The culture shapes the economy long before the economy shapes the culture. Where should we devote our energies?
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Note To The Local School Board
If some sweet-talking banker from J.P. Morgan, or one o' dem' udder NooohYork banks comes callin' with some sweet-sounding scheme to save us a bunch-a-money:
Tell him 'Hell-No!', and call the cops.
The Denver School board didn't, and they are in a mess.
From the New York Times Business section:
Since it struck the deal, the school system has paid $115 million in interest and other fees, at least $25 million more than it originally anticipated.
To avoid mounting expenses, the Denver schools are looking to renegotiate the deal. But to unwind it all, the schools would have to pay the banks $81 million in termination fees, or about 19 percent of its $420 million payroll.
Tell him 'Hell-No!', and call the cops.
The Denver School board didn't, and they are in a mess.
From the New York Times Business section:
Since it struck the deal, the school system has paid $115 million in interest and other fees, at least $25 million more than it originally anticipated.
To avoid mounting expenses, the Denver schools are looking to renegotiate the deal. But to unwind it all, the schools would have to pay the banks $81 million in termination fees, or about 19 percent of its $420 million payroll.
Saturday Morning, Small-Town South, August 7 2010
OS is weary, and so happy to be looking across his coffee cup at the sainted Mrs. OS, who has decided to tolerate him one more day, bless her.
OS knows a local newspaper writer, working for one of the county-seat papers. His county's experience paralleled ours. He reports that people are disgusted, and that they aimed their displeasure at the incumbents, many of whom have sat on their collective tooshies while their counties unwound around them. It may be a harbinger for November. In any case, OS breathes a bit easier in his county, with a new sheriff elected, replacing the one who more resembled the old Dixie model of a criminal with his own badge and police cruiser.
Over coffee, OS ran across this.
It's a thoughtful discussion of why the true unemployment rate may well be north of 20%, instead of south of 10%. Those figures actually correspond with OS's instincts and daily experience. The problem of the 'uncounted unemployed' has been with us a long-long time, and we may have reached an inflection point, where it is impossible to ignore.
OS, for his part, although far from rich, is so very grateful for the life he has been given. His spending habits, due to repair of flood damage from May, and necessary house and car repairs, have amounted to a one-man stimulus package for the local economy...
OS knows a local newspaper writer, working for one of the county-seat papers. His county's experience paralleled ours. He reports that people are disgusted, and that they aimed their displeasure at the incumbents, many of whom have sat on their collective tooshies while their counties unwound around them. It may be a harbinger for November. In any case, OS breathes a bit easier in his county, with a new sheriff elected, replacing the one who more resembled the old Dixie model of a criminal with his own badge and police cruiser.
Over coffee, OS ran across this.
It's a thoughtful discussion of why the true unemployment rate may well be north of 20%, instead of south of 10%. Those figures actually correspond with OS's instincts and daily experience. The problem of the 'uncounted unemployed' has been with us a long-long time, and we may have reached an inflection point, where it is impossible to ignore.
OS, for his part, although far from rich, is so very grateful for the life he has been given. His spending habits, due to repair of flood damage from May, and necessary house and car repairs, have amounted to a one-man stimulus package for the local economy...
The Oil Spill Cleanup: David Jones Of Daily Mail Visits The Gulf Coast
An extended article by David Jones of the Daily Mail, detailing his recent visit to the Gulf Coast to view the damage caused by the BP oil spill.
He makes two or three cogent points:
1. It could have been much much worse.
2. BP (and Heyward in particular) blundered at the beginning, and thus made themselves the target for Obama and company's cynical scapegoating.
3. Even at that, BP emerges with its reputation much more intact than Obama and company.
OS will keep repeating--BP has been around a lot longer than the clowns in the White House and Congress, and have been successful, if not saintly. They'll still be around long after this particular clown show leaves town.
And, for the record, OS is accumulating BP stock, while it is still cheap. Gonna make him some money, honey, on the back of The One's ignorant venality.
He makes two or three cogent points:
1. It could have been much much worse.
2. BP (and Heyward in particular) blundered at the beginning, and thus made themselves the target for Obama and company's cynical scapegoating.
3. Even at that, BP emerges with its reputation much more intact than Obama and company.
OS will keep repeating--BP has been around a lot longer than the clowns in the White House and Congress, and have been successful, if not saintly. They'll still be around long after this particular clown show leaves town.
And, for the record, OS is accumulating BP stock, while it is still cheap. Gonna make him some money, honey, on the back of The One's ignorant venality.
