Monday, December 6, 2010

Making Money Jobs

This guest post from Jacq Jolie is part of the “reader stories” feature at Get Rich Slowly. Some stories contain general advice; others are examples of how a GRS reader achieved financial success — or failure. These stories feature folks from all levels of financial maturity and with all sorts of incomes. You can read more about Jacq’s story at Single Mom Rich Mom.


On 31 December 2009, I finished what I hope will be my last full-time, permanent job. I’ve worked a bit here and there over the past year, but it’s on my own terms, and not because I have to. I’m now semi-retired at the age of 45. But what does that mean?


About nine years ago, after reading Your Money or Your Life, I changed from an under-earning, confused woman to a woman with a mission: to never have to work again (unless I wanted to). In November of last year, I reached the Crossover Point, where the income from investments exceeded my expenses. (I think it actually happened sooner than that, but I hadn’t been paying attention.) At last, nine years after first figuring out what I wanted to work hard and save money for, I’d reached Financial Independence.


I’m fortunate that in the last few years, I’ve managed to raise my income so that I can work a few months a year and earn the same amount as I have working full-time (and overtime!) in previous jobs. I’m also fortunate that my wants remain relatively small and I never succumbed to lifestyle inflation. I’ve never wanted a big house, a fast car, or exotic travel.


In a “normal” year, I can easily live on about $36,000, including mortgage payments of about $15,000 per year (that I’m prepaying). So I knew that my Crossover Point was somewhere around $20,000/year with a paid-off house. In the next year, I intend to downsize and move to a (mortgage-free!) townhouse that will be close to public transit for those times I choose to work, and, more importantly, be low maintenance to allow for periods of long travel during the summers.


I’m trying not to plan too far in advance. I want to be flexible. My hope is that I can continue to work part-time or a few months a year for the next 5-10 years until a part of my pension is eligible for withdrawal. My net worth is somewhere around the $500-600k mark, not including pensions. Since I don’t have any intention of touching my savings for the next ten years, I’m hopeful that it will last as long as I need it. If not, I’ll go back to work full-time for a couple of years.


I think what Financial Independence has given me has been a confidence in life itself — that I can handle anything that comes up. If life is difficult, sometimes throwing a bit of cash at a problem resolves it. It’s also given me the freedom that I first dreamed of when reading Your Money or Your Life — that I could work because I enjoyed working, and that I could have my life be about more than work. I have the flexibility to leave any work situation that doesn’t contribute to my overall happiness.


Having lived very frugally for long periods in the past, I experienced frugality burnout earlier this year. I’ve consciously been spending more lately on the things that I’ve “deprived” myself of over the last almost 30 years I’ve been working. For example, my bed was over 50 years old and desperately in need of replacement. A new bed is being delivered this week, and I couldn’t be happier. I’ve also stopped thinking that I should DIY everything; I’ve had house cleaners come in this last month — something I would never have considered doing just six months ago.


Part of me still worries about the future:



  • What is it like to be looking for a job and networking once I get over 50?

  • Will it be hard — or impossible — to find work if I stay out of the job market too long?

  • What if the stock market falls again?

  • Are my investments too aggressive or not aggressive enough given that I hope not to draw down on them for quite some time?

  • Am I jumping too fast? Should I keep working full-time for a few years and get to that magical million and give myself even more of a buffer?


I only have a year of semi-retirement under my belt, so I’m not sure if that’s necessarily a “success”; I’m still just learning what works. I do know I’ll never go back to a regular job again though and definitely not go back to driving myself as hard as I have in the past again. My hope is that my approach is flexible enough and that I’m resourceful enough to survive and thrive through whatever lies ahead.




Next time you hear an economist or denizen of Wall Street talk about how the "American economy" is doing these days, watch your wallet.



There are two American economies. One is on the mend. The other is still coming apart.



The one that's mending is America's Big Money economy. It's comprised of Wall Street traders, big investors, and top professionals and corporate executives.



The Big Money economy is doing well these days. That's partly thanks to Ben Bernanke, whose Fed is keeping interest rates near zero by printing money as fast as it dare. It's essentially free money to America's Big Money economy.



Free money can almost always be put to uses that create more of it. Big corporations are buying back their shares of stock, thereby boosting corporate earnings. They're merging and acquiring other companies.



And they're going abroad in search of customers.



Thanks to fast-growing China, India, and Brazil, giant American corporations are racking up sales. They're selling Asian and Latin American consumers everything from cars and cell phones to fancy Internet software and iPads. Forty percent of the S&P 500 biggest corporations are now doing more than 60 percent of their business abroad. And America's biggest investors are also going abroad to get a nice return on their money.



So don't worry about America's Big Money economy. According to a Wall Street Journal survey released Thursday, overall compensation in financial services will rise 5 percent this year, and employees in some businesses like asset management will get increases of 15 percent.



The Dow Jones Industrial Average is back to where it was before the Lehman bankruptcy filing triggered the financial collapse. And profits at America's largest corporations are heading upward.



But there's another American economy, and it's not on the mend. Call it the Average Worker economy.



Last Friday's jobs report showed 159,000 new private-sector jobs in October. That's better than previous months. But 125,000 net new jobs are needed just to keep up with the growth of the American labor force. So another way of expressing what happened to jobs in October is to say 24,000 were added over what we need just to stay even.



Yet the American economy has lost 15 million jobs since the start of the Great Recession. And if you add in the growth of the labor force -- including everyone too discouraged to look for a job -- we're down about 22 million.



Or to put it another way, we're still getting nowhere on jobs.



One out of eight breadwinners is still out of work. Most families in the Average Worker economy rely on two breadwinners. So if one out of eight isn't working, chances are high that family incomes are down compared to what they were three years ago.



And that means the bills aren't getting paid.



According to a recent Washington Post poll, more than half of all Americans -- 53 percent -- are worried about making their mortgage payments. This is many more than were worried two years ago, when the Great Recession hit bottom. Then, 37 percent expressed worry.



Delinquency rates on home loans are rising. Distressed sales are up as a percent of total sales.



Most people in the Average Worker economy own few shares of stock, if any. Their equity is in their homes. But with all the delinquencies and distressed sales, the housing market has a glut of homes for sale. As a result, home prices are still dropping. So the net worth of most Americans is still dropping.



And even though interest rates are falling, most people in the Average Worker economy can't refinance their homes. They can't get home equity loans. Banks don't want to lend to the Average Worker economy because people in it are considered bad credit risks. They still owe lots of money, their family incomes are down, and their net worth has fallen.



And according to the Reuters/University of Michigan survey of American consumers, expectations about personal finances are at an all time low.



Inhabitants of the Big Money economy are celebrating Republican wins last week. They figure financial regulations will be rolled back, environmental regulations will be canned, the Bush tax cut will be extended to the top 1 percent, and it will be harder for workers to form unions.



Inhabitants of the Average Worker economy aren't so sure. The economy has been so bad they're angry at politicians. They showed their anger at the ballot box. They took it out on incumbents.



But if nothing changes in the Average Worker economy, there will be hell to pay.



Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future, now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org.











bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off
Consumer Reports: AT &amp; T ocupó el último lugar entre las compañías aéreas EE.UU. | iLounge <b> Noticias </ b> de noticias iLounge discutir de Consumer Reports: AT & T ocupó el último lugar entre las compañías aéreas EE.UU.. Buscar más noticias de los principales iPhone iPod independiente, el iPhone, y el sitio de IPAD.

Jabón <b> Noticias </ b> Los días de nuestras vacaciones &#39; &#39; Vidas Tierras Big Fish y másLa están saltando en el mundo de las telenovelas, con nuevos personajes que entran y caras familiares que regresan. La semana pasada, se informó que la CBS le dio 'La.

