Tom Stream
Friday, December 12, 2003
Friday, October 24, 2003
Book Reviews
10/24/2003
Book Reviews from Tom Cleland
I recently had a chance to read a number of political and economics books. Here are my reviews:
Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, by Al Franken
This is the funniest political book I’ve ever read. Even some of the chapter titles are funny, like "Who Created the Tone?", "Did the Tone Change?", "Why Did Anyone Think It Would Change?", and "I Grow Discouraged About the Tone".
He gives example after example of Republican lies, including a deceptive "Budget Outlays" table, along with a corrected version. The book is pretty well footnoted (and endnoted, though he makes fun of endnotes). I spot-checked one of the book’s claims using the Internet, about Bill O’Reilly falsely claiming to win two Peabody Awards, and it checked out ok.
The book has some serious sections dealing with 9/11 and the memorial service for Senator Wellstone, which I feel Franken summarized very thoughtfully.
One of my favorite chapters is "Loving America the Al Franken Way", which is a great response to those who challenge the patriotism of liberals.
Stupid White Men, by Michael Moore
While Franken makes a good case that Democrats are better than Republicans, Moore makes a good case that Greens are better than Democrats. While I found this book not quite as funny, and somewhat coarser, it was still very amusing. I didn’t know Moore was elected to the school board while he was still in high school.
Moore details illegalities in the 2000 Florida presidential recount. Along with recent evidence showing no connection between Iraq and uranium in Niger, Moore’s remarks at the Academy Awards about President Bush appear to be justified.
As for Clinton, he writes: "Bill Clinton waited until the final days of his presidency to sign a raft of presidential decrees and regulations, many of which promised to improve our environment and create safer working conditions. It was the ultimate cynical move. Wait till the last 48 hours of your term to do the right thing, so that everyone will look back and think, ‘now he was a good president.’ But Clinton knew these last-minute orders would all fall under the hand of the new administration coming to power. He knew none of these orders would stand. It was all about image."
Crashing the Party, by Ralph Nader
This book, which I read last year, is Nader’s story of the 2000 campaign. Of particular interest is Appendix D, which lists 20 problems with the Clinton-Gore administration, such as ending the federal safety net, siding with big business on job-losing trade agreements like NAFTA, expansion of corporate welfare, approval of giant mergers, and on and on.
As we look ahead to the 2004 campaign, I was hopeful that Democrats might nominate a candidate that Greens could vote for. So far I’ve been disappointed with Howard Dean’s support of NAFTA and lack of support for the Kyoto protocol. Wesley Clark is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Crisis Group. Dennis Kucinich sounds good on the issues, but he is faltering in the polls, perhaps because of his campaign manager, Danny Sheehan.
Democrats should be courting us, considering that we have the proven power to swing elections. To the best of my knowledge, this has not happened yet. Most likely my conscience will not allow me to vote Democratic, but if Democrats pass Instant Runoff Voting, I may select a Democratic candidate as my second choice.
The Party’s Over, by Richard Heinberg
Of all the books listed here, this one could be the most important. Using an objective, dispassionate writing style, Richard Heinberg lays out the scientific, historical, and political facts about fossil fuels, and warns us that world oil supplies will probably begin to diminish within the next ten years.
As a result, we can expect the price of just about everything to increase steadily and indefinitely, because we rely on oil for so much. By 2150, life in many ways may be much like it was in 1850, only with more people. We should be using the remaining oil to build more windmills so our children can at least have electricity, but market forces are not reacting in time.
The book explains how fuel cells can store energy, but they can’t produce it. It talks about how trees in Europe became scarce in the Middle Ages, until coal was adopted, and how nitrogen fertilizers are made from natural gas, allowing agribusiness to maximize crop yields in farmlands that are already cleared to capacity worldwide. It is reasonable to expect that 2 out of 3 people simply won’t survive.
So as people don’t get too discouraged, Heinberg offers ways that we can navigate the decline, as a society, or if that doesn’t work, as individuals. Conservation, localized economies, and investing in things that don’t require fossil fuels are all ways to ease the transition and cushion the impact.
