Are these two news items related? You decide:
Tag Archives: economy
Balsa Struts and Tissue Paper
Have you ever created a reason to walk door-to-door, meeting your neighbours, greeting strangers who have internal imagery that defines their perfect center of the universe in domiciles that may or may not define domestic bliss?
In my door-to-door adventures, I asked for Halloween candy; have sold: raffle tickets for junior high school sock hops, desk lamps and other catalog items for Cub/Boy Scout projects, candles and oranges for high school marching band trips, mini-encyclopedias for college spending money; delivered free telephone books; taken survey information for the 2010 U.S. Census.
In the forty or so years of these face-to-face encounters, I have seen houses full of African violets, mobile homes full of marijuana plants, dog/cat feces all over the floor, spotlessly-clean living rooms (implying there was little in the way of living going on in them), ethnic diversity in areas where homogeneity was most coveted, souvenir dinner plates covering walls, people answering the door in a variety of [un]dress and people being as quiet as they can, refusing to open the door.
Do you know the official history of the spot where you call home, even if it’s a carpark where your Travelers’ caravan sits temporarily?
I am a vagabond of thought patterns, meandering from place to place, committed neither to one thought pattern nor another, aware of the vanity that goes with believing any one thought set is a permanent solution to anything in particular.
I have a childhood drawing with three names on the bottom: Rick Hill, Jeff Garwood and Suzanne Trimble. I guess the drawing was made sometime between the third and sixth year of primary school.
I know the first person very well, have lost touch with the second person and the third person is about to spend seven months in Germany for reasons unknown to me.
However, these three people well represent the types of people I met in my door-to-door wanderings as a child encouraged to impress himself upon his neighbours to exchange labour credits/money for goods/services.
I painted houses, mowed lawns, raked leaves and helped friends in their newspaper delivery routes to provide myself the economic power to participate in the local marketplace during my teenage years.
I suppose children are still providing these services to put spending money in their pockets and deposits in their bank accounts, a few of them buying stamps, comic books, dolls or other collectibles and/or government savings bonds and company stock for investments.
Broken-balsa-wood-and-torn-tissue-paper windup-rubber-band-powered airplanes sit atop dusty stacks of books around me.
A rusty model rocket launch pad rod sticks up out of shopping bag labeled “CIRCUSWORLD TOY & VIDEO CENTER.”
A telescope points toward the ground.
On a pile next to me rests a wire kitchen strainer once used as a parabolic wireless network signal concentrator/reflector.
These items serve as keys or bookmarks for memory locations inside my body.
The generic brick-and-mortar, vinyl-sided, stacked-box objects we call home serve as memory locations for inhabitants, too.
A cave or a bamboo hut.
An adobe hacienda or stone castle.
We are rarely aware of the network of memory locations within us that are triggered by external objects like our homes and their contents.
Is your home rich with memories, both good and bad?
Or, like some of the sterile environments I observed when going door-to-door, is your home mostly unused, filled with objects about which you have little memory recall, the TV and computer serving more as an extension of your thought set than the furniture and facsimile paintings on the walls?
A fellow blogger posted that her friends find her boring. It’s a matter of perspective. How imaginative is the thought set of the blogger? How rich are her memories of growing up?
The Internet has opened the gates that once allowed only the most persistent, imaginative people to appear in mass media.
Now, everyone with a computing device (computer, tablet or mobile phone) can appear in a one-person off-Broadway autobiographical show — a slice of life with no beginning or end, no plot, no climax, just a character carrying on about whatever it is that character wants to put on display.
Liberté, égalité, fraternité. E pluribus unum.
On a side note, is it just me or does the US FTC (Federal Trade Commission) emblem look like the mask that some of the global protestors have been wearing?:
LiFePo4
Thinking about Maslow’s hierarchy of needs today, comparing individualistic versus collectivist societies.
And then, remembering the kid on the playground who ended the game by saying, “It’s my ball and I’m going home,” while reading about the U.S. and Iran trading words over a no-longer flying electronic gizmo called a drone.
Will Brazil clear the Amazon rain forest in my lifetime?
Will governments shrink as retirement/pension plans are taken away from workers, thus decreasing the desire of people to get quasi-guaranteed-for-life government jobs? How will decreased tax revenues (a/k/a redistribution of wealth) change sociopolitical behaviour in the longterm? Is there a destabilising effect by fewer government bonds being issued?
