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  • From: THE MINNESOTA INDEPENDENT

    By Paul Demko 10/21/08 10:19 AM

    Hard at work...
    Hard at work…

    Rep. Michele Bachmann has long been viewed nationally as a solid favorite to retain her House seat in the Sixth Congressional District. But the controversy engulfing her campaign following Friday’s appearance on “Hardball” — during which she called for an investigation into whether her fellow legislators hold “anti-American” views — has altered perceptions of the race in the last 72 hours.

    The Cook Political Report has changed its assessment of the contest from “lean Republican” to a toss up. CQ Politics has also shifted its ranking of the race, from “Republican favored” to the less rosy “leans Republican.”

    “If Rep. Michele Bachmann limps to the finish line on Election Day — either ahead or behind — it is because she shot herself in the foot,” writes CQ’s Jonathan Allen.

    Consider the following…

    U.S. Constitution: Amendment I – Freedom of Religion
    Because of conservative, your tax dollars are funding religious groups a clear no-no whether you agree with a religion or not. Preaching politics from the pulpit has recently been the subject of a Justice Department investigation of 21 pastors of differing faiths who were warned not to pontificate in churches and challenged the right as of free speech jeopardizing their tax free status. To add insult to injury, conservative appointed judges have ruled that you do not have a right to challenge some statues. Kind of like Mullahs in Saudi Arabia where church and state are inseparable.

    Amendment IV – Search and seizure
    Under the guise of court action against abortion, conservative had John Ashcroft subpoena all the medical records of 11,200 women. This invasion of privacy approach is so frequent it is hard to subpoena all the records from all the offices of Congressional members and committees of the suspected cases of invasion of our privacy. The federal government also has access to our Internet browsing, email content and phone records. Unfortunately we as citizens are behind the curve on understanding what changes technology has brought to them as well as us.

    Amendment X – Powers of the States and People
    Federal conservatives have consistently tried to overturn States law. They use our US tax dollars to challenge the law of the land in Oregon in the “Death with Dignity” law; they lost, but their “help” will come again. If your state votes for something conservatives – religious, social and intellectual versions, not fiscal conservatives – don’t agree with, they will use laws enacted by a once conservative Congress to challenge it – which is the proper use of the laws of the land but in this age of ‘imperial presidency’ those types of actions show marginal regard for states rights than may be appropriate no matter who is in the White House.

    Amendment VIII – Cruel and Unusual punishment
    Conservatives spokespeople in the federal government supported and sanctioned torture. Spreading that influence to the Judiciary is a threat which is another reason to be aware of any government that has contempt for its people. I’d like to think the founding fathers were focused on the right to bear arms for defense of our country rather than the attack of the sovereignty of another country to foster the spread of democracy. Of course that is most likely a veiled attempt to instead grab more oil. In the process our own ‘Federalis Cowboy” Commander-In-Chief captures and detains for year citizens of this and other democratically elected countries as non-military combatants and then uses illegal cruel and unusual punishment without success to coerce testimony. Caution these days about all government is a requirement of freedom.

    Bachmann and desperate members of the GOP have adopted a rather presumptive neo-American tactics as they blame liberals, immigrants, blacks, Asians, or minorities for our economic crisis as Neo-Nazi’s blamed Jews, gypsies and immigrants from Slavic states.

    The U.S. Constitution is what we have to hold on to. Protect it or risk your life of liberty; however that comes about in this republic.

    1. There is no single cause for anything.

    2. Repeat after me, “There is no single cause for anything!”

    3. We all had a hand in the economic mess. Getting loans we couldn’t afford, looking the other way as we tried to get more without paying the price, consuming the earth’s resources without having to deal with the consequences directly.

    At the same time, those Anti-American views, racial views and implicit discrimination never go away; not in the generational cycle that is digitally accessible. Easy answers are poison. This shit is hard to understand and correct and if you don’t like confrontation, it’s best you stay home after you vote.

    Ya know… maybe it would help if we just stop calling people names like “Conservative” and “Liberal.”

    Do conservatives respect the foundations of our country? ASK BACHMANN…

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    Oct 21
  • Things are complicated out there. You may or may not be aware that your nervous system filters out the massive amount of data that your senses are exposed to. As a matter of conservation of energy (real and metaphorical) you are attending to very little of your environment based on your history and the current value you have for some segment of it.

    Let me frame this for your consideration…

    Due to our complexity as humans, when things are not there, we sometimes see things. (No, it is not the 60’s.) What’s more, when things are there in front of us and available for our experience, we don’t see them.

    Two Experiments to consider…

    1. In a recent paper in Science, Whitson and Galinsky (2008) found when individuals are unable to gain a sense of control objectively they will gain it perceptually through illusory pattern perception meaning they will identify “stuff” among a stimuli in their environment that don’t really exist. They are not hallucinating in the usual sense of the word. They are generating information to provide continuity linking what they can just as is sensory data is generated in sensory deprivation experiments.

    Whitson, et.al, empirically found that people generate pattern perceptions to make sense of the events in their environment when they experience lack of control of the environmental events they are experiencing.

    Now, consider what that means…

    • It means we don’t see the flaws in people we are connected to or that we see the flaws where none exist
    • it means that we see a conspiracy from a new boss when we don’t yet exist to the new boss
    • it means we identify objects in random noise images where there are none
    • it means we see mechanistic cause and effect relationships where no links exist
    • it means we see correlations in economic markets in companies we like
    • it means we don’t see how our behavior is like the behavior of someone we don’t like
    • it means we can’t tell why people like us or dislike us when they do
    • it means that we can’t see the flaws in our children as they lie dead with a needle in their arm
    • it means that we can be more than one kind of person every day of our lives
    • it means that people not like us are suspicious and people like us are allies

    Staggering, isn’t it!

    Examples of superstitious behavior in the modern world are countless – sports super heroes involved in astrology, learned rituals so complex that someone once referred to a baseball player as “his own seventh inning stretch” due to the time he took to address each pitch. Religion, prayer, sacrificial rituals, appeasements, holidays, traditions, incantations, etc. all come from making relationships where none exist.   Gasuntheit!

    When you are uncertain about your environment and don’t perceive you have control, know what is going on, etc., it is disconcerting. In terms of how we learn, not perceiving you have control is an aversive stimulus equal to shock, rejection, pain, or other punishers. Faced with uncertainty, lack of control, people look for patterns [ah, the value of search] in their environments to re-establish control. When it is not there empirically, we try to establish it perceptually with vision playing the lead role.

    With the dearth of information and conflicting data sets it is a constant challenge to understand what is related and what isn’t. In an election year the conspiracies exist for those that most not understanding why their candidate is losing since they see the relationships between them and the agenda as a citizen. The media, the polls, the moderators, the economy, the Jews, the youth, the women…etc. are all plotting to undo the trailing candidate.

    2. The following video  is based on research by Simons and Chabris from Indiana University. It is very interesting for several reasons, all of which you’ll see if you FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS OF THE PRESENTER EXACTLY.

    After you see it spend some time thinking how that affects what your life is like, how research is done and how the world works. After all that, come back write or respond with what you think the implications are of the research.

    Perception from Ted Conference

    Perception from Ted Conference

    ~~~~~~~

    The lesson here isn’t simple. If we were to want a society free from magical thoughts, then we need expand the tolerance for people to live in ambiguity in some areas, educate people on how feelings and emotions are the exhaust of perceived contingencies and how the environment comes to control behavior via consequences.



    J. A. Whitson, A. D. Galinsky (2008). Lacking Control Increases Illusory Pattern Perception Science, 322 (5898), 115-117 DOI: 10.1126/science.1159845

    Now you see it; now you don’t – Politics, reason and Jihad in Presidential debates!

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    Oct 14
  • So, the question comes up more than once…

    “What’s different about the changes that occurred in the 60’s and 70’s from the changes we are experiencing during our current crisis?”

    There are not many parallels between the two times because they are as different as the 50 years apart that separates them. ALL the context is different. How could they possibly be similar?

    First of all, we are just started the reaction and the responses to the last seven years and the 31 years leading up to this. It has just begun. You didn’t think it was some Palooka on Wall Street or in corporate America that made this happen, did you?

    There are a lot of things that came together in the 60s and 70s that made them what they were and there are a lot of things that are converging now to make this what it will be. That is where the similarities probably end.

    The 60s and 70s was the push back against repression, control, delayed gratification and isolation. The early 60s was a set of things in opposition to the status quo…. then other things came together, not by plan but by their own path and the confluence went POW!

    Music was the medium like the Internet is today… But, no one had any idea what they were experiencing and it wasn’t because of the drugs or music.  Caesar didn’t realize what was going on either. It was just what was happening.

    There were waves of change between the surfers-dudes and the button-down guys represented on the one hand by parents, Pat Boone, The Kingston Trio and, on the other, the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan and the Birds or Jefferson Airplane.

    • Drugs, sex and rock and roll
    • The pill
    • The war – the draft – the secrecy
    • The car
    • Woman’s liberation
    • The idealists

    The “pill” represented freedoms never imagined as did the car. Both were escapes from mom and dad’s world… In a similar but opposing ways, Britney Spears music is devoid of any content relating to the world today as the Zits cartoon series is today.  The 60s and 70s had irreverent tunes and MAD magazine… Both ‘anti-now’.

    But where is the VOICE of today? I don’t mean the Village Voice, which morphed into respectability and successfully collects ad revenue to support circulation of its coffee house rebels. I mean the “VOICE” of someone calling the ball on what has happened in America. That means accounting for losses as well as our mis-gotten “gains”. Whose voice is going to ring out to address America’s privatized profit but socializes risk, isolation from allies, might-makes-right arrogance and the branding of ‘Democracy’ through colonization?

    We have untold messages yelling at us about losing allies, losing hope, losing dialogue, losing respect, losing trust and openness that is displaced with secrecy, fear and loathing of anyone different from us including our government and the other boss in the corner office.

    What are you willing to give up? Cassias Clay was willing to lose everything. Martin Luther King Jr. did. Freedom riders, lunch counter activists and everything in between including those who were caught when the world changed on them like it has today for us.   You know who I am talking about; the cops that thought they were doing the right things, the governors, the FBI, the soldiers, the parents… they were All doing what they were told was right even if it was the opposite from what those they were repressing had been told.

    If you have no answers, the next 12 years aren’t going to be a good time for you in America or Europe, or Japan or… You will end up sour and ailing because today you are witnessing the tree of entitlements being cut down. It will take years to grow another. What is the expression in business? “He is a dead man just looking for a place to lie down!”

    So, where is the lightening rod for change from all this doom and gloom?   Where is that person going to come from? Come on; use that teraflop of processing power and your angry brain to generate something you like.

    • Is it the blogs?
    • The social communities?
    • The recipient paparazzi replacing investigative reporting?

    With all the complexity, technology, information, misinformation and confusion…what we’ve done in the past isn’t going to be what we do in the future.    Some prognostications:

    1. More suffering as the financial stuff sinks in and new things will rise out of the ashes.

    Hard times are going to drive a new of barter or “in-kind” exchange. Will it be a cottage industry economy? Will it be a network community sensitive to exchange and barter… a Woot.com for product and services grow up? I am guessing it will be those types of things.

    That will result in the middle man being taken out of the formula for commence more and more.  That is unemployment and that leads to some heart ache but change.  If it didn’t we’d be using buggy whips today…

    2.   Having a black President is a lightening rod! Having a President with a vision will draw the volts    and colts as needed.

      Now the insurgents in our own country will be running for the caves. And when they come out we, the people, have to meet them. We have to find our cohones and get them in the game.  You don’t need to change them; just participate.  After the election we’re going to hear and see some nasty stuff. If anything happens to the President there are going to be riots for all sorts of reasons and it won’t be only if our black president is gone.

      This all sucks you know… it sucks because it is not COMPLEX. It sucks because we have to experience it to grow.

      All the money and power falls apart at our feet without the slightest bit of introspection. We’ve had no introspection and we all are the greedy ones living outside our means.

      For them and for us, it’s all about the race, the chase, the game for positions and status. Trouble is, once you’ve arrived, where are you? We are rudderless now.  Our experiences will put us on a course with a world view rather than a mirror view.

      It is as reported to be for us and for our government?   Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

      Passing on Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll

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      Oct 9
    1. Entitlement in every sense of the word is over.

      Consider the immediate problem of unemployment benefits in a credit poor situation. Yup, that’s right, the states won’t be able to extend benefits much into 2009.

      It’s not hard to imagine how quickly the Boomer generation (they will be leaving the workforce soon and taking their knowledge and productivity with them!) is going to chew threw Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. I’m sure other welfare programs aren’t far behind.  With 1 trillion commited to “war” and 2 trillion commited (after interest) to “rescuing” financial institutions, there isn’t much cash to go around that isn’t tied up directly in the American household (in aggregate we’re probably some $50 trillion +, though most is in real estate…)  Thus, some of that $50 trillion will have to be committed to the entitlements or we simply we have to stop the entitlement programs.

      There’s your sacrifice folks.  Are you ready to pay for the boomer generation?  are you ready to pay for war directly? are you ready to pay for insurance companies (why not just pay for health care directly????) Are you ready to buy your neighbors house?  Your opinion doesn’t matter here, this is what’s happening already.

      This is not a rant. I came to grips a long time ago that the only way to secure a financial future for my family was to get filthy rich through hard work of building and selling things other people want.  Wasn’t it always about this underneath the swaps, the valuations, the lending, and the short selling?

      It appears others are starting to understand that getting something from “the system” is not a reliable strategy for survival.  That’s right, no one is entitled to anything.  What have you done for me lately? (and directly! and now!)

      The engagement of the public in civil affairs, public debate, legislation and overall governance is way up.  The rate of reinforcement is way up in these areas and the behavior follows.  The intervening variables fell apart months ago when the daily cost of living exploded for most of us.

      It’s now on our dime and that is a very powerful contingency.  Is it powerful enough to get a majority of people moving…….

      Entitlement is Over

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      Oct 8
    2. We know that behavior is not simple but there are simple behavioral components that keep getting ignored. Relative to what we all experience in life like conflicts in the Dan Ariely remarks below and in a previous blog on this site.… we recognize his statements on habits, good and bad, etc.  Yet there is a second component that comes to be more easily considered as well.  Follow along…

      Dan Ariely: ….(on the October Bailout, politicians, Wall Street, etc.)

      The second thing is that nothing has changed much in the short term living of people. In some sense, this is smaller than the effect of the increasing gas prices.

      Greer: Yeah.

      Ariely: What is happening? Basically the thing is we are creatures of habit, if you think about it. The best predictor of what we will do tomorrow is what we did today. That is it. Habits are good and bad. They are good because they help us save energy. We don’t have to think about it. We don’t have to contemplate every cup of coffee if it is worth it or not. As a consequence, we get into habits.

      When we lose 50 or 500 interactive habits all at once via an earthquake, hurricane, family death, financial threats, loneliness, fall from grace, rejection…etc. (you get the idea) we have nothing to replace those ‘habits’ that are the products of conditioning shaped by consequences over years. We don’t have any behavior to replace those lost dynamic relationships with… literally!. We have to figure it out all over again. Sometimes it is too much to handle.

      Take the following stories bunched together from Associated Press just today…10/7/08

      THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

      Tuesday, October 7th 2008, 11:31 AM

      AP/The Courier-Journal

      LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A deputy coroner confirmed Tuesday that Hope Orwick stabbed her two children to death and then shot herself.

      Deputy Jefferson County Coroner Bob Jones said Emily Orwick, 9, and Lindsey Orwick, 8, were stabbed multiple times, though he could not say how many. He said Hope Orwick, 35, shot herself in the head.

      RELATED: FATHER KILLS SELF, FAMILY IN MURDER-SUICIDE DRIVEN BY FINANCIAL PROBLEMS

      Louisville Metro Police spokeswoman Alicia Smiley said a family member stopped by the house just before 7:30 p.m. EDT Monday and found the bodies.

      Jones said he hasn’t been able to pinpoint when the girls died, and police were trying to determine a motive for the killings.

      Crisis counselors will be available at the girls’ elementary school Wednesday, said Jefferson County Public Schools spokeswoman Lauren Roberts, who would not say which school they attended. Public schools in Louisville were closed Tuesday for parent-teacher conferences.

      RELATED: MOM KEPT DAUGHTERS’ REMAINS IN THE FREEZER

      Along the quiet, well-kept southwest Jefferson County street where the family lived, children played in their yards Tuesday. All was quiet at the family’s modest, ranch-style house, where there were no signs of activity.

      Two chaplains were at the scene Monday night, and Smiley said 15 or so family members gathered there. Police talked to relatives to see if they could help explain what may have led to the deaths.

      Neighbor Mechelle Rockey, 48, told The Courier-Journal that she has lived across the street from the family for about six months. She said the two girls often played outside.

      Contingencies around us control our behavior. We give them other ‘causes’ but as you can see it is contingencies that have all the power, be you the Pope, the President or the paparazzi… all the people above lost what they saw as options on what to do. Ariely and the others represent the loss (of behavior) on how to cope, what strategies to use, what methods to embrace, etc. They lost their behavior.

      What contingencies control your behavior and generates your ‘habits’ that define who you are and what you’d do in your crisis?

      But wait Dan Ariely, there’s more…

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      Oct 7
    3. Dan Ariely is a professor of behavioral economics at Duke University and the author of Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions. I recently talked with him about some hidden forces shaping the current financial crisis.

      Mac Greer: You have a lot of Americans seeing this as a Wall Street crisis and not so much as a “Main Street” crisis. What do you think it will take for most Americans to reach some sort of a consensus that this crisis really requires immediate action?

      Dan Ariely: Well, one thing is we have been telling a lot of people for a long time that whatever they have in the stock market is about long-term strategy and not any short-term things. So the current change in speak, in some sense, doesn’t seem to be very effective. We have been telling people for 20 years the money you have in the stock market is about retirement, it is not about anything urgent. Don’t look at it. It is all about long-term strategy. It is very hard to convince people that all of a sudden that it is short term. That is one thing.

      The second thing is that nothing has changed much in the short term living of people. In some sense, this is smaller than the effect of the increasing gas prices.

      Greer: Yeah.

      Ariely: What is happening? Basically the thing is we are creatures of habit, if you think about it. The best predictor of what we will do tomorrow is what we did today. That is it. Habits are good and bad. They are good because they help us save energy. We don’t have to think about it. We don’t have to contemplate every cup of coffee if it is worth it or not. As a consequence, we get into habits.

      Read the full post from Motley Fool.

      Politicians for Bailout, Public Opposed – explained?

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      Oct 7
    4. Can you remember back to your days in 1975 while in Psychology 210: “Psych for the New World”?

      A Negative Reinforcer is a stimulus or stimulus set that when removed or terminated increases the probability of that same response in the future.

      Richard Fuld claims that ‘we’ made him and the others like him that have tetra dollar salaries and Mega stock and bonuses with parachutes the size of which could fund small nations… Well, he may be right. The contingencies that came together were those things that favored him doing what he did.

      We did it or at least reinforced it when it happened. We got them there and we gave them the keys to the kingdom and told them all that we wanted order and profit – if not in that order, we still wanted it. Those that could claim [reliably] to be able to bring it were vetted, signed and installed.

      Ugly isn’t it. Guess what…??? Fuld and those like him were the instruments of the body that didn’t want to face the clients, other boards, other nations, regulators and the zealots of legislature on the right, down the middle and the left. Fuld said he’d do it if they, the boards of directors, paid him. They did and he did.

      Competition says what the compensation will be. In effect he responded. “You want more, pay me more. You want your assets and reserves and exchanges managed? Get a manager! I bring it to new levels by risking my reputation for the good of the investors and clients. Anything short of that you can get someone from GE to sit at the desk…”

      That is what the board wanted to hear…

      Now he is doing his job to escape aversive stimuli [career ending sanctions, indictments, loss of pensions, bonuses, and parachutes] which is reinforcing to him and his companies… it is as reinforcing to him as it is to you and I only his scale of success makes it seem more gluttonous. Perhaps you nick the IRS a bit, use the corporate cards for discretionary spending, turn in to corporate gas mileage for the trip to see sick Aunt Gert? Same difference…

      We hail those who beat the system [– ironically, we’re the system]. Of course he is going to explain the run around that favors his position, just as we explain our positions favorably when it of value to us to do so…

      Reinforcement is just one behavioral property that helps explain what is going on. It even explains the behavior of those tinkering to prevent it from happening again as they figure out how to restructure the economy to get our hats out of our butts.

      Don’t think that it is possible to use negative reinforcement this way? Whattabet?

      Those that consider this or that to be a result of single causes should bite your tongue and go take a “time out” while you consider how contingencies work; antecedents events, current state, shaped past consequences for similar behavior…

      Consider this mornings Google News events from today.

      FIND THE ARTICLE THAT IS NOT CONTROLLED BY CONSEQUENCES

      10/6/08 Auto-generated 10 minutes ago

      German Stocks Fall to Lowest Since 2006; Hypo Real Estate Drops
      Bloomberg – 2 hours ago
      By Michael Patterson Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) — German stocks fell the most in eight months, sending the DAX Index to the lowest since July 2006, as the deepening credit crunch forced the country’s financial industry to double a credit line for Hypo Real …

      Barack Obama accuses Republicans of distracting voters from the …
      Los Angeles Times – 2 hours ago
      ‘TURN THE PAGE’: Obama in Asheville. His poll ratings have risen recently, even in red states such as North Carolina. John McCain wants to ‘distract you with smears rather than talk to you about substance,’ the Democrat says in Asheville, NC, …

      Northern California bus crash leaves 10 dead
      The Associated Press – 48 minutes ago
      WILLIAMS, Calif. (AP) – A casino-bound charter bus flipped over about 10 miles from its destination, ejecting passengers and crushing others as it rolled into a ditch.

