Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Vitamins D and K — way more important than you thought
https://www.backwoodshome.com/vitamins-d-and-k-way-more-important-than-you-thought/?fbclid=IwAR0UdM0zW7gNkUAMCs-4v2Yd-6K86u1avsMzZORskZzbJfwBwbWtxP5BWw4
Science has great news for people who read actual books
https://mic.com/articles/99408/science-has-great-news-for-people-who-read-actual-books#.N4WanNNEn
House Siding Options
http://www.bhg.com/home-improvement/exteriors/siding/house-siding-options/#page=5
Fabulous Citrus Cucumber Water Fat Flush!!!!
http://www.justapinch.com/recipes/drink/punch/fabulous-citrus-cucumber-water-fat-flush.html
Evington Hilltop Adventures
http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/
"DARE TO PREPARE LINKS PAGE"
PREPAREDNESS TOPICS
Eight-part series of The Basics of Resilience #msg-67140760
Disaster Preparedness List - Being Prepared in the Face of Disaster #msg-70557325
The 7 core areas of preparedness - #msg-70439402
Bug Out Survival - #msg-67153809
20 Things You Will Need To Survive When The Economy Collapses And The Next Great Depression Begins - 67140338
POPULAR BLOGS
Peak Oil & Depression - Sustainable Living #board-9881
The Survival Podcast - http://www.thesurvivalpodcast.com/
Country Living In Cariboo Valley http://www.countrylivinginacariboovalley.com/
The Journey http://bb.bbboy.net/thejourneyforum-viewforum?forum=24
Backwoods Home Magazine http://www.backwoodshome.com/
Backdoor Survival http://www.survival-woman.com/
International Living http://www.internationalliving-magazine.com/
Survival Blog http://survivalblog.com
VENDORS
http://www.efoodsdirect.com/
http://www.lehmans.com/
http://www.turtletuffshelters.net/
http://www.tumbleweedhouses.com/
http://jaam.powweb.com/
http://wakeup-world.com
RECOMMENDED READINGS
Crisis Preparedness Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Home Storage and Physical Survival #msg-67200229
Structuring Prosperity for Yourself and the Nation #msg-67200229
The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook #msg-67200229
VIDEOS
Ben's Mill - An Excerpt
Gardening for the Long Term
Sep 26th, 2011 | By Esther |
http://www.offthegridnews.com/2011/08/05/rich-scheben-living-his-dream/
A basic law of physics states that matter cannot be created or destroyed. From the perspective of your vegetable garden, think of all of the vitamin C and lycopene in those fresh tomatoes, the sight-enhancing vitamin A in carrots, and the folate and iron in green leafy vegetables and broccoli. Where did it all come from? Of course they came from the soil.
Now think about next year and what will be left to supply the fruits (or vegetables) of your labors? There are several easy ways to ensure your garden grows, and grows healthy produce chock full of the stuff you need. If you simply replant the same way year after year, a few things will happen: your seeds won’t germinate well, the seedlings that do germinate will grow into smaller plants, the plants will fruit less, and the produce will be smaller. The actual colors of the leaves and fruits won’t be as vivid as they once were. And the produce won’t taste as full, as sweet, as pungent—in fact, won’t taste the same at all after a while.
Issues like this and many others can prevent you from getting the maximum yield from your home garden. Here are some suggestions to ensure your hard work pays off well for many years to come.
Rotate Crops
Different plants consume different nutrients from the soil. Where the tomatoes grew last year, try planting onions instead. Don’t plant eggplant though; it’s in the same family as the tomato. Keep the row markers in place after the harvest to remind yourself what was there before, or keep a chart to refer to next year. In the early spring, have a family contest to see who can come up with the best plan. If the kids are involved in the planning, they will enjoy working in the garden more after it’s planted.
Compost
Don’t throw away all the good stuff that’s left over from food preparation or not eaten. A lot, if not most, of the vitamins and nutrients reside in the peels and rinds you didn’t eat. An old fifty-five gallon drum or piece of chicken wire makes a great compost container, or just throw it in a pile on the property down wind. By next spring it will look more like soil and less like rotted food; it should also smell considerably better. You can avoid a step if you want and just throw the waste directly on the garden. It will degrade directly into the soil, and you won’t have to shovel it later. This method isn’t quite as effective, but it will work, if you don’t have animal problems.
Fertilize
There are many commercial fertilizers available, but organic solutions are abundant and easily. Find a neighbor with horses, chickens, or cattle. Few farmers exist that would refuse anyone willing to help muck the barn. Raise rabbits and/or chickens: in addition to providing a family project, they also can provide a good meal and their little pellet droppings are excellent for the plants. Integrate the pellets into a bigger batch of manure/compost/fertilizer to avoid pH issues in your soil from the phosphates and acids in urine that can mix with the pellets.
Cover Crops
If time permits in your area, replant your garden with any number of quick-growing plants that will replenish the nitrogen stores in the soil. Common cover crops include ryegrass, barley, oats, wheat, vetch, fava bean, and clover.
Selection
You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. You are not the first person to garden in your area. Contact your local cooperative extension and see what they recommend. Many varieties of plants have been developed to thrive in every geographic environment. Find out what does well in your area and go with it.
Trial and Error
Plant several varieties of each vegetable and see what does well and what doesn’t. Next year limit your planting to what you know does well. Don’t be afraid to experiment with new varieties each year. Try a few exotic or unusual plants each year, as you might find something that does exceedingly well.
Move Perennial Beds
Asparagus, rhubarb, and the like return year after year. If you find your perennials failing despite fertilization, go ahead and move the bed to another location. You can do this slowly by thinning the crowded plant beds into a new area. It’s a lot of work, but worth it with the first bite of strawberry-rhubarb pie.
Keep the Soil Loose
Simple considerations such as not walking on or working wet soil, as it can pack down and keep too much moisture in one spot, will greatly improve your garden. Healthy plants require well-drained soil to thrive.
Protect Your Garden from Intruders
Many critters and even larger animals can prevent your hard work from paying off. If you’re having trouble with larger animals and your garden’s too big to fence, run a string around the garden and tie pieces of human hair to the string. Save your own hair when you cut it or go to a barber or hair dresser. Deer will smell human scent and avoid it. You can also tie reflective aluminum pans or used microwave-type containers onto the string. The movement and sound will scare off some hungry animals. As strange as it sounds, if little animals are bothering, you could consider collecting urine and pouring it around the perimeter of the garden at timely intervals. Mothballs seeded amongst the plantings detract burrowing creatures as well and are not harmful. While some of these old techniques can seem awkward, in a pinch they can serve you well. If the above methods are too unconventional, you would be surprised how much protection you can derive from some fine chicken wire and a little creativity.
Protect Your Garden from Insects
This is no easy feat, as many insects can attack the leaves of your plants and kill them as before they have had the chance to fruit. Hand picking the bugs is arduous but effective (think caterpillars and squash bugs). Of course there are commercially available insecticides and fungicides available. If used, be certain to wash the produce extremely well before ingesting. There is a commercially available organic powder called Rotenone that occurs naturally in the roots of certain plants and is relatively safe to use. For some scenarios it can prove a useful alternative.
Protect Your Garden from Birds
Netting can be used to prevent birds from devouring your hard won garden gifts. Another (less effective) method is to place an artificial bird statue or rubber snake in close proximity to the crops you want to protect. Again, the sounds made by tying objects that collide in the wind can be effective as well. If you are in a high-population area, a makeshift greenhouse can serve multiple purposes, including deterring birds.
Protect Your Garden from Frost
Unpredictable cold snaps are common in northern territories but can also surprise gardeners in warmer climates. Have a supply of old sheets, blankest, tarps, or other coverings to use in an emergency. You can build a simple frame covered with plastic to cover seedlings in the spring when frost is most likely. They are easily removed and stored when the weather stabilizes and the seedlings grow.
Maintaining a garden for personal use can be quite an undertaking: it involves consistent attention, surveillance, and planning for potential offenders that limit or steal the results of your hard work. The rewards of maintaining a healthy garden are vast: stress reduction, better nutrition, reduced cost of providing fresh produce, and variety of sustenance. However, the real benefit is in the satisfaction your fruits and vegetables will give you through the flavor, texture, and abundance coming out of your garden—and the knowledge that you grew them yourself.
©2011 Off the Grid News
Sheila Bair’s Bank Shot
By JOE NOCERA
Published: July 9, 2011
Sheila Bair
Ruven Afanador for The New York Times
Sheila Bair in March with Ben Bernanke, left, and Timothy Geithner.
Joshua Roberts/Bloomberg News
‘They should have let Bear Stearns fail,” Sheila Bair said.
It was midmorning on a crisp June day, and Bair, the 57-year-old outgoing chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation —the federal agency that insures bank deposits and winds down failing banks — was sitting on a couch, sipping a Starbucks latte. We were in the first hour of several lengthy on-the-record interviews. She seemed ever-so-slightly nervous.
Long viewed as a bureaucratic backwater, the F.D.I.C. has had a tumultuous five years while being transformed under Bair’s stewardship. Not long after she took charge in June 2006, Bair began sounding the alarm about the dangers posed by the explosive growth of subprime mortgages, which she feared would not only ravage neighborhoods when homeowners began to default — as they inevitably did — but also wreak havoc on the banking system. The F.D.I.C. was the only bank regulator in Washington to do so. During the financial crisis of 2008, Bair insisted that she and her agency have a seat at the table, where she worked — and fought — with Henry Paulson, then the treasury secretary, and Timothy Geithner, the president of the New York Federal Reserve, as they tried to cobble together solutions that would keep the financial system from going over a cliff. She and the F.D.I.C. managed a number of huge failing institutions during the crisis, including IndyMac, Wachovia and Washington Mutual. She was a key player in shaping the Dodd-Frank reform law, especially the part that seeks to forestall future bailouts. Since the law passed, she has made an immense effort to convince Wall Street and the country that the nation’s giant banks — the same ones that required bailouts in 2008 and became known as “too big to fail” institutions — will never again be bailed out, thanks in part to new powers at the F.D.I.C. Just a few months ago, she went so far as to send a letter to Standard & Poor’s, the credit-ratings agency, suggesting that its ratings of the big banks were too high because they reflected an expectation of government support. If a too-big-to-fail bank got into trouble, she wrote, the F.D.I.C. would wind it down, not bail it out.
As an observer of the financial crisis and its aftermath, I have frankly admired most of what she tried to do. She was tough-minded and straightforward. On financial matters, she seemed to have better political instincts than Obama’s Treasury Department, which of course is now headed by Geithner. She favored “market discipline” — meaning shareholders and debt holders would take losses ahead of depositors and taxpayers — over bailouts, which she abhorred. She didn’t spend a lot of time fretting over bank profitability; if banks had to become less profitable, postcrisis, in order to reduce the threat they posed to the system, so be it. (“Our job is to protect bank customers, not banks,” she told me.) And she was a fierce, and often lonely, proponent of widespread mortgage modification, for reasons both compassionate (to help struggling homeowners stay in their homes) and economic (fewer foreclosures would help the troubled housing market recover more quickly).
I thought something else as well: with her five-year term as F.D.I.C. chairwoman drawing to a close — her last day was July 8 — she never really got her due. The rap on her was always that she was “difficult” and “not a team player.” There were times, in Congressional testimony, when she disagreed with her fellow regulators even though they were sitting right next to her. Her policy disputes with other regulators were legion; in leaked accounts, Bair was invariably portrayed as the problem. In “Too Big to Fail,” for instance, the behind-the-scenes account of the financial crisis by the New York Times business columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bair is described as one of Geithner’s “least favorite people in government.” As Paulson, Geithner and the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, raced to bail out banks and companies like A.I.G., Bair resisted, fearing that they were being overly generous by putting the interests of bondholders over those of taxpayers. I couldn’t help recalling that the last female financial regulator to be labeled difficult was Brooksley Born, the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the mid-1990s. Fearful that derivatives were becoming a threat to the financial system, Born wanted to regulate them but was stiff-armed by Alan Greenspan and Robert Rubin.
It wasn’t just that the men controlled the narrative; it was also that Bair was a classic Washington policy wonk, far more comfortable discussing the fine points of regulation than backroom politics. Interviewing her could be an exercise in frustration. She was only too happy to talk about capital requirements, say, but even off the record she wouldn’t tread where most journalists, myself included, wanted her to go — into the boardrooms at Treasury and the Fed where decisions were hashed out. In 2009, The New Yorker published a short profile of her in which she refused to be drawn out about one of the many bureaucratic fights over too-big-to-fail. Her response was classic Bair: “It’s a very difficult task to try to balance all the different perspectives and come up with a package,” she said diplomatically, “and every compromise is going to have people who are unhappy about various parts of it.” You can almost hear the author sighing.
Bair, in April 2009, with Lawrence Summers and President Obama.
Gerald Herbert/Associated Press
Not long ago, I approached her with the idea of doing an extended exit interview. I thought it was important to get her perspective on the last five years. I also thought, to be honest, that her impending retirement might loosen her tongue a little. After thinking it over, she agreed to talk to me, with the stipulation that nothing be published until she left office.
And so there we were, talking about Bear Stearns, the investment bank whose near failure marked the beginning of the crisis. Even knowing that her views of the financial crisis were at odds with many of the others who were involved, I was taken aback: I had never heard anyone involved in the crisis criticize the government’s decision to help Bear Stearns avoid certain bankruptcy.
For a moment, Bair seemed a little surprised, too, by the words that had tumbled out. She took a sip of her latte and looked straight ahead, deep in thought.
“Do you really think they should have let Bear fail?” I asked.
When she put her drink down, her hesitation was gone. “Let’s face it,” she said. “Bear Stearns was a second-tier investment bank, with — what? — around $400 billion in assets? I’m a traditionalist. Banks and bank-holding companies are in the safety net. That’s why they have deposit insurance. Investment banks take higher risks, and they are supposed to be outside the safety net. If they make enough mistakes, they are supposed to fail. So, yes, I was amazed when they saved it. I couldn’t believe it. When they told me about it, I said: ‘Guess what: Investment banks fail.’ ”
I first met Sheila Bair in November 2005, during one of her rare breaks from government service. A longtime aide to Bob Dole, the Republican senator from Kansas — Bair grew up in the small town of Independence, Kan., and attended the University of Kansas — she had also been a commissioner on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and an assistant secretary in George W. Bush’s Treasury Department. In 2002, she left Treasury to join the faculty of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where she taught regulatory policy at the business school. Three years later, she invited Senator Paul Sarbanes, the former chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, to speak to her class. His visit to Amherst happened to coincide with a column I was writing about him. I sat in on the class.
At the time, all I really knew about Bair’s background was that she was a Republican. Which kind quickly became clear. She and Sarbanes, a Democrat from Maryland, obviously shared a great deal of mutual respect and affection, despite spending their lives on different sides of the aisle; she turned out to be a member of that dying breed, the Republican moderate. In our recent talks, she described herself as someone who believes in “regulations that reinforce economic incentives.” That came through, too; she praised Sarbanes’s signature law, Sarbanes-Oxley, which established new accounting rules to combat corporate fraud — and which most Republicans still denounce nearly a decade after its passage.
She also pushed the O.C.C. to issue its voluntary guidance, even though it would help only marginally. The vast majority of subprime loans were issued by institutions outside the regulated banking system, out of the reach of the O.C.C. or the F.D.I.C. But those nonbanks depended on the regulated banks for their own financing. As a way to get at the unregulated lenders, Bair came up with the idea of applying the government’s subprime guidance to any company that was financed by a regulated bank. The banks, she says, “fought us tooth and nail.” She lost.
At the same time, she was fighting a rear-guard battle on another critical banking issue — so-called capital requirements, the amount of capital banks must hold as a cushion against losses. Banks always want their capital requirements to be as low as possible, so they can take more risks, which can enable them to make more money — and reap bigger bonuses for executives. In 2004, an international group called the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision proposed rules that would allow banks to hold capital on a “risk-weighted” basis, meaning that assets with lower risk would require less capital. (As it turned out, triple-A-rated mortgage bonds stuffed with bad subprime mortgages were considered very low risk under the Basel proposal. That is why so many banks loaded up on them in the years leading up to the crisis.) To make matters worse, the Basel II accords, as they were called, permitted banks to evaluate their assets with their own internal risk models.
Most European countries quickly adopted Basel II. In the United States, the Federal Reserve was strongly in favor of doing so, too, as was the O.C.C. But the F.D.I.C., fearing that lower capital requirements and the self-selection of risk models would increase the risk of bank failures, opposed Basel II. This meshed perfectly with Bair’s own instincts, and once she arrived at the F.D.I.C., she became the standard-bearer in opposing the new rules. The Fed, in particular, pushed her to sign on; it didn’t need the F.D.I.C.’s approval, but it is politically important for all the regulators to be aligned when instituting such an important change. Instead, Bair conceded, “we dragged it out and dragged it out.” She dragged it out so long, in fact, that the financial crisis arrived before Basel II was ever implemented in the United States.
Foot-dragging is not the sort of bureaucratic tactic that draws praise or even much notice. But I’ve long believed that her opposition to Basel II has been a hugely underappreciated factor in helping to save the financial system when the crisis came. The European banks, lacking adequate capital, were crushed by the financial crisis. Big banks in places like Ireland and Iceland collapsed. Germany doled out hundreds of billions of dollars to shore up its banks. Even today, banks in Europe are in far worse shape than they are in the U.S. American banks didn’t have enough capital, either, but they had a lot more than their European counterparts, and for all their ongoing problems, they are much healthier institutions today.
By the summer of 2007, the subprime bubble had burst. Just as Bair expected, the default rate on subprime mortgages was rising quickly. Looking ahead, it wasn’t hard to see that all those adjustable-rate mortgages written in 2006 and early 2007 were going to reset in a year or two. During the bubble, when housing prices were rising, homeowners avoided the higher rates by refinancing. Now that was no longer possible. Disaster loomed, as millions of Americans would no longer be able to make their mortgage payments. Yet only the F.D.I.C. seemed to take this possibility seriously — and to fear the consequences. Paulson and Bernanke, for their parts, maintained that the damage from the bursting of the subprime bubble would be “contained,” as they liked to put it.
That fall, Mark Zandi of economy.com published a survey of mortgage servicers. “It showed that like 1 percent of those reset mortgages were being restructured,” Bair said. “They would just push people into foreclosure.” Bair was furious and felt that she had been lied to. All those promises made in the spring turned out to be nothing more than “happy talk,” in her words.
So she turned her attention to the Treasury Department, hoping to persuade Paulson and others to put the weight of Treasury — an agency with far more clout than the F.D.I.C. — behind her push for mortgage modification. Although there were sporadic efforts at Treasury to do something for homeowners, they never seemed to gain any traction.
There are certainly arguments against modifying mortgages. One is that doing so creates moral hazard — if some people struggling to stay in their homes get lower monthly payments, then everybody will want a similar deal, and they’ll stop making their mortgage payments even when they can afford them. Another is that many people in default will end up redefaulting on a modified mortgage. A third rationale is that the foreclosure process itself is necessary for any eventual recovery of the housing market. Lastly, designing a mortgage-modification plan that works for a large number of people is excruciatingly difficult, maybe even impossible. I have heard all these arguments from Treasury officials over the years.
In the cool light of day, however — with two million Americans having already lost their homes and another two million in serious default, and with one out of every five homes worth less than the homeowner’s mortgage — this thinking has been shown to be horribly shortsighted. Had the federal government emphasized mortgage modification early on, it could have prevented a lot of pain and might have helped stabilize the economy a lot sooner.
Bair, however, has always thought there were other reasons behind the general resistance to modifying mortgages. The government, she said, “thought maybe I was overstating the problem and that it wasn’t going to be that big a deal.” As for those in the industry, she added: “I think some of it was that they didn’t think borrowers were worth helping. There was some disdain for borrowers.”
In October 2007, she made a calculated decision to go public. In an op-ed article in The New York Times, she called on mortgage servicers to reset adjustable-rate mortgages en masse. “These borrowers would still be required to make their monthly payments,” she wrote, in an implicit response to the moral-hazard argument. She concluded: “Avoiding foreclosure would protect neighboring properties and hasten the recovery.”
Although she made no mention of the Treasury Department, everyone in the bureaucracy knew that it was her real target. It was now official: Sheila Bair was difficult.
That reputation was only made worse by the financial crisis.
The essential brief against her was that she refused to adopt the all-hands-on-deck mind-set required to deal with the unfolding emergency. At every step along the way, whenever she was asked to participate in one rescue program or another, she balked. As Sorkin put it in “Too Big to Fail,” the other regulators viewed her as parochial and small-minded and thought her “only concern was to protect the F.D.I.C., not the entire system.”