Campamento Carnahan Para Fox News <b> </ b>: ¿Por qué solo nosotros fuera? | TPMMuckrakerLawyers para el ex candidato al Senado Robin Carnahan argumentan que la cadena Fox News es singularizar el demócrata de Missouri en su demanda alegando su campaña violado los derechos de autor de la red.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

This guest post from Jacq Jolie is part of the “reader stories” feature at Get Rich Slowly. Some stories contain general advice; others are examples of how a GRS reader achieved financial success — or failure. These stories feature folks from all levels of financial maturity and with all sorts of incomes. You can read more about Jacq’s story at Single Mom Rich Mom.


On 31 December 2009, I finished what I hope will be my last full-time, permanent job. I’ve worked a bit here and there over the past year, but it’s on my own terms, and not because I have to. I’m now semi-retired at the age of 45. But what does that mean?


About nine years ago, after reading Your Money or Your Life, I changed from an under-earning, confused woman to a woman with a mission: to never have to work again (unless I wanted to). In November of last year, I reached the Crossover Point, where the income from investments exceeded my expenses. (I think it actually happened sooner than that, but I hadn’t been paying attention.) At last, nine years after first figuring out what I wanted to work hard and save money for, I’d reached Financial Independence.


I’m fortunate that in the last few years, I’ve managed to raise my income so that I can work a few months a year and earn the same amount as I have working full-time (and overtime!) in previous jobs. I’m also fortunate that my wants remain relatively small and I never succumbed to lifestyle inflation. I’ve never wanted a big house, a fast car, or exotic travel.


In a “normal” year, I can easily live on about $36,000, including mortgage payments of about $15,000 per year (that I’m prepaying). So I knew that my Crossover Point was somewhere around $20,000/year with a paid-off house. In the next year, I intend to downsize and move to a (mortgage-free!) townhouse that will be close to public transit for those times I choose to work, and, more importantly, be low maintenance to allow for periods of long travel during the summers.


I’m trying not to plan too far in advance. I want to be flexible. My hope is that I can continue to work part-time or a few months a year for the next 5-10 years until a part of my pension is eligible for withdrawal. My net worth is somewhere around the $500-600k mark, not including pensions. Since I don’t have any intention of touching my savings for the next ten years, I’m hopeful that it will last as long as I need it. If not, I’ll go back to work full-time for a couple of years.


I think what Financial Independence has given me has been a confidence in life itself — that I can handle anything that comes up. If life is difficult, sometimes throwing a bit of cash at a problem resolves it. It’s also given me the freedom that I first dreamed of when reading Your Money or Your Life — that I could work because I enjoyed working, and that I could have my life be about more than work. I have the flexibility to leave any work situation that doesn’t contribute to my overall happiness.


Having lived very frugally for long periods in the past, I experienced frugality burnout earlier this year. I’ve consciously been spending more lately on the things that I’ve “deprived” myself of over the last almost 30 years I’ve been working. For example, my bed was over 50 years old and desperately in need of replacement. A new bed is being delivered this week, and I couldn’t be happier. I’ve also stopped thinking that I should DIY everything; I’ve had house cleaners come in this last month — something I would never have considered doing just six months ago.


Part of me still worries about the future:



  • What is it like to be looking for a job and networking once I get over 50?

  • Will it be hard — or impossible — to find work if I stay out of the job market too long?

  • What if the stock market falls again?

  • Are my investments too aggressive or not aggressive enough given that I hope not to draw down on them for quite some time?

  • Am I jumping too fast? Should I keep working full-time for a few years and get to that magical million and give myself even more of a buffer?


I only have a year of semi-retirement under my belt, so I’m not sure if that’s necessarily a “success”; I’m still just learning what works. I do know I’ll never go back to a regular job again though and definitely not go back to driving myself as hard as I have in the past again. My hope is that my approach is flexible enough and that I’m resourceful enough to survive and thrive through whatever lies ahead.




Next time you hear an economist or denizen of Wall Street talk about how the "American economy" is doing these days, watch your wallet.



There are two American economies. One is on the mend. The other is still coming apart.



The one that's mending is America's Big Money economy. It's comprised of Wall Street traders, big investors, and top professionals and corporate executives.



The Big Money economy is doing well these days. That's partly thanks to Ben Bernanke, whose Fed is keeping interest rates near zero by printing money as fast as it dare. It's essentially free money to America's Big Money economy.



Free money can almost always be put to uses that create more of it. Big corporations are buying back their shares of stock, thereby boosting corporate earnings. They're merging and acquiring other companies.



And they're going abroad in search of customers.



Thanks to fast-growing China, India, and Brazil, giant American corporations are racking up sales. They're selling Asian and Latin American consumers everything from cars and cell phones to fancy Internet software and iPads. Forty percent of the S&P 500 biggest corporations are now doing more than 60 percent of their business abroad. And America's biggest investors are also going abroad to get a nice return on their money.



So don't worry about America's Big Money economy. According to a Wall Street Journal survey released Thursday, overall compensation in financial services will rise 5 percent this year, and employees in some businesses like asset management will get increases of 15 percent.



The Dow Jones Industrial Average is back to where it was before the Lehman bankruptcy filing triggered the financial collapse. And profits at America's largest corporations are heading upward.



But there's another American economy, and it's not on the mend. Call it the Average Worker economy.



Last Friday's jobs report showed 159,000 new private-sector jobs in October. That's better than previous months. But 125,000 net new jobs are needed just to keep up with the growth of the American labor force. So another way of expressing what happened to jobs in October is to say 24,000 were added over what we need just to stay even.



Yet the American economy has lost 15 million jobs since the start of the Great Recession. And if you add in the growth of the labor force -- including everyone too discouraged to look for a job -- we're down about 22 million.



Or to put it another way, we're still getting nowhere on jobs.



One out of eight breadwinners is still out of work. Most families in the Average Worker economy rely on two breadwinners. So if one out of eight isn't working, chances are high that family incomes are down compared to what they were three years ago.



And that means the bills aren't getting paid.



According to a recent Washington Post poll, more than half of all Americans -- 53 percent -- are worried about making their mortgage payments. This is many more than were worried two years ago, when the Great Recession hit bottom. Then, 37 percent expressed worry.



Delinquency rates on home loans are rising. Distressed sales are up as a percent of total sales.



Most people in the Average Worker economy own few shares of stock, if any. Their equity is in their homes. But with all the delinquencies and distressed sales, the housing market has a glut of homes for sale. As a result, home prices are still dropping. So the net worth of most Americans is still dropping.



And even though interest rates are falling, most people in the Average Worker economy can't refinance their homes. They can't get home equity loans. Banks don't want to lend to the Average Worker economy because people in it are considered bad credit risks. They still owe lots of money, their family incomes are down, and their net worth has fallen.



And according to the Reuters/University of Michigan survey of American consumers, expectations about personal finances are at an all time low.



Inhabitants of the Big Money economy are celebrating Republican wins last week. They figure financial regulations will be rolled back, environmental regulations will be canned, the Bush tax cut will be extended to the top 1 percent, and it will be harder for workers to form unions.



Inhabitants of the Average Worker economy aren't so sure. The economy has been so bad they're angry at politicians. They showed their anger at the ballot box. They took it out on incumbents.



But if nothing changes in the Average Worker economy, there will be hell to pay.



Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future, now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org.











bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

Consumer Reports: AT&amp;T ranked last among U.S. carriers | iLounge <b>News</b>

iLounge news discussing the Consumer Reports: AT&T ranked last among US carriers. Find more iPhone news from leading independent iPod, iPhone, and iPad site.

