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May 17, 2012

Bristol Palin Has A Bone To Pick With Obama Over G

Filed under: breaking news — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:25 pm

Image Credit: Laura Segall/Getty Images

Bristol Palin, the 21-year-old daughter of former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, has another bone to pick with President Obama.

The former ‘Dancing with the Stars’ contestant chastised the president for allowing his young daughters Sasha, 10, and Malia Cheap windows 7 key, 13, to influence his stance on gay marriage.

In an exclusive interview with ABC News on Wednesday, Obama said that his daughters “have friends whose parents are same-sex couples.”

“There have been times where Michelle and I have been sitting around the dinner table and we’re talking about their friends and their parents and Malia and Sasha, it wouldn’t dawn on them that somehow their friends’ parents would be treated differently,” Obama said. “It doesn’t make sense to them and, frankly Office Visio Key, that’s the kind of thing that prompts a change in perspective.”

In a blog posted Thursday, Palin criticized the president for consulting his “teenage daughters” — emphasizing the word “teenage” — when making “a massive change in a policy position that could affect the entire nation.”

“I guess we can be glad that Malia and Sasha aren’t younger, or perhaps today’s press conference might have been about appointing Dora the Explorer as Attorney General because of her success in stopping Swiper the Fox,” Palin wrote.

Palin then berated Obama for not being an “actual leader” and explaining to his young daughters Buy Windows 7 Product Key, whose views she suggested were inspired by “one too many episodes of Glee,” that even though their friends had same-sex parents, “that’s not a reason to change thousands of years of thinking about marriage.”

“While it’s great to listen to your kids’ ideas, there’s also a time when dads simply need to be dads,” Palin said in the blog post.

Palin broke out her skeptic pen in March as well to scold Obama over his decision to personally call Georgetown Law student Sandra Fluke, whom Rush Limbaugh called a “slut” after she testified before Congress about birth control.

“Dear President Obama, You don’t know my telephone number, but I hope your staff is busy trying to find it,” Palin wrote in her blog post.

Palin said she “figured I might be next” to get a call because of the “reprehensible things” liberal comedian Bill Maher, who donated $1 million to the pro-Obama Super PAC, has said about her and her family.

“He’s made fun of my brother because of his Down’s Syndrome. He’s said I was “f—-d so hard a baby fell out,” Palin wrote. “If Maher talked about Malia and Sasha that way, you’d return his dirty money and the Secret Service would probably have to restrain you.”

 

Phil Libin and the Refusal to Pivot Evernote Now

Filed under: breaking news — Tags: — admin @ 11:13 pm

Today, 30-million-user strong Evernote announced it had received $70 million in Series D funding from Meritech Capital, CBC Capital, T. Rowe Price Associates, Harbor Pacific Capital and Allen & Company at a valuation of Dr. Evil proportions: One billion dollars.

Unlike many other companies of this era, Evernote has known exactly what it was since the beginning — it just took some time for users and investors to catch on.

A while back I interviewed Evernote CEO Phil Libin about Evernote’s steadfast strategy for both its product and business model. On the occasion of Evernote’s sky-high valuation, Libin’s experience seems particularly compelling — and unusual.

“It’s almost like if you don’t pivot three or four times you’re doing it wrong,” he joked about today’s tech start-ups.

But in fact, Evernote had the tagline “remember everything” on the first day the company was formed in 2007, and it planned a freemium payment model from the beginning, Libin said.

“We said we wanted to make an external brain for everyone,” Libin said — as he has said many times in the past five years. “The driving force was no one is really happy with biological memory.”

But a good idea and a business model weren’t enough. Libin tried to raise money in the summer of 2008, a few months after Evernote launched and before it had much traction. He had a funding deal set up, set to close the day Merrill Lynch went bust. The investors told him they’d just lost 60 percent of their value so were pulling out.

At that point Evernote had four weeks of money in the bank.

Libin looked around for other investors for a week. Some potential investors told him they would fund Evernote if the start-up switched its business model from users paying for premium features to selling advertising about users’ interests.

“They said if you’re successful, you will have the holy grail of targeted adverting because people are telling you what’s important to them,” Libin said. “We considered that very briefly but I was never comfortable with that model. I always thought it would undermine the trust. We turned that down. We’d said we’d rather shut the company down.”

Other investors suggested an enterprise product, but Libin thought that would be odd because Evernote is, by design, made for both professional and personal use. Splitting the product into two versions felt false.

With three weeks left before forced shutdown, Libin was awake at 3 am. He said he told himself, “I’m going to go into the office and act like an adult for the first time in my life” and tell the staff it’s over so the company could close down on its own terms.

Sitting at his computer thinking his company was done, Libin noticed a new email from someone he didn’t know. Turns out it was an Evernote customer from Sweden saying how much he loved the product and wondering if the company was looking for any outside investment.

“Twenty minutes later we were on a Skype call,” Libin recalls. “He wired us half a million dollars within two weeks.”

The Swedish investor has asked to remain unnamed, Libin said, describing him as a computer nerd who started and sold a company. The two men have never met face to face.

The emergency funding from the mysterious benefactor paid off. A few months of keeping the company alive delivered the data to show that Evernote’s product and freemium model were working. It was able to raise its first institutional funding from Troika Ventures (which earlier this year sold its stake to Sequoia Capital for what’s estimated to be more than $45 million).

“I think if that email had come 10 minutes later I probably wouldn’t have seen it replica watches, and I probably wouldn’t have opened an email from a name I didn’t recognize in the morning,” Libin said.

Libin believes the fact that Evernote was saved by a happy customer was a proof point, in and of itself. “The guy from Sweden might not have fallen in love if it was an advertising company,” he said.

Why was Evernote, at the brink of being shut down after barely getting started, able to brush off potential investors who wanted to change its core premise? Libin said he could think of two reasons.

First, Evernote put a ton of work into building its own analytics tools and figuring out what to measure.

“I think the most important thing for us was really having a set of metrics and measurements so we didn’t have to make any blind, panicked major turns,” Libin said. “If you can’t see where you’re flying, it’s easier to start panicking and turn the flightstick around.”

And second, Evernote is not Libin’s first company — he’d previously sold two others — so he had confidence in himself and his convictions, and he didn’t necessarily need the job.

“It was easier to say ‘no one is forcing me to do this replica watches,’” Libin said. “We don’t want to get into targeted advertising? That’s fine.”

“I think if this was my first time around I’d be a lot more eager to please the market and the investors replica watches,” he added. “Maybe that’s a luxury.”

