mellowtigger: (people not profits)
2023-08-07 05:16 pm

such a great economy

I've written here at least once over the years that I think GDP is a bad measure of the condition of an economy. I think the GINI coefficient needs to be included in any measure of national health. Maybe you can understand my frustration when, year after year, we see president after president get up for a State Of The Union address and declare that the USA is "strong".

I've been saying at least since the Occupy movement that things are bad and getting worse. I know I sound foolishly unrealistic when I say it, given all the politicians and newspapers and journals who say otherwise. Consider, though, this chart that was brought to my attention on Reddit. I decided to check the validity of it. I went directly to Google to generate the same graph. It shows how often people in the USA search Google with the phrase "food banks near me", from 2004 to 2023.

Somebody needs to explain to me how things can be so bad and can continue getting worse for so long, yet "the system" keeps telling us that everything is alright.

I don't see how any of this can continue. Please, explain it to me like I'm stupid, because it doesn't make any sense to me. If I'm wrong, then I'm wrong, but I need to understand why I'm wrong.

mellowtigger: (snow)
2023-03-22 11:02 am

some updates from Minneapolis

I'm in a mood to put seeds into flats, although we're still many weeks from ground thaw, and the seedlings wouldn't be safe from frost on the porch yet. My indoor holiday cactus is blooming again in its semi-annual tradition, and earlier than last spring. I hope I get a job soon, so I can stay with my garden.

I took this photo yesterday morning. The knee-high corner of the raised garden bed is beginning to show again after the recent snowfall. Today is another overcast day, although the temperature is supposed to rise above freezing again this afternoon. Snow has been there on the ground since November, which is typical for Minneapolis winters. The last news I saw said that we were in our 8th snowiest winter ever. Some people are having fun with the evidence.

There's been more gunfire here in the local warzone, with some of it fully automatic. The police dashboard is a mixed bag. Some crimes are down significantly, but others (car theft) up significantly. If you choose the dropdown menu to select only "Precinct 4" data (where I live), you'll see that homicides are nearly double the rate from last year locally. Obviously, I'm very safe and very rich, if you average me with Bill Gates instead of my actual neighbors.

I've used the local Asian grocery for two months now. It's a good place to find fresh fruit and vegetables, although "organic" isn't really available, like it was at Aldi's. One day, the cashier asked if I found everything, and I asked if the instant (think: Ramen) noodles had any gluten-free options? They went in back to look, didn't find any, then came back to me and said to check next week after they ordered some. Now, I'm glad to report that the rice-based Mama and Mamy brand instant noodle meal packets are enjoyable. This is in addition to the huge bags of potato noodles that I found back in October on my first visit to the store (when I had a car). Plus, I get gluten-free flours by postal delivery from Target to make my own cookies, so I'm not hurting for food choices necessarily.

Another major food source is closing nearby, though. It's a neighboring city, but it's the one where Daunte Wright was killed in 2021, one of the areas near to "north Minneapolis". I'm beginning to wonder if insurance companies have had sternly worded conversations with their corporate customers and made it clear it will become expensive to insure in areas where they forecast increased unrest soon. Is corporate withdrawal happening in other metros in the USA? What new crisis are they expecting, or is it just the usual SNAFU with continuation of terrible wages compared to cost of rent and food as evictions continue?

mellowtigger: (liberal frustration)
2023-02-13 10:24 am

it's still expensive being poor

I've written before about how it's expensive being poor. The comedian Cody Johnston also makes excellent arguments in his new hour-long piece, "Why Being Poor Is So Expensive". As usual, not all of the jokes are great, there's a lot more cussing than the humor really demands, and it takes too many minutes to build up to a valuable performance... but within it all there's still a lot of good logic. This video essay even mentions the small detail that I've experienced recently: the availability of a laundromat assumes that you have your own private vehicle for transportation. Cody covers a lot of ground, even the loss of leisure time when you're poor. It seems like deteriorating conditions in the USA are coaxing people to think about these issues.

Minnesota Public Radio did a great write-up of the grocery closure, explaining just how far away the other "big grocery" options are. I know I keep harping on it, but I really can't overstate how terrible this loss is for the north Minneapolis community, which was already at a low economic level. The Walgreens pharmacy, which I already said was expecting to close in March, has advanced its exit. It's now closing on Feb 22.