Soap <b>News</b>: &#39;Days of Our Lives&#39; Lands Big Fish and More

The holidays are hopping in soap opera world, with new characters moving in and familiar faces returning. Last week, we reported that CBS gave 'The.

Carnahan Camp To Fox <b>News</b>: Why Single Us Out? | TPMMuckraker

Lawyers for former Senate Candidate Robin Carnahan are arguing that the Fox News network is singling the Missouri Democrat out in its lawsuit alleging her campaign violated the network's copyrights.


bench craft company rip off

This guest post from Jacq Jolie is part of the “reader stories” feature at Get Rich Slowly. Some stories contain general advice; others are examples of how a GRS reader achieved financial success — or failure. These stories feature folks from all levels of financial maturity and with all sorts of incomes. You can read more about Jacq’s story at Single Mom Rich Mom.


On 31 December 2009, I finished what I hope will be my last full-time, permanent job. I’ve worked a bit here and there over the past year, but it’s on my own terms, and not because I have to. I’m now semi-retired at the age of 45. But what does that mean?


About nine years ago, after reading Your Money or Your Life, I changed from an under-earning, confused woman to a woman with a mission: to never have to work again (unless I wanted to). In November of last year, I reached the Crossover Point, where the income from investments exceeded my expenses. (I think it actually happened sooner than that, but I hadn’t been paying attention.) At last, nine years after first figuring out what I wanted to work hard and save money for, I’d reached Financial Independence.


I’m fortunate that in the last few years, I’ve managed to raise my income so that I can work a few months a year and earn the same amount as I have working full-time (and overtime!) in previous jobs. I’m also fortunate that my wants remain relatively small and I never succumbed to lifestyle inflation. I’ve never wanted a big house, a fast car, or exotic travel.


In a “normal” year, I can easily live on about $36,000, including mortgage payments of about $15,000 per year (that I’m prepaying). So I knew that my Crossover Point was somewhere around $20,000/year with a paid-off house. In the next year, I intend to downsize and move to a (mortgage-free!) townhouse that will be close to public transit for those times I choose to work, and, more importantly, be low maintenance to allow for periods of long travel during the summers.


I’m trying not to plan too far in advance. I want to be flexible. My hope is that I can continue to work part-time or a few months a year for the next 5-10 years until a part of my pension is eligible for withdrawal. My net worth is somewhere around the $500-600k mark, not including pensions. Since I don’t have any intention of touching my savings for the next ten years, I’m hopeful that it will last as long as I need it. If not, I’ll go back to work full-time for a couple of years.


I think what Financial Independence has given me has been a confidence in life itself — that I can handle anything that comes up. If life is difficult, sometimes throwing a bit of cash at a problem resolves it. It’s also given me the freedom that I first dreamed of when reading Your Money or Your Life — that I could work because I enjoyed working, and that I could have my life be about more than work. I have the flexibility to leave any work situation that doesn’t contribute to my overall happiness.


Having lived very frugally for long periods in the past, I experienced frugality burnout earlier this year. I’ve consciously been spending more lately on the things that I’ve “deprived” myself of over the last almost 30 years I’ve been working. For example, my bed was over 50 years old and desperately in need of replacement. A new bed is being delivered this week, and I couldn’t be happier. I’ve also stopped thinking that I should DIY everything; I’ve had house cleaners come in this last month — something I would never have considered doing just six months ago.


Part of me still worries about the future:



  • What is it like to be looking for a job and networking once I get over 50?

  • Will it be hard — or impossible — to find work if I stay out of the job market too long?

  • What if the stock market falls again?

  • Are my investments too aggressive or not aggressive enough given that I hope not to draw down on them for quite some time?

  • Am I jumping too fast? Should I keep working full-time for a few years and get to that magical million and give myself even more of a buffer?


I only have a year of semi-retirement under my belt, so I’m not sure if that’s necessarily a “success”; I’m still just learning what works. I do know I’ll never go back to a regular job again though and definitely not go back to driving myself as hard as I have in the past again. My hope is that my approach is flexible enough and that I’m resourceful enough to survive and thrive through whatever lies ahead.




Next time you hear an economist or denizen of Wall Street talk about how the "American economy" is doing these days, watch your wallet.



There are two American economies. One is on the mend. The other is still coming apart.



The one that's mending is America's Big Money economy. It's comprised of Wall Street traders, big investors, and top professionals and corporate executives.



The Big Money economy is doing well these days. That's partly thanks to Ben Bernanke, whose Fed is keeping interest rates near zero by printing money as fast as it dare. It's essentially free money to America's Big Money economy.



Free money can almost always be put to uses that create more of it. Big corporations are buying back their shares of stock, thereby boosting corporate earnings. They're merging and acquiring other companies.



And they're going abroad in search of customers.



Thanks to fast-growing China, India, and Brazil, giant American corporations are racking up sales. They're selling Asian and Latin American consumers everything from cars and cell phones to fancy Internet software and iPads. Forty percent of the S&P 500 biggest corporations are now doing more than 60 percent of their business abroad. And America's biggest investors are also going abroad to get a nice return on their money.



So don't worry about America's Big Money economy. According to a Wall Street Journal survey released Thursday, overall compensation in financial services will rise 5 percent this year, and employees in some businesses like asset management will get increases of 15 percent.



The Dow Jones Industrial Average is back to where it was before the Lehman bankruptcy filing triggered the financial collapse. And profits at America's largest corporations are heading upward.



But there's another American economy, and it's not on the mend. Call it the Average Worker economy.



Last Friday's jobs report showed 159,000 new private-sector jobs in October. That's better than previous months. But 125,000 net new jobs are needed just to keep up with the growth of the American labor force. So another way of expressing what happened to jobs in October is to say 24,000 were added over what we need just to stay even.



Yet the American economy has lost 15 million jobs since the start of the Great Recession. And if you add in the growth of the labor force -- including everyone too discouraged to look for a job -- we're down about 22 million.



Or to put it another way, we're still getting nowhere on jobs.



One out of eight breadwinners is still out of work. Most families in the Average Worker economy rely on two breadwinners. So if one out of eight isn't working, chances are high that family incomes are down compared to what they were three years ago.



And that means the bills aren't getting paid.



According to a recent Washington Post poll, more than half of all Americans -- 53 percent -- are worried about making their mortgage payments. This is many more than were worried two years ago, when the Great Recession hit bottom. Then, 37 percent expressed worry.



Delinquency rates on home loans are rising. Distressed sales are up as a percent of total sales.



Most people in the Average Worker economy own few shares of stock, if any. Their equity is in their homes. But with all the delinquencies and distressed sales, the housing market has a glut of homes for sale. As a result, home prices are still dropping. So the net worth of most Americans is still dropping.



And even though interest rates are falling, most people in the Average Worker economy can't refinance their homes. They can't get home equity loans. Banks don't want to lend to the Average Worker economy because people in it are considered bad credit risks. They still owe lots of money, their family incomes are down, and their net worth has fallen.



And according to the Reuters/University of Michigan survey of American consumers, expectations about personal finances are at an all time low.



Inhabitants of the Big Money economy are celebrating Republican wins last week. They figure financial regulations will be rolled back, environmental regulations will be canned, the Bush tax cut will be extended to the top 1 percent, and it will be harder for workers to form unions.



Inhabitants of the Average Worker economy aren't so sure. The economy has been so bad they're angry at politicians. They showed their anger at the ballot box. They took it out on incumbents.



But if nothing changes in the Average Worker economy, there will be hell to pay.



Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future, now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org.











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Friday, November 19, 2010

Making Internet Money



Heard any good jokes lately? This headline was making the internet rounds yesterday:



"Sen. Conrad: Extend All Tax Cuts; Time to Get 'Serious' About Deficit."



