Archive for July, 2008

Economic rebound not as energetic as hoped for

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

The country didn’t get the energetic rebound in economic growth hoped for from the government’s tax rebates in the second quarter, and the economy jolted into reverse at the end of 2007, raising new recession fears.

The Commerce Department reported Thursday that gross domestic product, or GDP, increased at an annual rate of 1.9 percent in the April-to-June period. That marked an improvement over the feeble 0.9 percent growth logged in the first quarter of this year and the outright contraction in the economy during the final quarter of last year.

Still, the second-quarter rebound wasn’t as robust as economists had hoped; they were forecasting growth at a 2.4 percent pace. The pickup, while welcome, isn’t likely to be seen as a signal that the fragile economy is growing healthier. There are fears that as the bracing tonic of the tax rebates fades, the economy could be in for another rough patch later this year.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrials were off nearly 75 points in morning trading following two days of gains.

The health of the economy is the top concern of the public — and by extension politicians including candidates vying for the White House.

GDP contracted by 0.2 percent, on an annualized basis, in the last three months of 2007, according to annual revisions released by the government.

That contraction reflected the deepest cuts in 26 years from builders clobbered by the housing slump and cautious spending by consumers spooked by all the fallout.

The fourth-quarter’s dip marked the worst showing since the third quarter of 2001, when the economy was last in a recession. The government’s previous estimate for the final quarter of last year was in positive territory — but not by much — at an anemic 0.6 percent growth rate.

GDP measures the value of all goods and services produced within the United States and is the best barometer of the country’s economic fitness.

A pickup in consumer spending and brisk sales of U.S. exports abroad figured prominently in the second-quarter improvement.

Consumers boosted their spending at a 1.5 percent pace in the second quarter. That was up from a 0.9 percent growth rate in the first quarter and marked the best showing since the third quarter of 2007 when the economy was still performing strongly despite the severe housing slump.

Billions of dollars in tax rebates, the centerpiece of the government’s $168 billion stimulus package, spurred consumers to spend in some areas, a major force shaping overall economic activity. Spending on furniture and household appliances went up, while people cut spending on cars.

Meanwhile, sales of U.S. exports grew at a 9.2 percent pace in the second quarter, up from a 5.1 percent growth rate in the first quarter. The weak dollar has made U.S. goods cheaper to foreign buyers, helping to bolster exports.

Government spending also helped second-quarter GDP.

The housing slump continued to take a bite — although a smaller one — out of overall economic activity.

Builders cut back on residential projects by 15.6 percent, on an annualized basis, in the second quarter. That was not as deep as the 25.1 percent cut made in the first quarter or the 27 percent annualized drop in the final quarter of 2007.

Businesses showed caution in other areas. They trimmed spending on equipment and software and they reduced investment in inventories in the second quarter.

An inflation gauge tied to the GDP report showed all prices galloping ahead at a rate of 4.2 percent in the second quarter, the fastest pace since the end of last year.

However, when energy and food costs are stripped out, all other — or “core” — prices rose at a pace of 2.1 percent, down from a 2.3 percent rise in the first quarter. Still, the second-quarter’s core inflation reading is outside the Fed’s comfort zone.

Given mounting inflation fears, the Fed in June halted a nearly yearlong campaign of rate cuts to shore up the economy. It is expected to hold rates steady again next week. Boosting them too soon to fend off inflation could hurt the economy and the already crippled housing market.

A trio of crises — housing, credit and financial — have badly bruised the economy. In response, employers have cut jobs for six months in a row, bringing total losses this year close to a staggering half-million — 438,000.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that layoffs rose sharply last week. New claims filed for unemployment insurance jumped to 448,000, the highest in five years.

The faltering labor market is keeping a lid on wage pressures. Wages and benefits paid to U.S. workers, meanwhile, rose a moderate 0.7 percent in the second quarter, the same growth as the prior quarter. It was the lowest in two years, the department said in another report.

