MindBody: J.K. Rowling On The Inner World And The Outer….

“Unlike any other creature on this planet, humans can learn and understand, without having experienced. They can think themselves into other people’s minds, imagine themselves into other people’s places.

Of course, this is a power, like my brand of fictional magic, that is morally neutral. One might use such an ability to manipulate, or control, just as much as to understand or sympathise.

And many prefer not to exercise their imaginations at all. They choose to remain comfortably within the bounds of their own experience, never troubling to wonder how it would feel to have been born other than they are. They can refuse to hear screams or to peer inside cages; they can close their minds and hearts to any suffering that does not touch them personally; they can refuse to know.

I might be tempted to envy people who can live that way, except that I do not think they have any fewer nightmares than I do. Choosing to live in narrow spaces can lead to a form of mental agoraphobia, and that brings its own terrors. I think the wilfully unimaginative see more monsters. They are often more afraid.

What is more, those who choose not to empathise may enable real monsters. For without ever committing an act of outright evil ourselves, we collude with it, through our own apathy.

One of the many things I learned at the end of that Classics corridor down which I ventured at the age of 18, in search of something I could not then define, was this, written by the Greek author Plutarch: What we achieve inwardly will change outer reality.”

Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling at her Harvard commencement speech on June 5 2008.

Shooting for Justice: Supremes Uphold Right to Self-Defense

“The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Americans have a right to own guns for self-defense and hunting, the justices’ first major pronouncement on gun rights in U.S. history.

The court’s 5-4 ruling struck down the District of Columbia’s 32-year-old ban on handguns as incompatible with gun rights under the Second Amendment. The decision went further than even the Bush administration wanted, but probably leaves most firearms laws intact…..”

 

More at AP News.

Rights to self defense are for individuals not just for state militias, as liberals like to argue.  Notice it’s the only time you’ll hear liberals defend any rights for states…

 

Supremely Confused: Rat Out the State – Die…..Rape Kids – Live.

“[Justice] Kennedy concluded that in cases of crimes against individuals — as opposed to treason, for example — “the death penalty should not be expanded to instances where the victim’s life was not taken.”

The decision does not affect the imposition of the death penalty for other crimes that do not involve murder, including treason and espionage, he said…..”

More at the Washington Post on the Supreme Court’s latest piece of muddled thinking.

Comment:

If treason warrants the death penalty, it must be because of its heinousness as a crime, not because of any inherent tendency to lead to murder, since not all treason leads to anyone’s death (besides which, of course, the state is a far larger killer than any traitor).

But, if heinousness is a criterion, then isn’t raping children (at least in certain instances – let’s overlook mentally defective rapists here) heinous?

Right here, I find the rationale for my blogging and the source of much left-wing and right-wing confusion: the pervasive belief that most harmful things in society are physical and material; that most good things are physical and material; and that we can leave out the mind when we discuss the body politic….

Raping people is a form of torture – rape attacks your feelings about your own sexual identity and others’ that form the core of human personality and integration into society.

Children who are raped repeatedly grow up, like torture victims, with suffering that almost never leaves them. The lives of the most savage criminals often have childhood rape as a common theme. Growing up to be a serial killer or a future rapist seems to me to be a fate worse than being killed. You might not end up that way, but only because of a heroic effort on your part.

Parents, which would you rather have – a child who dies in war, is decorated as a hero and honored forever, or a child who is kidnapped and repeatedly raped and tortured, survives…. but only as an emotional and physical wreck, who for the rest of his life stumbles from one crisis to the next, eventually turning to crime himself.

If you find that difficult to answer, I rest my case…

Mob Mind: Warriors of the Amazon…

“As the Amazon sites expand their visitors are seen as an increasingly important. Mark Moskowitz, an independent filmmaker, sent an e-mail message to about 3,000 people this week asking them to review the DVD of his film “Stone Reader,” which goes on sale soon.

