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November 17, 2008

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Comments

its a waste of time to speculate on the details,great hardship
& misery are only one aspect of a depression.Depressions signal
some very profound basic changes in the world order such as wars
revolution,re alignment of Power etc..,at home there will be some drastic
change in the political structure.Better/worst? who knows!
History does not repeat itself but its out with the old order and in
with the new.

Hunger among U.S. children skyrockets in 2007
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/11/18/hungry.kids.ap/index.html

Hey Roger,

Setup a mirror site of a few copies of your articles, sourced to you, and within context of my blog. For your info, records and/or objection they are at:
Grapes of Wrath: “Perhaps the only Anger that can be avoided is the Anger that comes from trying to avoid Anger" : Financial Armageddon.

JMCSwan

So many political scientists are rooting for the destruction of the suburbs that predictions of desuburbanization have to be taken with a grain of salt. Here in Texas, most of the jobs have followed most of the people to the suburbs. In the event of a catastrophic depression, we will see deurbanization. The center city model, by and large, has outlived its usefulness in a decentrfalized world.

Two items that I disagree with- the plight of New England farmers and television.

As our spider web of distribution gets more complicated and is exposed to greater risk locally grown food and local agricultural land will increase in value. We already see this with a movement by consumers to Community Supported Agriculture. People still need to eat. The planes and trucks may not be arriving from California or Florida. New England farmers will do fine.

Concerning TV I think that we are going to lose a bunch of stations. When people aren't spending money on consumer goods, cause no one has any $, then there won't be ads running. Without ads running there won't be so many TV stations to choose among.

The future is looking pretty bleak to be sure, personally I hope to weather the financial storm. The new administration will have it's hands full, to be sure..

In any event, I am certainly excited about what an Obama presidency will bring to our beleaguered nation. He is very articulate to be sure, and seemingly has the intellect and composure to be successful in the highest office of the most powerful nation on earth. However, I am a little skeptical about his level of experience, alleged ties to unsavory organizations and religious affiliations. I voted for him, primarily because of bitterness at the incompetence of the Bush administration. I remain disenfranchised with America so far in the 21st Century, and came across a political graphic that does a fairly good job in capturing this sentiment.

http://www.cafepress.com/usa21stcentury

It's always cute to see the always-employed and always-comfortable speculate about the real world they apparently never see while they drive around encased in their cars. Really, they should visit the world by taking mass transit and walking everywhere.

This is the bleak picture:
http://mikecane2008.wordpress.com/2008/09/24/american-gotterdammerung/

And if you doubt that, People 101 right here:
http://mikecane2008.wordpress.com/2008/09/25/chronicles-of-depression-20-240-violence/

Lara Bravehear.
you mean like a 2nd. soap box?
Mr. Panzner might be glad to see less of me,he he,

Putnam ("Bowling Alone") has been writing about declining civic/social engagement for decades.

By reading him, you'd think we should be close to zero by now.

Some flaws in the article.

Education will become cheaper. If Universities shrink, the out-of-work educators will invent cheaper substitutes. Labor is one of the biggest costs of education. It is not credible to assume that education can maintain it's high prices in the face of deflating wages. In fact, the lack of student loans will bring tuition back down to earth. All you need to educate is a teacher, as student, and a textbook. We do NOT need palatial universities with all the amenities.

College educations may become MORE available since you will no longer have to hock the farm to get one.

Note 2:

The price of entertainment will adjust to available dollars. Hollywood will produce cheaper movies that people will come to see. You really think that they will be able to sustain $10 ticket prices? I say no.

Creative producers will come up with low-budget movies (think "Clerks") that are entertaining and realistic.

In fact, REAL talent may prosper since everyone will need to be low-budget.

This article was very good, but it utterly ignored the across-the-board repricing effects of job loss.

Some flaws in the article.

Education will become cheaper. If Universities shrink, the out-of-work educators will invent cheaper substitutes. Labor is one of the biggest costs of education. It is not credible to assume that education can maintain it's high prices in the face of deflating wages. In fact, the lack of student loans will bring tuition back down to earth. All you need to educate is a teacher, as student, and a textbook. We do NOT need palatial universities with all the amenities.

College educations may become MORE available since you will no longer have to hock the farm to get one.

Note 2:

The price of entertainment will adjust to available dollars. Hollywood will produce cheaper movies that people will come to see. You really think that they will be able to sustain $10 ticket prices? I say no.

Creative producers will come up with low-budget movies (think "Clerks") that are entertaining and realistic.

In fact, REAL talent may prosper since everyone will need to be low-budget.

This article was very good, but it utterly ignored the across-the-board repricing effects of job loss.

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