With more job cuts expected for July and in coming months, there’s growing concern that many people will pull back on their spending when the bracing effect of the tax rebates fades, dealing a blow to the shaky economy.

These worries — along with the negative GDP in the fourth quarter of last year — may rekindle recession fears.

There’s been a lot of debate about whether the economy is on the brink of, or has fallen into, its first recession since 2001. Under one rough rule, if the economy contracts for two straight quarters it is considered to be in a recession.

However, that didn’t happen in the last recession — in 2001. The unofficial determination, made by a panel of academics at the National Bureau of Economic Research, usually comes well after the fact. The panel takes into account economic activity, as well as employment, income and other things.

As part of the annual revisions, the government marked down growth in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Last year the economy grew by 2 percent, the weakest showing since 2002. The revisions are based on more information as well as improved methodologies.

Is it really free market capitalism when our tax dollars are bailing out Wall Street?

Thursday, July 31st, 2008


No. Its Socialism. Businesses should fail. Propping up dysfunctional institutions is bad for America.

And anybody who says, “They are too big to fail”, shouldn’t have let them get that big in the first place. Banks have a cap of 10% of all US Deposits. So a Bank like Bank of America is maxed out on growing its depositor base any further. Thus it isn’t too big to fail.

Government shouldn’t be in the trenches of Wall Street. That is how Socialism starts..

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That is the funny thing about the conservative leaders of the finance and banking industry. They are hardcore free market capitalists until it no longer suits them at which point they cry out for subsidies and bail outs saying how can we let this whole industry go into the dirt.

Its not free market capitalism, its the more power and connections you have the better off it is for you to do well. So next time someone is complaining about how some welfare case is leeching off the system even though they live in a relatively poor condition, take a gander at high ranking executives so incompetent in their positions and so irresponsible that they amassed huge amounts of risky assets to have it blow up in their face who still get to enjoy their mansions and swimming pools.

Can vegans eat frozen yogurt?

Thursday, July 31st, 2008


one thing i can’t get enough of if frozen yogurt, but at the same time i really want to be vegan or vegeterian, so i keep switching off BECAUSE of frozen yogurt.

can’t i just make one acception?

 

Ok, firstly, if it is only yogurt (which uses milk) that you cannot resist but you are okay with meat and fish, you can call yourself a vegetarian. There are like 10 names for vegetarians (inclding vegans) which I don’t remember and I don’t want to. I am not such a fun of labels.

Anyway, there is cheese for vegans made out of soy milk or another milk (except milk from animals) so I guess that there might be even yogurt.

However, if you really wanna be a vegan, what you can do, is find how they make yogurt (home made yogurt) and replace the milk with soy milk. The taste won’t be the same, but it will be similar.

A google search for home made yogurt or home made vegan yogurt might clear it up for you!

As I said though, I am not sure if there is vegan yogurt. i just guess because there is cheese for vegans.

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Vegetarianism and veganism is a personal thing. If you want to make one acception, do it.
Although there are some people who will get upset if you use a term that doesn’t technically apply to you, so you can call yourself a lacto-vegetarian.

Athletes foot?

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

I have tried Tinactin and Lotrimin and nothing seems to work. Any other ways to cure it that you know of? Thanks. =]

Soaking the foot in salt water and then using Lotrimin/Tinactin right after may help get rid of it quicker. It worked for my dad. It’s a continuous struggle for him. Eventually it works!

…………

I think I have that. My feet are frightfully foul and makes my kitty run into another room when I take my shoes off. Bathing doesn’t help the terrible odor.

How do I test the hardness of a rock?

Thursday, July 31st, 2008


I need to find the PSI/Hardness of a rock. Where would I send it to or how can I figure this out on my own? Its limestone if that helps.

