Author: Curt Doolittle

  • A COACH’S JOB IS RECRUITING, RECRUITING, RECRUITING Spent the evening with a coa

    A COACH’S JOB IS RECRUITING, RECRUITING, RECRUITING

    Spent the evening with a coach of one of the big college basketball teams. (Mostly talking smack, of course.) But mostly about work, our divorces, and life. Despite the vast differences in our disciplines, it sure felt like we were in the same business: the job is recruiting talent, and giving it direction. There isn’t that much more to it.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-11 01:35:00 UTC

  • WHERE DO ENTREPRENEURS COME FROM? “Following the lives of 6,116 young people in

    WHERE DO ENTREPRENEURS COME FROM?

    “Following the lives of 6,116 young people in the 1970 British Birth Cohort from birth to age 34, we examined the role of socioeconomic background, parental role models, academic ability, social skills, and self-concepts as well as entrepreneurial intention expressed during adolescence as predictors of entrepreneurship by age 34. Entrepreneurship was defined by employment status (being self-employed and owning a business).

    For both men and women, becoming an entrepreneur was associated with social skills and entrepreneurial intentions expressed at age 16. In addition, we found gender-specific pathways. For men, becoming an entrepreneur was predicted by having a self-employed father; for women, it was predicted by their parentsโ€™ socioeconomic resources. These findings point to conjoint influences of both social structure and individual agency in shaping occupational choice and implementation.”

    – Courtesy of Tyler Cowen at MarginalRevolution.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-11 01:30:00 UTC

  • WEIGHT UPDATE Waist 32″, neck 15.5″. Lost six inches around the waist. Two in th

    WEIGHT UPDATE

    Waist 32″, neck 15.5″. Lost six inches around the waist. Two in the neck. I’m now the same size I was in college. A 16/32 trim fit shirt is perfect even with a tie. Regular cut shirts are too blousey. Getting close to a 40″ jacket. 41 is quite good. 40 in Abboud is about right. Hickley fits ok at 41. 42’s look like tents. I would love to drop five more from my tire but now muscle tone in my shoulders and abs is more important than weight loss.

    Wish I was a gym rat but home workouts and yard work were always better.

    My friends Andy and Todd are looking great too. I’m glad the recession applies to waistlines. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-10 22:06:00 UTC

  • Had to miss the space conference on the isle of man this weekend. Sadly. Best wi

    Had to miss the space conference on the isle of man this weekend. Sadly. Best wishes to my friends who could make it a success. ๐Ÿ™‚


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-10 21:49:00 UTC

  • is no “we” in USA. The USA is not a superpower country it is an empire in declin

    http://www.gallup.com/poll/155585/americans-confidence-television-news-drops-new-low.aspxThere is no “we” in USA.

    The USA is not a superpower country it is an empire in decline.

    These numbers as well as the loss of confidence in the government are reflections of the loss of common purpose, and the insufficiency of shared reality.

    There is no “we”.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-10 18:07:00 UTC

  • Political Strategy: What Is Being Done To Prevent The Development Of A “cold War” Between China And The Us In The Coming Years?

    The USA is attempting to allow China to peacefully rise by use of commercial power rather than military power. Commerce creates consumption which addicts citizens to consumerism, which then makes it difficult for governments to jeopardize without insurrection.  That is the only strategy. The USA prefers the world consist of good commercial citizens.

    The fundamental problem though, is that China is a populous and very poor country that also contains conquered and rebellious territories, open to insurrection, and the wealthy coasts can be militarily devastated, and driven to starvation by blockading access to the South China Sea. The Chinese are quite aware of this vulnerability, plus they have a ‘chip’ on their shoulders from both british conquest, the failure of Marxism, and extended poverty, and the impact of those events upon the cultural mythology of Chinese superiority as the center of the world.

    Furthermore, their rise is complicated by the fact that they do not subscribe to the western moral code that currently is enforced by the United States on world trade — a code we take for granted but is antithetical to the Chinese.  (We resolve conflicts quickly and rely upon honesty and they wait for opportunity using deception. This difference in ethics pervades both cultures.)

