Since the photography equipment arrived, I have not had much opportunity to take serious photos because of work commitments, but I have been learning as much as I can about it all and have played around a little to familiarise myself with it all.
I am very impressed with both the camera and the lenses, and what little fiddling around with the flash I have done has impressed me too. I'll post some photos as soon as I have some time to do some serious shots.
In the meantime, I acquired, today, some new photography books I thought I'd mention. They're hardly professional, but they do offer some nice tricks and tips in a nontechnical way. I am looking forward to getting into them. They are a three-volume set by Scott Kelby and come highly recommended.
So far I have just browsed through them, and they certainly look promising - easy ways to get great pics without all the jargon that you read in so many other photography books, of which I have plenty.
I have also taken out a subscription to Practical Photography magazine. Can't do enough reading and learning ahead of the course next year!
My humble and sincere thanks to all veterans who have served to keep my country and my liberties safe. My heart goes out to all of you, especially to those who have made serious sacrifices. While I go about my daily business and snuggle down safe and sound in my bed, many of you are guarding a wall, battling with the enemy, or rescuing people off rooftops during a natural disaster. Some of you are tipping your last-call glasses of beer down in the halls of the American Legion or the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Your time of service has passed, yet a part of you lives always in the men and women who now serve. Some of you are praying, alone or in groups, that all sons and daughters, wives and husbands, brothers and sisters, and parents are home by the next Veterans Day. You know He can grant your prayers, but it's unlikely given the evil in the world.
Many of you will march in parades -- some of you will be escorted in your wheelchairs -- and be either encouraged by the numbers of people who gather and wave flags along the parade route or disappointed by the numbers, which seem to dwindle more each year. But you should know that the intensity of pride and sincerity of gratitude from just a few who gather are much richer, fuller, and sweeter than all the speeches, blog posts,and five-minute clips on the late news hours.
Some of you are homeless. We can argue about whether you are crazy or on drugs or a victim of the recession or whatever it is that makes you chronically without shelter, but I am at a loss as to how this could happen in my country. With the billions of dollars we borrowed from the Chinese to give to banks and companies who turned around and thumbed their noses at us while they got massages and played golf at an exotic resort, we couldn't spare a couple or three to shelter people who, conscientiously or not, went and stood in the way of bullets when others did not? I apologize to you, for both looking the other way and not being sincere enough to promise you I will not do it again. But I know that you sacrifice to this day for what you did for your country and I live in the grace of your sacrifice.
Some of you are recuperating in a hospital, trying to recover physically, mentally, or spiritually. Some of you are being taken care of by people who care about you, and some of you were forced to endure deplorable conditions at a military hospital, where people were supposed to care for you and try to make you whole as possible, in the name of the American people whom you served. I cannot understand this breach of faith and I'm angered by it, as I believe other Americans were, but like other government-run horror shows it appears to have been easy to sweep under the rug.
I am one of those people who get a lump in their throat when they see an American flag backlit by the sun's rays. A sucker for icons, I get it when anyone plays the national anthem, even though I love "America the Beautiful" a thousand times better, or a color guard comes out onto a baseball field, or some jets fly over a memorial. The arresting sight of a string of motorcycle guards heading to a funeral to protect a grieving family from a bunch of evil nutcase protesters from a Topeka church makes me want to pull in line and follow them to their destination.
But I get downright weepy when I walk through the tombstones of Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery, whether they mark the graves of Civil War soldiers, entire crews of planes shot down in World War II, or soldiers from other conflicts. And, even though some of the graves are for World War II and Vietnam vets from my own family, the the saddest to me are the newer graves of people who have died in recent wars.
I mourn those men and women who kept the wolf at bay.
And thank those who today still keep it from my door.
I am sweaty and smelly and gross and, in two hours, will be getting on a bus to make the 12 1/2-hour trip to Hue from Ninh Binh. Oops.
Hopefully I don't sit really close to someone.
