the money in hoodwinking

“Advertising is the art of convincing people to spend money they don’t have for something they don’t need.” – Will Rogers

Is advertising an industry fundamentally fueled by deception? Or is advertising better understood as a stream of information that, if well directed, can help people?

Comment?

of all fish

  1. Seafood aquaculture now accounts for nearly 50 percent of the world supply.
  2. For 20 consecutive years China is #1, producing 70 percent of the world’s total output.

There are three trends in USA fisheries. The first is aggressive management to stop catastrophic damage and depletion, including the industrial forage of 90% of the world’s small fish ground up as animal feed. The second is open ocean aquaculture such as captive tuna aquaculture, with the hope that the challenges of disease, concentrated pollutants and genetics will be mastered. The third are new efforts to erect massive inland fish farms.

the powder of money

twenty bucksNinety-five percent of the currency in Washington, D.C. is contaminated with cocaine.

Americans use 500 tons of cocaine each year.

In eighteen cities tested, cocaine is on 90 percent of the bills.

Cocaine on paper money ranged from .006 micrograms to more than 1,240 micrograms—the equivalent of 50 grains of sand.

coal’s tiny rain

PNNL said that aerosols in China’s polluted skies has led to the formation of rain droplets that are up to 50 percent smaller than rain droplets in clean skies.

The smaller droplets do not as readily form rain clouds, pointing to upcoming food shortages that would effect 1.5 billion people in China, India, and Pakistan.

facts and figures on foreclosure

Mark Hanson:

As long as foreclosure and foreclosure pipeline housing supply makes up such a large percentage of total sales the housing market will never be on the mend because supply is effectively infinite.

Well?

Another current review: The Coming Foreclosure Wave

hydrino power?

For a portent on the future of energy, Blacklight is just like a novel.

John Miller, a former president of Standard Oil, has been appointed to the Backlight Board of Directors.

Miller comments, “The successful development of new-generation chemistry and its simple thermal regeneration is a major historical step toward near-term, commercial hydrino power. Our recent execution of eight billion watts of commercial licensing agreements demonstrates that the power market is beginning to agree.” Smart power generators might want to get up to speed and consider opening a relationship with Blacklight. The early deals might be very advantageous.

brokering the outrage

If religion is the opiate of the masses, fundamentalism is crack cocaine. Rob Boston, associate editor for Church & State magazine examines the top ten power brokers of the religious right and efforts to style America under their narrow agenda.

  1. Pat Robertson – $246,986,289
    Christian Broadcasting Network
  2. Southern Baptist Convention – $205,716,834
  3. James Dobson – $156,972,266
    Focus on the Family
  4. Jay Sekulow, Pat Robertson – $42,658,159
    American Center for Law and Justice
  5. Alan Sears – $31,674,124
    Alliance Defense Fund
  6. Donald Wildmon – $22,547,087
    American Family Association
  7. Tony Perkins – $11,783,971
    Family Research Council
  8. Tim & Beverly LaHaye – $10,640,810
    Concerned Women for America
  9. Jerry Falwell Ministries – $4,208,989
  10. Steve Baldwin – $1,680,914
    Council for National Policy

There’s also our pew of demagogues in politics and media. Dick Armey, for instance, who said, “Let me just be clear about something. I have no problem with Medicare. I was talking to my minister just last night about it”. Exactly.

the truth is coming out

Prior to the Internet, America’s media moguls sought to seize even more control of the hearts and minds of Americans in order to satisfy the needs of their financial sponsors and political agendas. And they were successful.

Disgraceful? Yes. Surprising? No.

Today, America’s mainstream media machine is primarily owned by a small group of men. And they don’t just own television networks or newspapers. They own television networks AND newspapers AND radio stations.

This is why you get the same bull regardless where you turn.

This carefully guarded control has created a very dangerous form of censorship that few realize because America’s media industry puts out the same messages and rarely allows an open platform for the exchange of opposing viewpoints by credible experts.

Mike Stathis at SeekingAlpha:

I have a mission that, in my opinion is much higher and more rewarding than money. I want to end the exploitation of Main Street by the financial industry.

The mainstream media no longer holds complete control of media distribution.

We the people now have a say in distribution through the Internet. As a consequence, the truth is coming out.

But they will only lose if you wake up and realize how you’re being fooled.

our colossal notions

Keith Eubanks:

My background is in the field of system dynamics — a modeling technique developed at MIT that applies concepts from feedback control engineering to studying social systems such as markets or the general economy.

My observation is that what we generally term as the ‘economy’ (national or world economic activity) is far, far too complex for any individual to understand or forecast simply by thinking about it. Hence, we have all of these idealogical conflicts.

Mental models are not sufficient to sort out these issues and I doubt there are currently any mathematical models that are sufficient either. Hence, we are left with arguing.

I often notice that people talk the most about what they know the least about. We must discover how to manage ourselves. Endless arguing won’t do it.

death’s earnings

Advanced Directives are in the news.

Medicare spends nearly 40 percent of its budget on the final month of life.

Figures are thrown about and studies are rare, but it’s not life-preserving technology that explains the ‘end of life’ share of billings, although dying in an ICU might.

What else is going on? Seventy percent of Medicare’s budget is spent on 10 percent of its patients. Why is dying in Miami four times more costly than Minnesota?

A doctor met with a 90 year old, a “100 pound guy who glowed yellow. He looked skeletal. His skin was paper thin, like cellophane wrapped around a chicken breast”. The doctor recommended hospice for the old man and went home.

When he returned the next shift:

I stared at the chart for a while. I was a little tired and foggy brained. But I couldn’t believe it. The poor guy was zonked out in his bed, exhausted from all the tests and procedures that had been administered that day.

