Rolling UK Economy Into The Shitbin Thread Rolling US Economy Into The Shitbin Thread Real Estate bubble bust may be worse than Dot Com bubble bust
― Ned Trifle II, Saturday, 12 April 2008 12:20 (sixteen years ago) link
eeg so i guess i'm kinda glad this month's harpers has become buried in a pile of random objects on my desk xpost
― rrrobyn, Saturday, 12 April 2008 17:48 (sixteen years ago) link
The Economy piece in Harper's didn't really include any new information.
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:07 (sixteen years ago) link
I mean most of what it says was true ten years ago, granted that it's important to remember that all that is true.
Last month's Harper's cover about the potential contagious cancer made me laugh a little. They should just change their name to Looming Apocalypse Monthly.
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:09 (sixteen years ago) link
If the "Numbers Racket" article is about how the US gov skews its own economic statistics in order to manipulate markets, understate unemployment, and circumvent the intent of certain US laws (eg indexing Social Security benefits to the CPI), then I would like to read it.
― Aimless, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:13 (sixteen years ago) link
haha xpost
confession: i never read any of the american politics/economy articles in harpers
i try sometimes but
― rrrobyn, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:15 (sixteen years ago) link
the "Numbers Racket" article is about how the US gov skews its own economic statistics in order to manipulate markets, understate unemployment, and circumvent the intent of certain US laws (eg indexing Social Security benefits to the CPI), then I would like to read it.
-- Aimless, Saturday, April 12, 2008 2:13 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Link
That's what it's about, but your post pretty much sums up everything that's in the article.
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:20 (sixteen years ago) link
There was a time when these numbers weren't corrupt. It is good to keep track of how widespread the area of corruption has grown and who benefits from it, if only to keep one's sense of reality from becoming too distorted by the powerful Untruth Waves bombarding us from all sides.
― Aimless, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:28 (sixteen years ago) link
It has some neat graphs.
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:29 (sixteen years ago) link
Yeah, I see your point. It is important to stop once in a while and remind yourself that the statistics you're hearing have little bearing on whether the typical American living standard, or even your own living standard, is actually getting better.
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 18:30 (sixteen years ago) link
Got any faith in humanity left? Trash it.
― Oilyrags, Saturday, 12 April 2008 20:38 (sixteen years ago) link
Wait, sorry, I'm supposed to lose faith in humanity because someone did something kind of stupid and got killed?
― Hurting 2, Saturday, 12 April 2008 21:57 (sixteen years ago) link
I guess you're right, but it still pisses me off real good.
― Oilyrags, Saturday, 12 April 2008 21:59 (sixteen years ago) link
I do think it's a little saddening that this woman undertook a project that relied on a certain degree of basic human decency, and then those expectations were horribly violated. I'm also a little saddened by the jaded reactions I'm seeing all over the place.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 12 April 2008 22:24 (sixteen years ago) link
Was it a naive project? Maybe. But it's depressing nonetheless.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 12 April 2008 22:26 (sixteen years ago) link
lol Gawker's scifi blog (lol) had a roundup today on "12 Ways to Prepare for Our Dystopian Near-Future" or something, and even I thought it was some alarmist bullshit.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 14 April 2008 04:01 (sixteen years ago) link
and i'm already stockin up on non-perishables and shit
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 14 April 2008 04:05 (sixteen years ago) link
man drop in a reference to ghostface and that's the most in-character pair of posts i've ever had
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 14 April 2008 04:06 (sixteen years ago) link
http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/david_cox/2008/04/precautionary_principles.html
― banriquit, Sunday, 20 April 2008 09:58 (sixteen years ago) link
lol
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 20 April 2008 16:38 (sixteen years ago) link
CIA chief: 'Get ready for Children of Men-style funnies'. Admittedly I paraphrase.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:12 (sixteen years ago) link
I think it's just wonderful that the deterioration in the world situation from overpopulation will occur at a slow enough pace that we can adjust to each new level of chaos as normal and expected. This means that, however bad things get, life will still seem commonplace and acceptable. Humans are amazingly good at this.