When I asked Bair about the charge that she cared only about the interests of her agency, she scoffed. “First of all,” she said, “protecting bank depositors is important. So is protecting the taxpayer.” As she saw it, there were too many times when she was the only one trying to do both. (When I spoke to Paulson, he defended Bair’s work during the crisis: “Sheila came to play every day,” he said. As for the criticism that she cared only about bank depositors, he added, “That was her job.”)
“They always had the view that the F.D.I.C. was not in the same league as Treasury and the Fed,” she told me. “As a result, we were rarely consulted. They would bring me in after they’d made their decision on what needed to be done, and without giving me any information they would say, ‘You have to do this or the system will go down.’ If I heard that once, I heard it a thousand times. ‘Citi is systemic, you have to do this.’ No analysis, no meaningful discussion. It was very frustrating.”
Too often, she felt, their requests were excessive, putting taxpayers at risk while bailing out undeserving debt holders. For instance, during the peak of the crisis, with credit markets largely frozen, banks found themselves unable to roll over their short-term debt. This made it virtually impossible for them to function. Geithner wanted the F.D.I.C. to guarantee literally all debt issued by the big bank-holding companies — an eye-popping request.
Bair said no. Besides the risk it would have entailed, it would have also meant a windfall for bondholders, because much of the existing debt was trading at a steep discount. “It was unnecessary,” she said. Instead, Bair and Paulson worked out a deal in which the F.D.I.C. guaranteed only new debt issued by the bank-holding companies. It was still a huge risk for the F.D.I.C. to take; Paulson says today that it was one of the most important, if underrated, actions taken by the federal government during the crisis. “It was an extraordinary thing for us to do,” Bair acknowledged.
Citigroup was another example. No bank needed more federal assistance than Citi — it required three separate bailouts. And yet, in Bair’s view, no bank was treated as solicitously, especially by the New York Fed. She felt pressured by the Fed to allow Citi to buy a failing Wachovia — which she suspected was a kind of backdoor way to strengthen Citi by giving it access to Wachovia’s stable deposit base. To make the deal work, the New York Fed even agreed to absorb some of Wachovia’s losses. When the F.D.I.C. accepted the Citi offer, Geithner felt that a deal had been made. But before Citi could close the deal, Wells Fargo, a much stronger bank, made a better offer — one that didn’t require government assistance. Bair leapt at it. Geithner was furious, complaining that Bair’s action was sending the wrong signal at the wrong time: that the federal government couldn’t be trusted to stick to its word. Bair didn’t care; she clearly got the right outcome for taxpayers and bank depositors, even if it didn’t help Citigroup.
As she thinks back on it, Bair views her disagreements with her fellow regulators as a kind of high-stakes philosophical debate about the role of bondholders. Her perspective is that bondholders should take losses when an institution fails. When the F.D.I.C. shuts down a failing bank, the unsecured bondholders always absorb some of the losses. That is the essence of market discipline: if shareholders and bondholders know they are on the hook, they are far more likely to keep a close watch on management’s risk-taking.
During the crisis, however, Treasury and the Fed were adamant about protecting debt holders, fearing that if they had to absorb losses, the markets would be destabilized and a bad situation would get even worse. “What was it James Carville used to say?” Bair said. “ ‘When I die I want to come back as the bond market.’ ”
“Why did we do the bailouts?” she went on. “It was all about the bondholders,” she said. “They did not want to impose losses on bondholders, and we did. We kept saying: ‘There is no insurance premium on bondholders,’ you know? For the little guy on Main Street who has bank deposits, we charge the banks a premium for that, and it gets passed on to the customer. We don’t have the same thing for bondholders. They’re supposed to take losses.” (Treasury’s response is that spooking the bond markets would have made the crisis much worse and that ultimately taxpayers have made out extremely well as a consequence of the government’s actions during the crisis.)
She had a second problem with the way the government went about saving the system. It acted as if no one were at fault — that it was all just an unfortunate matter of “a system come undone,” as she put it.
“I hate that,” she said. “Because it doesn’t impose accountability where it should be. A.I.G. was badly managed. Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns were badly managed. And not everyone was as badly managed as they were.”
Grudgingly, Bair acknowledged that some of the bailouts were necessary. There was no way, under prevailing law, to wind down the systemically important bank-holding companies that were at risk of failing. The same was true of a nonbank like A.I.G., which the government wound up bailing out just two days after allowing Lehman Brothers to fail. An A.I.G. bankruptcy would have been disastrous, damaging money-market funds, rendering giant banks insolvent and wreaking panic and chaos. Its credit-default swaps could have brought down much of the Western banking system.
“Yes, that was necessary,” Bair said. “But they certainly could have been less generous. I’ve always wondered why none of A.I.G.’s counterparties didn’t have to take any haircuts. There’s no reason in the world why those swap counterparties couldn’t have taken a 10 percent haircut. There could have at least been a little pain for them.” (All of A.I.G.’s counterparties received 100 cents on the dollar after the government pumped billions into A.I.G. There was a huge outcry when it was revealed that Goldman Sachs received more than $12 billion as a counterparty to A.I.G. swaps.)
Bair continued: “They didn’t even engage in conversation about that. You know, Wall Street barely missed a beat with their bonuses.”
“Isn’t that ridiculous?” she said.
John Podesta, who headed the Obama transition team, was another Democrat that Bair had known forever. In one of her early conversations with him, she volunteered the name of Paul Volcker as a possible Treasury secretary. Volcker was most famous for taming inflation as Federal Reserve chairman in the 1980s, but he was also someone who didn’t think like a big banker. On the contrary, he was highly critical of the banks. “I just thought there had been too many people who had been too close to the financial situation for too long,” Bair told me. “I thought we needed a fresh perspective.”
Instead, Obama turned to Geithner. It was no secret by then that Bair and Geithner had a frosty relationship; inevitably stories leaked out that Geithner was trying to push her out. But the stories were wrong: Bair’s support for mortgage modifications made her enormously popular with Democrats; when she told Podesta that she would step down early if that’s what the president wanted, he said no: Obama wanted her to stay. (For his part, Geithner told me: “Even though we didn’t always agree, I greatly admire Sheila for her early recognition of the severity of the crisis and for her creative use of the F.D.I.C. to stem the panic.”)
What has been discouraging is that the Obama administration hasn’t done much better on the loan-modification front than the Bush administration did. Early on, the president told his staff to talk to the F.D.I.C. about how to set up a loan-modification plan. The F.D.I.C. had a wealth of experience, in part because it operated IndyMac for nine months until a buyer was found. It used that time to work on mortgage modifications with IndyMac borrowers and came up with a template for a program it felt could work nationwide. “They did talk to us,” Bair said of Obama’s staff, “but I always had the sense they were talking to us because the president wanted them to.”
Getting the banks to make large-scale mortgage modifications is no different today than it was in 2007 — next to impossible. The servicers still lack the economic incentives to modify mortgages; it’s easier in most cases for them to foreclose, which also generates fees, while modifications don’t. As Bair herself discovered during the IndyMac experience, changing that attitude requires dogged effort. “I ended up having calls with our servicers every Friday, to get a status report on what they’d done that week on loan modifications, just to keep the pressure on,” Bair said.
Without question, it is difficult to get mortgage modifications right. But many Democrats originally voted for TARP because it contained a provision mandating that $50 billion of the $700 billion in bailout money go to mortgage modification. The Paulson Treasury ignored that part of the law — and the Geithner Treasury has barely touched that $50 billion.
Still, a Democratic administration had to do something. Bair offered up the F.D.I.C.’s ideas, which involved, among other things, some government insurance protection for redefaults that took place after three months. She was sure her plan had better economic incentives for servicers than anything else under consideration. But the Obama administration went with a plan that didn’t fundamentally change the incentives, and that was not much different from what the Treasury under Bush did after the financial crisis.
When Bair was shown the plan, literally hours before it was announced by the president, she told them, “That’s fine; I’m not going to speak out against this, but don’t expect me to marry up to it either, because I don’t think it will work.” She told me: “They wanted my name and reputation on it.”
Sure enough, the Home Affordable Modification Plan has not exactly been a rousing success. Although some 700,000 homeowners have gotten modified mortgages through the program, that number is dwarfed by the millions of foreclosures that have taken place and the millions of homeowners in default today. Too often qualified borrowers have sought HAMP modifications only to be turned away by their servicers. Foreclosure remains their preference.
“I think the president’s heart is in the right place,” Bair told me. “I absolutely do. But the dichotomy between who he selected to run his economic team and what he personally would like them to be doing — I think those are two very different things.” What particularly galls her is that Treasury under both Paulson and Geithner has been willing to take all sorts of criticism to help the banks. But it has been utterly unwilling to take any political heat to help homeowners.
The second key issue for Bair has been dealing with the too-big-to-fail banks. Her distaste for the idea that the systemically important banks can never be allowed to fail is visceral. “I don’t think regulators can adequately regulate these big banks,” she told me. “We need market discipline. And if we don’t have that, they’re going to get us in trouble again.”
In the early wrangling over what became the Dodd-Frank bill, “resolution authority” was not a prominent part of the agenda. Then in March 2009, A.I.G. filed documents showing that it had set aside $165 million in bonuses for its traders. The public anger over these bonuses was enormous. One day in the middle of the furor, the president summoned Bair to the White House. When she arrived at the Oval Office, Geithner and Lawrence Summers, Obama’s top economic adviser, were sitting on the couch — and the seat next to the president was empty. That was where she was supposed to sit.?As the president vented his frustration over the A.I.G. bonuses, Bair saw her opportunity. “This doesn’t happen with our process,” she told the president. “We have a resolution process that we’ve used for decades, and when we put a bank into receivership, we have the right to break all contracts, we can fire people, we can take away bonuses and we don’t get into this kind of problem.” The president quickly signed on to the idea of having Dodd-Frank include the ability to resolve giant bank-holding companies and other systemically important financial institutions like A.I.G.
That was the easy part. Dealing with the Treasury Department was, as usual, the hard part. The original white paper the administration produced that outlined the financial reforms it wanted from Congress included a section calling for the government to be able to legally “resolve” the big banks. It had the F.D.I.C. running the process, which clearly made the most sense; the agency had been doing it for so long, it had the process down to a science. That’s why bank depositors scarcely notice when the F.D.I.C. shuts down their bank on a Friday and reopens it under new management on a Monday morning.
Weeks passed. About an hour before the president was set to announce the reform package, F.D.I.C. officials, including Bair, were shown the latest copy of the white paper. According to Bair, “The resolution authority had completely changed.” While the F.D.I.C. still had an important role, its authority had been seriously diluted — now the Treasury and the Federal Reserve would also have to sign off before a bank could be wound down. From Treasury’s point of view, this was completely reasonable. After all, any wind-down would require short-term lending from the Treasury, so it wanted some say in the process. But Bair felt strongly that this was yet another example of her — and her agency — being undercut by other regulators.
So she fought back; and in typical Bair fashion, she did so publicly. When called to testify before the House Financial Services Committee about the new resolution authority, she bluntly told Barney Frank, then the committee chairman, that, as she put it to me: “It still doesn’t resolve the large bank-holding companies. We would like the authority to do that.” In the final Dodd-Frank bill, Treasury’s oversight role was diminished — and the F.D.I.C. had the authority to manage a failing too-big-to-fail bank.
Even so, there are many people who remain convinced that the government will never have the nerve to let an important institution actually fail. Indeed, the big banks currently have a much lower cost of capital than their smaller brethren precisely because the bond market doesn’t believe they will ever be allowed to fail.
Bair has spent much of the last year trying to convince the country — and Wall Street — that the F.D.I.C. is up to the task. Most people remain unconvinced. But she insists, thanks to the new resolution authority, “I think we are in a lot better shape than we were.” The truth, of course, is that nobody can possibly know what the government will do. The only way to find out is to have an institution fail — not exactly a prospect to relish. But that will be a problem for someone else, not for Sheila Bair. She has done her part.
“I didn’t start off being assertive and going public with concerns,” Bair said as our second interview was winding down. “But we were being ignored, and we had something to bring to the table. There’s been speculation: maybe it was gender or that I’m not an Ivy League person. It could be; everybody has their biases. But I found I had to become assertive when they just wouldn’t listen.”
My own view is the country would have been far better served if more people in positions of power had been willing to listen to her as the financial crisis unfolded. Hers was a voice of common sense, trying to protect the taxpayer, the bank depositor and the homeowner. If other regulators had taken her early subprime concerns seriously — to cite just one example — the financial world might be a different place today.
“We always saw ourselves as the champion of the little guy,” she continued. “The other regulators never saw the pain of a bank closure, because that was our role. We were the ones that saw people losing their jobs when we had to shut down a little bank. They never understood the unfairness of the way little banks were treated versus big banks. Some of the other regulators have an institutional mind-set that the big banks have to always be with us.”
Which brings me back to where we began, with Bear Stearns. As I’ve thought about it in the weeks since our interviews, I’ve come to the view that she was absolutely right. “I think that the Bear deal set up an expectation for government intervention that was not really helpful,” she told me. Letting Bear Stearns fail would most likely have sent the right message to the rest of Wall Street, while there was still time, and without creating the kind of chain reaction that the Lehman failure caused. “I’ve always thought,” she said, “that it was really important for everybody to have to play by the same set of rules.”
That didn’t happen in 2008. Fighting the good fight, Bair has tried to make sure that it will happen the next time there’s a crisis.
Live webchat with Kurt Cobb and Christine Patton (Peak Oil Hausfrau)
by Staff
Published Jun 6 2011 by Energy Bulletin, Archived Jun 6 2011
http://www.energybulletin.net/stories/2011-05-27/live-webchat-kurt-cobb-and-christine-patton-peak-oil-hausfrau
Three Cheers for the Cheapeners and Cost-Cutters
By MATT RIDLEY
MAY 7, 2011
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704436004576299431739673572.html?mod=WSJ_topics_obama
Cheapeners deserve as much credit as inventors.
Last week a Minneapolis firm called TenKsolar announced that it reckons it can soon cut the cost of rooftop solar power in sunny locations to as little as eight cents a kilowatt-hour—which is almost competitive with conventional electricity. It borrows an idea from computer memory technology to wire up solar panels in a new pattern so that the current can take many different paths through the cells in the array. The result is that the output of the panel is no longer limited to the output of the worst-performing cell. Until now, a shadow passing over one cell would cut the output of the whole panel.
This mundane innovation will not in itself transform the prospects of solar cells, but it's a glimpse of the kind of small steps that, while winning no Nobel Prizes, are needed to bring the cost of solar power down to the point where it can be a cost-saving boon to, rather than a subsidized drain on, economic activity. That "cheapening" is vital.
A feature of innovation is that the greatest impact of a new idea comes not when the light bulb goes on over the geek's head, but when the resulting technology eventually becomes cheap enough for many people to use—perhaps decades later. The first plane at Kitty Hawk had zero impact on the world economy, but budget airlines have a huge impact; the first computer was a curiosity, but cheap laptops changed the world.
With some technologies, the cheapening happens almost immediately. The Post-it note springs to mind. With others, the cheapening takes a surprisingly long time: Lasers remained the preserve of labs for five decades before suddenly showing up in consumer goods. With some technologies, like helicopters, the cheapening has never happened at all.
Most of us consider the original idea rare and noble, the later cheapening inevitable and dull. Who would imagine today that Napoleon III of France reserved his newfangled aluminum cutlery for only his most honored guests, leaving commoner folk to eat with silver?
We also disrespect the people who achieve the cheapening. The robber barons of the late 19th century generally made their fortunes by drastically cheapening new technologies, grabbing market share by undercutting rivals—and ending up with terrible reputations. Cornelius Vanderbilt cut the price of rail freight 90%, Andrew Carnegie slashed steel prices 75% and John D. Rockefeller cut oil prices 80% between 1870 and 1900. Malcom McLean, Sam Walton and Michael Dell did roughly the same for container shipping, discount retailing and home computing a century later, and were also unloved for it.
Yet it's the cheapening that raises the world's living standards. And cheapening is often mighty hard work.
As Kevin Kelly argues in his book "What Technology Wants," once an idea is ripe, simultaneous invention of the same thing by different people is so common that it is almost the rule. This implies that inventors are more dispensable than cheapeners: If Thomas Edison had not existed, electricity would still have been invented. It's harder to argue that had Sam Walton not existed, discount retailing would have grown as fast.
The length of the usual gap between invention and cheapening implies that some of today's expensive technologies will eventually flower into prosperity-enhancing time-savers. All they need is a good cheapener to work on them.
Solar power may be one of these technologies, and others may be high-temperature superconductors, discovered in the 1980s, but yet to have much economic impact; biotechnology, still mostly helping research rather than therapy; and space travel, still far too expensive to be of any commercial interest. They await their Carnegies.
Twelve Unsustainable Things That Will Soon Come To A Disastrous End
Read more: http://news.iskcon.org/node/3485#ixzz1Gr6hy3KI
Ten Wild Edibles to Consider Planting on or Around Your Property
By Modern Survival, on September 15th, 2010
http://www.thesurvivalpodcast.com/episode-511-ten-wild-edibles-to-consider-planting-on-or-around-your-property
Wild Edibles with Linda Runyon
http://truthbrigade.org/smf/index.php/topic,5729.0.html
« on: June 01, 2010, 10:21:51 PM »
http://TruthBrigade.com/radio/06-09-10_WildEdibles-LindaRunyunon_32k.mp3
OR
http://www.americanfreedomradio.com/archive/Truth_Brigade_32k_060910.mp3
HORIZONTAL DRILLING
Northern Oil & Gas Co.
http://northernoil.com/drilling.php
The Political Chemistry of Oil / Lisa Margonelli
9/02/10
http://webpages.charter.net/fallingsky/
As to the fate of the developing U.S. great depression, it will encompass the fire of a hyperinflation, instead of the ice of deflation seen in the major U.S. depressions prior to World War II. What promises hyperinflation this time is the lack of monetary discipline formerly imposed on the system by the gold standard, a fiscally bankrupt federal government and a Federal Reserve dedicated to debasing the U.S. dollar. Shadow Government Statistics Copyright 2009
If the Democrats are the solution to the Kochtopus, the U.S. is far more screwed than even I believed possible. The Tea Party is the 2010, 180 degrees out of phase version of Hope and Change. Whether your cabin is on the port or the starboard side of the Ship of Fools, the destination is the same; oblivion. I don’t know what it will take to get the shit for brains Left and the shit for brains Right to understand that billionaires, and the governments that serve them, don’t have their best interests in mind. But, until that basic law of the universe is understood, there’s always the next election… *sigh* Good luck with that. Kevin Flaherty
When I was very young, I had certain assumptions about the path to adulthood. I believed that it was a transition that came as naturally to every person as walking or talking. Surely, I thought, there simply came a time when a man crossed a biological threshold that made him more responsible, more principled, more intuitive, more courageous, more compassionate, more wise. Now that I am much older, I find to my disappointment that wisdom does not necessarily come with age. Some people choose to remain children forever. Giordano Bruno
“Get ready for the cliff-edge,” warned Royal Bank of Scotland credit chief Andrew Roberts in a note to clients late last week. He said “monster” quantitative monetary easing (money printing) is coming and that investors should “Be long gold. Think the unthinkable.”
It would seem that there are more than three (all US based) ratings agencies in the world. There is at least one more, the Dagong Global Credit Rating Co. based in, of all places, Beijing. Following the lead of its US counterparts, "Dagong" has decided to cast its eye over the world of sovereign debt risk. Having done so, it has awarded the US an "AA" (two below top grade) rating. China (along with Germany, Holland and Canada) gets an AA+ rating. The coveted AAA goes to Norway, Denmark, Switzerland, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand.
In announcing its sovereign ratings, Dagong's chairman said this: "The essential reason for the global financial crisis and the Greek crisis is that the current international rating system cannot truly reflect repayment ability." What Dagong has done is to focus on the actual wealth creating capacities (and the foreign reserves) of the nations it is rating. This is, of course, the only REAL "repayment ability".©2010 - The Privateer / http://www.the-privateer.com / capt@the-privateer.com / (reproduced with permission)
It’s time to realize that the system itself is broken and that it cannot be repaired by simply feeding new cannon fodder into the grinding gears of politics.
The political system that controls our government cannot be changed as long as the decisions that drive that system are made by those who benefit most from it.
What’s the answer? Hell, I don’t know. I worked inside the political system for a decade and don’t have the answer. I went in an idealist who thought change was possible and emerged a drunk who did it for the money. Doug Thompson
My guess is that we’ve got a couple of years at most before somebody puts the right ingredients together in the right way, and the first fully fledged revitalization movement begins attracting a mass following with its strident denunciations of the existing order of things and its promise of a bright future reached by what amounts to a sustained exercise in magic.
