Author: Serkadis

  • LA Unified leaves permit policy mostly in place — for now

    Under pressure from parents and members of the Los
    Angeles Board of Education, Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said Tuesday that
    most students who attend schools outside the district can continue to
    do so next year. But he said he will go back to the board in September with a policy to deal with the 2011-12 school year and beyond.

    In February, Cortines moved to limit the types of permits issued to families seeking
    attendance in other districts, allowing exemptions only for students
    whose parents work within the boundaries of the other district
    and for students who would complete fifth, eighth or 12th grades next
    year.

    Last year, L.A. Unified granted permission to more than
    12,200 students to enroll in 99 other districts, including those in Torrance,
    Culver City and Santa Monica-Malibu. Cortines estimates that the
    district is losing $51 million in state per-pupil funding, money that
    could help to close a $640-million budget shortfall.

    But many families mounted an aggressive campaign to persuade L.A. Unified to scuttle or modify the policy change. Parents held a rally outside school district headquarters Tuesday before the school board met to discuss the permit issue for the first time.

    Board members Steve
    Zimmer and Tamar Galatzan support the superintendent’s plan to allow
    students in the fifth and eighth grades to continue at their schools,
    but the board members had proposed that that all high school students
    remain in their schools of choice until graduation.

    Cortines said he has consulted with numerous other officials, lawyers and parents and decided to allow most students to retain their permits next year. Board members asked that the new policy to be discussed in September take into account concerns raised over the last few weeks.

    –Carla Rivera

  • And By The Way REITs Are Staging A Monster Breakout (IYR)

    Along with everything else that screams RISK, here’s another asset class staging a monster breakout: real estate. Well, at least the publicly traded version of real estate, the REITs, are hot.

    This chart from Doug Short (Dshort.com) is ostensibly technical, but you can appreciate it even if you ignore the heads and shoulders and resistance lines. This area is hot.

    chart

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  • Autoblog Podcast #173 – with Jon Linkov from Consumer Reports

    Filed under: , , , , , , , ,

    Click above for the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes, RSS or listen now!

    Jon Linkov from Consumer Reports joins Chris Shunk, Chris Paukert and Dan Roth to talk about the New York Auto Show, offer insight into how CR rates autos, touch on the possible 16.4 million dollar fine for Toyota and consider the Renault/Nissan deal with Daimler that may happen this week. It’s an hour and a half before we run out of steam. Enjoy!

    Autoblog Podcast #173: with Jon Linkov from Consumer Reports


    In the Autoblog Garage:

    Nissan Cube
    Subaru Legacy 2.5GT (long-term intro)
    Volkswagen GTI
    Infiniti G37
    Jeep Patriot
    Mercedes CL550 4Matic

    News:
    New York Auto Show
    $16.4 million fine possible for Toyota
    Renault/Nissan and Daimler lash-up

    Hosts:
    Chris Shunk, Chris Paukert, Dan Roth

    Guest:
    Jon Linkov of Consumer Reports

    Runtime:
    1:28:45


    Get the podcast:
    [iTunes] Subscribe to the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes
    [RSS] Add the Joystiq Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator
    [MP3] Download the MP3 directly

    Feedback:

    Email: Podcast at Autoblog dot com
    Voicemail: 734-288-8POD (734-288-8763)

    Review the show in iTunes
    and take our survey

    Autoblog Podcast #173 – with Jon Linkov from Consumer Reports originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 16:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • A little something I found

    This is quite interesting to watch. A test is performed on curtain electronic equipments to see how strong they are against a blender. This test was recently done on the Ipad, and it is pretty interesting to see how he gets the blender going, and the result.

    Here is another one that I just noticed.

    Thanks for the links…. from a curtain Admin of a forum :)


  • NY Times Trashes Crowdfunding Without Looking At A Single Big Success Story

    At this point, we’ve seen tons of stories of “crowdfunding” bands. More get submitted pretty much every day. We’ve seen bands raise a few thousand dollars this way, and we’ve seen bands raise tens of thousands of dollars this way. So it seems a bit bizarre to read the following NY Times’ article by Randall Stross, where he takes a look at a very small number of crowdfunding stories and concludes that bands can’t make money that way.


    Fan financing of music seems best suited to exceedingly small projects. While it is cheering to see the success stories at Kickstarter and other sites, it is dismaying to see just how modest are the goals of the most successful.

    Support that is enough for full-time pursuit of music is still nowhere in sight. Gas money for Austin may turn out to be about good as it gets.

    Hmm. Jill Sobule raised over $80,000 in less than two months. That seems like more than gas money. Ellis Paul raised over $100,000. That seems like more than gas money. It’s not clear exactly how much Josh Freese was able to get from his experiment, but it was clearly over $30,000 from reports that were given. Marillion has been surviving on crowdfunding for over a decade.

    Sure, plenty of the artists who are using this model are small time and aren’t getting very much. But to claim that it can’t support the full-time pursuit of music is provably false. By the very same methodology used by Stross, you could conclude that selling albums was not enough for the full-time pursuit of music. That’s because most bands who have created albums never made much more than gas money to Austin. But some made millions. And yet, back in the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s, I’d bet the NY Times wasn’t writing stories claiming that “making an album isn’t enough for full-time pursuit of music.”

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  • Here It Is Folks, Mortgage Rates Heading Higher Post-Fed MBS Purchases

    In all it’s (in-)glory courtesy of Zillow.

    Mortgage rates for 30-year fixed mortgages continued to rise this week, with the current rate borrowers were quoted on Zillow Mortgage Marketplace at 5.08%, up from 4.93% at this same time last week. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate spiked Sunday at 5.14 percent before falling to 5.05 percent Monday.

    The good news. If you you want to play ARM roulette, it’s cheaper:

    Additionally, the 15-year fixed mortgage rate on Tuesday morning was 4.37% and for 5/1 ARMs, 3.68%.

    chart

    Also from Zillow, the current extension of the homebuyer tax credit ends April 30, so…. buy now!

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Ford Focus RS500 already sold out?