What about other low-cost options for transportation? Sure, the bus lines run through my Jordan neighborhood. Yes, the buses are safe space. The bus stops, however... definitely are not. Over the years, I've heard too much gunfire at the end of my block near the bus stop. The stop at the Cub grocery store is the spot I've written about many times already. And I've never ridden my bicycle since moving to this house in 2016. People here die on bicycles, even 2 blocks away from my house. People here are killed specifically to take their bicycle, even a dozen blocks northeast of me. So bicycling isn't a safe option here.

The luxury of private vehicle ownership is simply not a given here in north Minneapolis, which is why these essential service closures are so hurtful. In general, lower vehicles per capita are associated with richer, denser, or northern cities (read: liberal strongholds). The truth is more nuanced, with big cities allowing rich folk to outsource the expense of vehicle ownership (perhaps using online and traditional taxi service instead). Slate did some excellent journalism on this topic of transportation back in 2019, "Where Rich People Don't Own Cars":

But if the Green New Deal is a pure social justice project, it should probably just give poor people cars, because access to efficient transportation is the most effective predictor of escaping poverty, auto loans make up the fastest-growing segment of consumer debt profiles, and sprawl makes it challenging to provide good public transport. How do we square that circle? By redesigning cities so that driving—and by extension, car ownership—can be a choice and not, as the U.S. Supreme Court has put it, a “virtual necessity.” That would be good for the environment, good for low-income people, good for the mobility of seniors who shouldn’t get behind the wheel, and good for the 100 million Americans who are not licensed to drive, a number that includes children, undocumented immigrants, and the disabled. What Romem’s dataset offers is a map of which neighborhoods in which cities have succeeded in crossing that bridge to a place where the wealthy don’t own cars—an indicator that vehicle ownership, in those places, is a choice. We can try to build more cities like these, where jobs are accessible by fast, frequent transit and housing is dense enough to support walkable amenities. Or we can make it possible for more people to live in the neighborhoods that have gotten something right.

At this time last year, Aldi's expected to become the third-largest U.S. grocery retailer. Their exit (and Walgreens) from north Minneapolis might lead a pessimist to think that these corporations expect conditions to worsen soon, and they don't want to be in certain locations when it happens. I understand that the reality is probably a lot more complicated than that too-simple explanation.

I know it's stupid, but I still mourn the loss of the local Burger King in 2018. That building is still a boarded-up eyesore in 2023. Burger King is one of the few restaurant chains around here where a person can get non-meat fast food.

mellowtigger: (this can't be good)
2023-02-07 09:36 am
Entry tags:

the economic blight worsens

An hour or two after yesterday's post, I learned that this Aldi's grocery is closing in a few days. It's my main grocery, and it's within walking distance, but it will be gone by the same time next week. The Subway sandwich shop in that same building is already closed and gone. I've seen a NextDoor claim (therefore unverified) that the owner of the building wants to do some renovations, so business rentals are not being renewed. No idea what might eventually replace it someday, which doesn't help now at all.

Additionally, my Walgreens pharmacy will be closing sometime next month. It was bad enough worrying about vet care for my cat. Now, I'm not sure what to do for essential needs for myself.

People online have plenty to say.

"Minneapolis needs to figure out how to fix North. ... Food deserts continue the cycle of poverty."
- Reddit, by username "autobahn"

"On Lowry & Penn we had Paradise Grocery, and later there was a Piggly Wiggly (Ithink) and later Kroger where the current Aldi’s is located. At Lowry/Penn there was Mellin Drugstore, Post Office, Frank’s Bakery, Barber Shop, Baxell Photography, Maid-Rite, and further South on Penn there was a small one-man butcher shop who sold first rate meats. We had regular buses that ran every day on Penn and on Lowry. Further east on Lowry was Ennen’s Grocery which had McClary’s Meat Market in the store; we bought most of our meats and groceries there and used Paradise for daily pick up essentials. Almost all of that is gone now. I know things change, but communities need basic things like grocery store, drugstore, post office, barber etc.
- NextDoor, by username "Nancy Csi", from farther west of here, outside Minneapolis

I call my area of north Minneapolis the warzone, for good reason. Already in 2023 so far, it's where the city's homicides are clearly concentrated. I already know that life is rough here, with so many people self-medicating and falling to despair or nihilism. That much is already clear. Why, though, is life getting more complicated instead of less? I want to do the right thing, living without a vehicle, reducing my footprint of consumption on the planet. I want to find a 100% remote job, so I don't risk SARS-CoV-2 exposure. It seems, however, that the gods of capitalism require more sacrifice. *sigh* Amurrika!

edit 10:25am: I used online forms or email to contact Aldi's, my state rep, and my city rep. That intersection is on the bus rapid transit line and literally has 2 undeveloped properties on its north corners. (That's me in the photo on page 2 on one of those properties during a community meeting, pre-pandemic.) Why isn't somebody building business there? Surely someone can help encourage the resources this community needs?

mellowtigger: (flameproof)
2023-01-30 09:46 am

so much trouble in the USA

There's so much trouble in the USA recently that it's impossible to pick a single topic for Moody Monday.

