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Peoplenomics Independence Journal Site Disclaimer Elliott Wave View as Blog

Published Monday - Friday about 8 AM Central Time Except Holidays....many major typos are fixed by 8:30 daily

Saturday June 20, 2009        07:08 A CDT    Business news from UrbanSurvival.com's RSS feed 

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Content mirrored at my other site: www.independencejournal.com,

 

Waiting For the Market Break

Since this is Saturday morning - and I don't do Saturday updates (save the energy for the Peoplenomics report, which this week will focus on how governments keep control of their subject/citizens/'consumers') I'll briefly point out that the market - as expected - went through a complete yawner yesterday at options expiration.  It got so boring that I turned my computer off about 10 AM Eastern and just worked on projects around the ranch.  Most days I check 3-20 times during the session but yesterday?  Ha! 

 

Next week on the other hand, and actually through mid-July, will likely be another story because we have some potentially market moving events on the horizon.

 

Frankly, combined this is all side show stuff.  The real movers next week are likely to involve fund managers trying to take profits off the table before the end of Q2 in order to hit bonus levels.  And, along with that, trying to get ready for whatever is next in the market.

 

Getting on the right side of the next move will be important if you have any money left from the meltdown in the Dow which once upon a time in October of 2007 was over 14,000.  Not trying to run salt in the wounds, but just saying that we have three major paths open to us.

 

The first is that the country goes into a period of additional deflation.  A search of news headlines for the word 'deflation' bring up tidbits like "Bank of Japan: Must keep close watch on deflation" and "Gold gains limited by deflation, dollar: Prechter."

 

But on the other side, Dr. Marc Faber of the Gloom, Boom, & Doom Report says Hyperinflation could hit US in 5-10- years.  And already, around the edges you can see troubling indicators.  For example, Austin Peay State University in Clarkesville, Tennessee is looking at a tuition increase of 6-9%.  That's be double the official cost of living numbers here lately.

 

You saw Nouriel Roubini's outlook?  No recovery till at least end of the year and then a weak and vulnerable state.

 

Balancing off the reports is difficult, time consuming, and just plain frustrating.  However, since my personal investment goals are a) party on and b) preserve whatever little purchasing power I have, my three-pronged approach is really simple:

  • One third in paid for property which has some ag value

  • One third in cash & T-bills

  • One third in precious metals

 

In the ultimate worst case either on the inflation side (and where I've been nibbling at long-term silver call options here lately as a hedge) or on the deflation side when treasuries would be the winning bet to maintain purchasing power, I still would be able to eat; something pretty far up there on my agenda.

 

This is definitely not a 'get rich quick' kind of environment, so I'm not going to waste any of my time or yours suggesting otherwise.

---

So while I sit back and wait for the titanic forces of finance to sort out the present mess (and linguistically head toward hyperinflation late this year and into 2010), the real problem is where to move money when a break toward inflation or deflation happens. 

 

The problem, to take the hyperinflationary course, is what do you buy if you see hyperinflation coming?  Already gold deliveries are slow and even though I've got a stone and acid for testing quality of coins (along with a micrometer, etc...) buying gold when it's taking off seems problematic.

 

The alternative I'm considering is purchase of additional ag land that adjoins our property, but the longer term problem there has to do with taxes and that local governments are likely to be finding federal bucks harder to come by (since the federal government has money issues itself) and that means the local folks will come after the landowners. 

 

Seems like there's just no 'easy win' out there, other than to look for a country where you pay the taxes just once when you buy property and then that's it.  Simple transfer taxes at sale time work fine in places like the Cayman Islands, but they have the good sense to have Cayman Island dollars that give them a 20% spread over the US dollar. 

 

Effectively, they tax imports this way, something we should be doing in my view, but the wage-rate-differential corpsters would squeal like pigs (for reasons that are porcinely obvious).  Then they'd run up the false banner of 'free markets' which means, best I can tell, that it's OK for them to pay a worker in some backwater third world sweat shop 50¢ an hour so they can take the labor rate differential ' betwix thar and here'  and buy a new Lexus every year and live in The Hamptons, or whatever.

 

A break to the deflationary side is also problematic, but less so, since the government will have plenty of paper to sell thanks to the bailout of the banksters.

 

No, I don't have any grand illusions about changing the world, but with the limited way I can 'vote with my wallet', seems that investing in staples of life (land, food, education, etc) will have at least as good a payback as treasuries or precious metals in the very short term. 

 

Could it be the best possible investment these days is a treadmill?  Oh the ponderings.  Thankfully it's the weekend and we can all sit back and ask "WTF is going on here?"

 

Three More Banks Fail

One thing is banks are still failing:

 

I've given up counting

 

Terra Changes

Good BBC video on how "Glacier melt chances Italian border..."

 

Right Kinda 'Tude

Attitude is everything & readers are sometimes geniuses.  Take for example the email that came in under the subject line "Write When You Get Rich..."

"Cash for clunkers". Well George, I am rich, just check out my driveway. "

I loved it.  Why they couldn't have just said something simple like "Under 18 MPG combined OR has more than 100,000 miles on it and you deserve better..." is just beyond me.  But then the "You deserve better could be applied to a lot of things, now, couldn't it?

 

Around the Ranch:  Field Day Preps

Off to a ham radio breakfast this morning - so part of the reason for a short column.  Don't forget last Saturday in June is ham radio field day - when a bunch of radio nuts go off into the hinterlands, suffer through mosquitoes and warm beer and try to make as many radio contacts with any many other stations as we can while running on generators, solar, wind, and whatever else we can cobble up in the way of power.

 

Pound on a Morse code key, or moving pictures around the world without the internet may seem like a dumb hobby, but no more so than 'drowning worms'.  Besides, we get to use soldering irons and scopes, LOL.

 

See you bright and early Monday morning...

---

Send comments to george@ure.net

---

For Your Money's Worth:

Obama's Reconstruction Problem

This may sound a little odd - to be talking about the reconstruction plans of the Obama Administration, since there hasn't been a big enough disturbance to the economy to require any 'reconstructing' yet.  But, since I have a few clues as to what will be in the next predictive linguistics update, and because the second leg down in the derivatives disaster will likely be pulling into view before September, I figure it's as good a time as any to consider how America's future could work out.  In the process, I'm guided to some extent by After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies.  In order to do this efficiently, I've written up a PowerPoint and I show you the slides I'd put up in a board room if someone were foolish enough to ask me to place some bets on how the future's going to work out. Not foolish because I'd be wrong, but maybe foolish because who wants to see this coming?

More For Subscribers              Subscription Information

MyGroPonics

My commodity broker JB Slear has nailed a great solution for people who living in apartments and condos who want to become at least partially self-reliant when it comes to raising food:  An ultra-high efficiency micro-hydroponics system using readily available local parts. 25-pages and plenty of pictures to turn you into a farmer no matter where you live (Great if you have back problems, too...)...or if you just want to fill up the back yard with MyGroPonics trees and feed the neighborhood... $10 bucks here...

 

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Maxa-Cookie Manager

Maxa-Tools has provided us with a free demo - which you're welcome to try - of their dandy cookie manager tool that I use here on all my computers.  It shows both the browser-specific and the newer browser-independent cookies.  Quite happy with it.

 

Here's the download link for the free demo:

 

www.urbansurvival.com/setupMCMstdGU.exe

 

Once you try it out, click the upgrade button (!) on the upper right hand side for the $35 unlock to get it to remove even those pesky 'non-browser specific' cookies.  Bonus:  You computer may run faster.  I took over 1,000 cookies off my son's machine that he swore was clean.  It ran much faster.

 

Shameless Self Promotion

UrbanSurvival just keeps getting more popular - thanks to your help.  (Oh, sure, sometimes because we tell you the news before it happens and because my economic analysis has been better than 99% of the PowersThatBe who obviously don't get it; but let's not go into chest-pounding mode...)  So don't stop now.  Tell all your friends to wander on by for an uncommon mixture of relevant & real economics, humor such as it is, preparedness, all served up with the occasional side order of ...well, weird.  Click here for a tool that may help.  (It'll pop up an email window if youi use Outlook (or a few other email programs) then simply send a link to everyone on your distro list...

 

"Live on $10,000" Updated

What?  You haven't ordered the ebook "How to Live on $10,000 a year -- or less"?  Suit yourself.  We're all going to live it shortly, anyway.  I just thought you might like a heads up by reading about how to do it before you get pink-slipped.  But, suit yourself OR visit www.liveontenthousand.com or, click one of the following button:

 

 Buy Now

 

Yep - still possible.  I also took a bit of additional material that was pertinent from recent issues of Peoplenomics and included them.  The whole thing runs about 65 pages, but it gives you a vision of how to not only live on the aforementioned dollar amount, but also how to migrate up the economic foodchain if you make a little more than that and do some active savings...  Click here for the page with more details on it.

----

 Last week's report is here.    For back issues of this site, click here.  (Goes back to 1997!)

 


Friday June 19, 2009

Witches, Bonds, & Poets

"Double, double, toil and trouble, fire, burn, and cauldron bubble..." 

