From Supreme Allied Commander to … Ethanol Front Man? The Strange Journey of Wesley Clark. Lydia DePillis

 

I think Calvin Trillin–or at least his bar-room companion–is really on to something here:

“The financial system nearly collapsed,” he said, “because smart guys had started working on Wall Street.” …

I reflected on my own college class, of roughly the same era. The top student had been appointed a federal appeals court judge — earning, by Wall Street standards, tip money. A lot of the people with similarly impressive academic records became professors. I could picture the future titans of Wall Street dozing in the back rows of some gut course like Geology 101, popularly known as Rocks for Jocks. …

“Two things happened. One is that the amount of money that could be made on Wall Street with hedge fund and private equity operations became just mind-blowing. At the same time, college was getting so expensive that people from reasonably prosperous families were graduating with huge debts. So even the smart guys went to Wall Street, maybe telling themselves that in a few years they’d have so much money they could then become professors or legal-services lawyers or whatever they’d wanted to be in the first place. That’s when you started reading stories about the percentage of the graduating class of Harvard College who planned to go into the financial industry or go to business school so they could then go into the financial industry. That’s when you started reading about these geniuses from M.I.T. and Caltech who instead of going to graduate school in physics went to Wall Street to calculate arbitrage odds.”

I’d put it just slightly differently (and I realize Trillin is only about three-quarters serious): The key change on Wall Street was more sociological than intellectual. That is, it wasn’t so much that the smart guys went to Wall Street–though the intellectual caliber of the financial sector certainly increased with all those quants running around. The relevant change was that a lot of “outsiders” suddenly came to Wall Street, which had previously been dominated by insiders.

Was Wall Street Safer in the Hands of Stodgy WASPs? Noam Scheiber

 

Once the most famous and influential African American in the United States (and probably the world), Booker T. Washington has earned at best mixed reviews in the decades since his death in 1915. Black intellectuals and political activists, from W. E. B. Du Bois to the present day, have generally seen Washington as a conservative racial accommodationist, yielding to the repressive power of Jim Crow and urging American blacks to abandon their political struggles for equality and instead to set their sights on a future of manual labor and petty property ownership.

Nothing brought Washington more notoriety than the speech that he delivered in 1895 at the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta when, before a racially mixed audience, he appeared to acquiesce to the imperatives of legal segregation (“in all things purely social we can be as separate as the fingers”) while encouraging African Americans to “cast down your buckets” in the Jim Crow South. Although he is still read in college (and some high school) classes, usually against Du Bois, and remains in the pantheon of black historical figures, Washington is widely ridiculed and derided in black communities for his seemingly shameless pursuit of white favor. For many, he is the classic “Uncle Tom.” Even his most distinguished biographer, Louis R. Harlan, could not do much better than find at Washington’s core a drive for personal power and a penchant for political manipulation. And now that we are in the Age of Obama, when a man of African descent who set his sights on higher education and threw himself into grassroots politics–in short, who did many of the things that Washing-
ton advised against–has been elected president of the United States, do we really need to reacquaint ourselves with the likes of Booker T. Washington? Do his life and views any longer have meaning for us? Do we need another biography?

We Now Have a Black President. Was Booker T. Washington Wrong? Steven Hahn

 

We need to take a different turn. Bill Gates and Warren Buffet offer splendid examples of great, capitalist fortunes put to social use, making the capitalism they exemplify more palatable. When modern corporations do this, we call it corporate social responsibility. More of this will clearly have to be done.

But we also need to respond to the steady erosion of the American myth of mobility. Today, after nearly a quarter century of wage stagnation, and growing evidence that educational access for the poor has also declined, that myth is in a disastrous decline.

We have to respond by improving education and by relieving anxiety through reforms that make health care part of a basic provision for the poor. These reforms strengthen capitalism. Without them, the economic populists will enjoy a success that they do not deserve.