    The USA currently polices the world system of trade (largely the seas) because it took over the British naval bases at the end of the world wars. And petrodollars allow us to fund that policing. We sell dollars to other countries as debt, which they then use to buy oil, and then we inflate away the debt. This is how we ‘tax’ the developed world for our expensive military services. 

    However, this system of abstract taxation which is breaking down, and the USA can no longer count on those advantages because of demographic reasons, competitive reasons due to internationalization of labor and technology, and monetary reasons due to the use of other currencies as petroleum and reserve currencies. 

    General consensus among strategic thinkers is that the USA’s power will decline slowly and that Chinese rise will be moderated at some near point by simple economic pressures.  The more radical thinkers suggest that most empires like the USA do not decline slowly, but very rapidly over a period of less than 50 years, and that the standard of living of the average american will be so significantly affected by the loss in purchasing power, that existing political tensions will be drastically exacerbated, sufficiently so that we will have our own problems of insurrection.

    In other words, both countries are more vulnerable to internal pressures due to China’s rise than they are to conflict with one another.  The alternative school of thought suggests that when empires succumb to internal conflict, then they exaggerate external threats in order to pressure the citizens to stay united (see Iran for example).  So that once the states and china experience internal pressures they will conduct a war over it.  I tend to think this is unlikely because the USA’s citizens will have internalized it’s decline by that time.

    As I understand it, that is the current thinking in as short a summary as I can place it.

    https://www.quora.com/Political-Strategy-What-is-being-done-to-prevent-the-development-of-a-cold-war-between-China-and-the-US-in-the-coming-years

  • What Policies Have Helped The U.s. Come Out Of Recession While Europe Has Failed To Do So?

    In simplest terms, none.  No policies made the difference. The reason the US began (and has now stopped) coming out of recession, and europe has continued to decline, is that in europe, the protestant germanic states are unwilling to subsidize the catholic mediterranean states.  In the USA, this same  anti-subsidy conflict is conducted along racial and urban rather than national lines. The difference is, that in the USA, we are powerless to stop that subsidy because the monetary and fiscal power is centralized, and the government can inflate away debt across all people, whereas in europe the EU cannot inflate debt away because the monetary (central) and fiscal power (local) is separated.  However, there is very little difference in practice. In the States we are a polarized society, and in Europe they are a polarized society.  So, the difference in the duration of the recessions is structural, not one of policy.  This is why the left economists favor centralization and the right economists favor breakup of the eurozone by german exit: its a moral conflict.

    https://www.quora.com/What-policies-have-helped-the-U-S-come-out-of-recession-while-Europe-has-failed-to-do-so

  • people are almost always members of the middle class who build businesses and ma

    http://business.time.com/2012/07/05/how-the-rich-got-rich/Wealthy people are almost always members of the middle class who build businesses and make windfalls from capital gains when they sell all or part of them.

    Very few people are at the top for more than one or two years. Those that are, are insignificant outliers.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-05 14:09:00 UTC

  • AQUANTIVE BUST At the time, I viewed it as an act of executive desperation. It w

    http://business.time.com/2012/07/03/microsoft-writes-off-most-of-its-2007-6-3b-ad-business-bet/MICROSOFT’S AQUANTIVE BUST

    At the time, I viewed it as an act of executive desperation. It was.


    Source date (UTC): 2012-07-05 05:38:00 UTC

  • How Corrupt Is The U.s. Government?

    Government by it’s nature, because it is a monopoly, and concentrates capital, draws corruption.  In the USA, corruption tends to be systemic rather than individual. Meaning that the system encourages politicians to work for special interests, and government workers to collect extraordinary benefits – on avearage have retirement benefits equivalent to something like 750K in savings, compared to 50K for the average citizen — plus they cannot be fired and unlike the rest of us are insulated from market pressures.  Monetary corruption, meaning, the privatization of public funds or goods, in exchange for favors, is actually amazingly rare in the USA.  Almost all of it is systemic.

    Americans are somewhat unique in their belief that it is possible to construct virtuous politicians and insert them into a system that encourages systemic corruption. We attempt to change the human to fit the system, rather than change the system to fit human nature.

    https://www.quora.com/How-corrupt-is-the-U-S-Government