  • Minneapolis homeless people freezing in winter? Yes, of course, after all of the camp evictions. What did you expect from our cold winters? It's -20C/-5F outside (wind chill -29C/-20F) as I type this blog post.

  • Police murdering citizens? Yes, more of that. I never watched the Tyre Nichols video, because I learned all I ever needed to know from George Floyd's murder here in Minneapolis. The key point (ignoring the sheer brutality of the roving gang mentality and the follow up lies) is that the officers knew they were behaving badly while they were doing it. "Police reform" went nowhere.

  • Police corruption? Yes, more of that. A sheriff was caught destroying evidence of misconduct for at least a decade. To be fair, corruption is also a problem in the UK.

  • Climate change? We learned that oil giant Exxon knew about the global disaster of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, even back in the 1970s.

  • Political corruption? Ohio Republicans redefined gas as "green energy". I'm sure they'll get rich bringing the worst climate outcomes to all of us. (Liberal efforts to paint a "good" future are growing ever more convoluted as realism sets in.) Arizona Republicans exempt themselves from the state's open-records laws. You know what that means.

  • USA civil war? How about a tactical SUV for the Mad Max murderscape that is the USA?

  • More mass shootings? This is the USA, of course we have more mass shootings.

  • A billionaire corrupting Twitter? Yes, more of that, with Musk targeting an activist who helped identify US Capitol rioters. That activist is now on Mastodon.

  • Capitalism on display? Tech layoffs are numerous and swift, making my own job hunt even harder. COVID vaccines are set to skyrocket in price. Because that's what capitalism dictates. (There's no other choice, or so we're frequently told.)

  • SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19? In the USA, workers are still calling in sick at record high rates, rural America saw death rates climb 90% recently in a spike of otherwise "low" avoidable tragedies, but USA denialism grows more dangerous. Infection changes the gut microbiome, which is bad for a lot of reasons. The virus spreads directly cell-to-cell, avoiding drugs and immune system. Infection is permanent, which is true even while PCR tests are negative, a possibility that I've warned about for 3 years already. Some people knew all along how dangerous this virus is, while some people just now learning that it damages the immune system, but the rich elite at Davos are protecting themselves with technology that should be everywhere for society's protection. Mainstream news is finally (FINALLY!) providing accurate warnings.

And that's mostly just the news of the week. Go home, 2023. You need a "time out". And I still need an income... or win a lottery. (I'd have to play first.)

mellowtigger: (money)
2023-01-19 10:53 am
Entry tags:

Amazon Smile shuts down

Not many people knew of it, but anything you could buy at Amazon.com could also be bought at Smile.Amazon.com, with a portion of the sale money being donated to the charity you selected. At work, I always tried to direct products to that url when people asked me for tech items. Well, I just saw the email from Amazon that they are shutting down this charity service. Why it was a separate service instead of baked-in to the main corporate webpage, I don't know.

Media this morning report that people are surprised, like me.

The news has been met with a mix of disbelief, anger, and confusion from charities and consumers. For example, the SquirrelWoord Enquine Sanctuary tweeted a copy of the announcement along with the comment "What???? Seriously @amazon." One reply points out that AmazonSmile was a way to support small charities who are "innovative and creative," while another says they made purchases through Amazon because of the donation and that will not be the case in the future. https://www.pcmag.com/news/amazon-is-closing-down-amazonsmile-on-feb-20

The slow collapse continues, I guess. Exponential-growth capitalism must be fed at all costs. (Or such is the inevitability, we're sternly told. ("The beginning is near."))

mellowtigger: (hide)
2023-01-09 12:59 pm

Moody Monday: yep, it's a mood

I'm not in the best mood today. Let's blame it partially on the monkeypox vaccine 2nd dose and feeling "not my best" again, like last time. I'm checking out of civilization for the rest of today, I think. Sit under an electric blanket and read and eat and otherwise just be a bum.