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    2011 Ford Focus RS500 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Well, that didn’t take long, did it? We knew the new 2011 Ford Focus RS500 would move fast, but not quite this fast. Powered by a 2.5-liter five-cylinder that produces 345 horsepower and 339 pound-feet of torque, Ford‘s hottest hatch one-ups even the already bonkers Focus RS with its piddly 305 horsepower and 325 lb-ft. Considering that the RS is capable of a 0-62 mile per hour sprint of under six seconds and a top speed of 163 mph, the RS500 should clock in around 5.6 seconds.

    What we didn’t expect was the fact that the RS500 would sell so quickly. With their matte black paint, 19-inch wheels and all that performance on tap, we certainly expected them to be a hot commodity, but if Autocar is to be believed, the whole run of 500 units has already sold out – some 12 hours after the reveal. Sales will be spread out over 20 European markets, with the UK getting 101 units, Germany getting 55 cars, France receiving 50 and Belgium scoring 50 units, with Denmark, the Czech Republic and Greece getting five units each, while Ireland receives three.

    The best part of the story is the fact that all 500 units are already spoken for, even before prices have been announced. Ford is said to be sorting through the letters of intent from customers to figure out dealer allocations. And don’t forget, the order books don’t formally open until May. With the regular RS trading above sticker on the used car market, we’re guessing there will be more than a few flippers in the initial owner group.

    [Source: Autocar.co.uk]

    Ford Focus RS500 already sold out? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 16:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Six Ways that Human Activity is Changing the Planet


    Wired Science
    recently outlined six ways in which people are already geoengineering the earth, arguing that the world has moved from the Holocene to Anthropocene era. “From diverting a third of Earth’s available fresh water to planting and grazing two-fifths of its land surface, humankind has fiddled with the knobs of the Holocene, that 10,000-year period of climate stability that birthed civilization. The consequences of our interventions into Earth’s geophysical processes are yet to be determined, but scientists say they’re so fundamental that the Holocene no longer exists. We now live in the Anthropocene, a geological age of mankind’s making.”

    According to Wired Science, there are six forms of human-caused geoengineering already having an impact worldwide:

    Carbon Emissions 

    The human activity most widely viewed as changing the planet is the burning of fossil fuels.  In order to produce the energy that drives the world’s economy, countries rely on carbon-rich energy sources like coal, oil, and gas.  By burning these materials, 40 billion tons of carbon dioxide are added into the atmosphere each year.  Right now, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide are higher than any time in the last 15 million years. Carbon dioxide is a heat-trapping gas, and as a result of these atmospheric changes, average temperatures on the planet are rising and global weather patterns are changing.  Some of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is absorbed into the oceans, and has altered the acidity of the water.  This change has had far reaching affects on oceanic ecosystems and the food chains that support underwater plant and animal life. 

    Draining Rivers

    Life depends heavily on the supply of fresh water that exists in our rivers, lakes, and aquifers. It’s estimated that one fourth of Earth’s river basins run dry before ever reaching the ocean as the result of reduced rainfall caused by deforestation and the construction of man-made dams.  Less water flowing through river basins has altered local weather patterns. 

    The Aral Sea, located on the Uzbekistan-Kazakhstan border, was once the fourth largest lake, but has now shrunk by 75 percent.  The Aral Sea was once fed by two major rivers which now, due to human activity, run dry before they reach the lake.  In the early 1960’s, the Soviet Union diverted water from the inflowing rivers to irrigate rice and cotton crops in Central Asia.  The reduced water flow caused salt concentrations to increase, making it inhabitable for the fish species that once lived there.  The Aral Sea used to absorb heat during the summer and keep the temperature mild during the winters, but now that it is drying up, the local climate is changing.  The summers are now longer and hotter and the winters are colder. 

    Black Carbon

    For centuries, humans have been engaging in activities that produce black carbon particles that are changing our planet.  Black carbon particles are released into the atmosphere in the form of smoke that is produced by cooking with solid fuels, biomass burning, and diesel exhaust.  When the black carbon particles reach the atmosphere, they form a heat-absorbing layer that causes temperatures to rise.  Raindrops tend to form around black carbon particles in the atmosphere, and when they fall to the ground, they absorb heat on the ground too, thus magnifying the warming effect.

    According to Science Daily, Scientists estimate that 25 to 35 of black carbon in the global atmosphere was emitted by China and India from the burning of wood and cow dung in household cooking and through the use of coal to heat homes (see an earlier post). Nations that rely heavily on diesel fuel for transportation also contribute large amounts. Wired Science reported that over the last century, Arctic temperatures have risen by an estimated 3.4-degree-Fahrenheit, and scientists estimate that half of this rise can be attributed to black-carbon pollution.  It is likely that it has altered weather patterns in a way that’s reduced rainfall over South Asia and West Africa.  Also, scientists believe that black carbon has played a role in causing Himalayan glaciers to melt, threatening water supplies for hundreds of millions of people.

    Farming

    As the world’s population continues to grow exponentially, so to does the amount of farmland needed to provide sufficient food.  According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), over 40 percent of Earth’s surface is now comprised of agricultural lands, and a large portion of these lands were once covered by forests.  Much of Europe, for example, was once covered with dense temperate forests, but over time population growth spurred deforestation to create more farm land was needed. 

    According to Oxford-based Global Canopy Programme, two billion tons of CO2 enters the atmosphere every year from deforestation. That destruction amounts to 50 million acres destroyed annually, much of which occurring in the Amazon rain forest. Here, the regional cycle of evaporation and condensation has been disrupted, raising the possibility of the remaining forest becoming a savannah.  Furthermore, because the rain forest is shrinking, its carbon-dioxide absorbing capacities are being diminished, which in turn means more of the heat-trapping gas is reaching the upper atmosphere, causing global temperatures to rise. 

    Fertilizers used in farming have also had far-reaching effects. Their use has injected vast amounts of nitrogen and phosphorous into regional ecosystems. Wired Science reports that 120 million tons of nitrogen are removed from the atmosphere each year and 20 million tons of phosphorous is mined from the ground in order to produce fertilizer to be used for farming.  These practices add a tremendous amount of nitrogen and phosphorus to the biosphere than would occur naturally.  Runoff from farmland often carries large amounts of fertilizer into rivers and streams which eventually drain into the sea.  The increase of these elements to ocean ecosystems has been detrimental and is fueling rapidly growing marine dead zones.

