College Degree Does Not Always Equal A Better Life

July 17, 2008 – 11:50 pm

The Declining Value Of Your College Degree

A four-year college degree, seen for generations as a ticket to a better life, is no longer enough to guarantee a steadily rising paycheck.

Just ask Bea Dewing. After she earned a bachelor’s degree — her second — in computer science from Maryland’s Frostburg State University in 1986, she enjoyed almost unbroken advances in wages, eventually earning $89,000 a year as a data modeler for Sprint Corp. in Lawrence, Kan. Then, in 2002, Sprint laid her off.

College-educated workers are more plentiful, more commoditized and more subject to the downsizings that used to be the purview of blue-collar workers only. What employers want from workers nowadays is more narrow, more abstract and less easily learned in college.

To be sure, the average American with a college diploma still earns about 75% more than a worker with a high-school diploma and is less likely to be unemployed. Yet while that so-called college premium is up from 40% in 1979, it is little changed from 2001, according to data compiled by Jared Bernstein of the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal Washington think tank.

Most statistics he and other economists use don’t track individual workers over time, but compare annual snapshots of the work force. That said, this trend doesn’t appear due to an influx of lower-paid young workers or falling starting salaries; Mr. Bernstein says when differences in age, race, marital status and place of residence are accounted for, the trend remains the same.

A variety of economic forces are at work here. Globalization and technology have altered the types of skills that earn workers a premium wage; in many cases, those skills aren’t learned in college classrooms. And compared with previous generations, today’s college graduates are far more likely to be competing against educated immigrants and educated workers employed overseas.

The issue isn’t a lack of economic growth, which was solid for most of the 2000s. Rather, it’s that the fruits of growth are flowing largely to "a relatively small group of people who have a particular set of skills and assets that lots of other people don’t," says Mr. Bernstein. And that "doesn’t necessarily have that much to do with your education." In short, a college degree is often necessary, but not sufficient, to get a paycheck that beats inflation.

Economists chiefly cite globalization and technology, which have prompted employers to put the highest value on abstract skills possessed by a relatively small group, for this state of affairs. Harvard University economists Lawrence Katz and Claudia Goldin argue that in the 1990s, it became easier for firms to do overseas, or with computers at home, the work once done by "lower-end college graduates in middle management and certain professional positions." This depressed these workers’ wages, but made college graduates whose work was more abstract and creative more productive, driving their salaries up.

I do know some people with college degrees that have horrible low paying jobs. A global economy makes it extremely hard for the average person to compete. There are plenty of foreign workers that are able to do the same job as an American for less money and will in most cases do a better job. Americans will have to realize that in some cases they will need to work for less money or be unemployed.

McCain Does Not Use Computers

July 17, 2008 – 11:09 pm

John McCain Can’t Read This Column

John McCain, the oldest presidential candidate this nation has ever had, has now proven, by his own admission, that he’s not tech savvy enough to run this country.

I hate ageism. I really do. Assumptions made about people because of their age (young or old) drive me nuts, especially as I move firmly into middle age, a time in life where expectations are lowered and opportunities can wither.

McCain recently admitted to The New York Times that he currently has other people go online to get him the information he needs, adding that he’s working on mastering the technology. According to the Times, McCain uses "his wife, and aides like Mark Salter, a senior adviser, and Brooke Buchanan, his press secretary, to get him online." McCain actually said that these people "go on for me."

Then the clincher from McCain: "I don’t e-mail. I’ve never felt the particular need to e-mail."

I guess this means he doesn’t even read his own campaign’s e-mail newsletter. At the very least, he doesn’t write any of it on a computer.

What a bunch of hogwash. The man’s been in Congress for well over 25 years, and Internet policy has been on the agenda for at least a decade. During that time, he’s voted on over a dozen different pieces of technology legislation. What the hell was he waiting for? I’ve always appreciated McCain’s wit, straight talk, and integrity, but this is embarrassing. How can anyone hope to lead in the 21st century without a deep understanding of technology and the myriad issues that attend

A very big reason, in my opinion, to not vote for McCain (among a lot of other reasons). How can you lead the last superpower without being able to use a computer. The fact that he has people do this for him is ridiculous. How can you stand to be so ignorant to technology and then on top of that not even try to learn how to use it.

Supercomputer That Is As Fast As Your Brain

July 12, 2008 – 11:31 pm

Supercomputer Mimics Brain Function, Sets Speed Record

The IBM & Los Alamos Roadrunner supercomputer might be as fast as your brain.

