Number of Autism Cases Increases by 2000%

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Buried in this article about fad treatments for autism is the fact that the number of people diagnosed with autism has increased 20 times since the 70s.

Either we are better at diagnosing autism; there is an autism epidemic or we are falsely diagnosing children with autism.

Although extreme cases of autism prove that this is a serious a debilitating condition, I can’t help feeling its the latter and that both autism diagnosis and treatment are fads. The central role that autism has played in wrongful public hysteria over vaccination risks is perhaps due, in part, to the fact that autism diagnosis is a less than perfect science.

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When Lawyers Embrace Drug Culture

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The Ministry of Sound opened in London, in 1991, the first major nightclub without an alcohol license. It didn’t need one to be commercially viable, since the main intoxicant on offer was the then fashionable narcotic, ecstacy. People would buy water and soft drinks at inflated prices. This was common knowledge, and to suggest otherwise would be incredibly naive or deceitful. Today it is a $150M company with 120 employees and a legal team.

I am making no judgement about that, but its pretty ironic to see an interview with their ‘head of legal’, Victoria Davies, in The Lawyer. Of course we have seen this hybrid of party culture and what used to be conservative, elsewhere – in banking.

The unbelievable story of Bernie Madoff

Posted by | Uncategorized | 2 Comments

madoff

The man in the picture, could turn out to be the biggest civilian criminal ever and he used to be the chairman of the NASDAQ. Bernie Madoff has been arrested on charges of fraud totaling $50 billion, a Gordon Geckko-filled stadium’s worth of damage.

Investment returns were merely new capital invested handed to the previous investors. This is commonly called a Ponzi scheme, except that the eponymous Ponzi was small fry compared to Madoff (which is a much better term for making off with someone’s cash, anyway).

Many of the world’s most ‘prestigious’ investment firms, from banks like Santander to hedge funds like Nicola Horlick’s, Bramdean, were directly or indirectly taken in by what equates to a street scam. The fact that such a crude scheme worked reveals either a system wide endemic lack of due diligence or a don’t ask don’t tell culture regarding returns that looked like they may have been based insider information.

From the Madoff website:

The Owner’s Name is on the Door
In an era of faceless organizations owned by other equally faceless organizations, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC harks back to an earlier era in the financial world: The owner’s name is on the door. Clients know that Bernard Madoff has a personal interest in maintaining the unblemished record of value, fair-dealing, and high ethical standards that has always been the firm’s hallmark… Bernard L. Madoff has been a major figure in the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), the major self-regulatory organization for US broker/dealer firms. The firm was one of the five broker/dealers most closely involved in developing the NASDAQ Stock Market…Madoff was also a founding member of the board of directors of the International Securities Clearing Corporation in London

Can’t make this up.

Cassandra does Tokyo has a piece on Madoff, that reads like the 21st century version of Bonfire of the Vanities. Read it, it is history in the making.

What makes the ‘great recession’ seem irrelevant?

Posted by | politics | 3 Comments

A five degree climate change would have the potential to wipe out the majority of all humans, all mammals, reptiles, birds, fish, insects, plants, single-celled pond life and Wall Street Journal Op-ed readers. It would make the terrible consequences of the current economic meltdown pale into insignificance.

This is fact, according to scientists, and opinion according to the WSJ. But it is a fact nonetheless, so how do we prove it? Simple: that event already happened with the increased CO2 and resulting global warming at the Permian-Triassic extinction, 250 million years ago. We can read about it in the stone tablets of the fossil book.

The potential threat of human created, global warming is a fact according to the mountain of evidence and scientific consensus, but opinion according to the current US government and Energy Secretary, Sam Bodman. In addition, we are in the middle of a die-off, let alone recession, with the ongoing rate of species extinction being greater than at the P-T boundary.

Against this background of intransigence, ignorance and incompetence Obama’s rumored selection of Noble Prize winning physicist, Stephen Chu, as Energy Secretary would be the single most important appointment in a generation. It is as if the Papacy had yielded to the greater wisdom of Galileo.

AIG pleads with bloggers to let them have their bonuses

Posted by | business | 2 Comments

I recently commented on the fact that AIG sleazily announced bonuses under the cover of the term ‘retention’ and the Thanksgiving holiday.