    Reef Destruction

    Ocean reefs make up the foundation of many marine ecosystems, and their mass extinction is disturbing the flow of nutrients and energy that support animal and plant life in our oceans.  As a result of water pollution, ocean acidification, overfishing, and climate change, experts estimate that one-quarter of global reef cover has been lost in the last 50 years and one-third of reef species are endangered.  Scientists believe that massive ocean extinction events in the past caused fluctuations in the Earth’s carbon cycle that led to changes in climate and weather.  The continued destruction of reefs and disruption of ocean food chains jeopardizes the stability of Earth’s critical regulatory systems.

    Scientists believe that the northwest Mediterranean once supported a vibrant array of plant and animal species.  Today, however, the stripped-down ecosystem is dominated by bacteria and jellyfish, which exhibit a reduced capacity to regulate flows of nutrients and energy.

    Plastic Production

    Technological development has led to the invention of new materials, such as plastics, that were previously unknown to the planet.  Many of these new materials are made up of chemical compounds that can remain active in the environment for thousands of years and have lasting impacts on the delicate regulatory cycles and ecosystems.  Today, the world produces approximately 60 billion tons of plastics each year, and traces of their existence can be found around the globe, even in areas with no human activity.  The United Nations estimates that for every square mile of ocean, there are approximately 47,000 pieces of plastic.

    At high concentrations, these chemicals can disrupt animal endocrine systems, alter reproduction patterns, and cause cancer.  Organic pollutants and plastic-derived endocrine disruptors have been discovered in low concentrations all over the world, even in areas where they’ve never been used, such as Antarctica and at the bottom of the oceans.  While the effects of low doses of there chemicals are less understood, they may act as subtle and widespread stresses that ultimately change the composition of ecosystems.

    Read the article

    Image credit: Aral Sea, ABC News

  • Spy Shots: Clearest look yet at BMW’s next 6 Series

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    The next BMW 6 Series-click above for high-res image gallery

    We’ve been seeing spy shots of the upcoming 6-Series Convertible for some time now (also, here), but this is the first time we’ve seen the hard topped version out in the streets. Well, halfway out in the street, as BMW has it all wrapped up for up for a psytrance after-party. We will tip our hats to BMW for this black and white disguise, however, as there’s a slight resemblance to the Maserati 4200 GT in front, while they taped off the C-pillar ape the Z32 300ZX. That said, they’re not fooling anyone.

    First of all, the stuff they didn’t/can’t cover with camo-wheels, brakes and mirrors-all scream BMW. Especially the “Efficient Dynamics” brake kit that will charge the battery while you’re slowing down. Also, the trunk is still fairly Bangled, though less so than the current car.

    The engines will be coming out of the 7 Series, though probably not the vaunted 760Li’s twin-turbo V12. Expect the double-scroll single turbo 3.0-liter straight six and the twin-turbo 4.4-liter V8, as well as few diesel mill we won’t be seeing in the States. As far as the next M6 goes, that’s up in the air. Early reports indicate that BMW will be selling some manner of R8-fighter based on the Efficient Dynamics Concept, though it will probably be stuffed with a 600+ horsepower version of the BMW 262 cubic inch twin-turbo V8.

    Before you get salty tears in your coffee, our spies also inform us that a four door version of the new 6 Series is expected. Something along the lines of a 650i Gran Turismo, including a hatch/trunk lid similar to the one found in the 550i GT. A model needed (apparently) to combat the upcoming Audi A7 four-door coupe. Those wacky Germans…

    Spy Shots: Clearest look yet at BMW’s next 6 Series originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 15:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • IP Lawyer Says: ‘Stop Wasting Money On Patents’

    Erik Heels, an intellectual property lawyer and a regular Techdirt reader, has put up a nice blog post, explaining why patents rarely make sense for startups (especially if the patents are for software). He notes that, in most cases, filing for a patent is “a waste of time and energy,” not to mention money — not that “your money and time would be better spent hiring programmers, marketers, and a sales force.” Indeed. Unfortunately, lots of startups think they need patents — often erroneously claiming that VCs won’t invest without patents. But as many smart VCs point out, having patents for a startup is usually pretty useless. Startups live or die in the marketplace with a product — and that product is rarely going to wait around for a patent. Focus on building a business, not wasting time and energy on useless patents.

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  • OMG THE BULLS ARE DEAD! THE DOW ENDED DOWN 3 POINTS

    bull spain

    Of course, the other indices were up, so maybe we were being a little dramatic.

    NASDAQ: Up 7 points to 2436.

    S&P 500: Up 2 points to 1189.

    Energy had an abysmal day with oil gaining a mere $0.09, closing at $86.71 a barrel.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Another Excellent Representation Of This Boring Market That Does Nothing But Go Up

    So you know the VIX is dead as a doornail, but here’s another way of viewing this market that’s ceaselessly spiraling higher (today excepted on the Dow, barely).

    It’s from Bespoke, which notes the old maxim: never short a dull market.

    While 21 trading days without a one percent move seems like a long streak after what we’ve been through recently, it was actually not that uncommon prior to the financial collapse.  As recently as January 2007, the S&P 500 had a streak of 38 days without a +/-1% daily move.  As shown in the chart below, the current streak is big compared to the last couple of years, but it pales in comparison to many streaks over the last 20 years.  While the S&P hasn’t had a one percent gain or decline since March 5th, the index is up 4.54% over the time period.  Most of these streaks come during periods where the market is rallying nicely.  The phrase “never short a dull market” came about for a reason!

    Chart

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  • Video: Sign #5,328 You Have Too Much Free Time – Lego R/C Veyron with seven-speed gearbox

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    Remote control Lego Technic Bugatti Veryon – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Someone going by the handle “Sheepo” spent who knows how many hours satisfying the urge to build a Bugatti Veyron out of Lego Technic pieces. Among its many features are a remote controlled braking system, power targa roof and motorized rear spoiler. And then there’s that working seven-speed sequential gearbox – even the gear lever moves – plus reverse. If it goes 254 miles per hour to scale, we’ll be even more impressed. And to any of you with this much time on your hands and dreams in your head, keep up the good work. Follow the jump to see it in action. Hat tip to Cameron!