Today, as well as yesterday, was spent exploring Ninh Binh, a small town about 2 1/2-hours away from Hanoi. I arrived yesterday afternoon and, after some wandering, was able to find a guesthouse complete with dorm rooms. Three hours later I was on a bike to Tam Coc, an area described as "Halong Bay in the rice paddies" by Lonely Planet. Miraculously, I found it without any problems, and was able to bike all around the area avoiding both tourists and tourist-hounds. It was, of course, beautiful, and the perfect time of the day to visit. The sun was low in the sky, not only making the landscape more beautiful, but also making it considerably cooler. I biked around all the little dirt roads and watched rice farmers working at the feet of limestone cliffs.
While the landscape was picturesque, my level of physical comfort left much to be desired. It seems that my legs were not designed for Vietnamese transportation (I had trouble on the bus as well), and my knees were practically making it up to my chin as I rode along the (extremely) bumpy roads.
My butt also did not fair well and I found myself often standing up on the pedals, just to give it and my knees a rest. This probably made me look even MORE like a giant woman (I haven't seen any Vietnamese stand up on their bikes), and got me quite a few stares.
Still, the calming, peaceful feeling of being on my own and being both away from the city and other tourists inspired me to stay another day in Ninh Binh and explore the countryside again today. I started at 8 am this morning and biked all around the nearby farms and villages, often stopping for photos (or just to give my butt a rest), and receiving many "hellos" from the village children (it seems that is the one English word everyone knows). At about 11, I needed some proper food, and biked through a street with little cafes everywhere. At each one, I would say "Toi an chay" ("I am a vegetarian"). At first, this statement would draw blank looks. These were then quickly followed by a sad shake of the head and a point down the street. I was getting very hungry and a bit worried I wouldn't be able to eat.
Finally, I stopped at one restaurant in which my "Toy an chay" was met by enthusiastic nods. No one there spoke a word of English, and the menu was in Vietnamese, but the nice old lady sat next to me and pointed to various items on the menu, saying "chay", "chay", "chay"... To each one, I enthusiastically nodded. I then enthusiastically pointed to the cheapest dish she had suggested. She responded with equal enthusiasm. We were about to enthusiastically agree on the dish, when she (enthusiastically) pointed to the stuffed goat in the entryway and said, "chay"!! Suddenly, my enthusiasm was lost.
One thing you should know about Vietnamese is that it is a tonal language. The same "word", said with different tones, can mean about 5 different things. Of course, to my untrained ear, they all sound the exact same. In both Thailand and Vietnam I have often tried over and over to say a phrase or the name of a destination and only drawn blank looks. When I pull out a map and point to where I want to go, the person I am speaking to exclaims, "Oh!" and then says what, to me, sounds exactly like what I've just been saying for the past 10 minutes (to be fair, my spanish-speaking friends have commented on this problem when they speak English as well). Apparently the word for "goat" and the word for "vegetarian" in Vietnamese are very similar... and I just happened to be in a restaurant that specialized in goat dishes (in addition to the stuffed goat in the entryway, there were also goat heads on the walls... those probably should have been a dead giveaway).
I didn't know what else to do, so I said (rather desperately), "Toy an chay!" again in my very best Vietnamese accent. A different woman seemed to understand. She responded with "Kom (no)..." and pointed to the goat. I agreed and followed with "Kom *insert chicken noise*", "Kom *insert cow noise*", etc. I was probably making a scene at this point, but woman # 2 nodded enthusiastically and starting yelling things in Vietnamese to everyone else. It seems that the message was made clear, because about 10 minutes later (after they allowed me to wash my hands, face, and feet out back) I was presented with a rice/corn porridge... not the best dish I've had here, but definitely vegetarian.
After resting a bit, I continued on my way. As time went on and it approached 1, the weather started to get very very hot. My energy was getting low, as well as my water (I had brought nearly 2 liters) and the front tire of my bike. Life started to get a bit more difficult and so I turned back, stopping again at a local temple for some rest in the shade.
I arrived at my guesthouse at 3:30, thoroughly exhausted, but happy with how the day had went. I have also managed to make myself even more freakish and suspect to, not only get the usual points and whispers one receives in a foreign country, but also start collecting giggles as well. Though I put sunscreen on in the morning, in biking around I somehow managed to worsen my already strange tan lines. I now have distinct "reverse raccoon"-circles around my eyes from my overly large sunglasses, and the skin between my knuckles is white from being curled under the bike's handles. Of course, I have also deepened my more conventional tan lines so that my upper and lower shoulder (ie where the t-shirt sleeves stop when you roll them up) look like they belong to two different races and I have ridiculously white "v's" on my feet.
