Glowering Skies
This “moving” graphic of unemployment rate changes in the U.S. over the past two years does a pretty good job of putting jobs, or lack thereof, in perspective.
The darker the shading, the higher the unemployment rate.
Surfing the brink of chaos
This “moving” graphic of unemployment rate changes in the U.S. over the past two years does a pretty good job of putting jobs, or lack thereof, in perspective.
The darker the shading, the higher the unemployment rate.
Recently, my son, a young journalist, wrote an interesting story for the Santa Cruz Sentinel: “Despite significant health challenges, 15-year-old Santa Cruzan Tess Dunn finds herself rocking out ...”
The Online Etymology Dictionary explains the origins of the concept of “disease” a follows:
diseaseearly 14c., “discomfort,” from O.Fr. desaise, from des- “without, away” (see dis-) + aise “ease” (see ease). Sense of “sickness, illness” first recorded late 14c.; the word still sometimes was used in its lit. sense early 17c. Related: Diseased.Early 14c., “discomfort,” from O.Fr. desaise, from des- “without, away” (see dis-) + aise “ease” (see ease). Sense of “sickness, illness” first recorded late 14c.; the word still sometimes was used in its lit. sense early 17c. Related: Diseased.
In his NYT column today, “The Renminbi Runaround“, economist Krugman complains that the Chinese are playing unfair currency games.
“China’s exchange-rate policy is neither complicated nor unprecedented, except for its sheer scale. It’s a classic example of a government keeping the foreign-currency value of its money artificially low by selling its own currency and buying foreign currency.”
I like Krugman as much as I can like anyone who subscribes to the nonsense called economic theory. But the fact is that Paul is lost the funhouse. China has learned from us that the way to win the game is to manipulate the vig. In a reality that places profit as the highest calling, why waste energy creating something of value when you can churn money and con the other guy into making you rich? A sense of fair markets has nothing to do with making a profit. Just ask any whiz kid working on Wall Street.
We have been doing quite a bit of killing lately. So who must we kill to avenge 911 and make the world safe?
Follow the logic and the winner is the last man standing.
June 23, 2010 NYT – There has been vigorous debate within the administration about how to proceed in Afghanistan, but General McChrystal and his aides did not overtly criticize administration policy.Rather, the differences were personal, and publicly aired.
Huh!?
Some pundits are spinning the story by arguing that MacChrystal’s public display of discrespect for our Presidency and the senior officers of the administration is less egregious than an actual policy difference! It seems to me that if you want to debeate a policy, there are ways to do that, but if you show disrespect for those you disagree with, it’s game over.
MacChrystal’s disrespect for the U. S. Commander in Chief speaks volumes. His school-bully “warrior” arrogance strongly suggests that he also is disrespectful of his adversaries on the battlefield. This error of judgement is universally regarded as a cardinal sin in the art of war.
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