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading Video: Sign #5,328 You Have Too Much Free Time – Lego R/C Veyron with seven-speed gearbox

    Video: Sign #5,328 You Have Too Much Free Time – Lego R/C Veyron with seven-speed gearbox originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 14:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ‘Dirt! The Movie’ warns us to not become dirt poor

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Oil is running out. Clean water sources are dwindling. Next thing you know the very ground beneath our feet will be in jeopardy.

    Get ready to worry. It is.

    Dirt! The Movie warns us to tread more lightly

    Dirt! The Movie warns us to tread more lightly

    Dirt! The Movie,  being released on DVD today,  tells a story that might seem remote to many who live their lives inside cities, walking on concrete, occupying buildings and eating food that appears in restaurants. It might even seem remote to the suburbanite, that cultivator of chemically sustained sod. But this movie will dust away any notion that dirt lacks value. Indeed, our survival depends not just on Earth’s water and atmosphere, but the soil that covers the planet – even in cities where we can’t always see it.

    That’s the simple, devastating truth: We need dirt to grow the food that keeps us alive.

    Journey with narrator Jamie Lee Curtis, and a host of experts from California, India, Kenya and Argentina, in this documentary from Docurama Films, and you will marvel at the bounties dirt provides. You’ll also get the story on we humans have abused this vital natural resource. (With occasional comic relief from cartoon characters representing the micro-life within the soil.)

    Just as modern civilizations have taken what they want from forests, rivers and oceans, only recently pausing to consider replenishing these sources, they have degraded the soil, the Earth’s living skin. Dirt!, inspired by William Bryant Logan’s acclaimed book “Dirt! The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth” shows us the many ways this destruction occurs – through deforestation that allows rains

    Bill Logan, author of Dirt: The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth

    Bill Logan, author of Dirt: The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth

    to wash away the dirt, overbuilding that creates freshwater runoff, farming with poisonous pesticides and vast monoculture crops bleed off the soil’s nutrients.

    The end is always the same –  rich, productive land is stripped away, and in its place is left a barren desert that cannot sustain life.

    Dirt! bears witness to this disaster, this desertification, that’s unfolding continuously, almost everywhere on the globe. The destruction seems inexorable, a train wreck that we’re powerless to affect.

    We see scenes of massive commercial agricultural operations, where even the most basic rules of sustainability, like rotating crops to preserve the soil, are ignored in favor of chemical solutions that make the dirt perform, until it’s spent. We see dried and cracked farmland in India, already lost to ill-conceived farming practices and now climate change. And we see mountaintops sheared off by gigantic machines, their timber and rich soil discarded.

    By the time we get to Los Angeles, where directors Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow show us how runoff from concrete environments wastes freshwater, we want to yell, STOP! And this is probably exactly where the filmmakers wanted to corner their audience, driving home the grim situation before letting us in on some hopeful developments, like the movement toward organic gardening. (Gardners’ alert: You’ll love this movie with its defense of natural growing techniques, profiles of organic CSA owners and words of wisdom from traditional farming experts.)

    But you don’t have to be a gardener to appreciate Dirt! If you like to eat, or just live, you’ll appreciate that someone is digging into the situation with dirt.

    Dirt!, which has played at several film festivals and was an official selection at the Sundance Film Festival, does drench us with bad news about our soil. But it also sows seeds of hope.

    Did you know, for instance that, LA could get half of the water it needs from rainfall, if it managed that rainfall correctly? Currently, most of the city’s natural water is lost to run off down streets and walled stream beds, forcing LA to buy water from distant places. That makes no sense right? And the implication is clear: With greener spaces, permeable concrete and more thoughtful water management, and even  down to enlisting residents to collect rainwater, there could be hope for LA’s water situation.

    You probably also didn’t realize that Ethiopia, properly cultivated, could feed all of Africa. Now that’s mind expanding: Africa feeding itself. We don’t even think this is possible, and yet, the soil and farming experts in Dirt!, explain that we can get that sort of sustenance from the ground, if we treat it with respect and help it to regenerate as nature intended.

    The land, the soil, just like our water reserves and the air we breathe, must be tended and protected, say the many experts who appear in this film, from sustainable agriculture guru Wes Jackson of The Land Institute in Kansas to Vandana Shiva, physicist and acclaimed eco-activist of India, whose group Navdanya advocates for a return to traditional farming.

    Conservationist Wangari Maathai

    Conservationist Wangari Maathai

    Our dirt, these experts say, must be rescued from those who would use and discard it, like Big Ag, without planning for its future. And it must be managed as a recognizable resource, not a byproduct or ancillary feature of the landscape, because it holds the roots of life.

    Speaking about companies that clear cut forests, harming soil as well as trees, African conservationist and Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai laments:

    “They see timber. They see money. But they do not see the diversity of life.”

    Now you must see Dirt!

    (Dirt! The Movie is being sold online at the movie’s website, where you can also get information on community screenings.)

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Interview with Jeff Speck, Co-author of “The Smart Growth Manual”


    Jeff Speck, AICP, CNU, LEED-AP, Honorary ASLA, is co-author of The Smart Growth Manual. He is also founder of the design consultancy Speck & Associates. Previously, he was the director of town planning at Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company (DPZ) and director of design at the National Endownment for the Arts. Speck is also co-author of Suburban Nation, The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream.

    What inspired you and your coauthors Andres Duany and Mike Lydon to write The Smart Growth Manual?  Does this represent an effort to define or even codify smart growth practices?

    Andres and I started working on this about 10 years ago and Mike joined us more recently to help us put it together. Unlike Suburban Nation, which was something I was inspired to do after hearing Andres speak, The Smart Growth Manual was Andres’ idea. He realized, and I certainly agreed, that it was a term that was getting a lot of play. In 2000, we determined (and Andres, who tends to be right, determined) that it was the term that was going to win and become the dominant term, as it has. 