― Aimless, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:33 (sixteen years ago) link
Was it Obvious Day at the CIA?
― milo z, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:34 (sixteen years ago) link
i kinda suck at it but yknow, go humans xpost
― rrrobyn, Thursday, 1 May 2008 17:36 (sixteen years ago) link
Debates, debates.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 5 May 2008 19:22 (sixteen years ago) link
lol just had a half hour convo w/an old friend about how we're both getting a creeping sense of doomq
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 5 May 2008 19:24 (sixteen years ago) link
but fuck it i'm happy today
doomq
― rrrobyn, Monday, 5 May 2008 20:30 (sixteen years ago) link
http://blog.wired.com/cars/2008/05/as-diesel-price.html
― El Tomboto, Friday, 9 May 2008 00:49 (sixteen years ago) link
Earlier this week in Houston, Texas, a veteran driver was carjacked at gunpoint and his diesel tanker stolen. The truck was recovered today, undamaged, but minus its liquid cargo.
"is it thunderdome yet" indeed
I should have put this on this thread to begin with, but this story just kills me. they just caught the kid yesterday, he came back a third time and security jumped him. crawling under cars and powerdrilling into fuel tanks should have earned him a darwin award.
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/local&id=6117572
Police say the thief drilled a hole into the gas tanks of two SUVs and stole the gas. The first time it was a Chevy Silverado pick up truck, the second hit was on a Jeep Liberty SUV - that time the thief got scared off and left a bucket of gas just sitting there.
There have been a total of 10 reports of gas thefts in San Jose. Police in Daly City are just shaking their heads - they can't believe this has happened. They say it's a wonder that the thief or thieves didn't kill themselves because using drills around gas is not the safest idea.
― Milton Parker, Friday, 9 May 2008 01:09 (sixteen years ago) link
One guy stealing gas seems a bit lightweight for a thread about the looming apocalypse, don't you think?
― Aimless, Friday, 9 May 2008 01:39 (sixteen years ago) link
right now it's certainly just a curio story. I know the first guy who was hit, which made it personal. imagine an entire building's office chatter revolving around steel lined gas tanks for 12-gallon cars the week gas cleared $4 in SF.
― Milton Parker, Friday, 9 May 2008 01:52 (sixteen years ago) link
but you're absolutely right, it smacks of recreational panicking
― Milton Parker, Friday, 9 May 2008 01:53 (sixteen years ago) link
I think that one guy may be indicative of larger anxieties about the price of gas, though.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 9 May 2008 01:56 (sixteen years ago) link
esp with regard to tom's highlighted stolen tanker story. glad i don't drive. not even going to take the subway much anymore once i get a few parts for my bike.
― ian, Friday, 9 May 2008 02:07 (sixteen years ago) link
http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/photos/uncategorized/2008/06/13/flood.jpg
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, June 13 -- The sun finally broke through the layers of clouds on Friday, a reassuring presence after a week of rain. But as residents in and around this eastern Iowa city surveyed their waterlogged landscape, they did not like what they saw.
"It looks like Katrina," said a man in a pickup truck who declined to give his name. He was stuck in traffic that was at a standstill for 10 miles on the interstate north of the city, gazing at the Quaker Oats factory and buildings sitting in several feet of water.
Locals said the flood that hit Iowa's second-largest city is far worse than the deluge of 1993. About 25,000 residents have had to leave, and hundreds of homes and businesses have been damaged, many of them severely.
More than 400 blocks of downtown were evacuated, including a jail and a major hospital. Water flowed like a river through downtown streets blocked off by National Guard members, and warehouses along the Cedar River were nearly submerged. Floodwater gurgled around treetops and lapped just feet below electrical wires and billboards. The Cedar River crested at 31.2 feet Thursday, 15 feet above flood stage and breaking the record from 15 years ago.
