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17 Sep 06

Analysis: Kazakh president encourages turn to religion

  • Nazarbayev, president of Kazakhstan, encourages interfaith cooperation in building up the country. Sounds like he's read Appleby. - eraban on 2006-09-17
  • Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who as a communist helped Soviet-era Moscow maintain control over his country, is now working toward eradicating the last vestiges of communism: by encouraging his countrymen to turn toward religion.
11 Aug 06

New York Observer

  • Powerful article by Katherine Zoepf, reporting from Damascus, on popular feeling there. It's pretty grim. - eraban on 2006-07-22
  • But now I think that much of what I mistook for soulfulness—the long, idle hours in cafés, the emotional intensity of the friendships—are also aspects of a great, almost unfathomable, national despair. There are no jobs, there is no hope, and in the state-run media, Israel is always and ultimately to blame. In this context, any action is preferable to inaction, Sheik Nasrallah is a hero—and a sane, well-educated young man can look me in the eye across a café table and tell me that he hopes a clash of civilizations will begin.
    • You rarely read this kind of commentary in newspapers. Pretty powerful, if you ask me. - on 2006-07-23
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19 Jul 06

Heat wave scorches Europe - Europe - MSNBC.com

  • Near-record high temperatures across Europe. Reminiscent of the 2003 heat wave which resulted in over a thousand fatalities. Lions in English zoos get blood-flavored ice to lick; monkeys get fruit encased in ice. - eraban on 2006-07-19
  • At the Colchester Zoo, zookeepers gave lions ice blocks flavored with blood, and monkeys got blocks containing fruit.

Telegraph | Money | US 'could be going bankrupt'

  • Exceedingly pessimistic projections from an official at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Quite scary. Not that most of us haven't heard this kind of thing before... - eraban on 2006-07-19
  • US 'could be going bankrupt'
    By Edmund Conway, Economics Editor 

    (Filed: 14/07/2006)

    <!--NO VIEW-->

    The United States is heading for bankruptcy, according to an extraordinary paper published by one of the key members of the country's central bank.

    <script language="javascript" src="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/core/NetGravity/mpu.js"></script>

    A ballooning budget deficit and a pensions and welfare timebomb could send the economic superpower into insolvency, according to research by Professor Laurence Kotlikoff for the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis, a leading constituent of the US Federal Reserve.

    Prof Kotlikoff said that, by some measures, the US is already bankrupt. "To paraphrase the Oxford English Dictionary, is the United States at the end of its resources, exhausted, stripped bare, destitute, bereft, wanting in property, or wrecked in consequence of failure to pay its creditors," he asked.

    According to his central analysis, "the US government is, indeed, bankrupt, insofar as it will be unable to pay its creditors, who, in this context, are current and future generations to whom it has explicitly or implicitly promised future net payments of various kinds''.

    The budget deficit in the US is not massive. The Bush administration this week cut its forecasts for the fiscal shortfall this year by almost a third, saying it will come in at 2.3pc of gross domestic product. This is smaller than most European countries - including the UK - which have deficits north of 3pc of GDP.

    Prof Kotlikoff, who teaches at Boston University, says: "The proper way to consider a country's solvency is to examine the lifetime fiscal burdens facing current and future generations. If these burdens exceed the resources of those generations, get close to doing so, or simply get so high as to preclude their full collection, the country's policy will be unsustainable and can constitute or lead to national bankruptcy.

    "Does the United States fit this bill? No one knows for sure, but there are strong reasons to believe the United States may be going broke."

    Experts have calculated that the country's long-term "fiscal gap" between all future government spending and all future receipts will widen immensely as the Baby Boomer generation retires, and as the amount the state will have to spend on healthcare and pensions soars. The total fiscal gap could be an almost incomprehensible $65.9 trillion, according to a study by Professors Gokhale and Smetters.

    The figure is massive because President George W Bush has made major tax cuts in recent years, and because the bill for Medicare, which provides health insurance for the elderly, and Medicaid, which does likewise for the poor, will increase greatly due to demographics.

    Prof Kotlikoff said: "This figure is more than five times US GDP and almost twice the size of national wealth. One way to wrap one's head around $65.9trillion is to ask what fiscal adjustments are needed to eliminate this red hole. The answers are terrifying. One solution is an immediate and permanent doubling of personal and corporate income taxes. Another is an immediate and permanent two-thirds cut in Social Security and Medicare benefits. A third alternative, were it feasible, would be to immediately and permanently cut all federal discretionary spending by 143pc."

    The scenario has serious implications for the dollar. If investors lose confidence in the US's future, and suspect the country may at some point allow inflation to erode away its debts, they may reduce their holdings of US Treasury bonds.

    Prof Kotlikoff said: "The United States has experienced high rates of inflation in the past and appears to be running the same type of fiscal policies that engendered hyperinflations in 20 countries over the past century."

    Paul Ashworth, of Capital Economics, was more sanguine about the coming retirement of the Baby Boomer generation. "For a start, the expected deterioration in the Federal budget owes more to rising per capita spending on health care than to changing demographics," he said.

    "This can be contained if the political will is there. Similarly, the expected increase in social security spending can be controlled by reducing the growth rate of benefits. Expecting a fix now is probably asking too much of short-sighted politicians who have no incentives to do so. But a fix, or at least a succession of patches, will come when the problem becomes more pressing."

29 Apr 06

CommonTimes.org - news you choose

  • Social Networking for News - eraban on 2006-04-29

newsmap

  • News viusually shown - eraban on 2006-04-29

Challenged by Creationists, Museums Answer Back - New York Times

  • Organized attempts by ID proponents to harrass museum staff are countered by new training and education programs. - eraban on 2006-04-29

As Test Scores Jump, Raleigh Credits Integration by Income - New York Times

  • Economic integration of Wake County, NC schools seen as force behind minority standardized-test gains. - eraban on 2006-04-29

The Revealer: Light for the Dark City?

  • Commentary on National Guardsmen's discovery of ghost hauntings and other religious weirdness in NOLA - eraban on 2006-04-29

PowerPoint: Killer App?

  • Powerpoint responsible for Columbia crash - eraban on 2006-04-29

Article or Op-Ed

  • Argues against putting too much faith in poll-based evidence for overwhelming, rabid anti-Americanism in the Arab and Muslim world. - eraban on 2006-04-29
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