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August 1st, 2008

Wow, I'm on Kwippy now. :P Tha...

Wow, I'm on Kwippy now. :P Thanks for the invite, alfabettezoupe!
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August 1st, 2008

The Economy According to ThePete

So, the economy has been in the news a LOT lately--surprisingly enough (to me, at least) the mainstream media is actually covering the issue. However, I don't think they're really reporting what we need to know. Now, I don't really watch the mainstream news--I read some of it online, CNN.com, Drudge Rep/tort, WaPo, AP, and a few others, but mostly I get my news from alt news sources like Democracy Now and Bill Moyers (not the other PBS news shows, however).

Most of these guys are getting pretty in-depth, but they're still not quite getting to the meat of what I think we really need to know.

We've all heard about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac getting bailed out by the USG (followed by two more banks in California) but no one is pointing out some very interesting details.

So, it's all because of the sub-prime mortgage scandal, right?

Banks went hog-wild handing out loans/cash to people who couldn't pay them back.

Think about that for a moment.

Cash was handed to people with bad credit or no credit, without a job, or without obvious means to pay the cash back with interest.

Several things bother me about this equation:

1) Who was dumb enough to let banks regulate themselves? This can't be "a few bad apples" if trillions of USD are at risk.

2) Why is the news not talking about WHY these people are not suitable to loan money to in the first place? What did these people do wrong? Shouldn't we be working to solve the problems of these people having bad credit or crappy paying jobs?

3) Where the hell did the banks get all this mad money to give to people? Seriously--from investors? TRILLIONS of dollars ALL from investors who were too stupid to research where their money would go?

Think about this now:

a) You get a job. You receive your first paycheck of (a purely hypothetical) $100.

b) You go to the bank and deposit it.

c) The bank then loans your $100 to Person B so they can start a business.

d) Person B hires Person C, who then gets his first paycheck of $100. He deposits it in the bank.

e)The bank then loans out $100 to Person D who is starting a business.

Do you see the problem here? The money just goes in circles and each time it makes the cycle we pretend the $100 is a brand new $100. So, just in the five steps above, a mythical $200 is created from nothing and inserted into the economy.

Your original $100 is still there, in the bank, but really, it isn't. It's been loaned out. Sure, if you withdraw it, you can get it back, but it's really not yours, it's someone else's money that hasn't been loaned out yet. If that other person comes looking to withdraw their $100, that's when you have some problems.


OK, so Ambrose Evans-Pritchard could see the future--why didn't someone do something to help us avoid it?
We saw these problems recently in California and what most of the press I've seen hasn't reported is that we saw all of this happen before in the UK when, last December, there was a run on Northern Rock, the UK's fifth biggest bank. It had succumbed to its own sub-prime mortgage choices and its customers panicked.

See, so it's a trend--things were bad in the UK, but if you were looking, you saw the signs. You could then take those signs and look for trouble here in the US and guess what--you'd find it.

But why were the banks so eager to give money to people who couldn't pay it back? Why were they so blind to the problems that would obviously be caused by the practice?

The answer is profits--they wanted them. As much as possible. In the case of sub-primes, the interest rates were hiked so that the banks could make more money in the short term, while betting that in the long term, the borrowers would be able to pay the money back.

What if they couldn't?

Good question.

The good answer is that the bankers had a plan. The plan was to sell the debts to other people as investment opportunities.

"See Person F? He owes us $100. He bought a house and he's paying twenty-percent interest on the loan each year. You pay me $110 now and all of his interest payments are yours."

I'm simplifying, of course, but the basic plan was just like that. Investors pay bankers and the bankers make that money plus any payments they've already gotten from the borrower. Meanwhile, the risk is now transfered to investors and away from the bankers. Good plan, huh? Of course it was--and it worked--for a while. Ultimately, however, it led to disaster.

But let's jump back to my little 5-step model.

When you got paid that first $100, that money was worth $100. Then, two steps later, with two new sets of $100 injected into the economy, the supply of dollars is now larger, in theory. Under the law of supply and demand, more supply equals lower price. So, the same $100 you still have in the bank is worth less than it was when you were paid it because the other two sets of $100es now exist, as well.

This is what I'm wrestling with.

All of these $100es need to be paid back to the bank with interest, right? Even that first $100 you got from your boss he got as a loan the bank gave him (or perhaps it was from "profits" he got from selling products and services--that money, in turn coming from customers who got loans or payments from bosses, etc, etc).

So, here's where I am right now:

1) How does the interest ever get paid back?

2) Where do profits come from?

3) With every loan that is given in the real world, it seems like every dollar should drop in value.

