Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"In spite of its many faults, this America is a great country. Vote!"

Across The Curve sends me in two directions:

"I must confess to being thoroughly flummoxed by the price actions and once again suffer for viewing the world through the prism of a bond market operative. I am not about to list each of the recent data points which suggests that this recession is shaping up as the most serious decline in output since the Volcker engineered recession of the early 1980s. I can understand and comprehend some recovery in stocks from oversold territory but I can not fathom the follow through buying which continues as we speak.

I am convinced that this recession will be deeper than the conventional wisdom posits and the recovery when it comes will be feeble. The appetite to take risk has been fundamentally altered and changed. Old business models have been destroyed. A new and radically different model must emerge to replace it. That enterprise is akin to turning a supertanker in the ocean. The turn is not tight but is a long looping exercise.

So I suspect that when the recession ends, the return to growth will be slow and rates of growth will be less than the 3 percent to which the economy has geared itself during the years of boom and financial obfuscation."

I'm hoping he's wrong. Risk can't be held back for long, but we do need to tame bad risk.

Here he waxes eloquent:

"Racism will not be erased. Ignorant people survive and prosper. The struggle for justice and equality will continue. That struggle will never finish. It is a work in progress always. But the nomination (and possibly the election) of Senator Obama will mark an important punctuation point in American history. The chapter which recorded the struggle against institutionalized racism will close. The fight will continue in a myriad of other ways but a piece of Martin Luther King’s prophesied dream is no longer deferred but is attained.

In spite of its many faults, this America is a great country.

Vote!"

Well said.

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