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BANFF 2009: MENSA IN THE MOUNTAINS

Our Regional Gathering (September 2009) already has taken on mythic proportions. Great speakers, beautiful surroundings, hikes, games, exciting topics, all look like making it an occasion to remember. You can customize it to suit your tastes, so why not build your holidays around the event? And explore whether you can make it tax deductible. Get your thoughts to Patricia (almostp@shaw.ca) or volunteer to help out. Make this Gathering the best ever.

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SUPPORT OUR TROOPS? OF COURSE. THOUGH…

There is something odd about Canada in Afghanistan, as though Finland had sent troops, or we’d shipped soldiers to the Falklands. Are we sacrificing Canadian lives (not to mention funding for education and health care) for the greater freedom of Afghanistan? Strange way to behave if that’s true. We don’t bury our dead there, in the land we cherish so much we’re prepared to die for its improvement. We won’t grace the next generation of Afghans with grain nourished from our bones, yet we’re willing to see our youngsters rendered into bones for these same people. Afghans. What are the alternatives today if we’re eager to die for freedom? The RDC, Zimbabwe, North Korea, Iran? It may puzzle future historians that we chose Afghanistan. Fewer souls have died there at the hands of the Taleban, Al-Qaeda or both, than under the barrage of western firepower. Fewer have died in Afghanistan than in the Horn of Africa, Middle East or Asia. Where were we when Russia invaded Georgia? Or when the US overthrew democracy in Greece and installed the Colonels? The unique feature about Afghanistan is that we committed troops when we were under pressure to send soldiers to Iraq. It’s likely that Afghanistan was more politically expedient than Iraq. We shall – our leaders may have told the Americans – help you in Afghanistan instead of Iraq. You can command us, so there’s really not much difference. Understand, we support you, but Canadian sensibilities make Iraq awkward for our government. Good deal for you to have other countries by your side, whatever the war. Perhaps Mr Harper heard Afghans crying out for relief. It’s possible. Though they’ve been invaded by sanctimonious foreigners so many times that few generations have been exempt. Are they going to thank us 50 years from now? Not likely. We’re just another of the foreign devils incited by the mission to rescue ‘savages’ by slaughtering them. We can’t lose, we believe, because we have modern equipment and strategy. Which may exemplify a touch of racism and ignorance. None of this detracts, of course, from the courage of the soldiers we send to die where poppies grow and fierce tribal loyalties govern life. Though our commanders may be impeached for cowardice; they should have resigned their commands when they realized our goals are hopeless and a betrayal of the principles that govern our country. Or for ignorance; they failed to tell us of the superior courage in the destitute who return again and again to face our superior arms. When we bomb their weddings and innocent vehicles, we shout oops, or explain blandly that the female wedding guests were soldiers too. Unashamed, we seem to lie. And that will not be forgiven. It undermines Canada, for who now doesn’t believe that our leaders systematically deceive us? What a fine legacy Steven Harper has left. Like each of us, he emerged from the void and will return to it. When he does, it will be said of him: he sent our troops to die overseas in a time of peace and for a cause so trivial that its end was measured – not by success or failure – but by an arbitrary deadline on the calendar.

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General
 
Feel life is passing you by? Activities with fellow Mensans will turn this around. Think coffees, martinis, movies, dinners, quizzes, anything that ravels up the tired sleeve of care. We’re informal and unstructured, on occasion intellectually stimulating. Mensa Calgary is a community where members interact, network, support each other, and enjoy each other’s company. For further info, contact Patricia at kathleen4057@yahoo.ca ["There's no pleasure on earth that's worth sacrificing for the sake of an extra five years in the geriatric ward of the Sunset Old People's Home.” (John Mortimore)]
 
 
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Mensa Test
 
We’ve scheduled this for December 8. If any readers work at a post-secondary institution such as U of C, SAIT, or Mount Royal, or if you think potential Mensans are affiliated with your company or organization, we’d appreciate if you post a notice on a bulletin board, in the corporate classified ads or other appropriate location. For the notice format, contact Vicki at vherd@shaw.ca or (403) 243-6144. If you have ideas for advertising Mensa Calgary, please let Vicki know. If you have friends or colleagues who may qualify for Mensa, please let them know about the upcoming test.  
 
