Showing posts with label social comment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social comment. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Hans Rosling's 200 Countries, 200 Years, 4 Minutes - The Joy of Stats - ...


If you like to think about the world in which we live, human health and wealth, but also like Sports Center, you MUST look at this clip of Hans Rosling, a world class statistic presenter. There is a lot to think about here, history, implications, our place in the world.  Don't forget to read the comments, some are good, some stupid.  

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

New Blog Added to Exechobo Blogroll

In the column at the right I list a few blogs that I recommend you read.  I recently added one, and to keep from blog-bloat, I removed one.  First the bad news, Gregarious Loner is no longer shown.  I encourage you to keep reading, for the writing is really quite good.  I decided to de-list Gregarious Loner after a long internal debate, which arrived at the conclusion that brevity is the soul of wit.  I like that.  I may have it inscribed on a rug in my office and attribute it to Johnny Carson.  But I digress.

I became acquainted with Generation Y on Professor Matthew Perry's blog.  This is a blog run by a Cubana who is documenting her life.  It is important, and courageous.  Really so, not like a George Cloony movie courageous.  She lives in a repressive society that hassles her continually about her writing.  Go to Generation Y and read it.  It is important.

Friday, February 6, 2009

A story to enhance cynicism, or kindle hope- its up to your POV

I ran across video on Youtube. It was posted from Reason TV, and interesting site. It made me sick and it made me hopeful. Check it out:

Thursday, February 5, 2009

And the Reply to my Reply to his Reply

So, a few minutes later, a swift response from to my reply. From the IMA robot:

The e-mail address you have contacted does not accept direct email. If you have sent this message in error please disregard this reply.

If you are attempting to communicate with a Member of Congress, please visit the U.S. House of Representatives "Write Your Rep" website at http://www.house.gov/writerep.

The opportunity to respond is severly hampered when you can only send notes that are about the size of SMS messages, but the Congressional staff can reply with a position statement. Does anyone think anyone in Washington is listening to us? Is it any wonder that Lobbying is the only way to impact these people?

Of course, I will jump through the hoop, and go to the website, and fill in my information and send a snippet to the esteemed honorable representative.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Recession or Depression?

Now that we have officially been in recession for a year, we can all let a sigh of relief and congratulate ourselves on our survival. How hardy we are! The financial media is now falling all over itself to present an escalating view of how close we are to armageddon.
PANSIES!

One of the last great stories my dear old Dad told was about his first realization of what the Depression was like. It was the thirties, he was in his early teens. I will do my best to convey what he told me.

When it was clear that the depression was impacting everyone, my Dad's father was fortunate to be in a good position at Ford, as a foreman in a stamping plant. A little side story here. These were the days when Henry Ford was beginning to lose it, he was autocratic and paranoid. He had turned over much of the day to day operations to Harry Bennet, a thug in the truest sense. The riots and beatings in which Bennet's henchmen beat and killed workers were his "management style".

My grandfather ensured his job in the best way he could, by running his stamping machines faster than anyone else. He was not a very pleasant man. But he had the ingenuity common to most folks from the farm, he could really get it done, whatever it was. In these days Ford was learning how to run the world's biggest manufacturing plant, The Rouge, as it was built. Guys like Grandfather made their contributions. One was that when he got his line's production running at a hell for leather pace, the scrap out of the machines became ankle deep, and had to be cleaned up. The sweepers interfered with running the machine, and production suffered. So he had pits dug under the machines and the tailings were kicked into the pit, where they could be cleaned out with less interference to the work.

The day foreman had the pits filled in, because they weren't supposed to be there. In a very credible threat to the day foreman's life, Grandfather prevailed, and the pits restored. That is how guys like him kept their jobs.

One day, as Dad told us, his father came home on Friday and announce that he had bought a small farm. The family was packed up in the Model A, and drove out to the farm, about 90 miles north of the plant, 60 miles north of where they currently lived. Here is how dad put it: "He let us out of the car, and told us, "Here it is, this is how we will make it. You will learn to farm it, and you may starve, but by god, this family will not take one cent of public assistance." and that was that."

Now I'm sure it didn't happen like that, Grandfather may have spent the weekend with them to get things going, and Grandma was a very capable farm gal, but the fact is that the family was moved that quick, and the alternative to learning to farm was not going to be going on the dole. People thought like that then.

