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To: David Jones who wrote (38532)8/19/2005 6:44:16 PM
From: shadesRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
Kudlow and stein were talking about this attack on walmart today - that america seems to be turning more and more socialist each day. Stein went on to say get out of america and her assets, buy canada, buy australia, or buy energy - but like buffet - whatever you do - get out of the USA - hehe.

Puplava says one kind of BOOM! Mish says another kind of BOOM! Mauldin says muddle through - mass destruction to me just seems so last century.

hi.is

From: en.wikipedia.org

"Economists generally believe that derivatives have a positive impact on the economic system by allowing the buying and selling of risk.

However, many economists are worried that derivatives may cause an economic crisis at some point in the future.

Since with a derivative security, someone loses money while someone else gains money, under normal circumstances trading in derivatives should not adversely affect the economic system.

There is a danger, that someone would lose so much money that they would be unable to pay for their losses. There is a danger that this would cause a chain reactions which could create an economic crisis.

In 2002 legendary investor Warren Buffett in an interview with the New York Times commented that he had accumulated his wealth without the use of derivatives and that he regarded them as 'financial weapons of mass destruction', an allusion to the phrase 'weapons of mass destruction' relating to physical weapons which had wide currency at the time. "



To: David Jones who wrote (38532)8/19/2005 6:47:10 PM
From: shadesRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
Here is one guys solution to americas command and control problems - hehe. What say you?

techcentralstation.com

We Need 250 States

By Arnold Kling Published 08/15/2005

"It is always costly to ensure that agents [government officials] act on behalf of the citizens and that they do not use their power to extract rents from their constituents...

The costs of monitoring agents increase not only with the geographic size of the collective but also with the number of people in the collective. This is because in a larger collective each member captures a smaller share of the rents created by collective enforcement and therefore has less incentive to monitor the agent...With the stake in the collective inversely related to group size, we can expect less monitoring and more rent seeking and rent extraction as group size increases."
-- Terry L. Anderson and Peter J. Hill, The not so Wild, Wild West, p. 30

Terry Anderson and Peter Hill make an argument that suggests that democracy does not scale well. As the size of the constituency group gets large, the politician becomes less accountable. Politicians find it easier to extract rents and abuse powers.

The end-of-session legislative victories for President Bush and the GOP illustrate the problem. CAFTA passed, but with large concessions to special interests that threaten to undermine the trade benefits. The energy bill was an exercise in pork, as was the transportation bill. To anyone outside of the political/lobbyist complex, it was an all-too-typically dismal legislative performance.

Lack of accountability is one political characteristic that is clearly bipartisan. For example, take my government in Montgomery County, Maryland, which has been controlled by Democrats for decades. The nine-member County Council answers only to special-interest constituencies, primarily public sector unions. I see little hope of changing that. My county is a poster child for what Steven Malanga described as The Real Engine of Blue America.

"What makes these cities so Blue is a multifaceted liberal coalition that ranges from old-style industrial unionists and culturally liberal intellectuals, journalists, and entertainers to tort lawyers, feminists, and even politically correct financiers. But within this coalition, one group stands out as increasingly powerful and not quite in step with the old politics of the Left: those who benefit from an expanding government, including public-sector employees, workers at organizations that survive off government money, and those who receive government benefits. In cities, especially, this group has seized power from the taxpayers, as the vast expansion of the public sector that has taken place since the beginning of the War on Poverty has finally reached a tipping point."

Thanks to these interest groups, we enjoy a high bureaucrat-to-student ratio in our schools, a "living wage" law to protect public-sector workers, and anti-Walmart zoning to protect other union members. The County Council even wants to provide public workers with imported low-cost pharmaceuticals from Canada, notwithstanding the fact that one of the most important private-sector industries in the County is biotech research.

I would like a government that is modest in its exercise of power, and in which special interests are not excessively powerful. Instead, at all levels of government, I see the opposite. What can be done?

I think that Anderson and Hill offer a clue. The sheer size of modern electoral constituencies makes politics a matter of financial muscle and mass marketing. Only with smaller electoral constituencies would the incentive structure change to reduce the arrogance and rent-seeking of elected officials and powerful interest groups.

What did the bible say about dispersing the tower of babel - see it is all recursive - nothing ever really changes.