The testing fee is $90. This covers the cost of writing 2 tests, receiving feedback on eligibility for Mensa membership, plus the first year’s membership fee if you qualify. You write 2 tests so you have 2 chances to qualify for Mensa. Full time students pay only $70.
 
A pictorial test is available if your mother tongue is not English and you don’t want your scores to be disadvantaged by language.
 
You need to score in the top 2% of the population in one of the two tests to qualify.
 
Contact Vicki with questions about Mensa or the testing, and let her know if you want to write the tests so she can plan resources and give detailed directions to the site, likely at meeting Room 2, Basement, W R Castell Central Library, 616 Macleod Trail SE, Calgary.
 
 
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MensaGenerationX
 
Viva the under-30s!! Ideas and participation are welcome. Beat the winter blues by contacting Leslie Joanne at august_83@hotmail.com
 
 
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CoffeeFests
 
Canceled because of cold weather, December’s coffee fest on December 18th is remitted to January. Stay warm everyone. Here is the announcement as originally published: Brighten dark December by attending our coffee fest on Thursday, December 18th at 7:00 pm. The place is Kaffa (2138-33rd Ave SW, corner of 33rd Ave & 21st St). Parking on 21st. A copy of Harry Potter will be at the table. RSVP not required, atmosphere great, munchies superb. Really funky. Visit Casablanca afterwards for a DVD; they have the best selection in the city. Cash only at Kaffa.
 
 
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DinnerNight
 
December’s Dinner Night will be hosted by Maria and Patricia in a home setting for Christmas. Pot luck. And to evoke a Mensa challenge, we’re not disclosing what others will bring. Put Saturday, December 13, in your calendar for a cheerful holiday evening starting at 5:00 pm. The concept is good food among friends, a little Christmas music and perhaps a Christmas movie (Love Actually). Doesn’t this sound great? Bring your favorite dish. For more information, contact Patricia at almostp@shaw.ca.
 
 
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BookClub
 
The Mensa Book Club will meet on Sunday, December 7th at 2:30 pm hosted by Maria. We will be discussing The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupéry plus any other book. This is a great bunch of people. Plus, you get to talk about ideas and literature and virtually anything else. No holds barred. Contact Patricia at almostp@shaw.ca if you’d like to attend.
 
 
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SecondTuesdays(of the Month)
 
Second Tuesday will be held on December 9th at the home of Vicki Herd (2469 Sorrel Mews SW), 7:00 pm. The location is near the Safeway in Garrison Woods. Contact Patricia (almostp@shaw.ca / 212-1461) for additional information. Nb this month Dr. Allissa Gaul, President of the Alberta Association of Naturopathic Practitioners, will speak about naturopathic medicine, ie primary health care focused on prevention, using natural treatments to promote well-being. As per previous lectures, please contact Patricia (almostp@shaw.ca) to let her know if you’re coming. Second Tuesday is casual. Drop by and meet some of the other members.
 
 
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OtherUpComings
 

Movie night is scheduled for Friday, December 5th, but another possibility is between Christmas and New Years so watch this space or – better – contact Patricia with your suggestions.

1) Your task is to create an iron chain that consists of 15 links. You start with 5 chains that have 3 links each. It costs a dollar to cut a link and 50 cents to reweld a cut link. What is the cheapest cost to create the 15 link chain?
 
2) A wealthy benefactor in 2001 gave each member of Calgary’s Flying Saucer Club a few sacks of gold coins. She gave the same number of sacks to each member, but then added extra sacks for each female member. The benefactor increased the amount of these gifts year by year over the next three years. The benefactor in 2004 gave a total of 400 sacks of gold coins. That year, there were 21 male members and each received 11 sacks of gold coins. How many female members were there in 2004?
 
The answers to November’s puzzles were supplied in the November issue.
 
