Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Does Bail = Fail? No

When I was barely one and a half (or maybe two) in 1986 Ronald Regan (then President of the United States) said,

"Our trade policy rests firmly on the foundation of free and open markets. I recognize ... the inescapable conclusion that all of history has taught: The freer the flow of world trade, the stronger the tides of human progress and peace among nations."


Regan said it in the face of an enormous and dangerous challenge-- He said it in order to prove his point: that America, steeped in Free Trade and Democracy will always possess the wherewithal to defeat a Socialized/Communized State ran trade establishment and a 1 party Communist dictatorship.

"Our trade policy rests firmly on the foundation of free and open markets...."

If there's a question over the "fundamentals of our economy or Trade Policy" let it be known thus far that as long as trade exists in the United States unhindered, then the fundamentals of our economy are not only strong they are absolute.

That said... it's ok to also note that where we're at isn't "ideal"-- in fact, we are as from ideal as one could safely get (without getting too beat up). Yet, no "Depression II" is in our midst (or at least mine). Of course 'how we got here' is likely not how we'll get out-- but perhaps there might be a tad bit of wisdom in just examining this question.

In smarter, more jovial, and telling words-- Warren Buffet, in an investor's report, tells the story more clearly then I can...

How to Minimize Investment Returns

-by Warren Buffet


It’s been an easy matter for Berkshire and other owners of American equities to prosper over the years. Between December 31, 1899 and December 31, 1999, to give a really long-term example, the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497. (Guess what annual growth rate is required to produce this result; the surprising answer is at the end of this section.) This huge rise came about for a simple reason: Over the century American businesses did extraordinarily well and investors rode the wave of their prosperity. Businesses continue to do well. But now shareholders, through a series of self-inflicted wounds, are in a major way cutting the returns they will realize from their investments.

The explanation of how this is happening begins with a fundamental truth: With unimportant exceptions, such as bankruptcies in which some of a company’s losses are borne by creditors, the most that owners in aggregate can earn between now and Judgment Day is what their businesses in aggregate earn. True, by buying and selling that is clever or lucky, investor A may take more than his share of the pie at the expense of investor B. And, yes, all investors feel richer when stocks soar. But an owner can exit only by having someone take his place. If one investor sells high, another must buy high. For owners as a whole, there is simply no magic – no shower of money from outer space – that will enable them to extract wealth from their companies beyond that created by the companies themselves.

Indeed, owners must earn less than their businesses earn because of “frictional” costs. And that’s my point: These costs are now being incurred in amounts that will cause shareholders to earn far less than they historically have.

To understand how this toll has ballooned, imagine for a moment that all American corporations are, and always will be, owned by a single family. We’ll call them the Gotrocks. After paying taxes on dividends, this family – generation after generation – becomes richer by the aggregate amount earned by its companies. Today that amount is about $700 billion annually. Naturally, the family spends some of these dollars. But the portion it saves steadily compounds for its benefit. In the Gotrocks household everyone grows wealthier at the same pace, and all is harmonious.

But let’s now assume that a few fast-talking Helpers approach the family and persuade each of its members to try to outsmart his relatives by buying certain of their holdings and selling them certain others.

The Helpers – for a fee, of course – obligingly agree to handle these transactions. The Gotrocks still own all of corporate America; the trades just rearrange who owns what. So the family’s annual gain in wealth diminishes, equaling the earnings of American business minus commissions paid. The more that family members trade, the smaller their share of the pie and the larger the slice received by the Helpers. This fact is not lost upon these broker-Helpers: Activity is their friend and, in a wide variety of ways, they urge it on.

After a while, most of the family members realize that they are not doing so well at this new “beat- my-brother” game. Enter another set of Helpers. These newcomers explain to each member of the Gotrocks clan that by himself he’ll never outsmart the rest of the family. The suggested cure: “Hire a manager – yes, us – and get the job done professionally.” These manager-Helpers continue to use the broker-Helpers to execute trades; the managers may even increase their activity so as to permit the brokers to prosper still more. Overall, a bigger slice of the pie now goes to the two classes of Helpers.

