Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011
The Purpose of War in a Tyranny
"A tyrant also should endeavour to engage his subjects in a war, that they may have employment and continually depend upon their general."
-- Aristotle, Politics
Famous Last Words: I Don't Believe That Story About . . .
From The Outlaw Josey Wales:
FLETCHER: I don't believe that story about Josey Wales.
TEN SPOT: You don't?
FLETCHER: No sir, I don't. I don't believe no five pistoleros could do in Josey Wales.
ROSE: Maybe it was six. Could have even been ten.
FLETCHER: I think he's still alive.
TEN SPOT: Alive? No sir.
FLETCHER: I think I'll go down to Mexico to try to find him.
JOSEY: And then?
FLETCHER: He's got the first move. I owe him that. I think I'll try to tell him the war is over.
FLETCHER: What do you say, Mr. Wilson?
JOSEY: I reckon so. I guess we all died a little in that damn war.
Obama is a leech . . .
. . . and the IRS can go audit itself.
Oh the delights we enjoy from PJ O'Rourke, here, who proposes a 35 percent tax on the federal budget, which will eliminate its current deficit. Problem solved!
Have another beer!
Income Taxes are for Chumps, Capital Gains Taxes are for the Rich
[Bruce] Bartlett, a former member of the Reagan White House, isn’t against the wealthy paying higher taxes. He’s that rare conservative who thinks higher taxes need to be part of the deficit debate. His beef? It’s a hollow gesture to say the federal government should raise the tax rate on the country’s top wage earners when the likes of Zuckerberg have most of their wealth tied up in stock. Many of the super-rich see virtually all their income as capital gains, and capital gains are taxed at a much lower rate—15 percent—than ordinary income.
More here!
"The most significant achievement to date in effort to defeat al Qaeda"
From the president's remarks about Osama:
I can report
I directed
I was briefed
I met repeatedly with my national security team
I determined
Today, at my direction
I've made clear
I've repeatedly made clear
Tonight I called
my team has also spoken
These efforts weigh on me every time I as commander in chief
Let me say.
How Convenient
Kill "Osama" on May Day, and bury him quickly out of respect for Islamic law, at sea because no one would take the body. Like Pakistan hadn't already had it for years, albeit alive.
Next will be the announcement that since we've achieved our objectives, we're pulling out of Afghanistan.
Re-election can't be far behind.
Oh the money he'll now be able to spend.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Government Revenues in 2008 were $2.5 Trillion
Government revenues in 2008 came from the following taxes:
Individual income taxes -- $1.14 trillion; (IRS data is slightly different at $1.03 trillion)
Social insurance taxes -- $0.9 trillion; (earnings beyond $107,000 or so are not fully taxed for this)
Corporate income taxes -- $0.3 trillion; (think GE!)
Other -- $0.1 trillion; (think?)
Sales and excise taxes -- $0.06 trillion; (think gasoline)
Total -- $2.5 trillion. Not enough by a long shot, under Obama, Pelosi and Reid.
So whattayawannado? Raise taxes to pay for the new spending under these bums, or get rid of the bums?
So whattayawannado? Raise taxes to pay for the new spending under these bums, or get rid of the bums?
(source)
Labels:
Excise Tax,
gasoline,
Nancy Pelosi,
Tax Foundation,
Tax Policy Center
Doh! We Tax the Rich Because That's Where The Money Is, Knucklehead.
Per Census.gov here, these are the income limits by each quintile of 23,507.6 households in 2009:
Lowest: up to $20,453
Second: up to $38,550
Third: up to $61,801
Fourth:up to $100,000
Fifth: $100,000+.
That means 80 percent of the country, about 94,030 households, makes $100,000 per year or less.
We know from IRS data that earners reporting adjusted gross incomes of approximately $67,000 or less in 2008, totaling $2.8 trillion in AGI, represented 105 million tax returns out of 140 million total. They are the bottom 75 percent of tax returns in the country, a rough proxy for the first 4 of the 5 income quintiles.
Using back of the envelope estimates, perhaps another 7 million more tax returns represent the rest of the territory up to $100,000, and AGI of another $0.6 trillion, meaning that the first 4/5 of the country contributes AGI of about $3.4 trillion.
