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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: carranza2 who wrote (2)9/18/2001 10:26:38 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217998
 
Today's Wilshire
5000 Index

September 17, 2001 9,590.69
One Day Change -513.76
% Change -5.08
Intra-day High 10,104.45
Intra-day Low 9,587.47
One Year Ago 13,578.05
52-Week High 13,786.28
On September 28, 2000
52-Week Low 9,590.69
On September 17, 2001
All-Time High 14,751.64
On March 24, 2000



To: carranza2 who wrote (2)9/19/2001 3:18:54 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217998
 
Be less dependent of Oil and we get less trouble:

earthisland.org

I can recall that during the Oil Shock of the seventies, there were real actions -not only talking- about getting less dependent on crude.
Solar power, windpower, tide/waves power and alcohol to power cars. And most important SAVING fuel.

Oil crude prices came down,"peace" in the Middle East and everything was forgot. Everyone was happily consuming as before.
(A curiosity: When I was in Saudi Arabia, the magazines came censored. I sometimes asked friends to buy abroad and send by mail the page chopped off. The Scientific American brought a article very positive on alternative sources of energy and it was censored by the Saudi authorities.

But the technologies are there. In the case of fuel for cars -which is what most people think about when considering alternative fuel- is not a problem.

Brazil developed technology for cars powered by anydro alcohol made out of sugar cane. Yu need a barrel at between 30 and 40 to be economic -I heard, can't confirm.

When we see all the land that is being put aside because they are no longer needed for food crops in the developed world, it make sense of starting thinking g about the alternative sources of energy. When I lived in Stockholm, the power generation firms were talking about selling energy generated by 'green' plats. They would plant trees. And use them for producing fuel. The CO2 generated by burning wood, was taken off the atmosphere when the trees were growing.

It is the same if we plant sugar cane.



To: carranza2 who wrote (2)9/17/2019 9:22:57 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217998
 
Re <<Hello, elmat. Perhaps this thread will not have the fractious religious debate. We shall see.

Everyone should be like Jay, silent on touchy stuff, good humor to all.

Markets a bit more stable today. Unlikely to continue for very long.>>

am guessing the touchy stuff might become unavoidable as we approach November 2020, but no matter, the laughs should shine through.

First up, re this prediction Message 16376881 <<Be less dependent of Oil and we get less trouble>>, let us see if we have a new and / or expanded war. My guess is no kinetic expansion, per your earlier take, but maybe stealth expansion.

Should mean more drone and anti-drone system sales in any case.

Oops, forgot my greeting for the just passed moon festival en.wikipedia.org

We had a meal at Murray House in Stanley to celebrate. The street-level actions have not reached my neck of the island, and unlikely to, as there is only one through-road for several tens of miles, and local residents would rise to defend the peace and rule-of-law. It is nice not having tourists all about, for now.




To: carranza2 who wrote (2)7/13/2020 3:13:57 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Secret_Agent_Man

  Respond to of 217998
 
Re Message 16371841 we have been somewhat and more rather than successful even as we dialogue on touchy stuff. Let’s see how the rest of 2020 goes.

I do not remember what wrecked Booms, Busts, Recoveries and am unsure it was anything to do w/ religion. 2001 was sometime ago :0) Am also unsure we in the meantime avoided anything touchy.

On religion if there was anything fractious and I did not participate, likely because I do not know enough about the subject other than it being fractious :0)

I remember attending church a few times, and they all involved some girl inviting me. I think I know how my dad got involved with the communists in London and Moscow. Less clear to me why both occasions involved Jewish girls.



In the meantime, let’s also see what if anything Suntory can come up with that allows decreased social-distance and increased intimacy. Life seems to be somehow less fun than before. Hoping this current state is not permanent. It is crazy.

ft.com

Spirits giant Suntory bets on drinking helmets for pub revival

Third-biggest spirits maker tells managers to come up with headgear for safe drinking during the pandemic

July 12, 2020
Suntory has asked top managers to design headgear that will keep drinkers safe while recapturing the pre-coronavirus experience of a fun night out © AFPSuntory, the Japanese maker of Jim Beam whiskey and Courvoisier cognac, wants consumers to swap face masks for drinking helmets.