It's easy to see the humor in that. It's almost like saying you're serious about saving money but don't want to put any more pennies into the piggy bank. But here's what isn't so funny: Most reporters and politicians agree that Kent Conrad is "serious."



So-called "deficit hawks" like Conrad, Erskine Bowles, and Alan Simpson aren't just unserious. They're radicals. Their positions are an extreme departure from the philosophy of government that's guided American policy for a century. They're promoting an upward redistribution of wealth that would change the shape of our society forever. They're want to weaken a social contract that's existed since the Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt and dismantle the economic principles we've had since Teddy Roosevelt.



You can call it a joke if you want. But, to paraphrase Elvis Costello, it's got "a punchline you can feel."



Roger Hickey and I pointed out on Wednesday that most Americans (including most Republicans) oppose any cuts to Social Security benefits. They want the payroll tax cap lifted instead, which is a fiscally sound approach. But the Republican leadership would rather cut benefits than inconvenience the wealthy, and Democrats like Conrad agree. So the "serious" position in Washington is to split the difference between them.



What happens if you recommend the solution that most people (including most Republicans) want? People say you're an "extremist." No, seriously. And nothing you can do will change that. You can point out that Social Security is self funded and they'll roll their eyes. You can have the most qualified actuary in the nation prove that your solution works, and they'll never even acknowledge that your solution exists. (Peter Orszag and Alice Rivlin have both practiced this form of rebuttal by non-acknowledgement -- which seems to be the public policy equivalent of an Amish shunning.)



If all that makes you a little exasperated, they'll observe that you're not just an extremist, you're a shrill extremist. Which, of course, proves you're not "serious."



Consider this snippet of media repartee, captured by the always-serious Digby, about the Bowles/Simpson "deficit reduction" proposal:



JIM LEHRER: Well, Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House, said, this is -- just right off the top, is unacceptable, right?

LORI MONTGOMERY (Washington Post): Simply unacceptable, that's exactly what she said.



There's an interesting dynamic developing ... Many of the members, except for the most liberal members, the champions of Social Security, are very reluctant to outright criticize this thing ...



They're calling it a serious effort, something that they have to respect ... It's like, you know: This is a serious plan .. these very extreme reactions are coming from the far end of the party, of each party. I think that there is a middle ground that is going to try to massage this thing, and -- and could bring this whole debate back to life...



In this clip a prominent journalist is saying that it's "serious" to solve the deficit problem by cutting a program that doesn't contribute to the deficit. She's lauding "serious" people for finding the "middle ground" -- between what the public doesn't want and what it really, really doesn't want. And she's marginalizing anyone who thinks otherwise as "extreme," "liberal", and from the "far end" of the party. (Remember: Most Republicans polled don't like this idea either.).



Then there's Jon Cowan of Third Way, who writes: "It's now time to put up or shut up, in short to lead or leave. This (the Erskine/Bowles proposal) is the first real leadership test for both parties in a divided capitol: will they embrace the Fiscal Commission recommendations, or cop out and pick the plan apart?"



Leaving aside the misstatement of fact -- the Bowles/Simpson proposal doesn't come from the "Fiscal Commission," a group that would never endorse such extreme positions -- let's consider the nature of this "leadership test." As the perpetually unserious Paul Krugman observes, this proposal "represents a major transfer of income upward, from the middle class to a small minority of wealthy Americans." This drain on middle-class income to benefit the wealthy is the through-line that links Bowles and Simpson to Conrad and the other so-called "deficit hawks." Jon Cowan's position is that this upward redistribution of wealth doesn't even warrant public debate, and that politicians who submit to it without protest have passed a "leadership test."



Now, as it happens I've met Jon Cowan. He's a very nice, very bright guy. But this is another example of the unserious nature of "serious" thinking in Washington. Pols must "put up or shut up" -- but it's not the public who decides what gets "put up." And if you speak up for what most people (including most Republicans) want, that's a "cop out." You're "picking the plan apart." C'mon now: Do you want to be a leader or a decision-dodging nitpicker?



I'm gonna have to go with "nitpicker." If that's the new term for representing the people's wishes and acting in their best interests, I'd say we need a lot more nitpickers in Washington.



None of this is really "serious." It's play-acting, dress-up. It's like wearing daddy's overlarge clothes and repeating how-mommy-talks-in-the-office words that sound important, even though you don't know what they mean. We're talking tough, we're making the hard decisions, we're rolling up our sleeves and getting to work. Except we're not doing any of those things. This radical position is becoming the new Washington consensus. Going along with the crowd is easy, comfortable, and convenient.



The problem isn't Lori Montgomery or Jon Cowan. They're probably driven by the best of motives: the desire to work together, to collaborate, to go beyond rigid ideological boundaries to solve problems. But collaboration and bipartisanship are means, not ends. They're ways of getting things done, not the things themselves. When a culture prizes the method more it does the results, it's gone astray.



The "unserious" truth is this: Simpson and Bowles, like Conrad, would accelerate an upward restribution of wealth that's already rolling ahead like a freight train. They'd pay for it by taking money out of the pockets of soldiers, lower- and middle-income college students, and the elderly. That's a debate we need to have, and it's not a "leadership test" to run from it.



So, you want to hear an old joke? A drunk goes into a restaurant and orders a cup of coffee and a bun. The waiter says "I'm sorry, sir, we're all out of buns." The drunk thinks for a second and says, "Okay, I'll have a cup of tea and a bun." The waiter says "Sorry, we're out of buns." The drunk says "Fine, I'll have a glass of orange juice and a bun." After a few more exchanges like this the waiter loses his temper: "How many times do I have to tell you we're out of buns? No buns! No buns! No buns!"



The drunk says "Jeez, pal, if you're going to get so upset I'll just have the bun."



These so-called "deficit hawks" are the drunk, the public is the waiter, and the "bun" is any policy that benefits the wealthy at the expense of middle- and lower-income people. No matter how many times voters say that's not on the menu, they're going to keep ordering it. And they may very well get it.



But seriously, folks.

______________________________________



Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America's Future. This post was produced as part of the Strengthen Social Security campaign. Richard also blogs at A Night Light.



He can be reached at "rjeskow@ourfuture.org."



Website: Eskow and Associates












It’s not just the UK movie business that is suffering from draconian budget cuts because of the global financial crisis. Europe has an enormous hangover, too. And other European film industries are also suffering as EU governments scramble to reduce their debt mountains:


France

France's cinema unions say the French Senate finance committee's plan will have "catastrophic consequences" for French film and TV funding. That's because France's government wants to divert €128 million ($175 million) of revenue away from state film agency Centre National du Cinéma et de l’Image Animee (CNC) into its own coffers. This won't actually be a cut in CNC funding, just limiting next year's funding increase to a 7.6% improvement on this year's €575 million ($800 million) budget. The CNC is funded through a levy on cinema admissions – which are estimated to hit 210 million this year, the best for 20 years -- as well as a levy on DVD sales, a levy on broadcaster income and a levy on internet service providers. “Internet providers and VOD services are also now paying into the CNC coffers for the first time,” says Franck Priot, deputy head of inward-investment agency Film France. The CNC had been expecting an extra €171 million in income next year.


The government is also making its Sofica tax scheme – which raises money for film production through wealthy individuals – less attractive from an investor’s point of view. Last year 98 French films were financed through Sofica, which injected €36.2 million into French production. Still, says Priot, the scheme is so oversubscribed each year, even if the government does tighten things up, it won’t make a difference from a producer’s point of view. The scheme is always oversubscribed. Film France says that it doesn’t believe its own €920,000 budget – 90% of which comes through the CNC -- will be cut next year. Neither does it think that any of France’s 40 regional film commissions, 22 of which are financed by cities or the regions, will go out of business in 2011. Priot says there are always budget fluctuations, but that’s the same for any year. “Globally, it’s quite stable,” he tells me.