Jagdish Bhagwati is University Professor and Senior Fellow in International Economics at Columbia University. He is the author of In Defense of Globalization (Oxford, 2004) and Termites in the Trading System: How Preferential Agreements Undermine Free Trade (Oxford, 2009).

Feeble Critiques: Capitalism’s Petty Detractors
Jagdish Bhagwati

 

As political pressure has reduced the price tag of expanding coverage to below $1 trillion over ten years, many observers assumed Democrats would react by trimming financial assistance for the middle class–that is, people making between twice and four times the poverty line, or between $44,000 to $88,000 for a family of four.

The assumption was that if Democrats had to make tough choices about what to cut, they’d protect the the poor and most vulnerable. After all, they’re Democrats.

But now it appears that assumption may be wrong–or, at least, not entirely right.

Are Democrats Taking Money From the Poor to Help the Middle Class?! Jonathan Cohn

 

As the front-page story in today’s Times points out, the relationship between AIG and its longtime former CEO, Hank Greenberg, is getting more and more fascinating. On the one hand, Greenberg still owns a lot of stock in the company and is keen to see it become viable again. (I happened to speak with him a few weeks ago–I’ve got to make sure the conversation was on the record before providing more detail, but the short version is that his feelings on this point are pretty unambiguous. It’s a mixture of his personal pride in having built the company and his own financial interest.) On the other hand, Greenberg does seem intent on competing against it aggressively.

This particular detail from the Times story caught my eye:

The firm [that is Greenberg's current firm, C.V. Starr & Company] seems to be focusing on the specialized lines of business insurance that once made A.I.G. stand out. The government had hoped to leave those businesses at A.I.G. intact after selling off most of its other operations, like life insurance and household finance.

That’s basically what I’ve heard, too–I think the hope is to sell off the overseas life insurance and annuities business in particular. (The current CEO, Robert Benmosche, is a former life insurance executive and may decide to hang on to the domestic parts of those businesses.)

Now, if Greenberg were only making a push into the overseas consumer businesses, then there wouldn’t be much of a conflict. But commercial insurance is at the heart of AIG’s plans going forward. Moreoever, the reason those specialty lines have been so profitable over the years is that AIG has had little in the way of competition there and a lot of pricing power. If Greenberg and C.V. Starr are getting into those businesses, it could have a pretty direct effect on AIG’s bottom line.

What Is Hank Greenberg Trying to Do to AIG Anyway? Noam Scheiber

 

In light of the recent multitude of chances for the population at large to be gently introduced to the shenanigans of our Federal Reserve System, I have hope that the lights may come on for enough people before it is too late. Who knows, maybe that light will shine the way back to liberty, property, and peace — and towards real change for the better in America.

[VIEW THIS ARTICLE ONLINE]

 

When Irving Kristol joined the new magazine Commentary, he distinguished himself from the other editors–Clement Greenberg, part-time then, Robert Warshow, and me. First, he had an interest in politics, real politics, electoral politics, and not just the politics of left-wing anti-Stalinists, mulling over what was living and what was dead in Marxism, the fate of socialism, the future of capitalism, communist influence in the intellectual world–no mean issues, but hardly ones to affect who won and who lost an election. So Irving discovered the wonderful political reporter and analyst Sam Lubell in the pages of The Saturday Evening Post, persuaded him to write for Commentary, and made me an enthusiast for his books, now hardly noted (although Sam Tanenhaus’s recently published The Death of Conservatism uses one of Lubell’s central theses as a guiding theme). None of the rest of us had ever read or noticed The Saturday Evening Post.

http://www.tnr.com/article/books-and-arts/the-interested-man

 

Paul Krugman has concentrated his fire recently on those “thumping their chests” over the falling dollar. He has particular scorn for those recommending a return to the gold standard. In Krugman’s view, a simple look at the historical facts will show that it was a superstitious fetish for the yellow metal that prolonged the Great Depression.