 

The type of “hardness” you are talking about has nothing whatsoever to do with Moe’s hardness which is a scratch test used to test minerals. The numbers it uses are not equally spaced but are based on which mineral will scratch the one below it for example corundum is 9 and diamond 10 on Moe’s scale but in absolute terms if corundum is 9 diamond should be over 1000.
The type of test you require is, I am sorry to say, not possible to do at home. Cylindrical cores of rock are cut from various places in your deposit, trimmed and then placed in between the jaws of a hydraulic press and it is pressurized to the point where the sample crushes. The force at this point is recorded and from the size of the core used the strength of the sample is calculated. A more advanced form of this test is known as a triaxial test where the sample is contained within a testing cell and it is pressurized all round to simulate the rock’s strength when in situ. The machines to perform these tests are large, heavy (several tons) and expensive. There are however many companies that perform this type of testing on a contract basis at a very reasonable cost.

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Well to test the hardness of limestone on the Moh scale you can try and stretch it with other rocks. Mohs scale goes from one to ten and it is meant to show how well rocks can hold up to abrasions. Just to let ya know limestone is a 3-4 on the scale. But to test that you can do several things. You could try and scratch it with known rocks on the scale. for example if you rubbed quartz on it the limestone would scratch so you know it is softer then quartz then you could rub talc or gypsum and the limestone wouldn’t scratch so you know it is harder then those. and you can narrow down like that. Or use junk to test it for example your fingernail is 2.5 a penny is 3.5 a steel nail is 5.5. stuff like that. hoped that helped oh and here is moh’s scale.
1 = Talc
2 = Gypsum
3 = Calcite
4 = Fluorite
5 = Apatite (fluorapatite)
6 = Orthoclase
7 = Quartz
8 = Topaz
9 = Corundum
10 = Diamond

Is anyone aware of Thomas Mathus and what he did?

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008


He was an economist back in the early 19th century who warned of problems of finite resources vs. population growth.
For example,he warned of increasing food supply,but even more increasing population. Do U believe he was right in believing the world is headed for disaster during to the said above,especially with petroleum being the most obvious manifestation of the phenomenon going on?

 

Yes, I am aware of Thomas Malthus (there’s an “L” in his last name).

Ironic that by modern standards he was from a very large family, isn’t it?

I personally don’t see how humans as a whole are generally so myopic and fail to see how our over population of earth is going to come to a head at some point.

Then I think about the people (for the most part) who are having oodles of children. People from third world countries with little, to zero education. People in first world countries who tend to be on the bottom levels socially, employment wise, and education wise.

If people do not have a view of how the ENTIRE world is, then their world is tiny. It may be no bigger than their family, or their village. How can they possibly know that it’s a problem if they have 8-10 children, and 4-5 of them survive to adult hood? In their mind, it’s great! Someone to take care of them when they get old.

I currently live in Idaho, near a little town of ten thousand people. I’m constantly amazed at how little some of them know about the “outside” world….meaning more than 200 miles from town. For them, their entire world is relationships, squabbles, employment, ect right here within about a 50 mile zone. They don’t THINK further afield than that. To them it doesn’t matter that they produce seven children….there’s always food at WalMart.

I have done polls and such on the internet before. One would assume internet users to be a much more “worldly” crowd.

I’ve asked before what people would do if there was a famine (people actually starving to death) here in the United States. Over and over again, I am simply flabbergasted by the number of people who state something like, “It wouldn’t affect me, I get my food at the grocery store.” Or (this is priceless) “I’d just eat out if the stores didn’t have any food.”

So people in third world countries have a serrious disconect over the fact that there are simply too many humans, and we are running out of resources. People in first world countries have a SERRIOUS disconect over where their resources come from.

Yes, without question I believe the world is headed for a global meltdown. The earth will still be here…and the earth has proven wonderfully able to recover. However at some point humans themselves are going to be pitted against a true peril, which will kill millions.

