Today
is a holiday.
But
just in case you came here from force of habit, let me tell you why last
week’s House and Senate votes – which put us on the cusp of allowing
gays and lesbians to die for their country (and to translate Arabic chatter) –
are relevant to remembering our fallen heroes.
The
people we honor today died to keep us free.
All
of us.
The
original – and truly revolutionary – notion being, in its purest
form (which we have yet fully to perfect), that we are all born equally
deserving of opportunity and respect, even if we’re black or white,
Catholic or Hindu, tall or short, male or female, gay, straight, or
transgender.
That
last – transgender – seems particularly foreign to most people, who
have no transgender relatives, pals, or co-workers. But once you do have
a few, guess what? Some are lovely and funny and you’re really happy
to see them. Some are obnoxious and boring and you’d just as soon
they sat at a different table. Just as with any other category of people.
Anyway,
tomorrow is the start of Gay Pride month. Here is how the President set
the frame:
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
May 28, 2010
LESBIAN,
GAY, BISEXUAL, AND TRANSGENDER PRIDE MONTH, 2010
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION
As Americans, it is our birthright that all people are
created equal and deserve the same rights, privileges, and opportunities.
Since our earliest days of independence, our Nation has striven to fulfill that
promise. An important chapter in our great, unfinished story is the
movement for fairness and equality on behalf of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender (LGBT) community. This month, as we recognize the immeasurable
contributions of LGBT Americans, we renew our commitment to the struggle for
equal rights for LGBT Americans and to ending prejudice and injustice wherever
it exists.
LGBT Americans have enriched and strengthened the fabric
of our national life. From business leaders and professors to athletes and
first responders, LGBT individuals have achieved success and prominence in
every discipline. They are our mothers and fathers, our sons and
daughters, and our friends and neighbors. Across my Administration, openly LGBT
employees are serving at every level. Thanks to those who came before us -- the
brave men and women who marched, stood up to injustice, and brought change
through acts of compassion or defiance -- we have made enormous progress and
continue to strive for a more perfect union.
My Administration has advanced our journey by signing
into law the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr., Hate Crimes Prevention Act,
which strengthens Federal protections against crimes based on gender identity
or sexual orientation. We renewed the Ryan White CARE Act, which provides
life-saving medical services and support to Americans living with HIV/AIDS, and
finally eliminated the HIV entry ban. I also signed a Presidential
Memorandum directing hospitals receiving Medicare and Medicaid funds to give
LGBT patients the compassion and security they deserve in their time of need,
including the ability to choose someone other than an immediate family member
to visit them and make medical decisions.
In other areas, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) announced a series of proposals to ensure core housing
programs are open to everyone, regardless of sexual orientation or gender
identity. HUD also announced the first-ever national study of discrimination
against members of the LGBT community in the rental and sale of housing.
Additionally, the Department of Health and Human Services has created a
National Resource Center for LGBT Elders.
Much work remains to fulfill our Nation's promise of
equal justice under law for LGBT Americans. That is why we must give
committed gay couples the same rights and responsibilities afforded to any
married couple, and repeal the Defense of Marriage Act. We must protect
the rights of LGBT families by securing their adoption rights, ending
employment discrimination against LGBT Americans, and ensuring Federal
employees receive equal benefits. We must create safer schools so all our
children may learn in a supportive environment. I am also committed to ending
"Don't Ask, Don't Tell" so patriotic LGBT Americans can serve openly
in our military, and I am working with the Congress and our military leadership
to accomplish that goal.
As we honor the LGBT Americans who have given so much to
our Nation, let us remember that if one of us is unable to realize full
equality, we all fall short of our founding principles. Our Nation draws
its strength from our diversity, with each of us contributing to the greater
whole. By affirming these rights and values, each American benefits from the
further advancement of liberty and justice for all.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United
States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution
and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim June 2010 as Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Month. I call upon all Americans to
observe this month by fighting prejudice and discrimination in their own lives
and everywhere it exists.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
twenty-eighth day of May, in the year of our Lord two thousand ten, and of the
Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fourth.