Here are the answers to this month’s puzzles:
1) Cut each link in one of the 3-link chains. Join four of the 3-link chains with the 3 cut links. That’s 3 cuts and 3 welds, ie $4.50.

2) If 21 males received 11 sacks each, the benefactor gave them 231 in all. This means 169 sacks were given to the women. 169’s factors are 1, 13 and 169, which means that the women members received 13 sacks each and there must have been 13 women. QED. Kudos and admiration if anyone can predict the value of these coins on December 31, 2009.

Feature1 – ElectionOverAtLast

The muddy spectacle of the U.S. election is over, thankfully.
 
I’m glad it’s over. It has been a degrading, unedifying spectacle. Besides, voting day means Obama won’t again be speaking to tens of thousands of people in Minneapolis or Denver . He’ll be home, safer from the one bullet that has so often served to bring an already violent nation to its knees.
 
It has taken Americans decades to drag themselves back up to a standing position since Robert F. Kennedy Jr. died and there are no words for how heartbreaking it would be if the bullet were used again.
 
This is how beaten down we have become, that we’re grateful when a politician physically survives the campaign. And I’ll be grateful not to have to watch John McCain make a fool of himself anymore.
 
As much as I deplore the man for his sneering about "the physical health" of pregnant women, for the campaign ads only days ago that deliberately darkened Obama’s skin, for his backing of torture and wiretapping, for his wanton selection of a disgracefully unqualified VP candidate and, oh, 50 other matters involving ethics and the betraying thereof, it isn’t pleasant to watch anyone deteriorate, mentally and morally, on camera.
 
People shouldn’t be mocked for what they can’t help.
 
It wasn’t McCain’s fault that he shuffled around the debate stage aimlessly or that he stumbled over his own thoughts, forgot people’s names and made snuffling noises. We’ll all do that some day.
 
I also don’t think Joe Biden should have been mocked for his stutter, but Palin followers found it hilarious.
 
Primed as I am to find marriage intrinsically funny, I still didn’t find the charade of the McCain marriage amusing at all. Cindy McCain was a pretty, happy young woman when she made the decision to marry a starchy rage-filled man making up for lost time; she seems to have had a subsequent hellish life that money has done nothing to improve.
 
She was a thin, peeled white nerve placed precariously behind her stubby husband. I don’t know what helped her survive the campaign but I hope her doctors were compassionate with prescriptions.
 
But there were good things about the campaign, too, even if they were only the culmination of eight years of horror. The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, as teenage and girl-hating as it can be, was a tonic and The Colbert Report was satire on a positively British level.
 
The campaign was marked by the presence of the young.
 
College students were mad for Obama. And even babies liked him; they respond to calmness and quiet assurance in adults and they sat placidly in his arms.
 
It was good to see a candidate who has young children. For that’s when an adult is most impatient for improvement in the world, when it’s a fixer-upper he might eventually be able to show off to his kids.
 
But the whole campaign was odd. Joe the Plumber, whom McCain treated as some kind of pet, has an agent now and I hope his country music career takes off. He can hardly return to off-ledger plumbing.
 
That’s one thing that campaigns do, fling open the doors of a lot of people who wouldn’t normally go out but are lured into the front yard by some bright-eyed canvasser. You can see them blinking, unused to sunlight, saying they had heard Obama palled around with "turrsts."
 
Lady, go back inside for another four years. We’ll check on you in 2012. If you still have your house then.
 
The word that stayed in my mind as the campaign dragged on through the collapse of the world’s economic structure was "hobo." We’re all going to be hobos.
 
I would imagine myself packing up my bindle and setting out on the road in overalls and a pair of Roots boots. Train whistles, boxcars, hot soup, sleeping under a bridge, misery, fear, scrawny children with bite marks on their faces. A heartless Annie Leibovitz would be our Dorothea Lange.
 
It didn’t matter how secure or insecure we really were during the fall of ‘08; we watched McCain and Obama fight it out and figured we’d all be Tom Joads pretty soon.
 
If McCain wins, sooner than that, I bet, and there’ll be riots too.
 

