|
|
USA
|
(Year-on-Year) |
| EMPLOYMENT (Payroll Survey) |
UP |
| EMPLOYMENT (Household Survey) |
UP |
| PERSONAL INCOME |
UP |
| PERSONAL CONSUMPTION |
UP |
| DURABLE GOOD ORDERS |
UP |
| MANUFACTURING |
UP |
| INFLATION |
UP |
| OIL
PRICES |
UP |
|
TRADE DEFICIT |
UP |
|
Top Ten Energy Consumption Per Person |
nationmaster.com |
| Singapore |
157 |
| United Arab Emirates |
142 |
| Qatar |
75 |
| USA |
68 |
| Canada |
62 |
| Saudi
Arabia |
56 |
| Brunei |
47 |
| Israel |
45 |
| Australia |
44 |
| Japan |
42 |
|
Top Ten Paper Consumption Per Person |
earthtrends.org |
| Finland |
322 |
| USA |
307 |
| Canada |
281 |
| Sweden |
275 |
| Japan |
250 |
| Belgium |
247 |
| Denmark |
243 |
| Netherlands |
239 |
| Austria |
235 |
| Switzerland |
212 |
"The laws
that govern the structure of an economic system cannot, in the
nature of things, be set aside or altered by anything a mere
government can do."--W. J. Sidis, 1938
|
CHINA NOW #2 LENDER TO USA—"China’s purchases of U.S. government
securities rose 20% over the first half of this year and have
exploded by more than 105% since the beginning of 2001." [Japan is
#1 lender.]
democraticwhip.house.gov, 2004 NOW
#1 RECIPIENT OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT— "Contracted foreign
investment totals $1,026.207 billion and foreign investment in
actual use totals $540.292 billion.
PeoplesDaily
Bin Ladin in China?
|
| |
MBOX EXCLUSIVE
DRAMATIC DATA: AMERICAN FAMILY IN 30-YEAR ECONOMIC DECLINE—(1) Because of
inflation the average wage today has the same spending power
it had thirty years ago in 1974.
graphs, data, links (2) House prices and rents have inflated much
faster than wages, so now both parents must work.
"In
just over half a decade the
number of America’s working families paying more than 50
percent of their income for
housing has grown 76%."
NHC.Org
(3) 25% OF AMERICAN FAMILIES SERIOUSLY FINANCIALLY DISTRESSED—"In
this report, a national team of academic scholars and other
experts conclude that 30 million workers in America—one in
four—are seriously distressed and dissatisfied with their
personal financial situations."
source
(4)
HEALTH CARE WORKERS PRICED OUT OF HOMEOWNERSHIP
IN MAJORITY OF U.S. METRO AREAS, NEW STUDY FINDS—
nhc.org
GIRLS MORE LIKELY THAN BOYS TO SEEK
REVENGE?—"Violent events involving preadolescent and early
adolescent girls are more likely to be in response to a previous event and
to involve the home environment and family member intervention."
Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
TEFLON CONTAINS CARCINOGEN?—"Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) draft report concluded that previous studies on rats showed the
chemical [perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA)] was a "likely" carcinogen, and advised that the EPA should carry
out further tests." Nature
NewYorkTimes
CAN THESE PLANTS CLICK EDIT AND UNDO TYPING?—"In a discovery that has flabbergasted geneticists,
these second-generation plants replaced the abnormal code of their parents
with the regular code possessed by earlier generations."
Nature
"Cress with two mutant copies of one gene seem
to be able to correct the DNA they pass on, ensuring that at least a few of
their offspring revert to normal."
New
Scientist
BLACK HOLE GALAXY? Predicted in 1925 by W. J. Sidis—"A British-led team of astronomers
have discovered an object that appears to be an invisible galaxy made
almost entirely of dark matter – the first ever detected. Without any
stars to give light, it could only be found using radio telescopes."
PhysOrg.com
"Strong evidence for a massive
galaxy totally devoid of stars has been found in the Virgo cluster, about
50 million light years away from Earth. The new galaxy, which consists of
a gigantic cloud of hydrogen gas and exotic dark matter, contains enough
material to give birth to tens of millions of stars. Yet something is
preventing this from happening."
NewScientist
Wrote Sidis: "We
thus find the universe to be...a sort of three-dimensional checkerboard,
the positive spaces counting as white (giving out light), and the negative
spaces as black (absorbing light). Thus what we see is simply the white
space that we are in. The surrounding black spaces are invisible."
The Animate and the Inanimate,
Chap. 12
ASTROBIOLOGY TODAY
STILL NO FOSSILS FOUND BUT MARS HAD OCEANS—"Today we have strong evidence for an
exciting answer: Yes." NASA, March 2004 "We think Opportunity is parked on what was once the
shoreline of a salty sea on Mars. Some rocks on Mars probably formed as
deposits at the bottom of a body of gently flowing saltwater." March 2004
and
August 2004 Rover 1
"Oppoerunity" Photo Menu Rover 2
"Spirit" Photo Menu Mbox News NASA
Photo Archives Cetera
MACDICTIVE?—"American
researchers are investigating the possibility that fast foods may be just
as addictive as hard drugs. 'It seems that the rats ingest more and more
and the changes that we see in the brain are similar to what we would see
if we gave a rat morphine or heroin'." New Scientist
SWEET
DRINKS ADD CALORIES TO DAILY DIET BUT DO NOT ACT AS FOOD—"The children did not eat any
less food to compensate for the extra calories in the sodas, lemonades and
other drink treats
Journal of Pediatrics
KRISPY KREME
'CERTIFICATES'
APPEAL TO ADDICTIVE CRAVINGS?—"Customers can pick up their doughnuts right
when that Krispy Kreme craving hits 'em!"
krispykreme.com

