Saturday, December 27, 2008

Water Conservation Tips

1. Fix leaky faucets and plumbing joints. Saves up to 20 gallons per day for each leak stopped.

 

2. Don't run hose while washing car. Saves 150 gallons each time.

 

3. Install water-saving shower heads and faucet aerators.  Saves 500 to 800 gallons each month.

 

4. Water your lawn only when it needs it. Step on your grass. If it springs back, it doesn't need water. saves 750 to 1,500 gallons per month.  Or replace the lawn with vegetation that requires less water, especially in drier climates.

 

5. Shorten showers. Even one or two minute reduction can save 700 gallons per month.

 

6. Don't use toilet as ashtray or wastebasket.

 

7. Use broom instead of hose to clean driveways and sidewalks. Saves as much as 150 gallons each time.

 

 

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Weekend riding

I did 20 miles on the mountain bike on Saturday at Chesebro Canyon.  Felt great on the climbs.  A little wet in a few places but the singletrack and fireroads were otherwise in great condition.

I thought I would take Sunday off from riding as I wanted to do some cleaning.  But after cleaning and mowing the lawn by 12:30pm, I realized the weather was incredible and I had to get out on the bike.  So I did 35 miles on the road bike out to Mulhulland Highway and felt great again.  Really pushed it on the hills.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Bottled Water - It's not good for the environment

Bottled water is thought to be healthy for you. But it is not necessarily healthy for the environment.Below are a few reasons why:
  • The containers are made of plastic or glass. When full, both become very heavy. It costs a lot in gas to ship heavy bottles around the country, much less around the world.

  • Close to 2 million tons of plastic was used to make bottles for water last year. That manufacturing involves an enormous about of petroleum, since it is a key ingredient in plastic. In the U.S. alone, 30 million bottles a day, billions of bottles a year get tossed out. Recycling them costs another small fortune in gasoline to haul them to plants.  If they're not recycled, they fill up landfills.

  • Bottled water is being promoted all over the world by a host of companies such as PepsiCo, Coca-Cola Co., Nestle and others. These companies are staking their future on getting you to drink water from bottles since it is getting harder and harder to persuade you to drink soda and other sugared water from their cans — and it’s working.

  • According to Beverage Marketing Corp., a provider of beverage-related data, consumption of bottled water has been growing by a gallon a year per capita in the U.S., and consumption has doubled in the past decade. Americans now drink more water from bottles overall than any other nation. However, we are only tenth among nations of the world in drinking bottled water per capita, trailing Italy, Mexico, Spain, France, Germany and Switzerland.

If you want to do something to really reduce global warming and cut down the earth’s pollution burden, stop buying bottled water. The containers translate into oil in the shipping, oil in the refrigerating and oil in the recycling, not to mention the oil that’s also needed in the manufacturing of plastic bottles.

Friday, December 12, 2008

What is an American car?

Fewer than half of the parts on some Big Three vehicles are made in the
U.S.

The Ford Fusion is assembled in Mexico.

The Chrysler 300C is assembled in Canada, but its transmission is from
Indiana and the V-8 engine is made in Mexico.

Engines in the Chevrolet Equinox sport utility vehicle are from China.

Toyota's Camry is comprised 80 percent of parts made in the United
States, and 56 percent of Toyota's vehicles sold in the U.S. also are
made here.

The Toyota Sienna and Tundra also have 80 percent of their parts
manufactured in the U.S.

Something to think about when someone tells you to buy an American car
or when someone blames foreign car companies for our problems.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Funny Wikipedia

Below is a hilarious comic that mocks Wikipedia. It is from Sheldon Comics via My So-Called Japanese Life blog.


Monday, December 8, 2008

Time to Live Within Our Means

It is pretty clear to many that the current economic crisis stems largely from Americans who have not lived within their means. Purchasing far more then their income should allow. For the last 20 years, easy credit and poor fiscal responsibility by Americans have led to near economic collapse.

Below is a good article from the LA Times about President-elect Obama's Special Economic Advisor Paul Volcker who espouses the philosophy of living within ones means.