(by heather mallick, CBC, 3 November 2008)

Feature2 – Falls

Katherine Aliminosa, 93, shattered her lower leg while getting snacks for her nieces.
 
Susan Arnold, 87, broke her hip hanging a photograph.
 
In mid-July, in a nursing unit of a retirement community here, the two women were at the start of a recovery process that both hoped would return them to their previous lives.
 
Their progress over the next few months, and their divergent outcomes, illustrate the unpredictable impact that common falls can have on the bodies of older people.
 
By early autumn, Ms. Aliminosa had graduated to an independent living apartment and was able to get around with a walker. She looked like a different person: more robust, content.
 
Though six years younger, Ms. Arnold never recovered her strength after hip surgery. Her muscles atrophied from inactivity, and she developed pneumonia. She died on Sept. 6.

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Once considered an inevitable part of aging, falls are now recognized as complex, often preventable events with multiple causes and consequences, calling for a wide range of interventions, both psychological and physiological, that many patients never receive.

Even falls that cause only minor injury “need to be taken as seriously as diabetes,” said Dr. R. Sean Morrison, a professor of geriatrics and adult development at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, because “they can be a real warning sign that something serious is wrong.”
 
Dr. Mary E. Tinetti, a falls expert at Yale University medical school, compared falls to strokes in their harmfulness, adding that people do not always report them or seek help, for fear their families will try to put them in nursing homes. For some people, Dr. Tinetti said, admitting that they fall is tantamount to admitting that they are no longer competent to take care of themselves.
 
Each year, 1.8 million Americans over age 65 are injured in falls, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Some rebound as if the injury never happened. But for some, the fall sets off a downward spiral of physical and emotional problems — including pneumonia, depression, social isolation, infection and muscle loss — that become too much for their bodies to withstand.
 
In 2005, the last year for which statistics are available, 433,000 people over 65 were admitted to hospitals after falling, and 15,800 died as a direct result of the fall. Less visible are the many who survive the fall but not the indirect consequences.
 
When first interviewed in mid-July, Ms. Aliminosa and Ms. Arnold felt vulnerable and constrained, their world diminished. Both had led accomplished professional lives — Ms. Arnold as a school psychologist, Ms. Aliminosa as a medical researcher — and had been active in the community’s independent living apartments. But neither could be confident about what the future held.
 
Ms. Aliminosa said she was depressed, and able to walk only in very small stretches. A small woman with a soft voice and grainy New York accent, she barely filled her chair. She seemed defeated. “Emotionally I have not been well,” she said. “It’s made me very aware of my age, and that’s hard to accept.”
 
Ms. Arnold, by contrast, was full of emotional energy, so angry about her broken hip that she kicked out for emphasis as she talked, turning conversation into a full-contact sport. Before her fall, she had been preparing for a vacation with her daughter at a family beach house on Long Island — the same house where she had spread her husband’s ashes. Now that plan was gone.
 
“It kills me, it just kills me,” she said. “This was going to be the frosting on the cake, and somebody ate it.”
 
Of the two women, Ms. Arnold was up against the longer odds. One in five hip-fracture patients over age 65 die within a year after surgery, according to the C.D.C.; one in four have to spend a year or more in a nursing home. When younger people fall, they tend to break their wrists catching themselves, but in older people, who have slower reactions and less upper-body strength, the weight more often falls on their hips or heads. Any underlying conditions, like heart disease or respiratory problems, increase the chances of a downward health spiral.
 
Ms. Arnold had a history of pulmonary disease, and had been a heavy smoker, starting after high school. “She had a boyfriend in college,” her daughter, Margery Creek, said, “and it was the lesser of evils — sex, drinking or smoking.”
 
But her lung problems did not keep her down. In 2006, she took a 10-day trip to Sweden. Even after she fell and fractured a hip that autumn, she lived independently and was able to drive, returning to the beach house. That day in mid-July, even as she talked about depression, she took jubilant delight in photographs of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. “Now if that isn’t the picture of a baby,” she said. “Isn’t she a sweetie?”
 