Those of my readers who have been paying attention will recognize that this doesn’t mean people will be putting on robes and funny hats and brandishing ornate wands while intoning the names of spirits in whose existence they don’t actually believe. Just as magical incantations in the peak oil scene these days have replaced the old barbarous names with such words of power as “hydrogen economy,” “algal biodiesel,” “advanced petroleum recovery technology” and the like, the rituals that will be practiced by the revitalization movements to come may take the form of community building exercises, protest marches, outdoor festivals, and campaigns for political office. They may even include sensible steps such as weatherstripping homes and building solar greenhouses. What defines an act as ritual, remember, is that it’s done for symbolic rather than practical reasons; weatherstripping a house is a practical action when it’s done for the practical reason of saving a few dozen dollars a year on heat bills, but it becomes a ritual action when it’s done under the conviction that steps of this nature can ward off the end of the age of abundance. The Archdruid Report
The Great Depression and the 1931-1936 collapse of the international gold standard was due to the forcible elimination of the multilateral financing of world trade with real bills.
The gold standard did not collapse because of its “contractionist nature” — as alleged by Keynes. It collapsed because of its clearing system, the bill market was blocked. Antal E. Fekete
And so it is now: as the American empire has been crumbling, its leaders, both corporate and corporatist, were being specially selected for being unable to draw their own conclusions based on their own independent reasoning or on the evidence of their own senses, relying instead on "intelligence" that is second-hand and obsolete. These leaders are now attempting to lead us all on a dream-walk to oblivion. Dmitry Orlov
What scares me is what could happen to the share price of Companies whose Financials are Rotten to the core, or to share prices of Good Companies, whose share prices are measured in a Currency Unit that’s Rotten to the Core? Mark J. Lundeen
A Way To Measure The Severity Of The Situation:
In the face of all the financial and political storms raging at present, it is getting ever more difficult to keep a clear head and to sort out the important from the mere noise. The first step in doing so is to realise that no matter how loud the noise becomes regarding financial crises in other parts of the world, the global system still stands or falls on the standing of the US financial system.
It didn't have to be that way but it is that way as long as the US Dollar remains the unchallenged global reserve currency and the debt issued by the US Treasury remains the asset of choice in which to hold that global reserve currency. As long as this situation remains, the US Dollar and US government debt will be the most important indicators in the world. Actually, there is one other important indicator - Gold.
Here is the situation. The low for US T Bonds on the futures markets since the peak of December 2008 is just above the 114.10 level. That level was hit in June 2009 and again in April 2010. Any close BELOW that level would push 10-year bond yields above 4.00 percent and signal a potential T Bond sell-off. The USDX hit a 2010 high of 82.53 on April 28. That was its highest level since May 2009. Another dive to below the 80.00 level on the USDX - its floor between 1973 and 2007 - would be a warning.
And finally, there is Gold, which hit a new 2010 high of $US 1180.70 on April 30. The signal for Gold is simple. Any close above the December 3, 2009 all time high spot future close of $US 1218.30 is it. Gold is closer to its "signal" level than either T Bonds or the USDX. But all three are important.©2010 - The Privateer / http://www.the-privateer.com / capt@the-privateer.com / (reproduced with permission)
The Suspect: Governments working with central banks that issue fiat currency the world over and bullion banks such as JP Morgan Chase.
The Crime: Intentional selling of sovereign and central bank Gold into the Gold market to suppress the price of Gold.
The Murder Weapon: Massive naked short sales on COMEX and London Bullion markets.
The Motive:[img][/img] Suppression of the Gold price so as not to raise alarm over the MASSIVE creation of new paper currency by fiat paper governments with nothing of value to back such currency except for huge mountains of un-payable debt. Alex Stanczyk
How can such a crude check-kiting scheme mesmerize the entire population?
...This is not an easy question to answer. But going through all the alternative explanations one by one, we come to the conclusion that the debt of the U.S. government is still redeemable in a sense, however limited or restrictive it may be. The debt of the U.S. government has a liquid market in which it can be exchanged for Federal Reserve credit. In turn, Federal Reserve credit can still be exchanged in liquid markets for physical gold, the ultimate extinguisher of debt, albeit at a variable price.
But if you break that final link, when gold is no longer for sale at any price quoted in U.S. dollars, then the rug will have been pulled from underneath this house of cards, and the international monetary system will collapse like the twin towers of the World Trade Center. And this is the situation that we are confronted with. Antal E. Fekete
In the non-OPEC world, global oil production peaked in 2007. For OPEC, this peak was Q1’08. And realize this was when oil was shooting over $100 a barrel, so there were gigantic incentives to produce. Yet both non-OPEC and OPEC production still declined, so peak oil is probably already past. Adam Hamilton
How much of our freedom is related to 'cheap energy'? Last I checked, the average American uses over 60 barrel of oil equivalents of the 3 primary fossil fuels (oil, coal and natural gas) per year. Depending on ones assumptions (and occupation), this is in the neighborhood of hundred(s) of years of manual human toil supplanted by cheap ancient sunlight. (At $20 per hour, a human laborer makes over $40,000 per year so even an energy subsidy of 100X p/a equates to $4 million in dollar terms.) Do our social freedoms emanate from the nature of our socio-political system, or the reverse - is our socio-political system a byproduct of the resources we acquired and used after finding this land? What is freedom, anyways? And what will freedom look like in the future? Nate Higgins
The stimulus plan was made in blissful ignorance of the marginal productivity of debt which is negative and falling. In this situation more debt will only stimulate deflation, economic contraction, unemployment, and it will lead to further weakening of the global financial structure. Antal E. Fekete
INFLATION IS COMING:
There is a DIFFERENCE between the DEFLATION of the 1930’s DEPRESSION and the INFLATION coming our way in the SECOND GREAT DEPRESSION. In 1930’s EROEI (Energy Returned on Energy Invested) was 100-1, in 1970 it was 30-1, today its about 10-1. The world was AWASH in HIGH EROEI in the early 1900’s. Today the CANADIAN TAR SANDS is losing money when OIL is below $80-90 a BARREL.
Back in the day all it took was for some SLOB to SHOVE a PIPE in the ground and OIL JUST GUSHED OUT. Today, you need HIGH TECH EQUIPMENT to pump the oil. A $BILLION DOLLAR OFF SHORE RIG called “THUNDERHORSE” comes to mind. When THUNDERHORSE hits its peak production it will only be producing 250,000 barrels a day, but these OFF SHORE FIELDS deplete rapidly in just a few years….not like the great OIL FIELDS from OKLAHOMA, TEXAS and CALIFORNIA that lasted for decades or half a century.
When the price of oil DEFLATES to a certain level, then we have SUPPLY DESTRUCTION. This translates to our whole MODERN ECONOMY as it is now based on FOSSIL FUELS and not MANUAL LABOR as it was in the early 1930’s.
A local LARGE DAIRY in my area lost $600,000 the first quarter of 2009. They have about 3,500 cows and produce about 170,000 lbs of milk a day. They are getting about $10 a 100 pounds. Another HUGE DAIRY in Colorado has ten times the number of cows 35,000 and produces about 1.5-1.6 million pounds of milk a day. It is in debt now over $60 million. Looks like BANKRUPTCY is just around the corner.
People don’t realize that AMERICANS have put their money not in their FOOD SOURCES, but worthless SUBURBAN SPRAWL as in BROKERS, INSURANCE AGENTS, STAR BUCKS, RETAIL GARBAGE, STRIP MALLS and etc. We should have been paying the FOOD PRODUCERS much better. There is a DISASTER waiting to happen in the FARM, RANCH, and DAIRY INDUSTRY. The small farms are gone with only LARGE CORPORATE ENTITIES that remain. These are going to VAPORIZE as the EROEI drops even lower to 8-1 or 5-1. Americans will soon be paying much higer prices for FOOD, unless they want to STARVE TO DEATH. SRSrocco
Now, I understand that those who espouse various systems of monetary theory, and who are called experts in it, do not really understand money. What they understand and espouse are the workings of their particular system - no matter how divorced from reality it may be. Bruce Beach
I doubt that any of you need to see a quantitative analysis about how overextended America is. So why post this? Cryptogon is not about trying to change society, popularity contests, group think circle jerks, or lobbying politicians on the ship of fools to make minor course corrections on the way to oblivion. At this point, Cryptogon is about trying to convince a handful of you (to convince yourselves) to not only survive what is happening, but to be able to stand as examples and teachers for others wherever you happen to be.
Any top down solutions, assuming they materialize (which I wouldn’t), will attempt to centralize power with Greenwashed, Soviet style mega projects, with attendant killoff and dictatorial components. Bottom up movements will not have the funding, organizational capability or pathological motivation required to affect system-scale change.
Where does that leave us?
Get over the armchair, change-the-world ego trip. Strike “hope” from your vocabulary. Get together with your neighbors and try to produce your own food. People who are interested in surviving (or their own health, finances, spiritual well being, etc.) might mimic you.
Very, very few people are interested in voluntarily confronting reality. Those of us who are should view collapse as a crisis of opportunity and know that lots of people will be looking for ways to feed themselves when the time comes.
“Do you know how to grow a spud?”
“Yes?”
“Hmm. What else do you know? Tell me more…”
I’m starting to think of this as a home grown food insurgency. No insurgency gets anywhere without support from the occupied population. As shortages occur, and the various atrocities related to industrialized food production result in shock and anger, tell receptive people how you killed your own steer, grew your own spuds-vegetables-fruit, milked your own cow, caught fish, shot pheasants, smoked venison, etc. Better yet, offer them some. Let them taste freedom for the first time.
The state might try to stop you, if it gets wind of what you’re doing, and that’s fine if it does. You’ll know that you’ve got nothing to lose at that point. And people who know that they have nothing to lose are capable of incredible things. Kevin - Cryptogon
This government will stop at nothing even including manipulation. What the Fed does not want is a swooning stock market, surging gold, or sinking bonds. I think all three are now being manipulated. Pressure from various sources continues on gold, and we know the Fed is buying bonds. When an item is manipulated, the aftermath always ends unpleasantly. I expect "unpleasantness" ahead. In my opinion, big money and veteran investors have joined China in worrying about the dollar. It's a major reason why they trust this market. Richard Russell, Dow Theory Letter, 6 May 2009
…the US government intervenes in the gold market to make the dollar look worthy of being the world’s reserve currency when of course it is not equal to the demands of that esteemed role. The US government does this by trying to keep the gold price low, but this aim is an impossible task… So recognizing the futility of capping the gold price, they instead compromise by letting the gold price rise somewhat, say, 15% per annum. In fact, against the dollar, gold is actually up 16.3% p.a. on average for the last eight years. In battlefield terms, the US government is conducting a managed retreat for fiat currency in an attempt to control gold’s advance. James Turk
The causes of wealth are something totally different from wealth itself. A person may possess wealth i.e. exchangeable value; if, however, he does not possess the power of producing objects of more value than he consumes, he will become poorer. A person may be poor, if he, however possesses the power of producing a larger amount of valuable articles than he consumes, he becomes rich. The power of producing wealth is therefore infinitely more important than wealth itself; it insures not only the possession and the increase of what has been gained, but also the replacement of what has been lost. This is still more the case with entire nations (who cannot live out of mere rentals) than with private individuals. Freidrich List - The National System of Political Economy
It is impossible to grasp the meaning of the idea of sound money if one does not realize that it was devised as an instrument for the protection of civil liberties against despotic inroads on the part of governments. Ideologically it belongs in the same class with political constitutions and bills of rights. The demand for constitutional guarantees and for bills of rights was a reaction against arbitrary rule and the nonobservance of old customs by kings. The postulate of sound money was first brought up as a response to the princely practice of debasing the coinage. It was later carefully elaborated and perfected in the age which, through the experience of the American continental currency, the paper money of the French Revolution and the British restriction period, had learned what a government can do to a nation's currency system. Ludwig von Mises - The Theory of Money and Credit - originally published in German in 1912
History is being actively ignored. "What experience and history teach is this: that people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles deduced from it." These words were spoken by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (19th century German philosopher). Few observers seem to realize that on the spectrum, the distance between Fascism (battle cry of last eight years) and Socialism (battle cry since inauguration) is remarkable short. Socialism shares the misery, as the successful are forced to pay for the failures, the corrupt, and the lazy. To construe that nationalization and absence of profit motive represent movement in the direction of communism seems very much correct. The Politburo at the US Federal Reserve has done its job since irrational exuberance took root. The response in the gold & silver prices to USGovt policies that amplify the damage to the national condition will be profound, with advances to date only a prelude to a march to $2000 gold and $50 silver. Jim Willie, CB: 20090305
We are forecasting dramatic measures will soon be taken by the Obama Administration that will worsen the credit crisis and severely damage the nation’s economic system. Whatever Obama wants, Obama gets. Desperate, scared, and not knowing what to do to survive the economic storm, people are seeking a messiah to save them, and Obama is their man. When fear rules, reason and logic are ruled out. Gerald Celente
A new estimate has come from the Shadow Govt Statistics folks on the inflation adjusted 1980 peak gold and silver prices. They use the best available and most accurate price inflation calculations. Using their CPI Inflation Calculator, the equivalent today for 1980 peak gold ($850) and silver ($50) would be $6650 and $391 per ounce, respectively. John Williams said, “I think we would all agree today’s economy is much worse than that in 1980.” It is both useful and fun to set a goal based upon some realism! Efforts to avoid a deflationary depression will probably produce a nasty bout of inflation, according to Williams. He advises hoarding gold and even whiskey to barter. Alistair Barr reports. My suggestion is to include guns, ammo, and the real thing (toilet paper) along with soap. See the Ritholtz article. Jim Willie, CB
You know to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times. Jesus, Matthew 16:3
There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. Ludwig von Mises
"More capital injections and guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and the normalization of credit markets." So said Fed Chief Bernanke in a speech at the London School of Economics. Here, in bold words, is proof of the economic incomprehension of events at the highest levels, the US Fed itself.
Guarantees are one thing. They depend upon the liquid assets of the issuer of the guarantee. But if the one making the guarantee is in debt to the tune of TRILLIONS and running a deficit also to the tune of TRILLIONS per year, such a guarantee should look at least doubtful. Capital, and injections of same, are entirely different. Capital is PRODUCTIVE plant and tools. Capital is NOT the monetary value of such plants and tools. This is what Fed Chief Bernanke has reversed in his own mind! Clearly, from the words out of his own mouth, he thinks that if he injects a huge sum of money in the US financial system, then in an act of spontaneous generation, a matching quantity of new plant and tools on their factory floors will spring forth!
This is not economics. This is magic, with Mr Bernanke as the magician in chief. If what Bernanke thinks is so WAS so, then one could plant a pile of $US Dollars and watch wealth spring forth!President Obama wants to deficit spend, to spend what does not exist on what is still here. Deficit spending is a contradiction in terms and of facts. One can only spend what IS here. The Privateer / http://www.the-privateer.com / capt@the-privateer.com / (reproduced with permission)
We are on the road to nationalization. In many ways, we're in the midst of nationalization without a whimper. There is no real talk about it. I mean, we've essentially nationalized the insurance companies, the mortgage companies, the banks, and medical care is moving in that direction, and now the car companies are going to be run by a car czar from this Congress. I mean, it is such an embarrassment. It is such an insult to us who believe in freedom, who believe in sound money and who believe in limited government. It is such an insult to the whole idea of what made America great, and this is what it has come to - bailout after bailout after bailout - and nobody even calls it what it really is. It is the nationalization of our industries. Dr. Ron Paul
At any given moment there is an orthodoxy, a body of ideas which it is assumed all right-thinking people will accept without question. It is not exactly forbidden to state this or that or the other, but it is 'not done'... Anyone who challenges the prevailing orthodoxy finds himself silenced with surprising effectiveness. George Orwell
The same insider financiers who brought the world to the brink of financial collapse are now gobbling up the remaining sound assets of failing banks under the guise of saving the system. In giving unrestricted power to Treasury Secretary Paulson to decide arbitrarily whose debts the US government will rescue, Congress has unwittingly given him the power to decide which banks survive and which will be allowed to fail. Paulson's remarks this week that "additional banks will fail," is all too telling. If we had access to the details, which we don't (and won't), we would see that those banks designated to fail are not being allowed to have access to government bailout funds. Only the larger, insider-connected banks on Wall Street are having their toxic debts exchanged so that they have the liquidity to buy out the failing banks at pennies on the dollar. The FDIC is complicit in this as they seize banks they don't rescue and then conveniently designate another favored bank to come in and "rescue" the failing bank--instead of allowing the open market to freely bid on the remaining sound assets. The result is a massive shift of ownership of the remaining good debt from failed bank stockholders to the insider-connected banks and investment firms who created this mess. This crisis has nothing to do with saving Main Street--it's all about enriching those who drove the system into bankruptcy and establishing a permanent shift in financial power to government agencies staffed by former executives of these insider institutions. Joel Skousen's World Affairs Brief 20081010
If the spot demand is severe enough, the price may even go into backwardation where the spot price is higher than the forward price. Should that happen — it hasn’t happened yet because forward rates in London are still position and the important active December COMEX gold and silver contracts are still in contango — we would need to seriously consider the possibility of severe or even fatal systemic monetary consequences in the immediate future. 20081008 Tom Szabo
Being right is bitter medicine in bad times, being wrong however will be fatal.
All of us, whether aware, asleep or in deep denial of our present circumstances are in the same boat, a boat that is rapidly sinking. Most people, however, have little awareness or understanding of what is happening. Michael Thomas Bucci’s recounting of his community’s ignorance is not unusual, it is the norm.
All of us who are aware of the reasons for the collapse of our economies are shocked by this bifurcated reality. We and those not yet aware exist in worlds as separate as black and white. What we share, however, is a mutual inability to change what is.
Those ignorant of what is to come, however, will suffer in far greater measure than those who understand what is happening. In the not too distant future, economic fear and uncertainty will be replaced by abject terror and despair; and if you don’t understand the now changing world, you will soon be its victim. Darryl Robert Schoon
Whenever a Great Bipartisan Consensus is announced, and a compliant media assures everyone that the wondrous actions of our wise leaders are being taken for our own good, you can know with absolute certainty that disaster is about to strike.
The events of the past week are no exception. The bailout package that is about to be rammed down Congress' throat is not just economically foolish. It is downright sinister. It makes a mockery of our Constitution, which our leaders should never again bother pretending is still in effect. It promises the American people a never-ending nightmare of ever-greater debt liabilities they will have to shoulder. Two weeks ago, financial analyst Jim Rogers said the bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac made America more communist than China! "This is welfare for the rich," he said. "This is socialism for the rich. It's bailing out the financiers, the banks, the Wall Streeters. Ron Paul
This is the end of a system. It is not a cyclical correction. It is not a market pullback and it is not a repricing of risk in an otherwise resilient marketplace. We are witness to the end of an economic system based on credit-based paper money that began 300 years ago in England. All beginnings have endings—and that we didn’t expect it to end doesn’t mean that it wouldn’t. Mark J. Lundeen
Friday morning* on the ABC program Good Morning America, Senator Dodd said the congressional leaders were told “that we’re literally maybe days away from a complete meltdown of our financial system, with all the implications here at home and globally.” Senator Christopher J. Dodd, chairman of the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee September 19, 2008*
Everybody complains about pork, but members of Congress keep spending because voters do not throw them out of office for doing so. The rotten system in Congress will change only when the American people change their beliefs about the proper role of government in our society. Too many members of Congress believe they can solve all economic problems, cure all social ills, and bring about worldwide peace and prosperity simply by creating new federal programs. We must reject unlimited government and reassert the constitutional rule of law if we hope to halt the spending orgy. Ron Paul
"We have lost control," said Hale, quoting Bernanke. "We cannot stabilize the dollar. We cannot control commodity prices." Chicago Tribune
What's the difference between a Sorcerer and a Scientist?
A Sorcerer wants you to believe his will is the cause of his miracles. A Scientist wants you to know that his miracles are part of the natural order of things.
If Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke ever thought he or the Fed or any other institution had "control" over the dollar or commodity prices he wasn't, in my view, much of an economist. The currency of institutions is credibility, not control, although when the credibility bank account is full credibility can seem like control. Credibility is earned by being right, and lost by being wrong. Dave Lewis
U.S. SEIZES FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC
This represents a crime of such gigantic proportions
that many people won’t even be able to fathom what has happened. Kevin Flaherty
If the US government allows Fannie and Freddie to fail and international investors are not compensated adequately, the consequences will be catastrophic. If it is not the end of the world, it is the end of the current international financial system. Mr Yu Yongding
We looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further. A further rise would have taken down one or several trading houses, which might have taken down all the rest in their wake. Therefore, at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold price, manage it. It was very difficult to get the gold price under control but we have now succeeded. The U.S. Fed was very active in getting the gold price down. So was the U.K. Eddie George, Bank of England, September 1999
...the fact remains that, once the dollar’s global reserve function is successfully eliminated via an engineered crash of the US economy, there will be no choice but to initiate at least regional anchor currencies that can assume the dollar’s reserve role in a more limited, regional fashion. These anchor-currency or regional reserve currency arrangements will then inevitably lead to regional single currencies. Alex Wallenwein
We are grateful to the Washington Post, the New York Times, Time Magazine, and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost forty years. It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the bright lights of publicity during those years. But, the work is now much more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national autodetermination practiced in past centuries. This quote is by David Rockefeller, founder of the Trilateral Commission, in an address to a meeting of the Trilateral Commission in June 1991.