In my 2002 campaign for state senate, I emphasized global warming. While recent satellite photos of the Arctic show pronounced melting, I now wonder if fossil fuel supplies will run out before global warming becomes a serious threat to most people.
The Grand Chessboard, by Zbigniew Brzezinski
Unlike my chess books, this book is not about chess, despite its title, but about geopolitics. I read this book not because I agree with it, but because I wanted to understand the motives and strategy of the opposition. The author, who was an advisor to both Democratic and Republican administrations, sees the Eurasian continent as a chessboard, with the critical center squares being countries like Iraq and Afghanistan.
Perhaps our leaders have anticipated the impending oil shortages for some time now. "The world’s energy consumption is bound to vastly increase over the next two or three decades," he writes. "…The Eurasian Balkans are infinitely more important as an economic prize: an enormous concentration of natural gas and oil reserves is located in the region…"
Published four years before 9/11, the book contains this ominous passage: "Moreover, as America becomes an increasingly multicultural society, it may find it more difficult to fashion a consensus on foreign policy issues, except in the circumstances of a truly massive and widely perceived direct external threat."
Gold Wars, by Ferdinand Lips
This book contains an interesting perspective of our economy, rebutting some of the things I learned years ago in my college economics class. Paul A. Samuelson, the author of my college text, claimed that it was necessary to leave the gold standard in order to get us out of the Great Depression. Lips, the author of this book, on the other hand, says that nations departed from the gold standard to finance World War I, and then never went back, resulting in inflation in the 1920s and the stock market crash of 1929, which led us INTO the Great Depression.
To me, it seems logical that gold would be a more accurate long-term store of value, because its rate of supply growth is limited, whereas there is no limit to the amount of paper money that can be printed. The book lists historical examples of failed fiat currencies, and claims that today’s gold prices are kept artificially low by central banks, bullion dealers, and the like.
Bankruptcy 1995, by Harrie E. Figgie, Jr. with Gerald J. Swanson
Obviously there was no bankruptcy in 1995. One good thing I can say about Clinton is that deficit spending, at least officially, was reduced under his watch. But now with the war and the tax cut for the rich, the 8 trillion dollar national debt curve is near vertical again, and the potential for trouble is still there.
This book describes how an economic collapse might play out, given our large budget, trade, and personal debt levels. Under one scenario, the government and economy can’t operate because no one wants to buy U.S. Treasury bonds, bills, and notes. Under another scenario, the government prints too much money, and we get hyperinflation, like the German Weimar Republic of the 1920s, where a person had to haul a wheelbarrow full of money just to buy a loaf of bread.
I think its interesting that gold and oil prices tend to move together. Perhaps rising fuel prices will be the catalyst that triggers the collapse of precarious derivatives funds in the stock market, perhaps leading to a default on the national debt, a weaker dollar, and ensuing economic calamity.
Rich Dad, Poor Dad, by Robert Kiyosaki
In this book, Kiyosaki explains how his biological dad, intelligent and well-educated, with a well-paying job, was actually worse off financially than his friend’s dad, who wisely invested in money making assets, and stayed out of the rat race.
The author claims that the common wisdom of "go to school, get good grades, and find a safe, secure job" will not lead to financial independence. He also thinks that home ownership can be a liability if there is a negative cash flow associated with it.
Though I haven’t read it, Kiyosaki’s latest book, "Prophecy", predicts some sort of economic collapse.
Creating Wealth by Robert G. Allen
This book, published back in the 1980s, was in Kiyosaki’s suggested reading list. He says the surest way to financial independence is to buy modestly-priced homes with the smallest possible down payment, and then rent the homes out.
While I’m sure this strategy has worked successfully for many people, and housing is something people need in both good and bad economic times, I wonder how increasing fuel prices will affect this market.
Police Unbound, by Tony Bouza
I read this book a year or two ago. Tony Bouza was a police officer who worked his way up through the ranks in New York City, and then became police chief here in Minneapolis for a number of years. I campaigned for another candidate when he ran for governor in 1994, but I thought his book was insightful and interesting. I had a chance to meet him at the inaugural ball for Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Ryback.