Roughly 28 million tax returns would then round out the top quintile, with AGI of approximately $5 trillion. It is certain that 14.4 million of these returns account for $3.9 trillion of AGI, the top 10 percent of earners.
Thus one can estimate that tax returns from the top quintile have something like 6 times the AGI per return compared with the returns of all the quintiles below them taken together.
About 80 percent of the earners have 40 percent of the income, while the top 20 percent of the earners have 60 percent of the income.
That's where the money is.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Politico Reports Boston Globe Reporter Had Obama INS Files Since 2009
So The Boston Globe spiked the story?
Politico doesn't say. So inquisitive are they.
So inquisitive, in fact, that they don't notice that the details in the release contradict Obama's often repeated story about his earliest childhood.
Others have noticed.
Politico's story is simply participating in the administrations's diversion strategy, focusing on the fact that Obama Sr. was prodded out of the country by Harvard.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Patriots Switched to Coffee, Loyalists Stayed with Tea
"The Boston Tea Party is usually mentioned as nothing more than a humorous anecdote but its significance was profound and affected American cultural mores as deeply as the impetus it gave to revolutionary fervor in New England and later throughout the thirteen colonies. Anti-tea literature and boycotts swept the colonies and provided an emotional catharsis which every would-be patriot could share in by switching from tea to coffee."
-- Norman Berdichevsky here
Why Obama Revealed His Certificate of Live Birth This Week
Because he wanted to divert attention from a different, unavoidable, embarrassing revelation.
What revelation is that?
The revelation disclosed here as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request.
Namely, that the narrative Obama has been telling about the first two years of his life is a lie. His mother and father never lived together with Barack Jr. as a family. She went to Washington State. Obama Sr. stayed in Hawaii and left for Harvard before the future president turned one, not when he was two. The marriage itself might be in question.
Everyone is consumed by the release of the Certificate of Live Birth, but not with the truth behind it.
Obama is skillfully playing this out, no doubt on the advice of counsel, to divert, dissemble and distract.
See the discussion here.
Over a Million Apply for 50 Thousand Burger Flipping Jobs
Some recovery.
I'm sure the president is going to think long and hard about the hapless 950,000 or so, between sips at the Wednesday night parties, and between shots on the fairway on the next weekend golf outing.
It's hard work being president. Just ask George Bush.
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant Radiation Conditions
As of 0900 on April 29, Japan time:
438 microSv/h at the south side of the office building;
49 microSv/h at the Main gate;
19 microSv/h at the West gate.
More here.
Concrete Pump with 58 Meter Boom Replenishes Water at Fukushima Unit 4 Pool
Presumably one like this:
Another news report here said a 70 meter version was being dispatched.
The Fukushima Daiichi Unit 4 used fuel pool has needed nearly 1300 cubic meters of water over 13 days from April 13-25, according to this update. That number is consistent with, but about 200 cubic meters lower than, the predicted boil-off rate for the period in question:
Unit 4 pond contains a total 1331 used assemblies (783 plus full fuel load of 548), giving it a heat load of about 3 MW thermal, according to France's IRSN, which in that case could lead to 115 cubic metres of water boiling off per day, or about one tenth of its volume. ...
The pond at unit 4 is the main focus of concern now. It needs continual top-up with water, but at the same time there is concern about the structural strength of the building, which has been weakened either by the earthquake or the hydrogen explosion. Some 195 m3 was added to the pond on 13 April, about 20% of its capacity, and another 140 m3 on 15 and also on 17 April, by concrete pump. Another 100 m3 went in on 20 April, then 200 m3 on 22nd, 140 m3 on 23rd, 165 m3 on 24th and 210 m3 on 25th. Temperature has been up to 90°C and water level 5 metres down. It is not clear whether the main water loss is from leakage or boiling. However, Tepco reports that analysis of radionuclides in water from the used fuel pool of unit 4 suggests that some of the fuel assemblies there may have been damaged, but the majority are intact.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
I'm Flooring It and I'm Only Going 1.8
Thanks for the inspiration:
1.8 percent GDP growth in the face of massive stimulus is the equivalent of your car sputtering down the highway at 45 miles per hour while you have the gas pedal floored.
Read more from Henry Blodget here.
After Two Years, Bear David Rosenberg Finally Throws in the Towel
“This is not about throwing in the towel; it is an acknowledgement of what the market internals are flashing at the current time from a purely tactical and technical standpoint.”