Germany

Local producers are afraid for the future of both national screen agency Filmförderunganstalt (FFA) – Germany’s equivalent of the CNC or the UK Film Council – and national film fund the DFFF. Germany was the European country which has suffered least during the global financial crisis. It also has a robust film sector. At least for now. Germany provides $400 million worth of soft money each year to producers, through a mixture of national and regional funds. English-language movies that have tapped German funding recently include Hanna, Unknown White Male and The Ghost Writer. But Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court is deciding whether payments made to the FFA by Germany’s cinemas have been unconstitutional. And Germany’s broadcasters are now able to pay less to the FFA than they have been annually – again because of a change in the law.


Although the FFA expects its annual €70 million budget to remain the same next year, it could go down after that. Last year the FFA spent €52 million overall, of which €28 million was spent on local production. That amount will almost certainly go down if TV broadcasters give less. The German Federal Film Fund (DFFF) was launched at the beginning of 2007 with an annual budget of €60 million. This fund usually offers foreign and local producers grants of up to €4 million ($6 million) per film as long as 25% of a film’s production costs are spent in Germany – although this can be upped to e10 million ($15 million) in special cases. The DFFF was extended last year to 2012 but there’s a question mark after that.


Matthias Schwarz of the German Producers Alliance tells me: “It seems okay for next year but we’re afraid for the future of DFFF and FFA. If both schemes are ruled unconstitutional, then it would be very bad news. And we have budget concerns for the DFFF from 2013 onwards.”


Meanwhile, Germany’s regional funds lend €146.4 million ($204 million) annually between them. Regional funding is divided up as follows: FFF Bayern (€27.6 million), Filmforderung Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein (€12.4 million), Filmstiftung NRW (€35.8 million), Hessen-Invest Film (€5 million) Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg (€29.2 million), Mfg Baden-Wurttemberg (€8.3 million), Mitteldeutsche Meidenforderung (€16.5 million) and Nordmedia (€11.6 million). The total amount regional funds offer is approaching their historic high watermark of 5 years ago – after which funding declined. The funds expect producers to spend 100-150% of the amount they borrow locally. Loans are repaid over the exploitation of the film. Whatever a producer repays does not disappear into a general pot – rather, it’s set aside for the producer to re-use on his future project. And new regions such as Saxony-Anhalt, which is having a local boom, are coming online adding to what’s already on offer.


Another cloud is the amount German broadcasters invest in feature films. This percentage of the average film’s budget fell from 14% in 2007 to 7% last year. Broadcasters contributed €16 million to features co-funded by the FFA last year -- public TV injected €11 million, private channels €5 million. Schwarz says: “That’s a real problem. We have agreed with [public stations] ZDF and ARD that we need to talk about a number of issues including the number of Germany films on TV and how they’re scheduled, co-production levels and the amount broadcasters invest in local films.”


Iceland

Not part of the European Union, but a member of the wider European Economic Area, Iceland’s government slashed state film funding agreed for 2010 by 36% to IKR450 million ($3.4 million). This means there’s only enough money to back 3 features in 2010, plus a couple of feature documentaries. Iceland released 11 home-grown films last year. State broadcaster RUV announced it was reducing its investment in local film production due to budget cuts. Ari Kristinsson, head of the Association of Icelandic Film Producers, says that local film industry has collapsed and called the cuts “a massacre”.


Ireland

Simon Perry, CEO of state agency the Irish Film Board, expects his budget will be cut again next year by 15% to €14 million ($19.4 million). This year’s IFB budget of €16.5 million is already 5% down on last year’s. Such swinging cuts are necessary because there’s a €19 billion gap between what Ireland raises in taxes and what it spends each year. Last month, Ireland bailed out the Irish banking system to the tune of €44 billion. The country’s budget deficit is projected to equal 32% of GDP – 10 times the amount permitted under European Union guidelines.


Italy

The opening night of the International Rome Film Festival was disrupted last month as Italy’s film industry protested over government cuts. Over 1,000 incensed actors, directors, producers and other film professionals invaded the red carpet at Rome’s Auditorium Parco Della Musica, angered that the Berlusconi government has reduced Italy’s single arts fund, FUS, down to its lowest level in 20 years. This year the arts fund budget is below €300 million ($416 million) compared with €500 million 3 years ago. Cinema’s share of this year’s FUS funding is around €60 million. That’s small beer compared with what’s on offer in France and Germany. On top of that producers are still owed €50 million from previous years' funding rounds, which means there’s hardly anything left this year for the entire Italian film industry. The protest was also fuelled by fears that Italy’s new tax breaks, both for local and international production, may not be renewed. Silvio Berlusconi's government introduced longed-for tax breaks last year, overhauling Italy's old subsidy system which backed lots of films nobody went to see. But the government has included the new tax breaks on a list of possible recession cutbacks. Riccardo Tozzi, president of Italian producers’ association Anica who also runs Universal's Italian outpost Cattleya, tells me confirmation of tax credit legislation is expected by the end of this month.


Netherlands

The Dutch film industry is facing a horrendous crisis. It is estimated that cultural funding in the Netherlands will nearly be halved, once national and local cuts take effect. The cuts won’t really bite for another 5 years however. The new Coalition between the right-of-centre Liberals and the centre-right Christian Democrats has agreed to cut culture funding by €200 million ($277 million) a year from 2015. The government has described the arts and culture as “left-wing hobbies”. Cuts will be staggered until then: beginning with €30 million next year; €50 million in 2012; €100 million in 2013; €150 million in 2014. That €200 million figure is just above 21% of the current culture budget. Total state funding is being cut by 13%, which means culture is disproportionately hard hit. Local government in cities and provinces will also receive less money, and, as they subsidise cultural institutions too, the blow will be much bigger.


Eye, the new umbrella Dutch film agency which launched in January, will have its budget increased next year to €12 million. It is also due to move into an eye-poppingly modernist building in Amsterdam next year. Like the soon-to-be-defunct UK Film Council, Eye has brought together a number of film organisations: Filmbank, promotional agency Holland Film, the Netherlands Institute for Film Education and the Filmmuseum.


The Netherlands Film Fund, which is likely to move into the Eye building, has an annual budget of €35.5 million until end-2011. It is likely that the Film Fund will lose its annual €12 million “matching” fund though. This matching fund was introduced in 2008 to replace the Dutch tax break. It matches investment from either private or public investors. Because the money comes from the Finance Ministry, it’s likely this kind of fund will be an easy target. “The fear is that the supplementary fund will be one of the first to be knocked off,” says Dutch director and producer Ate De Jong. “The film sector won’t be affected too much until 2012, so we have some time to regroup – although nobody knows how.”


Both the Eye and the Netherlands Film Fund receive local funding. How much each will lose of that is being worked out at the moment. On top of direct cuts, state broadcaster NPO is having its budget cut by up to €200 million a year by 2015. The government is talking about closing down one channel if NPO can’t meet the cuts itself.


Spain

The budget for state film agency the Instituto de la Cinematografia y de las Artes Audiovisuales has been cut by 19.3% to €86 million ($119 million) in 2011. This year’s budget is €107 million. And the scenario for 2012 and 2013 seems even worse, Fabia Buenaventura, director general of producers’ association FAPAE, tells me -- although there’s nothing official yet. Last month ICAA director Ignasi Guardans was sacked to be replaced by Carlos Cuatros, director of Spain’s film academy. In May the agency halved the amount filmmakers can claim through the automatic subsidy system, pegged to box office performance, to €400,000 ($500,000). The ceiling producers can claim through selective funding was cut by 25% to €1.5 million. Spain launched a new €85m film fund at the beginning of this year. US movies that have accessed the fund -- which caused unrest with small, indie producers who felt frozen out by the focus on bigger, more commercial films -- include Juan Antonio Bayona’s The Impossible, starring Ewan McGregor, and Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s Intruders, starring Clive Owen.


