UK: Healey resigns as defense secretary, accuses regime of not spending enough on military

Source: Independent [UK]

“John Healey has dramatically resigned as defence secretary, warning Sir Keir Starmer that his defence investment plan (Dip) ‘falls well short of what is required.’ His shock resignation comes amid mounting tensions within the Cabinet over the publication of the long-delayed plan, which will set out how new equipment and defence infrastructure will be funded in the next decade. In his resignation letter to the prime minister – which he said he ‘never expected to write’ – Mr Healey accused Sir Keir and the chancellor of having been ‘unwilling to commit the resources that the nation needs to defend the country at this time of rising threats.'” (06/11/26)

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/john-healey-resigns-defence-secretary-spending-plan-latest-news-b2993909.html

The Smartphone, A Modern Miracle of Free Trade

Source: Cobden Centre

“This speech was given at the Beurs van Berlage, which was built as the Amsterdam Stock Exchange more than a century ago. Amsterdam was a pioneer of free trade and free enterprise for centuries. One of the companies [Max Rangeley] discussed was ASML, a Dutch company that is arguably the most important in the world right now for microchip fabrication, having pioneered extreme ultraviolet lithography, which enables intricate nanoscale manufacturing.” (06/11/26)

https://www.cobdencentre.org/2026/06/speech-in-amsterdam-the-smartphone-a-modern-miracle-of-free-trade/

An Unwarranted War, a Global Economic Drag

Source: Antiwar.com
by Dan Steinbock

“When the US-Iran conflict escalated earlier this year, the immediate concern centered on oil prices and the Strait of Hormuz. But the real danger was never confined to crude oil. The crisis has evolved into a broader energy, logistics, fertilizer, food and financial shock. What began as a regional conflict has become a structural drag on the global economy.” (06/11/26)

https://original.antiwar.com/dan_steinbock/2026/06/10/an-unwarranted-war-a-global-economic-drag/

Yes, I Will Be Watching Every Minute of FIFA’s $11 Billion Heist

Source: Persuasion
by Quico Toro

“What if your favorite thing in the world was in the hands of a ghoul? Like the damsel in King Kong’s hand, the FIFA World Cup is a thing of rare beauty in the grip of a monster. The tournament is disfigured by its prefix: FIFA, football’s cartoonishly evil world governing body, a cartel of such rapacious vice its perfidy almost — but never quite — obscures the luminescent glory of el mundial. … Every four years, the World Cup plants a flag in my life, transforming the boring middle-aged fart I’ve become back into the awestruck eight-year-old with a heart broken at the hands of Paolo Rossi.” (06/11/26)

https://www.persuasion.community/p/yes-i-will-be-watching-every-minute

Politics never does kill what doesn’t work, does it?

Source: Adam Smith Institute
by Tim Worstall

“Global Witness is telling us all that the things put in place to make sure that coltan (columbo-tantalite, a source of tantalum for mobile phone capacitors) does not come from slave driven mines aren’t working …. We agree, slave driven mines are a bad thing. It’s just that this problem was brought up before and a solution imposed. We disagreed with the solution imposed at the time as well, while Global Witness, Global Justice Now and the like all argued, vociferously, for that solution to be imposed. … In normal life something that’s an abject failure stops being done. In politics abject failure just carries on to the impoverishment of everyone — costs imposed that achieve nothing.” (06/11/26)

https://www.adamsmith.org/blog/politics-never-does-kill-what-doesnt-work-does-it

Adam Smith Warned of (Almost) Everything Wrong With US Trade Politics Today

Source: The Dispatch
by Scott Lincicome

“In the early days of the republic (back when government was really small), tariffs were the primary means of both raising revenue and doling out ‘rents’ to businesses that organized and lobbied for them. The wonderfully named Tariff of Abominations (1828) was heavily influenced by Northern textile and iron producers. The post-Civil War decades were a golden age of tariff rent-seeking, with the U.S. iron, steel, wool, and sugar industries essentially writing U.S. tariff schedules. As I’ve documented at Cato and as Dartmouth economic historian Douglas Irwin thoroughly chronicles in his great book, Clashing Over Commerce, 19th-century tariff lobbying was in many respects an incubator for the entire U.S. lobbying and interest-group machine that exists today. And it began because American trade policy was openly auctioned off to the highest bidder. Offer the rents, and the rents get sought.” (06/11/26)

https://thedispatch.com/newsletter/dispatch-markets/america-250-smith-wealth-nations/