Riku Sayuj’s Reviews > Drilling Down: The Gulf Oil Debacle and Our Energy Dilemma > Status Update
Riku Sayuj
is on page 117 of 251
Thanks to various films, our image of the Roman Empire is that it was immensely wealthy and powerful. In fact it was more like a third-world economy of today. Only a few people were wealthy and powerful, and only some major cities were opulent. Everyone else lived a hand-to-mouth existence, and many people were in danger of hunger.
— Nov 11, 2013 11:57AM
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Riku Sayuj
is on page 192 of 251
If fish were scientists, suggests our colleague T. F. H. Allen, the last thing they would discover would be water.
— Nov 11, 2013 01:44PM
Riku Sayuj
is on page 121 of 251
Diocletian introduced a silver-covered, copper coin, called follis. It started out weighing 10 grams, but quickly began to shrink in size. Roman emperors were often brilliant politicians and generals, but they were naïve economists. They did not understand that the amount of money in circulation affected prices. The continual debasements were inflationary, and the figures that have survived read like 1920s Germany.
— Nov 11, 2013 12:07PM
Riku Sayuj
is on page 48 of 251
Here is how to boil a frog. Place the frog in a pan of tepid water. Raise the temperature so gradually that the frog does not realize it is being cooked. It may even fall into a stupor, as a person might in a hot bath. Eventually it will die. According to experiments done in the nineteenth century, you can indeed boil a frog this way. Biologists today claim that you can’t. Either way, please don’t try it.
— Nov 11, 2013 11:32AM
Riku Sayuj
is on page 48 of 251
A quick Google search on January 14, 2011, yielded the following results: “global warming,” 23 million hits; “climate change,” 34 million hits; “Paris Hilton,” 37 million hits; and “iPod,” 262 million hits.
— Nov 11, 2013 09:24AM

