Archive for the ‘Learning’ Category

Two completely different summaries of the financial crisis

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Frank W. James writes Corn, Beans, Spent Brass, An Empty Page, and a Deadline. He summarizes the CRA/Jimmy Carter/Bill Clinton path to the bad loans crisis (he overlooked some of the reports that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae funds trickled into a few Democratic Presidential hopeful pockets).

Sharon Astyk writes Casaubon’s Book, possibly the most contrary perspective from conservative, gun rights advocate, agribusiness farmer Frank W. James. Sharon’s premise is that the crisis today has been coming, and is part of the slide into an era of expensive energy - Peak Oil. Peak Oil predicts that by 2012, world demand will be consuming more oil than can be produced - the end of cheap energy, probably a dramatic shortfall of needed oil from what can be available. By 2012, many families will be unable to pay the utility bill, and will be living ‘off the grid’.

Sharon’s take is that economies grow as subsistence workers, farmers and others, begin working the entry level factory work force. Only now, rising cost of oil is raising food prices, and the entry level workers that had been driving economic growth are now starving, and what wages they earn go solely to food, instead of fueling the local economy. And the shrinkage is rising to the top.

It seems both summaries explain a lot. Does Sharon’s view of global food prices vs. rising oil prices happen to support her explanation, or is her explanation what it is, *because* of her premise? I don’t think it matters, both explanations are very worthwhile to consider.

But Frank may have started a bit late in his timeline. I recall President Lyndon B. Johnson announcing his ‘war on poverty’. And I think the CRA that Jimmy Carter signed was a followup to the Democrat’s favored child, the war on poverty. I also recall, during that era, when NASA funds were threatened, that an engineer showed how many people you could feed with $1,000,000 spend on NASA - with no tangible product, you fed a bunch of families - who spend their money and kept businesses going, feeding those workers and retailers, etc. $1,000,000 spend on welfare fed fewer people, the cost of getting that money to the people ate up a bunch of the money, and the low income of the recipients meant the money was spent on food and shelter, with very little contributed to either the economy or tax revenue. Since that time I have always know the need to care for those in need, but that government programs are disabling to the recipients, and a poor value for the nation.

But do check out these well thought out summaries.

Oprah, Dove, beauty, self esteem and girls

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

I guess I just don’t watch the right channels. I saw a dove commercial today, promoting their Self Esteem Workshop focus, teaching girls of varying ages how to think about beauty and themselves in a healthy way.

Yeah!

The blurb I read up on was on Oprah.com.

About the only quibble I have, is teaching kids to think about beauty, and whether they have any. Remember Darryl Hannah in “Crazy People”? She tells Dudley Moore, from the perspective of a nut-house inmate, that “Pretty girls are breaking everybody’s backs.” When told she is beautiful, Hannah replies she doesn’t have the problems normally associated with pretty girls, because growing up she looked like Ed McMahon.

I could wish that every child grew up, thinking their appearance was adequate to fulfill their roles in life. I could wish that guys would look for a woman that would be a partner, that would be respectful, courteous, courageous, and honorable. That his regard for her appearance was solely that her appearance was an aspect of her individuality.

Then you can look at the campaign - aimed at self esteem in young girls.
http://www.campaignforrealbeauty.com/

This latter site is an eye-opening set of common sense approaches to healthy emotional growth for girls. Much of the content also applies to boys - leadership, being heard, needing a safe and trusted place for questions and security. Other things are women-specific - such as research that shows women spending three (3) minutes reading a fashion magazine - 80% experience lower self-esteem.

Umm - this is my own interest, and I received no money regarding this post or topic.