Photo credit: @jibees for LeWeb11 Conference

Becoming Fearless Dealing With Workplace Fears

Below are tips on how you can become fearless in dealing with work-related issues. The three issues: 1. Fear of being unemployed forever, 2. Fear that gets between you and your dream job, and 3. Fear of the dreaded Monday morning return to work.

How to overcome the fear of being unemployed forever:
Avoid late nights and sleeping in.
Set your alarm and be ready to start your day by 9 a.m. This allows you to mirror that of the mainstream business world and stay connected.
Be a go-getter. Your new job is that of a marketing executive and you are the product.
Take an inventory of your strengths and list them on paper and make sure they are reflected in an updated resume and cover letter.
Compile a list of 10 or more contacts, compose an email and attach your resume. Ask them to keep you in mind for any job they might know of and also for them to pass your information on to their contacts.
Schedule your day. For instance, from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., answer emails. From 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., look at job sites. From 11 a.m. to noon, send out resumes. From noon to 1 p.m., have lunch. You get the idea.
Consider volunteering and remember to relax.

How to overcome the fear getting between you and your dream job:

Define your dream job. Be specific. For example, what would it entail? Would you be working independently or as part of a team? Would you travel or be office-bound? Do you want something that’s analytical or creative? You get the idea. Really define all aspects of it and the qualities you seek in this dream job.
Surround yourself with people who can help you achieve your dream job. These should be people who inspire, support, and encourage you. Find someone who can offer guidance and mentor you.
Don’t reinvent the wheel. Ask other people how they got to where they are. Although your path won’t be entirely the same you might gain some valuable advice from knowing how others have done it.
Interview someone who has this dream job. Find out what the person did to land the job. Ask questions that will yield valuable information. Ask not only what they love about their job and what they do on a day-to-day basis, but also what they find most challenging, what they’d most like to change about it, and any regrets they might have.
Network, network, network. Each person you meet in the industry can potentially bring you closer to your dream job, making the impossible possible.
Do an internship or shadow someone at a company that you admire.
Apply! Even if a company doesn’t list openings, inquire about where and how they might use your skills.

How to overcome the fear of the dreaded Monday morning return to work:

Take a step back and look at the big picture. What makes you anxious about returning to work? Is it based on reality or on something you imagine?

Decipher fact from imagination. Focus on what’s within your control, not what lies beyond it.

Prepare for Monday every Friday. At the end of each workweek Professional Tattoo Machines, prepare for the next by straightening up your workspace, tying up loose ends, and making a to-do list.

Relax as much as you can. When planning your weekend, don’t over schedule and certainly don’t leave stressful activities for Sunday.

Plan your Sunday according to your mood. If you ordinarily feel depressed on Sundays, then plan a fun activity such as a special dinner out or hanging out with friends. If you typically find yourself edgy, then indulge in something relaxing such as a movie or reading.

Balance your sleep patterns. If you get up at 6 a.m. during the week but sleep in on the weekends Setting Tattoo Machine, you may not be tired come bedtime on Sunday. Leave Saturday for sleeping in. On Sunday try not to deviate too far from your regular wake-up time.

Stop staring at the clock. Turn your alarm clock away from the bed so that you aren’t reminded of your approaching workday. Have confidence that it will wake you at the appropriate time.

Count your blessings. Before you go to sleep, identify three positive things about your job or day ahead. Drift off to sleep looking forward to what you like about your job rather than dreading what you don’t like.

For more by Jonathan Alpert, click here.

For more on becoming fearless Tattoo Ink Kits, click here.

Three face charges over Afghan records

Filed under: breaking news — Tags: , , — admin @ 10:41 pm

Three military personnel face disciplinary charges for falsifying documents relating to Afghans detained at the Australian-run detention facility in Tarin Kowt.

But the incidents did not relate to mistreatment, Defence Minister Stephen Smith told parliament on Thursday.

In an update on detainee management in Afghanistan, Mr Smith said another review of questioning techniques had revealed possible use of unauthorised techniques.

Australia took seriously its responsibilities for ensuring detainees were treated with dignity and respect.

Following the withdrawal of Dutch forces in August 2010, Australia took responsibility for handling all Afghans detained by Australian troops and established a detention facility in its main base at Tarin Kowt.

Initially, it only had the capability to screen prisoners.

Since February, Australia has had the capacity to interrogate prisoners Buy Tattoo Kits, with about 20 per cent of detainees undergoing interrogation.

Those assessed as posing a serious threat are passed to the US facility at Parwan, while others go to the Afghan National Directorate of Security (NDS) in Tarin Kowt.

Many are released Tattoo Kits Supply, although some have been subsequently recaptured.

Between August 1, 2010 and May 7 this year, Australian troops detained 1355 suspected insurgents with 106 going to the NDS and 70 going to Parwan.

Mr Smith said there had been 91 allegations of mistreatment against Australian personnel either at the time of capture or during subsequent detention.

So far 79 had been assessed and found to be unsubstantiated, with 12 still under consideration.

Last year the Australian Defence Force Investigative Service (ADFIS) looked into claims by an ADF member that detainee management personnel may not have complied with proper procedures.

Following the investigation and subsequent referral of a brief of evidence to the Director of Military Prosecutions, three members of the previous detainee management team were charged with disciplinary offences relating to falsification of service documents relating to detainees, Mr Smith said.

“There is no allegation or evidence to suggest that detainees were mistreated Tattoo Machine Kits,” he said.

The ADF also was reviewing questioning techniques used in the initial screening of detainees in the period 2010-11.

Defence force chief David Hurley had advised that a recent review of records from this period identified the possible use of unauthorised questioning techniques when interviewing detainees, Mr Smith said.

“The irregularities identified during the possible use of unauthorised questioning techniques are limited to inappropriate language and do not include any alleged physical mistreatment,” he said.

May 16, 2012

The Global Economy What the Next Three Years Will

Filed under: breaking news — Tags: , — admin @ 3:37 pm

Editor’s note: The following post is adapted from a document originally sent to clients of PIMCO, an investment firm led by William H. Gross and Mohamed A. El-Erian. It summarizes discussions that took place at the PIMCO 2012 Secular Forum, an annual event that brings together investment professionals from PIMCO’s 12 offices around the world with thought leaders from outside PIMCO to discuss and debate global financial trends. Here El-Erian relays their collective attempt to lay out for PIMCO’s clients what the next three years will look like in the global economy.