    He said, and I agreed, there are so many different ideas, concepts, approaches, designs being associated with this term and no one’s doing a good job at truly codifying what constitutes smart growth. Furthermore, there were already thousands of pages about what smart growth is, but no one had tried to put it all together into a single easy-to-use resource. As we say in our introduction, the goal is not to be deep but to be broad, and provide a readable and useful way to fully define the term and to instruct people in how to practice smart growth, or to judge growth that purports to be smart.

    There are sections on nature corridors, parks, urban street canopies and streetscapes — work landscape architects do.  Are landscape architects a target audience for your manual?  How would you recommend they incorporate your recommendations into their projects?

    It became clear to me when I was the Director of Design at the NEA and oversaw the Mayor’s Institute on City Design, where we would bring together design professionals with mayors to solve mayor’s urban design challenges…it became clear to me very quickly that there’s no one profession that alone is determining the physical form of our cities. In fact, we would invite eight experts to each institute, including architects, starchitects (because there’s two different types of architects), planners, urban designers, landscape architects, preservationists, developers, transportation engineers, and economists to just about every session.

    Landscape architects are a big part of the audience, but really everyone who deals with the making and remaking of cities will hopefully find some use in the book. Landscape architects, like many professionals, have a name that says one thing, but they often do more than just that one thing. There are lots of landscape architects who are in effect planners or urban designers, but are accredited as landscape architects.

    There are aspects of the manual that pertain directly to landscape architecture in the strictest sense, but given that so many landscape architects effectively practice planning and urban design, there’s a lot more information that’ll be useful to people who call themselves landscape architects, but do more than just deal with the green stuff.

    UN-Habitat’s recent State of the Cities report discusses the rise of mega regions, municipal regions of more than 100 million people. The difference between regions and cities is fading with increased population growth. What does this mean for smart growth?

    It’s a real challenge in America because we do not govern ourselves at the scale at which we live. This is why at the NEA I worked with the E.P.A. to create the Governor’s Institute on Community Design, which deals directly with state leadership so that as a nation we can make the right decisions regarding regional policy-making and practices. Most Americans inhabit multiple jurisdictions. When I lived in Florida, I would wake up in Miami Beach, go to work in Miami, go to the gym in Coral Gables and then go back to Miami Beach and that’s a typical experience among Americans, who would all benefit from regional planning but often don’t because there’s no jurisdiction that truly embodies the region. 

     
    The Louisiana Speaks Regional Plan, a rare example of cross-jurisdictional planning.
    Credit: Calthorpe and Associates
     

    Very few governmental entities align with the metropolis and so regional planning has historically been the type of planning which has been practiced with the least skill or effectiveness. It’s also the most important scale of planning. So the book is like the Charter of New Urbanism in that it ranges from the scale of the region to the scale of the building in that order, and the first full section of the book includes regional principles and practices, and the entire second chapter lays out the steps for creating a regional plan for a metropolis. 

    The problem with so many new urbanism projects, many of which I’ve worked on and I’m very proud of, is that they exist within regions that are totally unplanned, and therefore don’t have impacts on transportation patterns and quality of life that they could have if a more regional approach was taken. I mean to say they don’t help as much as they could.

    The Smart Growth Manual encourages the development of different types of plans at a variety of scales.  At the regional level players are encouraged to map green areas, development priorities, districts, and corridors and integrate these with transportation, energy and water plans.  How can planners implement these complex intersecting plans yet still leave room for adaptation?  How can you plan for regional economic, environmental, and social diversity?

    In terms of allowing for adaptation and addressing the fear of planning too much: certainly, at the regional scale, we have no examples in America of planning too much. I think anyone who studies the subject with any seriousness would agree that one need have no fear of losing flexibility in our regional structures given regional planning is generally not practiced effectively in the U.S.  Secondly, what we’ve learned, and this is often the cry one hears from architects and landscape architects when dealing with issues of planning and coding, is this fear of loss of choice and loss of variety is exactly what happens in the absence of regulation. People think that in the absence of regulation every building is going to be a Frank Gehry masterpiece and every landscape a Laurie Olin garden when, in fact, what happens in the absence of regulation is the dreck of the auto zone. 

    We have a thoroughly established and extremely monolithic system that creates the same big box sprawlscape across the entire country whenever there’s an absence of regulation. Therefore, more planning at the regional scale could only do good.

     
    What happens in the absence of proper planning is the opposite of diversity.
    Credit: Google Earth
     

    In terms of diversity, again, it is precisely the absence of planning that causes diversity to disappear. What we see in conventional practice is a development community completely split into developers who only do multifamily housing and developers who only do single family housing — some developers seem to do one house over and over again. There are developers who only strip centers, developers who only do big boxes. There are vast areas of single use featuring no diversity at all and an enforced economic segregation between housing plots of different incomes. 

    One thing that proper neighborhood planning — as outlined in the new manual and also promoted by the new urbanists — does is insist on a full range of housing types and tenures within every neighborhood integrated with places to work, shop, learn and play. That is the sort of diversity that, due to the hegemony of the sprawl model, is utterly lacking in conventional development. That is, unless smart growth has had an influence.


    New Urbanist housing in Boston mixes subsidized and market-rate units.
    Credit: Goody Clancy
     

    A new EPA report concludes that smart growth is taking hold in many U.S. cities.  The report says “there has been a dramatic increase in the share of new construction built in central cities and older suburbs. In roughly half of the metropolitan areas examined, urban core communities dramatically increased their share of new residential building permits.”  In addition to new urban housing, what indicators do you look for as signs that smart growth is expanding?

    I’d say it’s less of an indicator than it is a cause, but the price the gas and the now never-ending escalation in fossil fuel prices will continue to be a major determinant in where people choose to live, simply for economic reasons. The old formula of drive-till-you-qualify, where people would move further and further away from the center city in order to get one more bathroom or a bigger garage, has proven to be a false promise. Now, many Americans are paying more for transportation than they do for housing. All that has been accomplished by these people in California’s Central Valley, who moved further and further out in order to get a bigger house, is that they’re now finding housing and transportation cumulatively to be too expensive. It’s these vast tracks of ex- urban houses that have been the hardest hit by repossessions in the current popped bubble. 

