Give Thanks

Posted On 27 November, 2008

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Thanksgiving is drawing a long year to a close, and for that I am thankful.

I’m thankful for a wife who has been amazingly supportive and understanding.

I’m thankful for kids who amaze me every day.

I’m thankful for the way things are working out professionally.

I’m thankful for a church, who has stuck together despite more than one of us having a season of struggles.

I’m thankful for friends and the opportunity to be a kid again.

I’m thankful for the support and love of families who are near.

I’m thankful for $12, two chocolate chip cookies and a cup of hot coffee.

Thanksgiving Day Massacre

Happy Turkey Day to all my fellow D&D’ers out there! Our regular Wednesday campaign was on hiatus, but those of us who could gather did gather. We used the new Beta Character Builder to roll up some 3rd level characters, and then we fought as many turkatrice’s as we could. Three of us made it through nine before we fell asleep on the couch.

What’s a turkatrice? Look no further:

4E D&D Turkatrice Stat Block

4E D&D Turkatrice Stat Block

Turkatrice Tactics

Turkatrices fight to survive. They swarm around their enemies gaining combat advantage when possible. If a turkatrice is reduced to fewer than 10 hit points, it uses fly away to flee the battle and live until the next holiday season.

Turkatrice Lore

A character knows the following information with a successful Nature check.

DC 15: Turkatrices are very tasty when slow roasted and served with gravy.

DC 20: Too much turkatrice can cuase you to feel sluggish and slow.

Demand-Side Economics

Posted On 12 November, 2008

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First, understand that the main problem right now is not the supply of credit. Yes, Wall Street is paralyzed at the moment because the bursting of the housing and other asset bubbles means that lenders are fearful that creditors won’t repay loans. But even if credit were flowing, those loans wouldn’t save jobs. Businesses want to borrow now only to remain solvent and keep their creditors at bay. If they fail to do so, and creditors push them into reorganization under bankruptcy, they’ll cut their payrolls, to be sure. But they’re already cutting their payrolls. It’s far from clear they’d cut more jobs under bankruptcy reorganization than they’re already cutting under pressure to avoid bankruptcy and remain solvent.

This means bailing out Wall Street or the auto industry or the insurance industry or the housing industry may at most help satisfy creditors for a time and put off the day of reckoning, but industry bailouts won’t reverse the downward cycle of job losses.

The real problem is on the demand side of the economy.

via Robert Reich’s Blog: The Mini Depression and the Maximum-Strength Remedy