Paul Volcker is back, and he warns of tough times ahead

Volcker has been chosen by President-elect Barack Obama as a special economic advisor. His 'no pain, no gain' fiscal strategy worked in the '80s, and there's no sign he's softened that philosophy.

By Ralph Vartabedian

December 8, 2008

A generation ago, Paul A. Volcker was a household name, the Federal Reserve chief who waged a hard-nosed but successful battle against virulent inflation that clouded the nation's economic future. He did it by engineering a horrific recession, clamping on the financial brakes and sending the economy into a tailspin in 1981.

Nobody knew whether his strategy would work. It certainly caused widespread pain. But by 1986, double-digit inflation was gone and price increases had dropped to about 2% annually, setting the stage for the next two decades of economic stability.

Now Volcker is back, tapped by Barack Obama as a special economic advisor. And if the president-elect follows his advice on the current economic crisis, there could be pain again and no doubt many protests -- but also the possibility of long-term benefits.

In speeches, interviews, public policy reports and congressional testimony, Volcker, 81, has laid out a fairly clear outline of what he thinks is wrong with the present-day financial system and the government's management of the economy.

His concerns go to the very core of how America lives and how Wall Street operates. A child of the Great Depression and a man of legendary personal thrift, Volcker thinks Americans have been living above their means for too long.

"It is the United States as a whole that became addicted to spending and consuming beyond its capacity to produce," Volcker lectured the Economic Club of New York in April. "It all seemed so comfortable."

Bringing consumption back in line with income would not only crimp individuals and families, but also require major readjustments in the global economy, which has relied on the U.S. as consumer of last resort.

More oversight

Volcker has become a skeptic of modern Wall Street, worried that the nation's entire financial system has evolved to a point that the government no longer has effective control over all of its important components. And the financial industry has become beholden to complex financial engineering that clouds the picture.

"The market was being run by mathematicians who didn't know financial markets," he said this year after the crisis struck.

Clearly, he wants tough new regulations on securities markets, including oversight of hedge funds, in order to avoid the need for a bailout effort by the Fed ever again. It seems likely that he will advise Obama that the growth of U.S. consumption -- everything from government spending to household outlays -- should not be financed by selling ever larger amounts of debt to foreign interests.

But he warns people not to expect an easy ride. "It's going to be a tough period," Volcker said in a speech at the Urban Land Institute in late October. "But when we dealt with inflation, it laid the groundwork for 20 years of growth. I'd like to see that happen this time."

In pressing his case, economists and policy experts say, Volcker will have a level of experience, credibility and integrity that should carry great weight in the new administration.

"It is less about his ideas but more about his stature, wisdom and integrity," said Princeton University economist Alan Blinder. "There is not another person on the planet who can match that combination."

"Paul has a very quiet but forceful way of expressing his views," said Princeton University economist Peter B. Kenen, who began working with Volcker during the Kennedy administration. "He can say, 'I look back on 50 years of public service and I can count the times that Idea A worked and Idea B didn't work.' "

Volcker will not occupy a position in the Obama administration that gives him any direct authority, a big change from the days when he ran the Fed with an iron grip. While the Treasury, Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission and other agencies all have turf to protect, Volcker has no turf.

He also will have to work with some outsized egos and giant intellects on Obama's economic team: Lawrence H. Summers, chairman-designate of the National Economic Council; Timothy F. Geithner, nominated to be Treasury secretary; and Christina Romer, chosen to lead the Council of Economic Advisors.

The group is generally not of one mind. Major differences exist in how they view regulation, monetary control and fiscal policy. Summers, for example, was among the Clinton administration officials who helped relax federal regulation on Wall Street, recalled David R. Henderson, a conservative economist at the Hoover Institution. Romer has questioned how well fiscal policy works at all, a central tenant of Democratic economic thinking.

Further complicating the picture, Volcker has an entirely new and untested organization to head.

The day before Thanksgiving, Obama named him chairman of the Economic Recovery Advisory Board, an entity seemingly created to bring Volcker, his experience, knowledge and credibility into the administration. The board is supposed to provide "fresh thinking and bold new ideas from the leading minds across America," Obama said.