That year, Grandma, Dad and his 4 brothers and sisters cultivated, planted and harvested 40 acres of the farm with hand tools. There was no tractor, no horse team. They planted beans and potatoes. That is what they lived on, trading for other staples, hunting, fishing, and picking berries for the rest. They made the farm work, built it up into a good operation of about 120 acres which for various reasons my Dad ran at the age of 16. Grandfather continued to work at the Rouge, making the 90 mile drive to and from the farm every weekend in the Model A, quite a commute!

Oh, and Grandfather seems to really have been that much of a hard-assed bastard. But I don't really know, I only know what Dad told us of him, and his word was gospel.

All this is typical of what was done by people during the Depression. Do you think we are in one now? Here are four other views of what life was like in the Depression.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Where I Come From...

... is a popular country western song.  It is a toe tappin fun ditty.   But where I come from is something less colorful.  Maybe a good writer could put a better face on it, I don't see how.  I come from Detroit, the Motor City.  A place that seems bent on self destruction and is too, what, I guess "obtuse" is a polite way to say it, too obtuse to realize it is too pathetic to be a laughing stock.  

I left during one of the many downturns in the Auto industry.  Mine was 1981.  The price of oil drove gas prices up and the Big Three were completely unprepared to deal with the instant change in consumer sentiment.  Foreign economy cars gave small companies that were a joke months before the entry they needed to do what the automakers could never in their hubristic minds conceive, an opening to surpass the Big Three.  

At the time, unemployment was running at 25%, and in every family I knew, the main breadwinner was out or work.  I was running restaurants, and though it was still a scornful excuse for a profession, it kept bread on the table, and enabled me to leave.  The thing I learned living elsewhere, and remember to this day, is how nice it was to work in cities where people came to work ready to work, where they were not marking time till the plant called them back, where they could be inspired to work with a good attitude.  I never wanted to return to Detroit. 

So what should we do with businesses that are repeatedly out managed, out produced, out marketed, out positioned, out planned, out executed?  Should we let them have another chance?  

Did you know the number of auto worker in the USA who don't work for the big three number about half of those who do?  And did you know these workers make about the same wage as those who do?  Toyota, Honda, Kia, BMW, etc. are doing fine here, and there are parts of the country that appreciate these employers.  Read about this in William Perry's blog, Carpe Diem.  

Monday, December 1, 2008

Man on a Wire- fantastic stunt!

In 1974 Phillipe Petit pulled a daring stunt, the likes of which has not to this day been duplicated.  Yet not many people remember.  So many events of epic proportions have made news in the ensuing 34 years, but this one, this one merits review.  I found this short trailer for the movie made about the event.  It is enjoyable to contemplate such daring.  


Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Veterans Day

November 11th. In Europe this is Armistice Day. The 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, the time the Great War ended. But here it is a day we honor our veterans. I am not aware that other countries honor those who serve in military service like we do. It is a good time to reflect on those people who dedicate themselves, even if for only 4 years, to laying their lives on the line for their country. So many Americans have served, and are serving, we see them everywhere.

When visiting San Antonio, you are always, always within sight of some member of the military on active duty. If you fly in, your plane has at least two or three. If the plane is not full, it is very likely they have been moved to first class. Fellow passengers buy them coffee in the airport, people come up to them to shake their hand and thank them. If they are returning from the sandbox, the captain usually announces the fact and the other passengers applaud them as a show of thanks. It is a far cry from the shameful nightmarish treatment of the Vietnam soldier.

Among this group of travelers are Marines. Your only clue is the jarhead haircut. You see, they are required to travel in Class A's only. Most choose civies for comfort. But if you are looking, they are there too.

There is also a group who are easy to spot, also almost always in civies, sweats or shorts, the most comfortable clothes for travel. They are usually men, though I have seen women too. Fit, laughing, active and straight, they are coming to San Antonio for treatment, or leaving, hoping for further duty, or having done theirs, hoping for a good future. They are amputees visiting SA for treatment.

Private Ryan is playing again on Nov 11, and we may watch it. The message always makes me think of my mom and dad, and how they have lived, having lived just the kind of sacrifice you read about in articles like this. Dad was 4-F, with bad eyes, a bad leg and a vital trade on the home front. But when he got his "Greetings from Uncle Sam", he didn't mention any of that, he went. His duty was to run a maintenance crew on B-17s and later B-24s. After D-day, he loaded up a trailer and a Deuce-and-a-half and went over to France, where he and his crew often drove behind the German lines (unwittingly), in advance of the 3rd Army and Patton, to recover downed planes or ensure bomb sights didn't fall into enemy hands.