I got a surreal reply from their PR dept., full of ‘the dog ate my homework’ style excuses. If they are going to this kind of extraordinary length to corral private bloggers, clearly AIG’s self-entitled executives are more focused on people taking away their toy allowance than the mob storming their batman-like, skyscraper palace and pinning their reality-challenged heads under the blade of a guillotine.

The reaction, after all, is reminiscent of Marie Antoinette’s ‘let them eat cake’ for its sheer gall and total cluelessness.

Here is the email I got, for your amusement:

Dear David Galbraith:

Given your recent coverage of our company, I wanted to let you know that you can contact me if you are looking to get AIG’s perspective on an issue relating to the company.

I also I wanted to give you a heads up that we have responded to a letter from Representative Cummings regarding AIG’s retention planning. Here is the letter we have sent (I have attached it above).

Our key point is this: our highest priority is to pay back the government. We will do this by selling some of our high quality businesses. In our industry, the value of those businesses is based on two things: people and capital. The people that run those businesses are stars in their field. They are the ones who made AIG the largest player in insurance, and they are constantly being solicited by our major competitors. These employees are not with, nor have ever been with AIG Financial Products, the group that sold the credit default swaps. These folks are employees of AIG’s core insurance operations. Moreover, we’ve been informed by credit agencies that if we lose key insurance employees, our credit ratings will suffer (this is detailed in Mr. Liddy’s letter to Mr. Cummings).

For us to get the best value out the businesses we’re selling, and to ensure that our core insurance businesses remain profitable, we need them to stay. If they leave, the value our businesses will decline, and we will have less money to pay back taxpayers.

Regards,

Nick Ashooh

AIG

Regarding the line: “we’ve been informed by credit agencies that if we lose key insurance employees, our credit ratings will suffer”. Yves Smith puts it best:

“What rubbish. Do you really think there are a lot of senior executive jobs on offer in the insurance industry these days? And have you ever heard of credit ratings being dependent on a particular manager staying in the saddle? CEOs get deposed without there being any ratings impact. This explanation comes perilously close to being a bald-faced lie”.

No Dyson Spheres Found Yet

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In the 60s, Freeman Dyson proposed that as intelligent life grew beyond the resources of a planet, it could re-engineer local solar system matter to create orbiting satellites which would be able to use more of their sun’s free energy. The result would be that looking at a star, it would appear dimmer, and in the extreme, invisible, and instead you would see the re-radiation of infra-red light from the satellites.

The Dyson sphere is a specific case of the inevitable thermodynamic result of the phenomenon of life. Without life, a star radiates high energy photons, which are re-radiated by a planet as many more low energy infra-red photons, with a black body distribution at around room temperature. This results in an increase in entropy. The localized, low entropy order of living things, act as little entropy machines which accelerate the overall production of this entropy.

In other words, no matter how weird the Dyson sphere sounds, it is a viable example of the mechanism by which the inevitable extreme increase in entropy (from the waste of a low-entropy grabbing, industrial society, operating for any significant period of time), could be achieved. There might be others, but they will all result in the same thing – low temperature black body spectrum waste.

For the first time, using the IRAS infra red telescope, a serious search has been conducted for Dyson Spheres, or dim stars, and the results are essentially negative. There are a few candidates but it is very difficult to differentiate them from specific cases of Red Giants or glowing, stellar heated, dust clouds.

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Relativistic Economics

Posted by | business | No Comments

An excellent item in the comments thread on this piece in the UK Telegraph about the impending printing of dollars to combat deflation. It states that we have already had deflation for the last decade, a period when you could buy a T-shirt for less than 30 years ago, or a Chinese DVD player for less than a Hollywood DVD:

“Why do people not understand we have had deflation for the last 11 years, it was on the imported goods from China. This is what caused us to get into a mess as we decided for an arbitrary reason that inflation had to be 2% and so we kept rates low and had an inflation boom in services and assets.
Now it is reversing as the deflation from China has run its course and becomes inflation, hence the assets and services must deflate.

Letting rip with money supply and govt spending will end with significant inflation and not the “old equilibrium” that they seem to be looking for. it will erase the debt but will not give people jobs…..”