Maybe it doesn't sound like it, but I really enjoyed today. It was really really nice to get a bit off the beaten track. I wasn't able to shower because I had already checked out of the guesthouse, but I hope I don't smell too terrible (I did a sponge-bath in the sink). I can't believe I have less than 10 days in Asia!
See you soon : ).
What are the can’t–live–without things on your web homepage?
What's that?
Oh, I know what a homepage is and all that. I just can't tell you how it could possibly be that important to me. I was conditioned long ago not to bathe in the spotlight, which is what homepages seem to me, or, at least, what they used to be. I understand Yahoo's idea is to allow a user to gather things together that matter the most to someone.
Well, I will point you to something I created recently:
J1 + J2 = S1 + S2 Pratt Family
Mostrecent.net is something that was created by Ian Smith, founder and creator of Joe's Goals, a simple goal tracker. He describes Most Recent thus:
"Most Recent is a tool I created to make it easy to build news page along the lines of the Drudge Report, Huffington Post, Daily Beast, etc. Simply create a page page, collect links you care about, publish to mostrecent.net"
And quite simply, I just set up mine to make it easy for my friends and family that are a little less than tech-savvy or even tech-literate to be able to just Favorite/Bookmark one site to keep up with what our family is doing. I told my father, "You don't have to look at all the links-- you can choose whichever ones you want. Instead of Favoriting them all, you can just Favorite this one."
Feel free to stop here-- thus ends the short answer. If you are bored, however, read on:
See, someone mentions "homepage", and I'm transported back to the mid 1990's, when the tools were still pretty primitive, and people used GeoCities or FrontPage or some other cookie-cutter template program. But the options have grown SO much since then!
I'm not much for getting news on a homepage. I use my e-mail client to track RSS feeds and such, and that cuts down clutter for me. I blog here, but keeping in touch with friends and family range between e-mail correspondence and social networking. And speaking of social networking, well, MySpace was the last site I saw that actually encouraged a "homepage" format, although the formatting is very messy and few have tamed it to fit quality standards of a good web designer.
By the way, Yahoo, I can't help but point out your 360 project failed, hard. And you had a seedy underbelly long before Craigslist or Adult Friend Finder came along.
Actually, though, I know Daisy writes the entries, and the sponsor does not dictate to her what she writes. So I am curious as to what inspired this one.
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Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter The Glide Path Option
by John Mauldin November 6, 2009 |
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The present contains all possible futures. But not all futures are good ones. Some can be quite cruel. The one we actually get is dictated by the choices we make. For the last few months I have been addressing the choices in front of us, economically speaking. Today I am going to summarize them, and maybe we can look for some signposts that will tell us which path we're headed down. For those who are new readers and who would like a more in-depth analysis, you can go to the archives at www.2000wave.com and search for terms I am writing about. And I will start out by briefly touching on today's ugly unemployment numbers, with data you did not get in the mainstream media. But first, let me welcome the readers of EQUITIES Magazine to this letter. The publisher is sending the letter to you directly. This letter is free, and all you have to do to continue receiving it is type in your email address at www.2000wave.com. Likewise, I have arranged for my regular readers to get a free subscription to EQUITIES Magazine, if you would like. You can go to www.equitiesmagazine.com. For those who don't know, I write a brief monthly column for them. The Ugly Unemployment NumbersThe headlines said unemployment, as measured by the "establishment survey," was down by 190,000; and even though that was slightly worse than forecast, market bulls were cheered by the fact that the number was not as bad as last month's. It is an improvement that we are not falling as fast. Well, maybe. What I did not see in many of the stories I read was that the number of unemployed actually soared by 558,000, to 15.7 million, as measured by the household survey. The establishment survey polls larger businesses; the household survey actually calls individual households. Let's look at the real number in the establishment survey. If you don't seasonally adjust the number, the actual change in unemployment for October was 641,000, or about 450,000 more than the seasonally adjusted number. And the Bureau of Labor Statistics added 86,000 jobs that they simply guess were created through the so-called birth-death ratio. Interestingly, the birth-death ratio number is not seasonally adjusted, so it is just added to the unemployment number. http://www.bls.gov/web/cesbd.htm The total (U-6) employment rate is at a record high