Isn't It Great To Take A Vacation! Just Ask Mrs. Obama
The UK Daily Mail gives us the breathless coverage.
Michelle Obama today faced a fresh wave of attacks over her lavish break in Spain with 40 friends, which could easily cost U.S. taxpayers a staggering £50,000 a day.
The First Lady has been lambasted for her extravagance at a time when the economy is still struggling. One blogger went so far as to brand her a modern-day Marie Antoinette.
And her critics will be further annoyed when they learn that the president's wife had a Spanish beach closed off today so that she, her daughter and their entourage could go for a swim.
Spanish police cleared off a stretch of beach at the Villa Padierna Hotel in Marbella after the Obamas had finished a busy day of sightseeing.
Hey, girlfriend! A girl's gotta have girlfriends! Ya'll just trippin', gettin' all upset 'bout this. It's cool, really ya'll. After all, it's hard work being the wife of The Winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize. Just chill, and let her do the same, ya'll.
The private sector of the US economy created 71,000 jobs last month. 120,000 people enter the workforce every month, due to the demographic math of Birth-minus-Death-plus-Immigration.
No worries, ya'll.
Michelle Obama today faced a fresh wave of attacks over her lavish break in Spain with 40 friends, which could easily cost U.S. taxpayers a staggering £50,000 a day.
The First Lady has been lambasted for her extravagance at a time when the economy is still struggling. One blogger went so far as to brand her a modern-day Marie Antoinette.
And her critics will be further annoyed when they learn that the president's wife had a Spanish beach closed off today so that she, her daughter and their entourage could go for a swim.
Spanish police cleared off a stretch of beach at the Villa Padierna Hotel in Marbella after the Obamas had finished a busy day of sightseeing.
Hey, girlfriend! A girl's gotta have girlfriends! Ya'll just trippin', gettin' all upset 'bout this. It's cool, really ya'll. After all, it's hard work being the wife of The Winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize. Just chill, and let her do the same, ya'll.
The private sector of the US economy created 71,000 jobs last month. 120,000 people enter the workforce every month, due to the demographic math of Birth-minus-Death-plus-Immigration.
No worries, ya'll.
Friday, August 6, 2010
Incumbency Was A Disadvantage In Tonight's Elections, Part Deux
OS woke up to the early news on the local stations, to check the weather for today's long drive north.
Eight county mayoral seats in the middle counties of Tennessee turned over. Incumbents were booted. In Tennessee, many of these folks serve for decades, transforming each county into a personal plantation.
In the governor's GOP primary race, Zach Wamp, Congressman from Chattanooga, enjoying the support of much of the Religious Right, lost by a wiiiiide margin after almost two years of campaigning. Voters remembered that he voted for TARP, after he was swamped by his constituents begging him to vote against it. That sort of stuff comes back to haunt. People have memories, after all, and waited for the opportunity to register their displeasure.
Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, a GOP institution in the legislature, came in a distant third. OS met Mr. Ramsey a few weeks ago as he came through town politikin'. He was, well, creepy, not anyone who should be allowed to actually run anything large.
Bill Haslam, mayor of Knoxville, who actually has successfully managed budgets, won the GOP primary. In his case, the public experience worked in his favor.
OS thinks the serfs may be irritated, that the natives may be getting restless.
Here's hoping.
Eight county mayoral seats in the middle counties of Tennessee turned over. Incumbents were booted. In Tennessee, many of these folks serve for decades, transforming each county into a personal plantation.
In the governor's GOP primary race, Zach Wamp, Congressman from Chattanooga, enjoying the support of much of the Religious Right, lost by a wiiiiide margin after almost two years of campaigning. Voters remembered that he voted for TARP, after he was swamped by his constituents begging him to vote against it. That sort of stuff comes back to haunt. People have memories, after all, and waited for the opportunity to register their displeasure.
Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey, a GOP institution in the legislature, came in a distant third. OS met Mr. Ramsey a few weeks ago as he came through town politikin'. He was, well, creepy, not anyone who should be allowed to actually run anything large.
Bill Haslam, mayor of Knoxville, who actually has successfully managed budgets, won the GOP primary. In his case, the public experience worked in his favor.
OS thinks the serfs may be irritated, that the natives may be getting restless.
Here's hoping.
Incumbency Was A Disadvantage In Tonight's Elections
OS lives in a little county west of Nashville, which has stumbled along for years. It's a beautiful and utterly frustrating place to live.
The frustration boiled over today at the polls, as almost every incumbent had his or her head presented on a silver charger.
It wasn't even close, ya'll.
Meanwhile, Steve Fincher handily won the TN 8th District GOP Congressional primary.