Britain

It was midnight in Los Angeles on July 24 when UK arts minister Ed Vaizey telephoned Tim Bevan, chairman of the UK Film Council, to tell him that his organisation was being abolished. The news came out of the blue. “I was surprised not to have had a conversation beforehand,” Bevan said later. The Working Title boss telephoned Film Council CEO John Woodward to tell him what had happened the next day. Woodward compared the decision to close down his organisation to being run over by a bus. Closing down the UKFC is expected to save £2.5 million a year. The government has assured the worried British film industry that the £26 million it currently gets through National Lottery funding will not only continue, but will increase to £43 million a year post 2014 (once the 2012 London Olympics are out of the way). And the UK tax credit, designed to attract Hollywood inward investment, which costs around £100 million annually, is safe.


It’s not just the UK Film Council that has been swiped by the government’s spending cuts. The Culture Ministry’s budget will be reduced from £1.4 billion to £1.1 billion by 2014/2015. The British Film Institute has had its budget cut by 15% from £16 million to £14.6 million. The British Council, which promotes UK film culture abroad, has had its total budget, provided by the Foreign Office, cut from £181 million to £149 million by 2014. The Film Industry Training Board is set to be privatised. Its chairman Iain Smith told me that, again, the government’s decision came out of the blue.


Worse, film funding outside of the BFI and the lottery, has been slashed by over 50%. The budget for all other film activity from now on will be £4.7 million – down from £9.4 million this year, says the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. The £4.7 million has to cover all the work of the regional film commissions, certifying whether films are British to qualify for the film tax credit, and a host of other activities. Regional screen agencies, which encourage local film production, are braced to have their budgets cut by 15% too.



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Heard any good jokes lately? This headline was making the internet rounds yesterday:



"Sen. Conrad: Extend All Tax Cuts; Time to Get 'Serious' About Deficit."



It's easy to see the humor in that. It's almost like saying you're serious about saving money but don't want to put any more pennies into the piggy bank. But here's what isn't so funny: Most reporters and politicians agree that Kent Conrad is "serious."



So-called "deficit hawks" like Conrad, Erskine Bowles, and Alan Simpson aren't just unserious. They're radicals. Their positions are an extreme departure from the philosophy of government that's guided American policy for a century. They're promoting an upward redistribution of wealth that would change the shape of our society forever. They're want to weaken a social contract that's existed since the Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt and dismantle the economic principles we've had since Teddy Roosevelt.



You can call it a joke if you want. But, to paraphrase Elvis Costello, it's got "a punchline you can feel."



Roger Hickey and I pointed out on Wednesday that most Americans (including most Republicans) oppose any cuts to Social Security benefits. They want the payroll tax cap lifted instead, which is a fiscally sound approach. But the Republican leadership would rather cut benefits than inconvenience the wealthy, and Democrats like Conrad agree. So the "serious" position in Washington is to split the difference between them.



What happens if you recommend the solution that most people (including most Republicans) want? People say you're an "extremist." No, seriously. And nothing you can do will change that. You can point out that Social Security is self funded and they'll roll their eyes. You can have the most qualified actuary in the nation prove that your solution works, and they'll never even acknowledge that your solution exists. (Peter Orszag and Alice Rivlin have both practiced this form of rebuttal by non-acknowledgement -- which seems to be the public policy equivalent of an Amish shunning.)



If all that makes you a little exasperated, they'll observe that you're not just an extremist, you're a shrill extremist. Which, of course, proves you're not "serious."



Consider this snippet of media repartee, captured by the always-serious Digby, about the Bowles/Simpson "deficit reduction" proposal:



JIM LEHRER: Well, Nancy Pelosi, speaker of the House, said, this is -- just right off the top, is unacceptable, right?

LORI MONTGOMERY (Washington Post): Simply unacceptable, that's exactly what she said.



There's an interesting dynamic developing ... Many of the members, except for the most liberal members, the champions of Social Security, are very reluctant to outright criticize this thing ...



They're calling it a serious effort, something that they have to respect ... It's like, you know: This is a serious plan .. these very extreme reactions are coming from the far end of the party, of each party. I think that there is a middle ground that is going to try to massage this thing, and -- and could bring this whole debate back to life...



In this clip a prominent journalist is saying that it's "serious" to solve the deficit problem by cutting a program that doesn't contribute to the deficit. She's lauding "serious" people for finding the "middle ground" -- between what the public doesn't want and what it really, really doesn't want. And she's marginalizing anyone who thinks otherwise as "extreme," "liberal", and from the "far end" of the party. (Remember: Most Republicans polled don't like this idea either.).



Then there's Jon Cowan of Third Way, who writes: "It's now time to put up or shut up, in short to lead or leave. This (the Erskine/Bowles proposal) is the first real leadership test for both parties in a divided capitol: will they embrace the Fiscal Commission recommendations, or cop out and pick the plan apart?"



Leaving aside the misstatement of fact -- the Bowles/Simpson proposal doesn't come from the "Fiscal Commission," a group that would never endorse such extreme positions -- let's consider the nature of this "leadership test." As the perpetually unserious Paul Krugman observes, this proposal "represents a major transfer of income upward, from the middle class to a small minority of wealthy Americans." This drain on middle-class income to benefit the wealthy is the through-line that links Bowles and Simpson to Conrad and the other so-called "deficit hawks." Jon Cowan's position is that this upward redistribution of wealth doesn't even warrant public debate, and that politicians who submit to it without protest have passed a "leadership test."



Now, as it happens I've met Jon Cowan. He's a very nice, very bright guy. But this is another example of the unserious nature of "serious" thinking in Washington. Pols must "put up or shut up" -- but it's not the public who decides what gets "put up." And if you speak up for what most people (including most Republicans) want, that's a "cop out." You're "picking the plan apart." C'mon now: Do you want to be a leader or a decision-dodging nitpicker?



I'm gonna have to go with "nitpicker." If that's the new term for representing the people's wishes and acting in their best interests, I'd say we need a lot more nitpickers in Washington.



None of this is really "serious." It's play-acting, dress-up. It's like wearing daddy's overlarge clothes and repeating how-mommy-talks-in-the-office words that sound important, even though you don't know what they mean. We're talking tough, we're making the hard decisions, we're rolling up our sleeves and getting to work. Except we're not doing any of those things. This radical position is becoming the new Washington consensus. Going along with the crowd is easy, comfortable, and convenient.



The problem isn't Lori Montgomery or Jon Cowan. They're probably driven by the best of motives: the desire to work together, to collaborate, to go beyond rigid ideological boundaries to solve problems. But collaboration and bipartisanship are means, not ends. They're ways of getting things done, not the things themselves. When a culture prizes the method more it does the results, it's gone astray.



The "unserious" truth is this: Simpson and Bowles, like Conrad, would accelerate an upward restribution of wealth that's already rolling ahead like a freight train. They'd pay for it by taking money out of the pockets of soldiers, lower- and middle-income college students, and the elderly. That's a debate we need to have, and it's not a "leadership test" to run from it.



So, you want to hear an old joke? A drunk goes into a restaurant and orders a cup of coffee and a bun. The waiter says "I'm sorry, sir, we're all out of buns." The drunk thinks for a second and says, "Okay, I'll have a cup of tea and a bun." The waiter says "Sorry, we're out of buns." The drunk says "Fine, I'll have a glass of orange juice and a bun." After a few more exchanges like this the waiter loses his temper: "How many times do I have to tell you we're out of buns? No buns! No buns! No buns!"