“The (US dollar) is on a one-way ticket south and so far has been orderly—will that be sustained is anyone’s guess."
“For now it is being viewed as fodder for the global liquidity and risk-on trades.”
"[The tech rally] is a clear sign that the big boys are putting money to work."
“Market internals are too strong to ignore right now—NYSE advancers beat decliners by a 3-to-1 ratio (Tuesday); the Dow transports soared 1.9 percent; and the small caps beat their major benchmarks."
“My overall macro concerns have not gone away, but these market facts on the ground are tough to ignore.”
-- David Rosenberg, quoted here
Rush Limbaugh Can't Think Before 1913
"Look, in a classic sense, Trump's not a conservative, folks. You don't promise to raise tariffs on the ChiComs 25%. That's not conservative. (interruption) People understand this, Snerdley. You remember when George W. Bush threatened to raise tariffs on imported steel, there was an outcry. No, you don't raise taxes, period. That's not the way to deal with it. That's protectionism. Smoot-Hawley. It's a death wish. This is why I'm always worried about populism. Populism is not conservatism."
-- Rush Limbaugh, 27 April 2011 (here)
"Tariffs were the largest source of federal revenue from the 1790s to the eve of World War I, until it was surpassed by income taxes."
-- "Tariffs in United States History" (here)
"The magnitude of the tariff shock in the Smoot-Hawley legislation . . . was simply not large enough to trigger the kind of economic contraction experienced after 1930."
-- Douglas A. Irwin (quoted here)
The baneful influence of doctrinaire libertarianism on conservatism continues . . . in the voice of Rush Limbaugh.
Labels:
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Bush 43,
China,
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Federal Revenues,
Michael Savage,
Rush Limbaugh 2011,
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Wednesday, April 27, 2011
May We See The Certificate Of Live Birth Number Now On The Certification?
Ask Snopes.
A Certificate of Live Birth has been released by The White House. Shouldn't the Certification above reference this by its number? Did it match? Let's see it. Let's authenticate it.
61-10641?
61-10641?
Government Aid Swells to 18.3 Percent of Income in 2010
Dennis Cauchon reports for USA Today, here:
A record 18.3% of the nation's total personal income was a payment from the government for Social Security, Medicare, food stamps, unemployment benefits and other programs in 2010.
Wages accounted for the lowest share of income — 51.0% — since the government began keeping track in 1929. ...
From 1980 to 2000, government aid was roughly constant at 12.5%.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Monday, April 25, 2011
Our Enemy, David Stockman, Wants Higher Taxes on the Middle Class
We already know David Stockman wants to turn home owners into renters.
Now his first words out of the box for The New York Times, here, call for raising taxes on the middle class, as if the middle class had any money:
IT is obvious that the nation’s desperate fiscal condition requires higher taxes on the middle class, not just the richest 2 percent.
Mr. Stockman affects displeasure with class warfare in others while himself engaging in it, on behalf of the speculators who enriched themselves for years at the expense of Americans' primary store of wealth: their homes.
But our world is not shaped by the top 2 percent of earners, and everyone else below them "the middle class." This sort of nonsense plays as well at a White House prayer breakfast as it does at the country club, where everyone is middle class for purposes of public discussion, which is why The Times is happy to put up a former (was he ever one?) conservative to say what it doesn't have the courage to say openly.
Having screwed us out of our housing wealth, they're next target is our declining American paycheck.
And unless the Fed wants to ruin the value of the dollar . . . Mr. Stockman tellingly opines later in the piece, revealing how miserable is his grasp of the utter failure of The Federal Reserve since its inception. What do you mean, "unless?" The 1913 dollar is today worth about 4 cents. I'm sure Americans will be happy to surrender 100 percent of their paychecks to the government when the dollar goes to zero.
No, the middle income quintile in America is just 35 million tax returns strong, with a paltry $1.7 trillion in adjusted gross income. To eliminate our annual budget deficits under the big spending liberals like Obama, Pelosi and Reid, Mr. Stockman would have to confiscate 100 percent of this middle class money. Comrade David Stalin might as well starve us all to death, or line us up against the wall and shoot us.
Is there enough money below them?