With many Japanese still reluctant to return to pubs and bars amid the coronavirus pandemic, Suntory chief executive Takeshi Niinami last month handed a group of top managers a seemingly impossible mission: design headgear that will keep drinkers safe while recapturing the pre-coronavirus experience of a fun night out.

The world’s third-largest spirits maker, whose brands also include Yamazaki whiskey and Maker’s Mark bourbon, was hit hard as the country’s pubs, bars and restaurants came to a near-standstill when a state of emergency was imposed in April to contain the virus.

It was lifted in late May, but Tokyo is now grappling with a spike in infections that sent the daily tally for the Japanese capital to a new record on Friday. With nightclubs taking some of the blame for fanning the outbreaks, izakayapubs, long a favourite destination for male office workers to gather, are under renewed scrutiny, too.

That gives managers at Suntory, whose non-alcoholic brands include Ribena, Lucozade and Orangina, another incentive to come up with a design that works.

“We are working on how we can have izakaya gatherings using face shields,” Mr Niinami said in an interview. “It looks weird but being weird may be acceptable in the new normal.” [emphasis by TJ]

The team at Suntory have generated several ideas, from face shields that resemble an astronaut’s helmet to a sun visor hat that customers could keep on while eating and drinking. The hope for both is that they contain any virus-laden droplets while allowing people a proximity to each other previously standard in bars and pubs.

The company has not released any photographs of the proposed new designs.

Japan’s hospitality sector has so far relied on a mix of social distancing measures, disinfectants, masks, temperature checks and plexiglass shields on tables to keep people safe.

Already punished by the lockdowns governments imposed across the world, the hospitality sector faces a fraught reopening given the risk that alcohol reduces discipline on social distancing and many pubs, bars and restaurants only have indoor space.

Experts in the UK will be watching to see whether infection rates have climbed since pubs were allowed to open earlier this month. In Texas, which is in the grip of a severe outbreak of Covid-19, governor Greg Abbott has said he reopened the state’s bars too quickly.

Suntory, which competes against the likes of AB InBev and SABMiller, has already tested some prototypes on employees of izakaya pubs.

But company officials admit that they have yet to come up with a winning design, with some staff at the pubs where the prototypes were tested complaining they were cumbersome and awkward to wear. It is also unclear whether customers would be willing to reuse a shield that has been used by others even if they are washed and disinfected.

Although Mr Niinami has recently rejected several ideas from his team because they fell short on reducing infection risk, he has not given up.

“It may not be a state of art technology but we have to think outside the box,” said Mr Niinami, pointing to the need to be creative in this crisis.

Sent from my iPad



To: carranza2 who wrote (2)9/11/2021 7:45:27 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
pak73

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217998
 
Hi C2, Re <<Perhaps this thread will not have the fractious religious debate. We shall see>> - 2001 09 18

From the fractious religious debate societies evolved and now debating about debates.

On top of it all, race, colour, gender selection, ... and the list goes long.

Re <<Markets a bit more stable today. Unlikely to continue for very long>> - 2001 09 18

Yes.

A moment of remembering, that at juncture Message 16330113



What a beautiful person Betty must have been ...

“In many ways, our family feels very fortunate because we know what Betty’s last moments were like because of her phone call,” Cathie said. “And there is some part of Betty that came home.”

scmp.com

9/11, 20 years later: remembering Betty Ann Ong, the flight attendant who alerted a nation

Ong, a third-generation Chinese-American, was declared ‘a true American hero’ for her call reporting the hijack of American Airlines Flight 11 Friends and family succeeded in having San Francisco rename a Chinatown community centre in her honour

In 2004, Ong was declared “a true American hero” by Thomas Kean, chairman of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, better known as the 9/11 Commission.

Her family takes that recognition as a great solace.

“Betty was an American. She is considered a hero because of what she did,” Cathie said last week. “The US when September 11 happened was a country where we were all one. We were all helping each other.”

But 20 years later, Ong’s family still grieves for a loved one whose life was cut brutally short.?



An undated photo of Betty Ann Ong. Photo: Cathie Ong-Herrera

Born on February 5, 1956, Betty – known in the family as Bee – was the youngest of four siblings in the San Francisco household of Chinese descent. Betty, along with her two sisters Cathie and Gloria, and their brother Harry, were third-generation Americans. Both sets of grandparents had emigrated from China sometime after World War I. Her father, Harry Ong Sr, and mother, Oy Yee-gum, ran a popular jerky shop in Chinatown.

Growing up in the city’s Chinatown, the sisters would travel to San Francisco International Airport to watch planes take off. Always fascinated by travel, Betty began her aviation career in the baggage claim department with PSA Airlines in the 1980s, then with Delta Air Lines as a ticket agent.

It wasn’t until 1987 that Ong became a flight attendant with American Airlines, a dream job. It was her choice to fly mostly between Boston and California so she could come home to San Francisco.

As a family, the Ongs are tightly knit, so close to one another that the entire group – parents and siblings alike – would go shopping together for someone’s shoes. When Betty joined American Airlines, the sisters would go on trips together.



An undated portrait of the Ong family: seated, Oy Yee-gum and Harry Ong Sr; standing (from left), Betty, Gloria, Cathie and Harry Jr. Photo: Cathie Ong-Herrera

That summer of 2001, the sisters were planning another trip, this time to Hawaii.

In a long last email to Cathie, Betty said she was working extra flights so she could go on the trip.

“Silly me for working so hard,” Cathie recalled Betty writing.

That was September 9. Betty offered to take a September 11 shift for a colleague – ending up on Flight 11.

When Flight 11 crashed, Cathie had barely started her day in Bakersfield, California. She and Betty were supposed to meet for lunch in Los Angeles later that day to discuss their plans for their first “sister trip” since visiting Tokyo together more than 10 years earlier.

Early that morning, Cathie’s phone rang. It was Harry, who, she said, told her to turn the TV on because “an historical event was taking place.”

As the siblings watched the stunning scenes, considering the two smouldering towers to be simply a news event, Harry asked Cathie where Betty was. He said he’d heard that the planes that had flown into them were flights originating in Boston.

“My heart sank,” Cathie said. “I called Betty’s cell phone and received a busy signal and it gave me hope that she was trying to call us to tell us that she was OK.”

Throughout the day, they tried desperately to reach her and get information from the airline; Cathie grew too agitated to stay put. She and her husband decided to drive up to her parents’ home in San Francisco. Somewhere during the trip, she heard an American Airlines ground crew member say on a news report that somebody from Flight 11 had made a phone call, giving reports of the hijacking.



How September 11 changed aviation security forever

8 Sep 2021



“When I heard that, I knew that if Betty was on that plane, it would be her because she was just that kind of person, brave and helpful,” Cathie said.

The next call Cathie got from Harry was bad news: American Airlines confirmed that Betty was on the plane.

“I remember telling my husband that I needed to get out of the car so we pulled off into the parking lot of a mall. And it was about 8 o’clock at night and I was just shocked, crying, and looking up at the sky and shouting ‘why, why, why!’”

When they got to her parents’ house, Reverend Norman Fong, a minister at Chinatown’s Presbyterian Church, was already there. Fong was Cathie’s oldest friend since childhood but they had not been in touch in years.

Fong became a driving force behind a decade-long campaign to commemorate Ong.