"We thought the crest would be 20 or 22 feet, and we thought we would be okay, but it was 31," Cedar Rapids Mayor Kay Halloran said.
The flooding that hit this city of more than 120,000 is just part of the hammering the Midwest has received from severe storms during the past week. Floodwaters have submerged parts of Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Authorities have been forced to close a nearly 300-mile stretch of the upper Mississippi River to all traffic. According to the Associated Press, scores of bridges across nine overflowing rivers have been weakened or swept away.
The floods have destroyed acres of corn, soybeans and other crops, prompting worries about a spike in food prices at a time when they already have been rising. "I have real concerns about our agricultural sector," said Gov. Chet Culver (D), who declared 83 of Iowa's 99 counties disaster areas. (...)
Carpenter Phil Leidigh, 53, a Cedar Rapids native, wondered where homeless people downtown would go and said flooding hit low-income areas of the city the hardest.
"Where the flooding is, it hit the people who are already struggling, who worked their whole lives to get where they are and now have to start over," he said. "It could take years for the city to recover.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 15 June 2008 01:32 (fifteen years ago) link
What was that film with Tina Turner where she wore all that leather and studs? Did I dream that? Are we talking about the same film? I'm really drunk.
― VeronaInTheClub, Sunday, 15 June 2008 01:46 (fifteen years ago) link
It had to do with the apocalypse so I'm not THAT drunk.
― VeronaInTheClub, Sunday, 15 June 2008 01:47 (fifteen years ago) link
When I went to a William Gibson reading/signing the other night, somebody asked him about the tendency to describe his books as "dystopian." He gave pretty much the same answer in this interview to io9:
"None of us ever live in dystopia. That's an imaginary extreme, a literary device. No one lives in dystopias, they just live in shitty cultures. And these societies [in my books] seem dystopian to middle class white people in North America. They don't seem dystopian if you live in Rio or anywhere in Africa. Most people in Africa would happily immigrate to the Sprawl."
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 15 June 2008 01:57 (fifteen years ago) link
"None of us ever live in dystopia?" LOL LOL LOL
― VeronaInTheClub, Sunday, 15 June 2008 02:03 (fifteen years ago) link
Most people in Africa would happily immigrate to the Sprawl.
this seems a salient point
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 15 June 2008 02:10 (fifteen years ago) link
The US does seem fairly prone to "extreme weather events" as the news people seem to love calling them, so maybe as that increases then it might encourage a particularly recalcitrant country to do something concrete about climate change. Not that I'm wishing them ill or anything, but New Orleans-style events are more likely to prompt action than Bangladesh vanishing under the sea.
― James Morrison, Monday, 16 June 2008 00:03 (fifteen years ago) link
i think the signs are pointing very much to the obvious.
― morgan bostwick, Monday, 16 June 2008 01:13 (fifteen years ago) link
The extreme weather in the USA is muchly related to the north-south orientation of N. America's mountain ranges. They present no barrier to funneling arctic air to the mid-continent.
― Aimless, Tuesday, 24 June 2008 18:27 (fifteen years ago) link
despite science being in agreement about climate change and global warming, I think there is also agreement that recent weather events aren't actually related to that.
― akm, Tuesday, 24 June 2008 18:32 (fifteen years ago) link
Yes, well, it's certainly true that no specific event can be pointed to as being because of climate change. It's more the increasing average frequency/seriousness of such events that's an indicator. And that mountain range thing is also true: isn't that why almost every tornado in the history of the modern world happened in North America?
― James Morrison, Wednesday, 25 June 2008 00:41 (fifteen years ago) link
Interesting article re running out of various elements: http://www.asimovs.com/_issue_0806/ref.shtml
Although it's annoying the way he says "extinct" when he means "locked up in consumer goods".
― James Morrison, Thursday, 10 July 2008 06:31 (fifteen years ago) link
Always nice to see this thread rising to the top. Like cream in fresh milk.
― Aimless, Thursday, 10 July 2008 16:35 (fifteen years ago) link