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MONEY Are we getting to the point
where any mention of the word “stocks” makes you want to throw
up? An aversion so strong no ordinary person would go near them for the
rest of his natural life? We’re not there yet, I fear – but
that will be the bottom. In the meantime, the
President is doing the right things. Out of the crisis could come the
well-reasoned adjustments we should have made long ago. “And these
new priorities,” Paul Krugman writes
in the New York Times, “are laid out in a document whose clarity
and plausibility seem almost incredible to those of us who grew accustomed to
reading Bush-era budgets, which insulted our intelligence on every page. This
is budgeting we can believe in.” Even so, there will be a lot
of painful “dislocations” along the way. It’s one thing
to say we need fewer car salesman and more solar-panel installers; another thing
to lose your job selling Pontiacs and try to get one bolting panels to
roofs. For which you would need an entirely different skill set and wardrobe. There are no easy
answers. If you studied less hard or now work less hard than your
competition in China, say, it’s no longer a sure thing that you will live
ten times as well as he or she, even though by rights (isn’t it
our right?) you should. Ideally, this gap will be
narrowed as our competitors’ standard of living rises, not as ours
declines. And with the astonishing forward momentum of technological
progress – much of it made in the U.S.A. – that may in fact be what happens. Our
houses and cars may stop growing in size, or even shrink; but this may be
compensated for in other less energy- and materials-intensive ways. PAC MONEY This
lets you see what proportion of any Senator’s or Congressperson’s
funding came from Political Action Groups. Sort it any way you
like. It’s dramatic. Obama took no PAC money, but a
great many in Congress get more than half their funding from PACs. Not to say that the
corporations, industry associations, and non-profit groups that form PACs are
all evil by any means. Far from it. But is this really the best way
to finance elections? Clean
Elections are gaining traction in many states, and there is interest in
applying the public-financing concept at the Federal level as well (click here). COOL PREVIEW Sally
Holmes Holtze:
“Have you thought of keeping your page open when the user clicks on a
link? The way it’s set up now, it disappears.” ☞
You can fix this. Switch to the Firefox browser, as I now have with happy
results, and use the CoolPreview
add-on touted yesterday. Works nicely. THATCHERISM As recounted to, and then by,
Peggy Noonan : Margaret Thatcher held a
meeting with her aides and staff, all of whom were dominated by her, even
awed. When it was over she invited her cabinet chiefs to join her at
dinner in a nearby restaurant. They went, arrayed themselves around the
table, jockeyed for her attention. A young waiter came and asked if
they'd like to hear the specials. Mrs. Thatcher said, "I will have
the beef." Yes, said the waiter.
"And the vegetables?" "They will have beef
too." CFL’s
versus LED’s (versus INCANDESCENTS) Click here.
The LED lasts six times as long as a CFL and uses even less energy, generates
less heat. But it costs way more (“and to my nephews, Brendan,
Timothy, Darius, Mackenzie, Edward, Christopher, and Patrick, I leave my seven
LED light bulbs”), so they provide the best return on investment in areas
of high electric rates. And down south, where you never really want heat
from light bulbs, even in the winter. (Does anyone know how much
energy and environmental destruction goes into making an expensive LED
bulb versus a CFL?) TEPID FILTH -
II Pieter Bach: “[You were
unenthusiastic about the Japanese practice of washing their clothes in old bath
water.] I’m sure you’ll hear from many others [I did! I
did!], but have you forgotten that in Japan it’s expected that you will
scrub (yes, scrub) yourself vigorously and thoroughly in the shower at
least once before you even think about sinking into the bliss of the
furo? Re-using the bath water has been traditional in Japan for
centuries. In addition to laundry, it’s also used to dust and
polish furniture and to wash the few areas of solid wood flooring in
traditional houses.”
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