Where the two lowest income quintiles dwell there are 70 million tax returns with even less money: $1.1 trillion in AGI.
At the top in America are 35 million tax returns with $5.6 trillion in AGI resting on these 105 million with $2.8 trillion in AGI. The 105 million are getting crushed.
The very top 14 million carry the most weight, with $3.8 trillion in AGI.
Even if we imagined raising taxes on the middle class meant we increased taxes on the 21 million tax returns in the upper middle and lower upper class, the pile of money available there for Mr. Stockman's extraction efforts barely beats that available in the real middle class at $1.8 trillion in AGI.
The big money is concentrated at the top, for a multitude of reasons, despite the on-going lies from The Wall Street Journal, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and now David Stockman. That's why President Obama's rhetoric about increasing taxes on the wealthy plays so well with the American people. It's the secret of his success.
By overwhelming numbers Americans support increasing taxes on "the rich." Despite all the success of the Tea Party in the US House, the American people obviously still haven't made the connection between the president and the Democrats and the massive revenue shortfalls. The shortfalls exist not because taxes aren't high enough. They exist because of massive new overspending.
That Mr. Stockman attempts to exploit the failed connection, perceiving that an opening yet remains, to confuse, obfuscate and lie, tells you all you need to know about him. Like the rest of our elites, he hates the Tea Party.
Right back atcha, David.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Senator Lindsey Graham: Advocate of International Terrorism
(1) the term "international terrorism" means activities that -
(B) appear to be intended -
(iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass
destruction, assassination, or kidnapping;
Friday, April 22, 2011
Trotsky Lives! At EmpireStrikesBlack.com
Oh the things you run across out here.
This is by one Barry Grey, a true believer of the Fourth International variety who rather dislikes that Stalinist, Barack Hussein Obama:
In the United Auto Workers union and the AFL-CIO and Change to Win union federations the Obama administration and the corporate elite have accomplices whose only concern is to secure for the union bureaucracy a cut in the spoils of the class war being waged against working people.
The Socialist Equality Party urges workers to carry out a rebellion against these corrupt, right-wing organizations and establish independent and democratic rank-and-file action committees to fight against layoffs, plant closures and wage cuts. These committees should spearhead the struggle to unite all sections of workers and young people and mobilize the power of the working class.
This is a political fight against the Obama administration, both big business parties and the capitalist system which they defend.
Very nice website, though. And clever name!
The International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) is the name of two Trotskyist internationals; one with sections named Socialist Equality Party which publishes the World Socialist Web Site and another linked to the Workers Revolutionary Party in Britain.
So Wikipedia, here.
Barry Grey sits on the international editorial board of the World Socialist Web Site.
Labels:
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Wikipedia
Thursday, April 21, 2011
One Man's Austerity is Another Man's Tax Increase
When it comes to "austerity," most people with common sense think "frugality," "reduced spending," and generally going on a diet of lower consumption.
Louis Woodhill reminds us here that what people without economic common sense mean by it is tax increases. Which is why Obama, and some Republicans, want to raise yours.
Woodhill knows we're already in the toilet, and thinks raising taxes now is tantamount to flushing it.
He makes a good case for repatriating capital by lowering corporate income tax rates. In view of the fact that corporations contributed only about $300 billion to federal revenues in 2008, he might very well be right: most of their money is "over there," escaping taxation.
Did Weird Al Choose French To Slam Lady Gaga's Italian?!
"A different lover is not a sin
Believe capital H-I-M
I love my life, I love this record and
Mi amore vole fe yah"
-- LADY GAGA - BORN THIS WAY LYRICS
"I'll wear a porcupine on my head
On a W - H - I - M
And for no reason now I'll sing in French
Excusez-moi, Qui a pete?"
-- Weird Al Yankovic's parody of same
Weird Al Commenter Doesn't Understand "Who Cut The Cheese"
Not only do Americans not speak French, we no longer understand euphemism in our own language:
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
"Most Americans can't name a GOP presidential candidate"
Here's that headline translated into English: "Most Americans can't find their ass with either hand."
Story here.
Areva To Build Water Decontamination Capability at Fukushima, Operable By June
Capable of processing 1200 tons of contaminated radioactive water per day, according to the story at NHK World here.
Long live the French!