Unfortunatly, there are so many humans now, and we breed so well, AND are able to stand on the shoulders of humans before us, that I don’t believe the earth will ever be rid of all humans. What I mean by “stand on the shoulders of humans before us,” is that we have the abbility to pass knowledge on. A baby born today does not have to “discover” fire. It can grab a book, and know how to mine coal, or built an oil drilling platform. As we build our knowledge each generation, we also build the damage we do to the earth.

I believe the begining of the end (for current human civilization) will happen with both a famine, and a pandemic.

Famine first, to weaken the population, pandemic next as a disease gains a foothold in a weakend population.

It’s possible, it could happen as soon as 2013, when Ug99 hits China, and all of India and Africa. What will the U.S. do when over 1/2 of the worlds population is facing starvation? What will the 1/2 of the world that is starving do to the U.S.? Remember “stand on the shoulders of humans before us”….we are not the only country who learns…..we are not the only country which is Nuclear capable.

So what exactly would the Chineese Government do if their people were dying of famine and disease? Hint: The Chineese military still teaches their soldiers that “war with the United States is inevitable.”
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;…

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The earth is finite. We live on a bounded sphere.

How can we possibly increase population, use resources and dispose of waste indefinitely in a finite world?

Doesn’t matter how efficient we get. Eventually resources will get used up, the biosphere will collapse under our waste and our population will crash.
There are countless examples of this in the natural world and examples of man himself outstripping his local environment.
Now we are doing it on a global scale.
It’s just simple logic that the Malthus prediction hasn’t come true - because we haven’t reached the limit - yet.
E.O. Wilson calculated the theoretical absolute limit - and it’s 14 billion.
The strain is showing at 6 billion.
At 9 or 10, I believe we will wish we had listened.

Physics help (finding the voltage drop across a circuit) pic included?

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008


http://i328.photobucket.com/albums/l341/…

 

The voltage across capacitors in parallel is the same, meaning the voltage drop across C2 and C3 is 241V.

The capacitance of the parallel pair needs to be determined, however, and is as simple to calcuate as adding the two capacitances.

Ceq = C2 + C3 = 6pf + 9pf = 15pf

Using the idea of a voltage divider circuit…

Ceq/C1 = Veq/V1
15/3 = 241/V1
V1 = 241/5 = 48.2

Total Voltage = 48.2 + 241 = 289.2 volts

Why does the corn at the end of a row grow shorter than the rest in the field?

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008


corn plants grow taller competing for sunlight. the plants around the field borders are not shaded on all sides like the ones in the middle of the field, so they don’t have to get as tall to receive the same amount of sunlight during the day.

i could also be because some fertilizer spreaders (spinners) spread less on the outside edges of the spread pattern. growers overcome this by overlapping a little bit. but you cant over lap on the outside pass without doubling the fertilizer.

water could be the factor …….. many variables.

turn rows (where the tractor turns around at the edge of the field) usually stay more compacted. this leads to more water run off (opposed to in-soak ) and restricted root growth

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Soil compaction and competition for water from trees in the fence line account for most of it.
Sometimes the compacted soil will not hold as much water. Other times the edge of the field is where excess water collects before it drains away.

But if you look across a field, it will appear to be taller away from the edge even if there a lot of short areas in the middle. You simply can not see them over the other corn.

Sometimes we see that weed stands are greatest close to the headlands.

Deep subsoil treatment that breaks up compacted subsoil often solves the problem.
Some have accused road dust in this situation. But more often road dust gives higher crops close to the road. So we do not simply accept that explanation.

I know i’m wrong, and i’m trying to change, how come i cant change fast enough?

Monday, July 28th, 2008


i fight with my mother, and over the past few weeks.. about 2 months, things have been slowly getting better, but i slip back into being mad at her for the things she’s done in the past (cant let go and cant stop putting myself down) i always feel like i’m wrong, and i guess i take my anger and put it on other people. . . how do i stop this? how do i become a better person? i do love my family no matter how much we fight and disagree, but i always feel like the bad guy, maybe i am, how do i change into the good guy and be a good person??
i feel like i should just die because i am so horrible, but i dont want to be selfish like i heard, i just want my family to be happy, and it seems the only way is if i’m not around. what should i do?
i do know it’s my fault, and i do know i am wrong. . . so you dont have to tell me that i’m a horrid child. just tips on how to change/be a good person would be nice. . . or what i can do to make it up to my family.