This year’s Secular Forum was particularly interesting and, also, very challenging. For 2 ½ days, we debated a range of issues, with lots of time spent on the familiar — such as the twin problem of too much debt and too few jobs, and the related austerity versus growth debate — but also on the less prominent but equally consequential — including the game theoretics of large debt overhangs, as well as how technology is redefining economic, political and social interactions. In the process, we iterated to findings that, we believe, are both consequential and actionable for investment strategies including … but, wait, I am trying to fast-forward a summary write-up that warrants proper introduction and context.

The Secular Forum has proven enormously important for PIMCO’s ability to deliver consistent value to you, our clients. Indeed, if we were to pick the handful of factors that have enabled us to serve you well for more than 40 years, this annual event would certainly be among them. It gathers investment professionals from PIMCO’s 12 offices around the world. Collectively, we engage in a lively debate aimed at identifying the major trends that will play out over the next three to five years (and, critically, not what should happen but, rather, what is likely to happen). Think of the outcome as providing medium-term guardrails for where and how we invest the funds that you have entrusted to us.

It is never easy to take an individual — let alone a group — out of the day-to-day routine and focus on issues that are not urgent now, but will prove both urgent and important over the next few years. To help us do so, we turn each year to thought leaders from outside PIMCO to act as catalysts and to challenge our views, thus also reducing the risk of groupthink; and again this year we were privileged to interact with terrific thinkers who brought lots of interesting ideas to the table. We also listened to our brilliant new class of MBAs and PhDs; and, once again, they provided us with valuable, fresh and provocative perspectives. And all this was mixed with quite a bit of background work and back-and-forth discussion.

Context

To provide context for our discussions, we explicitly started with our priors — the conclusions of previous Forums, adjusted for recent developments, new information and additional analysis.

A year ago, PIMCO concluded that the world would continue to exhibit multi-speed characteristics. Specifically, advanced countries would appear to cyclically recover. But, with lagging policy mindsets, growth would prove insufficient to overcome problems of unusually high (and persistent) unemployment, large budget deficits, rising debts, and worsening income and wealth inequality. For some countries with acute economic and balance sheet stress, we postulated the “virtual certainty of at least one (and probably more) sovereign debt restructurings” during our secular horizon.1

We painted a different picture for emerging economies. Because they are powered by higher growth, we argued that they would continue to close the global income and wealth gap, lifting millions more out of poverty in the process. We recognized that this would not be linear as countries confront inflationary concerns, disruptive surges in capital inflows and tricky internal transitions (including what Mike Spence, Nobel Laureate in Economics and author of the recent book on “The Next Convergence,” calls the “middle income transition”).

At the global level, we anticipated that the international monetary system would experience stress in accommodating these historic global realignments. Remember, not only would emerging economies grow faster, but they would also have an increasing and ultimately defining influence on the structural behavior of the global economy. Yet, due to deeply entrenched entitlement mindsets in advanced economies and outdated mechanisms in multilateral organizations, global governance would find it difficult to catch up with the evolving new reality, let alone get ahead of it.

This, of course, is what PIMCO had labeled the “new normal” back in early 2009 — one that spoke to delevering in advanced economies, structural imbalances, and global convergence.2 It thus portrayed, as reiterated in last year’s write-up, a post-2008 global financial crisis world that “heals only slowly and unevenly,” “transitions … in a rather messy and uncoordinated fashion,” becomes “increasingly fragmented in terms of cognitive recognition,” and in which “social cohesion is uneven.”

Our medium-term baseline was seen as being subject to two-sided risk scenarios. It could tip into a much better equilibrium if policymakers came up with three “grand bargains” — in Europe, the U.S. and China. But it could also fall victim to a more rapid and disorderly delevering.

These two scenarios were important enough for us to argue for a gradual morphing in the distribution of expected outcomes that underpins many investors’ behavior (and analytical constructs): away from the traditional bell curve that exhibits a dominant mean and thin tails (both very comforting), to a flatter distribution with much fatter tails that, in certain circumstances (Europe), could even go bimodal.

Much of what has transpired over the last 12 months is consistent with these priors. Indeed, at times it has felt as if the fast-forward button had been pressed on our secular themes.

In the run-up to the Forum, we found longer-term issues featuring more prominently in our cyclical discussions, as well as in the deliberations of the Investment Committee (which meets four times a week for two to three hour sessions). And with incrementalism dominating way too many policy reaction functions, these developments also help explain why the world/markets now face potential inflection points over the next three to five years — some probable and others possible.

Key Issues

It did not take us long last week to figure out that this would be one of the more challenging Secular Forums. After all, we were analyzing a global economy buffeted by complex realignments yet lacking proper historical precedents. Meanwhile, monetary policy is in full real-time experimentation mode, political anti-incumbency is growing, and extreme polarization is amplifying rising social tensions. And if this were not enough of a complex cocktail, let us not forget what our colleague Ramin Toloui called the disparate adherence to “alternate realities.” The resulting disagreements — which, increasingly, cover the past, present and future — further undermine any convergence to a common analysis of what ails individual countries, let alone the vision and sense of shared responsibility to solve it.

This combination results in what Jerome Schneider described as a self-reinforcing cycle of largely reactive partial responses, subsequent complacency and recurrent localized crises. The longer this persists, the greater the probability of a series of market inflection points in the next three to five years. Indeed, it should come as no surprise that both policymakers and economists are struggling with what has been oversimplified into the growth versus austerity debate. And the resulting confusion, together with a pronounced tendency for politicians to bicker and dither, has made the problems more complex and the solutions more demanding.

In such a world, we believe that it is particularly important to differentiate well between what one knows with a high degree of both foundation and conviction (the “knowns”), and where sufficient knowledge and confidence can only be built through additional data and analysis (”known unknowns”). This should be combined with enough intellectual agility to change the composition as more information become available; and also with the operational responsiveness required to evolve investment strategies accordingly.

Knowns

The knowns speak to the likely persistence of what has become a familiar combination for too many advanced economies — too little growth, too much debt, high joblessness (particularly among the young and long-term unemployed), excessive political polarization and growing calls for greater social justice.

Given current policies, none of these are likely to go away any time soon absent a major crisis and/or a big political pivot. Moreover, the adjustment processes in certain countries (with Greece being the lead example) have already been undermined by “policies that hurt but don’t work,” a phrase used by British politician Ed Miliband in a different context. As such, they risk a frightening economic, financial, political and social implosion.