Should the leaders of MF Global be hung by their short and curlies as a lesson to everyone else who says, “Well, sure, I was the head of the company — ‘the buck stops here’ and all that — but I’m just there as a leech to earn a big salary, using my face recognition as a selling point. I have no idea what I’m doing and certainly don’t know what’s going on in the company. I use coded words and phrases all the time — management doublespeak — how am I supposed to know which code words or phrases are actually interpreted and implemented by my employees?”?
Is there a tipping point in biodiversity for our species? Do we really want to find out?
What is the economic impact of Burt Rutan’s new venture?
Insects fly past the window.
A solar cell charges a battery on the front deck.
How many times have you gone out on a date with someone you met via an e-dating site and the date tells you, after meeting you in person, “Oh, well, I’m really serious about someone else”? We use coded words and phrases all the time. It’s up to us to figure out how to change our tactics/behaviour to hear different words and phrases the next time. Remember, insanity is hearing the same thing over and over and expecting to hear something different even though you haven’t changed.
Thanks to Garrett, Linda, Tiffany and Heath at Cracker Barrel; Batteries Plus; Sophie’s link to a Simple Guide to Having Fun; those who don’t use mobile phones, the Internet or electronic social networks.
Time to have fun away from the computer-connected global subcultural meme set. I assume the freedom of the Internet will be here when I get back.
Oh, and hey, be careful out there when buying Chinese real estate — the price of nest eggs in China DOES have an effect on you right now. Somehow, I feel like I’m repeating myself, repeating myself, myself, myself, self, my, oh my…
Putin, you are a…
…wait, where was I? Oh yeah, your chart for the day.
A Return On The Return To Form
The band of merrymakers is about to perform.
In other words, the associates, business colleagues and computer programmers have put their heads together to coalesce, creating a cohesive network of states of energy that no longer needs any one supercomputer to set forth a future worth living within.
It is now the network of predicted futures that operate our network.
It is the anticipation of input from subnetworks which predict their own futures (that is, subsubcultural meme set projections) that drive our progress out of this moment and into the next.
It is not what is happening now that is happening now; rather, what is happening later is happening now.
The Book of the Future is twisted within its own point along its Mobius strip of a point in irreducible place and motion (that is, time).
With that said, the view from the future says that the conflict between the EU bureacracy and the EU members’ citizens is inconceivably unfixable, not unifiable.
Therefore, the way the US Fed monetary solution was implemented is not the same as the way the EU will reconfigure itself.
What is hidden will remain hidden in order to be revealed through innuendo.
To create a superculture, one need not look at past economic pastoral settings.
The EU is dissolved by being absorbed into the greater good.
Boundaries are illusions.
Beliefs are ephemeral.
Myths and legends are universal, within a few thousand years of constant repropagation.
Natural history is the clue you’ve been looking for.
Humour is the key and the keyhole.
You determine the cypher, the character monogram, and the lock, the protection mechanism, to be broken.
Royal decree is a form of indignation, is it not?
Take nothing for granted, granite included
If I knew that our solar system was packed with living things (at least in the way we choose to define the term “living”), would I feel as compelled as I do to encourage us to devote xx.xx% of our resources toward populating the cosmos with living things from Earth?
The WordPress front page displayed a link to a blog entry titled, “Off the Couch and Into the Streets.” Rarely do I feel compelled to comment on a blog entry but I added one to Coleen’s:
Your blog entry popped up on the front page of WordPress, and the title “Off the couch and into the streets” caught my attention because I’m looking for a fun way to lose some extra weight. Thus, my expectations were different than you might have expected when you wrote this blog entry.
The Occupy [your locale] movement, Arab Spring, and any/all protestations against the common/established social structure are perennial, which usually fall under the label “counterculture.” I encourage you to feel and act differently, supporting your subcultural beliefs no matter how much you may feel crushed/oppressed by the common culture under which you live and socialise.
Having grown up during the 1960s global counterculture movement, my perspective, as a child at the tailend of the Baby Boomer generation, has taught and continues to teach me that those who protest will encourage others to act in less obvious, newsworthy manners, to effect longterm change.
I’m glad you have a job which gave you the flexibility and courage to join those who wanted to voice their displeasure with the current state of our common culture [one] day on the streets of Denver. Hopefully, through your job and with your friends, you can be the change you want to see today and into the future.
How do we express ourselves daily? In other words, do we carefully consider the words we use in social exchanges?