The drunk says "Jeez, pal, if you're going to get so upset I'll just have the bun."



These so-called "deficit hawks" are the drunk, the public is the waiter, and the "bun" is any policy that benefits the wealthy at the expense of middle- and lower-income people. No matter how many times voters say that's not on the menu, they're going to keep ordering it. And they may very well get it.



But seriously, folks.

______________________________________



Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America's Future. This post was produced as part of the Strengthen Social Security campaign. Richard also blogs at A Night Light.



He can be reached at "rjeskow@ourfuture.org."



Website: Eskow and Associates












It’s not just the UK movie business that is suffering from draconian budget cuts because of the global financial crisis. Europe has an enormous hangover, too. And other European film industries are also suffering as EU governments scramble to reduce their debt mountains:


France

France's cinema unions say the French Senate finance committee's plan will have "catastrophic consequences" for French film and TV funding. That's because France's government wants to divert €128 million ($175 million) of revenue away from state film agency Centre National du Cinéma et de l’Image Animee (CNC) into its own coffers. This won't actually be a cut in CNC funding, just limiting next year's funding increase to a 7.6% improvement on this year's €575 million ($800 million) budget. The CNC is funded through a levy on cinema admissions – which are estimated to hit 210 million this year, the best for 20 years -- as well as a levy on DVD sales, a levy on broadcaster income and a levy on internet service providers. “Internet providers and VOD services are also now paying into the CNC coffers for the first time,” says Franck Priot, deputy head of inward-investment agency Film France. The CNC had been expecting an extra €171 million in income next year.


The government is also making its Sofica tax scheme – which raises money for film production through wealthy individuals – less attractive from an investor’s point of view. Last year 98 French films were financed through Sofica, which injected €36.2 million into French production. Still, says Priot, the scheme is so oversubscribed each year, even if the government does tighten things up, it won’t make a difference from a producer’s point of view. The scheme is always oversubscribed. Film France says that it doesn’t believe its own €920,000 budget – 90% of which comes through the CNC -- will be cut next year. Neither does it think that any of France’s 40 regional film commissions, 22 of which are financed by cities or the regions, will go out of business in 2011. Priot says there are always budget fluctuations, but that’s the same for any year. “Globally, it’s quite stable,” he tells me.


Germany

Local producers are afraid for the future of both national screen agency Filmförderunganstalt (FFA) – Germany’s equivalent of the CNC or the UK Film Council – and national film fund the DFFF. Germany was the European country which has suffered least during the global financial crisis. It also has a robust film sector. At least for now. Germany provides $400 million worth of soft money each year to producers, through a mixture of national and regional funds. English-language movies that have tapped German funding recently include Hanna, Unknown White Male and The Ghost Writer. But Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court is deciding whether payments made to the FFA by Germany’s cinemas have been unconstitutional. And Germany’s broadcasters are now able to pay less to the FFA than they have been annually – again because of a change in the law.


Although the FFA expects its annual €70 million budget to remain the same next year, it could go down after that. Last year the FFA spent €52 million overall, of which €28 million was spent on local production. That amount will almost certainly go down if TV broadcasters give less. The German Federal Film Fund (DFFF) was launched at the beginning of 2007 with an annual budget of €60 million. This fund usually offers foreign and local producers grants of up to €4 million ($6 million) per film as long as 25% of a film’s production costs are spent in Germany – although this can be upped to e10 million ($15 million) in special cases. The DFFF was extended last year to 2012 but there’s a question mark after that.


Matthias Schwarz of the German Producers Alliance tells me: “It seems okay for next year but we’re afraid for the future of DFFF and FFA. If both schemes are ruled unconstitutional, then it would be very bad news. And we have budget concerns for the DFFF from 2013 onwards.”


Meanwhile, Germany’s regional funds lend €146.4 million ($204 million) annually between them. Regional funding is divided up as follows: FFF Bayern (€27.6 million), Filmforderung Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein (€12.4 million), Filmstiftung NRW (€35.8 million), Hessen-Invest Film (€5 million) Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg (€29.2 million), Mfg Baden-Wurttemberg (€8.3 million), Mitteldeutsche Meidenforderung (€16.5 million) and Nordmedia (€11.6 million). The total amount regional funds offer is approaching their historic high watermark of 5 years ago – after which funding declined. The funds expect producers to spend 100-150% of the amount they borrow locally. Loans are repaid over the exploitation of the film. Whatever a producer repays does not disappear into a general pot – rather, it’s set aside for the producer to re-use on his future project. And new regions such as Saxony-Anhalt, which is having a local boom, are coming online adding to what’s already on offer.


Another cloud is the amount German broadcasters invest in feature films. This percentage of the average film’s budget fell from 14% in 2007 to 7% last year. Broadcasters contributed €16 million to features co-funded by the FFA last year -- public TV injected €11 million, private channels €5 million. Schwarz says: “That’s a real problem. We have agreed with [public stations] ZDF and ARD that we need to talk about a number of issues including the number of Germany films on TV and how they’re scheduled, co-production levels and the amount broadcasters invest in local films.”


Iceland

Not part of the European Union, but a member of the wider European Economic Area, Iceland’s government slashed state film funding agreed for 2010 by 36% to IKR450 million ($3.4 million). This means there’s only enough money to back 3 features in 2010, plus a couple of feature documentaries. Iceland released 11 home-grown films last year. State broadcaster RUV announced it was reducing its investment in local film production due to budget cuts. Ari Kristinsson, head of the Association of Icelandic Film Producers, says that local film industry has collapsed and called the cuts “a massacre”.


Ireland

Simon Perry, CEO of state agency the Irish Film Board, expects his budget will be cut again next year by 15% to €14 million ($19.4 million). This year’s IFB budget of €16.5 million is already 5% down on last year’s. Such swinging cuts are necessary because there’s a €19 billion gap between what Ireland raises in taxes and what it spends each year. Last month, Ireland bailed out the Irish banking system to the tune of €44 billion. The country’s budget deficit is projected to equal 32% of GDP – 10 times the amount permitted under European Union guidelines.


Italy

The opening night of the International Rome Film Festival was disrupted last month as Italy’s film industry protested over government cuts. Over 1,000 incensed actors, directors, producers and other film professionals invaded the red carpet at Rome’s Auditorium Parco Della Musica, angered that the Berlusconi government has reduced Italy’s single arts fund, FUS, down to its lowest level in 20 years. This year the arts fund budget is below €300 million ($416 million) compared with €500 million 3 years ago. Cinema’s share of this year’s FUS funding is around €60 million. That’s small beer compared with what’s on offer in France and Germany. On top of that producers are still owed €50 million from previous years' funding rounds, which means there’s hardly anything left this year for the entire Italian film industry. The protest was also fuelled by fears that Italy’s new tax breaks, both for local and international production, may not be renewed. Silvio Berlusconi's government introduced longed-for tax breaks last year, overhauling Italy's old subsidy system which backed lots of films nobody went to see. But the government has included the new tax breaks on a list of possible recession cutbacks. Riccardo Tozzi, president of Italian producers’ association Anica who also runs Universal's Italian outpost Cattleya, tells me confirmation of tax credit legislation is expected by the end of this month.


Netherlands

The Dutch film industry is facing a horrendous crisis. It is estimated that cultural funding in the Netherlands will nearly be halved, once national and local cuts take effect. The cuts won’t really bite for another 5 years however. The new Coalition between the right-of-centre Liberals and the centre-right Christian Democrats has agreed to cut culture funding by €200 million ($277 million) a year from 2015. The government has described the arts and culture as “left-wing hobbies”. Cuts will be staggered until then: beginning with €30 million next year; €50 million in 2012; €100 million in 2013; €150 million in 2014. That €200 million figure is just above 21% of the current culture budget. Total state funding is being cut by 13%, which means culture is disproportionately hard hit. Local government in cities and provinces will also receive less money, and, as they subsidise cultural institutions too, the blow will be much bigger.