“If you didn’t see it but heard it was good, go ahead and post anyway, (what the heck),” Mr. Moskowitz told them. “It doesn’t obligate you for anything, even the truth.”

Despite the widespread presumption that the reviews are stacked, both readers and writers say they affect sales, especially for new writers whose books are not widely reviewed elsewhere.

To increase the credibility of the reader reviews, Amazon has introduced a means for users to vote on the quality of each review, and a corresponding ranking of the top 1,000 reviewers. But the site’s discussion boards are full of carping about how people are trying to play that system, too. Many prolific reviewers speculate that Harriet Klausner, 55, who has long reigned as No. 1, cannot possible read all the books she reviews.

In a telephone interview, Ms. Klausner, in turn, accused the No. 2 reviewer of getting people to vote for him and against her in a “desperate attempt to be No. 1.”

But such concerns among reviewers pale beside those shared by a range of naturally obsessive authors.

Late last month on her radio talk show, Dr. Laura Schlessinger used a call about an anonymous letter to vent her distress over some of her Amazon reviewers, who she described as “scummy, creepy people.”

The feminist author Katha Pollitt mentioned in a recent New Yorker article that she had considered anonymously posting a nasty review on her ex-boyfriend’s new girlfriend’s Amazon page, but refrained from doing so. In an interview, however, she said she had chastised a friend whose book had no reviews on Amazon when it came out, telling her to have friends to post some. The friend followed her advice, but Ms. Pollitt was disappointed. “I’m thinking what kind of friends are these? They’ve only written one sentence.”

The novelist A. M. Homes said the one Amazon review that had stuck in her mind was a negative one from someone who signed off “A reader from Chevy Chase,” which is her hometown.

“The world of books is a very small world these days, and any time someone takes the time to share their opinion it’s incredible,” Ms. Homes said. “But I do want to know who that person from Chevy Chase was and what their problem with me really is.”

Read the rest of this 2004 New York Times piece on the weird world of Amazon reviews.

Amazon Blog: The Funny-Money-Hunny [sic]

The German translation of “Mobs, Messiahs and Markets,” Der Massensyndrom, is out. And my co-author gave an interview to accompany the release.

We have a slight difference of opinion on this. I think the over-supply of paper money in the system over the past decades isn’t entirely Greenspan’s doing. It isn’t possible for one man to exert that kind of influence on the economy. What about the oceans of paper that poured in from millions of ordinary people in Asia who chose to stash their savings in the dollar rather than in a gunny sack… or in their own woozy currencies?

Too bad the dollar turned out to be as bad a bet as any of the others…

How the times they have a-changed.

Back then, we turned down thrifty, frumpy Hard-Work-And-Savings at the door (no callouses, dirty nails and sweat stains, please) and waltzed in on the arm of the Funny-Money-Hunny [sic] — a lady of questionable virtue and unquestioned charm….

But now?

We turn to the papers for insights and we find this:
Former Bear Stearns Hedge Fund Managers Indicted.

I guess they call that hedge-hunting.

Tut…And these guys were gods only yesterday.

How soon they forget….

All it took was for gas prices to double…..and the mob got out the noose and the gallows…
Back then, the working stiffs….got, well, stiffed.
Back then, all over the world, the good times rolled and the high-rollers made good;

But now it’s goodbye to the good times.
The nobs are being nabbed.
And the only thing rolling on Wall Street are the heads…..

(No trade mark infringement intended against Maria Bartiromo, TV’s original “Money Honey” – hence my alternative spelling..

Bear Stearns Hedge Managers: Doing The Perp Walk….

“Two former managers of hedge funds at Bear Stearns were arrested and charged with securities fraud on Thursday, a year after the collapse of the funds signaled the onset of a credit crunch that shows little sign of abating….
The indictments, which will be detailed this afternoon by federal prosecutors in Brooklyn, are the first to be brought against senior Wall Street executives linked to a tight credit market that has rattled global markets, led to more than $350 billion in write-offs, cost numerous executives their jobs and culminated in the demise of Bear Stearns.