The family’s disappointment grows. Each of its members is now employing professionals. Yet overall, the group’s finances have taken a turn for the worse. The solution? More help, of course.
It arrives in the form of financial planners and institutional consultants, who weigh in to advise the Gotrocks on selecting manager-Helpers. The befuddled family welcomes this assistance. By now its members know they can pick neither the right stocks nor the right stock-pickers. Why, one might ask, should they expect success in picking the right consultant? But this question does not occur to the Gotrocks, and the consultant-Helpers certainly don’t suggest it to them.

The Gotrocks, now supporting three classes of expensive Helpers, find that their results get worse, and they sink into despair. But just as hope seems lost, a fourth group – we’ll call them the hyper-Helpers – appears. These friendly folk explain to the Gotrocks that their unsatisfactory results are occurring because the existing Helpers – brokers, managers, consultants – are not sufficiently motivated and are simply going through the motions. “What,” the new Helpers ask, “can you expect from such a bunch of zombies?”

The new arrivals offer a breathtakingly simple solution: Pay more money. Brimming with self- confidence, the hyper-Helpers assert that huge contingent payments – in addition to stiff fixed fees – are what each family member must fork over in order to really outmaneuver his relatives.

The more observant members of the family see that some of the hyper-Helpers are really just manager-Helpers wearing new uniforms, bearing sewn-on sexy names like HEDGE FUND or PRIVATE EQUITY. The new Helpers, however, assure the Gotrocks that this change of clothing is all-important, bestowing on its wearers magical powers similar to those acquired by mild-mannered Clark Kent when he changed into his Superman costume. Calmed by this explanation, the family decides to pay up.

And that’s where we are today: A record portion of the earnings that would go in their entirety to
owners – if they all just stayed in their rocking chairs – is now going to a swelling army of Helpers.

Particularly expensive is the recent pandemic of profit arrangements under which Helpers receive large portions of the winnings when they are smart or lucky, and leave family members with all of the losses –and large fixed fees to boot – when the Helpers are dumb or unlucky (or occasionally crooked).

A sufficient number of arrangements like this – heads, the Helper takes much of the winnings; tails, the Gotrocks lose and pay dearly for the privilege of doing so – may make it more accurate to call the family the Hadrocks. Today, in fact, the family’s frictional costs of all sorts may well amount to 20% of the earnings of American business. In other words, the burden of paying Helpers may cause American equity investors, overall, to earn only 80% or so of what they would earn if they just sat still and listened to no one.

Long ago, Sir Isaac Newton gave us three laws of motion, which were the work of genius. But Sir
Isaac’s talents didn’t extend to investing: He lost a bundle in the South Sea Bubble, explaining later, “I can calculate the movement of the stars, but not the madness of men.” If he had not been traumatized by this loss, Sir Isaac might well have gone on to discover the Fourth Law of Motion: For investors as a whole, returns decrease as motion increases.

************

Here’s the answer to the question posed at the beginning of this section: To get very specific, the Dow increased from 65.73 to 11,497.12 in the 20th century, and that amounts to a gain of 5.3% compounded annually. (Investors would also have received dividends, of course.) To achieve an equal rate of gain in the 21st century, the Dow will have to rise by December 31, 2099 to – brace yourself – precisely 2,011,011.23. But I’m willing to settle for 2,000,000; six years into this century, the Dow has gained not at all.


It's all very simple, ok maybe not... Regardless--

Perhaps its time we all reassess our values and instead of buying 'hype'-- we invest in knowledge to attempt to navigate this whole debacle ourselves-us 'Mainstreeters' of 'Main-street'- Unless of course we're gifted by God with an intellectual bailout of Wisdom endowed upon Washington DC, Wall Street, and anyone else in absolute 'jump out the window' panic.

Good Times~ More to Come

In the meantime-- While your 401k drops to a point where retirement (for me) seems like it'll start in my '80's :P I leave you with the British Comedy of Bird and Fortune...