Eye, the new umbrella Dutch film agency which launched in January, will have its budget increased next year to €12 million. It is also due to move into an eye-poppingly modernist building in Amsterdam next year. Like the soon-to-be-defunct UK Film Council, Eye has brought together a number of film organisations: Filmbank, promotional agency Holland Film, the Netherlands Institute for Film Education and the Filmmuseum.


The Netherlands Film Fund, which is likely to move into the Eye building, has an annual budget of €35.5 million until end-2011. It is likely that the Film Fund will lose its annual €12 million “matching” fund though. This matching fund was introduced in 2008 to replace the Dutch tax break. It matches investment from either private or public investors. Because the money comes from the Finance Ministry, it’s likely this kind of fund will be an easy target. “The fear is that the supplementary fund will be one of the first to be knocked off,” says Dutch director and producer Ate De Jong. “The film sector won’t be affected too much until 2012, so we have some time to regroup – although nobody knows how.”


Both the Eye and the Netherlands Film Fund receive local funding. How much each will lose of that is being worked out at the moment. On top of direct cuts, state broadcaster NPO is having its budget cut by up to €200 million a year by 2015. The government is talking about closing down one channel if NPO can’t meet the cuts itself.


Spain

The budget for state film agency the Instituto de la Cinematografia y de las Artes Audiovisuales has been cut by 19.3% to €86 million ($119 million) in 2011. This year’s budget is €107 million. And the scenario for 2012 and 2013 seems even worse, Fabia Buenaventura, director general of producers’ association FAPAE, tells me -- although there’s nothing official yet. Last month ICAA director Ignasi Guardans was sacked to be replaced by Carlos Cuatros, director of Spain’s film academy. In May the agency halved the amount filmmakers can claim through the automatic subsidy system, pegged to box office performance, to €400,000 ($500,000). The ceiling producers can claim through selective funding was cut by 25% to €1.5 million. Spain launched a new €85m film fund at the beginning of this year. US movies that have accessed the fund -- which caused unrest with small, indie producers who felt frozen out by the focus on bigger, more commercial films -- include Juan Antonio Bayona’s The Impossible, starring Ewan McGregor, and Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s Intruders, starring Clive Owen.


Britain

It was midnight in Los Angeles on July 24 when UK arts minister Ed Vaizey telephoned Tim Bevan, chairman of the UK Film Council, to tell him that his organisation was being abolished. The news came out of the blue. “I was surprised not to have had a conversation beforehand,” Bevan said later. The Working Title boss telephoned Film Council CEO John Woodward to tell him what had happened the next day. Woodward compared the decision to close down his organisation to being run over by a bus. Closing down the UKFC is expected to save £2.5 million a year. The government has assured the worried British film industry that the £26 million it currently gets through National Lottery funding will not only continue, but will increase to £43 million a year post 2014 (once the 2012 London Olympics are out of the way). And the UK tax credit, designed to attract Hollywood inward investment, which costs around £100 million annually, is safe.


It’s not just the UK Film Council that has been swiped by the government’s spending cuts. The Culture Ministry’s budget will be reduced from £1.4 billion to £1.1 billion by 2014/2015. The British Film Institute has had its budget cut by 15% from £16 million to £14.6 million. The British Council, which promotes UK film culture abroad, has had its total budget, provided by the Foreign Office, cut from £181 million to £149 million by 2014. The Film Industry Training Board is set to be privatised. Its chairman Iain Smith told me that, again, the government’s decision came out of the blue.


Worse, film funding outside of the BFI and the lottery, has been slashed by over 50%. The budget for all other film activity from now on will be £4.7 million – down from £9.4 million this year, says the Department for Culture, Media and Sport. The £4.7 million has to cover all the work of the regional film commissions, certifying whether films are British to qualify for the film tax credit, and a host of other activities. Regional screen agencies, which encourage local film production, are braced to have their budgets cut by 15% too.



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Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Great <b>News</b>: The Donald May Agree to be President « Hot Air

During a longer video with Fox News (video) The Donald goes into more detail about how the world has lost respect for America under the Obama administration, as well as the need for his type of “finesse” to be a truly effective ...

Biden Says Civilian Terror Trial Outcome Better than a Military <b>...</b>

FOX News covers politics on America's Election Headquarters. FOX News political coverage on elections, races, foreign policy, candidates, and national security.

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Biden Says Civilian Terror Trial Outcome Better than a Military <b>...</b>

FOX News covers politics on America's Election Headquarters. FOX News political coverage on elections, races, foreign policy, candidates, and national security.

The Newsonomics of <b>news</b> anywhere » Nieman Journalism Lab

News Anywhere, or unified news, or All-Access, whatever we want to call it, demands the singular focus, product development and messaging that Netflix, HBO, Comcast, and Facebook are bringing to it. Those are all skills that have been ...


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<b>News</b> Corp&#39;s Two Newspaper Tablet Projects are Back on Track

After stories that Rupert Murdoch had binned his adventurous newspaper app project, his son James has said Project Alesia is going ahead, whether other newspapers want their content aggregated or not.

Biden Says Civilian Terror Trial Outcome Better than a Military <b>...</b>

FOX News covers politics on America's Election Headquarters. FOX News political coverage on elections, races, foreign policy, candidates, and national security.

Fox <b>News</b> Commentators Caught On Camera Mocking Sarah Palin&#39;s Show <b>...</b>

WASHINGTON -- The Fox News channel has been something of a safe haven for Sarah Palin, the type of outlet that provided the former Alaska Governor not only with a friendly audience but similarly kind questions.


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bench craft company rip off

Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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bench craft company rip off

Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


bench craft company rip off

Michelle Malkin » Sen. Rockefeller: One-Man Cable <b>News</b> Death Panel

Doesn't Rockefeller have a ton of money with which to develop his own network news operation if he wishes? Why doesn't he deploy his own capital and take the risk associated with free enterprise activities if he believes it is warranted ...

<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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Great <b>News</b>: The Donald May Agree to be President « Hot Air

During a longer video with Fox News (video) The Donald goes into more detail about how the world has lost respect for America under the Obama administration, as well as the need for his type of “finesse” to be a truly effective ...

Biden Says Civilian Terror Trial Outcome Better than a Military <b>...</b>

FOX News covers politics on America's Election Headquarters. FOX News political coverage on elections, races, foreign policy, candidates, and national security.

Police <b>News</b> at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the <b>...</b>

1 Tweets that mention Police News at Steven Landsburg | The Big Questions: Tackling the Problems of Philosophy with Ideas from Mathematics, Economics, and Physics -- Topsy.com. Pingback on Nov 19th, 2010 at 3:23 am ...


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<b>News</b> Corp developing a tablet-exclusive publication

News Corp Logo Reuters is reporting that News Corp, the world's third-largest media conglomerate, has confirmed they will be releasing a news publication developed specifically for tablet computers like the iPad. "It's a tablet-only ...

Biden Says Civilian Terror Trial Outcome Better than a Military <b>...</b>

FOX News covers politics on America's Election Headquarters. FOX News political coverage on elections, races, foreign policy, candidates, and national security.

The Newsonomics of <b>news</b> anywhere » Nieman Journalism Lab

News Anywhere, or unified news, or All-Access, whatever we want to call it, demands the singular focus, product development and messaging that Netflix, HBO, Comcast, and Facebook are bringing to it. Those are all skills that have been ...


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