[It will give people jobs – but perhaps, not long term jobs, if this is money spend purely to bootstrap, it does matter what the long term investment benefits are. Spending on weapons or patching up existing infrastructure won’t be good in the long term.]

Prices over the last decade depend on which frame of reference you use. The convenient view in places like America and Britain was that asset prices like houses were rising rapidly relative to goods. People borrowed against these assets and banks leveraged the borrowing further.

If, as is entirely reasonable, you look at this from another frame of reference, then house prices stayed the same, and wages dropped as China started to replace our manufacturing base, producing cheaper goods. Only one thing did rise – oil.

So what is happening now? A switching of the frame of reference.

Why Unemployment in America is Different

Posted by | america | One Comment

America’s unemployment rate is now similar to France, which registered 7.5% in 2007 but the implications are very, very different. In France, unemployment benefits run at 57 to 75 percent of previous salary for up to 3 years and sometimes longer, if close to retirement.

Added to this are the huge costs of healthcare insurance in the US, which typically run at 30% of a salary, for an employer. To put it in perspective, my family self-employed healthcare costs ($12,000 plus $4000 excess), are the same as my sister’s 80% mortgage for a 2 bedroom house on the South Coast of England.

In short, America will be a terrifying place to be for those who are going to be unemployed, as this article in today’s New York Times suggests.

Its the ‘Chinese’ Economy, Stupid

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It seems that a bunch of people are coming to the same conclusion:

That massive stimulus spending may actually only work in places like China. I’m not convinced, but the implications are disturbing, given that the government has run out of other weapons.

I’ll try to summarize their argument as best I can, correct me if I’m wrong:

It is China that is analogous to the US before the Great Depression, not the US.

i.e. China own US treasuries, US owned gold; China is a massive exporter, the US was before WWII.

The conclusion is that massive internal stimulus programs will work in China converting an economic engine which is externally driven by exports into an internally driven one. The more ruined other economies like the US are, the better this will work, because it will quickly destroy international trade and create an even bigger stimulus for a domestic market.

None of this actually precludes Keynsian policies from working in the US, except their efficacy will be far less than for China. This is because a domestic economy with American goods would result in prices that would be far more expensive than what we have been used to. In China the result might actually be the opposite.

What we are seeing is inevitable, the reduction in trade between emerging and developed economies will result in a period of regulation and trade barriers as the global economic engine temporarily (as in 50 years) fragments into smaller economic systems before eventually rebooting interconnected systems of free trade. The problem is that these periods tend to create wars precisely because there are rival, competing, less connected economic systems which are disrupted.

I like to think in pictures and imagine the following:

There is an economic, ‘figure-of-eight’ shaped system of connected ‘whirlpools’ that comprises people making cheap things in places like China for people to buy in places like America.

With every turn of this whirlpool, the difference in price between Chinese and American production shrinks as China becomes more developed and people make more money, to the point where the energy required to maintain the inertia driving the whirlpool in the same direction increases. The resulting system slows, becomes unsustainable and the whirlpool disappears.

The chaotic unpredictability of current markets are the result of the exact same mathematics that governs the messy collapse of such things as whirlpools.

When new whirlpools, or economic engines re-emerge, they will be more like separate spirals rather than linked figure-of-eights. This is not a result of deliberate policy, such as regulation, but the result of universal law, spontaneous emergence of single spirals are more likely than complex interconnected systems of flow.

The whirlpool that represents America will require more energy, compared to China, to make it spin, like a whirlpool in a viscous fluid. This is because the substance of which it is comprised is people with higher expectations and costs. It will therefore be smaller or grow less fast, and the people caught in its sticky vortex will be unhappy.

Fred Goodwin’s Resume

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Reading updated Wikipedia entries for bankers since the ‘great recession’ started and discovered this gem:

Fred Goodwin of RBS:

Awards
* December 2002 – Forbes “Businessman of the Year”” by the global edition, which described him as an original thinker with a fast-forward frame of mind who had transformed RBS from a nonentity into a global name.
* April 2003 – No.1 in Scotland on Sunday’s Power 100
* December 2003 – “European Banker of the Year” in 2003
* June 2004 – Knighted in the Queen’s 2004 Birthday Honours list, for his services to banking.
* December 2008 – Nominated by Slate Magazine columnist Daniel Gross for World’s Worst Banker

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