The owners of this country know the truth: It's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.
The real owners are the big wealthy business interests that control things and make all the important decisions. Forget the politicians, they're an irrelevancy. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. You don't. You have no choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. They own all the important land. They own and control the corporations. They've long since bought and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the statehouses, the city halls. They've got the judges in their back pockets. And they own all the big media companies, so that they control just about all of the news and information you hear. They've got you by the balls. They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying - lobbying to get what they want. Well, we know what they want; they want more for themselves and less for everybody else...
But I'll tell you what they don't want. They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well-informed, well-educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that. That doesn't help them. That's against their interests. They don't want people who are smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they're getting screwed by a system that threw them overboard 30 screwing years ago. You know what they want? Obedient workers - people who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork but just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly crappier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, reduced benefits, the end of overtime and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it. And, now, they're coming for your Social Security. They want your lousy retirement money. They want it back, so they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street. And you know something? They'll get it. They'll get it all, sooner or later, because they own this rotten place. It's a big club, and you ain't in it. You and I are not in the big club. George Carlin
The LIMA Declaration: On Friday, May 16, at the Summit in Lima, Peru, a declaration was issued by representatives from nearly 60 countries promising to act with urgency to address the rising cost of staple foods. Europe and China were there. The US was NOT! A 60-nation Summit - and the US was not invited.
A SUMMIT In Russia: Brazil, Russia, India and China are talking about forming a political alliance. The four largest emerging economies sent their foreign ministers to Yekaterinburg, Russia, where they met on May 16, for the first time outside the venue of the United Nations. The Europeans and Chinese were there - the US was NOT.
A SUMMIT In China: New Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is visiting China on May 23 and 24 for his first foreign trip since taking office, a further sign of improving ties. President Medvedev will make a state visit to Beijing at the invitation of Chinese President Hu Jintao, China's Foreign Ministry has said. The US is not there. This is a new global pattern led by the Japan/China Summit in early MAY. The US is simply NOT there.
©2008 - The Privateer http://www.the-privateer.com capt@the-privateer.com (reproduced with permission)
“So far gasoline prices haven’t fully reflected this oil surge, but they will. The tight Oil/Gas Ratio rendered in these charts makes this crystal clear. Regardless of where oil went between $11 and $124, the OGR didn’t break. And it is not going to break today either. You just can’t have finished goods priced lower than their feedstock input costs……Over one of the most volatile oil and gasoline decades ever witnessed, the OGR remained solidly locked within a tight range. It averaged 35.7, which means a barrel of crude oil cost 35.7x as much as a gallon of wholesale gasoline since 1998 on average. Diesel’s average ODR came in very close at 35.5.” Adam Hamilton
"Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation." Ben Shalom Bernanke
"...Politicians love to demagogue on high oil prices while consumers love to whine about them. But in real terms, oil is a lot cheaper today than it was in the summer of 2005! It is too bad the US Congress and American people will never understand this. We are all trapped in viewing the world through the lenses of our own fiat currencies, but as our central banks debase them it radically distorts our perceptions of real price trends...
...When viewed in euro terms, it looks like about one-half of oil’s dollar bull is fundamental. But when viewed in gold terms, this fraction drops to merely one-fifth. This is somewhat disturbing as it calls into question all kinds of perceptions about nominal price moves in all assets worldwide. Perhaps everyone, even students of monetary theory, is seriously underestimating the impact of fiat inflation on asset prices..." Adam Hamilton
"Watching the markets is much like watching a World Wrestling Entertainment match. There is a real arena with real fans in the seats, and the competitors are very athletic and act combatant. There is a referee officiating the event. There is a real announcer calling play-by-play of what he seemingly is watching. The wrestlers go at it, and apparently suffer bone-jarring hits and body slams that would make mere mortal men scream like a girl. There is a winner and a loser, scores are kept, and rankings assigned to the wrestlers. It all looks just like any professional sporting event. Except it isn't, it's totally scripted and fake…" James McShirley
The most shocking fact about war is that its victims and its instruments are individual human beings, and that these individual beings are condemned by the monstrous conventions of politics to murder or be murdered in quarrels not their own. Aldous Huxley
The Full Import Of The NATO Bucharest Press Conference:
At the NATO press conference in Bucharest, the French President was crystal clear. The serious press across Europe has treated his statements and those of German Chancellor Merkel with serious and dignified respect. In that joint press conference with German chancellor Merkel, French President Sarkozy repeated his stand that France intended to reintegrate fully into NATO - once a separate European Defence Pillar became a reality. This is the key statement! France will reenter NATO, solely to build that separate European Defence Pillar. In effect, this is a Trojan horse play. If the US allows France to come back into NATO, France will promptly assign some of its own forces to the Euro Corps, giving it real military teeth. France will also assign some or even ALL its nuclear forces to the Euro Corps. The game is then up for the US because then Europe will have its very own armed nuclear forces. At that point, the separate European Pillar is established. President Sarkozy even explained where that other pillar of the Transatlantic relationship would stand. He did it in a humorous way. But the import of what he said was that US forces belonged back in the US. That would leave two “pillars”, one back in the US and the other on European soil. That inherently necessitates a US withdrawal from Europe.
The geo-strategic outcome of the Bucharest NATO Conference is that President Bush has lost Europe.
© 2008 - The Privateer http://www.the-privateer.com / capt@the-privateer.com (reproduced with permission)
…we think that deflation and hyperinflation can only occur deterministically with reference to an external standard. With the lapse of the gold standard, there is none. Therefore its more likely to be the end result of policy decision(s). Jesse's Café Américain
It’s puzzling why bankers have come up with these new ways to lose money when the old ways were working so well. Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf
The United States during the Bush administration has failed to exercise proper political leadership. As a result the United States has suffered a precipitous decline in its power and influence in the world. The invasion of Iraq has much to do with the rise in the price of oil and the unwillingness of the rest of the world to hold dollars. A recession in the United States and the resilience of China, India and the oil-producing countries will reinforce the decline in the power and influence of the United States. A significant part of the monetary reserves currently held in Unites States government bonds will be converted into real assets. This will reinforce and extend the current commodity boom and create inflationary pressures. The decline of the dollar as the generally accepted reserve currency will have far-reaching political consequences and raise the specter of the breakdown of the prevailing world order. The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crash of 2008 and What It Means. George Soros
[US] "Treasuries are the most overvalued asset in the world, bar none" Pimco's Bill Gross
"I'm under strict orders not to talk about the dollar. I'm not going to get fired just to answer your question."
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino
Jim Willie CB
Jim Sinclair has revealed the identity of a major gold investor working in cahoots with the gold cartel itself. When the gold cartel takes a huge position to short gold in the futures market, all intended to suppress the upward flight in the gold price, some entity takes the counter-party position. At the March PDAC gold conference in Toronto Ontario in Canada, the irrepressible Sinclair claimed the party taking other side of gold forward selling contracts is the Carlyle Group. Many huge short positions have been placed by JPMorgan, Barrick, and AngloGold Ashanti. In doing so, the shadowy powerhouse Carlyle has been secretly accumulating future gold production. He implied his role in the exposure was that things are far enough along that risk has diminished. The Carlyle Group was mentioned in the March Macro Economic report as being stuffed with former foreign heads of state, ambassadors, military brass, defense contractors, bank titans, and more. Earlier in his speech, Sinclair mentioned something about an agency residing in the Cayman Islands that was accumulating vast amounts of gold shares, without offering any further information. Any connection to the Carlyle Group is unknown. Sinclair had made a clear point in recent weeks on his public website (click here) that there is only ONE dog at the top of any political heap. One can conclude that the top gold dog lives in the Caymans and controls much of Carlyle. He stressed that an important objective in the gold suppression game, and in being an architect in the next chapter of the financial structure for the Western world, is to own & control gold production over the long term. It is not as important to just own gold, but to own much of the future production of gold over the long term. The aim of this unseen group is not to just control gold production but perhaps to gain control over most or all major commodity production, like base metals and energy.
Sinclair has stated his belief that when the US$ DX index hits 52 (now 72), in about the year 2011, the USDollar will be saved as the international currency and tied to some kind of gold certificate. If not directly, the USDollar might be floated with a formal alignment to a gold & interest rate self-balancing mechanism. He suggested that the timing could easily change, with a higher DX trigger price and a sooner timeframe.
Sinclair repeated his theme regarding certain hedge funds, that many have been employing a leveraged spread trade. They are long the major gold mining companies and short the juniors. The so-called Juniors consist of the hundreds of small Canadian explorers and producers, headquartered throughout Canada, but mostly in Vancouver and Toronto. He expects the fate of these risky spread trades will soon change, and sees that process is in motion now, soon to be very apparent. He expects the juniors should soon rise suddenly in share price like a balloon being held under water that will pop-up once the pressure holding them down is removed. On his website he has been repeatedly pounding the table to take delivery of share certificates (stock shares), so as to nail the shorts when they try and cover their short positions. A share purchased on margin is immediately available for others to short. A share sitting in a brokerage account can be shorted in an unethical manner with a ‘wink & nod’ by brokerage executives.
Jim Willie CB (200803) Hat Trick Letter http://www.goldenjackass.com/subscribe.html
We are becoming increasingly concerned that the authorities in the world do not get it. The extent of de-leveraging involves a wholesale destruction of credit. The risk is that the Shadow Banking System completely collapses. Bernard Connolly, global strategist at Banque AIG
You have three vicious cycles going on simultaneously. A liquidity vicious cycle, in which asset prices fall, people sell and therefore prices fall more; a Keynesian vicious cycle, where people’s incomes go down, so they spend less, so other people’s income falls and they spend less; and a credit accelerator, where economic losses cause financial problems that cause more real economy problems... [We are facing] the most serious combination of macro-economic and financial stresses in a generation, and possibly, much longer than that… An increasing risk that the principal policy tool on which we have relied, the Federal Reserve lending to banks in one form or another, [is like] fighting a virus with antibiotics. Lawrence Summers
Money supply inflation ultimately leads to price inflation and this extraordinary rate of increase in the money supply, as several commentators, including Deepcaster, have pointed out, is leading us down the path to a hyperinflationary depression. Or, more ominously, to an attempt to implement The Cartel’s END GAME. Deepcaster
The resignation of Admiral William Fallon as US military commander in the Middle East probably signals a Bush Regime attack on Iran. Fallon said that there would be no US attack on Iran on his watch. As there was no reason for Fallon to resign, it is not farfetched to conclude that Bush has removed an obstacle to war with Iran.
The US is already over stretched both militarily and economically. An attack on Iran is likely to be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.
Paul Craig Roberts; former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s first term.
On March 17, President Bush meets with his Plunge Protection Team (PPT) (aka the President's Working Group on Financial Markets) to be "briefed" on the state of US financial markets. This promises to be the tensest meeting since the PPT was set up in the wake of the October 1987 stock market crash.
Then, on March 18, the FOMC gets together in what is probably the most anticipated scheduled meeting in their history. The desperation of the financial system is best illustrated by one simple fact. On March 13, the day before the Fed stepped in to bail out Bear Stearns, the betting on the futures market that the Fed would cut by 1.0 percent was zero. On March 14, seeing the bailout, the betting on a 1.0 percent cut had surged to 64 percent! The remaining 36 percent is betting on a cut of 0.75 percent. If the PPT is meeting to plan ways to stave off a Gold surge and a stock market and Dollar plunge on release of the FOMC's decision, they most certainly have their work cut out for them.
©2008 - The Privateer http://www.the-privateer.com capt@the-privateer.com (reproduced with permission)
he Collateralization of Trash - Deepcaster
Indeed, the Fed’s March 11, 2008 announcement establishing a new Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLP) is merely a short-term Band-Aid for what is a structural systemic crisis. The TLSP allows Federal Agency and non-Agency (i.e. private entity) AAA/Aaa Residential Mortgage backed (and otherwise illiquid) securities (some of which is irretrievably illiquid “bad debt”) to be used for collateral. Allowing these securities (containing bad debt) to be used as collateral makes it possible for banks to liquidate or transfer previously illiquid securities in their portfolios.
Let’s be candid here - - “previously illiquid” is a euphemism for “without any market value” (i.e. zero market value - ZMV).
That which is illiquid is illiquid because it has no market. That which has no market has no market value. Quod erat demonstrandum.Looking a bit more deeply, the reason for the zero-value character of these illiquid securities is that these bundles of mortgage-backed and other securities contain (in the case of mortgages) mortgages that either were in default or about to go into default. Thus to save the big institutions from having to fully recognize losses (Heaven Forefend!) The Fed will allow this junk to be used as collateral for cash (!) and, we predict, will allow the debt to be “rolled” indefinitely, if it can not be repaid.
Bill Murphy, in his inimitable style, rightly characterizes this latest Fed Action as “Cash for Trash” and Jim Sinclair also, quite rightly, characterizes it as “The Monetization of Bankruptcy.” Deepcaster 200803
From jsmineset.com
“Markets and economic activity are the result of the perceptions of the participants.”--Allen Greenspan 2004
The new school economics are based not on Economic Law but rather on belief and perception driven by unbridled greed run by the Authoritarians.
It is difficult to argue against the success of the adjustment of perception running both markets and business activity as applied on each economic turn down after Volcker’s period of Chairmanship.
It was the Chairman of the Board of the Federal Reserve who busted the USSR by busting their client nations, sending the ruble into dust.
Since Volcker’s leadership, subsequent Federal Reserve boards have been busy giving back all that Volcker had accomplished until the US dollar died as the reserve currency of choice. The US dollar’s status is now the universal reserve currency of mistake.
Because economic law still functions underneath the spin of perception, the dollar has dropped from being a star to being a scar on the US.
Right now perception is again being used as the primary tool for the correction of the rigamortus that has set into basic credit.
Slowly but surely the damage has been done by the cover up and bandage solutions for the now broken credit system.
No amount of spin will cure the horror of a meltdown in fraudulent OTC derivatives because all levels of debt feel and reflect any level of debt. You can see through business activity the march of the systemic breakdown in credit markets.
The last systemic breakdown in credit markets was in 1930, giving rise to every then known way to expand both monetary and fiscal stimulation.
Nothing changes. Spin will grow and grow, this time becoming almost ineffective. Interest rates on the short end will continue their dive towards zero as long rates hold and rise.
This is a Weimar-like set of facts monetarily.
To those that see a contradiction in short rates getting airtime while long rates hold or rise consider that that NY Port Authority had to pay 20% for money two weeks ago. 30 year US Treasuries will have a hard time competing with that. The credit standing of US Treasuries is reflected in the condition of the US dollar and long term US Treasury bonds. Short-term treasury (91) day bills look toward the discount rate for a key to direction.
The system is broken. The spin is at 9000 RPM. Economic law is reasserting itself. The jig is up.
Have you protected yourself? Jim Sinclair (200802)
Yes, we understand that it is considered the duty of those in charge, the usher in the burning theatre, to maintain order, and certainly NOT to create a panic rush for the exits. But we wonder at what point as they reassure the public to remain placidly in their seats, and shut off the fire alarms, and describe the smoke wafting in between the rows as cigarette fumes from the Ladies Lounge, that a fine line in motive and outcome is crossed. And as the privileged few are allowed to slip out the side doors first, after collecting their expensive coats and valuables, we wonder at what point this becomes something more than the duty of a public servant, and a despicable act of fiduciary negligence... Jesse's Café Américain (200802)
The US banking system is teetering at the precipice, the brink of collapse. Such words used to be regarded as vacant nonsense, laden with hyperbole, spoken by crackpots, used to frighten the public and to garner silly attention. NO MORE!!! Almost two years ago, in the Hat Trick Letter, my forecast was made crystal clear, that the housing crisis and mortgage debacle would topple and destroy the US banking system, just like what happened to Japan in the 1990 decade. The US banking system cannot withstand insolvency like the stronger Japanese banking system, which survived temporarily as vampire entities. The forecast should be clearly seen by now to be in the process of coming to pass. The mortgages, the CDO bonds, the commercial paper, these are all evidence of wrecked mechanisms in the US banking system. They will continue to worsen dramatically. The financial condition of institutions within the US banking system has gone critical, with core assets gone negative. Total deposits held, free of borrowed USFed reserves, have vanished. US banks have burned through their entire capital core, melted down from disastrous mortgage portfolios, their bonds, and related CDO leveraged bond derivatives. They must now rely upon borrowed reserves from the USFed in order to continue to function as lending institutions. The US banks by end January had almost $40 billion in total reserves. They have turned heavily to the USFed Term Auction Facility for the temporary $40 billion in resupplied capital. That is not injected, donated, free money. It must be returned. Jim Willie CB (200802) Hat Trick Letter http://www.goldenjackass.com/subscribe.html
Charlie and I are of one mind in how we feel about derivatives and the trading activities that go with them: we view them as time bombs, both for the parties that deal in them and the economic system.