Not even a week after the new Roadrunner supercomputer was juiced up and put to work, scientists are hard at work trying to push the machine to its limits. Housed at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, the primary goal of the supercomputer is to model the safety of the United States’ aging nuclear weapons stockpile. At over a certified petaflop, the machine renders calculations in a day that would take every person on Earth a calculator and 46 years to accomplish.

In about ten years or so you will be able to buy a computer as fast as or faster than your brain.

Two More Financials About To Bite The Dust

July 10, 2008 – 11:44 pm

freddiemac Fannie, Freddie sink on government rescue fears

Fears that the government will be forced to rescue Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could well become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Shares of the government-chartered mortgage finance giants plummeted Thursday and are trading at levels last seen in the early 1990s. If the prices don’t recover, it will be harder for the two companies to raise more money through stock sales to compensate for losses from the housing bust. Investors are afraid their stakes will vanish if the government is forced to rescue the companies.

"The government has to step in and do something," said Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. analyst Paul Miller.

Freddie Mac shares fell $2.26 or 22 percent, to $8, after sinking as low as $6.75 earlier in the day. Shares of Fannie Mae fell $2.11, or 13.8 percent, to $13.20, after earlier falling to $11.70.

fannie mae Testifying on Capitol Hill, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sought to calm investor jitters about the financial health of Fannie and Freddie, while urging Congress to give them new regulatory tools to better protect the country from economic and financial havoc if a major Wall Street firm were to fail.

Washington-based Fannie Mae raised $7.4 billion in May to fortify its balance sheet. McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac plans to raise $5.5 billion, but has been waiting to initiate the offerings because its stock is not yet registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Congress created Fannie in 1938 and Freddie in 1970 to keep money flowing into the home-loan market by buying up mortgages and bundling them into securities for sale to investors worldwide — thereby making home ownership affordable for low- and middle-income Americans.

Today the companies hold or guarantee around $5.3 trillion in home-loan debt, though under a 1992 law they are required to hold only a fraction of what is mandated for commercial banks as a financial cushion against risk.

I was watching CNBC as the Bernanke and Paulson where testifying and you could see the trades on the stock ticker of investors selling off huge amounts of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae stock. I don’t like the government bailing out these banks because of their risk taking and the fed should let them go under. Why should the taxpayers float the bill for someone’s greed? In the case of Bear Stearns the fed did not have a choice because our economy would have collapsed and we would be worse off if the fed didn’t do what they did. Hopefully Congress can give the fed more power to prevent this from happening and not postpone it to long because it is an election year.

Iran Doctors Missile Photo

July 10, 2008 – 11:28 pm

0709-lede-IRAN In an Iranian Image, a Missile Too Many

As news spread across the world of Iran’s provocative missile tests, so did an image of four missiles heading skyward in unison. Unfortunately, it appeared to contain one too many missiles, a point that had not emerged before the photo was used on the front pages of The Los Angeles Times, The Financial Times, The Chicago Tribune and several other newspapers as well as on BBC News, MSNBC, Yahoo! News, NYTimes.com and many other major news Web sites.

Agence France-Presse said that it obtained the image from the Web site of Sepah News, the media arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, on Wednesday. But there was no sign of it there later in the day. Today, The Associated Press distributed what appeared to be a nearly identical photo from the same source, but without the fourth missile.

As the above illustration shows, the second missile from the right appears to be the sum of two other missiles in the image. The contours of the billowing smoke match perfectly near the ground, as well in the immediate wake of the missile. Only a small black dot in the reddish area of exhaust seems to differ from the missile to its left, though there are also some slight variations in the color of the smoke and the sky.

nuke4Does Iran’s state media use Photoshop? The charge has been leveled before. So far, though, it can’t be said with any certainty whether there is any official Iranian involvement in this instance. Sepah apparently published the three-missile version of the image today without further explanation.

For its part, Agence France-Presse retracted its four-missile version this morning, saying that the image was “apparently digitally altered” by Iranian state media. The fourth missile “has apparently been added in digital retouch to cover a grounded missile that may have failed during the test,” the agency said. Later, it published an article quoting several experts backing that argument.

I don’t understand why the Iranians want to develop their own nuclear weapon technology. They could simply buy or steal a Russian bomb or buy scientists to make a bomb. They are just wasting money because Israel and the United States won’t let them get the bomb. Israel will definitely destroy Iran’s nuclear program if they keep this up. But I think this is simply just a cry for attention and to get the larger countries to listen to them (like North Korea).