of 17.5% (this includes those who are part-time for economic reasons). There are now over 10.5 million people who have lost their jobs since the beginning of the downturn. My favorite slicer and dicer of data, Greg Weldon (www.weldononline.com), offers up an even more horrific number. As I have noted before, if you have not looked for work in the last four weeks, the BLS does not count you as unemployed. Quoting Greg: "Moreover, when we combine the monthly change in the number of Unemployed, with the number Not in the Labor Force, we might consider the result to be a proxy for the actual 'change' in the underlying labor market situation ... in which case, October's figure of 817,000 represents the fourth LARGEST yet, behind last month's (September's) second largest figure of 1,021,000 ... for a two-month combined figure of 1.838 million, in newly Unemployed, or no longer 'in' the Labor Force ... "... the second LARGEST two-month total EVER posted, barely trailing the December-08/January-09 total 1.955 million. "Bottom line ... basis this measure AND the 'Total Unemployment Rate,' we could conclude that not only is there NO 'improvement' in the labor market, but moreover, that it continues to DETERIORATE, intently." There are plenty more implications in the data, but let's turn to the topic of the day. The Present Contains All Possible FuturesLike teenagers, we as a US polity have made a number of bad choices over the past decade. We allowed banks to overleverage and, in the case of AIG (and others), sell what were essentially naked call options of credit default swaps, based on their firm balance sheets, far in excess of their net worth; and that put our entire financial system at risk. We gave mortgages to people who could not pay them, and did so in such large amounts that we again brought down the entire world financial system to the point that only with staggering amounts of taxpayer money was it brought back from the brink of Armageddon. We assumed that home prices were not in a bubble but were a permanent fixture of ever-rising value, and we borrowed against our homes to finance what seemed like the perfect lifestyle. We did not regulate the mortgage markets. We ran large and growing government deficits. We did not save enough. We allowed rating agencies to degrade their ratings to a point where they no longer meant anything. The list is much longer, but you get the idea. Now, we are faced with a continuing crisis and the aftermath of multiple bubbles bursting. We are left with a massive government deficit and growing public debt, record unemployment, and consumers who are desperately trying to repair their balance sheets. If present trends are left unchecked, we will need to find $15 trillion in the next ten years, just to pay for US government debt, let alone state, county, and city debt. And perhaps some loans for business will be needed? Where can all this money come from? The answer is that it can't be found. Long before we get to 2019 there will be an upheaval in the market, forcing what could be unpleasant changes. We are left with no good choices, only bad ones. We have created a situation that is going to cause a lot of pain. It is not a question of pain or no pain, it is just when and how we decide (or are forced) to take it. There are no easy paths, but some bad choices are less bad than others. So, let's review some of the choices we can make. (Again, I am being very general here. You can go to the archives for more specifics. This is a summary letter.) Argentinian DiseaseOne way to deal with the deficit is to do what Argentina and other countries have done: simply print the money needed to cover the deficits. Of course, that eventually means hyperinflation and the collapse of the currency and all debt. There are writers who think this is an inevitable outcome. How else, they ask, can we deal with the debt? Where is the political willpower? One large hedge-fund manager in Brazil humorously remarked that Argentina is a binomial country. When faced with two choices (hence binomial) they always made the bad choice. Could it happen here? Hyperinflation is not an economic event; it is a political choice. I think last Tuesday's election is a sign that the voter population is beginning to pay attention to the need for something more than talk of change. There is growing discomfort with the size of the deficits. Further, the Fed would have to cooperate in order for there to be hyperinflation, and I think there is only a very slight (as in almost zero) chance of that happening. Could Congress change the rules and take over the Fed? Anything's possible, but I seriously doubt there is any appetite in saner Democratic circles for such a thing to happen. I think the chances of hyperinflation in the US are quite low. It would be the worst of all possible bad choices. The Austrian SolutionHere I refer to the Austrian school of economic theory, based on the work of Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek, et al. There are those in the Austrian camp who argue the need to do away with the Fed, return to the gold standard, allow the banks that are now deemed too big to fail to go ahead and fail, along with any businesses that are also mismanaged (such as GM and Chrysler), and