Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Tax Leads Americans Abroad to Renounce U.S.

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

PARIS, Dec. 17 — She is a former marine, a native Californian and, now, an ex-American who prefers to remain discreet about abandoning her citizenship. After 10 years of warily considering options, she turned in her United States passport last month without ceremony, becoming an alien in the view of her homeland.

“It’s a really hard thing to do,” said the woman, a 16-year resident of Geneva who had tired of the cost and time of filing yearly United States tax returns on top of her Swiss taxes. “I just kept putting this off. But it’s my kids and the estate tax. I don’t care if I die with only one Swiss franc to my name, but the U.S. shouldn’t get money I earned here when I die.”

Historically, small numbers of Americans have turned in their passports every year for political and economic reasons, with the numbers reaching a high of about 2,000 during the Vietnam War in the early 1970s.

But after Congress sharply raised taxes this year for many Americans living abroad, some international tax lawyers say they detect rising demand from citizens to renounce ties with the United States, the only developed country that taxes it citizens while they live overseas. Americans abroad are also taxed in the countries where they live.

“The administrative costs of being an American and living outside the U.S. have gone up dramatically,” said Marnin Michaels, a tax lawyer with Baker & McKenzie in Zurich.

So far this year, the Internal Revenue Service has tallied 509 Americans who have given up their citizenship, said Anthony Burke, an I.R.S. spokesman in Washington. He said complete figures were still being calculated.

Applications to renounce citizenship are on the rise at the American Embassy in Paris, according to an official who spoke on condition of anonymity. At the embassy in London, the number of applications was reported to be fairly stable over the past two years, though it would be hard to spot a recent surge because applications are taking longer to process there than in past years. Neither embassy would disclose exact figures. A spokeswoman for the American Embassy in London, Karen Maxfield, said Americans living abroad usually took the step “because they do not have strong ties to the United States and do not believe that they will ever live there in the future.”

“All have two citizenships and generally say they would like to simplify their lives by giving up a citizenship they are not using,” she said.

More…

– This article is from the NY Times and they insist that folks have an ID and a PW in order to read their stuff. You can get these for free just by signing up. However, recently, a friend of mine suggested the website bugmenot.com :arrow: as an alternative to having to do these annoying sign ups. Check it out. Thx Bruce S. for the tip.

Parasite ‘turns women into sex kittens’

Thursday, December 28th, 2006

– Well, that’s certainly an attention getting title, eh? But, sensationalism aside, there appears to be something going on with human beings and the Toxoplasma gondii parasite. I’ve written twice before about this bug here and here

————————————————

A COMMON parasite can increase a women’s attractiveness to the opposite sex but also make men more stupid, an Australian researcher says.

About 40 per cent of the world’s population is infected with Toxoplasma gondii, including about eight million Australians.

Human infection generally occurs when people eat raw or undercooked meat that has cysts containing the parasite, or accidentally ingest some of the parasite’s eggs excreted by an infected cat.

The parasite is known to be dangerous to pregnant women as it can cause disability or abortion of the unborn child, and can also kill people whose immune systems are weakened.

Until recently it was thought to be an insignificant disease in healthy people, Sydney University of Technology infectious disease researcher Nicky Boulter said, but new research has revealed its mind-altering properties.

“Interestingly, the effect of infection is different between men and women,” Dr Boulter writes in the latest issue of Australasian Science magazine.

“Infected men have lower IQs, achieve a lower level of education and have shorter attention spans. They are also more likely to break rules and take risks, be more independent, more anti-social, suspicious, jealous and morose, and are deemed less attractive to women.

“On the other hand, infected women tend to be more outgoing, friendly, more promiscuous, and are considered more attractive to men compared with non-infected controls.

More…

061222 – Friday – thoughts on New Zealand

Friday, December 22nd, 2006

What a mystery and a beauty this life is. Tonight, the apartment is gathered around me – some warm and safe space. I’ve been reading Earth Abides and listening to the wind pressing against the windows. A few minutes ago, my neighbor fired up their stereo and I found I wasn’t annoyed – it was nice to have the company – and their music’s not bad.