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Radiation in Iitate is Down to 3.88 Microsieverts Per Hour
As measured April 20th at 9:00 AM Japan time and reported here.
Vermont Wants to Shut Down Yankee Nuke Plant, Lawsuit Filed
The reactor is of the same design as at Fukushima and is already 40 years old.
Read more about it, here.
Barry Ritholtz: Author of Redundancies
Here:
After Standard [and] Poor’s missed the greatest collapse in history – indeed, they helped create it by rating junk mortgage backed securities Triple AAA – they are now over-compensating. As I mentioned on The Big Picture, there is an old Wall Street joke about analysts: “You don’t need them in a Bull Market, and you don’t want them in a Bear Market.” That especially seems apt with regard to S [and] P.
The Middle Class Doesn't Have The Deep Pockets For The Taxes
The bottom half of the country, 70 million tax returns, in 2008 had adjusted gross income totaling $1.1 trillion out of a total of $8.4 trillion, just 13 percent of total AGI. These earners have AGIs less than $33,000 per year.
The top half of the country, 70 million tax returns, in 2008 had the rest: $7.3 trillion in adjusted gross income, 87 percent of the total.
The first 35 million tax returns in this top half more or less represent the middle class in this country, accounting for $1.7 trillion in adjusted gross income, just 20 percent of the total AGI. Middle class earners have AGIs between $33,000 and $67,000 per year.
The next 21 million tax returns more or less represent the upper middle and lower upper classes, accounting for $1.8 trillion in AGI, or 21 percent of total AGI. People in this group have AGIs between $67,000 and $114,000 per year.
The top 14 million tax returns represent the upper class, accounting for $3.8 trillion in AGI, or 45 percent of total AGI in 2008. People in this group have AGIs in excess of $114,000 per year. They are the top 10 percent of the country by income. That's where the deep pockets are for taxes, not in the middle class. Unfortunately for liberal spenders, even these are not deep enough.
So don't piss down our backs and tell us it's raining when you say the middle's got the money. WE DON'T.
This IRS data is neatly summarized for anyone to look at, even Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and The Wall Street Journal, here.
Tax Cheats: The Guy in the Middle is Footing the Bill For Unreported Income
Talking her book, or telling the truth?:
There's no doubt the issue of how much taxes millionaires should pay is important. But the IRS's Nina Olson says there's an even bigger source of un-tapped revenue that almost no one is talking about:
"Any income that is paid by check, cash, whatever that is not reported to the Internal Revenue Service, the person who mows your lawn that you write a check to, things like that, is the largest area of the tax gap, the largest area of unreporting that we have in our tax system," she said.
"People like folks cleaning a house or mowing a lawn or running a farm stand and not reporting?" Doane asked.
"Restaurants, whatever. That's a bigger dollar loss in our tax gap."
And whether it's people skimming from the bottom, or getting breaks at the top, the guy in the middle is footing the bill.
"If everybody reported their taxes properly, people would pay, per person, $2,200 less," Olson said.
Consider the source, but read the rest here.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Fukushima Main Gate Radiation is Down to 62 Microsieverts Per Hour
Per the Wall Street Journal link, here, today.
Compared to the 57 millisieverts per hour inside Reactor Building 3, that's a whole world away even though the distance is only one kilometer.
Radiation in Fukushima Reactor Buildings at 57 Millisieverts/Hour
That's like 57 years' worth in an hour.
Story here at KyodoNews.com, which is no longer available in full without subscribing!
Time to move on.
The Wall Street Journal's Deliberately Misleading Middle Class Tax Target Graph
The graph above is the subject of a deliberately misleading story in The Wall Street Journal, here.
The graph makes it look like there's a pretty healthy middle in America, and that the population falls more or less neatly into a bell curve.
The truth, however, is otherwise: 4/5ths of the households in America have total income below $100K per year. The whole right half of the graph, in other words everyone at $100K-$200K and up, represents only the top 20 percent of the households, otherwise known as the fifth income quintile.
The people in the middle of this graph are in the upper middle class and the lower upper class, not in the middle class as The Journal states. And the single biggest pile of money is in the hands of the lower upper class, which doth protest too much of its modest circumstances.
The true middle in America is the 20 percent of the population making roughly $38K to $62, and this article doesn't speak for them anymore than Obama does, who fancies that rich in America only starts at $250K. It doesn't. It starts at $100K. And that's a shame. We should have done better than that by now.
