The Original DailySkew

Parodies, commentaries, short stories, reviews, opinions ... you never know what you'll read next.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Philosophical Ramblings: Cramer and the effect of predictions on the populace



Jim Cramer got in some hot water the other day for the following comments:

In what Curry called a “dramatic statement,” Cramer emphatically urged any investor who has money they may need in the next five years tied to stocks to pull their dough out.

“I thought about this all weekend,” Cramer told Curry. “I do not want to say these things on TV. Whatever money you may need for the next five years, please take it out of the stock market right now, this week. I do not believe that you should risk those assets in the stock market right now.”

While the animated Cramer is known for telling investors the best prospects for earning money on the stock market, he’s now saying retreat is the best position in the face of some of the worst financial news in decades. The bank lending default crisis that put financial firms around the country on the brink of collapse could bring “as much as a 20 percent decrease in the stock market,” Cramer predicted.


That day, the stock market dropped, and MEDIA started blaming the "Cramer Effect" for making matters worse.

This got me thinking about what effect predictions really have if they're listened to by the public. Do they amplify what is to come? Prevent it? Does the prediction become a self-fulfilling prophecy when millions of people hear and act on the information?


I also started thinking that if Cramer can be blamed for a stock market drop, what else can we blame on television? Can crime be blamed on news reports depicting crime? Can Bush and Paulson be blamed for inducing a panic on Wall Street (Yes)? Can Jose Canseco be blamed for kids shooting up steroids in Texas? Can Shot of Love be blamed for underage drinking and promiscuity?


If that's true, what's the response? Is this the true price of freedom?


For some reason, if you will allow a brief detour, this whole thought process reminded me of a comic book mini-series called Unstable Molecules. It's about the Fantastic Four before they became heroes. At one point, we see Reed Richards studying molecules under a microscope, and he realizes that the observer has an effect on the observed.


WE, as observers of MEDIA content on radio, television, print, internet, verbal ... WE have a collective effect on all this. Investors, for example, watch Cramer, and react to what he says. Enough sycophants pay attention to Jose Canseco that he makes a living selling books.


Now, in Cramer's case, he was observing the behavior of all the investors as a group, and he gave advice based on this. Prior to his advice, the market was already struggling. He MAY have amplified it ... he may not. Either way, he was reacting to investors ... observing them ... and possibly influencing them with his words.



And he was INFLUENCED by investors, which led to his decision to speak up!



It's a circular argument.




It remind me of Ouroboros. Here's a portion of the Wiki entry about this mythological creature:


The Ouroboros often represents self-reflexivity or cyclicality, especially in the sense of something constantly re-creating itself, the eternal return, and other things perceived as cycles....


I believe ... that the Realtor (who, in the real world, is represented by the ever-changing person or persons that market realities to our country) has sold the country YET ANOTHER bill of goods, covering up one lie (Financial CRISIS) with another.



That's where the circle starts.

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

The RETURN of Philosophical Ramblings: Different Races, Different Prices

I found out something shocking about the adoption industry: certain races cost more than others.

For example, adopting a white Russian baby with blue eyes will probably cost more than a mixed child from Guatemala.

"It's the free market," my friend told me, as he explained the situation.

According to him, if you wanted to adopt a baby from the islands, the MINIMUM cost is $11,000 ... and that doesn't include the years of paperwork and hassle.

"First, you have to pay an attorney here in the States. You have to undergo psychological review ... background check. And that's just here. In the islands, you have to pay a lawyer THERE to get the ball rolling on that end. And THEN you have to deal with immigration. It's a mess."

Now, if you're choosy about a baby ... and that baby's race is in HIGH DEMAND ... well, guess what? You're paying more.

"And the wait is longer ... five years," he said.

I told him that the whole thing seemed wrong. It reminded me of the slave trade. However, I had to admit that the adopted child is being helped, regardless of the surrounding circumstances ... but, then again, what about the children whose race is in low demand?

Damn. They're just forgotten children. They're chaff, as far as the richest people in the world (us) are concerned. Not even chaff. Less than chaff. Not even in our frame of reference. Not in our thoughts. Forgotten.

But, hey ... those kids need to be rugged individualists, right? They need to RUSH to excellence. That's right -- overcome dirty water, zero education, a language the world doesn't speak, an ethnic race with no lobbyists on capital hill demanding assistance on your behalf... good luck!

***

Speaking of forgotten kids ... I heard that Barack Obama's brother was interviewed for this month's Vanity Fair. Here's a segment of the article that talked about the interview:



The Italian edition of Vanity Fair said that it had found George Hussein Onyango Obama living in a hut in a ramshackle town of Huruma on the outskirts of
Nairobi.

Mr Obama, 26, the youngest of the presidential candidate's half-brothers, spoke for the first time about his life, which could not be more different than that of the Democratic contender.

"No-one knows who I am," he told the magazine, before claiming: "I live here on less than a dollar a month."

According to Italy's Vanity Fair his two metre by three metre shack is decorated with football posters of the Italian football giants AC Milan and Inter, as well as a calendar showing exotic beaches of the world.

Vanity Fair also noted that he had a front page newspaper picture of his famous brother - born of the same father as him, Barack Hussein Obama, but to a different mother, named only as Jael.

He told the magazine: "I live like a recluse, no-one knows I exist."

Embarrassed by his penury, he said that he does not does not mention his famous half-brother in conversation.

"If anyone says something about my surname, I say we are not related. I am ashamed," he said.


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