It’s a Big Club, and You Ain’t in It

This 2008 George Carlin clip has been popping up all over the place in recent weeks – it must have crossed my computer screen three or four times in just the last few days.

It was posted here at this blog almost two years ago and, with the many bank bailouts and growing dissatisfaction with elected officials since that time, it seems to have become even more relevant which probably explains its resurgent popularity.

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Goodbye Hummer, Goodbye Arnold

Lost in last week’s news amid a bevy of horrid economic reports, heightened tension in the health care debate, and Congressional hearings on Toyota’s acceleration problems, one overlooked story seems worthy of note this weekend – the demise of the Hummer.

With GM’s sale of the Hummer line of gargantuan SUVs to China’s Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery now scuttled, what served as a cultural icon during the middle of the last decade will now be relegated to history’s scrapheap. It is the final footnote to an era a half-decade ago when the U.S. housing bubble was at its maximum point of inflation and, not only would banks let you borrow money for virtually anything, but the government provided incentives for small businesses to purchase these monstrous vehicles.

It comes at a time of profound change for this country and there is more than a little irony in the Hummer being cast adrift in the same year that California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will meet the same fate, eight years after both were embraced back in 2002 as noted in this report in today’s Washington Post.

General Motors’ decision last week to shut down its Hummer brand is not merely one more sour note in a car-industry chorus of bailouts and bad brakes. It also appears to be the final chapter of a star-crossed love story, an American marriage of one man and one machine that couldn’t endure because of a hard truth: Even the biggest things don’t stay big forever.

The man, Arnold Schwarzenegger, was responsible for bringing the machine, Hummer, to prominence.

The little-known history of the street-legal H3 is detailed in this fine story, then the phoenix like rise of both the Gubernator and the H2 are chronicled.

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Steve Keen on Max Keiser

Max Keiser and and Stacy Herbert talk about a number of topics including Charlie Munger’s must-read commentary from earlier in the week “Basically, It’s Over” and then Steve Keen is interviewed starting at about the 12 minute mark.

The discussion about the impact of the China slowdown on the Australian economy is well worth a close listen since you don’t hear too much about it these days. It seems the economy down under is still viewed as some sort of a miracle system that escaped recession back in 2008-2009 and has only blue skies ahead.

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You Say It’s Your Birthday!

Today is my birthday – I’m 50.

Apparently, a lot of people attach some special significance to nice round numbers like this, but, to tell you the truth, if not for everyone else telling me how important this birthday is, I wouldn’t have thought much of it.

Maybe that has something to do with the fact that when people ask me how old I am I have to stop and think about it a bit before answering – it should be much easier now, at least for the next year.

I received birthday wishes from two friends from highschool today who I haven’t spoken with for more than 20 years.

Weird!

Other notable birthdays on this day are John Harvey Kellogg (1852 – Kellog’s cereal), Victor Hugo (1802), William F. “Buffalo Bill” Cody (1846), Johnny Cash (1932), Fats Domino (1928), and Robert Novak (1931).

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Dimon: Worry about Greece, not California

Barron’s reports that JP Morgan chief Jamie Dimon is a lot less concerned about Greece and the euro than he is about California and its growing budget troubles. Like the Greeks, officials in the Golden State had to cancel a bond sale this week and the two are competing for the top spot as poster-child for government overspending.

“Greece itself would not be an issue for this company, nor would any other country,” Dimon said, according to Dow Jones’s Matthias Rieker. “We don’t really foresee the European Union coming apart.”

However, given California’s size, “there could be contagion” if the state were to have problems servicing its debts, Dimon warned.

In a related story, there seems to have been Greek-like unrest in Berkeley last night as a budget cut protest party turned violent. Campus property was reportedly damaged and then the 200-strong protest moved out onto city streets where trash cans were set on fire, windows were smashed, and the police were called.

Ironically, this was just the pre-protest planning party, not the protest itself that is (or, at least, was) scheduled for next week. Two people were arrested, alcohol was apparently involved, and there was no word on how this might impact next week’s demonstrations.

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Existing Home Sales Tumble in January

The National Association of Realtors reported that sales of existing homes fell 7.2 percent in January to an annual rate of 5.05 million units after a plunge of 16.7 percent in December. This comes following a surge in home sales late last summer as the homebuyer tax credit was believed to be about to expire, a program that has since been extended through June.
IMAGE The median sales price for existing homes was unchanged from a year ago at $164,700 and first-time homebuyers were said to account for 40 percent of purchases during January while investors were responsible for 17 percent of all transactions. Sales are expected to increase again in the months ahead as the April 30th contract signing deadline for the tax credit nears.

Anyone looking to buy a house would do well to consider this item at the WSJ Developments blog that asks whether it’s better to wait to buy. The short answer is that, unless you really need the tax credit and can’t get financed at mortgage rates at much over five percent, you’ll probably be a lot better off later in the year because, unless these two conditions persist, lower prices are likely ahead.

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