leave the high ground to new and more properly run. In their model, government spending is slashed to the bone, as are (in most cases) taxes. The advantage is that, in theory, you get all your pain at once and then can begin to recover from what would be a very bad and deep recession. The bad news is that you risk getting 30% unemployment and another depression that could take a very long time to climb out of. Now, let me say that I have GREATLY simplified their argument. If you want to learn more you can go to www.mises.org. It is an excellent web site for all things Austrian. While I am not Austrian, I have spent a lot of time reading the literature and have certain sympathies for this view. That being said, this also has almost no chance of being implemented. In Congress, only my friend Ron Paul is its advocate. Most Austrian followers are Libertarian by nature, and that is just not a political reality for the coming decade. The Eastern European SolutionAs it turned out, Niall Ferguson (last week I wrote about his brilliant book, The Ascent of Money) was in Dallas last night, and I was graciously invited to hear him. He gave a great speech and signed books, and then we went to a local bar and proceeded to solve the world's problems over Scotch (Niall) and tequila (me), and went farther into the night than we originally intended. He's a very fun and knowledgeable guy. As we were talking about possible paths, he brought one to mind that I hadn't thought of. He reminded me of the period after the fall of the Berlin Wall, as the nations of Eastern Europe broke from the former Soviet Union. They started with very weak economies and simply overhauled their entire governments and economies in a rather short period of time, though not in lockstep with one another. Privatization, lowered taxes, etc. were the order of the day. We here in the US are always talking about the need for reform. We need to reform health care or education or energy. In Eastern Europe they did not reform in the sense that we use the word. In many cases they simply started from scratch and built new systems. They had the advantage that there was general agreement that things did not work the way they had been, so there was more room for change. Today in the US there are large constituencies that resist change. We only get to tinker around the edges, when real structural change is needed. Sadly, we agreed that here there is not much chance of major change. We can't even get the obvious changes needed in the financial regulatory world. Sidebar: I am outraged at the paltry proposed financial "reforms." Rahm Emanuel said that no crisis should be allowed to go to waste. The Obama administration is wasting this one. How can we allow banks to be too big to fail? Where is the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall? If we are going to allow large banks to exist, then their leverage must be reduced to the point where their failure would not risk the system and require taxpayer dollars. I don't care if that makes them less profitable. They are making those large profits because they have taxpayers implicitly behind them, and I get no dividend payments from them, the last time I checked. Where is Fannie and Freddie reform (and their breakup)? No mention of an exchange for credit default swaps? (And yes, I know that such an exchange would reduce the number of swaps and the profitability of them. That is the point. They are dangerous if allowed to become too big a market.) This bill reads as if bank lobbyists wrote it. Where is the populist outrage? We have let the fox set up the rules for running the hen house. Shame on us all if we allow this to happen. Japanese DiseaseI have written a lot over the past year about the problems facing Japan. Their population is shrinking, as is their work force. They are running massive fiscal deficits and have done so for almost 20 years. Government debt-to-GDP is now up to 178% and projected to rise to over 200% within a few years. They started their "lost decades" with a savings rate of almost 16%, and are now down to 2% as their aging population spends its savings in retirement. They have had no new job creation for 20 years, and nominal GDP is where it was 17 years ago. As bad as our problems are here in the US, their bubble was far more massive. Values of commercial property fell 87%! Their stock market is still down 70%. They had twice as much bank leverage to GDP as the US. (Think about how bad off we would be if bank lending was twice as large and had even worse defaults and capital shortfalls!) And yet, they Muddle Through. Productivity has kept their standard of living reasonable. Up until recently their exports were strong. The trading floors of the world are littered with the bodies of traders who have shorted Japanese government debt in the belief that it simply must implode. While I believe that it eventually will, if they stay on the path they are on, Japan is a very clear demonstration that things that don't make sense can go on longer than we think. Richard Koo (chief economist of Nomura Securities, in Tokyo) argues passionately that Japan had a balance-sheet recession, and that the only way for Japan to fight it was to run massive deficits. Banks were not lending