do not count on retaining the loyalty of working-class voters in places like western Pennsylvaniaplaces that gave Donald Trump the necessary margin for victorywithout rewarding them on the bread and butter issues. In particular, American conservatives should be very wary of cutting health-care programs severely.

Labour made extremely effective use of the charge that May and her Tories were starving Britains national health-care system of funds. That charge resonated with aging working-class Britons who may well have supported UKIP or Brexit. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, the Labour Party, under leaders like Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, had snubbed and stiffed those voters. In that respect, they resembled our own aloof and arrogant Obamas and Clintons. But under Corbyn, Labour began to court these neglected, deplorable voters again with, it appears, a fair measure of success. Conservatives: Be sure that the Democrats have grasped that piece of Labours strategy, and beware of it.

British conservatives had absorbed that lesson even before the election, and they should pay even more attention to it in the aftermath. May was depicted as a Red Tory in large part because of her views on social welfare. She or her Tory successors will probably blush an even deeper red now. Voters who favor nationalist causes, like Brexit or Making America Great Again, value a robust nation-state, not only because it guards its borders jealously and protects its native working class from low-wage foreign-born competition, but also because its health care and social security programs shelter them from the worst ravages of (what Edward Luttwak calls) turbo-capitalism.

A turn to the center on social welfare issues would be very good for conservativism both in Britain and in this country. In Britain, it would mean the Tory Party would break even further with the economic policies of Thatcherism and continue its return to an older and deeper conservative tradition. That is the tradition associated with post-War Tory prime ministers like Harold Macmillan and, in the nineteenth century, Benjamin Disraeli.

In those periods, the Tories aspired to beand in fact weregenuinely the party of the nation as a whole, rather than (like Labour) of one particular class. Their leadership consciously sought to combine the dynamism, innovation, and risk-taking of capitalism with substantial protections for those most vulnerable to the dislocations and deprivations that unfettered capitalism inevitably causes.

In my opinion, that is the true and natural habitat of conservatism in any advanced modern society. And it is the kind that comes naturally to President Trump. To an extent almost wholly unrecognized by commentators, with the notable exception of Conrad Black, both Trump and his followers are moderates. Trump appears to recognize not only the political necessity of protecting core social programs, but also the social imperative for doing so. The deplorables are an essential part of the national community, and the nation needs to give them their due.

Finally, a word about the Ulster MPs on whom the Tories depend. These are not the anti-Catholic bigots of the past, even a past as recent as the 1980s. Their leader, Arlene Foster, is a young Protestant woman who has earned the praise of the UKs Catholic Herald, for her openness to Roman Catholics and her partys staunchly pro-life values. It is not altogether unimaginable that Foster could play a leading role in the next UK cabinet, or perhaps even become prime minister.

The Tories dependence on her party for remaining in power gives Foster extraordinary leverage. It may even be that the Britain that emerges from this election, while taking a more progressive tack in economics, will steer in a more conservative direction on social and cultural issues. Its not a bad combination for American conservatives to espouse.

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The UK Election Means Voters Want Moderation, Not Socialism - The Federalist