A careful, comprehensive response to Krugman’s charges would involve an explanation of the classical gold standard, and the wonderful peace and prosperity it showered on the world. It was only after the major countries abandoned gold during World War I that major imbalances in international trade began to fester — imbalances that eventually exploded during the early 1930s.[1] As a good capitalist pig, I point the reader to my book on the Depression for the full story.

Fortunately, we can take a shortcut in the present article. Using Krugman’s own graph, we can see that the case for abandoning gold — and devaluing currencies in the process — is not nearly as straightforward as he seems to think.


http://mises.org/story/3778

 

Once upon a (not long ago) time, there was a widely established set of blueprints for regimes of monetary and exchange rate policies, one expected to fit not only the full range of economies in the global arena, but also to serve as a guide for international monetary cooperation. Confidence in the effectiveness of those blueprints has been shattered by the scale and simultaneity of asset price booms and busts that led to the current global economic crisis. A reshuffle of views on monetary and exchange rate policies may turn out to be a companion to the revision of financial regulation.

It is now increasingly accepted that, to some degree and width, mainstreaming reactions to asset price moves in monetary policy is to become a new norm. It is also becoming clear that the previous world of theoretical determinacy and optimum rules of conduct is to give place to less-obvious policy choices and more discretion.

The purpose of this note is to highlight how the special complexity and indeterminacy intrinsic to international monetary-financial relations will deepen under the new regime. In the case of financial transactions between advanced financial systems and emerging markets, there is in addition an asymmetrical impact in terms of higher foreign reserve requirements on the latter.

The determinate world of inflation targeting and exchange-rate corner solutions

“The past 10 years have been the decade of inflation targeting. (…) Narrowly defined, inflation targeting commits central banks to annual inflation goals, invariably measured by the consumer price index (CPI), and to being judged on their ability to hit those targets. Flexible inflation targeting allows central banks to aim at both output and inflation, as enshrined in the famous Taylor Rule. The orthodoxy says that central banks should essentially pay no attention to asset prices, the exchange rate, or export prices, except to the extent that they are harbingers of inflation”(Frankel. 2009).

Asset price cycles were seen as basically harmless – or non-significant as a channel of transmission of monetary policy, as in the case of developing economies without financial depth. Even when the frequent appearance of bubbles started to be acknowledged, the belief – “the Greenspan doctrine” – was that attempts to detect and prick them at an early stage would be impossible to accomplish and potentially harmful. If necessary, resorting to interest rate cuts to safeguard the economy after bubble bursts would be a safer procedure.

Low and stable inflation could then be attained through a forecast-oriented, anticipatory manipulation of basic interest rates, as the single focus for monetary authorities. Movements of floating nominal exchange rates would reinforce the effectiveness of interest rates set to target inflation. Stable inflation would also lead to low risk premiums and higher financial stability.

In the case of small countries, fixing the nominal exchange rate and abdicating of monetary policy would import stability from inflation-targeting countries. The “Great Moderation” period, with developed economies exhibiting relatively low inflation rates and output fluctuations from mid-80s onward, seemed to vindicate that confidence.

This world of presumed stable and stabilizing monetary and financial spheres was shaken by the global financial crisis. With hindsight, asset price booms and busts became acknowledged as both increasingly pervasive and harmful: real-estate and stock-market booms leading to excess US household debt and to fragile asset-liability structures; a generalized bubble burst pushing the global economy to a quasi-collapse.

Endogenous creation of liquidity and the “sea of bubbles”

Chapter 3 of the latest IMF’s “World Economic Outlook” brings evidence on the presence of real-estate and stock-market asset price busts over the past 40 years (WEO – ch.3). The recent experience with widespread busts of both house and stock prices is singular in the last 40 years (Chart 1). However, one can observe not only the frequency of previous episodes, but also that those “asset price busts are relatively evenly distributed before and after 1985 – a year that broadly marks the beginning of the ‘Great Moderation’” (p.95).

The Arrival of Asset Prices in Monetary Policy by Otaviano Canuto

 

I have a column in Financial Express today on the rationale for independence of the central bank, and how this is operationalised in democracies.

