2009
04.23

The video playlist below runs about one hour long. I challenge you to find the time to watch it and pay attention to what’s being said here. It’s a funny old man talking on and on about math, but some of the conclusions that he’s able to show here can shake the pillars of your world. Open up the mind a bit, grab a snack, sit back, and watch.

EDIT Mr. Disconsolate Rage pointed out to me that only one part of the playlist was posting earlier. I’ve since fixed that, and all eight videos should be playable. If you still have trouble seeing it, let me know.

2009
04.21

First, a baby learns how to pick itself up, then it begins to crawl. Later, the child learns to walk, then to run, and jump. In many cases, that child then learns how to ride a bicycle.

First, a person learns to care for their body and build themselves up. Later, the athlete learns how to move fluidly, then to free run. In no cases, that athlete learns parkour on a bicycle.

…Or do they? This is shamelessly stolen from my friend over at http://drseussjuice.com/. Pay him a visit–he’s got VOLUMES of incredibly kickass stuff on his blog.

All I can say is “wtf.” And maybe “wow.” Both of them are so inadequate in the face of such amazing skill.

2009
04.08

I’m eating a grilled chicken cob salad for lunch today. As I’m reaching the end of lunch, and I’m scraping together the last delicious bites of salad, I realize that there, sitting on my fork is a quarter of an egg, a chunk of grilled chicken, and a couple of bits of lettuce. Then, I became suddenly very uncomfortable with the situation. Does anyone else think it’s weird having a “before and after” on your fork?

This is part of a salad.

This is part of a salad.

And for the record, hell yeah, I ate it.

2009
04.07

This article is taken from http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22359.htm and is being discussed at http://www.doomers.us/forum2/index.php/topic,43471.0.html

Resist or Become Serfs

By Chris Hedges

April 06, 2009 “TruthDig” –America is devolving into a third-world nation. And if we do not immediately halt our elite’s rapacious looting of the public treasury we will be left with trillions in debts, which can never be repaid, and widespread human misery which we will be helpless to ameliorate. Our anemic democracy will be replaced with a robust national police state. The elite will withdraw into heavily guarded gated communities where they will have access to security, goods and services that cannot be afforded by the rest of us. Tens of millions of people, brutally controlled, will live in perpetual poverty. This is the inevitable result of unchecked corporate capitalism. The stimulus and bailout plans are not about saving us. They are about saving them. We can resist, which means street protests, disruptions of the system and demonstrations, or become serfs.

We have been in a steady economic decline for decades. The Canadian political philosopher John Ralston Saul detailed this decline in his 1992 book “Voltaire’s Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in the West.” David Cay Johnston exposed the mirage and rot of American capitalism in “Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves at Government Expense (and Stick You With the Bill),” and David C. Korten, in “When Corporations Rule the World” and “Agenda for a New Economy,” laid out corporate malfeasance and abuse. But our universities and mass media, entranced by power and naively believing that global capitalism was an unstoppable force of nature, rarely asked the right questions or gave a prominent voice to those who did. Our elites hid their incompetence and loss of control behind an arrogant facade of specialized jargon and obscure economic theories.

The lies employed to camouflage the economic decline are legion. President Ronald Reagan included 1.5 million U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine service personnel with the civilian work force to magically reduce the nation’s unemployment rate by 2 percent. President Bill Clinton decided that those who had given up looking for work, or those who wanted full-time jobs but could only find part-time employment, were no longer to be counted as unemployed. This trick disappeared some 5 million unemployed from the official unemployment rolls. If you work more than 21 hours a week—most low-wage workers at places like Wal-Mart average 28 hours a week—you are counted as employed, although your real wages put you below the poverty line. Our actual unemployment rate, when you include those who have stopped looking for work and those who can only find part-time jobs, is not 8.5 percent but 15 percent. A sixth of the country is now effectively unemployed. And we are shedding jobs at a faster rate than in the months after the 1929 crash.

The consumer price index, used by the government to measure inflation, is meaningless. To keep the official inflation figures low the government has been substituting basic products it once measured to check for inflation with ones that do not rise very much in price. This sleight of hand has kept the cost-of-living increases tied to the CPI artificially low. The New York Times’ consumer reporter, W.P. Dunleavy, wrote that her groceries now cost $587 a month, up from $400 a year earlier. This is a 40 percent increase. California economist John Williams, who runs an organization called Shadow Statistics, contends that if Washington still used the CPI measurements applied back in the 1970s, inflation would be 10 percent.

The corporate state, and the political and intellectual class that served the corporate state, constructed a financial and political system based on illusions. Corporations engaged in pyramid lending that created fictitious assets. These fictitious assets became collateral for more bank lending. The elite skimmed off hundreds of millions in bonuses, commissions and salaries from this fictitious wealth. Politicians, who dutifully served corporate interests rather than those of citizens, were showered with campaign contributions and given lucrative jobs when they left office. Universities, knowing it was not good business to challenge corporatism, muted any voices of conscience while they went begging for corporate donations and grants. Deceptive loans and credit card debt fueled the binges of a consumer society and hid falling wages and the loss of manufacturing jobs.

The Obama administration, rather than chart a new course, is intent on re-inflating the bubble. The trillions of dollars of government funds being spent to sustain these corrupt corporations could have renovated our economy. We could have saved tens of millions of Americans from poverty. The government could have, as consumer activist Ralph Nader has pointed out, started 10 new banks with $35 billion each and a 10-to-1 leverage to open credit markets. Vast, unimaginable sums are being placed into these dirty corporate hands without oversight. And they will use this money as they always have—to enrich themselves at our expense.

“You are going to see the biggest waste, fraud and abuse in American history,” Nader warned when I asked about the bailouts. “Not only is it wrongly directed, not only does it deal with the perpetrators instead of the people who were victimized, but they don’t have a delivery system of any honesty and efficiency. The Justice Department is overwhelmed. It doesn’t have a tenth of the prosecutors, the investigators, the auditors, the attorneys needed to deal with the previous corporate crime wave before the bailout started last September. It is especially unable to deal with the rapacious ravaging of this new money by these corporate recipients. You can see it already. The corporations haven’t lent it. They have used some of it for acquisitions or to preserve their bonuses or their dividends. As long as they know they are not going to jail, and they don’t see many newspaper reports about their colleagues going to jail, they don’t care. It is total impunity. If they quit, they quit with a golden parachute. Even [General Motors CEO Rick] Wagoner is taking away $21 million.”

There are a handful of former executives who have conceded that the bailouts are a waste. American International Group Inc.‘s former chairman, Maurice R. Greenberg, told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Thursday that the effort to prop up the firm with $170 billion has “failed.” He said the company should be restructured. AIG, he said, would have been better off filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection instead of seeking government help.

“These are signs of hyper decay,” Nader said from his office in Washington. “You spend this kind of money and do not know if it will work.” “Bankrupt corporate capitalism is on its way to bankrupting the socialism that is trying to save it,” Nader added. “That is the end stage. If they no longer have socialism to save them then we are into feudalism. We are into private police, gated communities and serfs with a 21st century nomenclature.”

We will not be able to raise another 3 or 4 trillion dollars, especially with our commitments now totaling some $12 trillion, to fix the mess. It was only a couple of months ago that our expenditures totaled $9 trillion. And it was not long ago that such profligate government spending was unthinkable. There was an $800 billion limit placed on the Federal Reserve a year ago. The economic stimulus and the bailouts will not bring back our casino capitalism. And as the meltdown shows no signs of abating, and the bailouts show no sign of working, the recklessness and desperation of our capitalist overlords have increased. The cost, to the working and middle class, is becoming unsustainable. The Fed reported in March that households lost $5.1 trillion, or 9 percent, of their wealth in the last three months of 2008, the most ever in a single quarter in the 57-year history of record keeping by the central bank. For the full year, household wealth dropped $11.1 trillion, or about 18 percent. These figures did not record the decline of investments in the stock market, which has probably erased trillions more in the country’s collective net worth.

The bullet to our head, inevitable if we do not radically alter course, will be sudden. We have been borrowing at the rate of more than $2 billion a day over the last 10 years, and at some point it has to stop. The moment China, the oil-rich states and other international investors stop buying treasury bonds the dollar will become junk. Inflation will rocket upward. We will become Weimar Germany. A furious and sustained backlash by a betrayed and angry populace, one unprepared intellectually and psychologically for collapse, will sweep aside the Democrats and most of the Republicans. A cabal of proto-fascist misfits, from Christian demagogues to simpletons like Sarah Palin to loudmouth talk show hosts, who we naively dismiss as buffoons, will find a following with promises of revenge and moral renewal. The elites, the ones with their Harvard Business School degrees and expensive vocabularies, will retreat into their sheltered enclaves of privilege and comfort. We will be left bereft and abandoned outside the gates.

The Debt Star

The Debt Star

2009
04.06

It’s not often that I get excited about a new video game. It’s not often that I pay the full “new game,” price. Dawn of War 2 was an exception. The first game, Dawn of War, got me excited and got me involved in Warhammer 40k. It was a game that I played (and still play) for hours and hours, on end. When the opportunity to do it all again with better graphics, and against the TYRANIDS, no less, I was excited. I found the game, quite by accident on a Tuesday evening. I went home, installed it. I played until late into the night. Sunday afternoon, I uninstalled the game and put it back in its box. It wasn’t that the game upset me. It’s not that it didn’t work. It wasn’t that I needed the hard drive space. I was just done with it.

After mere days, I’d played through all of the single player content on its hard difficulty. I spent several hours playing with the multiplayer games to find that I wouldn’t be playing them very much, and by the end of the evening on Sunday, I knew that it was time to uninstall the game; there was just no reason to keep playing.

Single play in the game has stripped away the entire strategic aspect that became so intense in the first Dawn of War. Now, there was no building a base, no upgrading units, or managing resources. Instead, you have your squad(s) and you point your mouse at what you want to die, and click on it. Your little army mans dutifully march where you clicked and begin killing (followed by light salad.) That’s. About. It. Instead of building up an army, reinforcing your squads, and pairing them up with the right kinds of leadership, you have loot that you find during or as a reward for various missions, all without any explanation as to why the Eldar or Tyranids are running around with Marine power armor, or who the mysterious benefactor is that’s rewarding your units with the mission rewards, because by all accounts, your units have been cut off. It’s just you and your three warships, which somehow only have about 20 troops, and infinite ammunition.

The multiplayer was about as balanced as the United States’ foreign policy. Basically, you play as the Space Marines, or you lose. I AM pleased to announce that there is resource management in this portion of the game, but building a base consists roughly of telling your command center to get bigger (which it automagically does) and then it spits out bigger and scarier troops. The Eldar (per usual, I suppose) are extremely squishy, and need to rely upon their mobility and stealth to overcome their opponents. This would be fine, except that most of the play maps are a little smaller than that end table that your grandmother keeps the doily and crystal bowl with the miniature Hershey bars. The ork troops are too expensive to properly field a decent horde, and the ‘Nids. Ooooh, the poor ‘Nids. If the Orks have a resource problem, the Tyranids ARE a resource problem. For the cost of a small squad of shooty-gaunts, you can get a unit of 5 space marines, or a 3-man devastator squad. It’s just not pretty.

In the end, yes the game was fun to play. Yes, it was pretty. It made for wonderful hors d’oeuvres before the entreé for which I paid my $60. Alas, the main course was never delivered, and Dawn of War II leaves this player wondering, “Where’s the Beef?”