…The derivatives genie is now well out of the bottle, and these instruments will almost certainly multiply in variety and number until some event makes their toxicity clear…
…In our view, however, derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction, carrying dangers that, while now latent, are potentially lethal. Warren Buffet (20030221)
"The Last Man Standing Walks Away:
Mr David Walker, US Comptroller General and the man who led the Government Accountability Office (GAO) for a decade, has announced his retirement. His resignation takes effect on March 12 and President Bush is not expected to appoint a replacement during the rest of his term of office. Mr Walker has been one of the very few men in the US federal government (Ron Paul is another) who took “Government Accountability” - especially FISCAL accountability - seriously. His message to the US government and the American people throughout his tenure has been that the fiscal profligacy and the resultant liabilities - funded and UNFUNDED - of the US government were unsustainable and leading straight to disaster. For ten years, Mr Walker has been one of the very few voices in government pointing straight at the irreparable damage being done to the REAL economy of the US. He was ignored." The Privateer (200802)
“Inflation is the web of the financial spider, and deflation the mastication of the human fly.” Jeffrey Mark
“LEAP/E2020 wishes to remind that we are now resolutely stepping into an era with no historical precedent. Our researchers insisted on that many times in the last two years: any comparison with the previous crises of our modern economy would be fallacious. It is neither a “remake” of the 1929 crisis nor a repetition of the 1970s oil crises or 1987 stock market crisis. It is truly a global systemic crisis, that is to say a crisis affecting the entire planet and questioning the very foundations of the international system upon which the world was organised in the last decades.” LEAP/E2020 (200802)
"We really and truly are screwed beyond all imagination, just in case you didn't know that already." the cryptogon
When Fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross. Sinclair Lewis
"The ruling class has the schools and press under its thumb. This enables it to sway the emotions of the masses." Einstein
"Just like the formation of galaxies and hurricanes and nautilus shells, the universe of the macro-economy operates through non stochastic fractal growth progression and nonlinear decay. Expect the unexpected." Gary Lammert
"The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable…" H.L. Mencken
"Organized crime is now officially legal and combined with the stock and capital markets - all enforced by force and rigged profits. This is the economic infrastructure for fascism." Catherine Austin Fitts
"Let’s face it, globalism is simply repackaged communism with a fascist twist, and "free trade" is how the redistribution of wealth scheme is being implemented. It is being implemented by well funded and well planned inside "traitors" (pun intended) who have been carefully installed in various key positions of industry and government over many many years. Part of the necessary goals on the road to world government are to make the American Constitutional Republic, the sovereign nation state and "capitalism" look very very bad, while advancing the ever creeping mobocracy known as "democracy" over a limited republican form of government…" Karl Reile
"Lenin was certainly right, there is no more positive, or subtle means of destroying the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate secretly and unobserved an important part of the wealth of the citizens. The process engages all the hidden forces of economics on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner that not one man in a million can diagnose." John Maynard Keynes
"The illusion of freedom will continue as long as it's profitable to continue the illusion. At the point where the illusion becomes too expensive to maintain, they will just take down the scenery, they will pull back the curtains, they will move the tables and chairs out of the way, and you will see a brick wall at the back of the theater." Frank Zappa
"We are at a wonderful ball where the champagne sparkles in every glass, and soft laughter falls upon the summer air. We know at some moment the black horsemen will come shattering through the terrace doors, wreaking vengeance and scattering the survivors. Those who leave early are saved, but the ball is so splendid no one wants to leave while there is still time, so everyone keeps asking, what time is it? But none of the clocks have hands." Adam Smith from The Money Game
"The gold offensive is already in full swing and has been extensively analyzed and reported on in previous issues. Add to all that the potential currency offensive, and you have a good picture of what's in store for the US - and the world. As despicable and repugnant as the current (or any other) neocon or potential ultra-liberal regime of the US may be, guess how it's going to compare to what a technologically updated and economically powerful China will inflict on the world when the US no longer holds the reigns of ultimate power in the world. Those who now hate the United States will long for the days when all they had to focus their hatred on was George Bush. That's why it's so important that Americans understand the China threat as well as the fiat threat to their way of life." Alex Wallenwein
"Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." H.L. Mencken
But capital alone is not worth of credit, unless associated with moral qualities in the tradesman; for a prudent man of great industry, integrity, and knowledge in his business is more worthy of credit without capital, than a rich man ignorant in his business...Persons who begin with large capitals do not succeed, generally speaking, so well as those who begin with small ones cautiously administered... Andrew N. Ure - The Philosophie of Manufactures 1841
"It has been a few decades since Al Greenspan was a devotee of Ayn Rand, and it shows. I'm not much of a fan of Rand as I found her philosophic views tended to steam roll over the, in my view, important questions of consciousness and totally missed Hume's point on the failure of reason alone, however, she did have her moments. Her steadfast defense of gold as money is a case in point- a point obviously lost on Greenspan over the decades." Dude
"Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Truth isn't." Mark Twain
"The course of a progressing inflation is this: At the beginning the inflow of additional money makes the prices of some commodities and services rise; other prices rise later. The price rise affects the various commodities and services, as has been shown, at different dates and to a different extent. This first stage of the inflationary process may last for many years. While it lasts, the prices of many goods and services are not yet adjusted to the altered money relation. There are still people in the country who have not yet become aware of the fact that they are confronted with a price revolution which will finally result in a considerable rise of all prices, although the extent of this rise will not be the same in the various commodities and services. These people still believe that prices one day will drop. Waiting for this day, they restrict their purchases and concomitantly increase their cash holdings. As long as such ideas are still held by public opinion, it is not yet too late for the government to abandon its inflationary policy. But then finally the masses wake up. They become suddenly aware of the fact that inflation is a deliberate policy and will go on endlessly. A breakdown occurs. The crack-up boom appears. Everybody is anxious to swap his money against "real" goods, no matter whether he needs them or not, no matter how much money he has to pay for them. Within a very short time, within a few weeks or even days, the things that are used as money are no longer used as media of exchange. They become scrap paper. Nobody wants to give away anything against them. It was this that happened with the Continental currency in America in 1781, with the French mandats territoriaux in 1796, and with the German Mark in 1923. It happened with the dollar in 1973. It will happen again whenever the same conditions appear. If a thing has to be used as a medium of exchange, public opinion must not believe that the quantity of this thing will increase beyond all bounds. Inflation is a policy that cannot last." Ludwig von Mises
“spit in the bastards eyes and use silver for money” Bond, David Bond
"If total shares outstanding grow by 10%, for example, your stake is worth 10% less even though you still hold the same number of shares. Dilution is to a stock exactly what inflation is to fiat-money supplies. The more shares issued the more the value of your own stake erodes." Adam Hamilton
"Gold’s reputation as a store of value had been eroded many times before, to wit, during such historical episodes as the Tulipomania, the South Seas Bubble, the Mississippi Bubble and, more recently, during the Roaring Twenties of the Twentieth Century." Dr. Fekete
"Religion is regarded by the wise as false, by the foolish as true, and by the rulers as useful." Seneca the Younger
"The failure to lead in this country now includes all the major fields of enterprise and resolves into a general and total failure of authority that threatens to drag us into darkness. Leaders in politics, business, the news media, science, medicine, education, and the organized religions have all failed to prepare the public for the hardships that will attend a global energy crisis supercharged by climate change, disorder in the financial markets, and almost certainly more war." James Kunstler
"The opinion of 10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject." Marcus Aurelius
"News is what people want to keep hidden; everything else is publicity." Bill Moyers
"They who lack talent expect things to happen without effort. They ascribe failure to a lack of inspiration or ability, or to misfortune, rather than to insufficient application. At the core of every true talent, there is an awareness of the difficulties inherent in any achievement, and the confidence that by persistence and patience, something worthwhile will be realized. Thus, talent is a species of vigor." Eric Hoffer
"The most successful men in the end are those whose success is the result of steady accretion. It is the man who carefully advances step by step, with his mind becoming wider and wider -- and progressively better able to grasp any theme or situation -- persevering in what he knows to be practical, and concentrating his thought upon it, who is bound to succeed in the greatest degree. Alexander Graham Bell
"Tricks and treachery are the practice of fools, that don't have brains enough to be honest." Benjamin Franklin
"You unlock this door with the key of imagination. Beyond it is another dimension, a dimension of sound, a dimension of sight, a dimension of mind. You’re moving into a land of both shadow and substance, of things and ideas. It’s a journey into a wondrous land, whose boundaries are that of imagination. That’s a signpost up ahead, your next stop, the Twilight Zone!" Rod Serling
Ixtoc I oil spill
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ixtoc_I_oil_spill
No relationship; Bulldog Resources was bought out.
sumi
How to deal with the coming economic crisis
By Sheyna Steiner • Bankrate.com
http://www.bankrate.com/finance/financial-literacy/how-to-deal-with-the-coming-economic-crisis-1.aspx
Investment expert and author Stephen Leeb believes we're entering the beginning of the end when it comes to the commodities that hold our modern world together. Resources such as oil, copper and iron are being rapidly depleted -- and with the needs of developing countries, demands are only increasing.
[At a glance
Name: Stephen Leeb, Ph.D.
Hometown: New York City
Education: B.A., in economics, University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business.
M.A., in mathematics and Ph.D. in psychology, University of Illinois.
Career highlights:
Editor of The Complete Investor, an investing newsletter.Author of "The Coming Economic Collapse: How You Can Thrive When Oil Costs $200 a barrel."Author of "The Oil Factor: Protect Yourself -- and Profit -- from the Coming Energy Crisis."Author of "Defying the Market: Profiting in the Turbulent Post-Technology Market Boom."Author of "Game Over: How You Can Prosper in a Shattered Economy."]
The economic fallout from the end of technology as we know it today will be enormous, he says. Many of the resources used in manufacturing today are interconnected. Oil powers much of the world: It fuels our cars and is used in the mining of other materials -- for instance iron ore and copper, each of which is a finite resource that is vital to manufacturing. The depletion of natural resources will have a profound effect on the way things are made.
Bankrate talked to Leeb about his perspective of the world and how investors could protect themselves.
You make some pretty dire predictions about natural resource shortages. Why is that, and when will they begin?
I think they're starting already. Oil is over $80 a barrel and you have 10 percent unemployment in the country -- you're already seeing it. With U.S. demand for energy down, energy prices -- except for natural gas, which is a domestic commodity -- have gone very high.
And the same thing is true with copper and other commodities. It's quite exceptional to see commodities rise to the extent to which they've risen. In the context of a pretty sharp recession in the developed world, I think you're already seeing this.
The tragedy of it is that we're going to see it more and more because what we haven't figured out, what has not occurred to so many people, is that the green movement or avoiding resource scarcity -- whatever motivates you -- whatever gets you to green, is necessary.
Whether you're an environmentalist or someone who's looking at peak energy or peak other things, green is an answer but green itself is very resource intensive.
That is a quandary that we haven't faced up to in any way, shape or form. We just don't get it. There are a lot of major dots that have to be connected and we haven't started that. We are really far behind.
And really far behind the Chinese, for that matter -- way, way, way behind in switching to green technology. In 2010 they're already the leading producer of hydroelectric and solar power and by 2011 will be the leading producer of wind power. They are literally outspending us on their smart grid by 200 to one. They have allocated $670 billion to their smart grid expenditures, their electric grid. We're spending about $3.5 billion.
This is not good.
You did mention in the book that it's easier for the Chinese to get things done quickly in some cases.
They're not as encumbered as we are. We have a wonderful society here. We are free. And one reason we can stay a wonderful society and one reason we have been able to remain free is that during times of war, we've been able to grant the president emergency powers and come together as a nation. But right now, we're not anywhere near it.
Everything is being passed along party votes. No one is even talking about resource scarcity and resource shortages. Someone has to wake us up, and if they do, I hope we'll be able to recover.
I'm certainly not rooting for any of this to be happening. I hope I'm wrong, but I'm just trying to be a messenger.
You talk about "absolute peaks" in regard to natural resources. Can you explain this?
Peak anything is when you are unable to produce more of it. I wanted to get across that it is very unlikely that you're going to reach peak energy or peak oil or anything like it without reaching peak lots of everything else.
That is because you need oil to produce iron ore; you need oil to produce copper; you need copper to produce oil. You need all these commodities to make more water. So when one critical commodity reaches peak, that might be peak for a lot of commodities and you might get to the point that the world can't produce any more commodities. And everything stops. You stop growing at that point or you find technological solutions.
We're not really at that point, we're trying to fund -- to some extent -- energy technologies, but we're not placing priorities on that at the moment.
This to me is the equivalent of a war. The Chinese are winning and we don't even know that we're in a race. Basically war may be too strong a word, but I don't think it is.
We are in the race for our lives and we don't know it. And they are running full steam ahead.
You're also predicting that inflation will reach 30 percent to 40 percent. Why will that happen and what will be the result?
In 2008 when we got into high oil prices the Fed decided to -- I can't say they got stingier -- but they kept interest rates high. They kept the economy in check because they were worried about high commodity prices.
Well it was easy then because there was no unemployment problem then.
But now here come high commodity prices again and you can't really expect the Fed to try and restrain the economy in the face of high commodity prices. Unemployment is already 10 percent. What are they going to aim for -- 20 percent?
If anything, they have to get looser. High commodity prices like high oil when you pay more to fill up your tank, that's like a tax. I think the Fed will have to get looser not tighter with high commodity prices and that is the making of an inflationary cycle.
What should people do to prepare themselves? What investments should they hold?
Canned goods, head for the hills?
I consider precious metals as an asset group. That doesn't mean you put 100 percent in precious metals, but I would certainly consider gold, silver and platinum as strong candidates for my portfolio. That is the least I would do.
Or perhaps investing in resource-rich countries.
New wave of commercial foreclosures looms
STAFF PHOTOS / E. SKYLAR LITHERLAND Buy photo
Orion Bank foreclosed on the Pan American Professional Center in North Port in January.
By Michael Braga
Published: Sunday, October 25, 2009 at 1:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Saturday, October 24, 2009 at 9:53 p.m.
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20091025/ARTICLE/910251027/2107/BUSINESS&tc=email_newsletter#
Land at 5150 N. Tamiami Trail near the Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport was to be developed -- until the developer defaulted on the loan.
Banks have foreclosed on more than 400,000 square feet of office space, more than 400 hotel rooms, more than 1,250 condominum units, more than 100,000 square feet of warehouse space and more than 150 acres of raw commercial land in Sarasota and Manatee counties since November.
This is prime commercial real estate that about 80 investors bought and developed during the real estate boom with loans totaling nearly $300 million.
With those investors unable to make interest payments, the properties will soon be taken over by banks -- a prospect that few in the financial community look forward to.
Just as the housing market starts to recover and the national economy tentatively emerges from the deepest recession since the 1930s, banks across the country are bracing for another wave of foreclosures.
Nationwide, $1 trillion in commercial real estate loans comes due next year. Many borrowers are unlikely to be able to refinance, causing defaults that could lead to more bank failures and could even knock the economy back into recession.
The only hope of averting a wave of defaults: a resurgence of investor buyers. Most observers think those buyers are waiting for fire-sale prices before they jump in.
Paul Kasriel, Northern Trust's chief economist, predicts the new wave of foreclosures means the growth the U.S. economy saw in the third quarter will not be matched again until the last quarter of 2010.
"This tsunami will not be as big as the first one," said Kasriel, meaning the wave of residential foreclosures. "But it will wash over the financial system and cause a lot of damage."
Office and hotel defaults
The big office complex that Peter Shipps erected on Tamiami Trail in North Port is a symbol of overbuilding during the boom.
Thinking that Southwest Florida would benefit from a sustained population increase, bankers willingly lent money without developers having to pre-lease the space.
Shipps, a successful Venice builder and developer, approached Naples-based Orion bank with a plan to build five Class A office buildings. Orion lent him more than $10 million for the first phase.
But just as Shipps' first two buildings came out of the ground, the real estate market entered its prolonged slide. He was unable to lease enough space to make interest payments and defaulted on $7.3 million in January.
"They are great buildings in a great location," said Chad Maxwell, a North Port commercial real estate agent. "They just created too much space on the market."
The worldwide recession only made things worse, said Stan Rutstein, a commercial agent with Re/Max in Bradenton.
"Every doctor's office, every attorney's office, every imaging center and every dentist's office cut back," Rutstein said. "People have left the market, tourism is down and businesses have cut back staff. It's pretty bloody."
A large of amount of office space built is sitting empty. Vacancy rates hover around 14 percent in downtown Sarasota, 20 percent in Lakewood Ranch and 30 percent in Venice and Bradenton, according to Manatee and Sarasota counties' economic development organizations.
The fortunes of local hotel developers also plummeted.
In 2005 and 2006, there was a mini-boom in hotel acquisitions and developments. A group led by Harvey Birdman paid $10 million for the 178-room Holiday Inn on Tamiami Trail near the Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport in April 2005. Reliance Realty Partners out of Stamford, Conn., invested more than $30 million in a vacation rental and marina project on Holmes Beach. Bernard LeBlanc's family bought the 160-room Holiday Inn on the U.S. 41 bypass in Venice for $10 million in August 2006.
All three have since defaulted, on more than $50 million in loans.
Another beat-up segment is office condominiums.
During the boom, these 1,000- to 2,000-square-foot spaces sold as fast as they came to market at ever-increasing prices. Condos that started selling for $55 per square foot soared as high as $155, said Carl Wise, a commercial real estate agent who founded Sarasota's Preferred Commercial.
But their owners are now defaulting in large numbers.
"They're in a terrible place now," Wise said. "They are losing their shirts and will continue to do so."
Banks swamped
Banks that lent money to commercial developers and investors are suffering along with their customers.
"I talked to one banker back in June and he said he had a stack of foreclosures two feet thick in his office," said Jeff Button, a commercial agent with the Sarasota's Kleiber Group. "And that's just one bank."
Analysts expect Florida community banks to be hit especially hard because they tended to make a lot of commercial property loans. Southwest Florida already has seen five banks go under -- Bradenton's Flagship National Bank, First Priority Bank and Freedom Bank and First State Bank of Sarasota and Community National Bank of Venice. They may not be the last.
In the meantime, the problems will be felt in the broader economy.
Banks have the capital to make loans. It just makes no sense to chase after commercial real estate when values are dropping, said Bill Sedgeman, chairman of Community National Bank of Manatee.
"What's coming to us now are people who are underwater on their mortgages," Sedgeman said. "They owe more than the properties are worth."
The only way banks can refinance them is if customers are willing to bring cash to the closing table.
Their properties are now sometimes worth only a third of the value they had when the loans were made, so they will have to repay some of what they borrowed. But few borrowers can come up with the cash. So banks will have to foreclose and sell off the properties.
With more and more properties coming onto the market through foreclosures, commercial property values will continue to drop.
Until buyers start taking more properties off the market than are coming on, banks will not lend, Sedgeman said.
"We need to have buyers and we don't have buyers," Sedgeman said. "The reason we don't have buyers is that our economy is so construction-oriented. Until construction gets started again, we won't have jobs and without jobs there will be no tenants for commercial space."
Awaiting private investors
With banks out of the picture, cash-rich private investors and private equity funds will rule the day.
But those investors are unlikely to buy until prices fall to 10 to 20 cents on the dollar, said Rutstein, the Bradenton agent. That is when the powerful private equity money from the Related Companies, Steve Roth of Vornado Realty Trust and Granado Real Estate will get involved.
"Buyers are not going to adjust prices," Rutstein said. "There's no reason. There's more supply than demand and every week supply gets bigger. The most used word in commercial real estate these days is 'carry.' 'What will it cost me to carry this property and for how long?' These are unknown questions.
"The price has to be right and we really haven't come to terms with the right price at the moment."
Generational wealth
The only good to come of all this turmoil: "People who have money will be able to create generational wealth," said Chad Maxwell, a North Port commercial real estate agent. "They will be able to buy properties for far less than the cost of construction."
In Southwest Florida, the residential market will gradually strengthen, allowing home builders to begin construction again. As the economy improves elsewhere, retirees will show up in greater numbers. Those builders and their subcontractors will expand staff. Offices and warehouses will start to fill. The growing population and rising employment will boost consumption.
Once all that happens, commercial real estate lease rates will stop falling, analysts said.
But how long will it take?
"In the old days, you could make a reasonable guess," said Ian Black, a Sarasota-based commercial real estate broker. "Even now, investors are willing to come back in the market. But there is still a tremendous gap between what people are willing to pay and what banks will let properties go for."
2012: Will it be the end of the world as we know it?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/6132571/2012-Will-it-be-the-end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it.html
>Your greenhouse is 8' x 6' bigger than mine. My property is slightly bigger than a commemorative stamp and I don't have room for anything.
I have that request into Matt.
Eddie
End of Summer Blues
By James Howard Kunstler
on August 31, 2009 8:30 AM
http://kunstler.com/blog/2009/08/end-of-summer-blues.html#more
In my larval, pre-blogging days, I always faced the back-to-school moment with abject dread. It meant returning to a program of the most severe, mind-numbing regimentation in the ghastly New York City public schools after a summer of idyllic unreality in the New Hampshire woods, where I went to a Lord of the Flies type of summer camp. And so here I am, many decades later, still uneasy as the final page of the August calendar flies away in a hot Santa Ana wind, and a great hellfire closes in on the far eastern reaches of Los Angeles, and the American money system falls into a peculiar limbo, and every fifth person is out of work, or going bankrupt, or glugging down the seawater of default, or being denied coverage by health insurance that he-or-she has already shelled out ten grand for this year, or getting shot in a trailer park.
I was in Los Angeles for a few days last week, as chance had it, marveling at the odd disposition of things there. I've been there many times over the years, but you forget how overwhelmingly weird it is. Altogether the LA metro area has the ambience of a garage the size of Rhode Island where someone happened to leave the engine running. To say that LA is all about cars is kind of like saying the Pacific Ocean is all about water. But one forgets the supernatural scale of the freeways, the tsunamis of vehicles, the cosmic despair of the traffic jams. The vistas of present-day LA make the Blade Runner vision of things look quaint in comparison.
You motor out of the LAX airport - personally, I love the name "LAX" because it so beautifully describes the collective ethos of the place - and you discover quickly that the taxi cab's windows are not that dirty, it's the air itself colored brown like miso soup. Going north on the 405 freeway, you see the looming Moloch of the downtown skyline through the brown miso soup. And you begin to understand why the products of the film industry are so fixated on the theme of machine apocalypse. Downtown LA looks like just such a gigantic machine as the FX crews would dream up, as if a day will come when those gleaming mirrored office towers will pull themselves out of the ground from their roots and begin lumbering, crunch crunch crunch, north toward the Hollywood Hills seeking to exterminate the vile humanity responsible for making the place what it is.
I happened to be camping out briefly in West Hollywood, in a scene-ster hotel where tiny bubbles of show biz mega-success wafted around amidst a background odor of failure, and an impossibly thin line was drawn between being pampered and being asked to go die in the gutter, please. The place is not without a certain decorum. I couldn't help but imagine how lovely Hollywood must have been in, say, 1923, when 92 percent of all the hopeless crapola now on the ground there had not yet been built, when there were no freeways, and fewer cars than currently found in Lincoln, Nebraska, you could go out to the Pacific Ocean on a "Big Red" streetcar, and on a clear day you could see from La Cienga out to Mount Wilson, and the movie "industry" was like a college theater department. What a fabulous giggle it must have all been - apart from poor Fatty Arbuckle - in that romantic desert at the edge of the world.
The whole "Dream Factory" myth has become such an awful cliché, but what remains interesting now is how it utterly infected every other organ, byway, and lost corner of American life, to the degree that the life of this nation became little more than a "narrative," a story-board, a montage of wishes superimposed over the harsher mandates of reality. Hollywood now is a mere cartoon of what Wall Street and Washington have turned into. We're a civilization of fluff now, riding on a river of toxic sludge.