 

Got your options calendar handy?  This could be a pretty boring triple witching options expiration day.  Why?  Well, for on thing it's not until next week that the Treasury is planning to auction off $104-billion in bonds. That's the 800-pound gorilla.  Higher bond yields drive stocks down and I wouldn't be surprised to see the yields coming up next week.

 

Depending on what you think they'll go for, that could push the market around a bit.  So far though, calm in Europe where the FTSE was up a bit.  Futures here in the US are up, too.

 

Last options expiration (May 15th) the Dow closed at 8,268.64.  Yesterday it closed at 8,555.60 - so up about 3.4% in a month.

 

Which gets me around to the interesting question:  How much of this gain has been related to actually improved sales prospects for the underlying companies that make up the indices, and how much can be laid at the feet of inflation?  I don't expect an answer right now, just something to think about.

 

The Thursday release of the Leading Economic Indicators by The Conference Board certainly supports the notion that things are turning upward, however slowly:

 

 

I'll be keeping a sharp eye on the LEI reports over the next couple of months.  Encouraging now?  You bet!  But, if the linguistics are right, over the course of July to late August, the derivatives mess will come back into focus, as if it does - and if that sets up a major decline into the Fall, then the LEI may be painting little more than a head-fake.

 

"Aye of Newt, bond of ink, wool of sheep and corpgov think..."

"The market heads to powerful trouble, like a hell-broth with derivatives bubbles."

 

But for now, "It's all good" till maybe mid August.

 

Rocket's Red Glare Department

Oh, this is just dandy:  "Japan warns that North Korea may file missile at U.S. on Independence Day."  But, of course, they'll miss.  How come? Even if they get 4,000 mile range out of their Taepodong 2 that still leaves them about 1,200 miles short of Hawaii.

 

Don't want to state the obvious here, but if you know of another piece of waterfront close to their labs where the NK's could fire off something out 4,000 miles where it would have a lesser chance of landing on anything, I'm sure they'd love to hear from you.

 

The US is tracking a suspicious ship from North Korea, meantime.  Two bets going around:  One is that this is a down range tracking ship.  Other bet is that it's a launch platform and our navy's likely to hail and query it as to what it's doing out there in the mid Pacific.

 

Meantime, I'm hearing that some non-essential folks are quietly moving off Okinawa...nothing 'fishul yet, but talk among readers out that'a way.

 

Conan's Barbarian?

UK headline this morning: "Star Trek actor William Shatner turns into nightmare guest on U.S. chatshow as he makes series of rude hand gestures..."  Damn.  Sorry I missed it!  Well, I didn't since  it's on YouTube already...do the UK headlines overplay the part?  Judge for yourself.

 

More Torture

Interesting read over at the IndyBay website about  how "U.S.-Trained and Funded Philippine Military Implicated in Abduction, Torture of American."

 

Since the US has set such a fine example of state torture, seems to be catching on.  Dandy, huh? Gotta love that moral high ground we're on...'specially since the fact is that someone being tortured will say damn near anything to make the torture stop.  But, of course, corpgov doesn't want you figuring that one out...national security, don'tcha know.  Hey, what are you doing with that wash cloth?

 

Iran's Election

No massive election fraud here, says Iran's supreme leader.  Tweet me up a flash mob, wouldja?

 

Papering Over

Hard sell is on for the idea that those $134-billion in bonds are fakes. Darn...made such a fine story, too.  Reader note:

"there was a story/opinion piece at bloomberg yesterday (i can't relocate it) anyway, the guy commented that maybe there is a whole lot MORE "money/bonds treasuries" floating around out there, and I started thinking "is this why they stopped tracking of revealing the M3 back in 2006?"

Nope.  Reason they pushed M-3 under the table is so that thoughtful people (like the kind that hang around here) won't be able to watch how the papering over of the Second Depression is going.  It doesn't seem to have occurred to monetary geniuses that folks like John Williams (Shadow Stats) and posted at Trader Bart's site here, show that M-3 is going up at a tad over 16% annually, which with 4% inflation visible, means deflation of 11% annualized is going on and that sucks.

 

But no, we don't notice those things...but thanks fer askin'

 

--- snip and save section ---

 

Coping:  Street Level Economics

Every so often I get some grand emails from folks out and about who have a great person-to-person look at the world which is often vastly different that what comes over corpgov teevee.  Take this one from Iraq, just for instance:

"Jorge! Thought I’d use the Spanish version as I’m soon to relocate (long with 80% of my expat co-workers) to Costa Rica. If you recall, I was the one giving you the intel scene from Kuwait a time back, and have since November come back “Up North” to Iraq as the $$$ scene in Kuwait had pretty much flat lined when the economy took a big dump last fall. Big dump in that the majority of contracts weren’t being renewed, (individuals that is… the Corporations had the same amount of work, they just started doing the ‘more with less’ thing again and saving $$$ on personnel.) Thing is, once one is addicted to the 86K +/- tax free, it’s damned hard to go back to “Dilbert’s World” in the cubes, and especially harder seeing that there just ain’t no jobs out there for a former soldier to have.

Tinfoil moment makes me think that’s part of the reason we keep in wars left right and centre… the CorpGov can’t afford to unleash a quarter million heavily trained troops into the workforce… think what happened after Gulf One (1990) when Haich Dub the First riff’ed about 3 divisions back into civvies… I was one of them back then and spent two years almost dying to get back in uniform. Nowadays, the troops have BT-DT (been there done that) and most if not ALL of them have ‘trigger time’ and face time killing the enemy. Scary concept to try and close down the wars and get it into a “Dogs and Soldiers Keep Off The Grass” eh? Unlike the wars of times past, this ‘Columbine Generation’ doesn’t fear anyone in power, and are so well trained that it makes me wonder that if the Lefties in the Obama world realize that they HAVE to keep these kids busy, lest we see what you and Cliff have been charting vis-à-vis the revolution meme.

Otherwise, Iraq is no less dangerous than Detroit. Actually, I drive downtown in my unarmored Chevy regularly, unarmored myself and no weapon either. I wouldn’t in Detroit. Baghdad hosted its first tourist group in like 30 years a few months ago, and besides the occasional flare up of the retards who think it’s fun to shoot mortars at the FOBs, the amount of violence is negligible. This stated, it means I’ll probably have someone trying to nab me and cut my casaba off on YouTube but eh… realistically, its mellowed… and I speak this as a ‘homeboy’ as I’ve been here off and on since the end of 03, and if it wasn’t for the heat and lack of decent water, I’d stay longer.

My hopes however, is that we got to war with, oh say Turks and Caicos… or even Jamaica… I heard them Ire-Boys been giving Florida some eeeeevil looks… I say we invade, and I’ll help secure the crops…. Er… the beaches… yeah that’s it… Toke… er… Talk to you later!

Ah, some fine economic and political content to gnaw through here.  First off, you're absolutely right about the Columbine generation now defending the country.  A goodly number have figured out that the reason the Obama administration is still signing war spending measures (and the latest one is in process of being rubber-stamped) is that there's no way that any of the powers that be want a well-trained - let alone fearless group of Constitution defenders showing up.  Why, that's about the worst nightmare that could come along.

 

The answer, is, as Orwell put it so well thirty-odd years back, is 'permanent war for permanent peace..."  Except'in of course, there ain't no peace because no profit in that.

 

If you think the world is facing a pandemic of swine flu this fall (we are) and that when the second leg down of Depression Two begins, that will be the most serious threat to the nation ever, then think again. 

 

I'd offer that the most serious threat to America is that people are starting to think and no matter how many wars, how much fluoride in the water, no many how many people Big Pharma can get addicted toi pain pills, no matter how many former soldiers will be put on 'can't own a gun list' because of 'combat stress', and no matter that within a year the free expression on the internet wi9ll disappear as a last-gasp attempt by the current ruling paradigm to buy self-preservation by tearing up the rights of free speech, there will still be a few folks who will 'get it'.

---

Still, your idea of invading the Caribbean makes total sense.  I, for one, will volunteer to do a little wall diving off Grand Turk...and say, is the Kittina still there?  And what ever happened to 'the Colonel' who used to hang there?

 

Yes, I can see the need to take Dunn's River Falls in Jamaica, too.  And SunSplash in Montego Bay?  Why, all them rasterboys gotta be sharin' de ganj  mon.  Could perhaps the Benedictines learn a bit about religious agriculture from 'em, I wonder? 

 

I'm afraid, however, that this idea to liberation of the rum & ganj islands is unlikely. More in line with current thinking, we're still paying for liberating The Hamptons and other haunts of the rich & blingfull.  Until we start printing up bailout vouchers for places like Telluride, Vail, and Jackson Hole up in veep Dick country, plate's kinda full. Oh, and we still gotta get at Iran's oil, too...speaking of which...

 

Oh, since you're in 'Raq, don't forget to say "Hi" to the local alphabet agency folks for us.  I'm admiring their fine orchestration of tweets and texts to whip up the opposition in Iran.  Helluvit is, though, that what they're learning there about flash mobbing is exactly why the Internet/texting/and SMS may not have a long future here in the once Home of the Free.