Saying I am the “99%” or I am the “1%” or any other label automatically establishes an artificial barrier.
Reminds me of taking the Myers-Briggs personality profile test as a requirement of working in a certain department at a company full of a variety of personality types, including conformists and nonconformists. After taking the test and, with another person who had gotten the same personality profile, saying that the test results were bogus, was informed that those who received that particular personality profile were prone to say the test results were bogus.
I feel the same way about the Occupy movement. The participants brag about how diverse and unlabelable they are — yet, they quickly chant about the “99%” and the “1%” without blinking a self-conscious inner eye.
Another commenter said, “It’s like telling a child “You just like to argue” and the child keeps saying “Nuh uh!”.” The same goes for those who are being labeled by the diverse Occupy movement participants.
To be frank, when I hear the Occupy movement chants through mass media soundbites, all I can think is, “Well, what if I’m one of the 1%? So what? Didn’t I earn my place in this financial position by saving (using the old adage of “pay yourself first”) and spending wisely? Sure, some of my Nike shoes or my wife’s Kathy Lee Gifford designer clothes were made using kids paid ‘slave wages’ but I stopped buying those items after I found out about their manufacturing sources. The University of Oregon and Stanford University, home to some students who have protested, didn’t refuse Phil Knight’s donations nor did the students refuse to attend those universities. Regis Philbin, a person apparently beloved by many, didn’t stop being Kathy Lee Gifford’s friend. I don’t have all the time in the world to investigate the raw material source and manufacturing location of every item I buy but will make reasonable changes when I find out. Some parts of me are just as susceptible to instant gratification and buyer remorse as anyone else in the 1% or 99% (i.e., all seven billion of us).”
That’s why using or not using labels is important to me. Also why I lump us all together into the label of “seven billion of us.” We’re in this thing as one. One planet, one global infrastructure, one solar ecosystem.
How do we train ourselves and one another to seek rewarding goals that limit destructive and detrimental effects on others, regardless of our entrenched differences?
This time of year, I look out the window and bare trees expose the view of row after row of shingled suburban rooftops.
The mortgage on my house has been paid off. The majority of mortgages for the rooftops out there are probably still being paid for.
Shall I blame or thank the finance/banking industry for suburban sprawl that makes my skin crawl?
Shall I adjust my view to show myself the people occupying those suburban boxes are paying taxes that support the roads that allow me to drive to unoccupied parks and forests set aside for my enjoyment via local/state/national proclamation and financial support?
If, as one person said, the rich have enough money to pay for half the population to control/kill the other half, where does that put me?
Well, I know where it puts where I want to be. I want to be one of the rich and when I get there, I don’t want to have to redistribute my wealth unnecessarily. I admit I like having the total population of my species at my control. I want to be Phil Knight and say, “Yeah, so what if my products have been made in sweat shops? My personally-directed donations are creating a whole new crop of those who will rule from the top”. If I’m going to be labeled as part of the 1%, I want to be Bill Gates, Carlos Slim, Pierre Omidyar or Vladimir Putin, not a homeless person as part of the poorest 1%.
Tiny leaves float through the air outside the window. A woodpecker hops up and down tree limbs, presumably looking for hidden insects to munch upon.
Both public and private money has given me the time to sit here and make these comments. It’ll take 100% of us to improve our conditions, if we so choose.
Yes, our global economy is not perfect and never will be perfect. It displays characteristics of both an open and a closed-loop system, subject to the advantages and disadvantages of each.
Can we show how unselfish we are and share our wealth, of knowledge and financial gains, accordingly, while some of us compete against each other in the chess game of life to make things better for our descendants?
Live happily in the fact that today’s 1% will not be tomorrow’s 1% nor will today’s 99% be tomorrow’s.
If you don’t like what’s going on, take the opportunity to change it. If you don’t like accumulating massive debt to pay for a college education, find a company that’ll hire you for your current skills/talents despite the lack of a diploma. I did. But I eventually got around to completing a bachelor’s degree just to prove I can (and got my company to foot the bill – hey, I wasn’t born yesterday – which set me up for a career ladder promotion that wasn’t interesting to me, but that’s another story).
Nothing is set in stone, except perhaps your date of death, and even that fades with time and exposure to the elements.
Think the members of the U.S. Congress who sit on a supercommittee can cut over $1T from the U.S. government budget and make everyone happy? Wanna make a bet?