~J out

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

My Eee PC: Making Sense for cents


Yesterday I got a chance to check out my new electronic/computing device: Asus's newest Eee PC model the 901 'netbook.' Upon unwrapping I was absolutely amazed at the size of it.. IT'S Small! (my own pictures coming soon)


(Stock Photo) (take two regular cd's and put them side by side to get an idea of the size of this keyboard.. )

The default OS was this Linux distribution of "Xandros" or something, but suffice to say whatever it was-- it sucked and degraded the overall value of the PC. That's harsh words, but it was true. The OS was built with tabs-- tabs that had applications but they were generic and tacky. My first inclination was that this was exactly what die hard windows lovers would want first time linux buyers to experience= A cruddy distro that looks like a toy's OS.

I got that-- except I'm no first time user and I happen to be an avid fan of Ubuntu. Having used linux regularly now for over 2 or 3 years I went ahead and hooked up my external cd player (something I was gifted years ago) and I installed Ubuntu's newest distro "Netbook Remix" with the Eee Custom Kernel.

The install took about 2 hours all said and told with everything working fine-- connecting to the internet via wifi and everything. So on that front-- I'm happy. However it's no fancy side toy-- I intend on using it often.

Usabilty and practical usage

This PC is going to be my satellite from home. The heavy computing and web serving and work horse I'll leave at home.. This pc I intend on using for front end work-- work such as 'blogging on the fly,' Iming, RSS reading, and whatever else I fancy. It's a computer on the go that I'm planning on configuring for what it's intended for... "Slimline Moble computing."

In English, I've ran into several moments when I needed a computer/laptop, but pulling it out-- booting it and using it was a drag. This, I know, I'll use because it's light, quiet, and the batt lasts a long time...

Ok enough of this banter-- I'm psyched (as you can tell).. Good times ;^P

~J out

Edit 12:00 (Lunch Time @ WholeFoodsMarket in Tanasbourne)***

Ok so to like kin da show/prove my point-- I'm sitting outside the local whole foods market at lunch time checking the email and blogging.. here's a pic via the Eee's webcam of me @ wholefoods.

peace!

~J out

Saturday, September 20, 2008

R3dnet Partially Up

Briefly I'll try to describe what all has been happening.

I've been messing around all week trying to configure this web server to run a simple bloglike front end while also maintaining a web file server type deal. Well it worked, then it didn't, then it did, then my mysql server got corrupted (without knowing).. it kept going on and on till today when I think.. I think... I did it right.

I hope.

~J

Monday, September 15, 2008

Building up R3dnet

Building up a new pet-project today called "R3dnet"

R3dnet is something I may have blogged about before, if not-- It's meant to be my personal server, the home server, my file browser, and web lab for my website I admin for (rangernet.org).

In essence it's for a dozen of things. So far I've set it up with Drupal CMS to manage documents and stuff, but my long term goal is design it into my main personal website which I plan to host previous term papers I wrote in college, link my blogs, pictures, (perhaps) install an online 'R3d-Radio' applet that plays Japanese music.

But I need to keep it limited because (at the moment) R3dnet lives on an old (tired) IBM e-Server with dual Pentium 3's in my room. So heavy bandwidth could blow the sucker.

If I upgrade the server or keep only 'light aps' running maybe I'll convert into my own customized webcenter.

Either way-- It took 2 hours to setup and I'm tired.

~J out

breaking the 180s

Here's a tiny little update..



I've been busting hard these past weeks in the gym to get back into decent shape and it seems my work hasn't gone unrewarded.

This morning after the shower I checked up on the scale to see where  all I was today and it read 189. So three or so weeks of hard work has brought me down from 199 to now in the 180's range.. ;-P

Waay to go me!

~J out

Monday, September 08, 2008

The Prestige

The first political science class I took in college my freshman year taught me that the hardest thing to do in electoral politics is to run against an incumbent. That, of course, isn't some rule or anything, but general fact about election politics. There's a number of reasons why, but two of the biggest reasons are that one, the incumbents' party is already established in office and the network is already there, the second is that a winning team-- well-- is good at winning.