This reality will continue to play out most distressingly in a few European countries where the institutional setup is already under strain. Indeed, politicians will find it increasingly difficult to reconcile what Andy Bosomworth labeled as the requirements of democracy, mutualization and conditionality – thus robbing the region of the type of mutual assurances that are critical to a cooperative orderly solution. With that, allocating balance sheet losses becomes even more difficult, both within and across countries.

Simply put, the status quo is no longer an option for Europe over the three to five year horizon. The higher probability outcome is that the eurozone will evolve into a smaller and less imperfect entity — namely, a closer political union of countries with more similar conditions. We believe that this smaller union would likely include the big four (France, Germany, Italy and Spain) which, together with other remaining members, would be underpinned by much stronger regional coordination and financing mechanisms.

We did not come to this view easily — especially as there is no orderly, easy and costless way to get there. Evolving into a smaller and less imperfect zone — as leaders need to do in order to save their important and historical European project, and thus also avoid a major disruption to the global economy – is expensive and uncertain. It requires a lot of proper coordination, a more balanced policy mix, stronger financial circuit breakers (well beyond the ECB’s lender of last resort facilities), less vulnerable banks, and quite a bit of luck too. It could even take a major fragmentation scare to force political leaders to act in a sustained manner.

All this also means that risk of a big derailment (an “existential risk” for the European project) is far from de minimis. Given the series of sustained negative shocks that this would entail — for individual nations, the region and the world as a whole — every political avenue should be pursued to avoid it. But we cannot count on that.

As Thomas Kressin noted, it is not just about the willingness of politicians to keep the eurozone intact. If it does fragment, it will most probably be because the population loses patience, resulting in political and social rejection that is aggravated by a tsunami of private capital outflows. Fortunately, politicians and policymakers still have the ability to get ahead of this, but they need to do so very seriously and very quickly. And for that, they also need a common analysis, a shared vision, and sufficient support.

Over the next three to five years, the U.S. will look good relative to Europe, outperforming in terms of growth and financial stability. That is the good news. The bad news is that Americans live in an absolute and not a relative dimension.

Our political analysis led us to conclude, using Libby Cantrill’s notion, that political scrimmages rather than grand bargains would dominate Washington — a forecast that reflects not only the reality of extreme polarization, but also the impact of significant disagreements among “technocrats” and related policy confusions. The fiscal cliff debate, which is certain to get louder in the coming months, will provide insights in this regard.

In a world that is so far away from any notion of a policy first best, look for the Federal Reserve to maintain its pursuit of financial repression for a number of years; and look for other regulatory bodies to pursue similar avenues in the context of a generally more restrictive regulatory environment. The resulting policy mix, however, will do little to alleviate legitimate concerns about growth, jobs, inequality, debt and deficits. In the process, the underlying structural fragilities of the economy will grow, in both economic and financial terms.

Turning to the emerging economies, we expect them to continue to outpace both Europe and the U.S. over our secular horizon. But don’t look to them to compensate fully for problems elsewhere in the global economy. Also, you should expect them to deliver a more volatile growth path, especially as some countries undertake needed and tricky transition in growth models (including China). Along with all this, also look for greater differentiation among countries in what will become an increasingly heterogeneous grouping.

Yes, we expect emerging economies will account for more than 50% of global GDP in the next three to five years (in purchasing power parity terms). And yes their size and growth rate will influence even more the functioning of the global economy. But this will not overwhelm developments in the advanced countries anchoring the core of the international monetary system. Moreover, with advanced economies attempting to hold on to outdated entitlements, the undeniable shift in economic gravity will not be accompanied by sufficient changes in the manner the global system is governed, wired and interconnected — changes that are important for laying a proper foundation for more balanced global growth and a more robust international system in the future.

So, turning to illustrative numbers, we expect growth in advanced economies to average some 1% annually over the next three to five years (compared to 2′ish% at the 2011 Forum); and some 5% for emerging economies (6% previously). Meanwhile, look for the inflation versus disinflation debate to continue unabated as the tug of war between stimulus and debt deflation plays out.

On balance, we believe that over the next few years, inflationary pressures will slowly build in the global system due to several drivers. Too many cyclical dislocations risk becoming embedded as structural impairments to long-term growth potential, particularly when it comes to the labor markets in advanced economies. With other government entities doing too little, central banks will likely maintain highly accommodating policies for too long. And do not forget the political appeal of resorting to inflation as a means to delever.

Known Unknowns

What about the known unknowns? There are quite a few, including some with the potential to turn some of the slow burn dynamics into sudden shocks, either negative or positive.

Elections and transitions could certainly be game changers. According to calculations by our MBAs/PhDs, more than 50% of global GDP will face a potentially defining change in 2012. Moreover, eight out of 17 eurozone governments have been voted out of office in the last couple of years. So the potential for political upheavals is certainly with us.

Armed with strong new mandates, governments could deliver the “Sputnik moment” that acts as a catalyst for a series of beneficial grand policy bargains. And the impact would be amplified by the crowding-in of significant private capital that is now on the sidelines. More likely, however, is that elections result in a further polarization that complicates economic management. And, as illustrated recently in Greece, the mounting loss of credibility of traditional political parties facilitates the emergence of fringe parties that are eager to dismantle the past but have as yet no coherent and comprehensive plan for the future.

Over the next few years, elections will compound the pressures that governments feel from increasingly restless populations (especially in countries with high youth unemployment, including 51% in Greece and Spain and 36% in Italy and Portugal). As one of our new colleagues, Min Zhang, put it, her generation is looking for “hope and opportunity.” Instead, and also lacking control of the ballot box, they are being saddled by an older generation’s debt and growth impediments. And demographic trends will accentuate the challenges. Under such circumstances, we should not dismiss the possibility of unpredictable sociopolitical reactions that end up further complicating long-standing social compacts and the related functioning of an already stressed international monetary system.

What happens in advanced countries will be of more than passing interest to the healthier part of the global economy, namely the emerging world — a point that Francesc Balcells, Michael Gomez, Ramin Toloui and others stressed.

The longer it takes for the advanced countries to grapple with their growth and debt problems, the greater the imperative for emerging economies to transition to sources of domestic demand to sustain growth. Nowhere is this more important systemically than China.

History suggests that economic, political and social frictions are inherent to such transitions, requiring careful and responsive management. Moreover, as the emerging world itself starts with a set of different initial conditions among individual economies — and a few differences are quite pronounced — some countries will likely be more successful than others, with related surprises.

