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Scannings: Absurdity & An Idea for Desis



Why reading WSJ Opinions such as this one on 8/29 can damage your laptop - stuff like this makes you want to spurt coffee all over your keyboard. Money quote:

"New Orleans' plight is not the result of federal underspending. Uncle Sam has spent some five times more on Katrina relief than any other natural disaster in the past 50 years. Both parties in Congress and the White House opted for the status quo by relying on federal bureaucracies to oversee the rebuilding effort. If Uncle Sam were deliberately trying to waste these funds, it is hard to imagine a better way than to funnel the money through the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Small Business Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Both HUD and the SBA have been on the chopping block back to the early Reagan years."

Contrast this "opinion" to a "news" story that ran on a earlier page in the newspaper ("In New Orleans, Recovery Is Sporadic; Disagreement Over Where to Rebuild Infrastructure Plagues Efforts a Year After Katrina" by Christopher Cooper. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 29, 2006. pg.A.4), which said this:

"Mr. Powell and President Bush have touted the $110 billion that Congress appropriated to assist Gulf Coast rebuilding, but only a sliver of the money has reached the region.

Of the $44 billion spent, about $17 billion was paid out in flood- insurance claims, which are at least partially backed by property- owner premiums. A large portion of the remaining amount was spent on immediate needs after Katrina, such as paying Federal Emergency Management Agency workers, establishing temporary housing for storm victims and providing local governments with operating cash. Very little of this money has a direct effect on long-term recovery for the region, and only a fraction has been spent on repairing infrastructure such as waterworks and electrical grids.

The government of New Orleans, which is struggling to provide basic municipal services, has received -- and spent -- $125 million in direct federal aid. "I've come to see that the word 'appropriation' has very little to do with actual cash in hand," said Oliver Thomas, president of the New Orleans City Council. He estimates billions of dollars will be needed to rebuild infrastructure in a city that independent analysts say has restored only 17% of its bus service, 60% of its electricity and 41% of its natural-gas grid."

Makes you wonder, doesn't it, if the wingnuts manning the WSJ Opinion desk even bother to read what their "News"* desk puts out? Or is this dissonance because they, in the words of Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert, live in a "fact free" zone? Besides, the last time I heard there was only one party** (allegedly the one that bills itself the party of "responsibility") that was in control and in charge of all levers of "guvnment", including those nasty clogged up "federal bureaucracies".

...

This is an excellent idea that desis should consider adopting from our "Chini" bhai-log; using Reality TV to unearth those hidden Indian Olympians:

from "China's New Reality Show Goes for the Gold" by Mei Fong. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 29, 2006. pg. B.1

"Called the "China Olympic Coxswain Competition," the show hopes to ride the popularity of reality TV shows in China, sparked by the stunning success of "Super Female Voice," a singing contest produced by provincial TV station Hunan Satellite that drew 400 million viewers to its 2005 finale. By comparison, "American Idol" drew 36 million viewers to its finale this year.

"This is the only sport in the Olympics in which such a competition could be held. The coxswain position is unique because you don't need great physical strength, just mental strength," says Liu Ai Jie, vice president of the China Water Sports Association. Mr. Liu came up with the idea for the program, which is expected to be announced today."

...

"Star power is also a must, say organizers. Karaoke and dance segments are being considered."

...

"To be sure, in English, the term coxswain has a decidedly less glorious connections: it's derived from roots that can be loosely translated as "boat boy."

The position ideally requires a master strategist with the vim of a cheerleader and the ruthlessness of taskmaster. It helps to be light too -- typically rowers tower over coxswains.

Famous coxswain include physicist Stephen Hawking, who coxed for Oxford before he began to suffer from lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, as well as U.S. Olympian Bob Moch, who lived until the age of 90 and rallied his team -- including one sick rower -- to an upset victory during the 1936 Berlin Olympics."

Y'all leave some inventive names for the desi version of such shows in the comments.

*WSJ "news" pages are surpisingly well balanced & in line with most main stream media; I suppose this has to be because businessmen can't make effective decisions on "free capitalism" shtick alone but have to resort to "real world facts"

**I belong to the Party of Walt Whitman, the kosmic man




Scannings

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Scannings - 2



NYT, August 23, 2006 Market Place For 2 Giants of Soft Drinks, a Crisis in a Crucial Market By AMELIA GENTLEMAN

The Center for Science and the Environment announced in August. that drinks manufactured by Coca-Cola and PepsiCo in India contained on average more than 24 times the safe limits of pesticides, which could come from sugar, water and other ingredients.

When those reports appeared on the front pages of newspapers in India, Coke and Pepsi executives were confident that they could handle the situation. But they stumbled.