If Ms. Arnold were a machine, it would be simple to draw a straight line between her lung disease, her hip surgery and her chances of recovery. Older bodies typically have several weakened systems that are dependent on one another, and rely on drugs that may or may not work well together. “If you take 70-year-olds, on average they’re taking five medications,” Dr. Tinetti said. “When you get to 10 medications” — as a patient might after a fall — “the likelihood of adverse effects is close to 100 percent.”
 
But psychological factors can be as devastating as the physical trauma, Dr. Tinetti said. “It’s the fear of falling, the lost confidence. Good walkers stop walking, stop going to church. They become socially isolated and depressed.”
 
After Ms. Arnold’s first broken hip, she had reduced feeling in one foot, which added to the likelihood that she would fall again.
 
On July 6 this year, it happened: Ms. Arnold turned her body without moving her foot, pulling the closet door down with her when she fell and fracturing her hip bone.
 
“I’m outraged,” she said a week after the fall, raising her voice and then becoming fatigued. Her breathing was interrupted by coughing spasms. She said she was determined not to end up using an electric cart. “Disappointment,” she said, accenting each syllable. “I had a very good life.”
 
“But your life isn’t over,” said Deanna Gray-Miceli, an adjunct assistant professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert in geriatric falls who was looking in on Ms. Arnold in the nursing unit.
 
“Well, it bloody well is,” Ms. Arnold said. “I have no strength. Let’s talk about depression.”
 
The period of immobility after a fall is particularly dangerous, said Dr. Gray-Miceli, whose research includes studying a group of patients after falls. “Being immobile, you’re not taking deep breaths, you’re more prone to orthostatic pneumonia, or older people can develop urinary incontinence. And that can have a whole cascade of emotional consequences as well as the physical consequences, such as skin breakdown, pressure sores, bladder infection, lung infection.
 
“We also see temporary confusion from infection,” she added, “And that can lead to someone’s demise.”
 
Dr. Gray-Miceli’s work focuses on identifying the causes of falls, which might include treatable factors like changes in gait, low blood pressure, declining vision or heart arrhythmias, as well as conditions in the home. In a study by Dr. Tinetti, simple preventive suggestions from doctors, like physical therapy and changes in medication, reduced falls by 11 percent. (The C.D.C. offers tips to reduce falls at home, like removing loose rugs and making sure stairway handrails go all the way to the bottom, at cdc.gov/ncipc/duip/preventadultfalls.htm.)
 
For Ms. Arnold, it was too late. Shortly after surgery she grew depressed and fatalistic, her daughter said. “One morning when my brother was here, she woke up and said, ‘I’m weary, I’m just absolutely weary,’ ” Mrs. Creek said. “And she had no muscle that came back. Her arms had really gotten down to skin and bones. You hear that term — it certainly seemed that way, no muscle.”
 
In August, Ms. Arnold developed pneumonia and spent three nights in the hospital. Though she responded well to the medications, Mrs. Creek said: “It was just one more nail. She said she was ready to be with Dad.”
 
The last time Mrs. Creek called her, in early September, Ms. Arnold could recognize her voice but not respond, Mrs. Creek said. “I think she just said, ‘I’ve had it, I’m checking out.’ ”
 
Down the hall, Ms. Aliminosa’s response after her leg fracture was just as unpredictable.
 
On April 4, she was enjoying a visit from two favorite nieces — Ms. Aliminosa never married — when she found herself on the floor of her apartment, she said. She had no memory of how she fell.
 
Ms. Aliminosa has osteoporosis and a history of falling, so she told her relatives not to touch her until the nurses came. She needed a metal rod in her leg and began a slow process of physical rehabilitation. She said the falls were the first thing that made her feel old. “I’d love to be able to have dinner and take a short walk, and I can’t do that,” she said.
 
Because she was in a full-spectrum medical facility, her care was well coordinated, said Dr. Albert Siu, a professor and chairman of geriatrics and adult development at Mount Sinai.
 
