Rick Perry vs. Barack Obama The campaign has begun
#61
Posted 2011-August-23, 15:42
#63
Posted 2011-August-24, 07:44
kenberg, on 2011-August-18, 10:51, said:
Nor am I. But that simply won't happen no matter who calls for it: the Fed is too tightly integrated with the whole financial system to be abolished now: Wall Street Aristocracy Got $1.2 Trillion in Fed’s Secret Loans
Quote
That was the same day as the firm’s $107.3 billion peak in borrowing from the central bank, which was the source of almost all of Morgan Stanley’s available cash, according to the lending data and documents released more than two years later by the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. The amount was almost three times the company’s total profits over the past decade, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Mark Lake, a spokesman for New York-based Morgan Stanley, said the crisis caused the industry to “fundamentally re-evaluate” the way it manages its cash.
The usual lessons apply: If you are going to be irresponsible with money, don't do it in a small way -- you will lose your home; instead do it in a massive way -- you will lose nothing.
One of my brothers, who is at Morgan Stanley, told me this summer that he has qualms about that whole situation (although he doesn't classify it as negatively as I do). And, despite his qualms, he's not planning to leave the company.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#64
Posted 2011-August-24, 11:26
#66
Posted 2011-August-26, 07:58
For example, did you know he was born in a manger in Bethlehem?
#67
Posted 2011-August-26, 11:09
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#68
Posted 2011-August-26, 12:10
blackshoe, on 2011-August-26, 11:09, said:
Exactly! Bethlehem is the new Kenya.
#69
Posted 2011-August-26, 12:15
#70
Posted 2011-August-26, 15:29
#71
Posted 2011-August-26, 19:33
luke warm, on 2011-August-26, 15:29, said:
Since cursive isn't a state-mandated testing subject, it isn't taught anymore. Don't you love the educational testing regime?
#72
Posted 2011-August-27, 06:02
jonottawa, on 2011-August-21, 00:25, said:
"Iraq, despite the brutality of Saddam Hussein, was a prosperous country with a highly educated middle class before the war. Its infrastructure was modern and efficient. Iraqis enjoyed a high standard of living. The country did not lack modern conveniences. Things worked. And being in Iraq, as I often was when I covered the Middle East for The New York Times, while unnerving because of state repression, was never a hardship. Since our occupation the country has tumbled into dysfunction. Factories, hospitals, power plants, phone service, sewage systems and electrical grids do not work. Iraqis, if they are lucky, get three hours of electricity a day. Try this in 110-degree heat. Poverty is endemic. More than a million Iraqi civilians have been killed. Nearly 5 million have been displaced from their homes or are refugees. The Mercer Quality of Living survey last year ranked Baghdad last among cities-the least livable on the planet. Iraq, which once controlled its own oil, has been forced to turn its oil concessions over to foreign corporations. That is what we have bequeathed to Iraq-violence, misery and theft."
Gosh Jon, I can't imagine why that Saddam Hussain follow decided on an unprevoked invasion of Iran in 1980. My Iraqi friends at the time weren't talking, for sure. Perhaps it had something to do with that German or that Italian guy and how that 1870's European experience was later interpreted by a miserable Christian Syrian. Old Saddam ended up messing with the day to day life of the rich countries in the world. The misery he brought down on his own people might have been less in perfect world if the good old USA had behaved differently, but you know about port-mortems.
#73
Posted 2011-August-27, 07:46
Elianna, on 2011-August-26, 19:33, said:
absolutely... i read somewhere that from 1967 on there was a steady downward curve in act and sat scores...
#74
Posted 2011-August-27, 08:16
luke warm, on 2011-August-27, 07:46, said:
Sure, but who can trust data?
#75
Posted 2011-August-27, 08:33
luke warm, on 2011-August-27, 07:46, said:
There are all kinds of explanations for this, one of which is that "in the old days" only top high school students expected to go to college and therefore took those tests, whereas today all except the bottom high school students do, so we're not comparing apples to apples.
#76
Posted 2011-August-27, 16:42
Bbradley62, on 2011-August-27, 08:33, said:
In other words, supply-side testing. No wonder data are ignored.
#78
Posted 2011-August-30, 17:43
Call me Desdinova...Eternal Light
C. It's the nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms.
IV: ace 333: pot should be game, idk
e: "Maybe God remembered how cute you were as a carrot."
#79
Posted 2011-August-31, 07:00
The problem is, it has become ok for politicians, as the mouthpieces for democracy, to put forward their own ideas on an equal footing. As if their opinion is equal. It would be much better, and more honest, for politicians to admit that they do not actually understand what is going on, and so they are seeking expert advice/consensus. In fact the opposite is happening, politicians are advancing their own ideas and assuming that because people voted for them, they must be right. A dangerous state of affairs.
#80
Posted 2011-August-31, 07:24
Lobowolf, on 2011-August-30, 17:43, said:
The answer is (effectively) yes
Back when I was taking standardized tests there was (often) a written component
You were not allowed to use cursive