Year: 2007

Tom Brady Just Gave My Wife an Orgasm

Monday Night Football, and she’s a Pats fan. With less than a minute to go, he thew a TD to Jabar Gaffney, making it New England 27, Baltimore 24.

Considering how lame the Ravens have been all season, it was an impressive performance against what is probably the best team in pro football.

It ended on the two yard line, with a hail Mary from the Ravens ending up on the 2 year line.

I was expecting 58-3…As was pretty much everyone.

Ravens Line Backer Bart Scott had a meltdown following the interference penalty that set up the TD. I though that his head would explode.

Schadenfreude: Mo Larry Craig Edition

More gay men describe sexual encounters with U.S. Sen. Craig.

Four men have been willing to go on the record.

I’m sure that Larry Craig does not believe that he is gay….In fact, if you hooked him up to a polygraph, it would probably show truth, but he is gay, and he has sex with other men.

I cannot understand how someone can do this. It is a denial of ones core self.

The closet is an awful place.

Unregulated Competition Hurts Innovation and Consumers

This analysis comes from that bastion of Communist thought, the Financial Times. John Gapper compares Europe, where GSM was mandated by government, and the US, where anyone who rented the spectrum could use whatever standard they wanted, giving us providers with GSM and CDMA.

He quotes a 5 year old article from Wired:

Once the marketplace was allowed to work, it quickly converged to CDMA, which proved to be superior. CDMA is ascendant in America. More important, it’s the foundation for the next generation of cell phone technology – 3G – since it turned out to be the only technology capable of making the leap to fast and capacious wireless data transmission. Had the US government mandated a standard, by contrast, it would undoubtedly have picked TDMA or GSM, since those were the dominant technologies at the time. And then we wouldn’t have CDMA leading the way to 3G today.

Certainly, it is good to read such a deeply held faith in the marketplace leading to its own advancement.

Of course, it would help if it were not 180° wrong. As Mr. Gapper states:

I am afraid that history has not been kind to this argument. Europe has stayed ahead of the US in mobile telephony, and in 3G services. Having one technology standard has spurred competition among network operators and handset manufacturers while competition in the US has been stymied by a proliferation of technologies.

In truth, he is only partly right. US mobile technology deployment, and for that matter US broadband suck because this is what the unfettered free market leads to.

The Europeans mandated a single standard, and have prevented carriers from locking in customers. From a purely profit perspective, there is more money in making your customers captive than there is in providing them a superior and innovative product.

That’s why local phone carriers and cable companies spent their money on lobbying, and creating limited products that require you to purchase all or nothing. To quote Willie Sutton, it’s where the money is.

They are monopolists by necessity….There is only so much in the way of wire or cable you can place in a city, so the last mile is necessarily a monopoly or duopoly, and they spend their money on protecting this, not on benefiting the consumer.

People are Starting to Get It About Alan “Bubbles” Greenspan

Patrick Artus, chief economist of Natixis SA and one of France’s most listened-to pundits says that “very bad” Fed chairman. A quote from his interview:

Artus: Yes. Greenspan was an arsonist and a fireman combined. He derived all his glory from his reaction to the savings-and- loans crisis, to the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management LP, and to Sept. 11, 2001. But LTCM and the savings-and-loans crisis were his doing. He absolutely failed to see where the malfunctions in the U.S. economy were.

Greenspan came up with a phrase, “irrational exuberance,” in 1997, but he didn’t do anything about it.

According to the article, Stiglitz is similarly down on Greenspan.

Score one for Red Ken, Congestion Pricing Works

I would suggest that people look at this analysis of London’s congestion pricing scheme.

Basically, they have license plate scanners set up at entry points around central London, and commuters are charged £8 per day to enter the center city (residents get a discount).

The proceeds from this charge go to mass transit.

Before implementing this, London speeds were less than 10 miles per hour, with 30% of the time being sitting not moving at all.

The impact of the scheme exceeded expectations. In the first year of the charge, traffic delays in London dropped by 30 percent, journey time reliability increased by 30 percent, and average speeds rose 17 percent, reflecting a sharp fall in traffic jams at intersections (the time spent traveling at speeds less than 6 mph decreased by one-third). The charge also changed who was using the roads: private car trips dropped by 34 percent, and trucks and vans by 5 to 7 percent, but bus, taxi, and bike trips all rose sharply. The overall impact was a noticeable improvement in traffic conditions.

The London experience has also shown that it’s possible – and important – to spread the benefits of congestion pricing widely. By committing to plough all the revenues raised by the congestion charge into public transportation improvements, London has ensured that congestion pricing didn’t just improve mobility for car drivers who can pay the charge (the “Lexus lanes” problem) but also increased access to the city centre for everyone. Innovative policies, such as the popular mass bike-share program in Paris, can also help to spread the benefits.

This is simple, it can be implemented in a matter of months, and it is revenue positive, which makes it too sensible to happen here.

Bloomberg tried to implement it in New York City, and the state legislature shot it down.

State Money Market Fund in Montana Now in Trouble

I get the sense that the serious of complex investmentsts that Atrios calls “The Big Sh@$pile” were aggressively dumped off on a lot of states and municipalities over the past few years, because it now appears that
Montana’s Short Term Investment Pool, another money market like investment. And again, there appears to be a run on this.

We’ve got the same thing going on in King County, WA (Seattle).