 

Freedom's a fine thing, and all.  But where's the profit in that?

 

Cash For Clunkers

Good article on the cash-for-clunkers bill that's coming down the pike.  I only have two problems with it.

 

1.  It rewards people who were  NOT sensitive to the environment since the threshold is you'll only get the credit if your combined MPG is 18 MPG or less.  And...

 

2.  Our old Daewoo Leganza which I'm about to put a replacement radiator in after that wolf/coyote took out the old one on the highway last week has a combined 21 MPG rating.  George is screwed for doing the right thing, again.

 

Is this like the whole new way of the world?  Do right, get screwed?

 

Well, I see where there's a different rule for pickups, and my 2001 Dodge Ram would qualify so maybe a new farm truck is the sheep trail to be chosen.  Maybe I'll just keep patching up the 'Woo...  Got anything without electronic engine management? 

 


Thursday June 18, 2009

Memories of Monopoly

As I was contemplating my navel Wednesday, along with the fine print of the 'financial reform' proposals from the Obama administration, which seem to boil down to more government - and in particular more power for the Fed - I was struck by something:  Why not bust up the Fed?  Or at least bust up the problematic banks and paper-slinging outfits?

 

We already have a prototype for monopoly busting in America - in the break-up of AT&T - a move which arguably was a pretty good one, if you can remember at the back to 1974.

 

The country's present financial condition is indeed precarious, and as our predictive linguistics pals reassure us, they're about to get a whole order of magnitude worse when commercial real estate and Derivatives Crisis II show up in a month or three, so what's the structural solution to what ails us?

 

When I read about the trillions of dollars worth of bailouts, TARP'ing and so on, I keep coming back to the fundamental design pattern at the root of where we are:  The whole notion of too big to fail.

---

The engineering concept is well known and well documented:  It's under "single point of failure".  Look up SPOF and you'll find all kinds of good science on mean time between failures and so on.

 

You want the answer to the nation's financial crisis - both now and going forward?  It's right there in Wikipedia...but too many of the so-called 'economists' who believe in Keynesian horse pooty and that inflation is somehow acceptable (e.g. trashing purchasing power to pay those who demand interest/rent on money) have never studied outside of their own inbred boxes.  So here's the lesson...ready?

The strategy to prevent total system failure is

Reduced Complexity

Complex systems shall be designed according to principles decomposing complexity to the required level.

Redundancy

Redundant systems include a double instance for any critical component with an automatic and robust switch or handle to turn control over to the other well functioning unit (failover)

Diversity

Diversity design is a special redundancy concept that cares for the doubling of functionality in completely different design setups of components to decrease the probability that redundant components might fail both at the same time under identical conditions.

Transparency

Whatever systems design will deliver, long term reliability is based on transparent and comprehensive documentation.

Next time you hear about a company that is "too big to fail" - remember, there is an alternative to printing up a whole bushel basket of money and laying the debt involved off on our kids and grand kids:  Simple bust up the "too big" operation into a series of smaller ones that are NOT too big to fail.  And then stand back and let the market forces work things out as they will.  Failure is both episodic and necessary...it's the humus on the forest floor of economics.  Has everyone forgotten that?

 

Seemed to work for the regional Bell operating companies after the AT&T break-up, no?

 

It's like Harold Geneen - once CEO of ITT - said: "The only unforgivable sin in business is to run out of cash."  We have a whole country right there, right now.

 

Absent a little new thinking (which is laughably absent) where we're going is horrifically clear...although the train coming down that track will be another month or three before it runs us over.  That gives you just time to read "Hyperinflation: The story of 9 Failed Currencies".

 

What both the Fed and the White House seem to miss is that no matter how much Tarp & Talk goes on TV, where the rubber meets the road, credit card companies are still in the tightening mode, as this NY Times article points out.

 

You saw the latest May traffic stats out of the Port of Los Angeles?  Imports down 18%.

 

Gee, here's a startling thought: No money, no room on the credit cards means no import demand.  Radical, huh?  When future history is written look for something that says "One of the dumbest moves was to cut credit card limits at exactly the moment people needed additional purchasing power to propel the country out of recession and to hang onto their homes."

 

We either break up banker cartels, or we write off America via hyperinflation. It's this latter course that's now baked in the cake seemingly.

---

Why we're not applying established monopoly-busting as was applied to AT&T to these financial outfits that have America by the financial nuts is plain crazy.  Here lately I'm becoming convinced that crazy, with a strong minor in denial psychology and complete ignorance of design patterns and interdisciplinary studies, is a mandatory prerequisite to holding office or being a mainstream sell-out economist.

 

The "Ultimate Conspiracy Theory"

OK, so a reader sends in a reminder of the WSJ Online headline recently:  "Treasury Has $134.5 Billion Left in TARP."  Date on story:  March 30th of this year.  And then those two Japanese fellows were busted with how much? $134-billion in bonds.

 

Naturally, UrbanSurvival readers are wondering "Was this our own government sneaking money outside the country in order to have some ready cash for when our economy implodes later this year?"

 

Tisk, tisk.  Perish such thoughts.  We're reassured that the bonds are fakes.  But then again, what would youi expect the official word on this to be? "Oh, we're just diversifying TARP dough into FOREX"?  Quick, hand me the Reynolds Wrap...something must be getting through my tinfoil this morning.

 

Greased

I see where oil is back over $71 a barrel as the oil cartel sheiks a few more bucks out of the American consumer.

 

Price at the pump is up 50-days running now, notes CNN Money.  And a pipeline has been blown up by militants in Nigeria.  Ever wonder if options players send money to militants?  More tinfoil, please.

 

RV's In Decline

See where Winnebago just posted a loss?  I'm thinking about a used RV - could use it for a guest house, bug out vehicle (if a short wheelbase) and darned, they are cheap on Craigslist here lately.. 

 

Plagued

The WHO is sending an expert to Libya to see if that's really the Black Death - bubonic plague - that has popped up.  It's just a handful of cases, but thanks to modern jet travel, a handful could turn to pandemic in no time, as any student of Mary Mallon's history will know.

 

"Mary who?" you're thinking.  Typhoid Mary....is it that early?

---

Brazil finds a new strain of H1N1 virus.  How do you say "Bend over and roll up your sleeve"?

 

Lakes on Mars

Hold the press!  A University of Colorado teams finds definitive evidence for ancient lake on Mars.  Understand land is cheap there...

---

But seriously:  We have to stop this space exploration stuff immediately since it would be absolutely nuts to export our system of "owning" the land to other worlds, unless, of course, under it all NASA is planning to make back all our billions by selling off real estate of other worlds? Hmmm...

 

Happy in the Hinterlands

A press release from the Census Bureau reveals some interesting trends if'n you're thinking about settling down somewhere:

"Outlying counties in metropolitan statistical areas grew faster than central counties between 2000 and 2007, according to a Census Bureau report released today. These outlying counties saw their population increase 13 percent, compared with an 8 percent increase for the central counties of metro areas. Metro area central and outlying counties both grew faster than the remainder of the nation (2 percent).

The report, Population Change in Central and Outlying Counties of Metropolitan Statistical Areas: 2000 to 2007, provides an analysis of population change and demographic components of change over the period. Central counties contain all or a substantial portion of the core urban area of the metro area. Metro areas may also contain outlying counties: adjacent counties that have a high degree of social and economic integration (as measured by commuting to work) with the central counties. The population change in central and outlying counties is examined by region, division and metro area population size category.

More than 80 percent, or 252 million, of the nation's population live in metro areas. About 92 percent of these people live in central counties.

The report shows that outlying counties grew faster in the South (17 percent) than in any other region. The percentage-point difference in growth between the South's outlying and central counties (which grew by 11 percent) was the largest among the four regions. Besides the South, outlying counties also grew faster than central counties in the Midwest and West.

Other highlights:

-- Outlying counties as a whole grew more through net migration than through natural increase (defined as births minus deaths). Nationwide, the average annual rate of net migration for outlying counties was 12.5 per 1,000 population compared to a 4.8 per 1,000 average annual rate of natural increase. Central counties followed the opposite pattern, with a larger proportion of their growth attributable to natural increase (6.6 per 1,000) than to net migration (3.6 per 1,000).

-- Outlying counties grew faster than central counties in each of the three most populous metro area size categories -- including those metro areas with April 1, 2000, total populations of 5 million or more, those between 2.5 million and 5 million, and those between 1 million and 2.5 million in population -- as well as in metro areas with populations between 250,000 and 500,000.

-- Among the nation's nine census divisions, the Mountain Division (Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming) experienced the highest percentage growth in its metro area population at 20 percent.

That was before the housing bubble got pricked, of course.

 

--- snip and save section ---

 

Coping: With Cougars

Neighbor up the hill came by last night and try as I might, we never did quite get around to having our "What to do about the cougar" talk.  Did get quite a range of opinions sent in by readers, though.

 

As you'd expect, there were some who took the "Nice kitty kitty..." approach.  Be sure and count your fingers after that.  A couple bemoaned that in Canada, pistols are pretty much verboten unless you're a woodsman or trapper and the paperwork to even own a handgun is monstrous.

