Archive for January, 2009

The Black Reading

the-black-book-of-communismThis is what I plan to read after I finish Eric Weiner’s “The Geography of Bliss” - a book about his own pursuit of finding the happiest places/people on earth…

It is 850 pages long, and as in Jeffrey Tucker’s shared review of the book,

” The historians writing in this 850-page book cover Lenin’s murders, Stalin’s Gulag, Mao’s Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge, and every other case of shocking crime and horror. [...]

They establish for all time that the machinery of communism is fueled by crimes, terror, and repression, and ends predictably in massacre.”

Gas crisis and monopoly profits

On Russia-Ukraine gas crisis via Reuters:

Russia accused its former Soviet neighbor of stealing about 15 percent the gas it ships across Ukraine to European states.

“Ukraine has stolen gas not from Russia, but from consumers who have bought the product and paid for it,” Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said in televised remarks late on Tuesday.

Ukraine’s pro-West President Viktor Yushchenko blamed Moscow for the supply disruptions, saying Moscow would continue to close the gas taps to Europe or stop them altogether.

Wait a second… it looks like Putin is the good guy, doing his poor customer countries in the region a favor by pointing out Ukraine’s theft. But wait another second, he didn’t stop at that, as I would have done if for example I had noticed someone stealing from my customer the merchandise he bought from me. No, Mr. Putin goes further with his “good” deeds, he punishes the thief, cutting off gas supplies. Fair enough if only, by doing so, he could have avoided punishing the victims.

Hence, Putin’s claim of working in Gazprom customers’ best interest cannot be faithful as it is doing far more harm then good (if any), but rather something else. Hmm, what would that be? Well,  Gazprom is a monopoly on natural gas on the European continent. This makes reducing its output very profitable and, thus, makes inventing reasons to brake any previous settlements (such as bilateral agreements) a political means to achieve new profits for Gazprom.