There's not enough money
In the world
To fill the dark hole
In Warren Buffet's soul.
There's not enough money
In the world
To fill the dark hole
In Warren Buffet's soul.
Yes, as in Earhart. She was vaguely hispanic, divorced, thirty-two, five feet tall, three kids and... Mormon. About the last thing I expected at McFadden's but she was a good pool player, too. A commanding voice. Clear, strong, low. Intelligent.
Later on I played Roberta... imagine a voluptuous Tyra Banks, 5'9", perhaps twenty-five and the typical cat'n'mouse game. Feigned disinterest but played pool anyway. Walked away for awhile but returned later to re-evaluate me.
And finally Christina - young, blonde, slightly plump waitress with a Jamie Presley face that I met months ago. Tonight she was off work and chatted me up for an hour or so.
It's possible that my blue-collar pool pals are "better people" than most of my white-collar co-workers.
( Feb 05 2010, 04:06:45 AM EST ) PermalinkHow do you defeat the Rational Sociopath on the Rational Battlefield? You don't. You force him to fight on the Battlefield of the Irrational. The Rational Sociopath can't grasp the strategy of a Queen Sacrifice and will never play it. There's a reason that Goldman Sachs is 150 years old while Christianity is 2000 years old.
What was the underlying message of the movie "Daybreakers" in context of the banking crash? Now think about the messages of "Avatar", "The Book of Eli" and "Legion". Capitalism and free markets are only a subset of human behavior and a battle is already in progress.
And The Rhythm Of Life is a powerful beat
Puts a tingle in your fingers
And a tingle in your feet
Rhythm in your bedroom
Rhythm in the street
Yes, The Rhythm Of Life is a powerful beat
Discovering the truth is an incremental process because Latency is a fundamental property of the physical world and of thought. Most people lack the courage and determination to seek the truth. I am undoubtedly incomprehensible to most interviewers and acquaintances. Latency is often a consolidation of many forces into a single vector.
I suspected a progression towards the 32-hour workweek, knew the empirical evidence of the Long Depression (60/48-hour week) and Great Depression (40-hour week) but it was in 2009 that I saw the theory and mathematical proof of it. Work is finite and shrinks in proportion to rising productivity. Work is a Commons area, subject to Tragedy Of The Commons and today's forty-hour workweek is an artificial constraint which prevents "overgrazing" of the Commons.
A 32-hour workweek is not guaranteed but it's the optimum path.
Even a de facto 36-hour workweek would measurably increase network flow-through.
See France and Germany as examples.
( Jan 22 2010, 04:51:59 AM EST ) PermalinkFiction.
Stranger than life.
The Fountainhead's protagonist, Howard Roark, is an individualistic young architect who chooses to struggle in obscurity rather than compromise his artistic and personal vision [in] an establishment centered on tradition-worship.
While Roark is working in the quarry, he encounters Dominique... There is an immediate attraction between them, which results in flirtation followed by what many readers interpret as rape.
[Ellesworth] Toohey sets out to destroy Roark through a smear campaign he spearheads.
Roark and Gail become great friends, although he does not know about Roark's past relationship with Dominique.
Roark... dynamites the building to prevent the subversion of his vision
The jury finds him not guilty. Roark marries Dominique.
The End.
( Jan 20 2010, 03:36:14 PM EST ) PermalinkIf you ask your questions long enough and often enough, you get answers.
Most of the time.
The problem is that you eventually run out of questions. Well, not quite. You still have questions but they're minor and the answers are trivial or arbitrary or too easily found.
( Jan 14 2010, 03:40:37 AM EST ) PermalinkDice listings declined to 50.5K after rising to 53K in October, 2009. Indeed.com monthly listings also declined in December, year over year, and January's numbers already look poor.


The university is surrounded by small single and duplex rentals for students, all carrying the traditional "For Rent, call (XXX-XXXX)" signs for the past year until Christmas when this sign appeared -

The problem with figuring things out is that easy quantifiable questions get replaced with difficult ethical questions. Are we the arbitrators of justice within our own local domain?
( Jan 07 2010, 05:02:07 AM EST ) PermalinkA fallout from my Wiccan incident was a brief review of Satanism. I'm hardly an expert but it seems to me that Satanism has more in common with Libertarianism than it does with Christianity or Libertarianism with Communism. Satanism and Libertarianism are ideologies that stress individualism while Christianity and Communism are ideologies about the group.
( Dec 26 2009, 11:23:15 AM EST ) PermalinkA common element in con scams is that the mark ("sucker") front-loads his own money in hopes of gaining more money in the future. For instance, the mark might pay into a health care fund today in hopes of universal health care coverage in 2013...
"Claim: expand coverage to most uninsured
Fact: All bills do this. Fine Print: Coverage starts in 2013"
( Dec 25 2009, 02:51:55 PM EST ) PermalinkIn periods of saturation, true value comes from the margin... from the most unexpected area of your world.
( Dec 24 2009, 04:33:42 AM EST ) PermalinkWe attended the premiere of "Death, Sex & The Holidays" and I came away with two thoughts.

1) The young aim for shock value because it's easy
2) the six vignettes combined Common Context interwoven with The Unexpected
Refer back to Branded Bandwidth, Feb of 2006 - Mental bandwidth can be divided into two mutually exclusive sets - bandwidth which seeks to conserve itself (The Mundane) and bandwidth which seeks novelty. Last week's "Death & Sex" play successfully threaded both bandwidths into a single story.

It's another meme design pattern - bind to common context, threaded with novelty.
( Dec 23 2009, 02:43:36 PM EST ) PermalinkAutonomy is inversely related to complexity. It's possible to optimize autonomy but in general, it's bounded by complexity. Autonomy is a rough proxy for flexibility.
( Dec 16 2009, 11:26:38 AM EST ) Permalink"Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia signed and ratified the pact... towards setting up a joint central bank and... single currency."
My comments from Sept, 2006 - "major international blocs have been planning to abandon the US dollar... Asian and Arab regions have their own schemes underway".
It's going to happen.
"Dishonest money breeds dishonest people".
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