  • On my trip to Aldi's grocery today, the hot sauce section of the shelf was empty. *sigh* First time I've ever seen that, I think. But they had eggs this time.
  • Someone famous has commented on the skyrocketing price of lettuce. Raw food is expensive now, and prepared food is outrageously expensive.
  • Home Depot's co-founder is on my naughty list again after blaming socialism for making people not want to work. At wages that won't pay rent and barely buys food, while corporate profits soar, maybe has something to do with it? Bring on the socialism, please.
  • The IRS audited poor taxpayers in 2022 while ignoring rich ones. *grrrrr*
  • USA police set a new record in 2022 for killing our own citizens, since records began in 2013.
  • Minneapolis police seized 31 guns after what started as a traffic stop. In 2022, they removed about 1,100 guns from city streets. That's some useful progress, I guess.
  • My Jordan neighborhood ranks only 7th in areas of Minneapolis measured by violent crimes per capita. For once, I also have data that says other areas are worse than Minneapolis. Search this blog for "The worst contiguous", and see the chart that places a Minneapolis area (not even mine) as 3rd of the worst so far analyzed.

So... bad mood. It's bad here, but there are worse places to be. I want to see a comparison of wealth inequality now in 2023 with that of other periods of world history when the peasants killed their economic overlords in desperation and outrage. It was bad before, and I'm sure it's worse now.

I'm tired of human civilization. The status quo is awful. I want to start over with new rules.

mellowtigger: (lowered expectations)
2023-01-01 01:21 pm

low expectations for 2023

I have a few thoughts on today's holiday. I've done it once before, telling people to expect bad things from a calendar year. I'm doing it again now for 2023.

See empty grocery shelves and read the forecast...

Food: Last week, I went grocery shopping again, and prices are still high. The egg shortage has more to do with an epidemic (chickens, non-COVID) than the usual supply chain problems that keep other shelves low on stock. The store shelves were entirely or almost empty of egg cartons at both Aldi's and Cub Foods. People are going online to try to find affordable eggs in Minneapolis. I bought my usual cage-free eggs at Cub, but they cost 0.8 hours of US minimum wage for a dozen eggs. Expect it to grow increasingly difficult to afford the calories to feed your body while you work to afford more calories. Forget about reserving any money for rent. (Shelter is a luxury in Amurrika. The police returned to evict that homeless camp. Merry Christmas, from Mayor Frey. Still no word yet if my pictures helped that lawyer get information from the city, at long last.) I blame capitalism for my low expectations on this topic. I don't think government lip service will help this cost inflation problem.

Climate: It is unusual for our climate to experience a "triple dip" of 3 consecutive La Niña years. When it finally ends in a few weeks/months, expect El Niño to just be hot. Expect more trouble with water supply and crop production.

Pandemic: I predicted that 2022 would be the year when the world finally realizes what's at stake with this pandemic. I was wrong about that realization. I wasn't wrong about what's at stake. More data arrived that infection is permanent. It's still not the ideal study to prove my point, but it's just one more piece of evidence in a continuing trend with the same conclusion. SARS-CoV-2 infection is permanent, like chickenpox. As with Hepatitis C, we should just assume that people who got infected are still infected, unless we find some compelling evidence that a particular individual escaped that fate through luck... or nasal neutralizing vaccines, maybe. The problem with this particular permanent infection is that it's much less benign. It damages the immune system (like HIV in several details, including recently reported dendritic cell damage, plus something new about CD14+ white blood cells) and causes blood clots throughout the body. I still expect global mortality to rise significantly over time. It is not doing so at the moment. In the USA and elsewhere, excess mortality appears to be stabilizing. That's against my prediction. But HIV takes about 10 years to progress to AIDS, so I may have to wait a long time for society to reach my level of worry. We know the damage is happening, but it's not killing people en masse yet, so "nobody cares".

Sure, it's hard to stay realistic in tough times without becoming cynical. I'll try to keep the bad news to Moody Mondays, and I'll try to bring more good news to my posts on other days. I still hold great hope for humanity's future and the Earth's. Good luck to everyone with surviving until that good future unfolds.

mellowtigger: (money)
2022-12-27 11:07 am

the pandemic churn at Meetup

Over the years, I've been the online leader for 2 different groups at Meetup.com. It's a great place to organize calendars of activity, and it's free to use for attendees. They charge meeting organizers for the service, but it's way too expensive for what it costs Meetup to provide that service. They charged US$150/year for each group, the last I knew a year ago. That's too rich for my blood, so I eventually stopped paying both of them.

