blog

  • Started
  • Last post
  • 75,848 Responses
  • ********
    0

    unresolved thing in blog:
    where is lela
    pics of the denmarkian neighbor
    chossy's edinburgh poem cycle
    emu's date with KATY PERRY
    and...

    • updates to sureshots blog
      and
      ********
    • who the fuck is killthefishGreedo
    • mean level of apathy among north american gray squirrel populationkelpie
    • where's gorbie?Greedo
  • killthefish0

    There was a warm wind with the high tide
    On the south of the hill.
    When a young girl went a-walking
    And I followed with a will.
    ``good day to you, my fine young lady
    With your lips so sweetly full.
    May I help you comb your long hair ---
    Sweep it from that brow so cool? ’’

    Up, ride with the kelpie.
    I’ll steal your soul to the deep.
    If you don’t ride with me while the devil’s free
    I’ll ride with somebody else.

    Well I’m a man when I’m feeling
    The urge to step ashore.
    So I may charm you --- not alarm you.
    Tell you all fine things, and more.
    Up, ride with the kelpie.
    I’ll steal your soul to the deep.
    If you don’t ride with me while the devil’s free
    I’ll ride with somebody else.

    Say goodbye to all your dear kin ---
    For they hate to see you go
    In your young prime, to this place of mine
    In the still loch far below.
    Up, ride with the kelpie.
    I’ll steal your soul to the deep.
    If you don’t ride with me while the devil’s free
    I’ll ride with somebody else.

    (i.anderson)

    • have a good weekend, kelpie.killthefish
    • lutes and flutes
      ********
  • kelpie0

    ^ yeah, fighting them off with a fucking stick these days

  • hallelujah0

    I'm Creedence Clearwater Wright
    best friend of Elodie Eye
    we've been tight since Percy Elementary
    class of 1985
    we moved together out to Philly after college
    took a two bedroom at South & 9th
    I sold my violin so we could have it easy
    El got her grandmother's money when she died

    we laughed like we were queens
    & split our ballgowns at the seams
    & every single time I'd dream
    it was only El & me
    but then she slipped away from me
    she met a boy from New Jersey
    & they fell fast in love of course
    I swear it felt like a divorce

    this September I'll be 26 years old
    & El's the only one besides my dad
    who's ever said I love you Creedence

    took got a job downtown
    it's an hour on the bus each way
    typing letters for a lawyer in a bad toupee
    it's dumb I know but it pays okay

    & did I mention I moved out
    I got my own place off of South
    & I've been living hand to mouth
    for going on a year by now
    & yes I still see El around
    it's different but I can't say how
    she cut her hair it's back to brown
    she's living with her boyfriend now

    & since September I've been 26 years old
    she's still the only one besides my dad
    who's ever said I love you Creedence

  • ********
    0

    " don't see why this song can't be about the loss of a friend as well as a "love lost song". To me the two aren't mutually exclusive concepts.

    Also, I think it's dangerous to start talking in terms of "this is what the artist meant". Surely the name of this site, "Songmeanings", implies some sort of personal interpretation. The song can mean different things to different people.

    I also saw this performed live, and the explanation Owen gave didn't make me think any less that it could be interpreted as a "love lost song". But it is undoubtedly (and simultaneously, at least to me) a "lost friendship" song. "

  • ********
    0

    wait there's more

  • ********
    0

    "Thanks Random Monkey.

    I'm certainly not telling people what to believe, or asserting an "absolute" meaning. I'm just saying what I think. I just don't happen to see any relation to CCR in this song. There are no references to any of their songs, or band members. The only common point seems to be his name, which his parents are responsible for giving him.

    But of course you are entitled to your opinion too :-) "

  • ********
    0

    My take is also that Creedence is a girl.
    Ashworth has written a few songs from the perspective of a female, New Years Kiss, Scattered Pearls to name two.
    I'd be interested to hear Jenny Herbinson sing this one, I would think it's only that Owen's voice is, as described above, somewhat gruff, that makes the subject more likely to be a guy.
    For me, proposals summed it up, it's about two female friends growing up, and growing apart.
    As for the love they shared, it's obvious to me the love is platonic. I've lost friends to outside relationships and there is a gap in your life when those mates are not around.
    Just Owen Ashworth sums it up better that I ever though of it: It feels like a divorce.
    It was never a real marriage, but the feeling of missing a friend being around is somewhat similar.

  • hallelujah0

    I find his takes on mid-twenties life quite touching

  • neue75_bold0

    sometimes I don't wake up in the middle of the night...

  • Jaline0

    Ack! I have work to do, but I will come back later to respond to people. Just note: I am reading everything :E

    • meh, the moment has passed...neue75_bold
    • hahaJaline
    • I'll still pick you up at 8 though...neue75_bold
    • you better respond to each and every one of those posts in your b-day thread.canuck
    • not if I get off this shot in timekelpie
    • I will, actually.Jaline
  • canuck0

    Any word on Thompy yet?