“It was difficult. She wasn’t recognised as a hero at first,” recalled Fong, 69, who retired recently as the executive director at the San Francisco Chinatown Community Development Centre. He and the family wanted a building named after Betty, but repeated attempts to rename one of the public schools Betty attended failed.



Norman Fong was instrumental in getting a community centre in San Francisco renamed in Ong’s honour. Photo: Mantai Chow

Fong didn’t give up, though, and solicited support from the San Francisco recreation and parks department as well as then-mayor Ed Lee to rename the Chinatown community centre in her honour.

The newly renovated Betty Ann Ong Chinese Recreation Centre reopened in the summer of 2012; the sprawling 2,230 sq metre (24,000 sq ft) facility hosted a wide range of events for children and senior citizens alike until the pandemic restricted activities.

In 2004, Cathie created the Betty Ann Ong Foundation, which runs summer camps offering active living and healthy eating for children. The foundation now also raises funds for sports activities at the recreation centre.

“I want to mirror Betty’s spirit of her love for children. And I want to keep her legacy. All I knew was it would be about children because that was what Betty loved,” Cathie said.

For a year after her sister’s death, Cathie said, she was in denial. She didn’t want to talk to anyone about Betty because discussing her meant admitting that Betty was gone. So she made up a story that Betty was “walking around New York with amnesia and that she would soon come home to tell us that she was OK”.

In 2017 – 16 years after the Hawaii trip that never materialised – Cathie went to the Hawaiian island of Maui to speak about her sister at the Rotary club there.

“I thought about Betty a lot on the trip because that was where my sister and I were going to go. Talking to the audience about my sister in Hawaii was difficult, but it brought me some closure,” she said.



Ong’s etching at the 9/11 Memorial in New York City. Photo: Mantai Chow

The family used to attend the September 11 commemorative events in New York City every year until recently, when it became too difficult for their mother, Oy, now 96, to travel across the country. When the pandemic hit, the family opted for retreats nearby.

Cathie, now 70, said that her sister’s death “made us as a family stronger. It made us closer than we were before.”

“We tell each other we love each other more. Almost every conversation ends with ‘I love you’. In that sense it changed us.”

It also gave the family pride: they know in their heart that because of what Betty did, many lives were saved.

“I figured Betty is in heaven, an angel there, for sure,” Fong said. “I would say ‘Thank you for what you did, not just for our country, but for all the Chinatown kids cross-country’. They have a hero, a beautiful hero.”

04:57

‘Take time to reflect’: Chinese-American serviceman recalls September 11 on 20th anniversary

Fong, who came out of retirement this year to continue community work to battle anti-Asian hate, said it was heartbreaking to witness the rising anger aimed at Chinese-Americans.

He said that a group of teenagers in a car had recently yelled at him to “go back to China”.

“Until America sees the Chinese-Americans as Americans too, we still have a long way to go,” Fong said.

“Fear is the main enemy in life. There is a lot of fear from hate. Betty overcame her fear to help save America. A lot of us have to step up to help the most vulnerable,” he added.

Cathie said that every time she hears about hate crimes, she thinks about her sister’s heroism. “I can feel the pain the victims and the families of these violence must be feeling,” she said.



A plaque honouring Betty Ong at the community centre in San Francisco that now bears her name. Photo: Mantai Chow

Betty’s recovered remains were buried at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California, on the San Francisco Peninsula. Cathie has lit candles for her sister since 2001. After their father, Harry Ong Sr, died in 2007, she’s lit candles for them both.

“I will light candles for Betty and my dad for the rest of my life every night. I stare up into the sky and talk to the stars. Many times, it’s very comforting because I see shooting stars and I feel that they are still with me.”

“In many ways, our family feels very fortunate because we know what Betty’s last moments were like because of her phone call,” Cathie said. “And there is some part of Betty that came home.”



To: carranza2 who wrote (2)9/11/2021 8:01:55 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217998
 
Remembering

Message 16330113