A couple of hours ago, I talked to Sharon as we do every evening. She sat in the hall way at home with several cats around her and dragged a ribbon around for their pleasure while we talked. I could see her on the camera and we chatted as if we were both sitting there. I have to remind myself that she’s nearly on the other side of the world.

When the music began to come through the wall, it was comfortable. Someone else enjoying the evening, someone else listening to the wind on the glass doors up here. Someone else safe in their high nest. I washed the dishes and looked at every plate and utensil. “Ours”, I thought. “Ours – this is ours, we own this place and these things so impossibly far away in another national reality.”

Sharon was so close on the phone and camera, the familiar cats, there with her – just outside of my touch, playing. I have to remind myself over and over again, where I am. I’m on those two islands that I’ve been looking at all of my life as I’ve spun the globe wondering and wishing. I’m there, here, sitting in this beautiful room, surrounded by my dreams unimaginably far away from my previous life.

I don’t ‘get’ distance. Oh, I know the numbers of miles and the time involved to get here, but I don’t really get it. Where ever you are, it seems that it is the center of the universe for you, personally. Sharon’s so close on the camera, just a few button pushes away on the phone, when ever I want to talk. I have no real idea how far away she is. I don’t think we ‘get’ distances like that anymore than we ‘get’ death. They are ideas we talk about as if we understand them – but we don’t.

Tomorrow, with luck, I will connect a camera up here so that she can watch me when she wants. It’ll probably be less interesting than I imagine; me playing on the computer, me writing E-mail, me walking over to look down on the street and over at the park and the sky, me sitting eating and reading on the couch. It sounds great to me – but then this is universe central. But, I think she’ll enjoy seeing the apartment and seeing me while we talk in the evenings.

I told her tonight that I’ve felt very little pull thus far to mount an expedition and go up to Kaikoura or to take the train over to Greymouth. I was thinking about why that is when I was riding the bus home from the market today. And, I think it’s because I’ve been doing basically nothing but laying about and doing exactly what I want all day long for over a month. The idea that I might need a break or a distraction seems ludicrous to me. Just organizing the trip sounds like work and focus. Here, I just drift from one whim to the next. I think nothing of deciding to walk 20 minutes to the library to pick up a book that’s come in. The city is ever changing and if I get tired, I can take the bus back or stop into Starbucks and have a coffee until I’ve recovered and girded myself up for the next whim’s expression.

I feel peace and poetry beginning to pool in odd places as these days collect. It’s strange, because in my writings and projections, I’m always seeing the demise of life as we know it in the western world. Yet, here I am at what might be the last truly beautiful place in history and I am drinking it deeply and feeling so very blessed. It is all a mystery; here/there, now/then, near/far, life/death.   I live so intentionally in the abstract and yet I feel so strongly and emotionally about the now.
I know it all changes – it always does. Time flies by like horizontal rain in the wind. In a month, I will be on the other side of the planet again and all the love and mysteries there will enfold me – and this will be a dream; this apartment, this city, this nation, these people. I know they will continue – but for me, they will be waiting for my return before they can animate. All this will be just two small islands on the globe in the hallway that I pass and glance at each day.

Our apartment will be like a beach head in paradise – a promise of our return. It will be waiting, silently, as the months pass while the traffic and the weather passes outside and the neighbor come home in the evening and plays music for an hour in a small personal celebration. I feel that celebration.

Southern Methodist University Staff Fiercely Protest Bush Presidential Library

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

– I agree with the folks at Southern Methodist who oppose the Library. 

—————————–

The New York Daily News reported last month that President Bush and “his truest believers” are launching “their final campaign — an eye-popping, half-billion-dollar drive for the Bush presidential library.”

Bush is attempting to raise $500 million to build a library and think tank at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, the alma mater of First Lady Laura Bush. “The more [money] you have, the more influence [on history] you can exert,” one adviser said. Much of the money will be used to build a “legacy-polishing” institute:

The legacy-polishing centerpiece is an institute, which several Bush insiders called the Institute for Democracy. Patterned after Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, Bush’s institute will hire conservative scholars and “give them money to write papers and books favorable to the President’s policies,” one Bush insider said.