“For example, osteoporosis is often at root of this,” Dr. Siu said. “But in a three-day hospital stay, addressing osteoporosis is not at the top of everyone’s mind. There it’s dealing with the pain, the complications and the repair of the fractured hip.” Medications for blood pressure or pain might increase dizziness or chance of falls. In mid-July, while Ms. Arnold was angry but relatively mobile, Ms. Aliminosa seemed resigned to a loss of mobility and independence. The prospect weighed heavily on her. When asked if she had considered counseling for depression, she said she did not think she could bear talking about it. “I think as we get older it’s hard to control our emotions,” she said.
Patients’ pessimism can be self-fulfilling, because they may not walk to the extent they can. “Their stride becomes shorter,” Dr. Morrison said. “They don’t use their lungs.”
 
Dr. Gray-Miceli said it was important for doctors and nurses to keep the patient focused on tangible signs of progress, “so she can say: ‘Today I got up by the side of the chair and took five steps. Yesterday I only took four steps.’ ”
 
Ms. Aliminosa began a physical therapy regimen to build strength in her legs and upper body and improve her gait. With improvement she gained a sense of optimism and control over her body.
 
She said the depression returned from time to time, as did the fear of falling again. But she said: “The thought that I’m getting better has helped a great deal. I try to think so each day, really.”
 
She smiled; she joked. On a recent morning, she groused amiably about her fitness program, but finished, with no sign of pain or exhaustion. “I’m walking,” she said, “I wouldn’t say to my satisfaction, because I used to be a hiker. I can’t expect that yet, but I’m hoping for it.”

 

(by john leland, New york Times, 7 November, 2008)

Feature3 – Secrecy&BigGovernment

The Pentagon was given secret authority by President Bush to carry out about 12 controversial attacks against al-Qaeda and other militants in Syria, Pakistan and elsewhere since 2004, it has been reported.
 
Quoting what it said were more than six unnamed military and intelligence officials and senior Bush administration policy makers, The New York Times said the military operations were authorised by a classified order signed by Donald Rumsfeld, former Defence Secretary, with the approval of the President.
 
Under the order, the military had new authority to strike the al-Qaeda network anywhere in the world and a broader mandate to conduct operations in countries not at war with the United States, according to the newspaper. Despite the order, each mission required high-level government approval.
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The order identified 15 to 20 countries, including Syria, Pakistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf states, where al-Qaeda militants were believed to be operating or to have sought sanctuary, a senior administration official told the newspaper.

A former top CIA official was quoted as saying that one of the operations included the raid of a suspected militant compound in the Bajuar region of Pakistan. The New York Times said its sources refused to provide details about the other previously undisclosed attacks, except to say they had been carried out in Syria, Pakistan and other countries.
 
The newspaper said officials made clear there had been no raids into Iran using that authority, but they suggested that American forces had carried out reconnaissance missions in Iran using other classified directives.
 
Senior military officials told the paper as many as a dozen additional missions were scrapped because senior administration officials decided they were too dangerous, diplomatically problematic or relied on insufficient evidence.
 
When contacted by The New York Times, spokesmen for the White House, the Defence Department and the military declined comment.
 
Raids targeting militants in countries friendly to the United States – particularly in Pakistan – have caused huge controversy in recent weeks, with the Pakistani government saying that it was capable of battling extremists within its own territory.

 

(by matthew cavanaugh, The Times OnLine, 10 November 2008)

Feature4 – ReasonForIraqWar

A joint venture between Royal Dutch Shell and Iraq’s state-owned South Gas Co. could give Shell a 25-year monopoly on production and exports of natural gas in much of southern Iraq – the biggest foreign role in Iraq’s oil and gas sector in four decades.

The planned venture, spelled out in a 16-page document obtained by United Press International, goes well beyond descriptions provided by Iraqi and Shell officials on Sept. 22, when they held a public signing ceremony in Baghdad.
 
The officials at the time described the agreement as:
* Limited to Basra province.
* Restricted to capturing gas that is burned off and therefore wasted in extracting and processing oil.
* Primarily intended to supply Iraq’s domestic market.
 
In fact, the two signed what is known as a "heads of agreement" (HOA) – basically a rough draft of a contract – that establishes the management team, scope, purpose and other details of the joint venture’s business plan.
 
