Sunday, April 12, 2009

Law Enforcement Deporting U.S. Citizens

American law enforcement appears to be intentionally deporting U.S. Citizens:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/mistaken_for_illegal_i

I am too stunned right now to have any intelligent comments.

Michael Lewis on Iceland and its Financial Collapse

Why you never, ever want to tick off a great writer--especially not someone as good as Michael Lewis:

Maybe because there are so few Icelanders in the world, we know next to nothing about them. We assume they are more or less Scandinavian—a gentle people who just want everyone to have the same amount of everything. They are not. They have a feral streak in them, like a horse that’s just pretending to be broken.

Lewis castigates the entire Icelandic male race in explaining the country's financial collapse. You can read the full Vanity Fair article here.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

NYT on Law Firms Coping with the Recession

The NYT (April 4, 2009, Adam Cohen) had an article on the legal profession and the recession:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/02/opinion/02thu4.html?em

For years, law school tuition rose along with big-firm salaries. Between 1990 and 2003, the cost of private law schools rose at nearly three times the rate of consumer prices. The average graduate now leaves with more than $80,000 in debt...

More schools may follow the lead of Northwestern, the first top-tier law school to offer a two-year program.

Astute readers can see that the high debt load and the length of most legal study programs are related. The third year of law school is usually unnecessary, unless students participate mainly in clinics or other programs that provide practical experience. My third year, I worked part time in a law firm. By year three, most law students are finished with their core bar classes and are spending most of their time looking for jobs or working. How much are they paying for this privilege of looking for work, interning for free, or working part-time? About $40,000 for some private law schools.

I have always said big law firms were pyramid schemes. At some point, all pyramid schemes collapse under their own weight. You can only get so top-heavy before something gets crushed.

Reason #3745 to Be a Libertarian



This video makes my blood boil. Bruce Babbitt is an idiot. First, he talks about retaliating against an employee for creating more transparency into his department; then, he refuses to answer any questions about how his department is using taxpayer funds. Didn't we fight a war to get away from people who acted like high and holy kings?

Update: Babbitt has not been Secretary of Interior since 2001. It's an old video.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Molly Ivins on Camille Paglia

I have to confess, I like reading Camille Paglia. When it comes to sheer entertainment value, she can't be beat. Molly Ivins on Camille Paglia is hilarious:

http://www.its.caltech.edu/~erich/misc/ivins_on_paglia

One fashionable line of response to Paglia is to claim that even though she may be fundamentally off-base, she has ``flashes of brilliance.'' If so, I missed them in her oceans of swill.

Ouch. If newspapers want more readers, they need more writers like Mike Royko and Molly Ivins. May they rest in peace.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

My Call on Wells Fargo Stock Was Accurate

On February 25, 2009, Wells Fargo (WFC) stock was selling for $13.44/share. I wrote an article where I praised WFC as undervalued:

http://willworkforjustice.blogspot.com/2009/02/treasury-on-wells-fargo.html

http://seekingalpha.com/article/122533-wells-fargo-should-emerge-from-this-crisis-stronger

At the time, President Obama had said that the government would continue to do whatever it took to support banks. Recently, the government allowed banks to use more flexible accounting to value certain assets.

Today, Wells Fargo stock reported better-than-expected earnings. WFC closed at $19.61/share, a 46% increase.

Personally, I bought Wells Fargo on margin all the way down to the single digits and sold at around $14/share. If I had Warren Buffett's money, I would have held on, but I couldn't handle having so much stock on margin. As it stands, I ended up losing some money on the WFC trades because I started buying shares at around $20/share.

It remains to be seen whether my most recent prediction--that the S&P will go to around 950--will come true. At this time, I continue to believe the S&P will rise to somewhere around 920 to 950.

Government Deficits Do Matters

Fun stuff from the Peterson Institute:

http://www.owenandpayne.com/why_you_owe.php

Each American now owes 184,000 dollars because of America's deficits.