Thursday, April 10, 2008

We owe

"Now I already knew heart disease was the number one killer of women... But I didn't know it claims more lives each year than cancer, chronic lower respiratory diseases, accidents, [marijuana,] and diabetes combined. [...] Too often we women tend to worry and pay attention to everyone else, but unless we're crawling in pain, we don't take the time to take care of ourselves. [...] We owe it to ourselves and to [...] Ms. Universe in front of me and professional supermodel Helena Christiansen [...] to walk the runway wearing red, along with celebrities"

~Natalie Morales, iVillage.com

Monday, April 07, 2008

The bold NBC morning show


A lesson in history? Check out the chart, screw the Fed (back), and read Mises.

'Today' Teaches History, Shows Light at End of Recession Tunnel


NBC morning show assumes economy is in recession, compares current conditions to 1973, 1987 and 2001.


Though economists are less than certain, a U.S. economy in recession is a foregone conclusion for many in the media. The April 3 NBC “Today” show offered a light at the end of an economic tunnel, however. [...] Natalie Morales declared recessions and booms are “all part of a never-ending economic cycle” and told viewers not to panic “because it’s psychologically driven.”

“In the last 50 years the U.S. economy has recovered from six recessions and after each there were periods of great booms,” Morales reported. “So, many experts say to really understand what’s going on and perhaps to benefit in the long run, you need to take a lesson from history.” [...] Morales began with the 1973 recession, spurred in large part by rocketing oil and gasoline prices as a result of the OPEC embargo against the United States.

“Government spending on the Vietnam War coupled with rising unemployment created a slump. America was in a recession,” Morales said. “Inflation doubled in 1972 to more than 6 percent and reached an all-time high (11.04 percent) the following year.”

Morales didn’t provide context to explain how current conditions compared to the recessionary conditions in the early ‘70s. Unemployment was 4.8 percent in February 2008, compared to 6.5 percent in January 1972 and a high of 9.1 percent in March 1975.

Inflation in 2007 was 4.1 percent [well above 10%], compared to 6.2 percent in 1973 and 11.03 percent in 1974.

But, Morales said optimistically, “Just six months after its lowest point, the economy saw growth in the double digits. Suddenly people were buying again.”

“By the mid-1980s things started to really boom. Big hair, big clothes and big bank accounts were in,” she said, setting up for the stock market crash – a drop of more than 500 points – on Oct. 19, 1987.

Much like today, when the media seem eager to declare the economy in a recession or even a depression, fears of economic turmoil were prevalent in 1987. But optimism won out. “Despite fears of another depression,” Morales noted, “the market rallied immediately after the crash, regaining nearly 300 points by the end of that week.”

Source: BusinessAndMedia.org

NBC is on your side, you big dummy! Bear Stearns The economy is not in trouble!

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

The MILF Replacement: A blonde granny

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