UH OH: " Chief of Staff Benny Gantz has ordered all IDF units to cancel their traditional Passover breaks so that they can operate in full capacity over the upcoming holdiay, Yedioth Ahronoth reported Wednesday"
Mahmoud, call your office...
My English is not perfect? Well, it's not my mother tongue, so sue me!
See also Barcepundit (the original, in Spanish)
UH OH: " Chief of Staff Benny Gantz has ordered all IDF units to cancel their traditional Passover breaks so that they can operate in full capacity over the upcoming holdiay, Yedioth Ahronoth reported Wednesday"
FOR SOME REASON I suspect that the guys at this Madrid bookstore don't totally get the concept: "We have paper e-books":
THE MYTH of the overnight success:
Angry Birds was Rovio’s 52nd game. They spent eight years and almost went bankrupt before finally creating their massive hit. Pinterest is one of the fastest growing websites in history, but struggled for a long time. Pinterest’s CEO recently said that they had “catastrophically small numbers” in their first year after launch, and that if he had listened to popular startup advice he probably would have quit.(via)
TODAY'S QUOTE is from Bill Maher:
The answer to whenever another human being annoys you is not "make them go away forever." We need to learn to coexist, and it's actually pretty easy to do. For example, I find Rush Limbaugh obnoxious, but I've been able to coexist comfortably with him for 20 years by using this simple method: I never listen to his program. The only time I hear him is when I'm at a stoplight next to a pickup truck.
When the lady at Costco gives you a free sample of its new ham pudding and you don't like it, you spit it into a napkin and keep shopping. You don't declare a holy war on ham.
IS KINDNESS a strategy? Looking around it seems most companies (and persons) would answer "meh", but they'd be surprised at the results if they acted otherwise.
BEEN USING Sanebox for a few weeks and I can say it has eased managing my email a lot. So much that I'm probably going to sign in after the free trial period. It's a little long to explain, so I'll rather point you towards a demo video.
SAY WHAT? "AOL Prepping New Weekly iPad Magazine Called 'Huffington'"
I AGREE: 50 is the new 30. And few companies (if any) realize that when they market a product or service to consumers.
ON THE one hand: Spain banks' bad loans data hits highest since Aug. 1994.
AND NOW the feel-good story of the day: "Lily is a Great Dane that has been blind since a bizarre medical condition required that she have both eyes removed. For the last 5 years, Maddison, another Great Dane, has been her sight. The two are, of course, inseparable."
FROM the guy who begs to have his taxes raised because he says he doesn't pay enough: "Buffett’s NetJets Countersued by U.S. for Unpaid Taxes"
THE END OF AN ERA: after 244 years, the Encyclopaedia Britannica goes out of print; it'll be web-only from now on.
SPAIN: cut spending or increase income via tax raise, to reduce the budget deficit? The WSJ weighs in.
BEFORE AND AFTER COMMUNISM: a great picture gallery of East Germany's transformation. Those heartless Germans: they lost the bucholic life in which people didn't worry about money all day. Of course, that's because they didn't have any, but don't tell that to a critic of capitalism...
I'M SURE that this will solve all the economic woes, like magic:
Spain's two main unions on Friday called a general strike for March 29 to protest the new conservative government's labor reforms and austerity cuts.
It will be the first general strike against the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, which won elections last November and took office late last December, in the midst of Spain's deep economic crisis.
MAKING A KILLING with green energy firms: they get cash from the government, then they give big fat bonuses to their executives, then... they go bankrupt.
CORRUPTION, LIES, AND DEATH THREATS: the crazy story of the man who pretended too invent email. Fascinating.
JUST IMAGINE for a second it was John Ashcroft instead of Eric Holder who said that the Constitution doesn't cover terrorists. Just imagine.
IS INEQUALITY to blame for the financial crisis? Not at all, say economists Michael Bordo and Christopher Meissner:
We find very little evidence linking credit booms and financial crises to rising inequality. Instead, the two key determinants of credit booms are the upswing of the business cycle or economic expansion and low interest rates. This is very much consistent with a broader literature on credit cycles. While inequality often ticks upwards in the expansionary phase of the business cycle, this factor does not appear to be a significant determinant of credit growth once we condition on other macroeconomic aggregates. Neither is income concentration a good predictor of the financial crises that often follow above average growth in credit. The anecdotal evidence from several historical credit booms finds little support for the inequality/crisis hypothesis.
AMERICA is just like Europe:
The U.S. does not have a significantly smaller welfare state than the European nations. We’re just better at hiding it. The Europeans provide welfare provisions through direct government payments. We do it through the back door via tax breaks.
For example, in Europe, governments offer health care directly. In the U.S., we give employers a gigantic tax exemption to do the same thing. European governments offer public childcare. In the U.S., we have child tax credits. In Europe, governments subsidize favored industries. We do the same thing by providing special tax deductions and exemptions for everybody from ethanol producers to Nascar track owners.
These tax expenditures are hidden but huge. Budget experts Donald Marron and Eric Toder added up all the spending-like tax preferences and found that, in 2007, they amounted to $600 billion. If you had included those preferences as government spending, then the federal government would have actually been one-fifth larger than it appeared.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development recently calculated how much each affluent country spends on social programs. When you include both direct spending and tax expenditures, the U.S. has one of the biggest welfare states in the world. We rank behind Sweden and ahead of Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Finland and Canada. Social spending in the U.S. is far above the organization’s average.
FROM Spain's pro-Socialist newspaper El País:
Although the conservatives won on the promise of turning the country around, a Metroscopia opinion poll, carried out for EL PAÍS on February 29 and March 1, shows that 72 percent of citizens still consider the political outlook to be bad, while on the economic front 96 percent of the country feels that things are downright dismal.Wow, three months and you're telling me that there's no unicorn for all yet? Shame!
Because of its own voters’ unflagging support, if general elections were held now the PP would in fact improve its results from 44.6 percent of the vote on November 20 to a hypothetical 46.3 percent. This bodes particularly well for the regional elections scheduled for March 25 in Asturias and Andalusia, both of which are expected to go to the conservatives.That's got to hurt...
JUST what we needed:
Tens of thousands of students protested education spending cuts in big cities across Spain on Wednesday, and the demonstrations turned violent in Barcelona as angry young adults clashed with police.I'm sure that will tremendously help the economy, yeah.
Riot police charged a crowd outside the stock market in Barcelona, Spain's second largest city, after protesters who broke away from a peaceful rally numbering thousands threw rocks and other objects.
Video in Spanish media showed protesters setting plastic garbage containers alight with flares, causing a blaze that destroyed at least one car. They also hurled rocks at the glass front door of a bank branch.
SO MUCH for the so-called wave of Islamophobia in the U.S. after September 11:
Mosques in the United States have doubled in number since the September 11 attacks, with urban and suburban centers seeing an uptick in mosque construction over the last decade, according to a new report.
"This is a growing, healthy Muslim community that is well integrated into America," Ihsan Bagby, who headed the research project -- which was sponsored by the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Hartford Institute for Religion Research, among other groups -- told The Washington Post. "Researchers conducting the national count found a total of 2,106 Islamic centers, compared to 1,209 in 2000 and 962 in 1994," The Washington Post reported.