and businesses were not borrowing, as both groups were trying to repair their balance sheets, which were savaged by the bursting of the bubble. It is said that at one time the value of the land on which the Emperor's Palace sits in Tokyo was worth more than all of California. Clearly this was a bubble that puts our housing bubble to shame. So, I understand the point that there are differences between Japan and the US . But there are also similarities. We too have had a balance sheet recession, although here it was mostly individuals and financial institutions that have had to retrench and repair their balance sheets. Japan elected to run large deficits and raise taxes. As I wrote in the October 16th letter (http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo101609), "Savings equal Investments: GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is defined as Consumption (C) plus Investment (I) plus Government Spending (G) plus [Exports (E) minus Imports (I)] or: GDP = C + I + G + (E-I) I don't want to go on at length again, but basically, the literature I quoted suggests that government stimulus and deficits have no long-run positive effect on GDP. In fact, the work done by Christina Romer, Obama's chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, shows that tax cuts have a three-times-greater positive effect on GDP, and tax increases have the same level of negative effect. In the equation above, if you increase government spending it will have a positive effect in the short run on GDP, but not in the long run. In essence, the increase in "G" must be made up by savings from consumers and businesses and foreigners. But "G" does not enhance overall productivity. Government spending may be necessary but it is not especially productive. You increase productivity when private businesses invest and create jobs and products. But if government soaks up the investment capital, there is less for private business. And that is Japanese disease. You run large deficits, sucking the air out of the room, and you raise taxes, taking the money from productive businesses and reducing the ability of consumers to save. Then you go for 20 years with little or no economic or job growth. This is the path we currently seem to be on. The Japanese experience says that it could last a lot longer than people think before we hit the wall; because if savings rise in the US, and if banks, instead of lending, put that money on deposit with the Fed, as they are now doing (in order to repair their balance sheets), the US could run large deficits for longer than most observers currently believe. We will need 15-18 million new jobs in the next five years, just to get back to where we were only a few years ago. Without the creation of whole new industries, that is not going to happen. Nearly 20% of Americans are not paying anywhere close to the amount of taxes they paid a few years ago, and at least ten million are now collecting some kind of unemployment benefits or welfare. Choosing large deficits does not reduce the amount of pain we will experience, it just seemingly reduces it in the short term and creates the potential for a serious economic upheaval when the bond market finally decides to opt for higher rates. This path is a bad choice, but sadly, in reality it is one we could take. The Glide Path OptionA glide path is the final path followed by an aircraft as it is landing. We need to establish a glide path to sustainable deficits (could we dream of surpluses?). That is because at some point there will be recognition, either proactively or forced upon us by the bond market, that large deficits are unsustainable in the long term. If Congress and the president decided to lay out a real (and credible) plan to reduce the deficit over time, say 5-6 years, to where it was less than nominal GDP, the bond market would (I think) behave. Reducing deficits by $150 billion a year through a combination of cuts in growth and spending would get us there in five years. The problem is that there is real pain associated with this option. Remember that equation above. Absent a growing private sector, if you reduce "G" (government spending) you also reduce GDP in the short run. You have to take some pain today in order to do that. But you avoid worse pain down the road: a bubble of massive federal debt that has to be serviced will be very painful when it blows up, as all bubbles do. The Glide Path Option means that structural unemployment is going to be higher than we like (which is actually the case with all the options). And the large tax increases that come with this option will by their very nature be a drag on growth (and cause a double-dip recession in 2011). We can debate tax increases all we want, but I sadly think we will soon have a VAT tax. There are no good options. I just hope that we cut corporate taxes enough when we do create a VAT, that it will make our corporations more competitive, which will be a boost for jobs. That's pretty much it. This is not a problem we can grow ourselves out of in the next few years. We have simply dug ourselves into a huge hole. This is not a normal recession. There is not a "V" ending to this recession. We are going to have deal with the pain. It will be the pain of reduced