Twin Cities Powershell Automation User Group is looking for a new leader, but it may not get one. It'd be a shame to lose it. I created that group back in 2014 October 14. (I got the date from the earliest copy at the wayback machine.) The powershell group had previously used EventBrite for RSVPs, but it wasn't reaching a large audience. Attendance definitely improved after switching to Meetup. I paid for that group for several years, before handing off the finances of it to Tim Curwick, the group president at the time. I hope it finds a new leader, but it seems unlikely. This group focuses on in-person meetings (with pizza!) rather than online meetings, which are available everywhere. There are probably more people like me who simply don't attend group events any more due to health risks.

Star Citizens of Minnesota found someone else to take over, which is good. I paid the bills for a few years, which is too much money gone. But I still haven't attended any of their indoor events since the pandemic started. This group is based on the Star Citizen game which has been in development since 2012, and still isn't in release yet, although some functions are playable (if you're on Windows).

I received the notice today that Twin Cities EcoClub is also looking for a new leader. I attended only one of their events. We listened to the person organizing the hydroponics container at the North Market grocery. (Aside: I know I edited photos of that event. Did I really never post it? I certainly can't find it now in Dreamwidth searches.) I remember that one was post-pandemic, because we stayed in a large spaced-apart circle outdoors to listen.

I know I've seen notices of other groups losing their leadership. Meetup will eventually delete the groups if nobody else steps up to pay the bills. It's sad to see the groups disappear, but maybe Meetup will finally stop "printing money" and reduce their rates (by a lot) to something more reasonable.

mellowtigger: (economy)
2022-05-30 01:34 pm
Entry tags:

Moody Monday: economy edition

poster "You chould be more upset about insulin prices than gas prices"As an appropriate sign of the times, a news story about people now unable to afford shopping at Walmart is paywalled behind a news site that costs $415/year. I didn't subscribe.  People can't afford such costs.  I'm doing better at this moment, but I've been there.  I expect that Biden won't help.

In the continuing hypocrisy of privatizing the profits but socializing the costs, the fossil fuel industry got $5.9 trillion in subsidies globally in 2020.  The pharmaceutical industry continues to overcharge on products we paid them to develop.  Considering how well it works for the gun lobby to pay politicians to create market demand for their product, what does it mean to pandemic healthcare policy?  Turn everyone into a pharmaceutical consumer thanks to persistent infection and long term disability?  Good plan.

In the continuing greed-is-good tragedy, 60 Minutes broadcast a story about essential life-supporting products being intentionally kept in short supply to prop up their prices.  Seriously.  Mother Jones created a whole series of reporting on how USA wealth is being looted by vulture capitalism. You can scroll down and just read the titles to learn how bad it is.

In the continuing growth-until-collapse cycle, wealth consolidation by the already wealthy keeps rising in low income neighborhoods even though mass theft and infrastructure cannibalization continues.  Nobody at the helm is paying attention.  Or worse, they're making the wrong decisions.  And that's without even mentioning gas prices.

If you have the hours to spare, I recommend watching the entire Wealth & Poverty playlist of the class lectures of professor Robert Reich. If you have less time, then I recommend the single lecture, "The Future of Inequality (& You?)." I've embedded it below.  Separately, I also recommend his short video, "This One Thing Is Making Your Life More Expensive".


I've been advocating for a different kind of economy for a long time, at least since Occupy, and I vote that way too. You know how I feel about worshiping wealth.  I want a new way forward.

Now, time to go outside and do a bit of gardening.
mellowtigger: (book)
2020-08-03 08:00 am
Entry tags:

supporting journalism

The truth is a casualty in tough times. I thought I might subscribe to a newspaper, but both local outlets are more expensive than I realized ($200 for Star Tribune and $150 for Pioneer Press), even for online-only subscriptions.

For money like that, I'd rather have access to the USA website where I most often read news articles, the Washington Post. They're within that critical "Most Reliable" section of news trustworthiness.  Their left-center rating also suits my typical reading habits.  Everybody reviews their sources of news for fact-based reporting, right?  Anyway, I lucked out, and they had a special for only $39 instead of $100 for a digital-only subscription. Why is local news so much more expensive? Is it just a matter of scale, so that fewer subscribers means higher cost per subscriber?

In addition, I spent some more of my COVID relief check by donating to local news outlets, MinnPost and North News.  I would've donated to Insight News too, but I couldn't figure out how.  Still, though, I hope I helped my neighborhood at least a little bit by supporting local journalism.

I know, having enough spare money to contribute any amount to journalism is disgustingly elitist these days.  How did we get so bad off that me earning $37K/year puts me better off than 33% of Americans (even before 2020 happened, now is it 50%, or even higher)?  Something has gone very, very wrong.