I found Hollywood utterly exhausting. On morning walks down in the buzzard flats below Sunset Boulevard you almost never saw a human being outside the protective carapace of a car. I think I was the only person who ever walked down Melrose Avenue this calendar year. There were a lot of fresh store vacancies in the endless one-story strips, as if the retailers had just packed up and left Dodge under the cover of night. There were obvious, if lame, attempts to pedestrianize the major surface boulevards with fancy crossing pavements, but traffic flowed on them at sixty off the rush hours, and you felt like a marmot in a buffalo stampede out there. For solace, I listened to Bruce Molsky sing "I Ride an Old Paint" on the iPod. The fiddle part is lovely.
The city of Los Angeles, indeed the whole state of California, seems exhausted too. Apocalypse is probably such a rich theme out there precisely because everything about that particular way of life seems to be nearing its end - whether it's the fiscal fiasco or the water supply, or the aerospace economy, or the music industry, or the once-great university system, or the Happy Motoring fantasy of cruising for burgers in what Tom Waits called the dark, warm narcotic American night. I went to the movies there one hot afternoon - Tarantino's latest, Inglourius Basterds, a completely crazy but enjoyable revenge romp against Hitler & Co. - and before the feature, they showed a "trailer" for Roland Emmerich's forthcoming apocalyptathon. 2012, in which virtually every global landmark from the Vatican to the White House is destroyed, and mankind's last hope is John Cusack riding a spaceship to worlds unknown.... If that isn't shooting your wad as a movie-maker, I'm not sure what is. Maybe next time out, Roland will step back and make a movie about a puppy.
I had my fill of apocalypse by the time I left the place, only to find myself back in a real nation really dissolving into a puddle of goo. In the strange new ether of the Web, a consensus grows that we're in for a rocky autumn, as if the signal event will be something like a hurricane of shoes dropping - bank failures galore, repudiation of US debt instruments by America's former patrons, foreclosures to the farthest horizon, jobs and incomes terminated, and all the good intentions of the folks in charge coming to naught in the face of historic forces. We're off to that kind of a start this morning, with the Dow dropping eighty points and the news that Disney Inc has just paid four billion for the rights to the Marvel Comics posse - Spiderman and his homeys. As if America needs more childish fantasy.
Thanks for the response. My greenhouse will be only 8' x 6'. Not big but perfect for me. Good luck with your raised platform. How long will the garlic take? Is this for a winter crop? Take care.
"Our Unfolding Destiny: Possibilities and Probabilities"
http://www.cacor.ca/Andy%27s-col-2.html
Growing Italian Newsletter
July 2009
http://growitalian.com/newsletter_july2009.html
AMERICAN IDIOTS
by James Quinn
August 14, 2009
http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/quinn/2009/0814.html
Smart grid that controls utility use comes to KC
By CHAD DAY
The Kansas City Star
Posted on Mon, Aug. 10, 2009 11:54 PM
http://www.kansascity.com/637/story/1374987.html
It’s a 98-degree August day. Air conditioners along Prospect Avenue near 42nd Street are running at full bore.
Suddenly the whirring stops, all at once, without anyone touching a thermostat.
Someone miles away at Kansas City Power & Light decided residents on this block could stand a slightly warmer home for a while to save energy.
That’s the future, and it’s called the smart grid. Someday it could be in your own home and in millions more nationwide.
Kansas City’s urban core in the Green Impact Zone will be the testing ground for advances in the smart grid, which is the name for a project to upgrade electrical devices in your home and upgrade power lines in the area.
“The rest of the country is looking to Kansas City to lead on this,” said Danny Rotert, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, a Kansas City Democrat who has been the driving force behind the green zone.
Boulder, Colo., already has installed an advanced smart grid designed to reduce energy costs and provide the potential for renewable energy.
Now KCP&L is looking to try the next generation of smart grid in the green zone, the $200 million effort to make 150 blocks in central Kansas City more energy efficient.
“The green zone is really a sandbox to deploy some of these newer technologies,” said Chuck Caisley, a KCP&L spokesman.
To simplify, think of power lines becoming two-way, like the Internet. That lets you see in real time how much energy you’re using, and possibly cut back. And it lets utility companies monitor — and at times control — how much power you’re using.
Sound scary? It does to some utility watchdogs and others who fear hackers or terrorist attacks.
But half of KCP&L’s grid already allows for a dispatcher to send messages to customers’ meters and then receive a message with information about how that meter’s working. That also allows the utility to see immediately where power outages have occurred.
KCP&L posts that information on its Web site and is working to upgrade the rest of its grid to allow real-time monitoring.
The green zone is expected to go much further, experimenting with some new smart-grid ideas:
•Networks that allow the utility to adjust appliances, such as lowering a water heater’s temperature when it’s not in use so it cycles fewer times.
•Thermostats, appliances and meters that the utility can signal to reduce energy use during peak times, such as on hot days. KCP&L already adjusts the thermostats of about 34,000 customers in Missouri and Kansas as part of a voluntary pilot project.
•Meters that show customers, in real time, how much they are spending on energy.
•Devices that allow KCP&L to see how much energy is being produced by home solar panels and small wind turbines. KCP&L would then be able to efficiently coordinate the energy being used by appliances in the home.
The grid also clears the way to distribute unused electricity from home solar panels and plug-in electric cars. There’s the potential for a home to become its own energy plant, contributing to the grid and then getting paid for that contribution, Rotert said.
The smart-grid approach has collected some critics, including those who fear it allows power companies to intrude, like Big Brother, into the lives of their customers.
Some customers are squeamish about signing up for programs that give control of their appliances to their utilities, said Mindy Spatt, spokeswoman for The Utility Reform Network in San Francisco.
“I think people certainly are worried that the utility companies are making decisions for them,” Spatt said.
Such concerns are one reason KCP&L’s pilot projects have been voluntary. It’s still up to customers to sign up, even in the green zone.
“None of this stuff at present is being forced on customers,” Caisley said.
Customers who choose to take part in the pilot project have the opportunity to opt out on days when they need to have a cooler home.
And KCP&L notifies them by e-mail when it has nudged their thermostat.
Hackers, however, could cause mass outages.
Weapons equipped with an electromagnetic pulse could knock out smart grids, said U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, a Republican and a former research scientist from Maryland, at a House subcommittee hearing last month.
Security is vital when transitioning to a smart grid, said Energy Secretary Steven Chu in an interview with The Associated Press.
“If you want to create mischief, one very good way to create a great deal of mischief is to actually bring down a smart-grid system,” Chu said. “This system has to be incredibly secure.”
As with the online banking, the utilities have put in place firewalls and other security measures to safeguard against hackers, said Jay Birnbaum, a senior vice president at Current Group, a Maryland smart-grid software company that helped design the Boulder project.
The government is prepared to spend a lot of money. In June, the Department of Energy freed up about $3.9 billion in stimulus money for smart-grid technologies.
The grid in the Green Impact Zone probably would cost tens of millions of dollars.
Some of the green-zone devices will make the cut for wider installation on the grid in the future, said Mike Deggendorf, KCP&L senior vice president for delivery.
Once the bugs are worked out and KCP&L sees which applications customers like, some of those smart devices could be making their way into the homes of the more than 800,000 KCP&L electricity customers.
“This allows us to see what parts are particularly effective and spend our time and money wisely,” Deggendorf said.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRAISE FOR THE GREEN IMPACT ZONE
Kansas City’s Green Impact Zone was proposed this year to use government stimulus money to make a 150-block zone in the urban core more energy efficient. U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, a Kansas City Democrat, has been the driving force behind the zone, which incorporates a smart grid, a green sewer project, neighborhood stabilization — including buying up foreclosures — and installation of solar panels on schools.
The Brookings Institution praised the Green Impact Zone as a successful stimulus project in a report issued July 23. The report said the zone is one of 11 projects that are models for future development.
For more on the report’s summary of the Green Impact Zone, go to KansasCity.com.
What President Obama Can Teach America's Kids
by Bill O'Reilly
published: 08/09/2009
These are tough times for American children for a couple of reasons. The rise of the machines means that kids can now be exposed to material on computers or cellphones that is far beyond their emotional IQ. While high-tech can be a tremendous educational tool, explicit images and conversation easily found in cyberspace can rob children of their innocence and, in some cases, put them in actual danger. Even if parents are vigilant in monitoring the machines, kids can still get the bad stuff at school and on the playgrounds, as computer access is just about everywhere.
The disruption of the traditional American family is also adversely affecting millions of children. Right now, almost 22 million American kids are living with one parent; more than 80% of those are being raised primarily by Mom. Just 50 years ago, a child living without a father was somewhat of a rarity. Now it’s an epidemic.
Thus, our modern age presents vast challenges to children, and they need to learn lessons quickly in order to prosper. And who better to teach them than the President of the United States?
As has been widely chronicled, Barack Obama had a tough childhood filled with instability and loneliness. However, that did not stop him from rising to become the most powerful man in the world. His breathtaking achievement presents five important lessons for all children.
Lesson One: Forgiveness
President Obama was just 2 when his father abandoned him and his mother in Hawaii. Four years later, his mother took her little son to Indonesia after she remarried. However, the home was somewhat chaotic as they tried to adjust to their new surroundings. So when Barry, as he was called, turned 10, he was sent back to Hawaii to live with his grandparents while his mother stayed abroad.
That kind of situation could ruin a child. But President Obama betrays no bitterness. In his books and speeches, he speaks lovingly of his mom. He admits she was somewhat “reckless” but also says he felt he was “the center of her universe.”
As for his absent father, the President says the void he left motivated him to succeed. So, it is obvious that he is not wallowing in past pain. He does not harbor bitterness toward his parents. Instead, he accepted his situation and saw it as a challenge. He forgave his folks and embraced a positive outlook.
Lesson Two: Respect
Even though his mom and dad apparently put their needs ahead of his, he speaks of them in mostly affectionate terms. He finds a way not to demean them.
Patricia Saunders, a clinical psychologist who works with children in New York City, says: “ Barack Obama dealt with his family situation by understanding it. He put his own ego aside and made a decision to act respectfully toward his folks. That maturity has served him very well throughout his life.”
Lesson Three: Persistence
Barack Obama had few advantages as a child but decided to fight the good fight. That is, he got up when he was knocked down.
For example, in 2000, he lost his run for Congress in Illinois. He could have given up and gone into the private sector where high-salaried jobs awaited him. But he preferred public service. So, just four years later, he ran again, this time winning a U.S. Senate seat.
Psychologist Ruth Peters, who counsels children in Clearwater, Fla., believes that all the hard knocks Obama took in his young life prepared him for both defeat and victory.
“Some people shrink when they are faced with adversity,” she told me. “Others seem to gain momentum and are challenged when they fail. The President did not use his difficulties as an excuse to quit. He used them as motivators to persevere.”
But determination must be coupled with a very specific discipline in order to succeed in life. And that is the fourth lesson from the President.
Lesson Four: Hard Work
A child does not go from taking English lessons in Indonesia to editing the Harvard Law Review without doing some tough work. The President earned his present job by performing in school and, later, in his various jobs. He was smart enough to lay a foundation for success. Early on as a kid, he understood the big picture.
“Barack Obama loves his work,” Saunders says. “And this is a great example for children. They must understand that work is very important and will ultimately define their lives.”
Lesson Five—perhaps the greatest lesson the President can teach children: In America, anything is possible
This is something of a cliché, but never has it been more vividly illustrated. Barack Obama, a youngster in Hawaii without his parents around, has toughed it out and become one of history’s great stories, no matter what happens going forward. What he has achieved in his 48 years is simply astounding.
Consider the odds. The United States is a nation of more than 300 million citizens. Only one person is currently the Commander in Chief. That man had no fatherly guidance, is of mixed race, and had no family connections to guide him into the world of national politics.
That adds up to one simple truth that every American child should be told: “If Barack Obama can become the President of the United States, then whatever dream you may have can happen in your life.”
It all depends on lessons learned.
PARADE Contributing Editor Bill O’Reilly is the author of the best-seller “A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity” and anchor of “The O’Reilly Factor” on the Fox News Channel.
Photo by Erin Patrice O'Brien For PARADE
Martin Armstrong: Is It Time To Turn Out The Lights?
http://www.contrahour.com/contrahour/2009/03/martin-armstrong-is-it-time-to-turn-out-the-lights.html
The Coming Great Depression
Why Government Is Powerless
http://www.contrahour.com/contrahour/2009/01/martin-armstrong-the-coming-great-depression.html
Why Do Traders Fail?
by Jeffrey Kennedy, Elliott Wave International | August 7, 2009
http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/ewave/2009/0807.html
The Dark Years Are Here
Egon von Greyerz
Matterhorn Asset Management AG - July 17, 2009 Newslettter
http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_08/greyerz071709.html
Honoring a Coach and an Upset
The former coach Paul Dietzel being greeted by Rollie Stichweh at a reunion Friday at West Point. Dietzel’s 1964 Army team beat Navy, 11-8. [Chang W. Lee/The New York Times]
By GEORGE VECSEY
Published: July 19, 2009
West Point, N.Y.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/20/sports/ncaafootball/20vecsey.html?emc=eta1
They beat Navy. They beat Roger Staubach. Forty-five years later, that is worth celebrating, all over again.
The old boys from the United States Military Academy brought back their coach, Paul Dietzel, and his wife, Anne, last weekend to commemorate one of the great upsets of college football — Army 11, Navy 8 — in November 1964.
By that time, Vietnam was looming over the men who played in that game, and it looms over them still. But the main reason to get together was to celebrate their coach, who prepared them and cajoled them into stopping one of the greatest college players ever.
This was when Army still had some leftover cachet as a football power, from the 1940s. Recently, Army has not been able to recruit enough talent, but its new coach, Rich Ellerson, has some ambitious plans, including a rematch with Notre Dame in Yankee Stadium in 2010, to be announced Monday. The echoes of Dietzel’s epic victory are still heard along the Hudson.
Dietzel, 84, still paints and talks up his recent book, Call Me Coach. There are many traces of the charismatic young man who left Louisiana State University — where he had won a national championship in 1958 — to return in 1962 as head coach at West Point, where he had served two tours as an assistant.
Anne Dietzel estimated that they have lived in 25 different homes. Once, she said, she asked a contractor how the heating system worked in her new home, and the man asked if her husband was around, so he could explain. Her husband was off recruiting linebackers in Ohio, she said; the contractor had best explain it to her.
He inherited the men in the room, now in their mid-60s, with charming wives and bad knees and successful careers. He is still Coach, a man who had control of every detail, except in his own household. Bill Zadel, the big tackle, was lying in the infirmary with a leg injury in 1964, when Coach paid a visit. Dietzel was so sweet, so solicitous, that Zadel allowed as how he was already feeling a bit better. That’s good, Zadel, Coach quickly said, because you’re playing both ways on Saturday. He played nearly 60 minutes against Navy, too.
Coach did have a light side. One summer, the Nashville Banner reporter Fred Russell was visiting camp, driven in a jeep by the assistant coach Bill Battle. Suddenly, there were explosions in the woods up ahead, and Battle urged Russell to seek cover, because live ammunition was unexpectedly being fired. That night, before the Rita Hayworth movie on base, everybody was treated to another film — Fred Russell diving into the underbrush.
Dietzel also kept tabs on missed bed checks and youthful pranks. The worst thing that could happen was to be addressed as “Son,” said Rhesa H. Barksdale, one of the team managers, now a federal judge in Mississippi and Louisiana, who arranged the weekend with Dietzelian precision.
No stranger to military life, Dietzel had flown B-29 missions in the Pacific as a 20-year-old, before playing center for Miami of Ohio, the so-called cradle of coaches, on the same squad with the future coaches Bo Schembechler, Bill Arnsparger and Ara Parseghian. He was an acolyte of Sid Gillman, Red Blaik and Bear Bryant before winning the national title at L.S.U.
After his first season in 1962, Dietzel converted Rollie Stichweh from halfback to quarterback, and Stichweh nearly beat Staubach as a junior, only to run out of time near the end zone. In 1964, playing quarterback and safety, Stichweh tried again. The old boys like John Johnson, Frank Cosentino and Vince Casillo still recall Dietzel’s game plan, to pressure Staubach from the wings, not let him move around.
Stichweh, who played 55 minutes that day, remains a lifelong friend of Staubach’s. They played in the same backfield in the East-West game, and Stichweh ran for a touchdown. Staubach served his hitch and became a great pro quarterback, but there were no all-pro players at Army.
As seniors, Stichweh and Zadel and the others began to hear of former cadets being killed or injured in Vietnam. “It began to get personal,” Stichweh recalled. By 1967, Stichweh was a captain in the 173rd Airborne on Hill 875 near Dak To, up near the Cambodian border. He said that playing football was only one part of the academy’s preparation to perform under pressure.
“By the time I was at Hill 875, it was already baked into your soul,” he said.
Zadel was a Marine officer a few kilometers away, but they did not know how close they were. Stichweh learned his first daughter had been born when he received a message scribbled on a shoe box, dropped in a package from a helicopter. They both survived and came home, Stichweh to become a top executive at the consulting company Towers Perrin and Zadel to become a highly successful businessman.
For a while, the teammates consoled themselves with the assurance that they had been fighting to advance democracy in Asia.
“That was my story at cocktail parties,” Zadel said the other night, adding that he had changed his mind after learning about the misgivings of President Lyndon Baines Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert Strange McNamara, who died July 6.
“I read the excerpts from McNamara’s book,” Zadel said, referring to McNamara’s belated admission that the war was in vain. “I was incensed.”
Stichweh said that every Memorial Day he visited the cemetery at West Point to honor his 26 classmates, including a member of his wedding party, who died in Vietnam, all of them, he said, after McNamara began to experience “his own little epiphany.”
Those comments were made in private; Stichweh and I have known each other for almost half a century. At the dinner, Stichweh was gregarious, as always, noting how Dietzel had come through a broken family, married well, lived his Christian faith.
In his remarks, Dietzel wept a few times and made people laugh many times. A few people at the academy had been upset when Dietzel left with a record of 21-18-1 after the 1965 season. He negotiated for more control at South Carolina, but his record there was a mediocre 42-53-1. That is old business; the academy is home; the memories are mostly fun.
On Friday, Dietzel recalled how, after becoming head coach, he had been summoned to the home of Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the commandant, and later the commander in Vietnam.
“You could say Westmoreland was a little stiff,” Dietzel said, kindly, recalling how his assistants had been aching for a beer, just to relax. Then Katherine Westmoreland, the vivacious wife of the general who was known as Kitsy, told the coaches she had some good advice about how to succeed at the academy.
With that, Dietzel said, she turned her back to them and hiked up her dress, revealing — in a dignified fashion, of course — black panties, with two words printed on them: Beat Navy.
It took them a few years, but they did. Forty-five years later, that is worth celebrating.
E-mail: geovec@nytimes.com
This Boomer Isn't Going to Apologize Article
By STEPHEN MOORE
JUNE 19, 2009
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124537646251430161.html
Last weekend I attended my niece's high-school graduation from an upscale prep school in Washington, D.C. These are supposed to be events filled with joy, optimism and anticipation of great achievements. But nearly all the kids who stepped to the podium dutifully moaned about how terrified they are of America's future -- yes, even though Barack Obama, whom they all worship and adore, has brought "change they can believe in." A federal judge gave the commencement address and proceeded to denounce the sorry state of the nation that will be handed off to them. The enemy, he said, is the collective narcissism of their parents' generation -- my generation. The judge said that we baby boomers have bequeathed to the "echo boomers," "millennials," or whatever they are to be called, a legacy of "greed, global warming, and growing income inequality."
And everyone of all age groups seemed to nod in agreement. One affluent 40-something woman with lots of jewelry told me she can barely look her teenagers in the eyes, so overcome is she with shame over the miseries we have bestowed upon our children.
The Wall Street Journal reported last week that graduation ceremonies have become collective airings of guilt and grief. It's now chic for boomers to apologize for their generation's crimes. It's the only thing conservatives and liberals seem to agree on. Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana, told Butler University grads that our generation is "just plain selfish." At Grinnell College in Iowa, author Thomas Friedman compared boomers to "hungry locusts . . . eating through just about everything." Film maker Ken Burns told this year's Boston College grads that those born between 1946 and 1960 have "squandered the legacy handed to them by the generation from World War II."
I could go on, but you get the point. We partied like it was 1999, paid for it with Ponzi schemes and left the mess for our kids and grandkids to clean up. We're sorry -- so sorry.
Well, I'm not. I have two teenagers and an 8-year-old, and I can say firsthand that if boomer parents have anything for which to be sorry it's for rearing a generation of pampered kids who've been chauffeured around to soccer leagues since they were 6. This is a generation that has come to regard rising affluence as a basic human right, because that is all it has ever known -- until now. Today's high-school and college students think of iPods, designer cellphones and $599 lap tops as entitlements. They think their future should be as mapped out as unambiguously as the GPS system in their cars.
