Archive for May 7th, 2008


Another bubble bursts

This one is SUVs. Owners are trying to unload their gas-guzzling behemoths.

After paying $75 to fill his black Dodge Ram pickup truck for the third time in a week, Douglas Chrystall couldn’t take it anymore.

“The SUV craze was a bubble and now it is bursting,” said George Hoffer, an economics professor at Virginia Commonwealth University whose research focuses on the automotive industry. “It’s an irrational vehicle. It’ll never come back.”

Detriot, and particularly Ford, delighted in making SUVs because the profit margin was so large. Meanwhile, Japanese automakers concentrated on smaller, more economical cars. Detriot made the same error in the 70’s too. I guess they never learn.

Large trucks can be designed to be considerably more fuel-efficient. And we certainly need large trucks. But not for hauling around soccer moms.

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Spinning blimp wind turbine

Spinning blimp wind turbine
It’s in beta. Could it work? Strong, dependable tethering to the ground would seem to be crucial here!

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So, when will Hillary get it?

By any measure the race is over. She can’t win and has to know it. It’s time for her to concede gracefully then back Obama.

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Connecticut vs. California

A former Connecticut state representative slams the comatose state government in a recent Op-Ed in the Hartford Courant. Job and business growth in Connecticut is nonexistent, and if it wasn’t for the super-wealthy Greenwich area, things would be much worse. Yes, Connecticut still has the highest per capita income of any state, but given the following, how much longer can that last?

From 1989 to 2005, while the nation witnessed job growth of 24 percent, the number of jobs in Connecticut dropped by 0.2 percent, placing us dead last — 50th — in the nation in job growth.

Over the past 15 years, the income gain for Connecticut’s middle-income families (the middle 20 percent) was barely half the national average, which ranked us 49th worst in the country as measured by the change in average real income.

Considering that Greenwich CT is the hedge fund capital of the country and that many hedge funds are currently imploding with more expected to do so, it seems obvious that Greenwich may not be able to prop up the state financially much longer. Is anyone at the Connecticut state level thinking about this? Well, of course not.

Instead, Connecticut’s solution, as the Op-Ed points out, is to constantly raise taxes and get deeper in debt while steadfastly refusing to think, much less do something about their obvious and growing problems.

When Sue and I moved to CT from CA in 2007 (I grew up in CT), we thought the cost of living would be less. It’s not. Connecticut property taxes are at nosebleed levels. The cost of heating oil and electricity is extremely steep. Gasoline is taxed excessively here too. Everything, for that matter, seems heavily taxed.

These are among the reasons we’ve moved back to CA. Yes, the California state government has huge problems. But, unlike Connecticut, they know it and are trying to do something about it. Never thought I’d say this, but I’m be glad to be back in a state where Arnold is governor. At least the California government is awake, has ideas, and is actively trying to solve problems. Contrast this with the CT governor who a few months back announced a plan to revitalize the state. Her plan was to put cameras on one part of an interstate to catch speeders and to give businesses a $250 rebate, and I think she was unclear why people thought these plans were inadequate to the point of being ludicrous.

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Before psychedelia, before punk, before all of it

… were The Fugs, maybe the first DIY / protest band ever. (This was recorded sometime in the mid 60’s.)

They are still recording and their recent The Fugs Final CD Vol. 1 is maybe their best ever. Seriously. Vol. 2 is coming soon. Website.

They had a profound impact on my tender young psyche and I thank them for it.

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