But the remarkable thing was that he got home, went simply to work, and made a great life for his family, like millions of others. As we grew into teenagers, he anguished as we revolted, not really sure if his impact was really going to be a lasting one, though he never would of thought in such self absorbed terms. He was only concerned that we too lived a Good Life. Everyday all three of his sons hope we are living up to dad's expectations.

With 3 Nephews and one son serving or having served in Somalia, Kuwait and Iraq, I am more confident that we have not lost the sense of duty and sacrifice of our heritage. Though the "kids" of today's military would never admit it, just as our fathers never would have, these are Good People all around us today. People like my brother, 8 years in the Navy, 2 tours in Viet Nam including riverine craft. My cousin, 20 years and three tours in Nam in Armor. And you Mike. Americans are still, after all, Americans.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

An Opposing View On The Bailout

I ran across this column, by Arthur Laffer, the guy who made the Laffer curve known, and a leading proponent of tax cuts to encourage economic growth. Some people think he is right, some think he is wrong. I always like starving the government of money to keep it disciplined, but then they go and spend in deficit with no compunction.

Personally, I have no confidence in government doing what is best for the economy, but great confidence in the economy to survive anyway. The bailout will look less and less like a good idea in the several years, but if it didn't occur, what would really be happening now is an interesting speculation.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Finally, my take on this financial crisis

To my thinking, it all began back in 1977, with the Community Reinvestment Act that began requiring banks to make bad loans. It continued with government bugling disguised as regulation, and as non-regulation.

This opinion piece from Forbes is a very brief explanation of how this "good intentioned" act created the by now predictable unintended consequences that legislation of markets is prone to. Also in this article, is information about how securitizing bad loans has absolved the lender from responsibility for the loan, by allowing loans to be bundled in to Securities that are sold, the beginning of the Derivatives problem, and the beginning of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae's downfall- when the government put strong pressure on them to buy the securities backed by these questionable mortgages.

Then of course, to make sure there was more official support for these loans, the Government stepped in to emphasize its direction via Freddie and Fannie. We now know the unintended consequences of that action. From the NY Times of Sept 30, 1999 is an explanation of how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were compelled, in an act of "good intentions" to underwrite loans that had no business being made.

This issue was compounded by subsequent regulatory acts that next absolved those banks of the risk of loans by allowing them to be bundled into securities to be sold to investors "upstream". Those bundles became Derivatives, the financial instrument that made big banks around the world investors in our mortgages, providing more and more money and incentive to lend, which Warren Buffet and George Soros, the SEC and a Congressional Committee that reviewed them all condemned. Warren Buffet was warning about them in 2002, as you can read here, excerpted from his annual report. The column is long, but is the words of Mr. Buffet himself, and not too technical. Seems commons sense now, but his and other voices of concern were overruled by Robert Reich and Alan Greenspan, allowing the Derivative Market to go unregulated, thus leveraging bad loans on homes into bad investments of multiple times greater value in banks around the world. What other voices were warning against derivatives? George Soros, the man who hate Republicans, the SEC in the form a mere female regulator, and the report that congress commissioned to look into derivatives. But in 2002, Greenspan was considered to be a water-walker. I doubt history will continue to revere him as much as Bill Clinton and George Bush did.

From a blog by Professor Perry, and economist and the University of Michigan, a series of writing on the mortgage mess. This is more authoritative, wide ranging and expert thinking than mine, and is why I link to the Professor's blog on Exechobos.

My Editorial Opinion: My experience is that money will always find a way to grow, profits will always be made, whether the system is highly regulated like in China, or less regulated like in the US. Government regulations are like obstacles in the road, put there with the intent to manage traffic, but money flows around them, finding a way to go where it can best make more money.

In the case of the requirement to loan money to people who couldn't afford a home, whether in Detroit during the 80's or LA in 2006, banks figured out how to meet the requirements of these acts, and offset the added risk with balloon loans, etc., then sell these loans to other banks in the form of derivatives.

It leaves me thinking that the price of homes was driven up by the increased number of people who were able and wanting to buy homes, due to the ability to finance homes, even as prices went higher. The demand was unleashed by the ability to finance home ownership, and the prices went up as result. The spiral had to end, as they always do. Prices will come down, as they always do. Money has been made and will be lost.