CBS News reported recently that echo boomers spend $170 billion a year -- more than most nations' GDPs -- and nearly every penny of that comes from the wallets of the very parents they now resent. My parents' generation lived in fear of getting polio; many boomers lived in fear of getting sent to the Vietnam War; this generation's notion of hardship is TiVo breaking down.
How bad can the legacy of the baby boomers really be? Let's see: We're the generation that spawned Microsoft, Intel, Apple, Google, ATMs and Gatorade. We defeated the evils of communism and delivered the world from the brink of global thermonuclear war. Now youngsters are telling pollsters that they think socialism may be better than capitalism after all. Do they expect us to apologize for winning the Cold War next?
College students gripe about the price of tuition, and it does cost way too much. But who do these 22-year-old scholars think has been footing the bill for their courses in transgender studies and Che Guevara? The echo boomers complain, rightly, that we have left them holding the federal government's $8 trillion national IOU. But try to cut government aid to colleges or raise tuitions and they act as if they have been forced to actually work for a living.
Yes, the members of this generation will inherit a lot of debts, but a much bigger storehouse of wealth will be theirs in the coming years. When I graduated from college in 1982, the net worth of America -- all our nation's assets minus all our liabilities -- was $16 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve. Today, even after the meltdown in housing and stocks, the net worth of the country is $45 trillion -- a doubling after inflation. The boomers' children and their children will inherit more wealth and assets than any other in the history of the planet -- that is, unless Mr. Obama taxes it all away. So how about a little gratitude from these trust-fund babies for our multitrillion-dollar going-away gifts?
My generation is accused of being environmental criminals -- of having polluted the water and air and ruined the climate. But no generation in history has done more to clean the environment than mine. Since 1970 pollutants in the air and water have fallen sharply. Since 1960, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and Pittsburgh have cut in half the number of days with unsafe levels of smog. The number of Americans who get sick or die from contaminants in our drinking water has plunged for 50 years straight.
Whenever kids ask me why we didn't do more to combat global warming, I explain that when I was young the "scientific consensus" warned of global cooling. Today's teenagers drive around in cars more than any previous generation. My kids have never once handed back the car keys because of some moral problem with their carbon footprint -- and I think they are fairly typical.
The most absurd complaint of all is that the health-care system has been ruined by our generation. Oh, really? Thanks to massive medical progress in the past 30 years, the chances of dying from heart disease and many types of cancer have been cut in half. We found effective treatments for AIDS within a decade. Life expectancy has risen and infant mortality fallen. That doesn't sound so "selfish" to me.
Yes, we are in a deep economic crisis today -- but it's no worse than what we boomers faced in the late 1970s after years of hyperinflation, sky-high tax rates and runaway government spending. We cursed our parents, too. But then we grew up and produced a big leap forward in health, wealth and scientific progress. Let's see what this next generation of over-educated ingrates can do.
Mr. Moore is senior economics writer for The Wall Street Journal's editorial page.
The Death of Common Sense
© Lori Borgman | Sunday, March 15, 1998
http://www.loriborgman.com/The_Death_of_Common_Sense.html
Three yards of black fabric enshroud my computer terminal. I am mourning the passing of an old friend by the name of Common Sense. His obituary reads as follows: Common Sense, aka C.S., lived a long life, but died from heart failure at the brink of the millennium. No one really knows how old he was, his birth records were long ago entangled in miles and miles of bureaucratic red tape. Known affectionately to close friends as Horse Sense and Sound Thinking, he selflessly devoted himself to a life of service in homes, schools, hospitals and offices, helping folks get jobs done without a lot of fanfare, whooping and hollering.
Rules and regulations and petty, frivolous lawsuits held no power over C.S. A most reliable sage, he was credited with cultivating the ability to know when to come in out of the rain, the discovery that the early bird gets the worm and how to take the bitter with the sweet.
C.S. also developed sound financial policies (don't spend more than you earn), reliable parenting strategies (the adult is in charge, not the kid) and prudent dietary plans (offset eggs and bacon with a little fiber and orange juice).
A veteran of the Industrial Revolution, the Great Depression, the Technological Revolution and the Smoking Crusades, C.S. survived sundry cultural and educational trends including disco, the men's movement, body piercing, whole language and new math. C.S.'s health began declining in the late 1960s when he became infected with the If-It-Feels-Good, Do-It virus.
In the following decades, his waning strength proved no match for the ravages of overbearing federal and state rules and regulations and an oppressive tax code. C.S. was sapped of strength and the will to live as the Ten Commandments became contraband, criminals received better treatment than victims and judges stuck their noses in everything from Boy Scouts to professional baseball and golf.
His deterioration accelerated as schools implemented zero-tolerance policies. Reports of 6-year-old boys charged with sexual harassment for kissing classmates, a teen suspended for taking a swig of Scope mouthwash after lunch, girls suspended for possessing Midol and an honor student expelled for having a table knife in her school lunch were more than his heart could endure.
As the end neared, doctors say C.S. drifted in and out of logic but was kept informed of developments regarding regulations on low-flow toilets and mandatory air bags. Finally, upon hearing about a government plan to ban inhalers from 14 million asthmatics due to a trace of a pollutant that may be harmful to the environment, C.S. breathed his last.
Services will be at Whispering Pines Cemetery. C.S. was preceded in death by his wife, Discretion; one daughter, Responsibility; and one son, Reason. He is survived by two step-brothers, Half-Wit and Dim-Wit.
Memorial Contributions may be sent to the Institute for Rational Thought. Farewell, Common Sense. May you rest in peace.
Bad Collateral
May 18, 2009
James Howard Kunstler
http://www.kunstler.com
The wishes of the "green shoots and mustard seed" crowd really hinge on whether the various organs of the suburban economy can be jump-started back to life -- the production home-builders, the granite countertop outfitters, the mall and strip-mall gang, the national chain discount retailers, all the people who make Happy Motoring possible from the factory to the showroom, and, of course, the banks who shovel money into these enterprises.
All these organs of our now-former economy are gravely impaired, and a realistic appraisal of them would have to conclude that they've entered the zone of congestive failure. The choice we face really comes down to this: do we put our dwindling resources and "hopes" into resuscitating those dying systems, or do we move forward to the next chapter of American life, cut our losses, and make new arrangements more consistent with the realities on offer from the universe? To take it a step further, can we remain one nation, a common culture, without such a conscious re-purposing of our collective spirit?
The bizarre spectacle being played out right now by President Obama and his team only adds layers of mystery and mystification to this big question. On the one hand, you have Mr. Obama giving a graceful, thoughtful speech on a very difficult issue (abortion) at a very tough venue (the country's leading Catholic university), and presenting an excellent case for common ground. It was a bold deed, unshirking, even brave considering what have come to be the standard modes of pander or evasion in presidential politics. I suspect that Mr. Obama did it as much to demonstrate his willingness to face tough questions in general as to address abortion per se.
All this is to say why it is so dispiriting to see Mr. Obama's White House mount a campaign to sustain the unsustainable in the economic realm. Everything they've done for four months involving money management and enterprise policy -- from backstopping hopeless banks, to gaming the bankruptcies of the big car companies, to the bungled efforts to prop up artificially-high house prices -- amounts to a gigantic exercise in futility. Worse, it gives off odors of dishonesty or stupidity, since the ominous tendings of our system are so starkly self-evident.
Not least of the problems entailed in all this are the scary political consequences. It's one thing for a business such as a bank to fail; its another thing for the public to lose confidence in banking, or their own currency, or the credibility of all the people who work in banking, or the authority of those charged to regulate these activities, or the courts and their officers who are supposed to adjudicate misconduct in them. When faith in all these things starts to go, all bets are off for even larger social constructs like democracy, justice, and the destiny of a federal republic.
The Obama White House has very quickly painted itself into a corner on these things. The so-called bank "stress test" couldn't have backfired more completely. Rather than bolster confidence in our money system and the people who run it, it only made the system appear more obviously corrupt. It made the Treasury Department (and the White House by extension) look idiotic for concocting it. Worse, the game of allowing the banks to audit themselves, and cook their books under newly jiggered accounting rules, only made them look less sound and trustworthy, and their executives more venal and mendacious. The stress test scam also virtually guaranteed that the banks will not get another dime out of congress -- even while it is common knowledge that they will desperately need quadrillions more dimes in the months ahead.
Who knows what the point of this ludicrous exercise was? Observers in all corners of the media saw through it, and the public has only been made more cynical, and is now so furious over related stunts like AIG using taxpayer money to pay back swaps bets to Goldman Sachs that there is a whiff of revolution in the American air for the first time, really, since 1861. A lot of reasonable people see a good chance that our society will sink into disorder if these trends continue, and these fears could beat a path into radical politics, even the frightful prospect of coup d'etat -- not something that I advocate, by the way.
The president is playing with fire on all this. The old economy is not going to recover, and so far he has not used his rhetorical talents to articulate what the next economy is likely to be about. It is reasonable to wonder whether he even really has a clear sense of it -- and, based on the fatuous utterances of his economic mandarins like Larry Summers and Austan Goolsby, this team is really behind the curve.
There are plenty of things you can state about the economy past and future with some confidence right now:
-- Cheap energy is over and our wishes for alt.energy are currently inconsistent with reality, meaning we have to live differently.
-- We have to downscale and re-localize our major economic activities: food production, commerce and manufacturing, banking, schooling, etc.
-- We can't hope to have a stable money system unless we allow a workout of unpayable debt to proceed.
-- Even if we can do this, universal easy credit is a thing of the past. From now on, we have to save for the things we want and run our businesses and households on accounts receivable.
-- Major demographic shifts are inevitable as it becomes necessary to let go of suburbia and reactivate our derelict towns and smaller cities (and allow our giant metroplexes to contract).
-- We have to face the truth that our major social contracts cannot be met, namely the continuation of social security as we know it and probably all pension arrangements. We'll probably have to change household arrangements to make up for these losses.
-- Health care will have to go through a revolution more comprehensive than just changing how we pay for it. Like everything else, it will have to downscale, re-localize, and become more rigorous.
We're not going to rescue the banks. The collateral for their loans is no good and it will only lose more value. All those tract houses on the cul-de-sacs of America and scattered on the out-parcels of our tragically subdivided farming landscape will only lose value, one way or another, in the years ahead. Right now they're simply losing inflated cash value -- and that has been bad enough to sink the banks. In the months and years ahead, they'll lose their sheer usefulness as the distances once mitigated by cheap gasoline loom larger again, and the jobs vanish and incomes with them, and the supermarket shelves cease to groan with eighty-seven different varieties of flavored coffee creamers, and one-by-one the national chain stores shutter, and the theme parks, and the Nascar ovals, and the malls, and the colossal superfluous cretin-cargo of consumer nonsense that we've been daydreaming in gets blown away in a hurricane of change that we were not ready to believe in.
Followers
|
2
|
Posters
|
|
Posts (Today)
|
0
|
Posts (Total)
|
107
|
Created
|
01/27/07
|
Type
|
Free
|
Moderators |
<div style="width:305px;">
<OBJECT classid="clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000"
codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,0,0"
WIDTH="305" HEIGHT="170" id="oil_consumption_counter_6"> <PARAM NAME=movie VALUE="http://www.energyandcapital.com/images/oil_consumption_counter_6.swf"> <PARAM NAME=quality VALUE=high> <PARAM NAME=bgcolor VALUE=#FFFFFF> <EMBED src="http://www.energyandcapital.com/images/oil_consumption_counter_6.swf" quality=high bgcolor=#FFFFFF WIDTH="305" HEIGHT="170" NAME="oil_consumption_counter_6" TYPE="application/x-shockwave-flash" PLUGINSPAGE="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer"></EMBED>
</OBJECT><br>
<div style="margin:5px; text-align:center; font-size:13px;">Find out how to invest in <a href="http://www.energyandcapital.com">energy stocks</a> at EnergyAndCapital.com.</div>
</div>
FINANCINGS
Total amount raised $35,684,000
2004: $1,950,000
2005: $16,734,000
2006: $17,000,000
Cash on hand: $13,000,000
http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2009-0509-3b.mp3
Industrialinfo Radio
http://www.industrialinfo.com/radio/index.jsp
INTRODUCTION
Bulldog Resources Inc. is a Calgary based emerging oil and gas company which commenced operations in December 2005 as a result of the Plan of Arrangement between Bulldog Energy Inc. and Crescent Point Energy Trust. Bulldog will pursue an aggressive growth strategy utilizing a balanced approach of exploration & development drilling, strategic property and corporate acquisitions in focused areas.
Bulldog Resources common shares are listed for trading on the TSX Exchange under the symbol BD. Bulldog Resources common shares began trading on December 5, 2005. After closing the common share private placement on April 4, 2006, Bulldog has 24,959,202 common shares outstanding.
CORPORATE STRATEGY
The business of Bulldog Resources is to create sustainable and profitable per share growth in the oil and natural gas industry in Western Canada. The company will also consider international projects should attractive, accessible opportunities be identified. Bulldog Resources will pursue an integrated growth strategy involving growth through the "drill bit" complemented with strategic acquisitions. The Company's undeveloped land inventory will be derived from a combination of land acquisitions, farmins and joint venture participation agreements. Acquisitions will complement its active drilling programs where exploitation, development drilling and exploratory drilling opportunities exist. Bulldog Resources will initially focus on pursuing medium depth (1,000 to 1,500 m) light oil reservoirs in Southeast Saskatchewan where this management team has demonstrated excellent success.
Bulldog Resources business strategy is summarized as follows:
identify and access undeveloped land that has the potential for light/ medium gravity oil or natural gas prospects;
create internally generated geological and geophysical oil and natural gas prospects;
develop a drilling portfolio of low to medium risk opportunities;
operate prospects, when possible, to increase control over both the timing of operations and amount of expenditures;
where involved in non operated prospects develop a strong relationship with the operating company;
focus on projects with short term "on stream" development characteristics to create immediate cash flow and shareholder returns
This strategy involves acquiring properties, consolidating ownership by acquiring additional interests in its properties, and developing its properties through well and facility optimization, completions and development drilling. Once established in an area, Bulldog Resources pursues additional development and exploratory drilling in the surrounding area.
Bulldog Resources management and directors have significant industry experience in producing areas throughout Western Canada and internationally. We have the capability to expand the scope of the Company's activities as opportunities arise. A key element of Bulldog Resources ultimate success is its continued ability to select opportunities that will promote value creation within the Company.
In reviewing potential property acquisitions, the Company considers the following criteria:
the ability of the Company to enhance the value of a property through additional development and exploratory drilling, completion and tie in of capped wells, additional exploitation efforts, including improved production practices, and improved marketing arrangements;
the quality of production and reserves, in terms of product type, production rates, stability of production, reserve life index and operating cost;
the compatibility of a property with management's organizational skills and capabilities and the Company's existing portfolio;
the availability of existing infrastructure and the ability to expand that infrastructure for increasing production;
the potential for multi zone hydrocarbon opportunity;
the degree of control gained over operations and development, and the potential for the Company to become the operator; and
the ability to efficiently bring a property's production to market in the near term.
The board of directors of the Company may, in its discretion, approve asset or corporate acquisitions or investments that do not conform to these guidelines based upon the board's consideration of the qualitative aspects of the subject properties including risk profile, technical upside, reserve life and asset quality.
MANAGEMENT
Ken McKay, P.Geol.
President & Chief Executive Officer, Director
Bulldog Resources is led by Ken McKay, a professional geologist with 24 years experience in exploration, exploitation, property evaluations and corporate finance in western Canada and internationally. Bulldog Resources is Mr. McKay's third start up of a junior oil and gas company.
In 2001, Ken co-founded Bulldog Energy Inc. as President and Chief Executive Officer. Bulldog Energy Inc. was a public company trading on the TSX Exchange. Bulldog Energy completed a $4.2 million initial public offering in December 2001 and commenced operations in January, 2002 with 13 Bbls/day of oil production. Bulldog Energy's management team and experienced board of directors successfully grew the Company to a production base of over 2,100 BOE per day. On October 3, 2005, the date of announcement of the transaction, the value of the operations sold to Crescent Point Energy Trust was $118 million.
Mr. McKay arranged and executed five financings raising approximately $31 million into Bulldog Energy. He was directly involved on all project, capital allocation, strategic and corporate decisions.
In 1995, Mr. McKay founded private Big Sky Resources Inc. ("Big Sky") with equity of approximately $350,000. Under Ken's leadership and direction as President and Chief Executive Officer, Big Sky assembled the team, projects and capital which grew company production to approximately 1,000 BOE/D (10:1) prior to its sale to Vermilion Resources Ltd. in August, 2000 for approximately $33,000,000 in cash, Vermilion shares and assumed debt.
From March 1994 until January 1995, Ken was an independent geological consultant. From 1992 until 1994, he was employed by Shell International Petroleum in the Hague, Netherlands as production geologist and team leader responsible for an integrated petroleum engineering study on Nembe Creek Field, Nigeria.
From 1982 until 1992, Ken held geological positions focusing on exploration and exploitation in western Canada at PanCanadian Petroleum Ltd., Bow Valley Industries Ltd., and Paloma Petroleum Ltd.
Ken graduated in 1982 with a Bachelor of Science in Geology from the University of Calgary.
Bruce McKay, C.E.T.
Vice President Production & Chief Operating Officer, Director
Bruce McKay brings 30 years of engineering, operations and corporate experience to Bulldog Resources.
Bruce was previously the Vice President Production & Chief Operating Officer, Director and Co-Founder of Bulldog Energy Inc. from incorporation in July 2001 to its successful sale to Crescent Point Energy Trust in November 2005.
He was integral in growing Bulldog Energy to over 2100 BOE/D. Bruce was responsible for all the engineering and operations functions of Bulldog Energy and was instrumental in corporate acquisitions, property acquisitions and corporate strategies. Bulldog Energy focused its operations in Southeast Saskatchewan where it exploited existing oil pools and discovered and developed many new light oil pools. Bruce's efforts and abilities allowed Bulldog Energy to drill and operate all of its major projects with below average costs.
From March 1990 to March 2001, Bruce worked for Fletcher Challenge Energy Inc. ("Fletcher Challenge") in Calgary. As the General Manager, Drilling and Field Services, he was responsible for all the company's drilling & completion, construction, facility engineering & pipeline functions. He was instrumental in helping grow the company from an initial 3000 BOE/D to 40,000 BOE/D. He also participated in corporate initiatives in New Zealand and Venezuela. Fletcher Challenge was sold to Apache Canada Ltd. in March 2001.
From 1972 to 1990, Bruce held various senior engineering and operations positions with Dome Petroleum Ltd., Newscope Resources Ltd. and Esso Resources Canada Ltd.
Michael Flanagan, P.Land
Executive Vice President, Land
Mike Flanagan is a professional landman who brings 24 years of diversified land and contract experience in the oil and gas industry to Bulldog Resources.
Mike was previously the Vice President Land and Co-Founder of Bulldog Energy Inc. from October 2001 to its successful sale to Crescent Point Energy Trust in November 2005. He was integral in growing Bulldog Energy to over 2,100 BOE/D. Mike was responsible for all land and contract functions of Bulldog Energy and was instrumental in corporate acquisitions, property acquisitions and corporate strategies. Mike's efforts allowed Bulldog Energy to capture a focused and prospective land base for our drilling programs.
From December 1997 to April 2000, Mike served as Vice President Land at CrownJoule Exploration Ltd. ("CrownJoule") a TSX listed startup company During Mikes tenure at Crownjoule production more than doubled from 500 BOE/D to over 1,200 BOE/D (10:1). CrownJoule was acquired by BelAir Energy Corporation in May 2000.
From 1994 to 1997, Mike held the position of Land Manager at Canor Energy Ltd. ("Canor"). This private company, funded almost entirely on cash flow, doubled its reserve base through the drill bit. Through Mike's efforts, Canor was actively involved in the start-up of a private sidecar company whose assets grew to $25 million in its first year of operations.
Prior to Canor, Mike held the positions of District Landman (1988 to 1990) and Land Manager (1990 to 1994) at Canada Northwest Energy. Mike started his career at Husky Oil Operations Limited in 1982, where he served as a Surface Landman, Contract Landman and Negotiating Landman.
Mike received his Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Calgary in 1981 and is a professional member of the Canadian Association of Petroleum Landmen.
Rob Kraft, C.A.
Chief Financial Officer
Rob Kraft joined Bulldog Resources in December 2005 and is a Chartered Accountant with 21 years of financial management experience in both public and private oil and gas companies. Rob's background and experience covers all aspects of the financial management and administration of public oil and gas entities including financial reporting, treasury, taxation, capital markets, risk management, investor relations, acquisitions and divestitures and corporate financings.