The rationale for central bank independence

The starting point of modern thinking on monetary policy is the issue of central bank independence. Watching the world across the centuries, a pattern has been found that non-independent central banks distort monetary policy to support the incumbent political party. When elections are approaching, rates tend to be dropped. This makes households feel a bit happier and more inclined to vote for the incumbent. This threatens the fairness of elections. And after elections, it tends to kick off higher inflation. Non-independent central banks are thus associated with election-induced fluctuations. Instead of monetary policy being a force for stability, it becomes (to some extent) a source of shocks for the economy, and of unfairness in elections.

Major countries have chosen a remarkable solution: politicians relinquish control over the central bank. This is a truly rare feature in public administration. In almost all other elements of government, democracies work by holding politicians accountable in elections, and giving politicians the reins in public administration. In this one area, the world has done something unusual.

This requires accountability mechanisms

Two issues follow hard on the heels of independence. First, independence goes with a narrowing of the functions of the central bank. There is no economic case for having independence from politicians for functions such as running the payments system, regulating or supervising financial markets or banks, running a bond exchange and depository, manning a system of capital controls, etc. The rationale for independence is limited to one specific problem: that of setting the short-term interest rate of the economy. Hence, giving RBI independence requires narrowing down its functions to the core where economic logic suggests independence. All other functions need to be placed in conventional agencies, with control in the hands of accountable politicians.

The second issue is that of accountability. The standard route of accountability through elections is being eschewed in this unique problem. But a central bank cannot be handed over to a set of unelected officials with no accountability. This would induce abuse of power, where the agency will focus on its own interests at the expense of the country.

The solution involves transparency, predictability and inflation targeting. The agency must be fully transparent about everything that it does. It must use rules rather than discretion, so as to limit the extent to which discretionary power is wielded by unelected officials. They must write down a monetary policy rule, discuss this in public, and live by it. The third element of accountability is inflation targeting. Independent central banks must have a quantitative monitorable target. Setting an inflation target for the medium term binds the agency to achieving a goal, as opposed to arbitrary exercise of power without accountability.

Commen sense and monetary economics come together

All this reasoning is rooted in the basic hygeine of good public administration. Once we accept the starting premise — that central bank independence is desirable — then careful thinking about public administration leads us to the remaining conclusions: narrow the functions placed in an independent central bank to only those where independence is required (i.e. setting the short-term interest rate), have full transparency, have a monetary policy rule, and require inflation targeting.

In historical sequence, the above reasoning led the way in monetary policy reform. It was a bit later that the best monetary economists started closing their models by putting in an inflation targeting central bank. They found it works very well. So in this strategy for monetary policy reform, we have a happy consensus between the common sense of good administrators and the state of the art of monetary economics. The central banks of the bulk of OECD GDP are now de facto or de jureDe jure inflation targeting is particularly important in countries with weak institutions, where the behaviour of an agency that is not tied down by law can be more erratic. inflation targeting, and the emerging markets with high standards of governance have also made the switch.

Indian monetary policy reform

The Indian monetary policy debate is about the key ideas of the successor to the RBI Act of 1934, which was drafted by the British in the 1920s. The authors of this act never envisioned the conditions of 2009, either in terms of the Indian economy, or our knowledge of monetary economics. In this debate, RBI staff are interested parties and have to recuse themselves.

Operationalising inflation targeting involves addressing many practical problems. A focus on these practical problems is premature. All these practical problems can be solved – as has been done myriad times in other countries – once the principle is accepted. The existence of these practical problems does not invalidate the basic strategy.

One periodically encounters criticism of low inflation as the prime goal of monetary policy. However, anyone who proposes that inflation targeting is not the answer has to come up with an alternative accountability mechanism, for no democracy can have an independent central bank without accountability. In addition, advocates of novel schemes have to explain why India should be a guinea pig for something not found in good countries.