 

A few sent in this link to a current cougar problem up in British Columbia.  My other neighbor (across the road) has a new "solution".  Have you seen the new revolver that shoots either a .45 long cartridge or a .410 shotgun shell?  Holy smokes!  Long cylinder on that beast...and spendy too: $500+ range at retail, MSRP around six and a half.  Shells about the size of your little finger...

---

Cougar and kit are safe for now...  Reader ideas coming in:

You are going a little overboard on this cougar issue. We here in west central Illinois have had cougars around for years. They are rarely seen, but are out there. The deer population is so great that they don't need much else to survive on. They avoid all humans in a big way. The only problem in your area is if they have ample food supply of deer and such. As long as food is plenty, you really don't have to worry much about them attacking anyone. They are stealthy as hell. With all the dear hunting in our area, hunters rarely see one and I mean allot of hunters up in tree stands camouflaged sitting for hours. If I had to guess, you probably won't even see one, but may hear one at night screaming like a women. Thinning the deer out in our area is a good thing, we have too many as it is. The best advice I can give you if you are still worried is, when you go out into the brush or woods, just make sure that you take someone along that doesn't run faster than you!

Good point...wonder how fast the neighbor up the hill can run? Half my age equals twice as fast?  Wonder how that math works.    And there's this:

Hi George, Living here in Montana we deal with them all of the time, all ready this year they have killed three lions that were right in town! And two days ago one of the neighbors had a fresh killed deer dragged up under his deck another woke up at 3am because his dog was going nuts and when he looked out side there was lion laying right up on his deck! The point is this if you are seeing this cat it has lost it's fear of pepole, trapping them and moving them does not work period end of story and that comes direct the FWP biologist. If you move them they will come right back! My best advice to you and your neighbors is to shoot on site and answer questions later! [or adapt the triple S policy-shoot shovel and shut up] Lions are extremely dangerous all they see in humans is a scooby snack. If you want a really good read on the subject get a copy of the book Monsters in the Garden. It will really open your eyes to what you are dealing with.

Damn Smart Readers Department

Uh huh.  Here's a note...

"The idea is that if your boat sinks from under you, you'll have a VHF handheld radio (modified to work on all VHF frequencies, including the aircraft 121.5 MHz emergency frequency "

I thought Aircraft frequencies were AM modulated, can you modify a VHF FM HT to xmit on AM?

Specs on the VX-7r and VX-8r - just for example include A3E...but fine catch there. Since these radios have general coverage receivers (cell blocked, but you know about mods, right?) how come no product detector and BFO for SSB? Throw in a CW filter while you're at it and make a plug & play matching HF transmitter of the 5-watt class... Can't be more than a dime or two worth of parts...

 

Speaking of Electronics

We weren't, but keep up here:  There was a dandy review of a new gotta-have-it-toy in the latest issue of the ham radio publication QST of an ultrasonic receiver.  This is an inexpensive kit that for about $70-bucks (and some time behind a soldering iron, a sure cure for work pressure any time) will give you something that can pick up the noises of bats and what have you.  Quite cool.\\

 

Source: http://www.midnightscience.com/ultra-kits.html

 

In Defense of Hawaii

A reader who grew up in paradise, says it's not at all unreasonable about Hawaii wanting to make even pocket knives illegal:

"Hawaii's going after knives for two reasons I can think of. First, very strict gun laws, so the baddies turn to knives. And secondly, lots of baddies, they have a huge meth problem and a high rate of violence, which hurts tourism. The economy tanking has made the violence worse of course. A person can bleed a LOT and make a BIG mess when all carved up, and since guns are so tightly controlled, they're seeing more of this in all its spectacularism, and on an emotional level it's then easy to see them wanting to ban knives.

I grew up there - did the sensible thing and got the hell out as soon as I could. It'd be a nice place with 1/10th the people.

As for the coconuts, yes you can get in legal trouble for not having your trees trimmed. Trimming involves taking off all dead leaves, fully mature leaves, nuts, flowers, etc., and pretty much discourages the tree from making more large nuts for a bit. They try to keep it where the trees are trimmed back enough that the largest thing that falls is about the size of a hand grenade. As a coconut flower grows, the nuts crowd each other out so you get falling nuts of all sizes. Tropical trees are kinda constant producers of leaves, flowers, seeds, nuts, pods, etc., which rain down on everything at a rate that a Mainland person can't comprehend. The biological turnover is amazing.

Well, sorry, but the answer to a meth problem is NOT taking right away from people.  It's about legalizing plants that the booze lobby is so dead-set against and getting the meth-heads into treatment.  Too simple?  Pardon moi....

 

Crime is one of the biggest businesses in America.  Why, without all those police  cars, where would Detroit be?  Without all those lawyers, who would attend law school?

 

Listen to me:  If we want to solve the economic problems of America, what we need is more crime and for sure a broader definition of terrorism.  Let's get to building more prisons so we can all take turns locking each other up!  Yeah, that's it....fine spin on the shopkeeper economy, don't you think?

 

Missing Time Department

Friend of mine in L.A. reports that she had some 'missing time' yesterday.  She'd set her watch by her cell phone time...and happened to wear it to bed.

 

Now the interesting facts are that she a) woke up with a bloody nose - first bloody nose she has had in 40-years and b) her watch - one of those fancy ones that shows two time zones, which had been set perfectly the day before, had a 55-minute difference.  Eastern time was right on, but Kalifornia time was 55-minutes off.

 

Conclusion:  Aliens who are abducting people aren't smart enough to change two times on a watch, LOL.  So whatever their agenda is, they ain't all that smart.  Come to think of it, judging by the people we elect, neither are we.  But, that's neither here, nor there.

 

Just a weird 55-minute difference between watch settings and a bloody nose.  Draw your own conclusions, but it's an interesting report from a trusted source that preoccupies my monkey mind this morning.  Maybe they just don't 'get it' with time zones or two  time zone watches aren't in their operating manual yet.  Ponder, ponder, pass the tinfoil again?


Wednesday June 17, 2009

CPI, CP Owe

And yippee kai yi yay, git along little sheeple.  Wallet-BOHICA Wednesday is here!

"The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) increased 0.3 percent in May before seasonal adjustment, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. Over the last 12 months the index has fallen 1.3 percent. This is the largest decline since April 1950 and is due mainly to a 27.3 percent decline in the energy index.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the CPI-U increased 0.1 percent in May after being unchanged in April. The index for energy, which had declined the previous two months, rose 0.2 percent in May as an increase in the gasoline index more than offset declines in other energy indexes. The food index decreased for the fourth consecutive month, falling 0.2 percent as the indexes for all major grocery store food groups declined.

The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.1 percent in May following a 0.3 percent increase in April. The smaller increase was partly due to the tobacco and smoking products index, which turned down in May after rising sharply in March and April. In May, the indexes for shelter, new and used motor vehicles, and medical care posted increases, while the public transportation index fell 1.0 percent and the indexes for apparel and tobacco declined slightly. The index for all items less food and energy has increased 1.8 percent over the last 12 months.

Hmmm...transport component was down 14.3% compared with a year ago.  Guess what?  Energy was down 27.3% unadjusted from a year ago.

 

Financial Messiahs Arrive - Again

No yawning - save it for 12:30 PM as about then, you'll want to have some popcorn handy and be grandly entertained as the Obama administration rolls out "Financial Regulation Reform."  Reform?  Gasp!  Kack!.....Let's compare the Obama reform plan and something I call "Plan G" [as in George] reform and you tell me what makes the most sense:

 

Obama Plan  Plan "G"
More regulatory powers to the banker-owned Fed in areas like mortgages, credit cards and banking End Fed.  Have Congress resume it's constitutionally mandated role in creating and regulating 'money.'
SEC focus on investor protection coordinated with Fed Have SEC get off its ass and ban naked short selling- Anything less is Scam 2.0
Fed takes over the role of Office of Thrift Supervision Office of Comptroller General given supervisory power over bankster-owned fed
Regulate derivatives with phased in regulations It'll be too late. Ban derivatives. Delever, delever, delever.  Did I say too late?
SEC and CFTC to be 'harmonized" Audit Federal Reserve and all US Gold Holdings. Audit all commodity warehouses for 'double ownership'.  Require metals ETF';s to actually own segregated physical commodities.  Delever, delever...too late!
Reassert faith in nation's financial system Stop printing money and deficit spending OR reassert faith in the Easter Bunny, too

 

Well, a little harsh, but it's another day of Obama TV.  No way does Plan G have a chance, and Plan O is nothing more than tip-toeing around the hard issues which aren't going to raise campaign money for the democons or republicorps. 

 

Ah, but we still have the best government money can buy, though.

 

Wonder if Big O will explain what that $134-billion of bonds was doing in Italy?  No?  Gee...look surprised.

 

Exclusive!

Credit Report Scores Revealed!

Our resident cartoonista is brandishing more economic truth than you may be comfortable with...so fine - here's the latest from www.toon-republic.com's Rebecca Price:

 

 

Paranoia Strikes Deep...