Previous to Bulldog Resources Rob consulted with Kaiser Energy Ltd. ("Kaiser"), a private oil and gas company, assisting Kaiser's corporate sale process resulting in the successful sale of the Company to Petrofund Energy Trust in December 2005. Previous to Kaiser, Rob was the Chief Financial Officer of Flowing Energy Corporation ("Flowing") from June 2004 to April 2005. Flowing was a public junior oil and gas Company with a production base of 3,200 BOE per day. Flowing was purchased by Daylight Energy Trust in April 2005. For the three years prior to Flowing, Rob was the Chief Financial Officer of Taurus Exploration Ltd. ("Taurus"), a private oil and gas company with a production base of 7,300 BOE per day. During the period 1984 to 2000 Rob held various senior financial positions with Bonanza Resources Ltd, Poco Petroleums Ltd., Paragon Petroleum Corporation and Northrock Resources Limited.
Rob articled with Coopers and Lybrand, Chartered Accountants where he qualified as a Chartered Accountant in 1982.
>Good post. In order for China to expand so massively, it had to first comb the world for secured natural resources. It has don just that on all continents; even if prices rise, China will pay the price, so long as they are first in line. Afterall they have a ton of American dollars sold for the junk that Americans has bought and continue to buy on credit.
I early await for the end of the Olympics. I have been saying that China will play Mr. Nice Guy, but after the Olympics, there is a new sheriff in town; the former sheriff is too busy reading People Magazine, Star, el al.
COMPANY WEB PAGE
http://www.bulldogresources.ca/index.html
QIS Capital Corporate Update
http://www.qiscapital.com/images/BDQ306.pdf
OTHER LINKS
PEAK OIL - EPOCHAL EVENT OF OUR LIVES
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/board.asp?board_id=6609
BBC RADIO INDEX
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/atoz/
kriscanshow's videos
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=kriscanshow
OTHER
ENERGY INVESTMENT REPORT
http://energy-investing.org/
The title of this board, Peak Oil - Epochal Event of Our Lives, purposely includes the word epochal, meaning without parallel.
Why will Peak Oil be without parallel?
Look at past events in the Middle East, which interrupted the supply of oil throughout the world and especially in the United States. These disruptions were geopolitical events and were ultimately resolved with diplomacy.
Peak Oil, on the other hand, will be a geological event, something that mankind has never faced before and certainly cannot control. It will inevitably occur when mankind has consumed half of nature's oil, which is a finite resource.
Illustrated below is Hubbert's Curve, which shows the growth, peak, and decline of worldwide individual and regional wells. This sequence will occur while world population dramatically increases and as Asia, in particular, accelerates its industrialization.
HUBBERT CURVE
Regional Vs Individual Wells
Peak Oil will adversely affect many aspects of our lives. For example, over the last 100 years, gas powered engines have contributed to the discovery and expansion of the automobile and airplane industries. Recently the population of the United States reached 300 million and vehicles now total 225 million. Future population growth, with a corresponding increase in vehicles, will further deplete oil supplies.
Agriculture has changed from numerous labor and animal-intensive family farms to a machine-intensive industry controlled by corporations. Further, much of the increased productivity of farm soil emanates from petroleum-based fertilizers.
Farming and transportation are just two segments of society that must adjust to prospective oil declines. The critical question is how will our entire society adjust to a worldwide oil scarcity.
M. King Hubbert, a Shell geologist, predicted in 1956 that oil production in the United States would peak in 1970. In hindsight, it did. He also predicted worldwide oil reserves and oil production would peak between 2004 - 2010.
Mr. Hubbert's warning was given, yet it has been largely ignored. Oil discoveries and plentiful oil reserves in Alaska and the North Sea made many people complacent. In addition, new technologies were developed, so that oil was sucked up from the earth as if by giant straws. Although oil was abundant in the 1980's and 1990's, reserves in this century are in demonstrable decline.
China, in particular, recognizes the potential shortage of oil. It canvasses the world making oil deals to secure its energy future. It is also currently building 30 nuclear reactors and 7 hydroelectric dams to supplement its energy needs.
Sadly, the United States lingers behind. Its attitude seems to be that oil will always be abundant, probably because it has been in the past. Even with the dramatic crude oil price increases of the past three years, there still is a reluctance to confront this potential problem.
PURPOSE OF THIS BOARD
One purpose of this board is to provide I-Hub members with a repository of Peak Oil articles. Hopefully these will stimulate interest in the topic and I invite readers to post their thoughts.
Another important purpose of this board is to help people in preparing for or coping with the Peak Oil event. To this end, various links by category have been supplied below.
Good luck!
sumisu
========================================================================
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TABLE OF CONTENTS :
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GETTING READY FOR PEAK OIL & SUSTAINABLE LIVING : A companion #board-9881 titled "PEAK OIL - SUSTAINABLE LIVING" was spun off from this board to provide an archive of postings and sources of information which will aid the community to adopt and survive in a world of declining energy resources. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PEAK OIL READING LIST FROM JIM PUPLAVA http://www.financialsense.com/resources/peakoil.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PEAK OIL SITES, BLOGS, & ORGANIZATIONS
Peak Oil Clock http://sydneypeakoil.com/peak_oil_clock/
Peak Oil News & Message Boards http://www.peakoil.com/
The Oil Drum http://www.theoildrum.com/
Energy Bulletin: Peak Oil Primer and Links http://www.energybulletin.net/primer.php
ASPO-USA http://www.aspo-usa.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=35
Association for the Study of Peak Oil&Gas http://www.peakoil.net
Dry Dipstick http://www.drydipstick.com
Beyond Oil, The View from Hubbert's Peak by Kenneth S. Deffeyes http://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/index.html
Simmons & Company International http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/research.aspx?Type=msspeeches
National Petroleum Council http://www.npc.org
Life After the Oil Crash http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/
The Coming Global Oil Crisis http://www.oilcrisis.com
The View From The Peak http://www.theviewfromthepeak.net
Energy Balance http://tinyurl.com/42awvh
Energy Outlook http://energyoutlook.blogspot.com/
Global Public Media - Public Service Broadcasting For A Post Carbon World http://globalpublicmedia.com/
PeakOilDesign http://peakoildesign.com/
Post Carbon Institute http://www.postcarbon.org/
NEI Nuclear Notes http://neinuclearnotes.blogspot.com/
PLENTY http://www.plentymag.com/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NARRATIVE LINKS
Peak Oil FAQ #msg-33046927
Peak Oil Report by Peak Oil Associates International #msg-32147901
Evolutionary psychology and peak oil #msg-30634038
Roscoe Bartlett Discusses His Special Order Speeches #msg-29893771
OIL SHOCK AND ENERGY TRANSITION by Andrew McKillop, May 7, 2008 #msg-29196735
Energy Bull Market Fundamentals Remain Strong, Chris Puplava, 2008 http://tinyurl.com/5nze3h
The Truth About Oil by Vasko Kohlmayer, 05 08 08 http://tinyurl.com/3guotj
The Gospel According to Matthew, by Mimi Swartz, 02/01/08 #msg-26286577
Another Nail in the Coffin of the Case Against Peak Oil, Matt Simmons, Nov 2007
http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/files/Another%20Nail%20in%20the%20Coffin.pdf
Megaprojects update: Just how close to Peak Oil are we? 10/18/07 Chris Skrebowski: Trustee of the Oil Depletion Analysis Centre http://tinyurl.com/33rl3q
Crisis, what energy crisis? Euan Mearns, The Oil Drum: Europe. 07/03/07 Over 50 links to Oil Drum articles from the past year are provided which combined provide a comprehensive overview of the issues surrounding peak oil and energy decline. http://www.energybulletin.net/31608.html
On the Precipice: Energy Security & Economic Stability on the Edge - by Daniel Davis 07/17/07 http://www.aspo-usa.com/assets/documents/Danny_Davis_On_the_Precipice.pdf
Evolutionary psychology and peak oil: A Malthusian inspired "heads up" for humanity. by Dr. Michael E. Mills http://www.drmillslmu.com/peakoil.htm
Peak oil: Facts converge with theory http://tinyurl.com/2gtud4
11 incontrovertible truths of oil production & peak oil arguments by PeakEngineer, 05/23/07 #msg-19902674
Peak Oil, Carrying Capacity and Overshoot: Population, the Elephant in the Room, © Copyright 2007, Paul Chefurka http://www.paulchefurka.ca/Population.html
CRUDE OIL Uncertainty about Future Oil Supply Makes It Important to Develop a Strategy for Addressing a Peak and Decline in Oil Production, GAO Report, 03/29/07 http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d07283.pdf
DIE OFF - a population crash resource page http://www.dieoff.com/index.html
Portland, Oregon City Council unanimously creates a peak oil task force - 05/10/06 http://www.portlandpeakoil.org/
Testimony before the Australian Senate by Dr. Samsam Bakhtiari, a senior expert employed by the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), 07/11/06 http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard/senate/commttee/S9515.pdf
The Hirsch Report - February 2005 #msg-10310387
The Financial Sense Energy Resource Page http://www.financialsense.com/energy/main.htm
Financial Sense Big Picture Archive http://www.financialsense.com/fsn/2006.html
OIL: A TRAVELOGUE OF ADDICTION by Chicago Tribune, 07/29/06 (Suggested viewing: Open link and click on Watch documentary, left-hand column). http://tinyurl.com/h78ve
Exploring emotional reactions to peak oil by Kathy McMahon http://www.energybulletin.net/19718.html
Denial Of Energy Crisis Is A Conditioned Response, By Dave Wheelock #msg-25561271
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hubbert peak theory From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil
A Tribute To M. King Hubbert http://www.mkinghubbert.com/
Outlook for Fuel Reserves http://www.mkinghubbert.com/files/hubbert_1974.pdf
Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels by M. King Hubbert, 1956 Published on 8 Mar 2006 by Energy Bulletin. Archived on 8 Mar 2006. http://www.energybulletin.net/13630.html
Shell Execs Briefed on Peak Oil in 1956 #msg-29389791
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
President Carter's Address to the Nation On Energy Policy (April 18, 1977) Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Y6pPF_lzsU
Transcript: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/carter/filmmore/ps_energy.html
Energy Policy and Conservation Executive Order 12003, July 20th, 1977
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=7842
Carter's Brave Vision on Energy by David Morris, Monday, October 10, 2005 by the Minneapolis Star Tribune
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1010-27.htm
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CONGRESSMAN ROSCOE BARTLETT is leading efforts to change U.S. energy policy to address the challenges of peak oil. U.S. oil production peaked in 1970 and is in permanent decline. World oil production will also peak - perhaps disastrously soon. http://bartlett.house.gov
Congressman Roscoe Bartlett video on Peak Oil in 7 parts. . .
The House of Representatives formed a Peak Oil caucus in 2005 with 8 members: #msg-30864250
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ON PEAK OIL
"Tapped Out" by Paul Roberts, August 2008 http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/06/world-oil/roberts-text
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FSN/JIM PUPLAVA AUDIO INTERVIEWS
Financial Sense Newshour (FSN] show on 09 27 08
ASPO presentations by:
Robert L. Hirsch, Senior Energy Advisor, MISI
Matthew R. Simmons, Chairman, Simmons & Company Int.
Chris Skrebowski, Editor, UK Petroleum Review
http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2008-0927-3b.mp3
FSN: W.D. Lyle Jr., Ph.D. & L. Scott Allen, Ph.D., August 30, 2008. "A Very Unpleasant Truth" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/Lyle.html
FSN: Matthew R. Simmons, August 9, 2008. "Energy: It's Still Cheap" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/Simmons.html
FSN: Chris Nelder [coauthor, Brian Hicks], 8/02/08. "Profit From The Peak: The End of Oil and the Greatest Investment Event of the Century" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/Nelder.html
FSN: Michael T. Klare, 6/21/08. "Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/Klare.html
FSN: Steve LeVine, 03/29/08. "The Oil and the Glory: The Pursuit of Empire and Fortune on the Caspian Sea" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/LeVine.html
FSN: Energy Roundtable: Jim Puplava, Matthew Simmons, Robert L. Hirsch, & Jeffrey G. Rubin Discussion - 02/02/08 http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/roundtable/2008/0202.html
FSN: Richard Heinberg, 09/22/07. "Peak Everything: Waking up to the Century of Declines" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2007/Heinberg.html
FSN: Matthew Simmons, 08/18/07, "All the Canaries Have Stopped Singing" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2007/Simmons.html
FSN: Matthew R. Simmons, 11/25/06, - Critique of the CERA Report http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Simmons.html
FSN: Richard Heinberg, 10/21/06 - "The Oil Depletion Protocol" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Heinberg.html
FSN: Matthew R. Simmons, 09/30/06 http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Simmons.html
FSN: Jeremy Leggett, 07 08 06 - "The Empty Tank"
http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Leggett.html
FNS:Paul Kruger, 06 03 06 - "Alternative Energy Resources" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Kruger.html
FSN: Peter Tertzakian, 04/15/06 - "A Thousand Barrels A Second" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Tertzakian.html
FSN: The Last Oil Crisis; 03/04/06 http://www.financialsense.com/fsn/BP/2006/0304.html
FSN: Energy Roundtable - Jim Puplava, James Kunstler, Richard Heinberg, 02/18/06 http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/roundtable/2006/0218.html
FSN: "Zapata" George Blake, 02/04/06 - "Everything But The Kitchen Sink!" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2006/Blake.html
FSN: Ahead Of The Trend: Interview with Zapata George Blake, 01/14/06 http://finance.banks.com/intersearch?Account=banks&GUID=272396&Page=MediaViewer&Ticker=BJS
FSN:"Energy, The Big Story of 2005" (Select December 24 - Part 1) http://www.financialsense.com/fsn/2005.html
FSN: James Howard Kunstler, 10/01/05 -"The Long Emergency" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2005/Kunstler.html
FSN: Matthew R. Simmons, 08/06/05 -"Twilight In The Desert" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2005/Simmons.html
FSN: Kenneth S. Deffeyes, 05/21/05 - "Beyond Oil: The View From Huppert's Peak" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2005/Deffeyes.html
FSN: Michael T. Klare, 01/15/05 - "Blood and Oil" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2005/Klare.html
FSN: Matt Savinar, 10/23/2004- "The Oil Age Is Over" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Savinar.html
FSN: Dennis Meadows, Co-Author, 10/09/04, "Limits to Growth: The 30-year Update"
http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Meadows.html
FSN: Julian Darley, Author, 09/25/2004- "High Noon for Natural Gas" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Darley.html
FSN: Richard Heinberg: 08/07/04 -"Powerdown" & 02 23 03 - The Party's Over http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Heinberg.html
FSN: Paul Roberts: 05/29/04- "The End of Oil:On the Edge of a Perilous New World" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Roberts.html
FSN: Stephen Leeb, 05/08/04 - "The Oil Factor: Protect Yourself--and Profit--From the Coming Energy Crisis" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Leeb.html
FSN: Lutz Kleveman, 01/24/04 - "The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia"
http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Kleveman.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
OTHER AUDIOS & VIDEOS
Peak Oil - Chris Martenson http://www.chrismartenson.com/peak_oil
Twilight In the Desert http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfEO3PCEeis
Peak Oil - Robert Hirsch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSbfvZiJ9g0
Peak Oil - Crude Impact #msg-30619202
CNN Special Investigation - OUT OF GAS #msg-30188572
Oil and the 'New International Energy Order' - Michael Klare, 04 14 08 http://tinyurl.com/59947u
"A conversation with John Hofmeister" - Charlie Rose, 03 25 08 http://tinyurl.com/23o8py
Video: A High-Risk Barrel, September 28, 2007 http://novakeo.com/?p=1054&jal_no_js=true&poll_id=10
Matt Savinar - Coast to Coast, 10/07 http://klrietmann.bingodisk.com/bingo/public/Savinarc2c111.mp3
A Crude Awakening http://tinyurl.com/yp88uu
Matthew Simmons on Peak Oil, ASPO Conference at Boston University 10 27 06 http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-429585738009344102&q=peak+oil'
Peak Oil, Richard Heinberg, 09/11/06 http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2141508903056009420
Peak Oil: Gas Prices, Supply Depletion & Energy Crisis: From NewCulture.org, 07 27 06 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMQd5nGEkr4&mode=related&search
The Long Emergency: Surviving Catastophies of the 21st Century, 10 30 05 http://tinyurl.com/2g6p35
Real Oil Crisis - 11 24 05 (Video Presentation) http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s1515141.htm
The End of Suburbia http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3uvzcY2Xug&feature=related
World Made By Hand (Video Promo) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbEe8v4YpgA
T. Boone Pickens on CNBC [discusses alternative energies] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylI4iQ-5iXg
Dr. Al Husseini, retired head of exploration and production for Saudi Aramco, interview with CNBC on 03/27/08: http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=697807590&play=1
RICHARD HEINBERG on OUR POST-CARBON FUTURE http://tinyurl.com/636juw
Megan Quinn Bachman - Peak Oil, Community & The Future in four parts:
Calm Before the Storm, Richard Heinberg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajqgOCxGEAo
Running on Empty: Life Without Cheap Oil http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jqg3P3wOV60 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A 10% Reduction in America's Oil Use in Ten to Twelve Years An Overlooked, Practical, and Affordable Approach Using Mature Existing Technology by Alan S. Drake, May 2006 • Rev. October 2006 http://www.lightrailnow.org/features/f_lrt_2006-05a.htm
Electrification of transportation as a response to peaking of world oil production by Alan S. Drake 12/19/05 in Light Rail Now http://www.energybulletin.net/14492.html
Public Transport Industry Issues http://www.lightrailnow.org/industry_issues.htm#electrification
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS & NEW URBANISM
The Community Solution http://www.communitysolution.org/
WORLD CHANGING http://www.worldchanging.com/about/
How to Wean a Town Off Fossil Fuels http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/005135.html
A Community Solution to Peak Oil: An interview with Megan Quinn http://www.energybulletin.net/5721
Sustain Lane | The Healthy, Sustainable Living Community Resource http://www.sustainlane.com/
Culture Change http://culturechange.org/cms/index.php
Communities, Refuges, and Refuge-Communities by Zachary Nowak http://www.energybulletin.net/21172.html
Karavans - Moving Toward a New World of Self-Sufficiency, Sustainability, and Genuine Community http://www.karavans.com/peakoil.html
New Urbanism http://www.newurbanism.org/
The New Urbanisn http://www.newurbannews.com/AboutNewUrbanism.html
Online NewsHour - New Urbanism http://www.pbs.org/newshour/newurbanism/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
OTHER NATIONS - STATUS FOR PEAK OIL
Closing the 'Collapse Gap': The USSR was better prepared for peak oil than the US - by Dmitry Orlov, 12/04/06 http://energybulletin.net/23259.html
The power of community: How Cuba survived peak oil - by Megan Quinn, 02/25/06 http://www.energybulletin.net/13171.html
"Flush With Energy" By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN August 10, 2008 #msg-31394853
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FSN: Lutz Kleveman, 01/24/04 - "The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia"
http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2004/Kleveman.html
FSN: Michael T. Klare, 01/15/05 - "Blood and Oil" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2005/Klare.html
FSN: Michael T. Klare, 6/21/08. "Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy" http://www.financialsense.com/Experts/2008/Klare.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CANTARELL OIL FIELD & DEPLETION
Cantarell Field by Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantarell_Field
Cantarell, The Second Largest Oil Field Is Dying, by G.R. Morton, 08 14 04
http://www.energybulletin.net/node/1651
Cantarell Decline Perspective, Jim KIngsdale's "Energy Investment STRATEGIES" 07 08 08
http://www.energyinvestmentstrategies.com/2008/07/08/cantarell-decline-perspective/
A Storm Called Cantarell by Sean Brodrick, "Money and Markets' 09 03 08
#msg-31902352
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Export Land Medel by Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Export_Land_Model
What the Export Land Model Means for Energy Prices By: Doug Casey, Casey Research LLC, 06 04 08 http://www.321energy.com/editorials/casey/casey060508.html
An Update on Mexico Export Land Model by GraphOilogy 01 22 08
http://graphoilogy.blogspot.com/2008/01/update-on-mexico-export-land-model.html
Oil Outlook: "Export Land Model" by Jeff Rubin on CNBC, October 2007
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Ed9jsKAOHU
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CHARTS OF INTERESTDepiction of U.S. Oil Production
The U.S. produced less oil in 2006 than it did in 1950. This production fits a curve that would make M. King Hubbert sigh and nod sagely. He was the first to trace the patterns of Peak Oil, and he saw this chart coming half a century ago. Source and worthy explanation of following charts at: http://www.peakoil.com/sample
USA National Gas Temperature Map http://www.gasbuddy.com/gb_gastemperaturemap.aspx
Peak Water(H2O) #board-12656
Peak Natural Resources #board-12910
https://plus.google.com/110498838702425947978#110498838702425947978/posts
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |