Defining Prosperity Down – Paul Krugman-NYTimes.com

An extremely disturbing column on the economy and our so called “leaders” in Washington.  More disturbing since it’s from Paul Krugman who always seems to be ahead of the ball and know what he is talking about.

Here is an excerpt with link to full NY Times column at the bottom:

I’m starting to have a sick feeling about prospects for American workers — but not, or not entirely, for the reasons you might think.

Yes, growth is slowing, and the odds are that unemployment will rise, not fall, in the months ahead. That’s bad. But what’s worse is the growing evidence that our governing elite just doesn’t care — that a once-unthinkable level of economic distress is in the process of becoming the new normal.

And I worry that those in power, rather than taking responsibility for job creation, will soon declare that high unemployment is “structural,” a permanent part of the economic landscape — and that by condemning large numbers of Americans to long-term joblessness, they’ll turn that excuse into dismal reality.

Not long ago, anyone predicting that one in six American workers would soon be unemployed or underemployed, and that the average unemployed worker would have been jobless for 35 weeks, would have been dismissed as outlandishly pessimistic — in part because if anything like that happened, policy makers would surely be pulling out all the stops on behalf of job creation.

But now it has happened, and what do we see?

First, we see Congress sitting on its hands, with Republicans and conservative Democrats refusing to spend anything to create jobs, and unwilling even to mitigate the suffering of the jobless.

We’re told that we can’t afford to help the unemployed — that we must get budget deficits down immediately or the “bond vigilantes” will send U.S. borrowing costs sky-high. Some of us have tried to point out that those bond vigilantes are, as far as anyone can tell, figments of the deficit hawks’ imagination — far from fleeing U.S. debt, investors have been buying it eagerly, driving interest rates to historic lows. But the fearmongers are unmoved: fighting deficits, they insist, must take priority over everything else — everything else, that is, except tax cuts for the rich, which must be extended, no matter how much red ink they create.

The point is that a large part of Congress — large enough to block any action on jobs — cares a lot about taxes on the richest 1 percent of the population, but very little about the plight of Americans who can’t find work.

via Op-Ed Columnist – Defining Prosperity Down – NYTimes.com.

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Four Deformations of the Apocalypse – NYTimes.com

Interesting article in today’s New York Times from Reagan Budget Director David Stockman.

Here is quote and a link to the full article:

IF there were such a thing as Chapter 11 for politicians, the Republican push to extend the unaffordable Bush tax cuts would amount to a bankruptcy filing. The nation’s public debt — if honestly reckoned to include municipal bonds and the $7 trillion of new deficits baked into the cake through 2015 — will soon reach $18 trillion. That’s a Greece-scale 120 percent of gross domestic product, and fairly screams out for austerity and sacrifice. It is therefore unseemly for the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, to insist that the nation’s wealthiest taxpayers be spared even a three-percentage-point rate increase.

via Op-Ed Contributor – Four Deformations of the Apocalypse – NYTimes.com.

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Karen Carpenter

I’m glad people are finally starting to realize what a great voice Karen Carpenter had…

For years, The Carpenters were a guilty pleasure of mine.  Now I no longer feel guilty.

People seem to be catching up to me and realizing what a great talent we lost when Karen died due to the complications of Anorexia.

Here are a few videos, that I enjoyed, that show both her great talent and her unfortunate physical decline.

Who knows where she might have gone if she’d been able to stay with us a while longer…

Just listen to that voice and her phrasing and tell me I’m wrong…

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Chapter 9: Black Cord Fever | My Southern Gothic Life

I have a new post up on the other blog, MySouthernGothicLife.com.

Here is an excerpt and link to the full post:

I know people today think that you come out of the womb with your cell phone already in your hands so you can call your mother and tell her you’ve been born.

However, there was a time when everyone did not have cell phones.

There was a time when there was only one phone in the house.  And it stayed there.

It had a long black or white cord that tied it to the wall.  You had to go to it and talk where it was, no matter who else was around.

Of course back in those long ago days, we believed in the quaint concept of privacy, so people would normally give you your space.  We also actually had secrets and hid things from our parents.  Our parents were even known to keep secrets from each other as well as from us.  All, alas is gone with the winds of change…

It was a primitive time, but we managed to survive.

Click here to read the full post : Chapter 9: Black Cord Fever | My Southern Gothic Life.

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Movie Recommendation: The Kids Are Alright

We just got home from seeing a great move, “The Kids Are Alright” with Annette Bening, Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo and some great younger actors.

It was smart, funny and brilliantly acted and directed.

I recommend it whole heartedly!

Here is the Trailer:

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Intelligence: The Evolution of Night Owls | Psychology Today

Now I know why I keep the hours I keep!

I just saw this article thanks to John over at Americablog.  Here is an excerpt and the link to the full article.

IQs and Zs

Night owls are smarter than other people, and now we may know why. The modern world contains many features our slow-to-evolve brains still find unfamiliar—cars, TVs, hot dogs on a stick. But the world has always thrown new stuff at us, and brighter humans may adapt more ably.

Satoshi Kanazawa, a psychologist at The London School of Economics and Political Science, argues that, while we have specialized mental modules for navigation, social interaction, and other age-old tasks, general intelligence is its own module handling only evolutionarily novel circumstances. And he has data showing that people with higher IQs are more likely to have values and preferences that just didn’t make sense for our ancestors to embrace. One of those is staying up late.

A previous study found that evening people are smarter than morning people. In a new paper, Kanazawa replicates the finding and provides a theoretical grounding. Because the nocturnal lifestyle allowed by electricity didn’t exist 10,000 years ago, we must now rely on general intelligence to override our early-to-bed instincts. So those with more of it stay up later. How much later? See below.

and:

Night Lights

Bedtimes and wake-up times for Americans in their 20s by IQ.

Very Dull (IQ < 75)

Weekday: 11:41 P.M.-7:20 A.M.

Weekend: 12:35 A.M.-10:09 A.M.

Normal (90 < IQ < 110)

Weekday: 12:10 A.M.-7:32 A.M.

Weekend: 1:13 A.M.-10:14 A.M.

Very Bright (IQ > 125)

Weekday: 12:29 A.M.-7:52 A.M.

Weekend: 1:44 A.M.-11:07 A.M.

via Intelligence: The Evolution of Night Owls | Psychology Today.

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Chapter 8: My Life as a Street Urchin | My Southern Gothic Life

I have a new post up on my new blog:

I have a confession to make.  I was a Paperboy for almost 10 years.  I still have nightmares about it sometimes.

It was a fascinating way to both earn money and to meet and spend time with friends.  It also gave you some amazing insights to people’s lives in the 1970′s.

Back then, there were two daily papers and I delivered them both.  I’ll be honest, it was a real bitch to get up at 5:00 am for the morning run- especially in  my late teens when I was frequently hung over…

But it gave me the two things I most desired:  Money and Freedom.

via Chapter 8: My Life as a Street Urchin | My Southern Gothic Life.

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Chapter 7: Scott’s Turn: A Process Check | My Southern Gothic Life

New Post on my new blog, MySouthernGothicLife.com:

I’ve pulled this new blog together rather quickly.

I think the fact that I don’t have to worry anymore about my Mother’s thoughts  and opinions has somehow freed me.  I also admit, I’m using this to deal with her current situation.

Now I feel I can tell my own story on my own terms.

I will fully admit that I waited almost 50 years to do this and am only being this open about all this now that I know that she longer knows or cares what I might say.

As I was raised to do, I have kept up appearances for almost 52 years.

But still, I’m feeling a little like Christina Crawford writing “Mommie Dearest”.  Or Grace Metalious writing “Peyton Place.”

Neither was my intent.

via Chapter 7: Scott’s Turn: A Process Check | My Southern Gothic Life.

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Ode to Billy Joe

For some reason, Dusty led me to Bobbie…

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Son of a Preacher Man

I was working on my other blog, MyShouthernGothicLife.com, when for some reason I thought of this…

Dusty should never be forgotten…

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