Punk Economics

Dave Barry was a kid when the Soviet craft sputnik was launched, sending out a “bleep” through low orbit all around the world.  His teacher intoned to the math class that, “From now on, you kids are going to have to learn a lot more about math and science.”  Barry added, “As if it was all our fault.”

People around the world are going to have to learn a lot more about economics and banking.  This time, however, it really is our own fault.  If we’re going to get some control over our lives in something like a democracy we better get moving.  Movements like “Occupy Everything!” are a start, but there has to be a lot more attention and education.  Fortunately, we have people like David McWilliams and his “Punk Economics” to help – teaching what’s going on with more than a little fun.

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BRICS ‘n’ China Shop

Halfway around the world in New Dehli, a conference will be held later this month between developing nations.  It’s hard to imagine anything further from the minds of most Americans, and it’s unlikely to make the news.  Yet what sources say will be announced could change our economy and standing in the world more than anything else that will happen this year, given enough time.  It could mark the moment that China takes its natural next step on the world’s stage.

Economic restructuring always occurs in a Depression as the system that crashed at the start emerges as a different arrangement that looks ahead to the future.  It’s a time of great opportunity, sometimes disguised as desperation.  That restructuring is taking place in the USofA slowly, but much more rapidly when the sun shines on the other side of the globe.  That’s why we should be careful what we wish for in the dead of the night.

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Catching Up

It’s well above freezing in St Paul and what little snow there was has melted away.  The High School Boys’ Hockey Tournament is starting today, so by tradition there should be one last gasp of Winter left.  But we have a change of seasons, and that’s a good time to catch up on a few of the topics that we have covered in Barataria that are always still developing.

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“Minnesota for Marriage” – Simply Wrong

Minnesota voters will confront the issue in simple black letters on a white ballot this November. “Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to provide that only a union of one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Minnesota?”  This “Marriage Amendment” is the most controversial of what is likely to be many ballot questions, and the sides are already gearing up for a fight.

In support of the Amendment there is “Minnesota for Marriage”, a coalition of groups that lobbied the Legislature to put the question on the ballot in the first place.  Their arguments are heartfelt, clearly defined, serious – and ultimately misplaced.  It is worth taking the time to refute their position carefully so that this issue can be defined by what it is – a Civil Rights issue.

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Gasoline, an Explosive Issue

The editor of an online publication revealed more than a little frustration.  “Whenever we ask for a piece on the economy,” he told me over lunch, “We either get a story on how nothing is happening or on gas prices.”  This was in the summer of 2010, which we now know was close to the bottom of the economy and the point where everything was just starting to turn around.

There wasn’t anything happening then, except for gasoline prices.  They went up and down in a kind of rhythm that defied just about everything, as they do today.

The normal fluctuations of something as basic as gasoline can become a partisan issue, at least to the extent that one party has something to capitalize on.  This election year, however, the constant up and down of the price of gasoline won’t make it because people don’t know who to blame, they are less dependent on gasoline, and it has the potential for serious blow-back on the Republicans.

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