The truth, however, is otherwise: 4/5ths of the households in America have total income below $100K per year. The whole right half of the graph, in other words everyone at $100K-$200K and up, represents only the top 20 percent of the households, otherwise known as the fifth income quintile.
The people in the middle of this graph are in the upper middle class and the lower upper class, not in the middle class as The Journal states. And the single biggest pile of money is in the hands of the lower upper class, which doth protest too much of its modest circumstances.
The true middle in America is the 20 percent of the population making roughly $38K to $62, and this article doesn't speak for them anymore than Obama does, who fancies that rich in America only starts at $250K. It doesn't. It starts at $100K. And that's a shame. We should have done better than that by now.
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Why Your Refund Was Smaller If You Received Unemployment in 2010
The share of people paying no federal income tax has dropped slightly the past two years. It was 47 percent for 2009. The main difference for 2010 was the expiration of a tax break that exempted the first $2,400 of unemployment benefits from taxation . . ..
More here.
Nolan Finley: The Bigger Government Gets, The More it Will Waste
Mr. Finley of The Detroit News wonders here why we recently wrung our hands and wrangled over cutting a mere $38 billion when the GAO had already issued a report, now mouldering on a shelf somewhere, detailing how elimination of reduplicative programs could easily have netted the taxpayers $200 billion in savings.
As our fathers used to say: Only government can screw up a two car funeral.
Saturday, April 16, 2011
New Radiation Totals For Namie, Iitate and Minamisoma
Per the story here, for the three week period starting March 23 and ending April 15:
Namie: 17 millisieverts;
Iitate: almost 10 millisieverts;
Minamisoma: 0.5 millisievert.
Annual exposures in the range of 1 millisievert are considered normal.
Friday, April 15, 2011
Iitate Radiation is 5.26 Microsieverts Per Hour, Fukushima Main Gate is 70.0
Per the latest information available right now.
Fukushima Daiichi Main Gate Radiation at 71 Microsieverts Per Hour
At about 3PM on the 14th, Japan time.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
What's the Difference Between the $14 Trillion Debt and the US Congress?
The $14 trillion has only 12 zeroes.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Fukushima Accident Summary From World-Nuclear.org
When the data differ, the on-going summary defers provisionally to the Japanese regulator.
Here is an excerpt dealing with the apparent rupture of the suppression chamber of reactor 2 on March 15 after its cooling power failed on the 14th and its water in the torus boiled.
From the "Fukushima Accident 2011" at World-Nuclear.org, last updated today (here):
After the hydrogen explosion in unit 1, some radioactive caesium and iodine were detected in the vicinity of the plant, indicating fuel damage. This material had been released via the venting. Further I-131 and Cs-137 and Cs-134 were apparently released during the following two weeks, particularly following the apparent rupture of suppression chamber of unit 2 on 15th. The caesium was at low levels (about two orders of magnitude less than the iodine). The hydrogen explosion in unit 4 involving the spent fuel pond on 15th apparently added to the airborne radionuclide releases.
Reactor 2 Suppression Pool Abnormalities Blamed For Bulk of Radiation Release
Over a two day period beginning the morning of March 15.
This according to the Nuclear Safety Commission in Japan, as reported here.
The leak is ongoing, "rising" in fact, even though volume is down, according to the story.
Radiation in Namie Town at 34 Millisieverts in Just 25 Days
From March 11 to April 5.
As reported here:
34 millisieverts of radiation had accumulated over that period at one location in Namie Town, about 24 kilometers northwest of the plant. This equates to about 314 millisieverts per year, more than 3 times the permissible level of 100 millisieverts.
The figure of 314 must factor in some estimate of radiation degradation over a year. 34 millisieverts in 25 days is a rate of 1.36 mSv/day, or 496 in a year, not 314.
The 100 mSv level may be permissible under extreme circumstances, perhaps, but the evacuation standard being used is 20 millisieverts or higher.
Normal average radiation exposure from all sources in the US is 6.2 millisieverts annually. A person living to age 78 would get almost 484 millisieverts in an entire lifetime at that rate. In Namie Town one could conceivably get that same whole lifetime's exposure in a single year.
