POLITICAL: open the books for all GOOFERMENT income and spending!

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

http://www.smallgovernmentact.org/

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Show Us the Money: An Open Letter to the Massachusetts State Legislature
Small Government News ^ | Feb 8, 2008 | Michael Cloud and Carla Howell
Show Us the Money: Open the Books for all Massachusetts State Government Income and Spending

**** An Open Letter to the Massachusetts State Legislature ****

from Michael Cloud and Carla Howell

Dear Massachusetts State Legislators,

On behalf of the 3,000,000+ taxpayers of Massachusetts,

For the purposes of transparency and accountability of the Massachusetts state government,

We request that you show us the money: open the books for all Massachusetts State Government income and spending.

We ask that you post the Massachusetts state government budget – every dollar of all state government income and spending online – on an open, free, easily readable, and easily accessible website.

Taxpayers shouldn’t need a Freedom of Information request to find out where the money comes from and where it goes.

{Extraneous Deleted}

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Seems like this should apply to every level of gooferment everywhere!

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WRITING: Interesting written on the GOOGLE BLOGGER platform

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

ED Day – Dead Sydney BY Darryl Mason
http://ed-day.blogspot.com
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A serialized novel by Darryl Mason. Set in Sydney in the months after the bird flu pandemic kills millions. The story follows three hundred survivors as they try to rebuild their society, in a city of the dead. New chapters will be posted each week.

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MONEY: The lesson in Bear Sterns

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/
RTGAM.20080317.rcreditbearstearns18/BNStory/
Technology/?page=rss&id=..rcreditbearstearns18

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As a result, a firm that had survived the Depression, the Second World War and numerous stock market collapses faced the humiliation of a government-assisted takeover by rival investment bank JPMorgan Chase & Co. that will likely vaporize most of the personal wealth of the firm’s executives and cost the jobs of more than half of its 14,000 employees.

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I’ve seen this before when employees fall in love with their employer. They drink the Kool Aid of “failing to diversify”. My Mom fell in love with her AT&T stock. And, I have in my memory bank, many other examples of this among my friends and acquaintances. Since the read this blog, I won’t call them out but you know who you are.

Suficeth to say, I “love” no stock or bond. I ruthless observe the old Wall Street canard “No more than 5% in any one thing!”. Bank, brokerage, Tbill, … … I don’t care. If there is a way to segment your portfolio, then you should know if you have more than 5% and make a conscious decision that “it’s OK”. That may be because there is no alternative. But, it should be a “conscious decision to accept a specific risk”, as opposed to “stuff just happens”.

There is one good question that I have been asked by my Turkeys and acquaintances. (My friends and relatives never ask financial advice since they will get a long wandering diatribe on the evils of fiat currency and the benefits of gold!)

How do you mitigate the risk of jobs and pensions?

Well, both a job, pension, and any income stream of regular payments can be viewed as like a funny kind of bond.

If you have a $100k/year job, that’s like having a 2M$ bearer bond that you can’t sell. There are the unusual risks associated with it (i.e., you can lose it; it might default). That’s why the folks at Bear Sterns investing more than 5% in Bear Sterns really blew it. If one had that proverbial $100k/year job (and most jobs there paid much more), then you had in effect a $2M “bond” in your net worth. To stay under the 5% rule, you’d have to have assets in excess of $40M. Then, you could start investing in the stock.

Unfortunately, houses, pensions, and jobs when measured on the equivalent asset basis tend to throw the 5% rule out of wack. Not a lot many can do to avoid it. But that’s no excuse to not recognizing the risk and seeking to mitigate it.

So buying your employer’s stock has to be made pretty attractive to rush in and grab that particular falling knife so to speak. Sometimes it works out. Sometimes, like Enron, it don’t. Can you afford the loss?

I’m always amazed that financial industry professionals — the experts — do such a lousy job of planning their own financials. Remember 90% of Cantor Fitzgerald employees, who were killed in 91101, had no life insurance.

Always watch out for “experts” and those who give advice like one. Even me! Do your own thinking.

But remember 5%!

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TECH SOFTWARE: Sage Software’s Act! — NOT RECOMMENDED!

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

http://weblog.infoworld.com/gripeline/archives/
2008/03/not_a_class_act.html

March 18, 2008
Not a class Act!

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Many people have mixed feelings about class action lawsuits, seeing as how the only real winners are usually the lawyers. But is such litigation more justified against a software company that keeps putting out a buggy product? That was the question confronting one reader when he received notice of a settlement involving Sage Software’s Act! 2005.

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I don’t even fight any more. My defense is Open Source Software. A huge criteria to “invest” my time and effort, which is worth far more than the little bit of money I spend on software, hardware, or services, is can I get my data in and out. I can’t — goodbye. I spend ZERO on anything that I can’t escape from. I’ve been locked in by the best of them most notable Microsoft and I’m going to escape that trap this year. No Vista for me. It’s a failed meme to use tools that trap you into upgrade cycle hell or steal your time and attention away from profitable activities. I’m moving to the zero foot print computing that the web — most notably Google — is offering. As long as I can export my data to Open Office, I’ll be OK. More than one way to skin a class action lawyer.

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WRITING: TEOTWAWKI plan — create a store of wisdom

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

http://www.frugalsquirrels.com/vb/showthread.php?t=170163

The Liebowitz project is something that everyone can do. Pick three books that are important to you, one on your profession or trade, one that is just entertainment (whatever you find enjoyable) and one that is a textbook on a basic subject you think important, and go out and purchase copies of them (library or archive quality, hardbound, if at all possible). Then, carefully preserve the books – seal them in plastic, spray the plastic with insecticide, and then seal that inside more plastic. Put the books in a safe place (I use a 20mm ammo can, painted silver).

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Starship Troopers. Thomas’ Calculus. The Thinker’s Toolkit.

So what are your three books?

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