 

There’s good news. If you’ve been shut out of a Roth IRA because your income is too high, beginning in 2010 you may finally be able to have a Roth. On January 1, 2010, the income limits for converting traditional, rollover, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs, and 401(k) or other workplace savings plans with former employers, to a Roth IRA will be removed. Before this change, only people—single or married and filing jointly—with modified adjusted gross incomes of $100,000 and below could convert. (There will still be income limits for contributing to a Roth IRA in 2010 and beyond.)

Who should convert?
The decision to convert needs to be made with care and should include a consultation with your tax advisor. Generally, it may make sense to convert if you:

  • Expect higher taxes in the future
    If you think that you’ll be in a higher tax bracket (combined federal, state, and local taxes) after you retire, or if you plan to leave a substantial amount of your retirement assets to your heirs, you may want to consider a Roth conversion. That’s because you may pay lower taxes now than if you waited until retirement to begin taking taxable withdrawals. Also, if you expect your income to be lower than usual in 2010, or if the value of your non-Roth retirement accounts has declined (and you expect it may increase), it may make sense to convert.
  • Have a long investment time frame
    Generally, if you have 10 years or more before you plan to begin taking distributions from your retirement accounts, you are more likely to benefit from a Roth IRA conversion. That’s because of the opportunity for tax-free growth over a longer time period. Even if you have a shorter time horizon, other features, such as the fact that you don’t have to take minimum required distributions when you turn 70½, may be reasons to convert to a Roth IRA.
  • Can pay the taxes on the conversion
    We believe that, in most cases, you should avoid using proceeds from the conversion to pay the tax costs. In fact, we consider this one of the most critical factors when considering a Roth conversion. Why? Because using proceeds reduces the amount that can potentially grow federally tax free in the Roth IRA, and offsets any tax savings that you may gain by converting. In addition, if you’re under 59½, you’ll pay a penalty, which will likely further reduce any benefit you might have received from the conversion. Instead, consider using cash or other savings held in nonretirement accounts to pay the tax liability.
 

The range of market capitalizations for small caps is between $10 million and $2.3 billion, according to the Russell 2000 Index, which is the standard proxy of small caps in the U.S. For perspective, large caps are generally in excess of $8 billion, while mid caps are in between.

Small caps tend to operate in a niche market that they have carved out via specific products or services. Some small cap companies have grown into household names like Starbucks and Wal-Mart. In other cases, however, small caps continue to operate in their niche market and their overall revenue may reach a ceiling. Some companies might wish to go further by merging with another company, while others will remain complacent with their current size. Additionally, the small cap segment of the market is a feeding ground for acquisitions by larger companies.

Finding good investment opportunities within the small-cap universe is all about turning over rocks, one at a time, and analyzing the large number of small-cap stocks. A benefit to the small-cap investor is that small-cap markets can be less efficient and present more opportunities for mispricings. This is often due to the lack of analyst coverage and the breadth of companies. Small-cap companies have the fewest Wall Street analysts covering them relative to mid and large caps. Additionally, small caps tend to be less liquid and at times harder to invest in, which can also present opportunities to investors with the ability to constantly monitor the stocks and bear the risks.

 

Market Commentary

How the Recovery Might Unfold

With economists estimating that the recession is drawing to a close, the question is what type of recovery will follow. Hear from our vice president of market analysis.
More

Investing Ideas

Sizing Up Small-Cap Stocks

The recession took a toll on small-cap stocks, but optimism has risen. See why they might be of interest now.
More

Personal Finance

Would You Benefit From a Roth IRA Conversion?

If you’ve been shut out of a Roth IRA because your income is too high, you may finally be able to have one because of changes that take effect in 2010.
More

How to Help Make Your Retirement Portfolio Last

While you cannot control the market’s impact on your portfolio, you can control something that can make a significant difference in how long your portfolio will last—how much you withdraw from it.
More

 

A bald man with a wooden leg gets invited to a Halloween Party.
He doesn’t know what costume to wear to hide his head and his
Leg, So he writes to a costume company to explain his problem.