...into your heart it will creep."  Lyrics from the Buffalo Springfield song "For What It's Worth"

 

If you're wondering why the song is coming to mind, you must not have seen the mass public programming effort underway in Melbourne Australia where "Melburnians urged to have Go Bags ready in case of evacuation..."

 

Why, I haven't heard of grab & go bag since I was living on my sailboat, where a grab & go kit is standard fare offshore.  The idea is that if your boat sinks from under you, you'll have a VHF handheld radio (modified to work on all VHF frequencies, including the aircraft 121.5 MHz emergency frequency, a gallon of water, survival gear including a solar still and fishing gear, a deck of cards and so forth...)

 

But a grab and go kit in Melbourne? 

---

It could be that the city fathers (and mothers) of Melbourne have been reading cheery reports like "World's megacities ripe for 'megadisaster'.

---

At some point, I rather expect a series of mega disasters.  Why?  The crooks who orchestrate things behind the scenes in the financial markets will need something BIG to cover their crimes and put the public off their scent.

 

What they don't want leaking out is the notion that printing up paper with nothing more than ink and a promise doesn't work very well as a long-term store of value.  Which is why a steak dinner in the days before the Federal Reserve cost $1 dollar.  today, it's 20-times that which means the purchasing power of money has been watered down twenty-times-over since 1913.  Well, more actually, but it's all hidden in plain sight behind the big lie "Prices Go Up!"

 

Truth is that "Money is being watered down."  Irwin Allen couldn't cook up a bigger disaster movie.  titles like  "The Poseidon Derivative", or "Towering Bankferno" rush to mind.

 

Guerrillas in Greece

Urban violence now playing in Greece.

 

Mickey Mouse's Laptop?

Disney goes for the kids laptop market with a $350 netbook.

 

MySpace Cuts

400 going, going....

 

Now This Makes Sense

"Qatar PM: Details on Porsche deal within three weeks".  Why wouldn't Middle East interests want a piece of a car company that puts out fine rides like my 930 that takes 12 quarts of oil come change time?

 

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Coping: Facing the  Future

If you are a subscriber to our www.peoplenomics.com website, you got the heads up in an email yesterday afternoon that the latest ALTA report is out from Cliff at www.halfpasthuman.com.  $10-bucks and 30+ pages of how the rest of this year to into 2010 plays out linguistically.

---

A couple of subscribers asked why my email ended with the word "Sorry..."

 

Do I need to explain?  I think once you read the report, which has a pretty grim outlook in it, the word 'sorry...' will become clear.  The only danger in seeing the future is getting it right and if that's the case, 'sorry...' is a very apt word choice.  Kind of like hearing about losing a loved one and passing on condolences;  that's how the next year or two works out.  sorry...

 

Oh, it's not all bad - which is where the 'new electrics' comes in (see next section) and if you're among the humans who make it to 2013-2014, then life oughta be pretty good (comparatively to what we're going through between now and then...).  But between now and then?  Uh....go read the report.

 

That 'Million Dollar Idea'

Where to pick up the adventures of the new magnetics study group?  You know, the one I'm setting up over at www.magnetics.independencejournal.com?

 

Several people have sent in ideas and some really cool concepts which I will be wading through today (See "Catch-Up Wednesday" section following this).  In addition, lots of people have expressed an interest in being 'readers' or 'reviewers' of material.

 

What seems to be the problem is the matter of finding the right software platform because there doesn't seem to be much of anything out there that would be a simple plug & play for the kind of applications where essentially, everyday smart people (which there are plenty of in the world) could perform a valuable service by helping experts broaden out their knowledge so that more interdisciplinary breakthroughs could be made.

 

Just to give you an example; I was talking to a colleague who runs a large national medical association on Tuesday afternoon and he got really excited about the idea.  His words were to the effect that "many of our docs just don't have time to read and consider everything that's out there because there is just so darned much to cover." 

 

We kicked it around for a while and this association (sorry no hints) would be very interested in such software too because as the knowledge floating around the world increases, the whole problem of  knowledge saturation pops up as an obstacle to future breakthroughs at some level.

 

Just to make the point - and I'll paraphrase this to protect identities here, my colleague told me...

"Before he passed away some years back, I had breakfast with the world's leading authority on vitamin C.  He knew everything  about C...I mean everything.  So about halfway through breakfast, I asked him about vitamin E and he looked back at me and said basically "What about E?  I haven't researched that..."

And so that's the problem in a nutshell.  In just about every major branch of science I can think of, there's a lack of 50-150 word concept summaries of all of humankind's research.

 

Sure, if you know what the Biefeld-Brown effect is in physics, you can find it in Wikipedia, alright.  But what's missing is the 150 word (or less) summary that would say something like:

"Biefeld-Brown Effect: High voltage on the order of 10's of kilovolts causes ion streams which may produce small amounts of lift.  Maximum lift is from (describe voltage and frequency if any).  Closest linked concepts are: magneto hydrodynamics and (list of other similar concepts)

Same thing is a problem in medicine.  Anyway, the search for the right software platform to mobilize free human brain cells into an actionable army of knowledge expanders is where my researches are at the moment.

 

Doctor Search

If you're a doctor (MD, perhaps have some medical director or monoclonal antibody research in your background) and even know what  a 'receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand (RANKL)' is, and you're looking for a well compensated job in research, my better half Elaine is working on a search for just such a person.  Send you're CV to texelaine@earthlink.net.  Good opportunity and about the only drawback I can see if that it's in a SoCal location.  Still, homes are a lot cheaper there than they used to be and the company has housing assistance among the many bennies.

 

Around The Ranch: Catch-Up  Wednesday

Had a reader ask yesterday "How is it you get so much done?  Do you really do all this, or do you have a cast of 1,000 helpers out there somewhere?"  Well, the answer is no, I don't get much much done at all, and what little I do get done, I owe mainly to  lots of computer horsepower, use of dual monitors and current everything software-wise, and even then I get backed up so that at least one day a week is devoted to catching up with the other six days.  Today is 'catch-up Wednesday'.

 

Today's docket, for example, calls for me to finish writing at the usual time (8:10 AM) then fire up my well-drilling rig and run until 11:30.  During that time, depending on how much rock I encounter I should have my well/hole in the ground down to about 60-65-feet.

 

Got a call scheduled at noon, and then from 1 PM until about 4:30 it will be catching up - sending people lost logon's to Peoplenomics, answering a zillion and one emails that have backed up, paying the monthly .bills, getting the trash around the shop all bagged up for garbage day, vacuuming in the office, and, and, and...  Then this evening, neighbor's coming over for a branch-water and to discuss our local 'kitty problem."

 

A couple of morning's back, a couple down on what passes for the 'main road' into our part of the outback - a single-track oiled sand affair wide enough for only one car - spotted what looked like a full-grown cougar while he was out having his morning coffee on the deck about 6:30 or so.

 

A day later, my neighbor across the road called to report a couple of kitty-prints in the soft dirt leading into his driveway from the mailbox.  The kitty-prints being about as big as a man's fist.

 

Then yesterday, the same neighbor's daughter reported seeing what looked like a cub - only about 12-15 inches to the shoulders which slinked off onto my property down by the creek.  Lest you think that we're not being attentive to have failed to see the 'kitty', remember from my front gate down to the corner is 1,400 feet and to walk the perimeter of our property is a bit over a mile worth of hiking.  And rugged as the dickens.

 

So the neighbor coming over for the branch water will be discussing the kitty problem.  We've both got exception night eyes; me Gen 2.5 NV and he's got both NV and a thermal imager.  Just because we're in the outback doesn't translate to 'backwards.'  Between now and then, he's going to have a chat with the local game warden and see what she recommends.

 

Not that we're in any hurry to blast away at the kitty.  On the other hand, the neighbors down at the corner (we share about 1,300 feet of fence line) they've got grand kids that often play in the woods and go down to the creek.  And, they have a pet goose that's been missing a week or two.

 

Cougars have been known to attack people, and we've got serious concerns about the cat (or two) being present here.  Just this week, a British Columbia youngster age 3 was mauled by a cougar. They also go after dogs and often kill them.  Not to mention what a big cougar and a kit could do to our local deer population and the roughly 50-goats between our neighbor's herd and ours.

 

Folks across the road have lost one chicken (early daylight hours) and while the wild cat is not known  to have anything to do with it, it's certainly on the suspect list.

---

People who live in the 'big city' sometimes don't appreciate what it's like to live out on the edge of the wilds, but when folks like me go out at night packing enough fire-power to give Yosemite Sam a run for his money, it's not that we're anti-social, paranoid, or a gun nut.  A full-grown cougar showing off its hunting skills in a little OJT session for its kitten, is not the kind of thing anyone walks into empty-handed.

 

Even with all the high tech, the stealth of a good bow-hunter, and watching the wind, the odds of seeing, let alone getting the kitty are low.  But if nothing's done, the odds of something more serious happening - missing livestock, or worse, kids, go up over time.

 

We'll see about trapping and such, but in the meantime, out here a gun is a tool, just like a set of socket wrenches.  Except, of course, we aren't being leaned on to register our socket wrenches. Yet. But'cha know, them sockets can be used to make a car that will go faster than the speed limit and therefore shouldn't we....oh let's not go there.