    We’re also approaching an era of peak oil. We don’t have to run out of oil, but just have to start demanding it at a greater volume than it’s available. As is discussed in many books like The Long Emergency, our economic story is going to completely change. Those people who are dependent on cars to live their lives will find themselves much more burdened by this new economy than those who live in places where walking and transit are a viable alternative. Secondarily, what you see happening is people making a lifestyle choice, or I would say a quality of life choice, to enjoy all the benefits that the city offers. 

    You also have a demographic shift where fewer and fewer households include parents with children. There’s this geographic shift among childless millennials, Gen Y and Gen X, but pre-family households, and then empty nesters, who have much more desire for the city, because cities almost universally have inferior school systems. Cities, of course, need to focus on schools first to broaden the demographic appeal. But what we’re seeing is the realization — and, perhaps, this is even a cultural shift — that city life has a lot of value. The kids in my generation grew up watching “The Brady Bunch” and “Happy Days” while kids in the current generation grew up watching “Seinfeld” and “Friends.” The model for what’s cool has shifted from the suburbs back to the city. 

    I do want to bring up the issues raised by Green Metropolis, a book I really enjoyed. What I find most interesting is that smart growth is the one sustainable option that you can choose that is not actually a sacrifice — it makes your life better — unlike all of the gizmo green gadgets that are being thrown our way. You can be a bit more sustainable if you have high fly ash drywall, bamboo flooring, a solar collector or hot water heater, or super-insulate your house. (By the way, all of which I have done.) But as David Owen says in his book, sustainability is not about stuff, it’s about systems. Houses and buildings are really not systems; neighborhoods and cities are systems.

    As far as I’m concerned, the changes we are making to individual buildings are like moving deck chairs on the Titanic. We can change them all we want but it’s only when we fundamentally begin to address the organizational structure of our communities that we can really have an impact. Just to elaborate slightly, you can change all the light bulbs in your house from incandescent to compact fluorescent, but if you can live with one less car because you live in a walkable urban environment — or even a well- organized, walkable suburban environment — that has 50 times the impact. It makes changing your light bulbs statistically insignificant. The real flaw in this sustainability discussion, as David Owen points out, is that it’s focused on, “What can I buy and add to what I’ve already got, to become more sustainable?”  When the real question is, “Where can I locate to be more sustainable?”


    The landscape of subsidized automotion.
    Credit: Steve Mouzon
     

    Smart growth asks people to make real changes that do impact the quality of their life, but in an almost universally positive way.  It’s a choice that a lot of Americans are making because they realize that it’s a better way to live. If the schools were decent, it would be a choice that many, many more people would make.

    In a recent study, the University of Maryland concludes that Maryland’s 10 year program of fighting sprawl has largely failed.  The Washington Post says this is because the smart growth “laws had no teeth to force local governments to comply and builders had no incentive to redevelop older neighborhoods.”  What do you see is the greatest obstacle to putting smart growth into practice in more places?

    Maryland and Governor Glendening were at the cutting edge of smart growth when no one else was even talking about it.  And so their programs were necessarily first steps forward. Also, their programs were necessarily limited in their impact because of the environment that they were working in. However, they were very important in showing people what sort of directions were necessary. I’m confident that when we look back 30 years from now, we’ll see how important that work was in starting a trend towards more effective practices nationaly. To that I would add that I am aware of a lot of programs in Maryland and Virginia that have had significant impacts. For example, there is Montgomery County’s affordable housing policy and the Piedmont Environmental Council’s farmland preservation efforts. A lot of policies in Maryland and in the D.C. region have preserved a lot of land and provided housing diversity that stemmed from the work done in Maryland government in the ’90s.

    But the big obstacle is really cheap gas. More to the point, and this is a much longer discussion, we as a nation do not allow market economics to function properly in the pricing of automotive transportation. If drivers were to truly pay the direct costs associated with the use of their roadways, gas would be closer to $10 a gallon. Driving is subsidized from a variety of sources, but principally through general tax revenue that pays for roads and the other costs associated with driving that are born not by drivers but society as a whole. If the price of driving caused drivers to pay the true cost of driving, we would see consumers and businesses start to make the right transportation choices.

    Your book offers some detailed recommendations at the neighborhood, site, and building levels.  For instance, in one section, you suggest street tree planting approaches. You write, “In less urban areas, trees should be located between the roadway and the sidewalk in a continuous planter from 5 to 15 feet wide.”  What kind of research went into these recommendations?  Also, what is the right balance between plugging into defined design templates and taking a flexible, adaptable design approach?


    The neighborhood model is the only alternative to sprawl that has been fully tested over time.
    Credit: Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company
     

    The research that went into this book was decades of studying existing places that work. What distinguishes smart growth as it is currently understood from a broad range of alternative solutions that may be sustainable — and, in fact, some of which may be more sustainable — is that it’s based on examples that work and have been demonstrated to work a thousand times over. This is a discussion that pertains to new urbanism as well as the smart growth movement, but more specifically to the focus on the traditionally organized neighborhood as the central building block to healthy growth. As we say in the book, there may be other new untested ideas that are more sustainable than the traditional neighborhood, but we can’t have confidence in their success in the same way that we can have confidence in this fundamental design approach that for millennia has proved itself to be sustainable.  It’s only in the past 50 years, with the demise of the neighborhood model and its replacement with the sprawl model, that we’ve become an unsustainable species. The research that supports the book is the work of hundreds of generations of successful sustainable neighborhoods. 


    The Transect defines a continuum from rural to urban environments and creates a foundation for smart-growth planning.
    Credit: Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company
     

    In terms of an adaptable, flexible approach, the tool that we use to allow appropriate flexibility, that your readers are probably familiar with, is the urban to rural transect. You’ll notice that question your question began with the phrase, “In less urban areas.” Every aspect of design in The Smart Growth Manual is modulated by a location’s position on the continuum from the most rural areas to the most urban areas. There is no one appropriate design solution for any design challenge, but rather one needs to properly understand the location of the site in that continuum before heading towards a design solution.  Many of the less successful projects of the last 50 years have been the outcome of a confusion between the urban and the rural. Most of the least successful parts of contemporary American cities resulted from the imposition of rural — but in more cases suburban — design templates on an urban environment. I think that good designers, who understand the distinction between the urban and suburban, and who are capable of building great buildings and landscapes within properly organized neighborhoods, will find the prescriptions of the Manual liberating, not constricting. The goal is to create more places where good design can actually matter.