Think about how much it would have cost to buy a house in the 1930s. According to the dollar amount, alone, it would have been insanely cheaper than it is today. Yet, aside from technological and safety advances, a house is largely built the same way now, in 2008 as it was in 1938.

This difference is explained away by the term "inflation" and "inflation" describes exactly this process--Webster's defines the word this way: " a continuing rise in the general price level usually attributed to an increase in the volume of money and credit relative to available goods and services." (source: www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inflation )

Yet, inflation never goes down. If you think it does, I'm afraid you're mistaken--it's the rate of inflation that can go down.

Essentially, the way our banking system is designed, the dollar will go down in value forever, endlessly. There may be brief rises in comparison to other currencies, but as far as I can tell, the dollar is doomed to drop--forever.

So, here we are in August of 2008, and just in the past few weeks we've seen five of the biggest banks in the US get bailed-out by the USG. Just two days ago, King George "quietly" signed a mortgage bill that would help the little people (the borrowers) keep their homes (source: is.gd/1biO ). According to the above-linked article: "The measure includes $300 billion in new loan authority for the government to back cheaper mortgages for troubled homeowners; $3.9 billion for communities to fix up foreclosed properties causing blight in neighborhoods; and $15 billion in tax cuts, including an expanded low-income housing tax credit and a credit of up to $7,500, to be repaid, for some first-time home buyers."

The article also states that George was originally going to veto the thing.

Yep, it's just that bad. Even the Decider has to change his mind.

The thing is, by saving banks that screwed the pooch and handing cash to homeowners who are short on it, are any problems really being solved here?

If my basic understanding about how banking works is accurate, aren't these just Band-Aids on a dying man?

Isn't our basic system just a bad idea from the beginning?

Think about it--where does profit come from?

It MUST come from one of two places:

1) Somewhere else--your pocket or someone else's.

2) It is created from nothing--and when this happens, the value of all other money goes down.

So, in the end, just what the fuck is going on here?

Now, I know that there are all sorts of excuses out there to wish away what I'm talking about. There are quite literally money magicians who talk about stocks, bonds, treasury bills, investments, futures, and about a thousand other obscure-sounding concepts. We've got foreign investors who spend their own mystery money to buy our money. We've got entire nations "loaning" our economy money.

And I've tried to get my brain around a good number of these ideas and I'm afraid I just couldn't see how any of them would change the complete and utter fallibility of my little 5-Step model, above.

Whether it's countries loaning countries money or people loaning it to people, the structure is still propping up the same, horribly flawed system--at least, to my eyes.

My ears, on the other hand, are open if anyone can explain this to me in a way that makes sense.
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August 2nd, 2008

Nothing like waking up to thun...

Nothing like waking up to thunder and rain. Soooo nice!! I totally missed actual weather in LA all those years.
Published at 16:03 / 0 comments / 70 visits
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August 2nd, 2008

@philiphodgen YES-I find all o...

@philiphodgen YES-I find all of this Obama-criticism for not being able to keep campaign promises frustrating as hell. Who else keeps them?
Published at 18:05 / 0 comments / 83 visits
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August 5, 2008

Wal-Mart Hates America (but loves your money!)


I grabbed this screencap a couple days ago from WSJ.com, though the article was originally posted on August 1, 2008 (here: http://online.wsj.com/…03381.html ). It's all about how Wal-Mart is concerned about a Democratic win in November. They're worried that laws might be passed that would make forming unions easier.



Has Obama even said anything about unions or Wal-Mart? I'm pretty sure he'll be in the same boat as McCain and any other politician in the back pocket of TheBigBusiness. They'll say unions are good, but won't do anything to help them.



Personally, this isn't even why I refuse to shop at Wal-Mart. I saw the documentary "Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Prices" where they make the claim that the family behind the mega-chain has their own nuclear fallout bunker.



To date I haven't found anything that denies the existence of this bunker.



So, if the anti-union stance isn't enough and the insanely low prices guaranteed by exploited workers in foreign countries don't stop you from shopping at Wal-Mart, how about the thought that Wal-Mart will build a nuclear-proof bunker for themselves, but won't mobilize their billions of dollars on protesting the existence of nuclear weapons?



They'll take your money but when the shit comes down, they don't give a crap about anyone but themselves (their low prices at the cost of exploited workers should prove this already to you).
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August 5, 2008

SocialMedian.com Default User Icon


So, I signed up with SocialMedian.com and found that they had discovered the best way to get people to add a custom user icon.



I took one look at Oprah, above, and updated my icon seconds later.



SHUDDER.



I then had to shower immediately.
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August 5, 2008

iPhone App Store Not as Vetted as Claimed


One of the annoying things about the App Store, Apple's method for delivering Apple-sanctioned applications to your iPhone, is the inconsistency. I've read that many developers are having a helluva time dealing with Apple. Some apps are rejected because of typos in the descriptions, while others are rejected out of hand with no explanation at all.