  • kelpie0

    yeah jaline, you didn't even make me a birthday thread and now you think you're too cool to reply to the birthday wishes I charitable extended you, even though you had snubbed me? wtf girl?

    • ESE?kelpie
    • when was yours? i would start one be i'm afraid i'm not Jaline enough7point34
    • you're more than enough jaline for me, my little airplane...Greedo
    • ... Propeller to face?
      ********
    • Well, if you were more of a whore about your birthday, maybe I would've!Jaline
  • canuck0

    I need a hair cut, yo.

    • darling don't you go and cut your hair...neue75_bold
    • I have a wedding to attend on Sunday.canuck
    • I got mines cut yesterday!
      Actually, going to get it cut some more today/ tomorrow.
      ********
    • I like the way this one guy shapes me up, but I like the way this girl cuts my actual hair. I'd say I'm complicated.
      ********
    • But I think it's more neurotic than anything.
      ********
  • neue75_bold0

    well, I've gotta head off to the real g/f's second birthday dinner...

  • hallelujah0

    I'd hoped today would get less boring, but it hasn't. I'm at a loss

    • Time to take up a new hobby. Maybe building model airplanes.canuck
    • even fffound is excruciatingly boring. but then that's not unusualhallelujah
    • I'm dyin ova heahhallelujah
    • help me.hallelujah
  • canuck0

    I was able to dig up enough change for a Tea at Tims.

  • canuck0

  • hallelujah0

    Housing

    Housing's basic problem is simple. Supply is at sky-high levels while demand is at low levels. As a result, prices are dropping as evidenced by the drop in the Case Shiller home price index. This has led to one third of recent homes sales leading to a loss for the seller (For a more complete explanation, see this story from my blog). The question becomes what can be done to deal with this situation?

    The answer is there is little the government can do directly. Remember the central issue is massive oversupply of housing. Unless the government wants to actually start buying properties outright or demolishing houses through its eminent domain powers to lower supply there isn't much to be done directly.

    However, there is an important indirect policy the government can undertake - making it far easier to rework mortgages that are underwater (where the mortgage is worth more than the home price). I would suggest three different policy ideas. First, create some kind of tax incentive beyond the policies in the current tax code to encourage private compliance with these goals. For example - a tax credit or some kind of bonus deduction would help to ease the losses faced by the financial sector when the financial institution directly owns the mortgage. Second, allow bankruptcy judges to rewrite mortgages. We're going to see a big increase in bankruptcy over the next year or so. Housing costs will play a fairly large part in that. Allowing judges the discretion to rework mortgage payments would ease some of the pain.

    Finally, something has to be done to allow a rewriting of mortgages that have been securitized. Here's the basic problem. Before securitization the lender actually held the loan. For example, when the borrower went to the bank to get a 30 year loan the bank would own the loan for 30 years. This would make reworking the loan that much easier. Now the problem is much more complicated because the original lender no longer owns the loan. Instead, the lender sold the loan to an investment bank who packages the loan as part of a mortgage backed bond which in turn is sold to large institutional investors. Some type of mechanism needs to be created to help with this situation (if it's possible).

    The General Economic Slump

    When the recession started is debatable. I have argued it started in the 1Q of 2008. I have seen others argue it started in the 4Q of 2007. Irregardless of when it started there can be little doubt we are currently in a recession. That means overall growth is declining. Starting in the 4Q of 2007, the growth rate from the previous quarter was -.2%, .9%, 2.8% and -.3%. The 2.8% growth rate in the second quarter of 2008 was a statistical aberration. Real growth without the import price "inflator" was a decline of 1.3%.

    So, the economy is clearly contracting now. This implies government stimulus would help to alleviate the slowdown. Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich explained the situation thusly:

    Introductory economic courses explain that aggregate demand is made up of four things, expressed as C+I+G+exports. C is consumers. Consumers are cutting back on everything other than necessities. Because their spending accounts for 70 percent of the nation's economic activity and is the flywheel for the rest of the economy, the precipitous drop in consumer spending is causing the rest of the economy to shut down.

    I is investment. Absent consumer spending, businesses are not going to invest.

    Exports won't help much because the rest of the world is sliding into deep recession, too. (And as foreigners -- as well as Americans -- put their savings in dollars for safe keeping, the value of the dollar will likely continue to rise relative to other currencies. That, in turn, makes everything we might sell to the rest of the world more expensive.)

    \That leaves G, which, of course, is government. Government is the spender of last resort. Government spending lifted America out of the Great Depression. It may be the only instrument we have for lifting America out of the Mini Depression. Even Fed Chair Ben Bernanke is now calling for a sizable government stimulus. He knows that monetary policy won't work if there's inadequate demand.