We're about 8 months or so till America throttles back and gets serious. For nearly two years now every single angle of every presidential contender has been considered, debated, analyzed, and archived. Many who in the past two years have made history are history. The big question has finally arrived-- was America even listening?

If they weren't the last couple of months-- they are now. They're listening to tireless reports of how analysts are running into funny season in politics.

McCain's Road to victory:

"Four more years of Bush/Cheney" is old-- and moreover it's outdated. The election from one side or both have been back and forth over their 'more-refreshing-then-the-other-guy' message, except this is when it really counts and the Dems- Running out the DNC are still stuck on inner groove of their only record. I mean-- I was digging the tunes till someone forgot to flip the record over.. now it's the same over and over.

McCain has Palin though.. And with Palin-- McCain's tossed out the old record and slapped on a brand new one and the media wants a crack at hearing it. Pre-orders are already in for the hip fresh & new Palin interview and at a time when voters wanna know too.

People, especially the GOP base, are hyper sensitive to Spin & Bias now and who ever gets a Palin Preview has to know what to ask or else risk career suicide.

With the new numbers out putting McCain on top by a point outside the Margin of error-- Ball is already rolling leaving hungry angry supporters of the other guy wondering why he didn't drop his own surprise-bomb.

What a race-- The Finally tally hasn't been taken, but with the momentum building at the key moment when America is finally taking a look-- McCain/Palin '08 will likely be a finally for the recordbook ;-p

McCain/Palin- Reform, Honor, and Duty

~J out

Friday, September 05, 2008

Palin not just 'Wowing' Conservatives



If one strictly followed the US Media only, You would be led to believe
that Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin is only watched, and admired, by the
conservative right.. Not so.. according to Variety Magazine which
reported yesterday that infact Foreign Audiences, especially the
Japanese, are extremely interested (and enthusiastic) of the young Vice
Presidential Nominee.

From Variety Magazine:



Think Americans are the only ones fascinated with the Sarah Palin drama?

Hardly.

"Japanese
men and women are very interested in her," said Hiroki Sugita, a
reporter with Kyodo News Service, who has been covering the U.S.
presidential campaign, including both conventions...

...For the Japanese, Palin is the big story, and before Palin came along, it was Hillary Rodham Clinton.

"There
was very big interest in the primary between Hillary and Barack Obama,"
Sugita said. The hook was the breaking of barriers that the contest
represented: Americans were going to nominate either the first African
American or the first woman to the head of a major party ticket.

But it was Hillary who generated the most attention.

"When
she was running, it provoked a very big debate in Japan about how far a
woman can go, and it exposed a lot of hidden thoughts both in how men
think of women and how women think of themselves," Sugita said.

When
Hillary dropped out, Japanese readers continued to follow Obama but
were not much interested in McCain until he named Palin as his running
mate, Sugita continued.

"She has a strong character and she is
also very beautiful," he said. "She is kind of a role model for
Japanese women who pursue a career path and are also a mother and wife."

Palin's
speech Wednesday night was "very much viewed" in Japan. Big issues in
the election - the economy, the two wars, the healthcare system -
"aren't really understood or interesting to Japanese," Sugita said.
"But character issues are big interest because everyone can join in the
debate."

It seems as though Palin has perhaps won a greater audience then anyone could have imagined, Palin included.

Foreign policy experience or no... Palin is being received well by the global community which is definitely important when the job entails cooperation of other countries and their electorates.

I say, when the McCain Palin speech moves faster then Obama's then it's obviously time for a joint smear campaign to be launched soon (ruining the 'clean political platform of Obama by the way). However I think a massive win is on the horizon-- It's McCain/Palin and the world knows it.


~J out
(hat tip to Japan Probe)

**Edit:
This is the news article that the picture (above) came from. The article is in Japanese, but it reflects everything mentioned above.




Thursday, September 04, 2008

Hail'in Palin to the McCain/Palin ran whitehouse

Last night watching the stirring speech by Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin I was awestruck by the witty & charming appearance of a person ready to face a cynical, but accepting America. I happen to not be the only one too.