Have no doubts, the “concentric circle” construct underpinning the international monetary order will be pressured in significant ways in the next three to five years. This is not to postulate a different system. As Rich Clarida argued, there is no alternate system and, therefore, you cannot replace something with nothing. Rather, it is about an increasingly hobbled international order whose anchoring core is weakening on a daily basis, thus undermining the standing of global public goods over the secular horizon. Also, don’t be surprised to see countries in the outer circles (particularly some emerging economies) increasingly establish direct links that bypass the core. Indeed, changing clusters of global influence are likely to be a notable feature of the next three to five years; and the systemic impact is inevitably uncertain.

Technology also provides for meaningful two-sided tails for our baseline hypotheses, especially given that disruptions in this domain easily catch people by surprise.

You would have to be in North Korea to deny that the world is in the midst of empowerment advances that fundamentally alter the relationship between individuals, between states, and between these sets of global actors. As discussed, it is a changing ecosystem that results in two worlds operating simultaneously — but with different protocols, speeds and legal protections: a physical world with government and institutional control, and a virtual one with individuals dominating the creation, dissemination and sharing of content. Over time, the latter will have even greater economic, political and social impact — and do so at times through unanticipated channels.

This provides for the exciting possibility of leapfrogging structural impediments through what Mike Spence calls off-sequence development. Several specific examples were put on the table where technology could serve as a beneficial accelerator. And if we are really lucky (and we mean really, really lucky), perhaps this could also help in dealing with some of the real dangers of self-limiting growth patterns, including those associated with society’s past abuse of the environment. But, again, we should not count on that.

Yet this phenomenon has more than one potential outcome. Some of the empowering technical revolutions can be negatively used to undermine social cohesion and security. Others offer the likelihood of disruptive revolutionary dynamics that are easy to start but prove difficult to control and complete, especially in the absence of sustained leadership.

Implications — The “What”

Our 2012 Secular Forum discussion confirmed that the distribution of expected outcomes for the global economy is both flatter in its belly and fatter in its tails. This is a potentially unstable situation, especially when compared to the conventional bell curve. Moreover, its density has shifted unfavorably in the past 12 months as a result of growing uncertainty, complexity and policy risk premia. In Europe, it has already morphed into a bimodal distribution — a phenomenon that colleagues in our five European offices confront on a daily basis.

In such a world, investors need to retain a claim on the upside while protecting against the downside, including gap risk. They need to be highly differentiated, positioning portfolios for the knowns (both for return generation and for risk mitigation), while also maintaining the right level of optionality in the face of the unknowns. And they must ensure sufficient operational agility to evolve as more data become available Discount DKNY Dresses, as will inevitably be the case.

In the short run, investors are well advised (indeed, urged) to supplement careful bottom-up security selection with macro, and in particular a deep understanding of the implications of the different policy approaches being used to deal with over-indebted economies generating insufficient growth — directly in advanced economies and indirectly in how this impacts the behavior of others. Specifically, and in the words of Bill Gross, they must seek to engineer a “great escape” from a range of actual and likely realities — be it financial repression in the U.S., default in Greece, or other forms of de facto confiscation elsewhere.3

This, of course, translates into a sizeable quality bias for sovereign and company exposures, the latter both in corporate credit and equity space. Focus on names with high cash balances, low financial leverage, high operating margins and exposure to growth areas. Higher quality sovereign exposure should be concentrated in parts of the yield curve that offer meaningful roll down and are anchored by credible central bank policies. Exposure further out the curve should be taken with caution, focusing on sovereigns with a lower risk of inflation and also utilizing inflation-protected securities. Meanwhile, higher-quality equity exposure should be supplemented, where possible, with a dividend dimension as a means of de facto shortening duration.

Consider real assets when thinking of the range of responses to minimize the multi-faceted risk of financial confiscation, especially as inflationary pressures slowly mount. Again, differentiation will be essential, with emphasis placed on those with low supply elasticities and offering a degree of geopolitical protection.

Currencies are the hardest to call in the world we have described. On the one hand, emerging market currencies will likely be supported by continued productivity gains, strong balance sheets and capital inflows. On the other hand, policymakers there will be hesitant to see their currencies strengthen in a world that is so uncertain, especially if the appreciation is turbocharged by leakages from what they view as excessive liquidity creation in the U.S. Also, expect the U.S. dollar to continue to be the main recipient of flight-toquality capital, at least for the first part of the secular horizon.

These considerations speak to relatively limited scaling of currency positions pending additional information. And they also shout for careful differentiation.

The bottom line here is a simple one: Wherever you are in the capital structure and in geographical space, be very alert to situations where valuations do not reflect the confiscation risk. And remember, confiscation is not just default. It is also a function of poor protection against inflation, nationalization or the large preemption of company and currency earnings by governments.

And…

The emphasis on minimizing exposure to financial repression will remain as long as central bankers are in control, including a Federal Reserve that is both able and willing to compress interest rates while underwriting the mounting collateral damage and unintended consequences. At some point during the secular horizon, however Buy Herve Leger v neck, investors will most likely need to pivot. Why? Because, absent a much more comprehensive policy response, central bank measures will prove insufficient by themselves to ignite growth dynamics and safely delever over-indebted segments in advanced economies.

Think of two corner solutions anchoring the range of possibilities in this pivot. At one end, central banks end up providing a bridge for other government entities with more effective measures, including on the structural front. And this serves to crowd in private capital currently on the sidelines. At the other end, central bank policies become not just ineffective but also counterproductive as the collateral damage and unintended consequences eventually overwhelm the intended benefits.4 In addition to the direct negative impact, this would encourage the private sector to de-risk further, thus sucking more oxygen out of the economy.

For investors, the essence of this pivot involves an overwhelming emphasis on capturing solid and growing value streams that reflect company and sovereign ability to “earn” them through sound fundamentals rather than to “buy” them through financial wizardry. Its exact nature depends on whether other policymakers, with better tools, finally step up to their challenges.

If they do, then an across-the-board risk-on posture would make sense; and government bonds would prove a bad place to be. But this requires the type of political decisiveness and effectiveness that sadly eludes most advanced economies; and it also necessitates better global policy coordination. Accordingly, the other pivot involves even greater emphasis on principal protection — or, to use Bill’s recent characterization, reinforcing the coming of age of investment defense.5 And, together, all this speaks to the need more than ever to allow for portfolio repositioning as new data come in and circumstances dictate.

Implications — The “How”

So far, we have discussed “what” investors should consider if they agree with our secular analysis. It does not stop here however. The analysis suggests that the “how” is equally consequential.