Now, SMU faculty, administrators, and staff are speaking out. In a December 16 letter to R. Gerald Turner, president of the Board of Trustees, members of SMU’s Perkins School of Theology have urged the board to “reconsider and to rescind SMU’s pursuit of the presidential library.”

We count ourselves among those who would regret to see SMU enshrine attitudes and actions widely deemed as ethically egregious: degradation of habeas corpus, outright denial of global warming, flagrant disregard for international treaties, alienation of long-term U.S. allies, environmental predation, shameful disrespect for gay persons and their rights, a pre-emptive war based on false and misleading premises, and a host of other erosions of respect for the global human community and for this good Earth on which our flourishing depends.

The letter concludes, “[T]hese violations are antithetical to the teaching, scholarship, and ethical thinking that best represents Southern Methodist University.”

Original article:

Dilbert’s take on Voting machines

Monday, December 11th, 2006

Is here…

Significant threads gathered for us

Sunday, November 5th, 2006

The Deconsumption Blog is one of my favorites and I follow it daily.  Steve Lagavulin always has great stuff and commentary.   Recently, he’s outdone himself by publishing what we might call “news strings”.   These are lines or patterns of significance which emerge from the bulk of the news.  In the past week or so, he’s taken the time to string together three of these emerging patterns and they make great reading.   I’m going to go over the top plagerlistically and publish the first of his ‘strings’ here in its entirety and then stop acting badly and clean up my act and simply reference the 2nd and 3rd ones with links to his site.   Thanks, Steve, these are a great service.

——————————————–

News Stringer

I referenced a slew of important news pieces at the News Room yesterday, and in doing so I realized that there were a couple major “lines” of events unfolding in the media, so I thought I’d string one of them together more directly right here. Hopefully I can outline the other one in a day or two, but feel free to visit the news room and browse the recent Iraqi war developments.

Anyway, I’ll start on the economic front, where the following warnings have all surfaced in just the past week (Cryptogon.com has bagged most of these already):

Former World Bank Chief Economist Predicts Global Crash

“Former World Bank Vice President, Chief Economist and Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz has predicted a global economic crash within 24 months – unless the current downturn is successfully managed. Asked if the situation was being properly handled Stiglitz emphatically responded “no,” and also drew ominous parallels to the development of the NAFTA Superhighway and the North American Union.”

GAO Chief Warns Economic Disaster Looms

“Walker can talk in public about the nation’s impending fiscal crisis because he has one of the most secure jobs in Washington. As comptroller general of the United States – basically, the government’s chief accountant – he is serving a 15-year term that runs through 2013….But the backbone of his campaign has been the Fiscal Wake-up Tour, a traveling roadshow of economists and budget analysts who share Walker’s concern for the nation’s budgetary future….Their basic message is this: If the United States government conducts business as usual over the next few decades, a national debt that is already $8.5 trillion could reach $46 trillion or more, adjusted for inflation. That’s almost as much as the total net worth of every person in America – Bill Gates, Warren Buffett and those Google guys included.

A hole that big could paralyze the U.S. economy; according to some projections, just the interest payments on a debt that big would be as much as all the taxes the government collects today.

And every year that nothing is done about it, Walker says, the problem grows by $2 trillion to $3 trillion.”

Of course it’s ludicrous to speak about the current state of affairs continuing for the next “few decades”, but the interesting point is that the GAO Chief has actually come to believe that he must take his show on the road to the moneyed-classes in this country to get his message across. Evidently the people who hire him aren’t listening…

Paulson re-activates secretive support team to prevent markets meltdown

“Judging by their body language, the US authorities believe the roaring bull market this autumn is just a suckers’ rally before the inevitable storm hits.Hank Paulson, the market-wise Treasury Secretary who built a $700m fortune at Goldman Sachs, is re-activating the ‘plunge protection team’ (PPT), a shadowy body with powers to support stock index, currency, and credit futures in a crash.

…Mr Paulson says the group had been allowed to languish over the boom years. [Ed. note: no it hasn’t, that’s a lie]. Henceforth, it will have a command centre at the US Treasury that will track global markets and serve as an operations base in the next crisis.

