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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

It was the night before the State of the Union...

Tomorrow the President will address the nation. Where should he begin the failed economy, rising unemployment, and astronomical debt? No one doubts that Obama has been dealt some difficult cards his first year. No one can say he has sat by idly or not addressed the issues as they continue to come. Nearly everyone though has a reason why his stimulus and bailouts have not been as successful as we all had hoped and what the price tag demanded. Was it too little too late? The too late part seems fathomable but the too little is almost laughable. Should we have let the market self-correct? Was the stimulus a overzealous waste of money? I don't profess to be an economist or a market analysis, but I haven't seen the jobs the stimulus was suppose to create and the banks profit reports make me sick to my stomach.
There are some things the administration I have been extremely happy with. The taxes on the banks profits to reclaim our bail-out money. The concept seems fair enough, but Ill be interested to see which banks are given this tax and which are given amnesty. Today, a bi-partisan effort failed at coming up with a way to tackle national debt.In many administrations, this would be tabled for a while. republicans are against any move toward tax increases. There is significant talk about cutting spending in Medicare and Medicaid that is backed by many Dems.I find this interesting because why is the party that promotes healthcare for all cutting the little healthcare we have now? All and all the 53 votes fell short of the 60 majority needed to pass.
Obama has stepped to the late and recognized his own Instead impact on the national debt and said he will establish a similar panel by executive order. I hope republicans are blocked-out of this conversation like many panels and committees made by this executive administration but i appreciate his unwillingness to let the issue sit.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Team Google.

I really recommend reading this great article by New York Times writer Roger Cohen. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/opinion/15iht-edcohen.html?ref=opinion
I never thought I could be so proud of my E-mail provider. Google is obviously so much more than my e-mail provider. I'm a google fanatic- google reader, google docs, google calendar. I have it all but everyone knows how influential and pervasive , not to mention transformative, the company is. My generation can have a myopic view of the world pre-google. Often I am in conversation revolving goggle as if i was the cell phone or the Internet-What did people do before google?
When a service becomes this much or a cornerstone of advancement and knowledge diffusion, it has some weight to throw around. And throw around, or should I say down, it did. While China reluctantly embraces change in the name of globalization, the governemts censorship permeates every sectior and leaves no rock, or server, unturned.
Google really isnt too pysched to have something censoring searches and tampering with accounts so in a monumental move for both foreign policy and globalzation- google is withdrawing google.cn.
Finally Chinas incompatible polices have met. Globalization is not possible without open market systems. But more than the predicament China faces, google has shown that there companies can be successful without compromising their ethics. Removing google.cn isn't a profitable move, but google realizes the revenue they would be receiving would be at the steep price of everything they stand for- freedom of information.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Students Rally For a Cause

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjtaPe4xj34
Students riot the streets! With anger and passion, students from University of Tennessee showed they can really unite and rally for a cause.
What were the chants of anger and passion about- healthcare? war? animal cruelty? child labor?
Something much more dire. Their college football coach, Lane Kiffin, left their program.
While I am sure their feelings of disappointment and betrayal were real, it made me reminisce for days i never saw. Days when students would hold walk-outs, sit-ins, and protests for reasons that were real and tangible. We are not living in a time that doesn't demand our voice. Two wars, an economic melt-down, main street and wall street failings- and what we rally around?
I think the students should have protested. They were passionate about a university failing and felt scorn. But I just wish more students felt the amount of emotion they feel for their collegiate football program for the future of their county, for the lives of soldiers, or really for anything that doesn't involve referees.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Airport security

Hey guys,
This is my first post and I hope it wont seem gloom and doom that my first post is on airplane security but I want this blog to be news oriented and today I have been watching coverage on why the Christmas plane explosion got as far as it did. I have personal experience of getting through liquids, that I didn't realize were in my purse, and friends getting tweezers and other banned objects past security. I think that tweezers and my perfume bottle are reasons to worried- but those are things we ARE looking for and they are not being caught. So it doesn't surprise me that things we haven't thought of, exploding man-diapers, are not being detected. I am really confused how after such horrible attacks like 9/11 and constant terrorist attacks around the world that there are scanners that could catch these very type of things but because of bureaucracy and privacy concerns they are not largely implemented. I dont understand how someone can really complain that the strangers can see their underwear over being blown -up. If people really feel this strongly because of religious or other concerns, then railways still run. Drive or take a train. Airplanes are not a right, they are a business and they deserve to set their own standard for the safety of their vessels and customers.
I talked to a friend of mine who is a naval officer and works with CIA and he said that airplane safety is rushed because of the strict takeoff times and that the future of air safety is tentative take off and arrival times. You would board your plane when everyone has been checked and run through databases. There would be an arrival cutoff and then everyone would get checked. Once that was done then the plane takes off. It would be hard with connecting flights but I think that people need to realize connivence is not to be sacrificed with safety and we arent living in the same world as we were 20 years ago. We watched the countries be plagued with terrorist attacks and thought that we could never be there. Now we know we can be there, and we need to pull out every measure to prevent any attacks.
I also watched the press conference with President Obama where he said that he was done with finger pointing and the buck stops with him. This sounds horrible to me. I want whoever is in change of connecting databases that would have send him or whoever didn't flag the fathers call about his son going rogue to Yemen with an extremist group to be fired. Finger pointing is useless but pointing out where things weren't wrong and fixing them by hiring someone who would do it better is not. This is not bureaucracy, this is how any high-level company would operate. At any news agency or large corporation there was a melt down of this capacity, there would be people who were fired. This also doesn't send a good message to terrorists abroad, they will know the same people that let this happen will still be in place the next time they try to attack us. They are learning from their failure as much as we are and now they know they wont have to worry about change of command and a change in mind-set. We still are only preparing for past attacks and not looking to the future, which wont be explosive underwear.