  • VIX. RIP. (VXX)

    The below chart is of the VIX (VIX) the so-called volatility index. It would be silly to point out how low the volatility is, because we’d just be repeating something that’s been said a million times before.

    Instead let us just remind you how many times you’ve seen predictions that the VIX just COULDN’T get any lower on this runup, and that a shock return to volatility HAD to be right around the corner. How many folks have lost money making that bet? (Thanks to Joshua Brown for the inspiration).

    chart

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  • Teaching Earth Science with Children’s Literature: Jump Into Science SAND

    sand.jpg

    Jump Into Science SAND, written by Ellen Prager is a great book for students when learning about sand.  The book starts off by explaining the different uses of sand: beaches, desert dunes, home for certain aquatic life and the recreational uses people use sand for: walk, lie down and to build sand castles. The autor does a fantastic job of describing what sand is make of , where it comes from and how sand moves from location to location. 

    “Sand can be many colors-white, red, green, tan, or black. Some sand even looks like the black and white of a Dalmation’s spotted coat. The color of sand comes from the color of it’s grains.”

    The book explains in detail how the various colors of sand are seen around the world.  An example is a white beach which is made up of the beautiful coral reef’s and shells found in the water close by.  It can take a very long time for sand to create the beautiful beaches we are use to today.  There are sections of the book that show what the different colors of sand look like up close. 

    Ellen Prager does a great job explaining how sand travels for the early elementary student while still capitaviting the older student.  Sand can travel by water, wind and ice.  She explains how each of the natural ways of movement shape the grains of sand differently.  At the end of the book you will find a fun activity titled, Shake It Up.  This would be a fun way for students to learn hands on how sand can be made.

    Curriculum Connections

    This would be a great resource for teachers teaching about minerals and rocks in the classroom (SOL 4.9C).  The book explains in detail how rocks and minerals are broken up into smaller pieces, which make a grain of sand.  This book can be used throughout the state of Virginia for teaching students about the sand they can find sand along the east coast of Virginia at the beach as well as small recretation areas along the west coast of Virginia.

    Resources

    Early elementary students can complete the word search, At The Beach to find words associated with the beach.  This would also go along well when teaching about the seasons.

    Activites for students ranging from preschool to grade 3.  This web-site has ideas for teachers to use such as sand pictures & sand beads. The web-site also can provide teachers with information about the animals that live (habitat) in the sand.

    Another fun activity for students would be making sand filled bottles and creating sand art. Students can create different layers of colored sand while learning about the different colors and how they are created.

    Book: Jump Into Science SAND
    Author: Ellen Prager
    Illustrator: Nancy Woodman
    Publisher: National Geographic Society
    Publication Date: 2006
    Pages: 31
    Grade Range: Preschool-5th grade
    ISBN: 0-7922-5583-6

  • Free Image Data Converter v3.2 Update Reduces High-ISO Image Noise

    α (Alpha) digital SLR users can now enjoy even more control over creating beautiful, low noise images with the latest release of Image Data Converter SR v3.2 software. The latest update features new algorithms that significantly reduce image noise at high ISO settings when converting RAW data to JPEG files. Processing is most effective at ISO 800 and higher, delivering impressively natural results with minimized color noise right up to ISO 12800 (depends on DLSR model).

    The new algorithm is effective when converting RAW file or cRAW files (depends on DSLR model) to JPEG files produced by all current and previous model digital SLR cameras by Sony (excluding DSLR-A100).

    Image Data Converter SR Version 3.2 is part of the Image Data Suite that also includes Image Data Lightbox SR Version 2.2. Supplied free of charge with all new digital SLR cameras by Sony, the enhanced bundle now also offers support for Mac OS 10.6 (Snow Leopard).

    Click here to download the new update from Sony. This is a link that came from Sony Europe that ties back into a download at sony.net. Oddly, Sony’s e-support site doesn’t have it listed. I gave it a shot and was pleased to see it installed the full version hassle free, and I was quite interested in the functionality. The software seems like a good compliment to Photoshop, as it even allows the two programs to work together. What do you think? What would you add?

  • Ron Paul Discusses America’s Moral Decline & Economic Collapse

    Show: Alex Jones Show
    Host: Alex Jones
    Date: 4/5/2010

    Transcript

    Alex Jones: Ladies and gentlemen, we are live. It is Monday, the 5th day of April, 2010. Until the bottom of the hour, we have Congressman Ron Paul with us. And we appreciate him coming on. Congressman, good to have you here.

    Ron Paul: Good to be with you.

    Alex Jones: There is so much going on. I’ve got a lot of important questions I want to ask you. But out of the gates, what is most important on your plate that you want to warn the American people about today?

    Ron Paul: Oh, there are too many things. And I don’t know which one is the worst. You know, the finances are so bad, and they’re getting much worse because of the way they’re spending money, running up the debt. I think the financial crisis is getting so much worse. Interest rates are going up. I think that’s a major, major problem we face. But Ben Bernanke believes that he’s achieved great things by printing the money, […], taking care of his friends. And the people who lost their jobs don’t have a voice. So he thinks he’s had a great victory. But the second thing is what’s going on over in the Middle East; that’s getting much worse. The Iraqi situation is worse, now they won’t remove any troops at all. And of course, we’re going to be up to a 100,000 troops in Afghanistan, and Karzai is now feeling very bold and critical of the United States. When that happens, you know, I just wonder how we’ll handle that, because at times when our good friends start to act on their own, we usually get rid of them or desert them or let them go on their own. So I think that thing is a whole mess and it’s really going to blow up in our face.

    Alex Jones: Well, let’s get into the economy then first. I’ve seen the different job charts, showing that this is the worst recession since the late 1940s. And, meanwhile, I have a Business Week article from 2 weeks ago, where the federal regulators are pressuring public and private pension funds to be invested “in failed banks”. We have Geithner in the news with China talking about not buying as many dollars. We have open discussion by Moody’s and other top rating services of the U.S. losing their AAA rating. The economic situation appears to be spiraling downwards.