They underestimated how quickly events would spiral into a nationwide scandal, misjudged the speed with which local politicians would seize on an Indian environmental group’s report to attack their global brands and did not respond swiftly to quell the anxieties of their customers.

...

In hindsight, Ms. Bjorhus, the Coke communications director, said she could now see how the environmental group had picked Coca-Cola as a way of attracting attention to the broader problem of pesticide contamination in Indian food products.

Sunita Narain, who heads the group, “has serious concerns about pesticides in the food chain,” Ms. Bjorhus said.

“By focusing her attention on the soft drinks industry, she gets a lot of attention.”

...

Regulators have not set standards for allowable levels of pesticides in soft drinks. Cleansing sugar of pesticide traces is difficult, and India’s groundwater is so contaminated that most food products contain some pesticide residue.

Asim Parekh, a vice president for Coca-Cola India, said his “heart sank” when he heard first heard the accusations because he knew that consumers would be easily confused. “But even terminology like P.P.B. — parts per billion — is difficult to comprehend,” he said. “This makes our job very challenging.”

So is the great NYT saying the question of whether desi colas are contaminated or not isn't as much as scientific problem but a 'weak/ faulty communication' problem on part of the cola gaints? Yes, Mr. Sinking-Heart-Parekh, we be so ignorant that we don't comprehende P.P.B and s**t; so pliss just be giving us a slew of ads (preferably engineered by PR companies that specialize in crisis management) with Bollywood stars feeding cola to their kids for breakfast instead of "doodh" fhata-fat, and we will go back to dinking dem colas, pesticides or not. ...

NYT, August 21, 2006 Fresh Princes of Mumbai, Building a Global Audience By LAURA M. HOLSON

India has a robust movie industry with none of China’s political constraints. Mr. Lynton offered to introduce the actor to Indian producers, actors and directors. And the next month Mr. Smith took his first trip to India.

Now he has a deal — to make movies there instead.

Overbrook Entertainment, the company created by Mr. Smith and his business partner, James Lassiter, announced it was working with UTV, a television and film concern run by the entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala. The two have agreed to produce two movies, neither of which will star the popular Mr. Smith.

UTV will pay the films’ costs up to a specified sum (after that amount, Overbrook has to raise the money) but the burden is on Mr. Smith and Mr. Lassiter to develop a script and hire the cast.

Will Will Smith get jiggy with Bollywood babes is the question? After Ms. Mallika -my-body-is-like-Viagara - Sherawat flashed Jackie Chan, which lady will do the same for our brotha from Bel Air, all in the name of art?




Scannings

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Scannings -1



I am restarting my reading of WSJ, and as I scan through the paper, these are some peripheral comments that I find myself mouthing:

China Looks Beyond U.S. Farmers to Satiate Its Growing Soybean Appetite Dongjin Park. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 21, 2006. pg. A.2

As personal income increases, Chinese citizens want to eat more meat, especially fish and pork. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the Chinese aquaculture industry produced 41 million tons of fish in 2004, up from 17 million tons in 1994.

Chinese farmers traditionally fed their pigs and chickens with leftover food and ground grains. The old method wasn't fit for mass production, which is why farmers are moving to soybean-based feed. Since the per-capita consumption of meat in China increased threefold in the past decade, livestock began eating all the soybeans China could produce domestically.

Propsperity = more meat = ecological disaster = isn't it high time for me to stop eating meat before I preach to the Chinese? ...

Consumers Curb Upscale Buying As Gasoline Prices, Housing Bite Justin Lahart and Amy Merrick. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 21, 2006. pg. A.1

...evidence that households earning as much as $75,000 a year are changing their habits. Survey responses among this group were more similar to those of low-income households than those of wealthy families, she says. The types of spending most likely to be chopped: fashion accessories, clothing, home decor, electronics and entertainment...

...Three-fourths of U.S. economic growth last year stemmed from increased consumer spending...

To be sure, the nascent pullback isn't affecting all retailers equally. Handbag maker Coach Inc., which bills itself as offering "accessible luxury" and prices most of its products in the $200-to- $800 range, said earnings in its most-recent quarter jumped 33%...

American version of "growth" = python eating its own tail, i.e., Starbucks, Whole Foods, Coach Bags, XBox 360? ...

De Beers Begins 'Journey' for New Diamond Style Suzanne Vranica. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 21, 2006. pg. B.3

Journey-themed necklaces, bracelets and earrings use four or more diamonds arranged in a graduated pattern from smallest to largest. Devised by Diamond Trading, working with the jewelry industry, the style is meant to symbolize how a person's love for another grows stronger over time. The ads make the connection obvious, showing pictures of Journey-designed jewelry above the tag line "With every step, love grows."...