---

OK, we're going there anyway:   I thank the stars above that I don't live in Hawaii where an effort is being  made to make even folding pocket knives illegal.   As of this morning, the bill is still out in committee.  Hopefully, it will die there quietly, but given the 'save us from ourselves/Nanny-State mindset', don't place bets.

 

Wonder if Hawaii will ban coconuts, too.  Why, when I was living in the tropics down in the Cayman Islands, I saw people actually get injured  and occasionally even knocked out by falling coconuts now and then.  We oughta cut 'em all down, or at least laser-etch their trunks! Yessir.

 

Out here in East Texas we have a local phrase to describe someone who doesn't carry proper outdoor gear including at least one good working knife besides night vision or an imager, a long arm and a side arm when there are wild hogs, cottonmouths, copperheads, rattlers, coral snakes, and now a cougar out & about:

 

We call 'em damn fools.  Laser etch that.

 


Tuesday June 16, 2009

Super Tuesday Numbers

Hmmm...let's start with the PPI - Producer Price Index to the unwashed: Rally Rabid on this one which is way better than expected:

"The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods increased 0.2 percent in May, seasonally adjusted, the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. This rise followed a 0.3-percent advance in April and a 1.2-percent decrease in March. At the earlier stages of processing, prices received by producers of intermediate goods rose 0.3 percent following a 0.5-percent decline a month earlier, and the crude goods index climbed 3.6 percent after rising 3.0 percent in April. (See table A.)

In May, a 2.9-percent increase in finished energy goods prices more than offset a 1.6- percent decline in the index for finished consumer foods and a 0.1-percent decrease in prices for finished goods other than foods and energy."

Table A, huh?  Still looking deflationary with finished goods down at an annual rate of 5% while intermediates were about flat when annualized (+0.3%) and crude goods were up only 3.6% annualized.  But what about fudging the numbers with seasonal scribbles?

"Before seasonal adjustment, the Producer Price Index for Finished Goods increased 0.5 percent in May to 170.8 (1982 = 100). From May 2008 to May 2009, finished goods prices decreased 5.0 percent. Over the same period, the finished energy goods index fell 27.3 percent and prices for finished consumer foods declined 2.1 percent. By contrast, partially offsetting the decrease in finished goods prices, the index for finished goods less foods and energy increased 3.0 percent. At the earlier stages of processing, prices received by manufacturers of intermediate goods moved down 12.5 percent for the 12 months ended May 2009, and the crude goods index decreased 41.1 percent."

From where I sit, it still looks like my resource allocation model (farmland/TIPS/Tbills and precious metals) still makes more sense than betting on the Dow.  But then again, a Ouja Board and a six-pack makes more sense than the Dow, too, lately. 

 

What will start to slam the PPI next month will be rising energy prices.  This is May data, so keep your shirt on and a nitro pill at the ready.

 

Meantime, the Housing numbers were WAY higher than expected with housing construction up 17.2% for the month.

 

The industrial production and capacity utilization numbers should be out about 9:15 Eastern and will be on the www.federalreserve.gov web site...soi set a reminder to hit those, too.  Modest uptick possible.

 

The PPI numbers and the housing starts mean that the CPI due out tomorrow may be somewhat tame, so if you were betting on the short side into triple witching this week, I wouldn't be planning any big dinners out for a while.  At least not if you were going to pay for them with trading profits.  Who told you 'rally' is on?  Maybe through July?  You wanna play short? Wait till August or so and then look 6-months out, unless you like 'catching falling knives' and big mortgages.

 

Iran as the Global  "Florida"

You were asking about the 'summer of hell" were you?  How's Iran looking for a kick-off?  Calls for recounts, millions in the street, shots fired and demonstrators killed.  Yep, that'd be how things start.

 

Attacking the Dollar

What's this? Russia's president "Medvedev calls for new reserve currencies" - which I take to mean that Russia has unloaded a big chunk of their dollar denominated assets, as I explained yesterday, they wouldn't dis until they were out from under.  Well, that was sure quick, wasn't it?  Why it's been years since I've seen such a passionate one-day love affair, LOL.

---

Gee, you don't suppose that this is why gold is up and oil, too?  Doh....

 

Stimulus Questions

Now just see what republicorp Tom Coburn of Oklahoma is questioning?  $300 street signs, money for Montana's state booze peddlers, under highway crossings for turtles?

---

Why just in the past two weeks, I've almost hit wondering armadillos who seem unconcerned with a madman coming at them at 80 MPH on a single-lane East Texas backcountry road in a pick-em-up truck.  Why, if brother Coburn would just lay off for a while, maybe Anderson Country Texas could get some of that easy money and put in snake and 'dillos crossings which we so sorely need.

 

And what about the Coyote and Wolf overpasses?  I've got the replacement grill and radiator coming for the old Daewoo which hit a wandering beast last week when Elaine was coming back from a Dallas shopping adventure.  Why, again, we need wildlife overpasses!  No reason Alaska should have Mooserpasses on the Alaska Pipeline, when we have more wildlife turning to road kill here in the Republic than Alaska could ever dream of? 

 

All Hail!

New Jersey.  Remember the linguistics about odd weather abounding this 'summer'?

 

Erosion Problem

Family times disappears with just a few clicks.

 

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Coping: A Call for "Distributed Research - Magnetics, Levitation * New Electrics"

Either tomorrow, or maybe Thursday, but most likely tomorrow, the new $10-version of the ALTA (Asymmetric Language Translation Analysis) will be issued by Cliff over at www.halfpasthuman.com .  And it makes for an interesting read and will give those who are not familiar with the ground-breaking research based on linguistic shift over time (sampled via spiders that we have off reading everything publicly accessible on the net) a taste of what's to come this fall and into next year.  In particular attention, there's this area of magnetics and new electrics that has me enthralled.

 

"Fine so be enthralled, George."

 

Go you one better:  We've cooked up a new research project and you're welcome to participate - think of it as a 'future jack' or 'helping the future come along' since it hints in this particular direction anyway.

 

It's an implementation of something which I think may be a whole new way of harnessing human potential to move forward in a never-before-done manner:  We're going to try an experiment in something we're calling  "widely distributed public research."

----

A little background here:  Both Cliff and I often get terribly overwhelmed with how complex our research gets.  For example, Cliff is presently knee deep in translating scientific documents covering linguistics (and lots of other fields) from their native Russian into English. The scope of that work is almost overwhelming. 

 

My own interest lays in the direction of something that we 'know' - at least it's hinted at in the predictive linguistics for the next 6-months to year period - where various breakthroughs seem possible-if not LIKELY - in the fields of "new magnetics" and "new electrics."

 

Now, in order for there to be a breakthrough, the 'design pattern of such usually includes at leasttwo components:

A.  A massive amount of research and concept collecting followed by

B.  A huge number of trial & error/trial fits of different concepts.

Remember how many conceptual pieces Edison test fit? 

 

Which gets us to the core problem of a new researcher into the field of 'new magnetics' or 'new electrics' - who's got time to do all the research?

 

Just as an example, Cliff suggested that I hire my son's excess time when he's not doing medical studies - and put him to work watching everything on YouTube that has the term "magnetic" or "magnetism" in the  video's subject line.  The idea was that he'd watch a video, distill the core concept down to 50-words and lay it on the old man's inbox so it could be fitted with various magnetics experiments I'm doing.

 

(I'm working on propagation of magnetically offset radio frequency at the moment, so anything that goes to the idea of offsetting E & M fields is of interest...)

 

The problem is what?  As of this morning there are 61,200 returns on YouTube alone with the word 'magnetic' in the topic. Plus another 70,400 videos with the word 'magnetism' in the title.  That's hold on to your eyeballs: 131,700 videos to watch...

 

If we assume they only average 5-minutes in length (although many may be long talks/lectures, then in order to read/research all of YouTube, someone would have to watch just under 11-thousand hours of video.  Working 40-hour weeks, that would be 274,375 weeks, or based on a 50-week work year, five a a half years of video watching - and that assumes that no one adds to the video resources between now and then.

 

Which is nuts! Because inventions and inventors march on.

 

Worse:  The YouTube indexing system doesn't 'core concept' their stuff (not their job, OK?) and it doesn't get into extensibility of concepts...which is where I want to play....

 

So (going back to one of my favorite books on the Russian science of invention, TRIZ) And Suddenly the Inventor Appeared: TRIZ, the Theory of Inventive Problem Solving I got to asking...Hmmm...How can a group of 40-50-thosuand people a day who read this site be turned into a  major breakthrough in magnetics and new electrics?  How about by setting up a private super-sized Manhattan Project?  Easy!  Well, almost....

 

The general answer is to take the spare time thousands of people have every day and turn it into a massive research project.  So I set the input framewor on my IndependenceJournal.com web server because I have oodles of server space & bandwidth there since it's main purpose is to provide redundancy to the www.urbansurvival.com site and to give people who are in government (and stick-up-their-you-know-what corporate) offices  that censor everything but news and research sites, a way to get to UrbanSurvival's daily content at work.

