Whaddya Do?
Thursday, December 18th, 2008What do you do if the government doesn’t think you’re too big to fail? If you’re GM and Chrysler, you merge.
What do you do if the government doesn’t think you’re too big to fail? If you’re GM and Chrysler, you merge.
Blago wanted a part time board of directors job for his wife to help with the household finances? Sounds pretty fishy to me. We’ll have to see at what point the PatMan stops.
“In a state this corrupt who’s there to rat to?”
So I was really happy to have Netflix on the Xbox 360 following the NXE update this past week. Unfortunately, it seems that using the xbox regularly was too much for it, and it has died. Wednesday, the day OF the update, my voice communication stopped working. After that there would be freeze ups. Last night, three rings of death.
If you’re Sarah Palin, you buy it, wear it, and return it:
“Look, she lives a frugal life,” Mr. McCain said. “She and her family are not wealthy. She and her family were thrust into this, and there was some — and some third of that money is given back. The rest will be donated to charity.”
Tracey Schmitt, a spokeswoman for Ms. Palin, said Sunday that a third of the clothes were returned right after the convention.
- New York Times
There is a difference between mavericks and yahoos. There is at least some implication that a maverick knows what they’re doing and are acting in accordance with their knowledge. A maverick has a method, or a theory. A yahoo, on the other hand, just randomly throws stuff against the wall hoping that something will stick and makes a big fuss about their independent thinking if something does work.
Adam Davidson from the This American Life episodes The Giant Pool of Money, Another Frightening Show About the Economy, and A Better Mousetrap has a new podcast that digs into the current global economic crisis, “Planet Money“. Well worth a listen.
Given the unpredictable nature of life I figured I’d better get voting done now rather than later. If they’re going to pull out an October surprise it’s too late to work on me and the twenty other people I saw at the early voting place. At this point though, it’s difficult to think of what they could do to steal this one in terms of manufactured events, and it’s probably better not to think about it.
So I was out walking about and I figured out that Sarah Palin’s views on humanity’s contributions to global warming are about the same as the oil companies’ views - that as long as a scientist claims or can be paid to claim that human contributions might not be a significant factor and that there’s a sliver of a possibility that the rise in temperatures is due to natural fluctuations she won’t support taking the action that most scientists argue we need to take. Throw this in with the category of economists who for the past couple of decades have been arguing that the national debt is in fact a good thing and we see the road to ruin clearly.
So McCain has chosen Sarah Palin as his running mate which on the surface looks like a solid choice. On the record she seems to be a person who acts according to her principles, which McCain has of late not done, and can help persuade him to not go into a binge of tax cutting with the mistaken idea that as taxes go to zero economic growth and federal revenues go to infinity. Maybe some of that executive experience can also convince him that he’s not going to balance the federal budget on his cloudy spending cuts. Maybe she can convince him that the single most important national security issue we face in the next twenty years is the economy - and that nobody’s going to listen to him rattle his saber if the American economy can’t back up the talk.
In any case, it looks like McCain is positioning all of his hopes on “doing better than” in the debates. I am filled with utter dread at the thought of him pulling “to quote a great American president, I won’t hold my opponent’s youth and inexperience against him” out when Obama makes a procedural mistake.
While I’m not swoony eyed about the Obama nomination, and still have many reservations about the massive tax and rebate plans he’s outlining, and am vehemently opposed to cap and trade and the nebulous secondary markets it will create instead of implementing a straight carbon tax, I am heartened that Senator Joe Biden has been added to the ticket. I imagine that there will be times that Obama will be talking to his advisors and they’ll be nodding like bobble heads and Joe will say “what the hell are you talking about? I have no idea what you’re talking about! Listen, the numbers don’t add up!” Does Biden have drawbacks? Oh my yes. But on the whole he’s been a good legislator and has added some tough questions to the hearings he’s participated in.