Unfortunately, I think the derivative investments that were based on mortgages were eagerly shared by financial institutions all over the world, because the returns were good, and there was a perception that the US Government would always support Frannie and Freddie. Until they didn't, and panic set in. Then banks dried up credit, and companies as powerful as GE couldn't use the credit they depend on for everyday operations, so we have the start of a panic and meltdown, that governments around the world could not permit. The damage could not be confined to the housing market or mortgage lending business, it has been spread and leveraged too far. So, while I hate government bailing out banks, I can see it is a necessary evil.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Americans think everything sucks, but I am OK

There is a column in the Telegraph about the gap between reality and the media/polititcian built perception of the US economy.

In the Telegraph, Irwin Stelzer writes: "Fortunately for America, the state of the nation is not quite as described by the Democrats. Some 85% of Americans do have health insurance. Of the 45.7m people who are uninsured, many receive healthcare at no cost to themselves from the non-profit hospitals that account for about 90% of all such institutions in America. And, according to The Wall Street Journal, 25% of the uninsured are eligible for government-funded Medicaid, but have not signed up, and 54% are between the ages of 18 and 34, a group heavily weighted with people who probably see little need for coverage. Can things get better with sensible policies? Sure. But experience in other countries suggests that huge government intervention in the healthcare system might not be the answer."

The idea that the US economy is fundamentally healthy is an unpopular one, as is the idea that Gustav is just another tropical storm. Hyperbole sells adspace and news papers, because we just like to tune in or read about the big train wreck. Of course, we don't have to buy into the idea that we were actually ON the train, do we?

Friday, August 29, 2008

Thinking Outside the Box

One of the best soundbites in not-too-recent history came from a Boeing engineer while in France. You have probably read this, but it is a great example of how a prepared mind can react quickly to a challenge, and how ordinary people can defend our great nation's reputation:

"There was a conference in France where a number of international engineers were taking part, including French and American. During a break one of the French engineers came back into the room saying 'Have you heard the latest dumb stunt Bush has done? He has sent an aircraft carrier to Indonesia to help the tsunami victims. What does he intended to do, bomb them?' A Boeing engineer stood up and replied quietly: 'Our carriers have three hospitals on board that can treat several hundred people; they are nuclear powered and can supply emergency electrical power to shore facilities; they have three cafeterias with the capacity to feed 3,000 people three meals a day, they can produce several thousand gallons of fresh water from sea water each day, and they carry half a dozen helicopters for use in transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck.. We have eleven such ships; how many does France have?'"

BUT, in the interests of accuracy and fairness, and to be sure that a good response is qualified and fact checked until it is no longer so worth repeating, I have discovered the truth! He was a little off on his stats. A Nimitz class carrier has more foodservice, less hospital and more water capability than he said. France does have a carrier, though it is not one of the "such ships" referred to, so the engineer is right. Here it is in comparison the the Eisenhower. Guess which is the bigger one? But seriously, the source of this rebuttal comes from Snopes, in a forum thread full of dirty hippie types. They don't even realize that French bashing did not originate with the War in Iraq, but really got going when the French refused to allow US planes to overfly its airspace when Reagan sent a mission to bomb Quadafy into submission. Which worked, and benefited the French. Or maybe it comes from the embarrassingly incompetent and cowardly performance of the Third empire leading up to and encouraging WWII to get on a roll, or maybe it was later, the traitorous Petain puppet regime that sent hundred of thousands of Jews and others to the concentration camps from France?

But now, we really should reassess this all. President Sarkozy may be more conservative and better at governing his country than our next president. Even if it is a rather small county. Or could jealousy be at the root of French bashing? In what bakery can you find bread like you can in every French hamlet? Or where can you find good table wine here for about $2 a bottle. And how many great cheeses does the average US county produce? There is much to be said for this Texas sized vacation resort. So lets cut them a break. Unless they pipe up again with the stupid, irrelevant, pious criticism that emanates from Paris every now and again.

Proud to be an American!

Thursday, August 28, 2008

US Economic Health

The dollar is increasing in value, so we are happy for what the means to our current travel plans. And for what it means to the US. Here is some analysis as to why. It is a competitive world, and it was apparent recently that just as in the 80's, other nations were rooting for our decline. What now seems apparent is that what goes around comes around.

While a weakened dollar was driving US exports higher, it was also propping up high oil costs, and hurting our economy. Now we are seeing the dollar rise against other currencies. Reports of the demise of the US economy, so relished by other countries and some people withing this country, seems to be premature, as Mark Twain said.

If you read the blogs on my side bar, you can see in Carpe Diem that the economy grew by over 3% last quarter. Once more, a recession is non existent, despite what the media and politicians want you to believe. More evidence of how resilient and fundamentally strong the US economy is.

Charlie Wilson's War

Many of us have seen the Tom Hanks movie about Charlie Wilson, and how he managed, as a no-accomplishment, no-impact representative from Texas to fund the war between the Soviet Union and the Muhajadeen, thus precipitating along with Reagan's policies the fall of the Soviet Union. Well Mr. Wilson is still around, and has written a column worth reading. In it he refers to the Peace Corps, and there is a link in the column to more articles about the Peace Corps. This is good reading if you are up for some thinking. It made me think that foreign aid may not be wasted spending after all, if used wisely.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Even a Liberal Columnist can get it right, when it's so obvious

For some reason, Froma Harrop, writing for the Providence Journal, put 2+2 together properly. If you read her column here, you will see what I mean. She manages to paint a good rendering of what our material standard of living (SOL) has done within one generation.

The human side of the story, and why Americans made such strides in our SOL escapes this column. But to stop and read it, consider the reality of our parents just 50 years ago, and to see what makes us whiny now, really makes one ill. It is no wonder the Greatest Generation just shook their head as we built bigger houses, bought more expensive toys on a line of credit based on the collateral of...our bigger houses. Not quite a house of cards, but a good representation.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

A Case for Reality Based Hope

In case you missed Michael Totten's recent post, check it out. If you don't feel good about this, you won't like puppy pictures either. You see, people can get along. It is the venal, greedy, power hungry, repressive, demagogues who stand in the place of leaders who can't. This kind of posting makes travel writing a worthy occupation.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Oil is Less Profitable Than Railroads

Margin. That is what is relevant. What percent of the dollars that come into an enterprise are converted to profit? Here is a great table that you can sort, showing various industries. The margin % column shows the oil industry ranks right below railroads. Scroll down to find them... Keep scrolling...down further...almost there... yes, right there, number 60!

Now, how reasonable is it to impose a windfall profits tax on oil? Why are they a "worse" industry than say, computers? And how much in tax is enough for the government? Oh, we already know there is no limit to the amount of money they can spend, so taxes must follow. Who is next?

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

As Oil Demand Declines, So Does Price

Supply and Demand is inexorable, no matter what governments and non-free markets try to do. Inevitably a lowered demand will drive down price. As will an increase in supply. We are seeing both occur.

The price of oil seems to have begun a retreat, as demand has fallen sharply. I have written about the reduction of gasoline use several times, including in this post. Now we see the price of oil back to the low $120/bbl range, and a set of oil price reduction events in place that will gain in momentum. They are:
1) reduction in miles driven
2) increase in mileage of the entire US auto fleet
3) relaxation of constraints on drilling in the US

These three things will act to further reduce oil prices. If this continues, the pendulum will swing so far that oil companies will be dis-incented to develop more costly oil sources, and the cost of gas will go below the number that compels conservation, and we will be right back where we were, on the edge of a problem. Irwin Kelner, Chief Economist at Market Watch agrees in his recent column.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

How to ride out a "recession"

A column by Steve Chapman got me to thinking about how the economy impacts me. Read it.

No American feels the impact of an international economic crisis. But the reality that does touch people is having to sell a home at a loss to avoid having it foreclosed. That seems to be the person "on the tip of the spear" of our woes. Fortunately, that person represents 0.58% of mortgage holders. Yes, thats right, a small number. But it is a bigger number than the usual 0.28%, so that's where the giant numbers you see come from. Fun with numbers. If I had a business that generated $0.28 per year in sales, then I was able to get to $0.58 in sales the next year, I could report that sales were up 107%! It is so easy to succeed.

In the US, there are over 119 million homes. Of those, 40% are owned free and clear, not mortgaged, according to the Census. So doing the math, 4 million homes are somewhere in the process of foreclosure, including being more than 30 days late with a payment. We have all been in foreclosure, technically.

The situation of foreclosure, like most bad things, is a result of accumulated problems, that when taken alone, are not disastrous.

