At the beginning of each new year I'm always drawn to the practice of reading the Bible in a year through the help of a daily Bible reading plan.  I might try using YouVersion | 1 Year Bible Reading Plan -- though I am loath to put too many personal reflections into the Web application, not so much because of privacy concerns, but more because of data lock-in. In other words, I don't want all the writing I have stuck in youversion.com. (Note: there is the promise of a public API in the new year.)
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What to do about fat cats?
Besides getting angry, what can one do in response to the outrageous behavior of irresponsible people in the financial services sector -- which was well dissected by Krugman in The Madoff Economy:
- The financial services industry has claimed an ever-growing share of the nation’s income over the past generation, making the people who run the industry incredibly rich. Yet, at this point, it looks as if much of the industry has been destroying value, not creating it. And it’s not just a matter of money: the vast riches achieved by those who managed other people’s money have had a corrupting effect on our society as a whole.
Is any way to get reform enacted to keep the Wall Street fat cats from driving the system off the cliff again, often still collecting bonuses they didn't deserve? Or am I just unfairly singling out bankers for something we all share collective responsibility? That's the argument put forth recently by Henry Blodget in The Atlantic Online Why Wall Street Always Blows It?:
- Who’s to blame for the current crisis? As usually happens after a crash, the search for scapegoats has been intense, and many contenders have emerged: Wall Street swindled us; predatory lenders sold us loans we couldn’t afford; the Securities and Exchange Commission fell asleep at the switch; Alan Greenspan kept interest rates low for too long; short-sellers spread negative rumors; “experts†gave us bad advice. More-introspective folks will add other explanations: we got greedy; we went nuts; we heard what we wanted to hear.All of these explanations have some truth to them. Predatory lenders did bamboozle some people into loans and houses they couldn’t afford. The SEC and other regulators did miss opportunities to curb some of the more egregious behavior. Alan Greenspan did keep interest rates too low for too long (and if you’re looking for the single biggest cause of the housing bubble, this is it). Some short-sellers did spread negative rumors. And, Lord knows, many of us got greedy, checked our brains at the door, and heard what we wanted to hear.
But most bubbles are the product of more than just bad faith, or incompetence, or rank stupidity; the interaction of human psychology with a market economy practically ensures that they will form. In this sense, bubbles are perfectly rational—or at least they’re a rational and unavoidable by-product of capitalism (which, as Winston Churchill might have said, is the worst economic system on the planet except for all the others). Technology and circumstances change, but the human animal doesn’t. And markets are ultimately about people.
Should I stop dealing with banks? pull my money out of the stock market? treat bankers with disdain? How should I put my anger to productive use instead of just ranting against the fat cats who were supposed to know what they were doing?
Bad Shower Poetry: 2008-11-13
In the sanctuary of shower flow, I walk into the river of my brain. I net a gleaming thought, yet stand flummoxed by the tantalizing school that swam by. On my wish list: a brain freeze to overturn Heraclitus.
[thanks to editorial suggestion by my Sweetie.]
Pickens on The Daily Show: natural gas is the way?
After watching T. Boone Pickens on The Daily Show last night, I would like to learn more about the Pickens energy plan. From what I can gather watching the interview, Pickens wants the U.S. to shift to consuming natural gas produced in the United States, which he says is owned in great supply by the US. Pickens argued that electric hybrid technology is a good thing for passenger cars, but inadequate for large trucks. Does his plan make sense? What are the greenhouse gas implications of his plan?
Remembrance Day 2008
One way in which I knew Laura and I were in Toronto last weekend is the presence of poppies to commemorate Remembrance Day. I wanted to get my hands on a poppy to take back to the States, where wearing poppies is very uncommon. (Photo by Alana Elliott)
Striptease of Rainbow Red
While we don our scarves, trees reduce to their essential lines. Not first without that striptease of rainbow reds and yellows, transubstantiated from the memory of living green.
Making GOTV calls for Barack Obama
I spent this morning volunteering to make "get the vote out" phone calls for the Obama campaign. Laura and I are living in Pittsburgh, PA this fall, so we feel the tension and excitement of being in a battleground state, something I didn't get all those years in California. I will admit to being nervous about making political phone calls -- even though I have spent years making phone calls for a (non-political) good cause.  It made a big difference though to show up at the home of an Obama supporter where I was trained and where I drew encouragement from my fellow callers.   I wish I had managed to work up the courage to participate in phone banking earlier but it's important to take those little steps.
Beijing Welcomes You — on YouTube
During the summer Olympics I got hooked on the song Beijing Welcomes You. See one of several YouTube versions: YouTube - 2008 Beijing Olympics, Beijing Welcomes You [High Quality MV English Sub Pinyin Sub:
I've been in playing it often, trying to learn the lyrics, even though my Mandarin is extremely basic. Tears off until my sentimental eyes when I listen to the song; I find it hard to believe how it taps into some deep, not fully understood, ties I have to China, even as a Chinese-Canadian living in the USA.
Some other references to the song on the web are:
I’d vote for Obama if I could….
Deciding which of the candidates running for president of the USA must surely be one of the most important decisions as an American citizen can make this fall. As a Canadian living in the US as a permanent resident, I don't have the vote. However, I would urge anyone reading this blog who can vote to vote for Barack Obama in November. I won't attempt to make an argument today for why you should vote for Obama. Instead, I'll simply express my support for Obama and follow my friend Lloyd's lead by embedding one of Obama's latest political ads ("Plan for Change"):
Lloyd quotes the text of the speech, which you can find in many places, including an analysis of the speech in the NY Times today, which concluded that the ad "is substantive, providing a simple, easy-to-follow outline of Mr. Obama’s campaign promises, but its length and monotonous visuals could lose the viewer’s attention."
Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Squirrel Hill Branch
One of the first pieces of official business for me upon relocating to Pittsburgh this fall was to obtain a library card. I've been very happy with the Squirrel Hill branch of our public library (the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh). It's not a large building, and there are not a lot of books at the branch -- but the selection and decor are winning. Moreover, the reading chairs provide a nice view of Forbes Avenue while you immerse yourself in your book or magazine.