Roy Herron won the Democrat nomination. Fincher's primary total far outstripped the entirety of the Democrat vote in their race. The three top GOP contenders together really swamped the Dem's numbers.
Here's hoping Mr. Fincher knows how to be a gentleman, and that if he's elected, he'll mature in office. In the end, OS just couldn't put the 'X' by the man's name, and no, t'ain't your business to know who he voted for.
The frustration boiled over today at the polls, as almost every incumbent had his or her head presented on a silver charger.
It wasn't even close, ya'll.
Meanwhile, Steve Fincher handily won the TN 8th District GOP Congressional primary.
Roy Herron won the Democrat nomination. Fincher's primary total far outstripped the entirety of the Democrat vote in their race. The three top GOP contenders together really swamped the Dem's numbers.
Here's hoping Mr. Fincher knows how to be a gentleman, and that if he's elected, he'll mature in office. In the end, OS just couldn't put the 'X' by the man's name, and no, t'ain't your business to know who he voted for.
Dean Dad: Enrollment At Community College
Dean Dad reports a new phenomenon in his institution, a community college he heads.
This Fall, with just a few weeks to go before the start of classes, we’re seeing a weird bifurcation. Applications for enrollment, and applications for financial aid, are both up significantly even when compared to last year. But students who have actually registered are significantly down. Put differently, the number of students who started trying to attend and then vanished is dramatically higher than it has been in past years.
The folks in Admissions have done follow-up calls to the folks who’ve applied and taken their placement tests but not registered, to see what happened. I was hoping to hear that the most common reason was something like “you were my safety school, but my first choice school came through with a great offer.” Instead, the most common answer was “my unemployment ran out.”
This is where the “education as private good” idea has real social costs. If you have a significant population that just can’t find work because the economy is in the tank, and that population would like to go to college but doesn’t have the income for living expenses -- financial aid is great for tuition and such, but doesn’t do much for living expenses -- then what would you have that population do?
There is discussion that ThePeopleInChargeOfSuchThings have decided to define a 10% unemployment rate as 'The New Normal'. With a 10% 'official' rate translating to an actual 15%-16% rate--well, ya'll, that's a prescription for cultural disaster.
We don't want to go there, and we sure as shootin' don't want to define what we now experience as 'normal'. Stroll through a rural WalMart on a Friday evening, and then tell yourself this is what you can accept as The New Normal.
This Fall, with just a few weeks to go before the start of classes, we’re seeing a weird bifurcation. Applications for enrollment, and applications for financial aid, are both up significantly even when compared to last year. But students who have actually registered are significantly down. Put differently, the number of students who started trying to attend and then vanished is dramatically higher than it has been in past years.
The folks in Admissions have done follow-up calls to the folks who’ve applied and taken their placement tests but not registered, to see what happened. I was hoping to hear that the most common reason was something like “you were my safety school, but my first choice school came through with a great offer.” Instead, the most common answer was “my unemployment ran out.”
This is where the “education as private good” idea has real social costs. If you have a significant population that just can’t find work because the economy is in the tank, and that population would like to go to college but doesn’t have the income for living expenses -- financial aid is great for tuition and such, but doesn’t do much for living expenses -- then what would you have that population do?
There is discussion that ThePeopleInChargeOfSuchThings have decided to define a 10% unemployment rate as 'The New Normal'. With a 10% 'official' rate translating to an actual 15%-16% rate--well, ya'll, that's a prescription for cultural disaster.
We don't want to go there, and we sure as shootin' don't want to define what we now experience as 'normal'. Stroll through a rural WalMart on a Friday evening, and then tell yourself this is what you can accept as The New Normal.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Jesse, Bless Him, Shares A Tale You Must Read
Just when OS suspects he might be able to assemble a few memorable words in sequence, along comes the urbane Jesse, dashing his hopes yet again.
Jesse introduces a wonderful essay in his own wonderful way.
Read this bit first.
Then read the whole essay he references.
Wonderful stuff, in the Hunter Thompson tradition.
Jesse introduces a wonderful essay in his own wonderful way.
Read this bit first.
Then read the whole essay he references.
Wonderful stuff, in the Hunter Thompson tradition.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Whoops!: Katie Couric As Katie Couric (So Much For Feminist Sisterhood, Ya'll)
Somebody at CBS, beginning with Ms. Couric, gots a whole-lotta-'splainin'-to-do, Lucy.
At the same time, OS is most grateful no cameras were running at the worst moments of his last ten years or so.
Play nice out there, ya'll. It's better for everybody.
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