      UPDATE 1-RESEARCH ALERT-FBR raises Wells Fargo price target
      Reuters – 46 minutes ago
      Oct 6 (Reuters) – Friedman Billings Ramsey raised its price target on the stock of Wells Fargo & Co (WFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the fifth-largest US bank, by $5 to $25, saying the proposed merger with Wachovia Corp (WB.

      ImClone Announces Merger Agreement with Eli Lilly at $70 Per Share
      MarketWatch – 48 minutes ago
      , , ) , pursuant to which Lilly has agreed to commence a tender offer for no less than a majority of the issued and outstanding shares of ImClone common stock at a net price per share of $70 in cash.

      European countries ramp up deposit protection
      Washington Post – 39 minutes ago
      By MATT MOORE AP STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Nordic countries Denmark and Sweden moved Monday to bolster protection of bank accounts as stock exchanges across Europe opened lower and central banks pumped more money to cash-starved banks.

      Sony Expands E-book Reader Range
      PC World – 9 hours ago
      Sony is introducing a second electronic book reader to its range in the US that comes with upgraded hardware and will go on sale in November.

      IBM Expands Cloud Computing Offerings
      CRN – 1 hour ago
      By Rick Whiting, ChannelWeb IBM expanded its cloud computing efforts Monday, debuting new on-demand services for ISVs and customers the company said would make it easier for businesses to adopt cloud computing practices for improving collaboration, …

      Facebook co-founder Moskovitz leaves to start group collaboration …
      VentureBeat – 5 hours ago
      Facebook co-foudner Dustin Moskovitz (left) and colleague Justin Rosenstein (right) said this weekend they are leaving Facebook to start their own company.

      McCain, Obama campaigns trade barbs
      The Associated Press – 38 minutes ago
      WASHINGTON (AP) – Officials with the presidential campaigns of John McCain and Barack Obama are trading fresh accusations of mudslinging a month before voters choose George Bush’s successor.

      Under Financial Restraints, McCain Drops Michigan
      ABC News – 1 hour ago
      By RUSSELL GOLDMAN The electoral map shrank for John McCain Thursday as he abandoned his campaign in Michigan, raising the stakes in other battleground states such as Ohio.

      ‘SNL’ Keeps It Political
      New York Times – 7 hours ago
      Once again, “Saturday Night Live” led off the weekend’s show with Tina Fey, above, the Emmy Award-winning creator of “30 Rock,” as the Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, governor of Alaska.

      ‘Beverly Hills Chihuahua’ tops weekend box office
      Los Angeles Times – 4 hours ago
      A nation of Chihuahua dogs living in the Lost City of Techichi. in the movie “Beverly Hills Chihuahua.” The Disney film does better than expected, grossing $29 million and knocking ‘Eagle Eye’ into second place.

      OJ Simpson jury: Tapes did football legend in
      New York Daily News – 5 hours ago
      BY NANCY DILLON Jurors, including Dora Pettit (with mike), say they set aside personal feelings and based guilty OJ Simpson conviction on facts.

      Yes, it is sort of a trick question but it explains all you are seeing in Washington, DC, Wall Street and Main Street…

      Behavioral Analysis of Richard Fuld’s Testimony, Lehman CEO

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      Oct 6
    5. To help pay for the rescue, the government should raise taxes on the wealthy, Mr. Buffett suggested. “I’m paying the lowest tax rate that I’ve ever paid in my life,” he said. “Now, that’s crazy.”

      Get more recent Buffet here.

      and here

      “I’m paying the lowest tax rate that I’ve ever paid in my life”

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      Oct 6
    6. Here she is, check it out.

      probably worth reading considering as a tax payer you’re about to spend $6900 of your money on it (per person in your house!).  I like to know what I’m buying….