PSYCHOTRONICS UPDATES—[In the 1960s
Dr. Jose Delgado flipped a switch and
stopped a charging bull in its tracks (The Physical Control of the Mind, and
Man's Intervention in Intracerebral Functions).]
Now it's
(1)
REMOTE CONTROLLED RATS—"Signals
from a laptop up to 500 metres away make
the rats run, climb, jump and even cross brightly lit open spaces,
contrary to their instincts...The research arm of the US defense
department is funding the work."
Nature
(2)
REMOTE CONTROLLED FRUIT
FLIES "We can not only passively
observe but actively control behavior." Cell
Science Daily
Science Live
(3)
REMOTE CONTROLLED SHARKS—"Engineers funded by the US military have created a neural implant designed
to enable a shark's brain signals to be manipulated remotely, controlling
the animal's movements, and perhaps even decoding what it is feeling. They
hope to transform the animals into stealth spies, perhaps capable of
following vessels without being spotted."
New Scientist

© 1997 2000-2007
dan at danmahony dot
com
|
|
MBOX EDITORIAL
WE MUST ACT NOW
AS IF THERE IS A HUMAN-CAUSED CLIMATE EMERGENCY. While there is
still no conclusive proof that CO2
is causing global warming, we should act as if it is and get green
now.
Latest Data |
HOW
MUCH OIL IS LEFT?—(1) "The total amount
of regular oil produced in the world up to and including 2002 is
891Gb [52%]. The
total amount discovered is 1713Gb, which leaves the world with total
reserves of regular oil of 822Gb [48%]." Uppsala Hydrocarbon Depletion Study
Group
(2)
"Levels
will hit their maximum soon...At that point prices for petrol and
other fuels will reach disastrous levels."
CNN,
October 2003 (3) "Demand for the black
stuff is gushing but supply isn't and the surge in the cost of crude
to its highest level since 1990 shows no sign of running out of
fuel. 'OPEC is powerless', writes Tim Webb, 'and the world economy
will suffer'."
Independent
(UK), May 2004 (4) "The peak
in production of any nonrenewable resource is a very critical point.
At that point, demand remains the same, but supply drops off. The
first result is rapidly increasing prices."
daviesand.com
(5) "Peaking is
at hand, not years away."—Investment
Banker Matthew Simmons, peakoil.net
(6)
"What is left [after a
peak] is an enormous amount of low-grade hydrocarbons, which are
likely to be much more expensive financially, energetically,
politically and especially environmentally."
oilcrisis.com,
Nov. 2003
(7)
"Peaking could
occur as early as 2007...not as a result of an OPEC decision, but of
an inability of producers to continue expanding production of what
is, ultimately, a finite resource."
World
Resources Institute, 2000
(8)
"Global oil
supplies could struggle to meet growing demand after 2007, according
to Petroleum Review, January, 2004."
Oil
Depletion Analysis Center
(9)
"Pessimists: mainly retired geologists or retired CEO,
technical data; Optimists: mainly economists or governmental
agencies, political or financial data."
Laherrere
Report: Estimates of Oil Reserves, 2001 (10)
Scientific American—"There is only so much
crude oil in the world, and the industry has found about 90 percent
of it. What matters is when production begins to taper off. Beyond
that point, prices will rise."
Scientific
American, 1998
SAUDI ARABIA UNCOVERED?—"Heavily in debt, burdened
by high unemployment, lavish stipends to more than 10,000 princes and
hush-money to its religious establishment, while solely dependent on oil
income for its economic well-being, the House of Saud cannot sustain a
drop in revenues. Saudi per capita GDP has dropped from $18,000 in 1980 to
about $7,500 today. Decline in oil sales due to Iraqi production could
further decrease it to about $3,000 by 2010." I.A.G.S SAUDIS SUDDENLY TRIPLE
THEIR ESTIMATE OF
THEIR OIL RESERVES—"Officials from
Saudi Arabia’s oil industry and the international petroleum organizations
shocked a gathering of foreign policy experts in Washington yesterday with
an announcement that the Kingdom’s previous estimate of 261 billion
barrels of recoverable petroleum has now more than tripled, to 1.2
trillion barrels."
arabnews.com, April, 2004
"Companies, and even governments, have hyped up the estimates of
how much oil they have, which is a vital factor in measuring their
economic health."
janes.com,
April 2004
"The next generation of Saudi oil
will be harder to extract."
Matthew Simmons, csis.org "In
2-3 years we will have conclusive evidence that Saudi oil is peaking."
I.A.G.S. March 2004 "It seems
indisputable that OPEC has far less oil left than it claims."
Leeb
& Leeb, The Oil Factor

BASEBALL MAKES MAJOR LEAGUE ERROR—George Sisler's 257 hits in
the 154-game season of 1920 are, by simple math, equivalent to 271 hits in
the 162-game season we have now. So Ichiro Suzuki's 262 hits in 2004
did not actually set a new record. But Baseball's official book of
its records, The Baseball Almanac, claims it does:
Baseball Almanac
Baseball News
"George Sisler was the nearest thing to a perfect
player."—Ty Cobb
Hall of Fame
SURVEYS
"Most of the seventh-graders who responded about being driven by someone under the influence
[of alcohol] are quite likely referring to their
parents." napanews.com
"NRDC 's report points out that as much as 40% of all bottled water comes from a city water system, just like tap water."
bottledwaterblues.com
Survey
Archiv es

Liberty and
Property for All


Corporation Declares Itself A Government

|
| |
 Magazine

We've Got a Problem
Here
|
Links to
all books and articles on this free site: |
 |
|