Given the likelihood of inflection points, investors will need to be extra careful of traditional market capitalization indices that underpin not just conventional benchmarks but also many passive investment approaches. These can be particularly counterproductive in fixed income when debt is growing beyond safe levels (remember, they encourage the allocation of large and rising sums to increasingly vulnerable credits). In equity space, many of the traditional indices and approaches risk missing out on disruptors that will thrive in dislocated and changing markets and ecosystems.

It is also high time to revisit a whole host of backward-looking labels and dividing lines that often lurk in asset allocation, investment guidelines and mindsets. Are “domestic equities” really domestic when a large and growing portion of company revenues and profits come from other countries? Are advanced government bonds really interest rate risk when countries continue to slip down the credit curve? And are all emerging market sovereign bonds as risky as the term is often seen to imply?

All this speaks not only to increasingly outdated historical distinctions, but also to correlations among asset classes and the flexibility to react to (and combine more optimally) different risk factors. Remember, as Josh Davis, David Fisher and Curtis Mewbourne note, it is about how an investment behaves rather than what it is called.

Led by our analytics and solution capabilities, PIMCO has done a lot of work on this. This particular effort was initiated back in 2006 and we now have encouraging results to share with you — from forward-looking indices (including “Global Advantage” that just celebrated its third anniversary) to solution methodologies and risk factor analysis.

Finally, and perhaps most disappointing for many, society will need to lower its return expectations in general, and particularly its risk-adjusted return expectations. Having produced what Scott Mather called a period of “false economic prosperity,” the enormous multi-year levering of both the public and private sectors in advanced economies also involved the front-loading of investment returns. This can only be maintained and enhanced now through additional leverage (and the set of binding constraints here is set to grow) or through the lifting of structural impediments to growth (a much better approach but unfortunately problematic, at least for now).

As return expectations come down, the asset side of the balance sheet will not be sufficient on its own to meet the objectives of many investors. An even stronger linkage to the liabilities side will be paramount. In many cases, this requires a concurrent evolution in portfolio construction. Moreover, as demonstrated by Vineer Bhansali and Jim Moore, an investment approach that places risk mitigation just on the shoulders of asset class diversification will suffer. It will need to be appropriately supplemented by more sophisticated asset-liability management, cost-effective tail hedging, and a solution (as opposed to just product) mindset.

Bottom Line

In July 2010, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, Ben Bernanke, came up with an elegant term to characterize the United States’ cyclical outlook — he called it “unusually uncertain.” PIMCO’s 2012 Secular Forum suggests that this term could well prove as resilient as our May 2009 forecast for a “new normal.” Given our analysis, Bernanke’s unusual uncertainty applies to more than the cyclical timeframe, and to more than just the United States. It is both secular and global.

Now uncertainty, even of the unusual variety, does not — and should not — translate into investor paralysis. We believe that specific areas of the secular horizon are already clear and actionable today; others are subject to significant two-sided fat tails that should be detailed and managed accordingly.

Over the next few weeks, we will provide you with several more detailed notes from our specialists on how the Forum’s conclusions affect their individual sectors. We will also continue to fill out the secular topology, especially as we learn more about how the global economy is accommodating historic multi-dimensional changes — be they in advanced countries, in emerging economies or in the functioning of the international monetary system. And you can be assured that we will work very hard to do so well ahead of others.

References:

1. “Secular Outlook: Navigating the Multi-Speed World,” PIMCO, May 2011.

2. “Secular Outlook: A New Normal,” PIMCO, May 2009.

3. “The Great Escape: Delivering in a Delevering World,” PIMCO, April 2012.

4. “Evolution, Impact and Limitations of Unusual Central Bank Activism,” PIMCO, April 2012.

5. “Defense,” PIMCO, March 2012.

May 15, 2012

Why People Love Dogs

Filed under: breaking news — Tags: — admin @ 10:33 pm

Listen to the MP3 audio version of this story here, or sign up for Slate’s free daily podcast on iTunes.

Pearl

My friend and fellow dog lover Edie, an occupational therapist in Massachusetts, has been looking for a mate for nearly 10 years. She finally thought she’d found one in Jeff Tattoo Supplies, a nice guy, generous and funny, who teaches high school. They dated for several months, and just as there was talk about a future, it occurred to Edie that Jeff hadn’t really bonded with her yellow Lab, Sophie. In fact, as she thought more about it, she wasn’t sure Jeff was a dog guy at all.

She confronted him about this at dinner one night, and he confessed, in some anguish, that he didn’t love Sophie, didn’t love dogs in general, never had.

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They broke up the next week. More accurately, she dumped him. “What can I say?” Edie told me, somewhat defensively. “Sophie has been there for me, day in and day out, for years. I can’t say the same of men. She’s my girl, my baby. Sooner or later, it would have ended.”

Having just spent two months on a book tour talking to dog lovers across the country, I can testify that this story isn’t unusual. The lesson Edie gleaned, she says Tattoo Supplies, was that she should have asked about Sophie first, not last.

In America, we love our dogs. A lot. So much that we rarely wonder why anymore.

This, perhaps, is why God created academics.

John Archer, a psychologist at the University of Central Lancashire, has been puzzling for some time over why people love their pets. In evolutionary terms, love for dogs and other pets “poses a problem,” he writes. Being attached to animals is not, strictly speaking, necessary for human health and welfare. True, studies show that people with pets live a bit longer and have better blood pressure than benighted nonowners, but in the literal sense, we don’t really need all those dogs and cats to survive.

Archer’s alternative Darwinian theory: Pets manipulate the same instincts and responses that have evolved to facilitate human relationships, “primarily (but not exclusively) those between parent and child.”

No wonder Edie ditched Jeff. She was about to marry the evil stepfather, somebody who wasn’t crazy about her true child.

Or, to look at it from the opposite direction, Archer suggests, “consider the possibility that pets are, in evolutionary terms, manipulating human responses, that they are the equivalent of social parasites.” Social parasites inject themselves into the social systems of other species and thrive there. Dogs are masters at that. They show a range of emotions—love, anxiety, curiosity—and thus trick us into thinking they possess the full range of human feelings.

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May 14, 2012

Leon Trotsky

The following essay is adapted from Clive James’ Cultural Amnesia, a re-examination of intellectuals, artists, and thinkers who helped shape the 20th century. Slate is publishing an exclusive selection of these essays, going roughly from A to Z.

