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Jim's Journal

jim
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10/09/2008 08:41 #46011

Obama Debate Prep
Category: humor

imk2 - 10/09/08 17:36
HA HA HA...that was great!
james - 10/09/08 09:46
There is plenty of Barack to go around!

10/07/2008 09:01 #45973

E:Strip Holiday Dinner
I'll be planning an (e:strip) holiday dinner, for sometime in early December (between Thanksgiving and Christmas).

This post is just a heads up, I'll make another post in a month to nail down availability and the best times for everyone.

JJ's and India Gate have both worked out OK in the past. If the group is big enough I'll reserve a banquet room somewhere to make sure we have enough space. Any ideas along these lines, please comment!

Cheers,

Jim
matthew - 12/13/08 12:36
Are you still planning on doing this this year?
imk2 - 10/09/08 17:32
oh wow, i forgot about the dinners. i vote for india gate.
paul - 10/09/08 09:26
Sorry I missed this - I have been so busy this week. We can have it at our house. Its not a big deal. It gives us a reason to use the first floor, lol.
fellyconnelly - 10/07/08 22:43
mmmmmmm canned pudding.....
janelle - 10/07/08 16:23
OMG, chocolate pudding?! I love chocolate pudding! You're the best (e:James).
james - 10/07/08 12:48
That is pretty awesome of you Drew. I feel bad always doing stuff at PMT's estate.

Just for (e:Janelle) I will bring a giant can of institutional pudding!
drew - 10/07/08 10:59
I love a pot luck and can share church space. I would open my home, but it is rather pet-infested.
james - 10/07/08 09:54
May I also suggest pot luck at some place free of pets. Either that or Paul had to wear a hazmat suit.

10/02/2008 20:30 #45903

Yak Shaving
Category: culture
An awesome term, for when you find yourself doing some task at 8 removes from what you meant to be doing, each step along the way seemingly utterly necessary...

You start out deciding to tidy your room and you realize that in order to do that you'll need some more trash bags, so you need to go to the shops, which will involve you getting out the car, but the car needs gas, so you'll need to go to the gas station first, which means you should probably find your gas discount card, which involves finding your keys, which are in the room somewhere... ( )



And ultimately, in order to tidy your room, you somehow end up shaving a yak.

image

You know it's happened to you too!
metalpeter - 10/03/08 19:09
That is what kinda keeps my place a mess. The papers pile up because I don't have a filling place. I don't have one of those because of the clothes everywhere, I can't put the clothes away because the video tapes prevent me from having a place to put a dresser so I don't buy one, ha, but it is true.
dcoffee - 10/03/08 10:32
haha, I was totally expecting some Ren and Stimpy
tinypliny - 10/02/08 21:19
I have put this up on my office wall.

Doing is well NOW is much better that doing it perfectly later.

Excellent guidance for me. :/

Thanks for posting that link in chat.
james - 10/02/08 20:39
I just shave my cooch instead.

10/02/2008 07:43 #45886

First!
Category: work
I like being the first one in at work. No interruptions, a nice start to the morning.

That's all :)
tinypliny - 10/02/08 15:22
I made big plans with (e:boxerboi) to do the 7-3 workday but I never made it after the first day. Pathetic lazy me. I think he still does it, though. He is not my hero for nothing! :)
james - 10/02/08 09:32
Don't be afraid to come home either :p
fellyconnelly - 10/02/08 09:11
I think i am mad at myself for referring to my job as my 'profession'.
fellyconnelly - 10/02/08 09:11
even in my profession it is nice sometimes. But then it goes waaayyy too fast!
paul - 10/02/08 08:49
That is the very same reason I like being the last one in at work, because after 5 everyone leaves and I am there till 7 or 9 without interruption and can actually get work done.

09/30/2008 09:38 #45858

ZOMG DOOOOMED
Category: economics
Actually, I am glad that the bailout failed. We'll now get a smaller, more incremental bailout. Rough ride for the next year though, no matter what.

Japan in the 90's went through a crisis very similar to ours, a huge asset bubble and then a giant markdown.

I get what the crisis is about - liquidity - but there's more then one way to solve it. If we prop up existing institutions no questions asked, we'll end up like Japan in the 90's, where zombie banks were technically fine but actually not able to loan much money anyways, thus dragging the crisis out into stagnation for a decade.

The current failed plan was to buy the bad assets at their original inflated values, sell them back to the market at a reduced rate, and use the funds from selling them to buy additional bad assets and repeat the process until all the money was totally gone. That is, if you believe the conference call that was held between the government representatives and Wall Street insiders ( mp3 torrent ), instead of what was said publicly.

Banks operate on the velocity of money. They take money in, send it out again. Don't think of them as repositories, but instead as intermediaries between those who need to hold cash and those who need to spend cash. The banking system is not set up for stasis.

The proposed plan would've increased the velocity of money. Something does need to be done, but jumping to the most drastic expensive plan doesn't sit right with me. I'm totally up for $500 billion worth of no interest loans, something along those lines.

But not recapitalization of the largest banks via burning down $700 billion. Plenty of smaller banks are doing fine. Those are the ones that should be getting help, to replace the large burdened banks. A new day on Wallstreet, slaughter of the behemoths is what sounds good to me.

If 10 years from now there are no familiar old names on Wallstreet, and a new crop of giants risen from the ashes of this meltdown, I'll be a happy camper.
tinypliny - 10/01/08 21:59
Again, a very interesting post and comments! Can you do a common-lingo post on what you think might be the repercussions of the 700bn bailout failing?
hodown - 09/30/08 14:17
I'm ok with the revamping of wall street just as long as I can keep my finance job (and all it's perks).
joshua - 09/30/08 13:26
With regard to your last paragraph - that is exactly what is going to happen, one way or another. After all, three of the five big banks in NY are already a part of history and the niche players are picking up the slack.

Most Americans are queasy about the bailout as is, so I agree that if it were structured via the implementation of loans it would be a better deal, zero-interest or not. Providing such a large amount of currency to flush the "illiquid" debt should be reward enough for these jackals. Regular folks have to eat a **** sandwich over this, so even if they decided to charge a modest interest rate loans are a reasonable idea. Where in the world could somebody possibly borrow that kind of money interest free anyway? If anybody can find out I would like them to point the US Government in that direction.

Many people are selling this plan as a bulwark against potential erosion of lending capability on the part of holding banks. What happens when we get put on the hook for this money and the banks lend to themselves but not the people? Paulson et. al. have been criticized for not being able to phrase this bailout in plain English, explaining the scenario and how it may affect life at home. People want to know if they will be able to get a car loan, and small businesses want to know if they can get bridge loans to meet payroll. We are being told that yes, this will loosen the chokehold on the credit market, but I am still skeptical about how that will shake out for regular people.

Interesting article today from a Harvard egghead, advocating for bankruptcy rather than a bailout. :::link:::