returns on traditional stock market investments, a lower dollar, low returns on bonds, European-like unemployment, lower corporate profits over the long term, and a very slow-growth environment. But if we choose this path, we will get through it in the fullness of time. And of course, then we will eventually have to deal with the $70 trillion in our off-balance-sheet liabilities in Medicare and Social Security and pensions. Sigh. But that's for another time. Philadelphia, Orlando, and PhoenixI really am more optimistic than this letter makes me seem. But if you ignore reality, then you have no chance to figure out how to make the best of your situation. It is the efforts of hundreds of millions of individuals trying to make their own lot a little better than will get us back to a robust economy. Monday I fly to Philadelphia and then the next day to Orlando for two speeches, and then the following week a quick trip to Phoenix, then home to start to plan for Thanksgiving. I will be in New York the first weekend of December (the 4th) for Festivus, a great fundraiser for kids sponsored by Todd Harrison and the team at Minyanville (http://www.rpfoundation.org/), Interestingly, they hold it every year at a "Texas" barbecue joint. Look me up if you are there. Tiffani has been out the last two days of this week. She is due in seven weeks or less, and her hips are expanding. The pain is too much right now for her to walk up the stairs to the office, so she is working from home. The doctor says this is the one time that her pain is not a sign of something bad. She is being a trooper and not taking any pain meds. It has been 30 years since I was around a pregnant lady for more than a few hours, and it does bring back some memories. Watching her grow and change has brought back the sense of awe over how our bodies are designed. Ryan and Tiffani have decided on the name Lively for my first granddaughter, to add to the two new grandsons this year. From zero to three grandkids in just six months! Kind of makes me dizzy. I really enjoyed my time in South America. Rio is quite beautiful and I want to go back and spend some time. Have a great week. There will be enough good friends and family that I know I will. And tomorrow night I finally get to go to a Dallas Mavericks game. We may have a real team this year. Your always optimistic at the beginning of the season analyst, John MauldinJohn@FrontLineThoughts.com Copyright 2009 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. 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It get the distinct impression that, the longer and travel, and the more infrequently my posts here become, so also do they become more boring. I could blame it on things like slow internet and lack of time, but really I'm just unmotivated.
So I apologize for the dry posts, and will try to step it up a bit (key word = try... so don't judge).
As many of you know (yay Facebook!) I arrived in Hanoi, Vietnam on 2 November. I will spend only one full day in the city, but have learned from experience that I enjoy rural areas more anyway. Still, that one day was nice. I visited historical sites/museums and just wandered around, taking in the sights and sounds. In contrast to Thailand (where there are more Starbucks than in New Zealand), Vietnam feels distinctly foreign, and I like that about it. Though there are many foreigners around, I still find that I stick out, and have had a few (Vietnamese) men predictably profess their love to me. While I could get by speaking my American-version of Thai, I have trouble saying "thank-you" in Vietnamese. Still, it's much easier than either Ghana or India, and so I'm not too worried.
There are two things one has two worry about in Hanoi: traffic, and the scary basket ladies. I had been warned that the traffic would be ridiculous, and it is. Street signs mean little, and buses and motorbikes and cars and bicycles and about every other vehicle you can imagine whiz around with little regard to what direction they should be driving, or what side of the road they should be driving on. As Lonely Planet says, might means right, and if you're a 18-wheeler you can pretty much do whatever you want, while we lowly pedestrians must watch our steps carefully. When I first arrived, I thought to myself, "It's MUCH better than India", and on the surface it is. There are breaks in traffic and I get the distinct impression that most people TRY to follow the laws as long as they are semi-convenient to them. The main difference to the pedestrian, however, is that, in contrast to India, Vietnam has no usable sidewalks. What would normally be pedestrian space is littered with motorbikes and street vendors and made totally un-walkable. One must walk along the side of the road, listening to the horns blasting around, and just hope that people will weave around one's backside. My personal strategy is to walk calmly and cooly, giving the impression that not only do I belong in the middle of the street, I have more of a right to be there than anyone else. The theory is that motorists, like dogs, can smell fear, and as soon as your eyes widen at the site of oncoming headlights, or your steps quicken to dodge the spinning wheels, they know you are powerless.
I haven't died yet!