    Ron Paul: Well, I don’t think there’s any doubt about that. But there are a lot of people with their head in the sand. And I don’t know whether they’re lying to themselves when they say, “Oh, I really believe that things have turned around.” They look at the other side of the story and they see more jobs are being found, and unemployment is staying under 10%, GDP is going up. And they either try to fool the people, or they’re fooling themselves. But ultimately, though, the market will dictate and everybody will catch on. But I think where the disconnect is the government is putting a positive spin on it, but the people that you talk to and the people who take part in the Tea Party Movement know better. That’s why they’re […]; they’re not buying into this. This is a completely different year than we’ve had in, I guess, many, many years.

    Alex Jones: Well, the AP reported last week that half of these so called ‘new jobs’ are government jobs and census jobs. And we know that the unemployment number is really above 20%. So even with cooked numbers, they’re claiming that we’ve gotten a small amount of job increases.

    Ron Paul: Yeah, and in this last report there were a lot of part-time jobs. They weren’t real jobs. There were part time jobs, government jobs. I don’t think there’s much good news in that report at all.

    Alex Jones: Congressman Ron Paul, let’s talk about the healthcare bill; how it was passed, what it really does, the best ways you think the states can counter this. I think we shouldn’t just have lawsuits and trust the federal courts, state level nullification. Specifically on the healthcare bill, you talked about Obama being emboldened, and now he wants this carbon tax. He’s going to try to pass that in the Senate, declaring CO2 a toxic waste. Let’s talk about healthcare legislation, because we’ve seen Obama say, “Look, it’s been a few weeks since this passed, the birds are singing, the sun is shining”, but he knows that this thing doesn’t get phased in until next year and the three years after that. So that’s a very deceptive game he’s playing of perception.

    Ron Paul: You know what he’ll probably do is by that time, whoever is in charge or whoever will be there, will say, “Oh, maybe we didn’t do quite enough. Maybe what we really needed to have was that single-payer system”. So failure to them is just another opportunity. And if in the next year and next six months the people only hear good news and they don’t see what it’s going to really cost, you know, he may get away with it for a year without it coming down hard on him. But ultimately, though, it’s an illusion to think that they can do what they claim and not cost any money and improve healthcare. That’s a hard sell.

    Alex Jones: Well, you’re a medical doctor yourself, not just a congressman. And, of course, you’re also someone who’s researched how the economy really works. Specifically, for people that have questions about the healthcare legislation that is now law, a) what is in it that concerns you most, b) What do you think the most effective constitutional strategy is to defeat this?

    Ron Paul: Well, if the people were awake enough and there were enough of us, the process would be to just change the Congress, change the president, and repeal all that stuff. That’s the smoothest way to do it. The part that bothers me the most, of course, is the process that you talked about. I mean, how they pulled it off and, you know, we passed the rule, and the rule passed the Senate version, and then they go to reconciliation. That was horrible. But I think philosophically the worst part was that they moved away any opening for a private option. You know, they talk about public option, but what about the private option? Why don’t individuals have the right to get out?

    Fortunately, some people opt out of the public school system and they have private schooling and homeschooling. Why don’t we have that in medicine? And that’s the HSA approach. But they minimize those; it’s much more difficult and if you opt out and say, “I don’t want it, I’ll take care of myself, I’ll handle everything. I don’t want to be a ward of the state”, you’ll have to pay a fine. You know, pay your $9000 and that, to me, was a big, big move in the wrong direction. And instead of thinking the day after we got this passed, “Oh, let’s repeal the whole thing.” Well, that would be great if you could, but maybe if we could narrow it down. And I want to introduce legislation to just narrow it down to legalize a private option to get out and take care of yourself. And that might be less confusing than going through 2,000 pages and explaining what is good, what is bad, what we’re going to keep, can you really get rid of everything; you know, that whole thing. So I would like to see debate where we just have a change over in Congress and we wouldn’t have to fight these things over and over. I mean, they pass this stuff and the people now are becoming more informed and they get upset. So there is lot of frustration out there turning into anger.

    Alex Jones: What do you see as the best strategy to defeat this, though, at the state level? I mean, can’t the states nullify this because it does force the states to pay for a large part of the federal mandate? So we have attorney generals now suing, but I don’t think that’s enough.

    Ron Paul: Well, I’m all for that if people want to do it. But they’re behind the 8-ball there. It’s not going to be accomplished. It’s sort of like they take our highway funds and then they come and say, “Well, you get your highway funds from the federal government, so we’re going to set your speed limit. Everybody has to drive at 55 miles per hour”. That’s what they did for so many years. And the states say, “Oh, we’re not going to do that? We’re going to fight that. We don’t want that sort of law.” The federal government says, “Alright, we’ll just keep their highways fund”.

    And that’s what they’ll do on Medicare. What are you going to do? Repeal every state participation in Medicaid? And then it’ll make the problem worse. There are unfunded mandates, and they’re going to have more unfunded mandates if they just try to ignore the law. I think the states want to do it, and I think it’s good that they’re talking about it and they passed these resolutions. That represents some good PR on how upset the people are. But I don’t think that is the solution. The ultimate solution for all this is people having a better understanding and a better trust in the way the market works and the way freedom works. You don’t need the government nanny state taking care of us from cradle to grave. If that isn’t repealed – that attitude – tinkering around the edges of legislation won’t do the trick.

    Alex Jones: Congressman, you’ve talked about the fact that what’s really going to end this is the country collapsing financially. Can you speak to that? And then also as a medical doctor, my dad’s a physician, and everyone knows that federal money comes in for abortion. And then these hospitals and clinics just use money that they would have used for something else for the abortion, and use the other federal money to pay for the other programs. So it’s a shell game.

    Ron Paul: Yeah, and that whole thing and the process…

    (to be continued)

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  • What Does One Have To Do To Get A Little Yield These Days?

    Glad you asked.

    This excellent chart from JPMorgan (via Paul Kedrosky) shows exactly what you need to do to get yield these days.

    We could stare at this for hours.

    chart

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