I also want to know how the problem houses on this block always have cars and trucks outside that are so much nicer than my rust bucket?  Oh, yeah, it's probably because they're operating tax-free businesses like all the best companies do.
mellowtigger: (Daria)
2016-11-14 05:02 pm

it's expensive being poor

While my car has been parked at my house this year, it has been rear-ended by a drunk driver, nearly-scraped by a doped up driver (who destroyed other cars on the block and a fire hydrant which took months for the city to finally repair), and had the driver side door messed up by someone trying to break into it.

bullet holes in my car last night 2016 Nov 13Now I can add bullet holes to the list.

When the first few bullets were fired around 10:10pm, they sounded like they were practically in front of my house.  I was sitting by the front window, so I dove for the floor and started dialing 911.  Then the second round of bullets were fired, and I realized that the sofa probably wasn't much of a barrier.  I ran upstairs to sit in the bathtub to finish dialing 911.

After confirming that police were on the way, I went outside to start looking around.  It's pitch black here.  We do have street lights on our block, but they are dim and nowhere close to my house.  As police headlights brightened up the area, we discovered that 3 cars had been hit by bullets, including mine.

I gave them permission to get into my car and door to try to retrieve the bullets.  They waited for a crime unit to come out and do the work.  They finished around 1am.  I discovered today in sunlight that what was left of my badly-functioning door was now completely dismantled by police and practically unusable.  I went to my usual mechanic today to see what could be done, but it pretty much needs just replacing completely, which will cost several hundred dollars.  I only have the minimal liability insurance required to drive legally, so that's no help for the damage that other people do.

I've got it scheduled for Friday.  I considered just painting my usual hashtag #WarzoneInMinneapolis onto the door with the bullet holes left alone.  There are plenty of kids on this block, though, and I figure it's best not to add to the background noise of their impression of "normality" in the Jordan neighborhood of Minneapolis.  So I'll get at least one of them repaired.

I was woken up again around 5am this morning by more gunshots, but they were much farther away, so I just went back to sleep eventually.

I woke up after 10am and eventually went out to survey the car.  I talked to another neighbor about the incident.  He was a black guy a few years younger than me.  He mentioned that he'd been shot recently by a paint ball gun by someone driving in a car, and he still had a bruise from it.  Yuck.

When this car is no longer usable, I'm sure I'll rely solely on public transportation from now on.  I figure we're only a decade away from self-driving car services that make private ownership just a luxury.  I might as well join the trend early.  We already have several people at work who always use bicycle or public transport, so I'll be in good company.

For now, though... I'm annoyed by sudden expenses that rich people don't have thrust upon them by strangers during the night.  At least no windows were broken in the car or house.  I think we have another citizen patrol scheduled this week.  I'll be there.
mellowtigger: (economy)
2011-07-12 09:54 am
Entry tags:

the collapse continues

Okay, one more depressing post, and then I'll try to get back to talking about happy bunnies and dancing unicorns.

I've read elsewhere that Soviets observed the illegal cannibalization of infrastructure as they reached the breaking point of their failed economy. During the last two years, I have kept my eyes open for signs of such activity here in America. I find plenty of it, but it's still not quite enough to reach popular attention yet. All it'll take is one big power outage in a major city for everyone to finally notice.

Here in Minnesota, thieves are stealing manhole covers and sewer grates from the streets, copper from vacant buildings, and copper wiring from park lamp posts. Around the country, similar things are happening. Thieves are taking copper wiring from parks, copper plumbing from business properties, copper wiring from live transformers, copper tubing from air conditioners, and they've even caused a power outage in a small Ohio town by taking down an electrical substation.

It's becoming a big problem. The New York Times did an article back in February. They mention that there's even a national coalition that's formed to help bring awareness and promote legislation to slow this black market activity. USA Today did their own article in April on the theft of catalytic converters.

The economic spiral continues downward. At the national level, Republicans and Obama together are still bent on reducing government employment. I said two years ago and still maintain that we need huge national government projects that put massive numbers of people to work.