Then there are the apps that make it on to the App Store when they really shouldn't. I have lost count of how many apps I've downloaded only to find that they refuse to open or work at all once they do open.



To be sure, most of the apps I've tried have worked fine. I just don't understand how apps that so obviously suck don't get filtered from the system while others get through--as in the case of the above screencapped app. It's an app called "Codes Retard." At first, I thought it was some sort of reference app for programmers. You know like "Coding for Dummies" or something. Then I tried to find out what it was and... whoops!



I'm not sure how Apple can justify rejecting some Apps for typos when this thing made it into the US App Store with the entirely wrong language--AND with the claim that it's in English.



I just hope Apple makes the NetShare app available again. I'm so annoyed I didn't know there was an app that allowed you to tether your iPhone before it was yanked.



Tethering, FYI, is when you plug your laptop into your cell phone and allow your laptop to use the cell phone's data connection to surf. Yeah, it's obvious why Apple yanked NetShare, but leaving it up would make them look like they actually cared about what their customers wanted.
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August 5, 2008

DARK KNIGHT (2008)

Positive Experience/Entertaining? Definitely entertaining but only a positive experience if entertainment is all you want. This was a mess of a movie with just enough explosions and "drama" to keep audiences unaware that this was a poorly made film.


Technically any good? The acting from all involved was just fine. The FX were solid and believable across the board (if not a little corny). The music was inventive and actually did some very cool things. The script, however, was a heavy-handed, plot-challenged, lightning-paced mess. Batman felt stapled into the movie, so much so that I felt the film should have been called "Two-Face." Joker is in it (duh) but he feels more like he's stapled in, as well. The plot (what there is of it) congeals around Harvey Dent's story arc. Sure, it's all from Batman's point of view, but don't expect to see him do anything more interesting than good stunts and talk too much. The Batman from Batman Begins had to wrestle with his past, confront his demons and go against his mentor. In this he does almost none of that.


How did it leave me feeling? Disappointed. As the audience was clapping I was wondering what movie they'd just seen because the one I saw had gaping plot holes where characters would vanish from the movie randomly and return only when the plot called for them. The film I sat through featured characters openly discussing morals in blatant, obvious, and boring terms. In the second-to-last (of four) climaxes, as Batman explains to Joker what he's just be shown, I found myself wondering why the movie felt the need to have Batman explain what we'd just seen. Imagine, as Luke is flying away from the destroyed Death Star, he contacts Vader on the radio and explains the morals behind what he did.


Final Rating? NFI - NetFlix It. Honestly, the stunt work will make more sense on the small screen and I don't think it's worth the money to sit through the bad script. If I knew then what I know now, I'd have saved my $12.

Check out my absurdly long diatribe against this movie.
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August 5, 2008

iTunes Overkill for Ringtone Syncing


Here's a cap I took of my iTunes last night after clicking "Sync Ringtones."



That's right--all existing songs, movies, and TV shows on my iPhone (I call her "Kurochan") will be wiped JUST so I can sync my ringtones!! What the hell is that?



Why must I wipe all of my media just for ringtone-syncage? It's bad enough we have to pay to have ringtones added. It's also bad enough we can't just use songs in our music library for ringtones (not to mention not being able to use them for the alarm clock!) and now we have to go through the effort of dumping all of our media back on the iPhone?



I love it when a corporation tells me what to do.



It means I don't have to think as much.



I just wish it didn't hurt so much when I do it anyway. :(
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August 5, 2008

New Regs Allow Border Guards to Search Your Data


I microblogged about this the other day (here: http://thepete.com/…e-us-bord/ ) but thought I should go into a bit more detail than 140 characters allows.



Back on August 1, 2008, Democracy Now reported (here: http://www.democracynow.org/…/headlines ) that the Washington Post reported that: "federal border agents are now allowed to take and search a traveler’s laptop computer, cellphone or other electronic device without any suspicion of wrongdoing."



The DN anchor added later that: "The policy covers any device capable of storing information in digital or analog form, as well as all papers and other written documentation."



So, this is the free country we live in. Even Americans can have their thumb drives, their iPods, laptops, and even hand-written notebooks searched by border guards. This is absolutely absurd.



As an American citizen, the only thing I should ever have to show at the US border is my passport unless a legal search warrant is shown to me.



What's really disturbing about this is how it might relate to the slippery slope argument.



Is this just the beginning? Are we going to see STATE border guards soon that can stop you to make sure you're not carrying any child porn or terrorism plans on your iPhone? Or worse yet, will we see police officers given the legal ability to search our thumb drives, our wallets, and our laptops without cause?