A few days later he received a parcel with the following note:

Dear Sir,
Please find enclosed a pirate’s outfit. The spotted handkerchief will
cover your bald head and, with your wooden leg, you will be just right
as a pirate.

Very truly yours,
Acme Costume Co.

The man thinks this is terrible because they have emphasized his
Wooden Leg and so he writes a letter of complaint. A week goes by and he
Receives another parcel and a note, which says:

Dear Sir,
Please find enclosed a monk’s costume. The long robe will cover your
Wooden leg and, with your bald head, you should really look the part.

Very truly yours,
Acme Costume Co.

Now the man is really upset since they have gone from emphasizing his
Wooden leg to emphasizing his bald head, so again he writes the
Company another nasty letter of complaint..

The next day he gets a small Parcel and a note, which reads:

Dear Sir,
We have TRIED our very BEST
Please find enclosed a bottle of molasses and a bag of crushed nuts.
Pour the molasses over your bald head, pat on crushed nuts, stick your
Wooden Leg up your ass and go as a caramel apple.

Very truly yours,
Acme Costume Co.

 

The Big Thaw

As investors return to the market, big companies in Europe are finding it easier to raise money via bonds, equities and even IPOs.

 

Problems Plague Launch of ‘Safer’ Next- Generation Reactors

The executives of electric utilities worldwide are dreaming of a renaissance in nuclear power. But problems with a new, state-of-the-art reactor in Finland suggest that this is unlikely to happen. The industry’s alternative strategy is to modernize older plants to drastically extend reactor lifetimes.

 

Google News Alert for: new jersey economy

Economy the top issue in New Jersey governor’s race
Press of Atlantic City
In recent surveys, state residents say jobs and the economy are a top issue in the New Jersey governor’s race, with the economic slowdown affecting almost
See all stories on this topic
New York Daily News

Grand Old Nookie Party: NJ GOP candidate Stepfanie Velez-Gentry’s sex-toy
New York Daily News
Republican candidate for District 5 of the New Jersey Assembly, Stepfanie Velez-Gentry holds a catalog from one her sex toy parties.
See all stories on this topic

Survey: New Jersey non-profits still hurting from economic downturn
The Star-Ledger – NJ.com
These findings were culled from New Jersey Non-Profit Economic Trends Update, a mid-year analysis conducted by the Center for Non-profits to gauge trends,
See all stories on this topic
All is not lost in Jersey, even if the candidates steer away from reality
The Star-Ledger – NJ.com
This is New Jersey, so we have plenty to complain about — corruption, property taxes, and the monstrously ugly fake ski slope in the Meadowlands,
See all stories on this topic
CONGRESSMAN HONDA & CHIVUKULA & NJ ASIAN AMERICAN LEADERS CAMPAIGN TO
PolitickerNJ (blog)
New Jerseyan has access to quality education, health care and that we are keeping New Jersey’s economy on the right track and our state moving forward.
See all stories on this topic
Jersey jobs con job
New York Post
By JIM GERAGHTY NEW Jersey’s economy is in rotten shape. But if you want a more pre cise measurement, don’t trust the state’s unemployment figures.
See all stories on this topic
Expectations run high for NextGen air traffic site in Atlantic County
Press of Atlantic City
The NextGen Park is a joint effort of the Hughes Technical Center, the South Jersey Economic Development District, The Richard Stockton College of New
See all stories on this topic
In a Tighter New Jersey Race, a Testier 2nd Debate
New York Times
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI WAYNE, NJ — With New Jersey’s economy sputtering, taxes rising and unemployment at 9.8 percent, it did not take long on Friday for the
See all stories on this topic
New York Times

New Jersey Dining | Prepared Meals
New York Times
Dinner by Design, which opened in 2006, is one of several New Jersey companies that provide made-to-order meals delivered to customers’ homes.
See all stories on this topic