BARACK OBAMA
NBIX THE OPPOSITE OF BOREF
As you know, I like both these $4 stocks – albeit only
with money you can truly afford to lose. The difference (in my mind,
which shrinks with every passing year) is that BOREF is a lottery ticket whose
odds are 2 out of 3 of total loss – but 1 chance in 3 of an eventual 25-fold gain . . . high risk, sky-high return . . . whereas with NBIX
the odds of losing it all may be just 1 in 3, with a 2 out of 3 chance
of a triple or quintuple.
Note that if these pulled-out-of-the-air odds are fair
estimates (which there is no way of knowing), that still leaves nearly 1 chance
in 4 that both will fail. So even if both are smart bets to take
with money you can truly afford to lose, you really might lose that money.
Borealis has a whole portfolio of patents and a frozen wasteland
of alleged Arctic mineral wealth. But looking only at its WheelTug business, there’s growing
reason to think the technology can be successfully commercialized. One
can easily see how that success, if realized, could make Borealis worth $500
million, 25 times its current $20 million valuation (5 million shares at $4
each). Indeed, one could start dreaming much bigger – dreaming is
basically what Borealis management has been doing for the 11 years I’ve been
reading its projections – but I’m happy to start with a 25-fold
gain.
As to the downside, I’ll admit that, in my heart of
hearts, I assume there will always be some value, and some hope
in this speculation. So maybe you really wouldn’t lose everything
if you went to sell your 200 shares – some fresh speculator might be
willing to pay a few bucks for the dream just as you are finally giving up.
But the downside is certainly real. For one thing, it appears
there are powerful players out there not keen to see WheelTug succeed, whether
because they hope to reap the profits themselves (did Antonio Meucci or Elisha Gray want to see
Alexander Graham Bell succeed?), or because they hate not having come up with
the solution themselves, or perhaps even because – by extending the life
of aircraft engines and decreasing the number of incidents of “foreign
object debris damage” – fewer aircraft might be sold and fewer
invoices sent for repair. For another, WheelTug just might not work.
By contrast, with NBIX, big players
do want to see success, and will likely be bidding for the right to market its
drug. That’s how the business works. Small companies develop
drugs which are then sold in partnership with giant drug companies.
There’s still the chance NBIX will not succeed in
Phase III trials – but the phase II data
were so good, my guru thinks the chance of that is low.
And there’s the chance some miracle will emerge from
left field that cures endometriosis – but, given all the FDA hurdles new
drugs and therapies are required to clear, NBIX would likely at least have a
decent head start.
So maybe the chance of total loss is even less than 1 in 3. (Who
knows?) As for the upside, what I like . . .[famous last words ON]
is what might be called the “inevitability edge.”[OFF] By
which I mean the market’s tendency not to focus on the inevitable until
it is really on the verge of happening.
(Which is the opposite of the market’s tendency to get
carried away with unlikely hopes – like the hope that all those
dot com’s in 2000 could have become Amazon and eBay, so all of
them were worth 70 times hoped-for earnings).
This is a very human characteristic . . . to
ignore global warming, to put off saving for retirement (even though warming
and aging are all but inevitable) . . . or, as I hope is the case
with NBIX, to take a bird in the hand instead of two in the bush even
when the two in the bush have little chains on their ankles and
can’t fly away. There’s always the chance someone might
come along in the middle of the night and saw off their chains.
There’s always the chance the housing bubble might never have burst and
the shares of related companies might never have plunged. But really,
anyone betting against the housing stocks that have since crashed was profiting
from the inevitability edge.
It’s these two conflicting irrationalities – a
market that errs on the side of blind enthusiasm or a market that won’t
accept something as real until it’s three feet away – that can
provide opportunity, whether it be buying puts on unrealistic hopes, or –
I hope – waiting patiently as NBIX gets approval for its drug, which
seems all but inevitable, and then watching women choose to take a pill at home
instead of having to go to the doctor for a painful injection, which seems
likely, too. From there you can just do the math, and the profits justify
a much higher valuation for NBIX.
But NBIX was $70 four years ago, so there are an awful lot
of investors who hate it for all the money they lost as it fell to $2.
And 2012, or whenever the profits might start flowing, is still quite a ways
off, and there are other more immediate opportunities . . . so, well,
if NBIX is undervalued at $4, this may help explain why.