The second thing to worry about in Hanoi is the scary basket ladies (not the technical term). These are women who walk around the streets selling food from two baskets suspending from a pole they carry on the shoulders. They look harmless enough, and when one first sees them, one gets the impression that one should purchase food from them because they look culturey and authentic. That is all part of their game. Avoid them at all costs. I have had few dealings with these women, but they have taught me that the scary basket ladies are the pushiest, craftiest, most-prone-to-cheating-est, people I have ever come across. They do things like charge 4x's the fair price for a banana and then snatch it out of your hand when you try to bargain. They grab your arm and won't let go, and they slam their baskets and cone-hats on you for a picture that they then try to charge 20 USD for. The worst part is that they are everywhere. I spent the past few days in Halong Bay on a boat, and woke (sweaty and panting) in the mornings to the sounds of their little rowboats hitting our own, and their little voices yelling, "Buy something?! Buy something?!" Be afraid. Be very afraid.
Anyways, like I said, I only spent one day in Hanoi. As touched upon, the past few days were spent on a tour of Halong Bay, a natural wonder near Hanoi that is reminiscent (though much much larger) of Doubtful Sound (Fiordland, New Zealand... where I went kayaking). We stayed on a "junk" boat and spent our days relaxing in the sun, kayaking, swimming, and even did a bit of trekking. Much of the time, we just watched the beautiful scenery go by. There are thousands of huge limestone cliffs jutting out of the emerald waters, and small, brightly colored, fishing villages are scattered around their bases. While kayaking, tiny schools of fish would jump out of the water around us, and we saw monkeys (I think Japanese Macaques? The grey ones with the red faces and bottoms) climbing around the cliffs. It was beautiful In addition to the scenery, the accommodation was absolutely the best I have had my entire time abroad, and the food was plentiful and delicious. For the second time while traveling (apart from my first 3 months living in Wellington), I had my own room. For the first time, I had my own bathroom. It was glorious!
Tomorrow morning I am off to Ninh Binh where I will do more naturey things. I will then continue on south. I hope that the recent typhoon in central Vietnam will not affect my travels, but am prepared to change them if I need to.
Only 10 days left! I can't believe it!
Today was a bit of an adventure, though. It simply started where I wanted to walk with a donation down to the nearby thrift shop. They have a drop box on the corner of the street, so I did so. Then I decided I wanted to walk over to the hospital's Diabetes Education building to weigh myself. 353 pounds. Nice. But I wanted to go on, so I walked to the library, to see if they had any books I wanted or movies to check out. Not open yet. OK. I go to the adjacent park and get a drink. They're open when I return. I request "The Te of Piglet" at one of the catalog search terminals. Meanwhile, there is nothing on the shelves that I want.
I'm very hungry; I hadn't eaten breakfast yet. So I go further downtown to the Sun Mart that has a Subway, have a nice 6" buffalo chicken sub, and scribble the note you see above. Walked past the old Sunburst video-- quite a shame the business had to fold. Looked at the beauty school that's located now in the old Penguin Plumbing building. Wondered if they still had Halloween makeup. (When I still played Live Action roleplay, such was needed now and then.) Thought about going to the Big 5 sporting goods store on my way back to get camera binoculars. Decided against it and continued on to Schuck's/O'Reilly's auto supply store to get a reuseable K&N air filter for the car. Decided to get an oil filter of the same brand. Hopefully it will pay off in the long run.
Did not want to climb the hilly street next to the store, so I doubled back to the street alongside the Catholic elementary school to take advantage of a shortcut only available to pedestrians. Got home and had Cimmy put the air filter in. The oil pump works, but there was no way she could get at the oil filter without crawling under the car, and we don't have the means to do that very well. Besides, so little oil was drawn out and she thought she was missing something. So we gave up and she took it to Wal-Mart to have it changed.
Now, if only I had the resources those trained monkeys do...
So I don't know how many of y'all know this, but I've been taking thyroid medication for the past four years. If I have my diagnosis correctly, I have thyroid nodules and am in danger of developing Hashimoto's Disease down the road. I have other family members who have thyroid problems, but out of the three of us, I take the smallest dosage.