The two funds had names as obtuse as the complex subprime securities in their portfolios — High Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund, and its riskier sister offering, the High Grade Structured Credit Strategies…….”

More at the New York Times.

Comment:

Tut…And these guys were gods only yesterday. How soon they forget….

All it took was for gas prices to double…..and the mob got out the noose and the gallows…

Brazil Booming…

Lost Your Job on Wall Street? Head for Brazil! PDF Print Mail
27 May 2008
by John Fitzpatrick
The financial crisis which has hit American and European banks has cost tens of thousands of workers their jobs. One side effect of this has been a rise in interest by Western bankers in other markets, particularly in India, the Middle East and the Far East. The Times of London coined the expression summing up the dilemma facing those with no prospects in Western markets: ‘Mumbai, Dubai, Shanghai – or Goodbye”. It quoted a headhunter as saying there had been an annual increase of 20% to 25% in the number of Western bankers heading East over the past two years. So far there has been no sign of many (if any) of these jobseekers heading to Brazil but there are a number of reasons why they should consider the idea.
Any Wall Street whiz kid would feel at home immediately in São Paulo. The city is obsessed with money, success, status and flaunting your wealth. Visit the old downtown area around the Bovespa and BM&F futures exchange, Avenida Paulista, Faria Lima, Funchal, Itaim and Berrini or head further out along the Marginal highway almost as far as Interlagos and you´ll see banks, brokerages, finance houses, insurance companies, accountancy firms, consultancies, actuaries and lawyers´ offices by the score. Countless sky-high buildings, gleaming as the sun reflects their glass exteriors, swarm with hundreds of thousands of busy bees, plugged into their computers, phones glued to ears as they gaze into their computer screens while holding conversations with a dozen people at the same time

Individualism Is A Lamb With A Lawyer

“Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting what’s for dinner. Freedom is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote….”
Benjamin Franklin (?)

My Comment:

Maybe so. But corporatism is a pack of wolves and a sheep drawing up an employment contract. Individualism is a lamb with a contract lawyer and paid-up union membership.


Financial Flings: Consumer Prices Here to Stay

“Don’t expect to see any drop in the prices you pay at the pump — or at the grocery store or anywhere else — from any decline in the price of commodities. The price of gas at the pump actually climbed to a new high at $3.983 a gallon last week, according to automobile club AAA, even as the price of oil was falling. (And it kept on climbing, to $4 a gallon, on June 8 after a two-day rally in crude oil prices.)

You can expect the same from other commodities that have tumbled in price. Consumer prices will stay high even as commodity costs come down. Wheat prices are down. From a record $13.95 a bushel on Feb. 27, the most actively traded contract on the Chicago Board of Trade had dropped 42% to $7.78 a bushel on June 5. The prices of most other commodities — well, except for corn, which has soared as heavy rains have held up planting — have tumbled in recent weeks. See any drop in the price of bread or in a meal at your favorite restaurant?

No, and don’t expect to. There’s no quick relief coming to consumers even if commodities continue — or resume, in the case of corn and oil — their retreats in prices.”

More from Jim Jubak’s Journal at MSN Money.

Ronald Reagan on Peace Through Strength

“History teaches that war begins when governments believe the price of aggression is cheap.”
-Ronald Reagan

Comment:

Weakness invites attack. Statistics show that mugging victims are more likely to be shorter, frailer and more defenseless than the average person – which is why mugging victims are typically older people, women, slightly-built men, children, the physically handicapped, foreigners, or outsiders of some sort. And why victims of harassment in the work place are usually employees with fewer options to negotiate or leave (such as older men and women, divorced women or single mothers, or junior employees/contract workers (men and women).

Fundamentally this is a type of mob behavior. The establishment beats up on the outsider; the corporation hunts down the lone whistle blower; the church burns the the isolated dissenter – (though a group of dissenters might quickly become another church); carnivores prey on the deer that is wounded or separated from the pack.