 

Everyone makes mistakes this does not make you a bad person. It takes time to learn new habits. You get so used to dealing with things in your own way it is hard to do things differnelty. Your parents love you very much. Life is about overcoming and perservering. Now don’t think about taking your own life thats no solution that will only but you in hell and your parents through devastation i know you dont want that. Be strong ask god to guide you and give you stregth. Try and find ways to channel your anger in to something positive. When you feel yourselve getting mad walk away. Tell your parents this dont let your hate blind the goodness inside of you man. Is the things your mad about really worth being mad about. Somethings you just need to let **** go dont worry about it. Ask gid to help you pray and ill pray for you you have a good heart i can tell keep on pushing brother be patient nothing good comes easy if it did we would all be rich

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Life sucks and I know exactly what you mean about the family thing..mine tottaly sucks..anyway,I think tho life is crazy you have to think of the ppl who DO love you..and that even toh its hard we all have a place even if its small.. so keep pushing fwrd dont give up..

How to make a compost?

Monday, July 28th, 2008


How to make compost ? wat things we can put in compost? How long? How to use?

 

if you are in a apartment ,if you have a balcony get a big plastic bin drill some holes in the side and lid ,or buy one of the pre-made ones ,
there are special compost bins you can get for apartments ,best to keep on the balcony where there is airflow.

there is a whole range http://www.cleanairgardening.com/accesso…
http://images.byderule.multiply.com/imag…

and add a bit of sand now and again,or leaves or sawdust, to put over the trash ,you should really stir or move the stuff at times to aerate it and ensure that the decomposition is overall ,keep moist
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a general note on compost

bones,tree trunks,cardboard,eggshells ,leaves,kitchen waste,food scraps,newspaper,
kitty litter ,any organics banana skins ,nutshells ,saw dust,vegetable cuttings

All can be put on the compost heap

as long as you seal it with a covering of leaves .or put a piece of plastic on top ,
keep it moist and in the shade ,it will then get hot enough to kill all parasites

the worms will develop,and take care of everything ,the moisture helps decomposition

the plastic keeps in the moisture and protects the worms from predators .like chickens ,birds armadillos,and even dogs .i have seen going in to eat my worm culture

you could add a bit of lime now and again
to make the process more potent

HOW
make the compost in a shallow hole ,so that it retains more humidity,
about 2 square meters is good ,and have it under a tree or put a little roof over it,which does not have to be water proof ,so a palm thatch is enough,

and make sure the garden sprinkler gets there or spray some water on it ,at least once a week,don`t have it water logged or the worms will drown or leave
or
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NOTE
food scraps are better if kept apart to feed to a pig or chickens or dogs depending on the food scraps
if one puts these things in the compost these animals ,(if allowed )will go into your compost .

also the rate of decomposition depending on temperature and moisture ,stipulates what can all go in your compost heap .

In Mexico where it is very warm ,with lots of bugs of all descriptions ,we can put a tree trunk in the compost and in 6 months it is gone completely ,there is also a much longer vigorous decomposition ,there is no winter to slow things down.and we continues add huge amounts of green matter such as banana stems
and leaves (each banana plant dies after making bunch)coconut palms (they drop all the time)
and cuttings ,the heap goes up and down ,and in 7 years has never grown ,it is like a hungry all consuming hole that has no limit to its appetite.

the base is one meter into the ground and i have never got round to cleaning it .although it has a lot of compost in it by now
relevant links
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;…
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;…

http://byderule.multiply.com/journal/ite…
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