In Defense of Corporate Jets

Joe Nocera writes on Bloomberg.com that private jets have long been stand-ins for corporate indulgence: “Nothing looks more excessive and more plutocratic” than a CEO jetting around on a company plane–which means aircraft are “easy targets” when firms want to show shareholders they are cutting costs. Take General Electric. The Wall Street journal recently exposed […]

Life is One Drama After Another

From Richard Carlson’s Don’t Sweat The Small Stuff: Whenever we’re dealing with bad news, a difficult person, or a disappointment of some kind, most of us get into certain habits, ways of reacting to life—particularly adversity that don’t serve us very well. We overreact, blow things out of proportion, hold on too tightly, and focus […]

Royal Wedding, Monarchy-Mania, Trump and Political Dynasties

Theunis Bates, managing editor of The Week (issue date 01-Jun-2018) comments on the relevance of the British monarchy and prevalence of political families that have come to dominate American politics: I am a disloyal British subject. Some 29 million people on this side of the Atlantic woke up early last Saturday to watch Prince Harry […]

The Less-Bullish Case for Apple Stock

In the August 20, 2018, issue of Barron’s, Rupal Bhansali of Ariel Investments discusses why investors should not own the Apple stock: People think of Apple as the poor man’s technology stock. At 16 times forward earnings, it is cheap, compared with Facebook and Netflix. But Apple isn’t a technology company. It’s a consumer-electronics company, […]

Making Kombucha

Kombucha is a fermented, somewhat alcoholic, lightly effervescent, sweetened black or green tea beverage with alleged health benefits. From a profile of Health-Ade’s founder and CEO Daina Trout in Delta Airlines’Sky magazine of May 2018: The effervescent elixir is made from three ingredients—tea, water and sugar—plus a scoby, a starter culture. Trout uses a blend […]

John Adams and Thomas Jefferson: Comrades and Adversaries

In his review of Gordon S. Wood’s Friends Divided: John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, James Piereson writes in The New Criterion: And though they clashed spectacularly when they faced off as presidential candidates in 1800, that rocky period was bracketed by a fruitful alliance during the Revolutionary War era and a late-in-life reconciliation that carried […]

Fun Facts on Tea

From Delta Airlines’Sky magazine of May 2018: Approximately 92,000 pounds of tea were destroyed during the Boston Tea Party, the present-day value of which has been estimated to be around $1 million. Herbal teas aren’t actually teas but tisanes: infusions of seeds, berries, flowers, leaves and/or roots. When his hot tea didn’t sell at the […]

Harvey Weinstein, Complicity, and the Rules of the Game in Hollywood

Stephen Galloway of The Hollywood Reporter wonders if the Harvey Weinstein trial will shame Hollywood: Disgraced movie producer and accused serial sexual predator Harvey Weinstein is facing charges that could send him to prison for life, but his lawyers will try to put his many enablers and Hollywood itself on trial-and the results may be […]

Tolerance and the Homo Sapiens

Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari writes in his international bestseller Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, Tolerance is not a Sapiens trademark. In modern times, a small difference in skin color, dialect or religion has been enough to prompt one group of Sapiens to set about exterminating another group. Would ancient Sapiens have been more […]

Overthinking and Its Adverse Consequences

From Sonja Lyubomirsky’s excellent book The How of Happiness, Many of us believe that when we feel down, we should try to focus inwardly and evaluate our feelings and our situation in order to attain self-insight and find solutions that might ultimately resolve our problems and relieve unhappiness. Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, I, and others have compiled […]