Nuclear power is safe . . . until it isn't. And then it's unsafe it a big, dirty, relentless and inuring kind of way.
Another Voice for a Sensible Idea: Tax-Free Retirement Withdrawals for Real Estate
The only thing preventing many mortgages from being paid off free and clear for many people is the tax hit and withdrawal penalty they'd take to withdraw the funds from their retirement savings.
John Crudele for The New York Post looks at those funds and sees a kind of housing bailout in the waiting, where consumers might even actually use the dough to buy new or existing homes. Call it a housing stimulus spending bill:
Well, maybe it's time to listen to John (that would be me). Change the rules on retirement plans so the American people can rescue the ailing real estate industry, which, by the way, will take a decade to fix if left on its own.
Let people withdraw a relatively small percentage of the $15 trillion in retirement funds to purchase real estate. Give them a tax break -- maybe even a big one.
More at the link.
John Crudele for The New York Post looks at those funds and sees a kind of housing bailout in the waiting, where consumers might even actually use the dough to buy new or existing homes. Call it a housing stimulus spending bill:
Well, maybe it's time to listen to John (that would be me). Change the rules on retirement plans so the American people can rescue the ailing real estate industry, which, by the way, will take a decade to fix if left on its own.
Let people withdraw a relatively small percentage of the $15 trillion in retirement funds to purchase real estate. Give them a tax break -- maybe even a big one.
More at the link.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Namie, Japan, Expected to Radiate 300 Millisieverts Within Next Year
According to Kyodo News, here:
For a part of the town of Namie, the government's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency has estimated that the dose for one year since the quake would exceed 300 millisieverts.
6 millisieverts per year is average in America from all sources.
The story details the announcement of the evacuation of Namie and other similar hot spots beyond the original 20km evacuation ring.
Japan Expands Evacuation Zone Due To Expected Annual Radiation of 20 Millisieverts
A month after the accident at Fukushima, the future is clear: there will be radiation problems 20 to 30 km around the nuclear plant for the foreseeable future.
So NHK World, here:
[A]nnual exposure in the zone is expected to be above 20 millisieverts. The worldwide average exposure from the natural environment is 2.4 millisieverts.
The expanded zone includes Katsurao Village, Namie Town, Iitate Village and some parts of Kawamata Town and Minami Soma City.
Was it worth it, Tokyo?
Namie, Japan, Radiation 14 Millisieverts in 17 Days, In Iitate 8 Millisieverts
The source is believed to be cesium, with a very long half-life (a generation) compared to radioactive iodine (a week).
An American gets on average 6.2 millisieverts in a year from all sources. Japanese set the threshold for natural sources at 1 millisievert.
NHK World has the story here:
Since March 23rd, the ministry has been measuring radiation levels in 15 locations more than 20 kilometers away from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
At one location, in Namie Town about 30 kilometers northwest of the plant, 14,480 microsieverts of radiation had accumulated over the 17-day period to Sunday.
8,440 microsieverts of radiation were observed in Iitate Village.
In another location in Namie, the amount reached 6,430 microsieverts.
People would be exposed to this accumulated amount of radiation if they had stayed outdoors throughout the entire period.
Labels:
cesium,
Fukushima Japan,
Iitate Japan,
iodine,
Namie Japan,
nuclear power
Sunday, April 10, 2011
The Date Your Home Became Just Another Commodity: August 5, 1997
When you could begin to sell every two years and avoid the capital gain.
The chart here shows the first stirrings late in the year of what was to become the housing bubble.
The chart here shows the first stirrings late in the year of what was to become the housing bubble.
August 5, 1997 marked the date when the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 was signed into law by President Clinton.
"When the bill passed in the summer of 1997, it stipulated that married couples would pay no taxes on the first $500,000 in profits from the sale of a house. At the time, this wasn’t seen as an incentive for people to start trading up or flipping houses—although, according to the National Association of Realtors, single-family-home sales jumped 13 percent the year after it passed, and some economists have said it instantly added value to homes, and fueled their rise in prices. But if you drove over that bridge, into the 21st century, and combined this windfall with record-low interest rates and lower down-payment mortgage requirements, the synergy changed the way people bought homes: Instead of looking at how much house they could afford, people started looking at how much mortgage they could carry. (In other words, you could roll the profits into a pricier house, put less down, and still wind up with a lower monthly mortgage payment.) Taken by itself, the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 didn’t cause the economic meltdown. But it was one more piece of kindling on the cord that would eventually become the bonfire of all our vanities."