Under a totalitarian regime it is the apparatus that implements the dictatorship. But if my hirelings are occupying all the key posts in the apparatus, how is it that Stalin is in the Kremlin and I am in exile?
—Leon Trotsky Replica Missoni Dresses, quoted by Dmitri Volkogonov in Stalin

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After being murdered at Stalin’s orders, Lev Davidovich Bronstein Replica Christian Audigier Clothing, alias Leon Trotsky (1879–1940), lived on for decades as the unassailable hero of aesthetically minded progressives who wished to persuade themselves that there could be a vegetarian version of communism. Trotsky could write and orate, he loved women, and he presented enough of a threat to the established Soviet power structure that it should want to track him down to his hiding place in Mexico and rub him out. It followed, or seemed to follow Cheap Herve Leger v neck, that Trotsky must have embodied a more human version of the historic force that sacrificed innocent people to egalitarian principle: a version that would sacrifice fewer of them, in a nicer way. Alas, it followed only if the facts were left out.

It was true that Trotsky, in those romantic early days in Paris, was a more attractive adornment to the cafe than Lenin. In the Rotonde Bandage dresses sale, where Amedeo Modigliani settled his bill with drawings and paintings when he lost at craps, Lenin could at least defend “socialist realism” against Fauvist painter Maurice de Vlaminck, whereas Trotsky couldn’t even get a job as an artist’s model (too small). But the Russian civil war that turned Trotsky into one of the century’s most effective amateur generals also unleashed his capacities as a mass murderer. The sailors at Kronstadt Herve Leger sale, proclaiming their right to opinions of their own about the Revolution, were massacred on his order. The only thing true about Trotsky’s legend as some kind of lyrical humanist was that he was indeed unrealistic enough to think that the secretarial duties could safely be left to Stalin. His intolerance of being bored undid him. But his ideas of excitement went rather beyond making love to Frida Kahlo, and at this distance, there are no excuses left for students who find him inspiring. Trotsky’s idea of permanent revolution will always be attractive to the kind of romantic who believes that he is being oppressed by global capitalism when he maxes out his credit card. But the idea was already a dead loss before Trotsky was driven into exile in 1929. He lost the struggle against Stalin not because he was less ruthless but because he was less wily.

Trotsky was good at sarcasm. His journalism written in Mexico would have been enough reason on its own for Stalin to nominate him as a target. Pro-Soviet credulity among Western intellectuals was usually proof against logic, but Trotsky had rhetoric: a more penetrating weapon. If Stalin’s emissary had not managed to smash Trotsky’s head in, his jokes might have made the Moscow show trials sound less convincing. From that viewpoint, Trotsky’s murder was not only horrifying, it was untimely. Treachery made it possible, and the subject is still surrounded with a miasma of bad faith. Pablo Neruda was instrumental in smoothing the assassin’s path but never wrote a poem on the subject: something to remember when reading the thousands of ecstatic love poems he did write. They are full of wine and roses, but no ice ax is ever mentioned. Admirers of Neruda don’t seem to mind. The same capacity for tacit endorsement is shown by Trotsky’s admirers, who even today persist in seeing him as some sort of liberal democrat; or, if not as that, then as a true champion of the working class; or anyway, and at the very worst, as one of those large-hearted Old Bolsheviks who might have made the Soviet Union some kind of successfully egalitarian society had they prevailed. But when it became clear that the vast crime called the collectivization of agriculture would involve a massacre of the peasantry, Trotsky’s only criticism was that Stalin’s campaign was not sufficiently “militarized.” He meant that the peasants weren’t being massacred fast enough.

We can dignify Trotsky’s ruthlessness with the name of realism if we like, but the question abides of just how realistic his ruthlessness would have been if he had won a power struggle against Stalin and stayed on to rule the Soviet Union. As things turned out, there never was a power struggle. Trotsky wasn’t interested in the hard grind of running the show: Leave that to Stalin. But—an important but—Trotsky yielded no points to Stalin in the matter of dealing with anybody who dared to contradict him. It was a trick they both inherited from Lenin. Golo Mann said it went back all the way to Marx. Marx’s Italian contemporary Giuseppe Maz­zini observed that he had more anger in his heart than love, and that his whole temperament was geared to domination.

We can still see it today, even when totalitarianism is no longer a thing for states, but only for religious fanatics. It is the trick of meeting contradiction by silencing whoever offers it. Trotsky’s undoubted fluency as a polemical journalist does not mean that he wouldn’t rather have had a gun in his hand. The humanist makes a big mistake in supposing that a literary talent automatically ameliorates the aggressive instinct. Osama Bin Laden has several of Trotsky’s characteristics. According to students of Arabic, he commands his native language with vibrant fluency, giving a thrilling sense of its historic depth; he can lead a simple life and make it look enviably stylish, as if asceticism were a luxury; and above all, he can inspire the young to dedicate their lives to an ideal. If the ideals of the caliphate tend to become more elusive on close examination Herve Leger gown sale, so did the ideals of communism: but they needed to be incarnated for that very reason. Trotsky lived on after Stalin, and to some extent is still alive today, not because young people want the world he wanted: a phantasm that not even he could define. What they want is to be him.

Should We Make Somali Pirates Walk the Gangplank

The pirates attacked the merchant ship early on the morning of May 5. The crew members locked themselves in the engine room with a stock of food and water. A naval destroyer came steaming to the rescue and demanded that the pirates give up the ship. When they refused, the destroyer attacked with guns and cannons, and, after a brief firefight, the pirates surrendered.

Had this been a story from a children’s book—the kind with a skull and crossbones on the cover and a foldout treasure map inside—the pirates would then have walked the plank. But it wasn’t a story from a children’s book. This was May 5, 2010. The merchant ship was not a schooner but a Russian tanker, carrying 86,000 tons of crude oil worth $52 million. The pirates were not colorful figures with cutlasses but Somalis led by professionals who knew what this cargo was worth.

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As for the Russian destroyer, it was not operating according to an 18th-century code of honor but according to international law, such as it is. Theoretically, the captain was supposed to hand the detainees and the evidence over to regional police. Not wanting to involve himself in legal wrangling Cheap White Herve leger, however, he decided to “release” the pirates instead. And thus they were “set free” in a tiny inflatable raft, with no navigation equipment, 350 miles off the coast of Yemen. The raft has since disappeared. In the 21st century, this is how pirates walk the plank.

In fact, the Russian destroyer wasn’t the first to hit upon this solution. Asked last weekend, the commander of the European naval force that coordinates military operations off the Somali coast said there had been “similar instances” involving Dutch and Danish ships, but he declined to elaborate. He also noted that of 400 pirates captured in the last three months, only 40 have been prosecuted. The rest have been released. Or “released.”

