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Alternative Health & Pfizer Bites It

From the “Americans aren’t so stupid after all and may be starting to wake up”

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department.

Healthnews.com reports “American consumers spent an estimated $34 billion on alternative medicine in 2007. In fact, alternative medicine accounts for over 11 percent of out-of-pocket spending on health care in the United States. “

Alternative medicine is anything not controlled by the pharmaceutical mafia which protects hundreds of billions of dollars in profits every year by manipulating and exploiting groups such as senior citizens into becoming drug addicts courtesy of your local doctor and the mainstream medical establishment, which includes the FDA, your friendly local government strong-arm men.

Think yoga, biofeedback, diets, nutritional and fitness coaching, chiropracters, naturopathy, hypnosis, vitamin supplements, herbs, natural and organic foods, a brain that actually functions part of the time, meditation, tai chi, gardening, long walks and prayer to the holy godfather in the sky. You create your reality with your thoughts, so think positively.

It’s great to see Americans finally waking up to the incredible health benefits of alternative health therapies, particularly the anti-aging supplements that can extend lifespan. Over 1/3 of all Americans are now using some form of alternative medicine, [...]

Depressions: Recessions: Money Supply:

A happy shout out to economic historian Price Fishback for reminding us in a piece published in the New York Times that, as bad as things may now seem in the economy, they are nowhere near as bad as during the great depression of the 1930′s in the US.

He begins by saying that economic cycles and downturns are a natural part of the economic cycle [and "nature's" cycle], but that we may be more sensitive to them now because  the big downturns have been coming less frequently since the 1980′s. In other words, we may have gotten a little spoiled and less used to the hardships of the normal business cycle [this lag in business cycles may have something to do with the increasingly loose monetary policy of the last several decades, which climaxed during the reign of "Bubbles" Greenspan].

And according to the theories of Soviet economist Nikolai Kondratiev on the nature of economic supercycles, we are basically due for another big downturn in the world economy. In other words, this is all part of the divine plan and this too shall pass.

But comparison with the Great Depression just doesn’t hold up. Yes the stock market is [...]

Toyota and the Financial Crisis: Democracy, China or Nietzsche?

In a stunning example of the plight of the world economy, the Toyota Motor Company – which passed General Motors in 2008 for the record of most vehicles sold worldwide – posted an annual loss of 436.9 billion yen, or $4.4 billion dollars for the fiscal year ending March 2009. This was Toyota’s first annual net loss since the good old days of 1950.

How much did things cost in 1950? According to http://www.thepeoplehistory.com/1950.html,

The yearly inflation rate in the USA was 1.09% A new house averaged $8,450.00 Average wages per year: $3,210.00 Cost of a gallon of Gas: 18 cents Average Cost of a new car: $1,510.00 Stromburg black and white television: $249.95 Ball point pen: $0.25 Samsonite case: $25.00 Clock radio: $59.95

To make matters worse, Toyota is predicting it will lose another 550 billion yen or $5.5 billion  dollars for the fiscal year ending March 2010, while global sales drop by almost 15%.

It’s interesting to note that in 1950 the average cost of a new house in the US was about 2 1/2 times the average wage. In 2007, the average wage in the US was about $40,000 and the average cost of a new house [...]

To Be Clear Or Not To Be

In the article Panel Warns U.S. on Cyberwar Plans in the April 29th edition of The New York Times, John Markoff and Thom Shanker reveal that a report recently issued by the National Academy of Sciences is “the first major effort to look at the military use of computer technologies as weapons.” This despite the fact that “The potential use of such technologies offensively has been widely discussed in recent years, and disruptions of communications systems and Web sites have become a standard occurrence in both political and military conflicts since 2000.”

If cyberwar has been a major issue and regularly occuring threat to the US for about 20 years, why are our non-military government agencies responsible for oversight only now getting around to studying it? Isn’t 20 years a little late? Shouldn’t we have been conducting major studies on this issue for, say, at least 15 years, give or take a decade?

And when our government does finally get around to analyzing this issue – better late than never – is it too much to expect that they discuss it with some intelligence, not to mention imagination? For example, The Times reports the study as concluding that “The United [...]