…Mr Paulson is not the only one preparing for trouble. Days earlier, the SEC said it aims to slash margin requirements for institutions and hedge funds on stocks, options, and futures to as low as 15pc, down from a range of 25pc to 50pc….The move is so odd that conspiracy buffs are already accusing SEC chief Chris Cox of juicing the markets to help stop the implosion of the Bush presidency.”

Lowering the margin rate means giving the huge players LOTS more money to play with, certainly. But it also–perhaps more importantly–means they’ve been given lots more breathing-room on their margin calls.

And I suspect that’s the principle reason for the move. If hedge funds are facing margin calls that means they’re being forced into a position where they have to sell, and time and again that’s the recipe for a market crash, as the margin calls beget selling which begets more margin calls and more selling.

This is absolutely a desperation move, no doubt about it. Coupled with the uncloseting and knighting of the PPT–which is nothing more than an officially sponsored market-manipulation group–it sounds a strong signal that something is very wrong.

What a strange world our markets have become when indexes can hit new highs and there is such wide-eyed desperation in the ranks that they’re resorting to changing the rules to keep things going. Of course, keep in mind that a host of smart people have been saying that the markets have been playing against a “house edge” for several years now, and many old-timers have left the game altogether.

Oh, and speaking of desperation, this piece is my favorite (and double kudos to Keving at Cryptogon.com for noting it):

Costello seeks orderly $US withdrawal

“[Australian] TREASURER Peter Costello has called on East Asia’s central bankers to “telegraph” their intentions to diversify out of American investments and ensure an orderly adjustment.Central banks in China, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and Hong Kong have channelled immense foreign reserves into American government bonds, helping to prop up the US dollar and hold down American interest rates.

Mr Costello said “the strategy had changed” and Chinese central bankers were now looking for alternative investments.

“Of course you can have an orderly adjustment,” he told reporters. “And what I would recommend is that these matters be telegraphed well in advance. I think we should begin preparing ourselves for it.”

I literally had to laugh when I read this again and realized he was serious. It’s not that “telegraphing” moves is any big deal–heck people do it all the time. But they generally do it AFTER they’ve taken or exited a position. Watch CNBC, whose only purpose anymore is to allow money managers to tell people what they want them to do after they themselves have already done it. Or any stock bulletin board for that matter….

No, the real shocker is that the Australian Treasurer is openly admitting that people are getting trigger happy to dump the dollar. He’s asking these Eastern bankers “hey, can’t you just let everyone else in on your monetary plans”. In effect, he seems to be admitting that the US Dollar is a liability, that no one is looking to the US for monetary guidance anymore, and he’s genuflecting before China to call the shots going forward. In fact if you read the piece, he goes on to kiss a lot of butt, saying how Australia is really a lot closer to China than it is to the Western world, respects it’s unique heritage and culture, etc.

Clearly Costello is switching sides out of fear of a US$ collapse, letting everyone know there’s a new tune to dance to. (And the UAE appears eager to hit the dance floor early).

But ultimately in the contest for desperate statements, the brass ring goes to our own President Elect(?):

China saving too much money: Bush

“US President George W. Bush said today that he hoped China would transform from a country where people “hoard the money they have” into one where people buy large amounts of US products.In an interview with conservative radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh, Mr Bush said China should become “a society in which there’s consumers. Because now they’re a society of too many savers”.

…”If we can encourage China to become a country of consumers, you can imagine what it would mean for US producers and manufacturers to have access to that market,” he said.”

I can’t even explain where such an asinine statement comes from. China will never go that path because they are fundamentally a different people. Shouldn’t a world leader have at least some inkling of essential, varying cultural characteristics? But then I guess if you’re a NeoCon you’re already suffering under the erroneous assumption that everybody else really wants to be what you want them to be….

But even to make a statement like this must cause world leaders everywhere to roll their eyes. I mean the world already knows that Americans are living on borrowed money/time–now we’re advising the Chinese to do so as well, so that we can continue our spree? The Chinese want the US to collapse! They’d just rather have it happen slowly than quickly… And what are we going to sell them? Their own stuff? I mean I know there are Wal-Marts in China, but let’s face it: one day the troops are going to walk into them and escort the small handful of foreign managers out the door and off to the airport (hopefully) and that will be it. A bloodless corporate coup. After all the only thing non-Chinese about them are the financial coffers!