Why? Pirates are hard to convict, because it is hard to collect evidence at sea, because ship captains have other priorities, and because the nearest working courts, in Kenya and the Seychelles, are overwhelmed by pirate cases. Pirates are also being released because they are learning to work the international legal system: Last month, pirates captured by the German navy sued the German government on the grounds that they could not be guaranteed a fair trial in Mombasa, Kenya. As for Somalis who have landed in Germany itself—or Holland, or the United Kingdom—they are rapidly learning that they can claim political asylum.

Captured pirates can also be brought to the United States Discount Emilio Pucci Dresses, of course, but that is expensive, time-consuming, and at some level absurd. Eleven Somalis were indicted in Norfolk, Va., last month—all men who cannot speak English, who cannot read or write any language, and who do not know their birth dates. When asked their dietary preferences, they requested camel or buffalo meat. How can they be judged by a jury of their peers Herve Leger sale, as American law requires?

In fact Buy DKNY Clothes, captured Somali pirates present the Western world with a perfect storm of legal complications: As legal scholar Ruth Wedgwood has put it, they leave us “tangled in a postmodern confusion over the law of armed conflict, human rights law, solipsistic views of national criminal jurisdiction and, above all, a stunning lack of common sense.” It is simply illogical to treat them as domestic criminals or to try them in national courts: They should be considered a special category of international terrorist, not as domestic criminals. On the other hand Buy Hale Bob Dresses, there are no international courts or international prisons equipped to cope with them: Last month, the U.N. Security Council called on the secretary-general to look into the idea of creating some, but, of course, any U.N. system will take months or years to come into being.

In the meantime, we have a few other options. We can take the Somali pirates more seriously as a military and terrorist threat, go after their backers in the Gulf and East Africa, and systematically attack the “mother ships” from which they launch smaller pirate boats. We can step up the international coordination of navies in the region: Russians help Russian tankers and the U.S. Navy helps U.S. ships, but there are many countries with ships and sailors in the region without real navies—Greece comes to mind. A few months ago, a Greek-flagged tanker was ransomed for $7 million. That sort of money buys a lot of new Kalashnikovs around the Gulf of Aden.

But until we, together with the Russians, the Chinese, the Europeans, and others, can reach some agreement about what we call them and how we treat them Cheap Hale Bob Dresses, each captured pirate—like each captured terrorist—will invariably be dealt with ad hoc. Leaving them to float away on a rubber dinghy might not be the best solution, but it’s the only one we’ve got.

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Can You Be Scared Enough To Pee Your Pants

Why do things like fear or running water affect our bladder control?

Photograph by iStockphoto/Thinkstock.

NASA agents burst into a Denny’s in Southern California five months ago to arrest a 74-year-old grandmother who was trying to sell a moon rock to raise money for her son’s medical expenses Cheap Herve Leger gown, according to a recent AP report. The elderly woman told a reporter that she was so terrified during the sting that she lost control of her bladder. Why do people become incontinent when frightened?

Blame the limbic system. Bladder control requires a sophisticated interplay of brain regions. An area of the brainstem known as the pontine micturition center is in constant contact with the bladder. It knows when pressure is building Buy DKNY Clothes, and makes the preliminary decision to void. Thankfully, this area doesn’t have exclusive control over our bathroom habits, or we’d urinate whenever (and wherever) our bladders become full. The prefrontal cortex can override the desire to pee by sending an inhibitory signal to the brainstem. Under stressful conditions, however Cheap Chloe Dresses, the inhibitory signals from the frontal lobe can themselves be overridden by the limbic system BCBG Dresses sale, a combination of brain areas that controls the famous “fight or flight” response. When we become stressed or anxious, electrical signals from the limbic system become so intense that the brainstem has trouble following the frontal lobe’s commands. That’s why many people urinate more frequently before important exams or in the starting corral of a marathon. In life-threatening situations, the limbic system’s orders become so urgent that you can’t even make it to the bathroom.

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That’s the neurobiological explanation, at least. The larger evolutionary question—of why incontinence might be advantageous in a survival situation—has no satisfying answer. What’s clear is that urinating in the face of danger pervades the animal kingdom. Gazelles wet themselves with a lion in hot pursuit. Pigeons often become incontinent when chased by wild-eyed toddlers. Laboratory rats have a nasty habit of peeing all over researchers’ hands. Some speculate that the instinct is related to the practice of marking territory with urine to prevent conflict. Alternatively, it may be that urinating could put a pursuing predator off the trail. In the absence of a good explanation, you’re free to speculate.

There’s a related condition known as paruresis, or shy bladder. Sufferers find it nearly impossible to urinate in the presence of others. The neurological basis for the disorder is very poorly understood, but it seems to be the neurological opposite of what happened to the target of NASA sting. The inhibitory signal from the prefrontal cortex becomes hyperactive, for some reason. You might think of paruresis as the story of civilization run slightly amok. The brainstem acts on a primordial level, controlling our most basic behaviors. The prefrontal cortex evolved inhibitory centers to control impulses. Without it, we would urinate and defecate freely Cheap Christian Audigier Clothing, and violate all manner of social norms. The importance of these inhibitory centers can be seen in patients with Alzheimer’s, stroke victims Cheap Herve leger strapless, and those who have suffered catastrophic brain injuries. Oftentimes, they lose control over their excretory habits.

Got a question about today’s news? Ask the Explainer.

Explainer thanks David Diamond of the University of South Florida, Gary Fisk of Georgia Southwestern University, Roy Freeman of Harvard Medical School, and Gert Holstege of the University of Groningen.

May 13, 2012

2013 Mazda MX-5 Special Edition shows off its new

The Chicago Auto Show and the Mazda MX-5 Miata have quite a history. After all Fake IWC Watches for sale, the very first Miata debuted at the 1989 Chicago show, and since then, Mazda has routinely used the Windy City expo to showcase some sort of new roadster hotness.

For 2012, we’ve been introduced to the MX-5 Special Edition (clever name, we know) Fake Ferrari Watches for sale, which dons a new black power retractable hard top and gunmetal wheels Fake Movado Watches, among other small updates.

Underneath the skin Fake Jaquet Droz Watches, Mazda has fitted its standard suspension upgrade kit, which includes Bilstein shocks, while inside you’ll find black accents and heated black leather seats Replica Burberry Watches, along with a full kit of tech options. Pricing starts at $31 Fake Panerai Watches,225, and only 450 will be sold in the United States. Get it while it’s hot.

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