Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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Opinion: The pain of a weak US dollar: Tough talk in Asia Times from Axel Merk, "the portfolio manager of the Merk Hard Currency Fund, a no-load mutual fund that invests in a basket of hard currencies from countries with strong monetary policies assembled to protect against the depreciation of the US dollar relative to other currencies." Given that context, here's some of what he says. If you have a perspective on this, please add it in comments. I'm out of my expertise here, but this seems like something the voters very much want Congress to address. The United States' massive trade deficit exerts pressure on the US dollar as currency is shoveled abroad in return for goods and services. As the US economy is slowing down and possibly sliding into recession, the rate at which the trade deficit grows may also be slowing; in September, this deficit was "only" US$64.3 billion - still near record territory but not as bad as economists had predicted.
Insomniac bears are roaming the forests of southwestern Siberia, scaring local people, as the weather stays too warm for the animals to fall into their usual winter slumber... This is ominous, but it's awfully nice that the temperatures are still in the 60s in mid-November in New England, and we haven't had a hard frost in my yard yet. The birds are still around, and winter, when it comes, will already be shorter. And the heat hasn't come on much at all. To see the rest of the bear, click on the photo. It comes from a Kemerovo site with photos we think are of the region -- hard to tell, don't speak Russian. Good news for the phone-spammed: Dems to put Congress to work. Chicago Sun-Times: With their new power, Democratic leaders want to craft a constitutional way to stop voters from being flooded with robo-calls peddling deceptive information. They are floating the notion that authorizing calls with fraudulent content should be a crime. "These robo-calls, somehow, constitutionally, we are going to have to find some way to stop this," Reid said. Yes!
His editor found my link through a Google alert, and Lane was interested, since he had been to a Rolling Thunder concert elsewhere. He took the thread and ran with it. TANGLED UP IN PLYMOUTH - Still freewheelin’: Dylan masterpiece resurfaces finds somebody who went (tickets were $7.50). Amazingly, The shows still stand as the most significant musical event in the town’s history. They also marked a notable moment in rock history as well: Dylan launched his famous Rolling Thunder Revue tour from there. Kudos to Lane for finding a local story in an obscure bit of the Web flung up by a blogger. It's supposed to work this way. Free at last: Conservative/Libertarian columnist John Tierney is leaving the elite Times Select crowd, but unless you subscribe, you wouldn't know it. Whatever they (Congress) do the next two years, I won’t be here to kick them around. This is my last column on the Op-Ed page. I’ve enjoyed the past couple of years in Washington, but one election cycle is enough. I’m returning full time to the subject and the city closest to my heart: science and New York. I’ll be writing a column and a blog for the Science Times section. Head spinners: Here's pointage to two of the most unusual blogs around, for those nights when the rational brain cells are used up and parched, and a shot of strangeness feels right. Rigorous Intuition is the larger site for Canadian Jeff Wells' alt-reality blog. Its subhed is, "What You Don't Know Can't Hurt Them," and They are the nefarious dudes who run the world. Did fellow Bonesman Kerry deliberately raise a distraction for Bush before the election? This and more there. Tom Matrullo's IMproPRieTies: "A new commonplaces, fair and balanced watchdog of the zou gou" is a horse of a different color. Um, try this: A stylus - child picks it up, discovers it can represent what until then has been mute, offstage. Soon the impedimenta of everyday life are all around it: mother, tree, rock, puppet, graduate student french exam, history of bees, Bush's cabinet, my catty friend, the introduction to Oblomov, clouds, viable alternatives to global warming, the question of Palestine, the entelechy of irony, a most lively comic talent, what I saw on Youtube, the reason we beat the Persians, 40 centimes, Blessed Event, pissing from Mexican balconies, Clem, giant windmills, teeth set in the skull, spiders, Berubeanism, cojones, my USian friend, the bowling ball... |
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