It's these little examples of bits of our freedoms being chipped away that bother me. After all, if they were to simply yank all of our freedoms away in one fell (and obvious) swoop, we'd rebel instantly. But this tap-tap-tapping at the bedrock of our freedoms reminds me of the old frog-in-the-boiling-water story.



You know, drop a frog in boiling water and he leaps to safety. Drop him in non-boiling water and slowly heat it up and he's frog soup.



Let's not be frog soup, yeah?
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August 5, 2008

US Attrocities Commited During Korean War


Is there a single war where we DIDN'T do something horrible?? (I mean, aside from the horrible stuff that is already done in war.)



What makes the cynic in me laugh like Charlton Heston is that the AP headline has the word "massacre" in quotes, like it's just being called that and that the killing didn't happen or that the killing of these people shouldn't really be called a massacre.



Merriam-Webster.com calls a massacre: "the act or an instance of killing a number of usually helpless or unresisting human beings under circumstances of atrocity or cruelty" (source: http://www.merriam-webster.com/…y/massacre )



Just reading the first sentence of the article and you can see that there isn't anything "alleged" about the massacres: "South Korean investigators, matching once-secret documents to eyewitness accounts, are concluding that the U.S. military indiscriminately killed large groups of refugees and other civilians early in the Korean War."



Said "documents" come from THE USG. Here's a bit from later in the article: "Commission researchers have unearthed evidence of indiscriminate killings in the declassified U.S. archive, including a report by U.S. inspectors-general that pilots couldn't distinguish their South Korean civilian allies from North Korean enemy soldiers."



Then there's the caption of the picture to the left: "South Korean villager Cho Byung-woo recounts on April 22, 2008 what happened in January 1951 when U.S. warplanes dropped napalm bombs at the mouth of this cave, where hundreds of refugees had gathered."



Sounds like an actual massacre to me--not like one that belongs in quotes.



So, even after all these years, America can't face its own demons, openly and bravely. Its government hides its own soldier's dead from cameras, its press candy-coats "massacres" in the news while accused Marines go free after being accused of killing 25 unarmed civilians (that's a massacre, right?) (source: http://www.democracynow.org/…utraged_as ).



Sheesh.



Sorry to be such a downer today.



The above screencapped article comes from AP.org and AP.Google.com and you can find the original here: http://is.gd/1fNe
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August 6, 2008

Berobed Men on Subway


My guess? Some sort of marketing campaign for a bathroom-related product. I think I saw the phrase "Shave Anywhere" in fairly small print on their backs as they entered the train. So, I guess it's a *bad* marketing campaign since I don't know, for sure, what it's about.



Hm.
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August 6, 2008

@cmiper Wow--doesn't that mean...

@cmiper Wow--doesn't that mean people will stop going to Ping.FM entirely? How will they ever make money? o_O Ah well, still good news!
Published at 20:48 / 0 comments / 89 visits
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August 7, 2008

Ad from 70s: Iran Nuke Power OK!


The above image came from PixelFish first (here: http://www.utterz.com/…NTEyMTA0MQ ) and Shakesville second (here: http://shakespearessister.blogspot.com/…n-for.html ), finally originating at Dvorak.org (here: http://www.dvorak.org/blog/ ).



Good stuff.



Now, I forget, did we put the Shah in power? Or did we get rid of him because he *had* nuclear power? I forget.



We've propped up and torn down so many middle eastern leaders, I can't keep 'em all straight!
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August 8, 2008

Wow--nothing else puts the fea...

Wow--nothing else puts the fear of typos in ya like writing an email to your high school sweetheart. Gah. Still more work to do!
Published at 03:14 / 0 comments / 93 visits
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August 8, 2008

Ah, damn it. It's 3 in the mor...

Ah, damn it. It's 3 in the morning again! I simply MUST work out how to slow the planet down! EVERY night at this time, it's ALWAYS 3am! ARG
Published at 07:24 / 0 comments / 87 visits
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August 8, 2008

Trying to make heads or tails ...

Trying to make heads or tails of this Russian/Georgian thing. Seems Georgia went after separatists & Russians? I think I need to read more.
Published at 17:28 / 0 comments / 79 visits
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August 8, 2008

So, Russia and Georgia is at w...

So, Russia and Georgia is at war and Ex-Senator Edwards' infidelity is more important to folks? Why is anyone surprised at his behavior?
Published at 20:30 / 0 comments / 83 visits
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August 10, 2008

OK, why can't I use a ringtone...

OK, why can't I use a ringtone for new text messages on the iPhone? DAMN IT, APPLE! Stop trying to control us!!
Published at 06:35 / 0 comments / 73 visits
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