If it was me, I’d spread the cuts proportionally to those who are expected NOT to vote in the next election. Hey, it’s only fair, is it not? The U.S. is a democratic republic where lawful citizens have the right to participate in electing legislative, executive and some judicial representatives. Those who choose not to participate, or vote, get less of the government pie to eat – isn’t that one of the tales we learned in kindergarten?
We’ll see what we see when the time comes…
Owned? Pwned?
We are no longer free beings – we are robots beholden to the banking industry – a translation from today’s issue of Le Monde:
Goldman Sachs, the link between Mario Draghi, Mario Monti, and Lucas Papademos
LEMONDE.FR | 14.11.11 | 6:57 p.m. • Updated 14.11.11 | 7:16 p.m.
London correspondent – have in common Mario Draghi , Mario Monti , and Lucas Papademos ? The new president of the European Central Bank, the Chairman of the Board appointed the new Italian and Greek Prime Minister belong to varying degrees to the “Government Sachs” European. The U.S. investment bank has indeed woven in Europe a unique network of influence for ages sedimented through a dense network, such as underground public.
In any contest, you need a hierarchy. The first prize went to Mario Draghi, of course, vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs in Europe between 2002 and 2005. Named a partner, he is responsible “companies and sovereign.” In this way , one of the missions is to sell the financial product “swap” to cover a portion of sovereign debt, which helped make up the Greek accounts. Then Mario Monti, advisor International since 2005. Came third Lucas Papademos, who comes to be appointed prime minister of Greece, who was Governor of the Central Bank Hellenic between 1994 and 2002, who participated in this respect to the operation of faking accounts perpetrated by GS. The manager of the Greek debt is also a Petros Christodoulos , a former trader for the firm.
Two other trucks take the upper hand in the defenestration of the euro, Otmar Issing , former president of the Bundesbank and Jim O’Neill, the inventor of the concept of BRICS, the acronym for emerging markets with high potential growth (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). Former president of Goldman Sachs International where he remained a director, Irishman Peter Sutherland has played a key role in the rescue of Ireland. Finally, Paul Deighton , who spent 22 years at Goldman Sachs, is executive director of the organizing committee of the London Olympics in 2012. The red lantern because everyone knows that sport is like friendship standout.
Yet, beyond appearances, the network of influence that has made its power before or during the political turmoil in financial 2008 has lost its effectiveness. Indeed, the old accomplices maintained by the former senior central bankers mobilized to pull the strings appear to be less useful against politicians sensitive to the unpopularity of financial professionals held responsible for the crisis. Where Goldman Sachs could easily exert his talents, a series of cases – Greece, speculation against the Euro, the Abacus scandal which was involved the French goldmanien Tourre – put him back in the public.
The address book is useful but not sufficient by itself a complex and technical financial world and facing a new generation of industrial least steeped in respect for the establishment. The European managers set out to conquer the world have emancipated the Crusaders of high finance style Goldman Sachs. The quest for value of the shareholder, the requirements of transparency of accounts and the imperatives of foreign expansion blunt the “network effect”. Finally, become more demanding about the quality and independence of business consulting, European customers, but not limited to requiring compliance with a minimum of ethics.
And that’s where the rub about Goldman Sachs. Because the bank likes to put his men never let down the mask. That is why his henchmen hide this relationship when they give an interview or conduct an official mission (as was the case of Monti who has been entrusted in 2010 a study on the single European market by the President of the Commission, José Manuel Barroso).
Mario Draghi asserts that took office in 2002, it had nothing to see with makeup accounts Greek orchestrated two years earlier by the bank. And resigned in 2005, one year before Goldman Sachs sell a part of the “swap” in question to the National Bank of Greece, the first commercial bank in the country, headed by a former Goldmanien, Petros Christodoulos today head of the agency managing the Greek debt.
Marc Roche
Two data points
Can you figure out how these two connect?:
- Carbon-based lifeforms using carbon – gee, who’d have thought of that?
- Is joblessness really the issue here?
Should Michael Bloomberg be cast in the remake of a movie that starred Paul Giamatti?
Do Italy and Greece matter when analysing the LHC test results?
When was the last time you paid attention to what’s going on in the Outback or Siberia?
Did you calculate the miniscule effect of YU55 on the orbits of Earth and the Moon?
How…
Five data points, this time
I’ll leave it up to you to connect the dots:
When you need an excuse, any excuse will do.