But here is the scary quote:

Montana has completed a thorough review of its subprime exposures. Less than 1% of the underlying assets of its SIVs are subprime, South said, with the rest being bank debt and prime and commercial mortgages.

“It’s not a subprime issue anymore, it’s an asset-backed commercial paper issue now,” South added.

Translated into English, this means that the entire us investment system is now unsafe.

Bush and His Evil Minions™ Claiming Secrecy Needs for Details on Abramoff Visits

You have GOT to be kidding me. Just when I thought that this group of criminals have gotten me so jaded about their venality and corruption that they can no longer shock me, they do something like claiming that details about Abramoff’s visits to the White House are somehow deep state secrets that must never be revealed.

This is even more transparent than the Libby pardon.

Elections in Russia and Venezuela

Well, Putin won, and Chavez lost.

The former was a forgone conclusion, while the latter was a close thing, as evidenced by the 60%+ vote in Russia, and the 50-49 vote in Venezuela.

Despite the claims or organizations like the OECD that Putin’s election was unprecedented in its anti-Democratic nature, it was pretty typical of elections since the fall of the USSR.

The balloting was reasonably fraud free, but the campaign neither free nor fair.

This pretty much reflects what happened under Yeltsin too. There were suspicious deaths of reporters in both regimes, the state had near absolute control over the mass media and the economy (through cronyism with Yeltsin, and more directly by the state with Putin), dissidents were harassed (Yeltsin with his staging an armed assault on the legislature was worse here), and so generally the results have never met Western standards.

The big difference, and the reason that the support for Putin is to a large degree real, is that people are getting paid for the work that they do, they are getting their pensions, and the rampant corruption has been reduced.

The so-called reformers instituted a system of klepto-capitalism following the fall of the Soviet Union. They believed, largely as a result of Western economic theory that shock therapy transition to free trade would benefit everyone, which did not work in Chile in the 1970s under Pinochet, in Russia in the 1990s, and in Iraq today.

Notwithstanding the generally anti-democratic bent of Putin and his allies, the vote does actually reflect what the Russian people want, or at least what the ethnic Russians, want right now.

Hugo Chavez’s loss is I think generally good news.

While I think that he is better than the alternative, the ruling classes in Venezuela whose real differences come down to which side gets to loot the country on any given year, the idea that he the electorate, albeit by a slim margin, has told him that term limits will apply to him is a good thing.

Among other things, this will provide more impetus for him to spend more time on real changes to make Venezuela a more egalitarian country, and less or rhetoric, as his rule now has an expiration date, even if he, as is likely, remains the power behind whoever succeeds him as president.

This also gives us an opportunity to see how profoundly anti-democratic Chavez is. While it’s clear that he is not what one would call a small-d democrat in Western society, this will give us an opportunity to see how far removed from this he actually is.

My guess is that he is somewhere between Bush and His Evil Minions and Howard Dean.

Word Up….Politics Good

Dave Roberts of the Gristmill gets it right. At a meeting on environmental policy, he made the point that Republicans really don’t have detailed or credible global warming ideas, and someone scolded him for, “making it a political issue.”

His response is spot on:

It’s something I hear a lot, and I remain utterly baffled by it. The assumption seems to be that politics is bad and that the ideal state would be unity. That’s just … creepy. This is an enormously significant policy challenge facing a democracy, where different citizens and groups have different assessments of the problem and different proposals for solving it, arising from different interests. In other words, it is political. Politics is the means by which people resolve their disputes. The only practical way of achieving unity is by suppressing dissent.

Sasa Studying Magnetohydrodynamic Hypersonic Turbojet

They are working on the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) energy bypass engine.

Basically, it uses MHD to extract energy from the air stream, which can keep the inlet temperatures for a turbojet manageable well beyond the normal limit of about Mach 3. They are claiming Mach 7.

Still, I’d like to see the first A in NASA doing more non-space related work, as this is clearly intended to be used with a booster.

IDF Planning Groud Assault on Gaza

This Aviation Week Articls (Paid Subscription Required) mentions a number of issues and complications:

  • That any decision on a ground assault would be influenced by the outcome of PA/Israeli negotiations.
    • The article implies that a failure in negotiations would lead to a ground action, but I see it as being the other way around. As long as their fingerprints are not on it, the PLO/Fatah would love to see the IDF assaulting Hamas and Islamic Jihad, they are their rivals.
  • The high population density makes operations difficult.
  • The tunneling operations can reduce the utility of air assets significantly.
  • Uncertainty as to the actual size of the opposing force.
    • FWIW, I think that Hamas is uncertain of this too. Much of the goodwill that they used to win in parliamentary elections has been exhausted, and so it is unclear how many of their irregular forces will take up arms if directed to do so.

As the joke goes, “Yes, but this is the middle east.”

Nasty Rudy Shows Self to Journos

Well, the press if finally seeing the real Rudy Giuliani. Now that they have something on him that does not reflect well, the city money for his assignations, the authoritarian and paranoid control freak is coming out:

“We’ve already explained it,” he said, walking past reporters after a town hall meeting.

Giuliani, who is normally friendly to reporters, bristled past them, and campaign staffers were unusually physical in keeping the press away. Several campaign aides told campaign reporters to return to the press area, and some of his security detail manhandled reporters.

This is is something that New Yorkers, and those who have followed his exploits, already know.

He is, after all, the man who fired his wife on TV on Mother’s Day.