The theme of the Journey campaign is familiar. Many of De Beers ads over the years have equated diamonds with romance -- a TV ad for a three-stone anniversary ring shows a man in London's Trafalgar Square asking his wife to marry him again -- and the latest effort is no exception. One TV spot, to air this month, shows a couple embracing after the man gives the woman a Journey necklace.

"We have to find narratives to give people reason to justify a high- priced item," Ms. Valentzas says. Diamond Trading says it is targeting a broad group of consumers with this ad effort: men and women from households that have incomes north of $75,000.

Woman who wants a diamond engagement ring = gets my axe, forever. Woman who survives this to go on the "journey" with me, and then asks for "Journey" baubles = sleeps with the fishes. ...

From the Ashes of Defeat; A Recent Court Ruling Forces Cigarette Makers to Revamp Marketing of Their Products Vanessa O'Connell. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 21, 2006. pg. B.1

From Jan. 1, cigarette makers would be banned from using terms such as "light," "low tar," "mild" and "natural" and any other adjectives that might result in the public believing a particular type of smoke might be less hazardous than other brands. In her ruling, Judge Kessler lashed out at the tobacco companies, saying they "employed highly sophisticated and expensive promotional campaigns to portray light and low-tar cigarettes as less harmful than full-flavor cigarettes in order to keep smokers from quitting."

At stake is the future of the tobacco industry's single most important product. Cigarettes with tar ratings of 15 milligrams or less -- those generally marketed as "light" or "low-tar" -- constituted 84.9% of the 367.6 billion cigarettes sold in 2003, up from 60.5% in 1991, according to a Federal Trade Commission cigarette report for 2003, the most recent available. Cigarettes with tar ratings of 3 milligrams or less made up 1% of the total in 2003.

Holy moly, 360 billion death-sticks a year! No wonder big tobacco is BIG ...

Health --- Kelly Greene. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Aug 21, 2006. pg. R.1

It's a predicament that's marring retirement for older Americans in pockets dotting the country, particularly temperate, picturesque spots like Santa Cruz that are a magnet for retirees. Finding and keeping a doctor for some patients is becoming a trial, and health-care executives and patient advocates alike are concerned that the situation will only get worse as the number of retirees grows dramatically in coming years.

"Come 2011, when the baby boomers hit 'Golden Pond,' we're just not going to have enough doctors," says David Reuben, president of the American Geriatrics Society...

Robert Kane, a geriatrician and professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health in Minneapolis, organized an advocacy group called Professionals With Personal Experience in Chronic Care. The group comprises geriatricians, gerontologists and other health-care professionals who have struggled to help their own relatives get access to appropriate medical care.

"My epiphany came around 2000 when my mother had a stroke," Dr. Kane says. "I'm a geriatrician and I have written policy books, but basically I spent three frustrating years with my sister trying to organize care for my mother. If somebody who knows as much as I do and knows as many people as I do couldn't get the system to work, what chance does anyone have?"

His advice for advocating for yourself or an older family member: "First, recognize that it may take a while to find a doctor -- and it may take even longer to find a doctor who you want. Second, you need to be proactive to make the system work. Keep a very clear record of your medications. Ask a physician when he's ordering a drug if he's aware of the other drugs you're on." In other words, "you need to become your own advocate. If you can't do that, that's where your family comes in."

Several years ago, Robert Preston, an actuary in Sarasota, Fla., was frustrated with the lack of medical and custodial attention his father, the retired chief financial officer of a large pharmaceutical company, was receiving in Florida. Expenses totaled $10,000 a month for a room in a nursing home in Venice Beach, as well as personal attendants.

Mr. Preston started thinking about pursuing care for his father in another country. He settled on Costa Rica after a friend returned from a trip there, singing the praises of the country's medical services. Eventually, Mr. Preston's father settled in a private home in Costa Rica, with a house manager, chauffeur and three attendants -- all for about $3,000 a month. Instead of being confined to a nursing home, his father attended church every Sunday, took a large group to brunch afterward, went out to dinner several times a week -- and occasionally even went on a date. (Mr. Preston flew down to see his father once a month on a four-hour flight to San Jose, rather than a three-hour flight to Florida.)

There is something very disturbing about this story; something to do with "care" for the elderly as an "industrial" task that can be outsourced to a "medical" factory (cheaper in Costa Rica too - hey desis consider this "outsourcing" business?) vs. it being a family or community based task. However, much I knock "tribal" systems for squelching "freedom" there is something to said for the safety nets they provide.




Scannings

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