In the interval, an astounding amount of medicine had been practiced. Consults had gone out to GI, oncology, and nephrology (creatinine 1.9). The GI guy had ordered an MRCP and, based on some mild distal narrowing of the common bile duct, had scheduled the patient for a possible ERCP in the morning. A stat CT guided biopsy of the liver lesions had also been done. The oncologist had written a long note about palliative chemotherapy options and indicated he would contact the son about starting as soon as possible. The nephrologist had sent off a barrage of blood and urinary tests.

That’s fee-for-service in a nutshell.

we turn to nowhere

An insider’s view, 27 years in the enforcement division of the SEC.

Much of the problem arose from decades of deregulation dating back to the beginning of the Reagan administration. Elected deregulators appointed their own kind to head regulatory agencies and they, in turn, removed career regulators from management positions and replaced them with appointees who had worked in or represented the regulated industries. These new managers and, in many cases,the people they recruited and promoted, advanced or adhered to a regulatory scheme that, at least with respect to the most important issues, advanced the interests of regulated.

…the industry “captured” the regulators and the regulatory system.

But not in the passive sense that true regulators over time came to identify too closely with the interests of the regulated. This is not a case of financial regulators falling victim to the Stockholm syndrome. The vast majority of capture resulted from intentional efforts by the finance industry to advance their narrow interests at all costs and defeat meaningful regulation.

Unfortunately, we live in a country that can be bought from the top down and the finance industry exploited the situation very successfully. But do not blame the regulators. Career regulators are as much the victims of these events as the public’s economic welfare.

As Frank Rich wrote in the NYTimes,

“What disturbs Americans of all ideological persuasions is the fear that almost everything, not just government, is fixed or manipulated by some powerful hidden hand, from commercial transactions as trivial as the sales of prime concert tickets to cultural forces as pervasive as the news media.”

it’s all or bunk

David Foley:

I have a graduate degree in economics. I never used it professionally, because I think it’s mostly bunk: sophistry masquerading as science. Economics provides few insights that wouldn’t be obvious to a reasonably bright 16-year-old with a grasp of calculus.

To diagnose and solve our current situation, sure, take a look at economics – but then consider the insights of systems science, the structure of networks, futurism, ecology and forms of whole-systems thinking.

Otherwise, we’re going to blow it.

trained to bully

Dana Blakenhorn, “Nixon used scorn — his nattering nabobs of negativism.”

President Obama has a problem. His thesis is based on consensus, yet he must overthrow the Nixon Thesis of Conflict.

They refuse to join. They refuse to deal. They would rather lie, they would rather bully, they would rather kill The Other. This is what the last generation of American politics has taught them. It’s the only way they know to behave.

aristocracy of the moneyed

Outrage over corporate politics reached a high point in 1904. What’s next? In all the hate and worry, there’s very little election reform.

The founders were wary of corporate influence on politics — and their rhetoric sometimes got pretty heated.

In an 1816 letter, Thomas Jefferson declared his hope to “crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country.”

Jefferson offers encouragement too:

“I have no fear that the result of our experiment will be that men may be trusted to govern themselves without a master.”

But as Senator Dick Durbin once said, “They own the place”.

one-third of all pay

CEOs in America pull in the big bucks because there’s a shortage of people willing to destroy the lives of many other human beings.

Thom Hartmann

Over time, balance and democratic oversight will always produce the best results.

An “unregulated” marketplace is like an “unregulated” football game — chaos. And chaos is a state perfectly exploited by sociopaths, be they serial killers, warlords, or CEOs.

luxurious daffodility

Ostrich pulling a cartCamel-sparrows. Beetle-ness. Pondering daffodilty and barely imagined beings:

“We are so disconnected from the living world that we can live in the midst of a mass extinction, of the rapid invasion everywhere of new and noxious species, entirely unaware that anything is happening.

“Happily, changing all this turns out to be easy.

Just find an organism, any organism, small, large, gaudy, subtle — anywhere, and they are everywhere — and get a sense of it, its shape, color, size, feel, smell, sound… meditate, luxuriate in its beetle-ness, its daffodility.”

bring your own library

A Canadian visits Nixon’s library to find cliché-tourist whitewash. He found a few guidelines:

  1. Focus on childhood; humble beginnings are good.
  2. Be a fighter, a man of strong moral conviction.
  3. Put emphasis on the First Lady and the First Family.
  4. Show children or that children are adoring.
  5. Be with great people. The aura of greatness rubs off.
  6. Concentrate on strengths. Ignore failures.

Said Richard Nixon, “Only if you have been in the deepest valley, can you ever know how magnificent it is to be on the highest mountain.”

way, way-y-y off the radar

Bhopal, India:
The High Court ordered the Central Bureau of Investigation to arrest Warren Anderson, former chair of Union Carbide Corporation, and bring him before the court “without delay“.

Anderson was proclaimed an absconder from justice in 1992 after he ignored a summons to appear in court in India.

Union Carbide and Anderson are charged with “culpable homicide not amounting to murder”, “grievous assault” and other serious crimes in relation to the 1984 Bhopal pesticide plant explosion. [wiki]

no safe level of lead exposure

The first global paint report:

  1. University of Cincinnati found that 73 percent of consumer paint brands tested from 12 countries representing nearly half the global population exceeded current US standard of 600 parts per million for lead in paint.

  2. Nearly 70% of the brands had at least one sample exceeding 10,000 ppm.

  3. American consumer paints are required to lower the permissible lead limit from 600 ppm to 90 ppm as of Aug 9.

wikipedia: Lead causes nervous system damage, hearing loss, stunted growth, and delayed development; can cause kidney damage and affects every organ system of the body. It also is dangerous to adults, and can cause reproductive problems for both men and women. Paint with significant lead content is still used in industry and by the military. For example, leaded paint is sometimes used to paint roadways and parking lot lines.