 

Soo... head on over and take a look at (drum roll please):

http://magnetics.independencejournal.com/

The more I've been tinkering with the concept (public research clearinghouse) the more I like the idea.  A couple of reasons:  First, a lot of academics self-filter and because of peer pressure/group think, they don't get into ideas that obviously have some historical basis.  Just seems to be beyond their reviewed/group-limited framework.

 

Example:  You may not be aware of it, but there are reports that in parts of Tibet (as well as other ancient cultures) a semi-circle of drums and horns (at specific frequencies) was used to levitate huge stones.  Well, I've got some dandy function generators and can buy speakers all day long, so you find the cite and let's go levitate some heavy objects  using sound- and if there's anything to it, my digital scale and a half dozen channels of audio at high sound density levels ought to be able to at least record something anomalous, get it?

 

The one curious thing - at least it strikes me as curious - is that I haven't been able to find the right software to do this public invention & discovery mission.  Oh, sure, there are forum software packages, and blogs, and wikis and even curriculum development tools.

 

But here's the concept:  Where is the public knowledge building add-on to something like Wikis?  Moodle is fine if you already have a subject area and existing knowledge to package, but it doesn't seem 'research friendly' as in take the following 6-concepts, combine them this way and get back to us...kinda thing.  Great stuff for teaching the 'what is already known' - but what about the case where we have so much material that we can't get down to the 'what is known" as a collection of 50-word recipe cards that can then be mixed up in that text case and that, so we can get into the serious business of public discovery?

---

Remember a couple of years back, there was an effort by SETI, I think it was, where the idea was to use a special screen-saver to harness unused computer time and leverage that?

 

Well, what's interesting is that the human-scale analog to that seems not to have appeared yet.

 

In truth, this is the kind of "Big Picture Concept" stuff that may have been more appropriate for one of my subscriber reports, but since it depends on massive public participation, even I have to step out of the box every so often and say "Aha!  This is for everyone..."

 

If we want to really solve our energy problems and move along as a world (less pollution and so forth) then obviously those little magnets which keep pressing out and which keep generating electricity when a wire is moved through their fields, is a good place to start.

 

But again, not by 100,000 people reading a book or a single video, but by a group of people reading 10,000 books, and 70,000 videos and summarizing them into their most concentrated form!

 

 By distilling as much knowledge as we can down into flip cards so that we can figure out first what all the puzzle pieces are, then as we get all the puzzle pieces together, then test fit the most promising and actually do some future-jacking here.

 

And this is not to take anything away from the excellent sites that are already doing work in the field - such as Tom Bearden's fine site, www.cheniere.org.  I just want to capture the mass of unused brain cells that go surfing on useless website, or which get hooked into spending money on useless baubles off eBay when there's much work to do.

 

There are all kinds of massive public research projects that need to be done:  Optimizing agriculture, optimizing energy, construction, and so forth.  But while these topics get touched on by Yahoo Groups and other such outlets, the really useful knowledge tools that collect recipes/concepts and then propose new combinations and summary results of different concept mixes is apparently yet to be invented as a cross between a curriculum development tool, discussion group/forum, a wiki, and a simple database.

 

Whether this actually goes anywhere beyond an interesting conceptual bit over a cup of coffee with 'George the nutter' seems to have at least some momentary promise, at least that's what's in the linguistics which will be coming out tomorrow or Thursday.

 

But as a bottom line here's how I see it:

  • There is a need for massive public research software to learn what isn't known (or which has been forgotten in the ancient past.

  • Let's try something and see what happens.

 

According to the rickety time machine, this may be something that's about to get legs.  And besides, what's the point of a time machine if we can't beat the crowd now and then, anyway?

---

And sometimes, I just get the concept either wrong - or just ahead of it's time.  I trust you remember my Public Design Library concept?   The concept of that one is still, in my estimate, a million dollar idea waiting to happen.... Oh well... Maybe now, the timing will be better...

 

I'll let you know if I get responses...

 


Monday June 15, 2009

We are Not Alone - Or Are We?

As a reader of UrbanSurvival (and maybe as a subscriber to our premium service Peoplenomics.com) you already know that my skepticism about both the depth and duration of what was first baled a 'recession' has been horribly underestimated by convention economists who have yet to come to terms with two hugely important economic realities.

 

The first of these is a 70-85 year economic cycle, which has features (starting from the Country's founding) of a Civil War, a Great Depression, and now...whatever it is that we slide into between now and 2013.  Cycles are real, and hordes of group-think economists of the lock-step variety won't change that reality, any more than wishing the tide wouldn't come in has a snowball's chance in hell of working, either.

 

The other point missed widely is that the whole world's economy is interdependent such that what used to be local or sub-regional economic impacts are now as contagious as the pandemic flu.

 

Having these two concepts firmly in mind, I'm just a little disappointed to read that veep Joe "

Biden tells "Meet the Press" that "everyone guessed wrong" on the impact of the stimulus, economy was worse off than anyone thought."

 

With all due respect, Mr. Vice President, I have to take exception to your use of the words "anyone thought" since my colleague Cliff and I were on uncountable radio shows telling whoever will listen that the events of October 2008 would be a sort of modern analog to the 1932 bond market disaster, and for the past six months, or so, we've been on whatever forums would have us telling folks "Yah ain't seen nothing yet...since the second leg down and derivatives blow up will be coming into focus over the next couple of months."

 

And that, along about November/December, will reveal a horrible truth about globalism:  Can't just write a check and have problems go away presto-chango like.

---

That being said, it may be easy enough to dismiss the 40-50-thousand people a day who read this column as economic whacko's who, despite having beat the grim reaper in the financial markets over the past couple of years, just 'got lucky.'

 

But, as this morning's headline points out: "We are not alone."

 

For example, "IMF says worst not over; record fall in  Euro jobs..." and I'd have to agree.

 

While Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner was at the G-8 this weekend as well, and trying to sound upbeat, those stories which might lead the casual observer to hold hope of a quick recovery seem to have forgotten that the so-called 'experts' were saying in October of last year that we'd be in a recovery right now.

 

Guess who got that little forecast wrong?

 

I see where Boeing expects an order upturn in 2010 but once again, I believe that history will make another example here of 'experts getting it wrong again."

 

The problem for Boeing is that with the US dollar headed for a slide, because the Fed is buying Treasuries, in a grand circular reference economy, the rest of the world is getting ready - this fall - to blow out of dollars.  As other countries devalue the buck - meaning they won't buy as much overseas - that will mean prices will go up domestically for almost everything imported.  By this time next year, if not late winter, the debate should be "so just what is the threshold where inflation turns into what would be accurately labeled hyperinflation?"

 

Oh, and even if Boeing does happen to see an uptick in plane orders in next year's environment of $250 and up a barrel oil, try to remember that a Dreamliner is not something you pop in the assembly line for one month later out comes an airplane.  T

 

Then there was the world naked bicycle ride this weekend to protest oil dependency.  I've been keeping an eye out for this one, LOL.

---

No doubt you are supposed to be reassured when you read headlines like "Treasuries climb after Russia says it has Confidence in Dollar."    But think about it:  If you were dumping dollars, would you say "I'm dumping my bux?"  Hell no!  You'd spout all kinds of drivel to drive the prices as high as possible during your pump and dump operation, wouldn't you?

 

Oh, the sophistication levels of sheep...well, at least we're not alone.  Even the Wall Street Journal describes the "Fed's Conundrum on Treasury Purchases."

 

That's the kind of financial shenanigans that might land us mere mortals like us in jail.  Need more money?  Just print up some promissory notes (bonds we'll call 'em)  and pass them off to a 'banker in your pocket' who'll give you cash in return - then spend it quick!  Sure sounds like a scam, doesn't it? 

 

But like I said:  "Why go to jail when you can go to Washington?"

 

I'm sorry, got carried away: Conundrum then.  And maybe we are alone...

 

Trade Disaster Continues

Port of Long Beach says May inbound cargo was down 22.8% YoY and outbound cargo was down 26.7%.  Declines at LA probably are less, but we should have their figures tomorrow or Wednesday.  Word substitution for the word 'trade':  Suxabunch.

 

Markets

The market futures were down about 1% when I looked this morning, a cup-and-a-half back.  Wondering why?  I mean besides the illusion that we're in a big recovery is on the verge of breaking down?  Answer is simple:  Options triple witch week, CPI figures due out tomorrow, along with he producer price index and building permits.  A kind  of Super Tuesday for the nail-biters who chase paper.  Darned Nervous Nellie's.  Fools may be more like it. 

 

Iran's Elections

I see where "Ahmadinejad's re-election may hamper nuclear talks, EU says".  Damned geniuses is what they are...geniuses!  Wonder if Iran imported any used Florida voting machines?

 

Head's Up of  the Week

Here's one for you to ponder:  How is it that in an admittedly small sample (of more than a dozen people) I've heard reports about, NO ONE is getting the same serial number precious metal bars shown on their warehouse receipts when they go to take delivery!  Why aren't bar numbers matching up?  Little accounting problem going on, or something else?

---

Meantime, speaking of bar talk, the Royal Canadian Mint is telling customers 'Your gold is safe with us..."