‘Black Hole’ Is A Racist Term

July 10, 2008 – 11:13 pm

black hole Dallas County officials spar over ‘black hole’ comment

A special meeting about Dallas County traffic tickets turned tense and bizarre this afternoon.

County commissioners were discussing problems with the central collections office that is used to process traffic ticket payments and handle other paperwork normally done by the JP Courts.

Commissioner Kenneth Mayfield, who is white, said it seemed that central collections "has become a black hole" because paperwork reportedly has become lost in the office.

Commissioner John Wiley Price, who is black, interrupted him with a loud "Excuse me!" He then corrected his colleague, saying the office has become a "white hole."

That prompted Judge Thomas Jones, who is black, to demand an apology from Mayfield for his racially insensitive analogy.

Mayfield shot back that it was a figure of speech and a science term. A black hole, according to Webster’s, is perhaps "the invisible remains of a collapsed star, with an intense gravitational field from which neither light nor matter can escape."

I laughed when I read this. I wonder if this will catch on and no one will be allowed to talk about… well you know… black holes.

Some Top Secret Programs Should Always Remain That Way

July 9, 2008 – 11:04 pm

vx Files show US military planned nerve gas testing in Australia

There are revelations the United States military was planning to test deadly nerve gas in north eastern Australia in far north Queensland rainforest in the 1960s.
Australian Defence Department files obtained by Australian television station Channel Nine, show the US was planning to test Sarin and VX nerve gas on up to 200 Australian combat troops by aerial bombing areas around Lockhart River.
The plan never went ahead, but American survey teams inspected the proposed testing site.

Why where we even planning this? Hopefully this isn’t true because this would be insane if it was.

BMW Rumored To Sell 500 Electric Minis

July 9, 2008 – 10:47 pm

battery 500 electric Minis coming to California

Five-hundred Minis will come off the line in Oxford, England sans drivetrain. The powerless shells will be sent to Germany painted silver with contrasting yellow roofs… what, no green motif? Workers in Munich will convert the vehicles into battery electrics, and the cars will then be shipped to California where they will be offered for sale. Unofficially, that is, as BMW has yet to confirm these plans, though that just seems like a formality at this point. Therefore, we don’t have any specifications or pricing information to share just yet.

What drives me crazy is that the American automakers are not doing this at all. They are just making some crazy looking concept cars and pushing hybrids. I’m sure that Ford or GM could easily make a cheap all electric car relatively quickly and be able to tap an untapped market. But as always they are behind the curve and are almost bankrupt.

Times Square Gets Green Billboard

July 9, 2008 – 10:40 pm

Times Square Gets Solar-Powered Billboard

An electronic billboard entirely powered by the sun and wind is set to go up in Times Square in December, a company said today.

The result will reduce carbon dioxide usage by 18 tons a year, Marchetta said.

The office automation equipment and electronics supplier already has an electronic sign in Osaka, Japan, that is 100 percent solar- and wind-powered.

The first solar-powered billboard in the United States came last year when Pacific Gas and Electric erected one in San Francisco.

On days lacking enough solar or wind power, the sign will go un-illuminated, Marchetta said.

It’s pretty amazing that one sign like that could produce 18 tons of carbon dioxide. I wonder what the cost to run a sign like that costs? But it is good to see companies going green even if it is only for good public relations.

Plasma and LCD TV’s Cause Global Warming

July 3, 2008 – 4:33 pm

smokestack Plasma, LCDs blamed for accelerating global warming

A gas used in the making of flat screen televisions, nitrogen trifluoride (NF3), is being blamed for damaging the atmosphere and accelerating global warming.

Almost half of the televisions sold around the globe so far this year have been plasma or LCD TVs.

But this boom could be coming at a huge environmental cost.

The gas, widely used in the manufacture of flat screen TVs, is estimated to be 17,000 times as powerful as carbon dioxide.

Ironically, NF3 is not covered by the Kyoto protocol as it was only produced in tiny amounts when the treaty was signed in 1997.

Levels of this gas in the atmosphere have not been measured, but scientists say it is a concern and are calling for it to be included in any future emissions cutting agreement.

Pretty much everything we do is causing global warming. And for some reason it seems like corporations love to pollute the world which just doesn’t make sense to me. But until a law is passed that tells the evil corporations to stop using dangerous chemicals to make Plasma and LCD TV’s cheaper they won’t stop and will continue to destroy the planet.