From the political mob squad of MSNBC's First Read-

From Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Domenico MontanaroST. PAUL, MN -- Last night’s speech by Palin made one thing very clear: Conservatives have found their Obama. Win or lose, Palin has already established herself as the future star of the party. She stayed within her comfort zone, avoiding issues she's not up-to-speed on just yet. The only question is whether her tough sarcastic words for Obama played well with swing voters, who were hearing her for the very first time.


The spin is that this goofy old vet just outta the blue picked Palin, but that's spin. If by that they judge McCain then all who fall in love at first sight, too need to rethink their hubbies and gals ;P.

No, Palin Showed us both the character of a westerner, the drive of a working class Mom, the determination of a real reformer, and the brazen armor that she can 'hack anything' you throw. And get ready for a whole lot more it too.

It's hard to judge the media since they're somewhat tied in ways to supporting the highest bidder's wishes, but the general thumb is a 110% attack after a rousing speech means someone has doubts over their (otherwise) invincible candidate.

Speculation aside-- I say the dems are showing some color. Out goes any notion of a "negative-free" campaign now someone is worried. If it isn't clear already there's factions to be dealt with on the otherside before any (cough) "UNITY" materializes. For one, notions of sexist commentary against Hilary, and now Palin need to end-- By going off on Palin you remind Hilary supporters both converts & others that the party you support don't support "working Mom's for VP."

Second-- The party of Minorities is dispelled. McCain reshuffled the deck of "political cards" when he picked Palin. It's now about whose reform is "actual" and whose reform is "re-hashed as political non-speak."

McCain/Palin haven't wrapped it up, but they're a unified force against a party of full of small cracks-- It's only a matter of time before the party divides-- Thus it might be crazy to say this, but it may be that a McCain/Palin administration is the best the Dems have at actual unification (since it's clear Bush/Chaney couldn't do it).

~J out

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Ready Mech

Part of the job that I love the most is that once in awhile I find some really fascinating stuff that people have done with the web. Some of these things might have been around for a long time, and some are brand new-- but it's near impossible to find them all which is why when I find something-- I consider it like I found a Gold Nugget.

One of those nuggets happens to be this site "Ready Mech"



From the site:

Readymechs are free, flatpack toys for you to print and build. They are
designed to fit on an 8.5"x11" page and printed with any printer.


Here's an example:



You can find more cute "origami" type projects at http://www.readymech.com/

Did I mention it was free?

DL one and try it out today will yah?

~J out

Entrenching the Youth?


I see it happening now more then ever-- it appears as though both parties want to train the youth of America to pick sides and to attack (with added fervor) opposing viewpoints. However, we are not the generation that rejects members for opposing viewpoints.. Or.. Are we??

Myspace, Facebook, and Blogs are what we've grown to use as our tool of expression. It's to over emphasize our diversity and to show there's more to us then 1 sided issues. We've been raised to view the world with 1 objective-- "To make it better.."

Now I understand both views.. I even understand the need to question the motives of each side-- but the youth of America and abroad need be wary of outright spewing hurtful and negative things that's been spun by smart political (albeit "old white haired dudes") spinmasters. We're smarter then that I thought-- Especially us who have gone to school and learned the value of considering both sides.

Our objective in this election is to consider all sides of a complex coin and to follow what we think and not what we're told to think. That's the essence of critical thinking and we'll be better equipt and more confident if we first question all that's presented first, then pass judgement last.

In other words:

Repeating Party/Spinmaster talking points ='s fail, Critically thinking and questioning those points ='s win!

;P

~J out

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Website building

Over the long weekend I had a chance to work on rebuilding my website community 'rangernet.org' so that it functions better with a portal environment.

The install went good with little problems and it's seemed to receive fairly good comments so I hope it works out.

Long term I want to transition the website to a more dynamic Content management system. I don't know what features I want to add, but it'll be complex.

Like a told one member on the forum, more features come as I learn more about the internet's secrets... ;)

~J out