Half-century career

Volcker is the chairman and Austan Goolsbee, a noted University of Chicago economist and longtime Obama advisor on economics, will be staff director.

But those who know Volcker think his influence will be clearly felt, regardless of his portfolio.

His career has spanned half a century. He began working at the New York Fed in the 1950s, and five years later went to Chase Manhattan Bank, where he became a lifelong confidant of the Rockefeller family. By the early 1960s, President Kennedy brought Volcker into the Treasury Department in his first government job at the policy-making level.

He later held top appointments under Presidents Johnson, Nixon, Carter and Reagan.

In recent years, he has led investigations into how Swiss bankers handled the accounts of Holocaust victims, the United Nations' troubled food-for-oil program and the accounting scandal surrounding the collapse of Enron Corp. He also chairs the Group of Thirty, a who's who of world economists that examines complex public policy issues. It met over the weekend to discuss an upcoming report on the overhaul of financial regulations.

Volcker grew up during the Depression, raised by a father who taught him one lesson above everything else: Integrity is a person's greatest asset, said Volcker's sister, Virginia Streitfeld. She calls Volcker, who stands 6-foot-7, her "little brother."

He is known for practicing what he preaches about the nation living within its means. He travels with one business suit and lives in the same Manhattan apartment that he bought decades ago.

When he was Fed chief, he lived in a modest Maryland apartment and did his laundry on Saturdays at his daughter's house nearby, recalled Marina v.N.Whitman, a University of Michigan economist who has known Volcker for decades.

"Paul is one of the most frugal guys on Earth," Whitman said. "The advice he gives and the way he views the world are entirely consistent with his personal ethics and lifestyle."

He is outraged by executive compensation packages, seeing them as part of a larger breakdown on Wall Street.

"Paul can't imagine anybody wanting or needing that much compensation for consumption purposes," said Whitman, a member of the Group of Thirty. "It probably offends his sense of right and proper."

As for the bigger picture, Volcker feels that tremendous changes in the financial system have eclipsed government regulators, allowing excesses to go unchecked and subjecting the economy to ever greater shocks. Over time, the U.S. has moved from a system of highly regulated banks that funded the economy to a system of highly engineered financial markets that operated outside the scope of regulators.

Complex financial instruments were created that attempted to slice and dice the risks, handing them to investors who would be most willing to accept them.

But the mathematical models that were supposed to measure those risks actually hid the true risk from the marketplace, Volcker has said: For one thing, no mathematical model can accurately predict human hysteria in a financial panic. "Simply stated, the bright new financial system . . . failed the test of the marketplace," Volcker said this year.

'Old-fashioned'

"Paul has long been skeptical about financial engineering, which is another way of saying concocting schemes on Wall Street that nobody can understand," economist Blinder said. "He has some old-fashioned ideas that banks should apply some common sense to loaning money -- like making sure borrowers can repay."

The result of such problems was that the Federal Reserve, the linchpin of U.S. economic power, was forced to "take actions to the very edge of its lawful and implied powers" that violated "time-honored central bank practices," Volcker told the Economic Club of New York.

"The only reason I sleep at night," said a longtime friend and business partner of Volcker's, speaking on background, "is that Paul Volcker will have the president's ear."

Vartabedian is a Times staff writer.

ralph.vartabedian

@latimes.com

Friday, December 5, 2008

300

I just watched the movie "300".  It was a brutal and violent movie.

But it was one of the movies where at the end I said simply, "That was a good movie".

One word: Intense

I recommend

Thursday, December 4, 2008

This is Insane. Read this craziness

In Canada, it appears that airlines will now be required to provide one free ticket for an attendant or assistant who is assisting an extremely fat person.  So if you are extremely obese, you get two tickets for the price of one.

Read the article here on MSNBC.



Monday, December 1, 2008

The pigs really did it to us, didn't they?

The pigs I am talking about are the bankers, mortgage lenders, regulators and the Bush administration.