1) No personal safety net of savings, or one too small is the poor foundation that leads to economic collapse.

2) Job loss is part of the issue in 38% of foreclosure. The jobless rate going above 5% is indicative of a real problem, for anything below that is considered full employment, so the trend is disturbing as are the actual numbers.

3) A health crisis is part of the problem in 25% of the cases. That people living on the edge of financial ruin own a house but not health insurance is puzzling, seeming to add more weight onto a weak financial foundation.

ADVICE NUGGET TO THE KIDS: When you lose a job, get another, regardless of how fulfilling it is; and maintain health insurance first, it is a basic, and it is affordable; and maintain 6 months of living expenses in a savings account. This is how you avoid financial ruin.

Editorial comments follow.
The fever to get more Americans into their own home has been a political goal that has spawned profits and risky decision making by banks and individuals since the mid eighties. Billions in profits have been made on the decisions to lend money to people who can't afford to pay it back. But with a booming economy, everyone "won". The trillions more that was "going" to be made on the interest for these loans in the thirty years of their life was too tempting for bankers and financial geniuses who then packaged these potential income streams into leveraged instruments they could sell. And more of the financial geniuses snapped them up.
Now, the piper is to be paid. Ooops! A rise in foreclosures means no money comes in to service the loans, and confidence, the key ingredient in the scheme, fails, as do those foundations of the leveraged notes. And when a leveraged note fails, the repercussions are, well, LEVERAGED! Owwieee!

But what I want to know is, why is the government using my money and your money to "fix" all this for those who profited and are now suffering? Why did I act responsibly and miss this gravy train? I want my share of your money too, after all, isn't that my right? See how easy it

is to go down the road from compassion and concern, past no accountability, and arrive at socialism? Oh, and if you wonder why that is bad, bone up on the countless and continuing failures of socialist systems.

But really, is the human face of our poor economy as bad as we are led to believe? If the statistics aren't talkin to ya, look at this map:














The red is bad. These are the areas that are feeling the problem, and causing the problem. Keep this in mind, the creative financing that allowed people to buy homes they couldn't afford became popular because the cost of the homes was too much for them to afford. There is a pattern there. Get rid of Phoenix (why the HELL do homes there get so expensive), LA and Vegas, well throw in Detroit too, just because it is a good idea, and guess what, nationally the foreclosure rate is lower than it historically is. Makes you think, eh?

BIG ADVICE NUGGET FOR THE KIDS: If you can't afford something, do not buy it.

OK, so reality time:

1) House prices went up,

2) lenders figured out how to exploit the laws congress passed in the eighties to allow those who were not able to qualify for loans to do so (now this is a great case of unintended consequences to legislating social programs at the expense of economic reality!),

3) people were able to buy homes they couldn't afford when they signed loan contracts with ridiculously escalating interest rates, HOPING that the future would not occur,

4) real estate prices continues an upward spiral in response to a new, falsely created mass market of buyers,

5) more people signed loan contracts to get on the real estate market ride in spite of being stretched beyond their economic means to make the silly low payments of the first two years of the ARMs,

6) and a loss or reduction of one income, or an onset of a medical problem occurs, gas prices and food (thank you Iowa Corn Growers for the bio fuel madness lobby) prices go up,

7) the shit hits the fan (SHTF)!

But what of the rest of us? We are suffering too, or so the news tells me. Well, we can always tighten our budgetary belts, rethink our spending needs and wants, and keep on drivin' (well figuratively). It has worked every time, and will work now. And the price of homes nationally is down about 6%, a start, so save your money, and buy a house with 20% down.

UPDATE: new data compiled and reported this week shows that the only states with housing prices down more than 4% are CA, FL, NV and AZ. All the places that have experienced the incredible escalation of prices and have been experiencing the worst of the foreclosures. It is so logical, it is silly. The issue- the most quoted report on housing, Standard and Poor's Case/Schiller report, fails to cover the entire market of homes equally. Here is an article on how that is done.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Exxon posts record...taxes?

Reported in his blog Carpe Diem, Professor Mark Perry shows the relationship of Exxon's latest quarterly profit to the taxes they generate. Profits- $11.68 Billion. Taxes- $32.36 Billion.

This includes the taxes they collect at the pump, which congress is trying to increase. And keep in mind, there is a growing concern by states governments that we are conserving too much fuel, and they are losing out on the tax bonanza we pay at the pump. It is sad for them. Boo Hoo.