In the United States during the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Works Progress Administration provided paid jobs for millions of unemployed men and women (as well as youth in a separate division, the National Youth Administration).
Incredibly, during the current Great Depression, government employment has been shrinking (aside from temporary census hiring last year).
- http://rwer.wordpress.com/2011/07/12/the-incredible-shrinking-state/

It annoys me that the national government continues to do things that I think are unhelpful and/or idiotic.  It seems so obvious to me what needs to happen.  Exactly the opposite of Republican strategy, I think that big wages need to end so that big employment can happen.  Tax the living daylights out of the rich and use that money (yes, redistribute the wealth!) to pay for huge public projects that give spending money back to the population and renews their job skills so they remain employable after the projects eventually end.  Much better than simply extending unemployment benefits, I think.
mellowtigger: (Terry 2010)
2011-07-01 04:40 am
Entry tags:

the cost of no government

It's finally happened.  Minnesota is "shutting down" its government.  A judge has ruled on what services are deemed "essential" for the safety of the population or necessary to meet federal obligations, and those will remain functioning.  The effect will be the furlough of 2/3 of state government employees, the largest layoff in state history.  I think my list of the essentials would have been slightly shorter, but hers includes:
  • judicial courts
  • most of the state's prison system, state patrol
  • driver license renewal, vehicle license plate renewal
  • buses and rail lines (I would have closed them as being huge conveniences but inessential to state government)
  • emergency maintenance of roads and bridges
  • K-12 education, and state colleges and universities (I would have closed all of them)
  • benefits payments for medical assistance, MN Care (that affects me directly, presidential-hopeful Pawlenty intended to cut it)
  • welfare, child support, refugee assistance
  • veterans homes
  • unemployment benefits
Services that will be shut down:
  • benefits for childcare assistance, criminal background checks, food shelf distribution
  • regular maintenance of roads and bridges (this change affects my commute across various bridges over the Mississippi River)
  • new driver license testing services
  • highway rest stops
  • minnesota historical society sites
  • minnesota zoo (except as needed to keep animals safe and secure from escape)
  • state parks
  • hunting and fishing licensing
  • race tracks and state lottery
  • some legislative staff (apparently, though I can't find specifics on who)
  • any new payments to city or county governments
I already got my letter from Minnesota Care warning me that if I had trouble getting any service, I should just go to a hospital emergency room.  *sigh*  Some non-profit agencies are going to suffer tremendously for lack of support from state government.  Luckily, I work someplace that receives no money from government except (I think) for a few city contracts to provide their animal control shelter service.

I happen to like living in a society that includes almost every service that Minnesota state government provides.  Exactly which of these services are frivolous?  I presume that the race tracks and lottery are meant as revenue generators rather than mere entertainment.  Which service exactly is the one that Republicans are offended at supporting?  That's what I don't understand.  For the most part, I like this government.  How do we benefit by refusing to fund it?  I think it could certainly be simplified (especially the tax process) but not eliminated.

Suppose a government needed to acquire 20% of all money circulating in its economy to keep its civilization content.  If you can't collect any more money from the poor ("squeeze blood from a turnip" is a phrase that comes to mind) then you have to tax the rich since they have the majority of the money anyway.  Republicans seem hellbent on protecting the rich on both the national and state levels, however, so now we get to see what it's like to do without much of the government.  They couldn't legislate their way to smaller government, so I guess they intend to starve it instead.  They're having much more success with that method.

We've turned off the infrastructure repair in Minnesota today.  What happens when we shut off education and prison too?  Why can't we tax the rich to keep all this stuff functioning?

It's a http://www.shutdownshame.org/main/, indeed.
mellowtigger: (economy)
2011-06-11 05:39 pm
Entry tags:

decline to equilibrium

any job will doI still say that there needs to be zero growth in the economy, zero growth in population, and zero growth in energy consumption. After, of course, a significant decline to get everything to a sustainable level. Decline is painful. Steep decline is even worse.

Here is a photograph of a neighborhood home (about 4 houses away) that I took last year around 2010 August 18.

And here's the photograph I took of the same house today.
not enough jobs

mortgagesI guess that desperation to work and do any job is insufficient to overcome these economic doldrums. Very sad.

Next month should show us if things are holding steady at "bad" or if they're about to get even worse.

"They're saying there are more jobs. I'm just wondering where those jobs are," Lambrecht said.

About 6.2 million Americans, 45.1 percent of all unemployed workers in this country, have been jobless for more than six months - a higher percentage than during the Great Depression.

 

Rough times.  So far, I don't regret cutting expenses by living without an automobile for the summer.
mellowtigger: (absurdity)
2010-10-19 10:13 pm
Entry tags:

the end of american empire

China buys West Texas oil field formationGuess who just today cut off America's supply of rare earth metals?  China. Guess who's buying rights to oil fields in Texas?  China. Guess who's the number 1 consumer of world energy?  China. Guess who owns more dollars than any other nation? China.