      SEC. 2. PURPOSES.
      1
      The purposes of this Act are—
      2
      (1) to immediately provide authority and facili-
      3
      ties that the Secretary of the Treasury can use to
      4
      restore liquidity and stability to the financial system
      5
      of the United States; and
      6
      (2) to ensure that such authority and such fa-
      7
      cilities are used in a manner that—
      8
      (A) protects home values, college funds, re-
      9
      tirement accounts, and life savings;
      10
      (B) preserves homeownership and pro-
      11
      motes jobs and economic growth;
      12
      (C) maximizes overall returns to the tax-
      13
      payers of the United States; and
      14
      (D) provides public accountability for the
      15
      exercise of such authority.
      16

      Revised Text of Economic Crisis Bill

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      Oct 1
    7. Come-on people…it is gut-check time!!! You want a republic to be proud of? Now’s the time to find you spine.

      We got the government we worked to get. Right, none of us worked hard enough and this is what laziness has wrought.   We didn’t mind when it was someone else’s dollar. Enron was a joke. Now we are all in the same financial concentration camp.

      • Bills, in one form or another, assigning $700 billion to Paulson are on the table or will be…

      • Henry Paulson, is the Secretary of the Treasury; a Cabinet position, fifth in line to succession as President.

      • He and the other people who 3 months ago said the economic fundamentals of the nation were sound are now in the triage room trying to keep the economy alive. Our economy…

      Before succumbing to fear’s faux response, the watermark of the major arguments for everything for the last 7 years, we, not Congress, should re-read Article 1, Section 1 of the Constitution; our Constitution.

      “All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in Congress of the United State, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives”

      The congress has abdicated essential legislative powers in the last 24 years to the executive branch making this bail out not only ill conceived and anti-market driven but above the law. Supplanting the rule of law – laws written by the elected representatives now abdicating their responsibility to leave for legislative recess – with the rules of the executive branch places another jewel in the imperial presidency.

      This is about information and misinformation, subjects addressed here without much coddling or political correctness. Right now the putzes in Washington want you to decide without information.

      First of all, legislative control of public funds is not a discretionary matter for our government. It is not as Commander and Chief of the Treasury that the President or a Supreme Court Judge gets to ramble on down to Wall St. in an exercise to control the flow of capital through the veins of American Capitalism.

      In a free market the impact isn’t always positive. There is always a risk of malfeasance as well as determined but unpredictable events robbing the speculators and the institutional investors of their goals.

      When new programs are reviewed be they healthcare or tax treatments we get no where. The Congress stifles discussion and leadership.

      Subject Matter Congressional Response

      Social Welfare Reform:

      “…just a payoff to lazy cheats!”

      Socialized Healthcare Reform:

      “…just another liberal giveaway scam…”

      Socialized Capitalism

      “Thank God!”

      WE ARE RUDDERLESS!

      You can’t tell the difference between the parties any more. None of them can tell themselves apart from the people they ridicule across the isle or across the sea.

      The enormous range of intricacies including our financial services under siege is of our Congressional making. Financial services are interesting because they are THE bridge between the private and public sectors that were shunned by congressional oversight and lack of cohunes to make the tough decisions for two decades.

      If you abdicate getting involved and allow this bailout, which program might you consider more seriously in the future? Healthcare, earthquake relief, atomic weapons for Texas…? Find you spine!

      As George Will has stated, “these are micro problems, although quite huge, pale next to the macro problem…”

      And what are those you ask?

      o Retirement of 78 million baby boomers in roughly the last 9 months

      o Aging population with medical needs that can’t be met

      o Transition to a welfare state requiring more economic growth, not collapse

      o Lower revenues for everyone moving from a manufacturing to service entity

      Today’s crisis will require our governments to print large amounts of capital further devaluating the dollar here and in the world market – at an accelerating rate that has been dropping for almost 6 years.

      o That money is being allocated based on a non-existing economic plan

      o That money being controlled by people who didn’t do the job they were hired by Congress to do in their Cabinet positions.

      o That money is being allocated on non-economic considerations

      o That money allocation is not subject to review by Congress just like we are being asked to forfeit the right to do in governments hast today

      Either way, we are all going to suffer for past bad business entanglements that our government put in the hands of the very people who are now telling us that $700 billion will make the problems go away.

      I don’t believe it.

      What’s more, are subsequent generations willing to sign up to pay for rippling cost acceleration generated by a predatory role of the state in allocating financial resources without consequences that even Congress walked away from?

      There WILL be more bailouts! WE ARE RUDDERLESS!

      –––––––

      Sep 26
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