Analysis: NJ, Va. are lagging political indicators
Dailyrecord.com
The odd-year governors’ races in Virginia and New Jersey have long been touted as a glimpse at the voting trends for the next election.
See all stories on this topic
 

Know nukes: A brilliant young nuclear scientist arrested in France for alleged al Qaeda links had worked for a top-secret British nuclear research center, according to a Daily Mail report speculating on possible foiled strikes against Britain. American intel shops are mulling rewriting a much-assailed 2007 assessment’s finding that Tehran halted its nuclear weapons efforts in 2003, The Wall Street Journal reports — as a Post columnist suggests “the Iranian nuclear program is in much worse shape than most analysts had realized,” and another Post op-ed says “a military attack would only increase the possibility of Iran developing a nuclear bomb.” Mohamed ElBaradei, the outgoing U.N. nuclear watchdog, meantime, maintains that the danger posed by Iran’s nuclear program is being exaggerated, The Jerusalem Post relates.

 
Here’s why a NC-17 rating is so critical:
  • An R rated movie easily makes its way to the cinema in your local neighborhood. Thankfully, many local cinemas still won’t show the movie if it’s NC-17.
  • An R rated movie stands a chance to make more money than NC-17 and this will only encourage some producers in Hollywood to make more vile movies like this.
  • And most importantly, children under 17 cannot get into movies with an NC-17 rating, unlike R rated movies, which admit them.
Currently the movie has elected to be “Not Rated” which will allow ANYONE OF ANY AGE TO VIEW THIS HORRIFIC, WICKED MOVIE.
THE MOVIE not only includes deliberately explicit and pornographic sex scenes, it also contains graphic close-ups of sexual mutilation and murderous, accidental violence, including the death of a baby.

A woman is portrayed as the antichrist in this film. The main female character in the movie takes a two by four to her husband’s private parts. And then drills his leg to a millstone while doing other acts of mutilation. This is not the kind of thing we want our children to observe.

The movie is designed not only to shock and titillate the audience. It is also designed to contain symbols, metaphors and other content referring to Christian, biblical themes.

We must act now, today since the movie is coming out next week. Please stand with us and others who care about how movies affect our kids. Click here and sign the petition.

Please forward this petition to everyone in your address book who cares about protecting the eyes and minds of children (as well as adults!).

Click here to sign the petition www.movieguide.org/antichristpetition

Click here to read the review of ANTICHRIST at www.movieguide.org/box-office/7/10015/antichrist

Click here to read reviews of other, more positive movies at www.movieguide.org

 

 

A Wide Open Race for Industry Leadership

Warren Buffett has invested in China’s BYD, but columnists Anil Gupta and Haiyan Wang caution against putting too much faith in its early-mover advantage.

 

Europe Concerned as Dollar Decline Continues

A number of European countries have embarked on a slow recovery following the economic collapse late last year. But with the euro now at a 14-month high against the dollar, euro zone officials worry exports could suffer.

 

Strategerizing: Military intellectuals envision a 50-year “Long War” against al Qaeda consisting of counterinsurgency operations spanning Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Horn of Africa, the Philippines and beyond, Tom Hayden discusses in The Nation. “Comparing al Qaeda in AfPak to al Qaeda in Iraq . . . illustrates both the pros and cons of building U.S. strategy in South Asia around a counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan,” Brian Fishman suggests in Foreign Policy. If Obama submits to Veep Joe Biden’s campaign to shift the focus from the Taliban in Afghanistan to al Qaeda in Pakistan, “as I suspect he will, is there any reason to think America won’t simply preside over the rebirth of al Qaeda? Probably not,” Thomas P.M. Barnett blogs for Esquire Magazine. “Al Qaeda is implementing its game plan in the South Asian war theater as a part of its broader campaign against American global hegemony that began with [9/11],” the organization’s “guerilla chief” tells Asia Times.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbPmXAyt8Io&NR=1

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