    Anyone who is familiar with the way the BEA reports GDP growth will be familiar with the above mentioned format.

    So, we have the government spending to help minimize the effect of the slowdown. The question now becomes how much. Paul Krugman offered this analysis:

    Right now, we're at 6.5% unemployment and a 3% output gap - but those numbers are heading higher fast. Goldman predicts 8.5% unemployment, meaning a 7% output gap. That sounds reasonable to me.

    So we need a fiscal stimulus big enough to close a 7% output gap. Remember, if the stimulus is too big, it does much less harm than if it's too small. What's the multiplier? Better, we hope, than on the early-2008 package. But you'd be hard pressed to argue for an overall multiplier as high as 2.
    When I put all this together, I conclude that the stimulus package should be at least 4% of GDP, or $600 billion.

    Here's where the plan runs into a big problem. Bush is leaving Obama a fiscal disaster. Total US debt has increased from $5.8 trillion in 2001 to $10.6 trillion today. From a debt to GDP ratio the increase has been from roughly 57% to roughly 72%. These increases indicate that no one in Washington has been able to make any tough choices for the last 8 years. As a result the federal finances are now in terrible shape.

    The central problem is interest rates on the debt. The price of a bond and the bond's interest rate are inversely related: as prices drop the interest rate on the bond increases. The Treasury is already issuing tons of debt to pay for the financial bail-out. As a result traders are expecting prices to decline and interest rates on government debt to increase:

    ``The No. 1 reason is supply,'' said Jason Brady, a survey participant and managing director at Santa Fe, New Mexico-based Thornburg Investment Management, which oversees $4 billion in fixed income assets. ``You have Fed and Treasury actions which are supporting credit markets and causing a huge amount of issuance.''
    The U.S. is boosting debt sales to fund such programs as the Treasury's $700 billion bank bailout and the Federal Reserve's purchases of commercial paper to thaw credit markets. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke has made unprecedented use of the central bank's powers as lender of last resort, unlike his predecessor, Alan Greenspan, who relied on interest- rate cuts to stabilize turbulent markets. President-elect Barack Obama called on Congress Nov. 7 to pass economic-stimulus legislation.

    Quarterly Borrowing

    Last week the Treasury Department estimated that it will need to borrow $550 billion this quarter, more than triple an earlier forecast. New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said Oct. 29 the government's requirement this fiscal year that started Oct. 1 will almost double to $2 trillion.
    The federal budget deficit may climb 58 percent to $687.5 billion for fiscal 2009 as U.S. debt swells and the slowing economy crimps tax receipts, according to a survey by the Securities Industry and
    Financial Markets Association of its members released Oct. 31.

    Expectations that yields on 10-year U.S. notes will rise increased to 54.08 in November after reaching a seven-month low of 48.91 in October, according to the Bloomberg survey. The measure is a diffusion index, meaning a reading above 50 indicates that participants expect bonds to weaken and yields to go up.

    These are hardly alarming interest rates. 5.40% of interest on a 10-year debt is still very reasonable. However, it's important to remember that issuing all of this debt will have consequences. Some of which would be extremely unpleasant:

    "The U.S. might really have to look at a default on the bankruptcy reorganization of the present financial system" and the bankruptcy of the government is not out of the realm of possibility, Hennecke said.

    "In the United States there is already a funding crisis, and they will have to sell a lot more bonds next year to fund the bailout packages that have already been signed off," Hennecke told CNBC.

    So, so help solve some of the basic problems of the economy the US will have to increase spending in a big way. For someone like myself who has been continually harping on the debt this is an extremely difficult policy call. I don't like deficit spending in any way at any time. It is an extremely dangerous precedent to set. However, there are times when it is required. And now is such a time. Simply put without the cushion provided by a massive injection of government spending we are in serious trouble - as in a contraction the likes of which we haven't seen since the early 1980s and probably before.

    However, in doing so we are walking on extremely slippery policy ground. We have not come close to balancing the budget in over 8 years. As a result the debt/GDP has continually increased. Now -- at a time when it would be great to spend without having to worry about things like a dollar collapse, a loss of our AAA rating or a spike in interest rates -- such an action will in fact increase the possibility of that happening. Simply put there are no good choices right now. Do nothing and risk an extremely painful recession. Do something and place the soundness of the US government's finance sin jeopardy. It's not a pretty set of choices.

  • hallelujah0

    don't make me paste more shit

    • And let's face it ... it's all shit. Everything is shit. Just one big shit sandwich.
      ********
    • (But ... what's the bread then, that houses the shit?)
      ********
    • MORE SHIT!
      ********
    • this sandwich's got spunk!7point34
    • blog is the breadhallelujah