But regardless, for Bush to even make a statement like this is worrisome. Mark my words: Bush, or/and his administration, are headed for some kind of collapse before the next election comes around. I don’t hold much hope for fundamental reform to come out of this week’s elections, and I don’t doubt an Iranian invasion-gambit is on the table….but however that may be, these people have got “implosion” written all over them.

———————————–

– now, here are two links to his 2nd and 3rd news strings which are also great reading.   Enjoy.

More News Stringing

And Yet More News Stringing

Australia defends climate stance

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

Australian Treasurer Peter Costello has said there is “no point” in Australia signing the Kyoto Protocol on climate change unless China and India do too.

Australia, like the US, has refused to ratify the Kyoto agreement, but is set to face increasing pressure to do so in the light of a new hard-hitting study.

A report by former World Bank economist Nicholas Stern warned of severe problems if global warming was ignored.

If there was no action now, he said, the world would face a huge depression.

The UN has also just released new data showing that rich countries have made little overall progress in reducing the production of gases blamed for global warming.

More…

Senators call on Exxon to stop funding climate change denial lobby

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

In an act of surprising bi-partisanship so close to the mid-term elections, Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Jay Rockefeller (D-W.VA) have penned a letter to ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson demanding that Exxon, “end any further financial assistance [to groups] whose public advocacy has contributed to the small but unfortunately effective climate change denial myth.” The Senators singled out the Washington lobby group Competitive Enterprise Institute, whose penchant for promoting junk science on climate change has been stoked over the years by over $2 million oily dollars from ExMo.

More…

CNN Fact Checks Inhofe’s Diatribe Against Global Warming Science

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

– This fellow, Senator Jim Inhofe, a Republican from Oklahoma, is Chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment.  If that’s not scary, nothing is.  He apparently disbelieves in Global Warming though one has to wonder if the $850,000 he took in as campaign donations from the oil and gas industry had anything to do with it.  The U.S. has lagged very badly on coming up to speed with the rest of the world and this man is one of the major roadblocks.  How can I say this politely?  He’s an idiot and we’re all going to pay for his stupidity.   Read this one – it’s chilling!

——————————-

On Monday, Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK) took to the Senate floor and launched into a 45-minute diatribe on global warming science. Repeating his claim that global warming is a hoax, Inhofe said, “The American people know when they are being used and when they are being duped by the hysterical left.“

In particular, he attacked the news media. According to Inhofe,  during the past year, “The American people have been served up an unprecedented parade of environmental alarmism by the media and entertainment industry.”

This morning, CNN hit back with a segment documenting that virtually everything Inhofe said was flatly contradicted by the facts.

More…

Dobbs: Voting machines put U.S. democracy at risk

Wednesday, September 20th, 2006

NEW YORK (CNN) — Democrats and Republicans are desperately trying to nationalize the midterm elections, now only 48 days away.

Democrats are seeking to focus voter attention on President Bush’s conduct of the war in Iraq, while Republicans are trying to convince voters that the president and all Republicans should be given credit for the conduct of the war on terror, and the fact that there has not been a terrorist attack on U.S. soil since September 11, 2001.

And voters will also choose which party to support on a host of other issues, local and national: illegal immigration, border security, the state of the economy, the escalating cost of health care, failing public schools, record budget and trade deficits, and the declining standard of living for the middle class.

Voters will be deciding whether the promise of challengers or the performance of incumbents merits their votes. The most recent polls reveal a national public mood that is now more supportive of a still unpopular president and about evenly divided over their preferences for, or tolerance of, congressional Republicans and Democrats. In other words, less than seven weeks before we go to the polls, there is every indication that the partisan quest for power on Capitol Hill will be close.

But there is additional uncertainty about the outcome of our elections that is intolerable and inexcusable, and which could make the contested 2000 presidential election look orderly by comparison. As of right now, there is little assurance your vote will count. As we’ve been reporting almost nightly on my broadcast for more than a year, electronic voting machines are placing our democracy at risk.

More…