-- Bruce Feirstein, here
The mortgages behind those houses had started to become mere commodities, too, at about the same time:
Securitization accelerated in the mid-1990s. The total amount of mortgage-backed securities issued almost tripled between 1996 and 2007, to $7.3 trillion.
Hurting us where we live.
Securitization accelerated in the mid-1990s. The total amount of mortgage-backed securities issued almost tripled between 1996 and 2007, to $7.3 trillion.
Hurting us where we live.
Boston Globe Slams Obama's Nuke Waste Irresponsibility
For supporting more nuclear power, which means more unsecured waste, and closing a never-opened $10 billion Yucca Mountain depository at the same time:
The administration’s decision to cancel the depository was a profile in craven political calculation: candidate Obama promised to cancel Yucca Mountain to curry favor in the 2008 Nevada caucuses, and he followed through on the urging of a key political ally, Democratic Senator Harry Reid of Nevada.
Read the whole opinion here.
Saturday, April 9, 2011
New Video: Fukushima Daiichi Swamped by 15m Tsunami, Designed for 5.7m
Story and video here:
[T]he tsunami reached up to 15 meters on the ocean side of the reactor and turbine buildings. The figure is far beyond the company's originally estimated height of 5.7 meters.
TEPCO confirmed that the 6 reactors at Fukushima Daiichi power plant had been under as much as 5 meters of water.
Friday, April 8, 2011
Coal Was King Recourse In Last Decade, Followed by Oil and Gas
"Almost half of the increase in primary energy use in the past decade has come from coal. Almost all the rest has come from oil and gas."
-- Peter Foster, here
Pay For Your Own Goddamn Abortion
“What we can’t be doing is using last year’s budget process to have arguments about abortion . . .."
-- President Obama, quoted here, who used the Obamacare process under budget reconciliation to slaughter the Hyde Amendment prohibiting federal funding of abortion.
BankRobberiesRUs
From Jeff Randall for The UK Telegraph:
When asked by a judge why he persisted in robbing banks, the serial offender replied: “Because that’s where the money is.”
For us taxpayers, this observation is now doubly true. The banks have captured our money twice over: as cash in their vaults and investments in their shares. ... We rescued them – and in so doing became their prisoners. ...
The global economy cannot function without big banks, they say: gigantism provides synergies, efficiencies and benefits of scale. What a hoot. Tell that to the shareholders of Citigroup, a banking behemoth, which all but disappeared up its own balance sheet in 2008, having had a wild (losing) punt on sub-prime mortgages. ...
There is a general perception that we don’t want banks to fail, not even bad ones. This is a mistake. We should be perfectly happy to see poorly run businesses disappear.
Read the rest here.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
5 Radiation Monitoring Posts 20-30 Km From Fukushima Daiichi Over 10 MicroSv/Hr
One radiation post, #83 near the 20 km ring northwest of the reactors, continues to register the highest reading of all the monitoring posts: 58.5 microsieverts/hour.
A little farther out, four others, #s 33, 32, 31 and 79 near the 30 km ring, register 19.5, 27.8, 11.4 and 14.8 microsieverts per hour respectively.
The main gate to the reactor complex is about 108 microsieverts per hour, while Iitate is just over 6 microsieverts per hour.
These values would all need to come down to 0.11425 microsievert per hour just to mirror normal, natural conditions under which a person gets 1.0 millisievert per year. Just a handful of locations even come close.
For the following map and values, go here:
Federal Reserve Discount Window Aided Many Banks Which Failed Anyway
So says another in a long line of incriminating stories in The New York Times, highlighting the pervasive involvement of the US government in bailing out failing institutions and implicating it in the spread of moral hazard to the highest levels of American banking:
More than one thousand banks have taken advantage [of the discount window during the financial crisis]. A review of federal data, including records the Fed released last week [by court order], shows that at least 111 of those banks subsequently failed. Eight owed the Fed money on the day they failed, including Washington Mutual, the largest failed bank in American history.
Here's the graphic from the article showcasing some of the worst offenders:
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