From MSNBC:
Bush Administration Ignored Clear Warnings

The Bush administration backed off proposed crackdowns on no-money-down, interest-only mortgages years before the economy collapsed, buckling to pressure from some of the same banks that have now failed. It ignored remarkably prescient warnings that foretold the financial meltdown, according to an Associated Press review of regulatory documents.

PIGS

Bowing to aggressive lobbying — along with assurances from banks that the troubled mortgages were OK — regulators delayed action for nearly one year. By the time new rules were released late in 2006, the toughest of the proposed provisions were gone and the meltdown was under way.

“These mortgages have been considered more safe and sound for portfolio lenders than many fixed rate mortgages,” David Schneider, home loan president of Washington Mutual, told federal regulators in early 2006. Two years later, WaMu became the largest bank failure in U.S. history.

PIGS

The administration’s blind eye to the impending crisis is emblematic of a philosophy that trusted market forces and discounted the need for government intervention in the economy. Its belief ironically has ushered in the most massive government intervention since the 1930s.

Many of the banks that fought to undermine the proposals by some regulators are now either out of business or accepting billions in federal aid to recover from a mortgage crisis they insisted would never come. Many executives remain in high-paying jobs, even after their assurances were proved false.

PIGS

In 2005, faced with ominous signs the housing market was in jeopardy, bank regulators proposed new guidelines for banks writing risky loans. Today, in the midst of the worst housing recession in a generation, the proposal reads like a list of what-ifs:

· Regulators told bankers exotic mortgages were often inappropriate for buyers with bad credit.
· Banks would have been required to increase efforts to verify that buyers actually had jobs and could afford houses.
· Regulators proposed a cap on risky mortgages so a string of defaults wouldn’t be crippling.
· Banks that bundled and sold mortgages were told to be sure investors knew exactly what they were buying.
· Regulators urged banks to help buyers make responsible decisions and clearly advise them that interest rates might skyrocket and huge payments might be due sooner than expected.


Those proposals all were stripped from the final rules.

PIGS

Federal regulators were especially concerned about mortgages known as “option ARMs,” which allow borrowers to make payments so low that mortgage debt actually increases every month. But banking executives accused the government of overreacting.

Bankers said such loans might be risky when approved with no money down or without ensuring buyers have jobs but such risk could be managed without government intervention.

“An open market will mean that different institutions will develop different methodologies for achieving this goal,” Joseph Polizzotto, counsel to now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers, told U.S. regulators in a March 2006.

PIGS

Countrywide Financial Corp., at the time the nation’s largest mortgage lender, agreed. The proposal “appears excessive and will inhibit future innovation in the marketplace,” said Mary Jane Seebach, managing director of public affairs.

PIGS

California-based IndyMac also criticized regulators for not recognizing the track record of interest-only loans and option ARMs, which accounted for 70 percent of IndyMac’s 2005 mortgage portfolio. This summer, the government seized IndyMac and will pay an estimated $9 billion to ensure customers don’t lose their deposits.

PIGS

Last week, Downey Savings joined the growing list of failed banks. The problem: About 52 percent of its mortgage portfolio was tied up in risky option ARMs, which in 2006 Downey insisted were safe — maybe even safer than traditional 30-year mortgages.

“To conclude that ’nontraditional’ equates to higher risk does not appropriately balance risk and compensating factors of these products,” said Lillian Gavin, the bank’s chief credit officer.

PIGS

The government’s banking agencies spent nearly a year debating the rules, which required unanimous agreement among the OCC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Federal Reserve, and the Office of Thrift Supervision — agencies that sometimes don’t agree.

The Fed, for instance, was reluctant under Alan Greenspan to heavily regulate lending. Similarly, the Office of Thrift Supervision, an arm of the Treasury Department that regulated many in the subprime mortgage market, worried that restricting certain mortgages would hurt banks and consumers.

PIGS

Marc Savitt, president of the National Association of Mortgage Brokers, said regulators were afraid of stopping a good thing.

“If it seems to be working, if it’s not broken don’t fix it, if everybody’s making money, then the good times are rolling and nobody wants to be the one guy to put the brakes on,” he said.

PIGS, PIGS, PIGS