I introduce to you the new world superpower: China.

America has lived by an odd philosophy for many years, wondering why God put our resources under other people's soil.  Now we'll get to see what it feels like, as a more powerful nation begins eying us for the sole purpose of figuring out how they can exploit us to sate their own desires.

I wrote my final paper in geology class a few years ago (college: the second attempt) in part on China's plans to mine the surface of the moon for tritium to feed its nuclear fusion plants.  They're far behind schedule, but at least they have a perfectly logical utility to their space ventures.  America doesn't.

I've warned about it repeatedly, but hopefully our nation will finally get serious about the state of our material resources (which are depleting rapidly).  Maybe now we can have a real space program, please?

Liberals are prepared to understand the inevitable future in a way that conservatives will entirely fail to grasp.  Our future be constrained (finally) by resource limitations which are good for the environment, as Green folk have been warning for decades.  Our future will be multicultural (finally) with a pseudo-communist nation leading the planet.  Our future will be dominated (finally) by a nation that doesn't spend an absurd percentage of its gdp on its planet-wide military complex.  Why bother, when the natives willingly sacrifice their future to the god of exponential money supply growth via legally enforceable bank contracts?

I, for one, welcome our new Chinese overlords.  Ni hao.  (Free Tibet!)
mellowtigger: (economy)
2010-10-05 10:28 am
Entry tags:

keeping out the giraffes

Keeping Out The GiraffesTED is such a wonderful institution.  The presentations that they host and the videos that they publish are both great additions for teaching and conversation.

Today's video is by economist Tim Jackson.  He adds human psychology back into the economic equation.  The elimination of "rational agents" from economic theory is a cornerstone of the "post-autistic economics" movement.  It's good to see other economists joining the effort, although they probably wouldn't know it by that name.  Maybe eventually we'll stop worrying about those giraffes.

http://www.ted.com/talks/tim_jackson_s_economic_reality_check.html (direct link to this embedded video)


Now, excuse me while I shutdown my pc to remove my RAID 1 array.  I plan to eliminate the duplicate hard drive energy consumption and wear-and-tear.  I think perhaps I can learn to live without the convenience of Windows' restore from sleep mode.

Here in Minnesota, we have giraffes at the Minnesota Zoo only during the warm months.  During the winter, we haul them to warmer climates in special giraffe trucks.  We're safe from giraffes during the cold season.  I guess I can spend my time thinking about something else... like impossible hamsters.
mellowtigger: (Green Lantern)
2010-09-02 09:10 am
Entry tags:

best government tool. ever.

Technology is great. The user interface still needs a lot of improvement, but this is exactly the kind of tool that can help promote democratic discussion! Individuals now have the power to experiment with government budgeting.

This website offers a tool to help people see just how difficult (or easy) it is to balance the Minnesota state budget.  Tweaking taxes upward (not even a lot) solves the deficit very quickly.  Cutting expenditures requires some really awful choices when you see how all of the costs are divided between various programs.

http://www.mymnbudget.com/

How do the various candidates stack up, when you get to play with the numbers yourself? They only link to PDF documents instead of providing a template with the user interface widgets already adjusted for you, but at least it's a start! As this local newspaper article mentions: "[The Democratic candidate] boasts, not unjustly, that he has been "far more explicit than other candidates about what I intend to do."

The Republican mantra ("Cut taxes!  Cut spending!") looks pretty awful when you watch just which programs have to get axed, rather than blaming some nebulous and nefarious "gummint". Only one of the Big Three candidates has no explicit budget proposal on the site: the Republican candidate.

I happen to dislike both the Democratic and Republican candidates, so I am looking to give my vote to a minor party instead. This tool, however, is awesome for comparing the various political platforms on one important issue.
mellowtigger: (economy)
2010-08-18 10:38 am
Entry tags:

economic non-recovery (an update)

economic non-recoveryI've stated before that the methods used to calculate the health of our economy are incorrect.  They favor corporate profiteering but ignore personal hardship.  Economies exist because people need them; it should be its effect upon people by which we measure the health of any economy.


stimulus is workingA recent article by the post-autistic economics crowd sums it up nicely, although I would edit their title to become "Obama's profitable non-recovery".  The chart to the right explains the situation rather well.  If you use metrics of corporations, things are looking up already.  If you use metrics of personal hardship, however, a very different picture emerges.

Cut to avoid being too image-heavy... )

I keep saying that we need a zero-growth financial system.  We need a zero-growth society to go with it.