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After Democratic activists stalked Sinema, one activist remarked, 'Not being able to pee in peace is a reasonable consequence for betraying democracy.'
held this summer in Spokane. Canning
’s colleagues this article.
It is with great sadness that we inform you of the passing of Paul Canning ’71 MA, associate professor of history at UConn Hartford. He spent the last week in hospice with his partner and children.
A specialist in Irish and British history, Canning was the author of several articles and
British
Policy Towards Ireland, 1921-1941, an insightful study of the aftermath of the independence of the Republic of Ireland.
After teaching at Gonzaga University in Washington and Marymount University in Virginia, he returned to UConn as a faculty member in the fall of 1985, and taught for 35 years at UConn Hartford.
WeblogBahamas.com
by Peter T. Bauer (Lord Bauer) (1915–2002)
Thursday, December 1, 1966
This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.
Foreign aid is clearly not a necessary condition of economic development. This fact is obvious from the history of the developed countries, all of which began poor and have invariably progressed without government-to-government aid. It is clear also from the history of many underdeveloped countries Hong Kong, Japan, Malaya which have advanced in recent decades without foreign aid.
Nor is foreign aid a sufficient condition of economic advance or even a generally effective force in its promotion. Indeed, its failure to advance living standards in poor countries after more than a decade of its operation is recognized in current discussions which emphasize the continued low living standards in the recipient countries and insist on the need for indefinite continuation of aid at present or higher leve