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APEE Five-O

Here’s a pic of the FMAC contingent at the APEE in Maui:

Charles Johnson, Ross Kenyon, Roderick Long

Thanks to a last-minute program change, a number of would-be attendees thought our session was on a different day, so turnout was a tad thin. There was a bigger turnout for the Bastiat panel I was on.

After the conference I took a free day in Maui and another free day in Oahu.

My free day in Maui: In the morning I decided to drive from Lahaina to Kahului the “hard” way, around the bulgy northwestern shore. If I had realised just how rugged that road was, I might not have attempted it – but I’m glad I did. The cliffside road is narrow, steep, twisty, and in places one-lane (so when you meet another car you sometimes have to back up to the last place the road widened) and/or gravel. But absolutely spectacular views.

In the afternoon I drove up Haleakala, the volcano (not technically extinct, but inactive the past few centuries; the active ones are over on the Big Island, which I didn’t have time/money to visit) at Maui’s center. It’s 10,000 feet high – almost twice as high as Jerome AZ, where I was earlier last month – and you go from sea level to 10,000 feet in just about 39 miles. At the bottom it’s lush and green because it’s under the clouds all the time. Then you drive into the clouds, and the landscape becomes strange and mysterious while free-range cows saunter across the highway amid the swirling mists. Then you’re above the clouds, way above, like being in an airplane, and the terrain becomes desert-like because it gets so little rain, and the road keeps going up, incredibly, until at the top there’s an arid moonscape overlooking a massive crater, and the air is so thin you think maybe you are indeed on another planet, and the clouds are far, far below.

I didn’t take the following picture. I’ll upload my own pics later.

Haleakala

Later in the afternoon I took part of the Road to Hana, which is like the Lahaina-to-Kahului road I described above except less extreme. But I turned back before getting to Hana, because it was getting late and that’s not a road I fancied essaying in the dark.

On my free day in Oahu, I visited locations where my mother had lived in 1937-38, including Lanikai (near where Edgar Rice Burroughs lived a couple of years later; Burroughs even put Lanikai into one of his Martian novels). I didn’t take this pic of Lanikai either:

Lanikai

I also walked around downtown Honolulu and Chinatown, drove over the Pali and around Diamond Head, and had a mai-tai on Waikiki beach at the Royal Hawaiian.

I saw a car with an Idaho license plate. That must have been a tricky drive over.


Molinari Unbound!

[cross-posted at BHL]

I’ve contributed the opening essay to an exchange on “Gustave de Molinari’s Legacy for Liberty” at Liberty Fund’s new “Liberty Matters” forum.

Responses by Gary Chartier, Matt Zwolinski, David Friedman, and David Hart, and will be forthcoming in a few days, followed by exchange among the five of us.

Thanks to Sheldon Richman for arranging this!


C4SS Regenerates!

[cross-posted at BHL]

In honour of May Day, the website of the Center for a Stateless Society has just undergone a massive and beautiful redesign.

Here’s how the site looked when C4SS first launched in 2006.

Here’s how it looked last month.

And here’s the C4SS website today. Shiny!

The chief architect of the new site redesign is William Gillis, to whom shukrani sana.

If anyone feels moved to help C4SS out with donations, translations, or our new Into Libraries program, don’t be shy!


Don’t Tell Anyone About This, Because If You Do, You’ll Get Them Killed

A number and a flower

I’ve previously mentioned media critic Phil Sandifer, who since early 2011 has been blogging his way through every episode of Doctor Who (plus related phenomena) from 1963 to the present. (The reference to a “psychochronograph” in the recent Doctor Who episode “Hide” was a shout-out to Phil’s blog, which until recently was titled “TARDIS Eruditorum: A Psychochronography in Blue.”) He’s also been reworking the posts into chapters of a book series, the first three volumes of which (on the First, Second, and Third Doctors) have been published – though you might want to hold off on buying the first one, since a revised edition will be available soon.

For the last ten months Phil’s been valiantly slogging through the vast interregnum of novels, audioplays, and spinoffs (in other words, stuff I have no familiarity with) between the end of the classic series in 1989 and its revival in 2005. Now he has finally gotten to “Rose,” the first episode of the revived series, and has revamped the website for the occasion. Here’s the entry on “Rose.” Go read it! And here’s some background on “Rose.” Go read that too.


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