---

I don't care how exciting it is to take delivery of a 100 ounce bar of whatever, my advice is really simple: match up the warehouse bar number with what's presented at delivery!  I'm just not a very trusting fellow, am I?  Am I being paranoid or prudent?  Watch as history catches up...

 

Future History Week

And yes, this week the next ALTA report from Half Past Human is due out in a day or two...as soon as it's up, I'll post a note here.  Or, go tot eh source: www.halfpasthuman.com home of the time monks and rickety time machine and such.  $10-bucks last I heard and about 15-16 pages.

 

"Secession Talk Going Mainstream?"

You want something to worry about?  Skeptical of my 75-85 year econ cycle?  OK, well, how about this round up of OMG, look what states are doing... from Michael Panzner's "economic road map" site [he's the author of "When Giants Fall"].  Definite must read.

 

--- snip and save section ---

 

Coping: With Fire Ants

If you haven't seen the Paul Stamets video on using mushrooms to solves ome of the world's problems, click here because it's worth it.

 

Now, where to get some...

 

Container Termites

Been meaning to mention this:  Oh oh...my dreams of the vermin-proof storage container - one of those 40'foot leftover shipping containers runs into a snag:

"George, enjoyed your column today as all days. Just one little note I though you mightn't be aware of:

Shipping containers are not completely pestproof, but they can be made so. You know those nasty little Formosan subterranean termites that you have so much of in Texas? Yep, well, they're pretty much everywhere. Most of the shipping containers -- at least those actually used for shipping -- have oak floors. I've had occasion to refurbish a few of them and have had to treat ALL of them to kill active termite infestations.

Now how in the world do subterranean termites get entrenched in a mobile container? Same as they do on wooden boats. I also had occasion to find a HUGE termite nest under the main console of a liveaboard. Subterranean termites swarm, and when the winged-alates (reproductives) find a good harbor, they can set up shop there. They need the mud tubes that they make to preserve their very delicate humidity needs.

So what to do? Jack up the container, treat the underside with Tim-Bor (disodium octaborate-tetrahydrate), paint it with a good oil-based paint, and then do the same for the topside. Tim-Bor won't stop them from making their trails, but it does kill the microbes in the digestive system of the termites that allows them to digest cellulose. Imagine having a hearty meal and then not being able to digest it.

Really more than you wanted to know about termites, wasn't it. lol"

Hmmm...putting in a metal floor sounds like a bother...solutions anyone?

 

The Ownership and Tax Question

Reader sends this:

"Your logic is mostly impeccable but every once in a while you surprise me. Income tax for all?!!! How about income tax for none, slave!

The rich will never give up their power willingly.

IIf anyone can take any part of your income without your express permission, they are your master – simple concept. Whether they require you to bow or not...

Just as property ownership in this country is a myth:

If anyone can take "your" property because you do not pay them some money, they are the owner – would you pay property tax if it were not "required". "

Ah...and that's the sad fact of life, right there.  Here in the "Land of the Brave, Home of the...." we're still all just sharecroppers on the King's...I mean duly elected bought & paid for government's - lands.  Somehow, I had gotten the impression that wasn't what the Founders had in mind.

---

The next tax-grab that may be expected is something called the 'imputed tax'.  This is where, if you own your own home, the evil economic geniuses say that because you're not paying rent, then that's a benefit that you should be taxed on.  Yeah, I can't make up idiocy like this - it's like taxing your savings account too - something I wouldn't put past 'em either.  Why it's an asset on your financial statement, right?  When that happens, I move somewhere else.

----

Gee, I can't figure out why secession talk would be spreading among the states, can you?

 

30-Miles Between Cities

Touched on something in Peoplenomics this weekend that drew a fine and educational response:

"George,

I had to laugh about the cities/towns being 30 miles apart...we escaped from Kalifornia about 6 years ago to the hills of Mississippi and have been preparing and working towards a self sufficient lifestyle ever since...

Until we bought 150acres of land last year we owned a lake house in the same county where the closest gas station/ country store was 18 miles away, as we were learning where to find "real" stores, etc, I would call my dad and ask him how far is it to ?, and his reply was always the same..."about 30 miles"

After awhile I became frustrated with his answer and responded, "everyplace can't be 30 miles away from everyplace else!" (but it is here!) So, I asked my Dad, why is it 30 miles?....he replied " it was walking distance or a buggy ride away".... When he earned his Eagle Scout status, the one person who owned a car in the county offered to give him a ride to the ceremony, he said the roads were so muddy, they walked the whole way there and back...while pushing the car."

Yep - thank God and government (if you can still distinguish between 'em) that safety standards have now made cars too heavy to move.  Otherwise, guys like me would weld up a couple of bikes, put a lawnmower engine on it with water-injection and be happily getting 100 MPG all over the place.  Can't have that, now, can we?  Revenue chill'uns!  Revenoo!

---

But the 'good old days' may be backer sooner than the rulercrats think.  You saw where due to the imploding economy where roads in Michigan are reverting to gravel?  I might just weld up a super-mileage ultralight "Model G" this winter for the helluvit. 

 

Around the Ranch:  On Being Jinxed

So there I was, drilling a fine hole in my yard with my Hydra-Jet well/hole drilling system.  I was down about 40-feet on my way to a water-bearing strata ate 55-65 feet when my beloved neighbor across the road came over to supervise the job.

 

"Dman, it's a hot one to be working this hard," I began.  I'd been working since about 6:30 and it was getting on towards noon Sunday and the temp was into the mid 90's here in East Texas, even in the shade.

 

"Aw, common George, it could always be worse...at least your equipment hasn't broken down and the engines are still running..." he offered and then moseyed back over to his place.

 

"Dang!"  I thought to myself just soon as the words were out of his mouth.  I knew this was bad ju-ju,  a jinx, or some kind of an omen. 

 

How did I know?  I figure that for whatever reason, Universe listens very closely to my neighbor.  Folks don't get to do multiple combat tours in places like Korea and Vietnam, collecting five Purple Hearts and an incredibly distinguished Special Forces career record without, oh you know, Universe being on their side in a serious way. 

 

So I almost knew it in my gut the moment he made reference to 'the engines still running' that something was up.

 

Sure enough, I only had about 10-minutes to wait before the trash water pump coughed, sputtered a bit of blue smoke, and then continued.  A few more minutes and the process repeated again.  And again, and then lots of blue smoke and it died.

 

I shut everything down and checked the oil in the trash water pump.  What had been nice dark oil was now a light gray emulsion.  Didn't take the old rocket surgeon long to figure this one out:  The bearing between the trash pump and the engine had failed and that had allowed the high pressure water to intrude into the gas engine's crankcase, which turned the oil into a water-emulsion, and that was either wearing heavily on the rings, or was just in the process of seizing up the main bearings...not that it mattered either way.

 

So this morning, as soon as the column is done and I get a little caloric uptake issue handled, it'll be off to the local Tractor Supply armed with a $300-dollar bill to find a successor, and then a stop at the local auto parts store for a couple of those $8 bottles of Royal Purple (synthetic oil) to reduce the chances of a rerun.

 

Still, seemed like a fitting Sunday reminder from Universe about "be careful what you - or anyone else around you - wishes for something or even gives voice to a fear, lest it be made so.  Left me pondering how the Universe does its dance of co-creation with humans and why I haven't been able to make it work even a little bit with lottery tickets while the slightest reference by my neighbor seems to be able to wreak havoc with my drilling equipment.

 

One thing it did clear up, however.  Universe does not take Sunday's off anymore, and I wonder it it has an ownership interest in TSC or the trash pump company and this is just how to drum up business?  I'm convinced there has to be some kind of lesson in here somewhere, so I'll buy a lotto ticket while I'm in town....Just in case.

 

Know how Universe seems to dance, I may win back about exactly what the trash pump will set me back (About $350) and that way, perfect balance in Universe would be maintained.

 

 

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Chart of the Week!

Before the chart, a little background:

Once upon a time, a long while ago, I observed during my quest for 'truth' in economics, that the PowersThatBe, the talking heads on the teeve, and the other information sources that actively engage in the programming of humans not to think, had conveniently swept several trillions of dollars that disappeared in the Internet Bubble's bursting (since spring 2000) under the rug.  Surely, it wasn't unnoticed by the thousands of people who called brokers and said "Where is my money?"  "Gone, but hang in there as you're a long term investor!" was about all they heard back.

 

So one of our charts for Peoplenomics subscribers oughta be widely circulated - it shows that if you line up the peak of the Dow in January 2000 with the peak in early September of 1929, we're on a very very close replay track.  Much closer than even the chart shows if you were to back out inflation, and put in the effects of 1929 deflation, but that'd be real work, and I'm sort of lazy if the truth be told.

 

No, it's not a perfect replay of 1929, but history doesn't repeat exactly, it only rhymes.  So think of this as the rhymes and the crimes chart:

 

 

"George, that's only a coincidence!" your monkey-mind will protest. 

 

Why sure it is...you bet.  A 9½ year long coincidence...yessir....just a coincidence, I'm sure...

 

Write when you get rich,

 

George Ure, The People's Economist

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