Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]
12
I always loved Saturdays. When I was a college student, quite improbably, my parents decided that I would be a “technical executor” of our family’s monthly budget. My family was part of the red bourgeoisie and we had enough, and probably more than enough, for a comfortable life; the life that today’s middle classes might find constrained and limited in income but attractive because of its security. What it meant was an apartment of 67 square meters, two bedrooms, enough money to go on a modest vacation once per year, very little money to travel abroad (because prices in Western Europe were a multiple of these in Yugoslavia, and one night in a hotel would cost a half of one’s salary), and enough to go to a restaurant once in a fortnight.
a year ago

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from Global Inequality and More 3.0

Capitalism of finitude: pessimism and bellicosity

Review of Arnaud Orain’s "Le Monde Confisqué"

a week ago 9 votes
The break-down of the representative system and the road to dictatorship

(on the example of Serbia)

a week ago 12 votes
Poison for the soul

Review of David Lay Williams’s “The Greatest of All Plagues”

a month ago 17 votes
Trump, the state and the revolution

To say that Trump in his new incarnation is different from the Trump No.

a month ago 17 votes
Gold, volk and IQs

Hayek’s fatal conceit

a month ago 21 votes

More in history

Africans in ancient Greece and Cyprus

Africans were already present on the European mainland by the time Herodotus —the so called father of history— wrote his monumental work, The Histories.

11 hours ago 3 votes
Vintage Architectural Stationery Vignettes

The images below are from Columbia University’s collection of commercial stationery, featuring architectural illustrations and gorgeous typography for factories, warehouses, mines, offices, stores, banks and hotels. Industries in this album of architectural stationery vignettes range from livestock, textiles, printing, roofing, and brewing to wagon works, cordage and merchandising.   Columbia’s Robert Biggert Collection of printed … Continue reading "Vintage Architectural Stationery Vignettes" The post Vintage Architectural Stationery Vignettes appeared first on Flashbak.

11 hours ago 1 votes
Weekly Wisdom Quiz

Aristotle and Happiness

9 hours ago 1 votes
Facts and Myths About Harriet Tubman

There are few Americans today who do not know the name Harriet Tubman. Famous for her work on the Underground Railroad, Tubman is a beloved historical figure of the Civil War era. Yet common knowledge about her and her work is plagued by half-truths and exaggerations. As historians have further researched Tubman, they have […]

yesterday 2 votes
Tolerance and terror

Reflections on ‘Reflections on the Revolution in Europe’, Part Seven

yesterday 2 votes