He is real frank about issues of race and law enforcement, and points out how police corruption can occur and ways to prevent it. The most interesting suggestion I gleaned from the book is that it’s good to have some police just to keep an eye on other police, a sort of check and balance approach.
Well, that’s all for now. Some of these books I found on the following web site, which I now have bookmarked in my Internet browser:
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/index.html
While I still find some of its claims hard to believe, I’m turning to it increasingly as my primary news source.
Tom Cleland
Tuesday, September 30, 2003
Interesting factoid
9/30/2003
If you took all the gold mined in the world and formed it into a cube, it would fit inside a little league baseball diamond.
Friday, August 08, 2003
Logical ways of doing things
8/28/2003
Throughout history, experts have developed a number of systems, often from the ground up, that are alternatives to the traditional way of doing things, and have the potential to become standards some day. Depending on your point of view, they might be more logical, efficient, easy-to-learn, or just plain cool, but have not yet been adopted, because the existing ways evolved first. Also, for many of us, since we have already learned the existing methods, it is perhaps too late to retool our habits from a practical standpoint.
1) The Metric System -- This one has been adopted by much of the world, but not particularly in the U.S., where inches, feet, yards, pounds, and gallons are still used. As you probably know, the metric system uses our base 10 numbering system (we have 10 fingers), and knowing the prefix, you can tell that a millimeter is 1000 times shorter than a meter, and a kilometer is 1000 times longer. The Metric System blends nicely with our Arabic numeral system, which replaced Roman numerals.
2) The Esperanto Language -- This spoken and written language was built from scratch over 100 years ago. It is designed to be politically neutral, and is said to be 4 to 10 times easier to learn than other languages. All nouns have the letter "o" in the suffix, and adjectives have the letter "a". To create a word that is the opposite, you just add "mal-" in front of it. For example, "bona" means good and "malbona" means bad. And to turn a statement into a question, you just put the word "cxu" (pronounced "choo") in front of it.
3) Quickhand -- This is easier to learn than conventional shorthand because it uses the English alphabet. (Not sure if there's an Esperanto version!) It uses consistent patterns for prefixes and suffixes, and short abbreviations for the most commonly used words. For example, a hyphen ("-") is used for the word "the", and the letter "j" is used in place of the suffix "-tion". Sometimes the same abbreviation is used for several different words, but you can tell which word it is by how it's used in the sentence.
4) The Dvorak keyboard for typing -- Ever wonder why the letters on your keyboard are scrambled (in the order QWERTY, etc.)? It's because the original typing machines were slow and the inventors wanted to give them a chance to keep up with the operators. Dvorak developed a keyboard where the most common letters (like ETOARSNL -- the ones you see a lot on "Wheel of Fortune") are placed on keys nearest your strongest fingers. This would be more efficient if you were learning it for the first time, but may cause some anguish to relearn.
5) Piano Roll representation of music -- In this system, written music is displayed in a graph format, on a grid, where time, in beats, is displayed along the horizontal axis, and pitch, in half-steps, is displayed along the vertical. Everything is displayed in proportion to how it is heard, and there is no need for sharps, flats, or key signatures. Most musicians are trained in the traditional system, and what system they use is a matter of personal preference. Fortunately, modern computer software offers both methods and can convert from one to the other.
6) Harry Lorainne Memory System -- This standard can be adopted on a personal level, but it's hard to say how widespread it is used. It uses illogical imagery to remember lists, numbers, names, faces, etc. For example, to remember numbers, a phonetic sound is associated with each digit. The sounds can be chained together to form words, such as "tot", "tin", and "tomb" for the numbers 11, 12, and 13. Words can be chained together to form lists. This is done by creating crazy, illogical images like a fish sitting in a chair. To remember names and words from foreign languages, you can do a "sounds-like", like in the game "Pictionary", to get a word that has an image. For example, "June bug" for the city of "Juneau".
7) The Linux Operating System -- This one may be more controversial, but it is generally agreed that this computer operating system takes up less disk space than the more popular Microsoft Windows. This leads one to believe that the code is probably cleaner and more concise. Developers who use it claim that it is more logically organized, and all agree that the program code is not hidden from view, as it is with Windows. Still, Linux has a little further to go in terms of features and ease of use for new users.

