а можно подробнее и поконкретнее почему он куку? биография вполне, книжки пишет и их издают, награды, журналистская карьера... куку пока не просматривается...Hairy Potter писал(а):Так чувак этот куку на всю голову. Его статьи только conspiracy fringe сайты перепостят. Мусор писать дело не хитрое.Биркин писал(а):ага, а совспорт вы пошлете нах как пропутинскийHairy Potter писал(а):Мы буржуазным источникам не верим. Где гарантия, что это не заказная статья от дяди Сэма?Биркин писал(а):Автор - Пол Крейг Робертс, его еще отцом рейганомики называют тк он был в администрации Рейгана замсекретарем по экон. политике. Без обходных маневров называет Штаты главным виновником украинской ситуации. Статья написана 14 февраля, до текущего обострения
Давайте газету "Правда" или на худой конец "Советский Спорт", что-ли...![]()
Удобно! зачем вообще что-то читать, думать и искать аргументы за или против если можно все что не нравится в топку - и правых и левых
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Craig_Roberts
He is a former editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal, Business Week, and Scripps Howard News Service. He has testified before congressional committees on 30 occasions on issues of economic policy.
From 1975 to 1978, Roberts served on the congressional staff. As economic counsel to Congressman Jack Kemp,[4] he drafted the Kemp-Roth bill (which became the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981). He played a leading role in developing bipartisan support for a supply-side economic policy.[3] Due to his influential 1978 article on tax burden for Harper's,[5] while economic counsel to Senator Orrin Hatch,[6] the Wall Street Journal editor Robert L. Bartley offered him an editorial slot. He wrote for the WSJ until 1980.[7] He was a senior fellow in political economy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, then part of Georgetown University.[4]
From early 1981 to January 1982, Roberts served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy. President Ronald Reagan and Treasury Secretary Donald Regan credited him with a major role in the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, and he was awarded the Treasury Department's Meritorious Service Award for "outstanding contributions to the formulation of United States economic policy."[3]
Roberts resigned in January 1982 to become the first occupant of the William E. Simon Chair for Economic Policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, then part of Georgetown University.[8] He held this position until 1993. He went on to write The Supply-Side Revolution (1984), in which he explained the reformulation of macroeconomic theory and policy which he had helped to develop.
From 1993 to 1996, he was a Distinguished Fellow at the Cato Institute. He also was a Senior Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution.[3]
In The New Color Line (1995), Roberts argued that the Civil Rights Act was subverted by the bureaucrats who applied it. He thought it was being used to create status-based privileges and threatened the equality of the Fourteenth Amendment in whose name it was passed. In The Tyranny of Good Intentions (2000), Roberts documented what he saw as the erosion of the Blackstonian legal principles that ensure that law is a shield of the innocent and not a weapon in the hands of government.
Honors and recognition
In 1987 the French government recognized him as "the artisan of a renewal in economic science and policy after half a century of state interventionism"; it inducted him into the Legion of Honor on March 20, 1987. The French Minister of Economics and Finance, Edouard Balladur, came to the US from France to present the medal to Roberts. President Reagan sent OMB Director Jim Miller to the ceremony with a letter of congratulation.[3]
In 1992 Roberts received the Warren Brookes Award for Excellence in Journalism from the free-market American Legislative Exchange Council. In 1993 the Forbes Media Guide ranked him as one of the top seven journalists in the United States.[3]