Though nonbinding, the confidential document is telling.
 
The joint-venture company would give Shell the largest foreign role in Iraq’s oil and gas sector since the 1960s, when Iraq expelled the world’s big oil firms after 40 years of foreign control of exploration, production and exports.
                   

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The joint venture will be the "sole gas company engaged in business," as outlined in the HOA, "and providing gas for domestic and export markets and generating revenues from gas marketing activities."
 
"The ministry shall not pursue any discussions with the intention of entering into a project with a similar scope to that set out in this HOA with any third parties," the document states.
 
The joint venture would be "of a long term (25 years extendable)," according to the HOA. Iraq would own 51 percent and Shell 49 percent of the venture.
 
Iraq has the world’s 10th-largest proven gas reserves, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, most of it located in southern Iraq.
 
Two to three times more reserves could be found when the region is fully explored, industry analysts say.
 
Iraq’s government has tried and failed thus far to enact a national oil and gas law, in part because of a dispute over foreign participation.
 
The Shell joint venture reflects an attempt by the Oil Ministry to walk a fine line, attempting to push ahead despite a deadlocked parliament.
 
"The Ministry of Oil has the authority to sign the venture without going back to the parliament," said Assem Jihad, a spokesman for Iraq’s Oil Ministry. "However, if the parliament requested clarity, we are ready to explain. The matter of fact is that this venture is for the interest of Iraq."
 
The joint venture, however, has stirred opposition in parliament.
 
"It is a long-term monopoly that allows Shell to export gas when Iraq is in need of that gas," said Jabir Khalifa Jabir, a member of the Shi’ite Fadhila Party and a member of the parliament’s Oil and Gas Committee.
 
"This joint venture will include all of Basra and more likely to [encompass] the entire region of the south," said Mr. Jabir, whose party is the largest in Basra province.
 
He called the deal illegal and unconstitutional because local officials in Basra did not participate and warned that parliament should be involved if the venture develops new gas fields in the future.
 
Iraq’s once top-shelf state-run oil and gas industry was devastated by Saddam Hussein’s misuse, foreign sanctions and three wars in three decades. Infrastructure and equipment were harmed, and new technology and training were shut out.
 
Only 58 percent of demand for electricity in Iraq is being satisfied, according to the U.S. State Department’s Iraq Weekly Status Report, in part because of shortages of oil and gas.
 
More than 60 percent of Iraq’s natural gas production is burned or released into the air or reinjected into the ground because of insufficient infrastructure to transport and use the gas.
 
"Some 700 million standard cubic feet per day are currently being flared in the south of Iraq. The [joint venture] will initially focus on gathering this gas, hence reducing the flaring and turning this resource, currently being wasted, into value for Iraq," said Shell spokeswoman Kirsten Smart.
 
"Iraq’s domestic market is where the initial focus will be. Ultimately, it’s up to the Iraq government what happens to the gas," Miss Smart said.
 
Mr. Jihad denied that the joint venture would have a monopoly.
 
"It is only a partnership; there will not be monopoly of the gas. It is only the gas that is being wasted will be used, the gas that is currently wasted that will be exploited," he said.
 
"After Iraq takes its needs from gas, Shell will buy the surplus at the international price," he said.
 
The HOA defines the south of Iraq as the southernmost province and the oil and gas capital of Basra, though a map appendix to the HOA shows the contract territory extending for an unknown distance into the Persian Gulf.
 
In addition, the document says the joint venture can be extended to "any other areas as may be agreed by [Shell and the Oil Ministry]."
 
While the HOA does not bind the ministry and Shell to create the joint venture, it is a legal contract for 12 months, with a six-month automatic extension, during which it restricts the Iraqi Oil Ministry from negotiating with any other company or carrying out any work that could be interpreted as competing with Shell.
 
A six-member Joint Management Committee, with equal representation from Iraq and Shell, was due to begin work Oct. 22. All of the JMC decisions must be unanimous, though only one person each from the ministry and Shell is required for a quorum.
 
The JMC will determine "activities" of the joint venture, and Shell and the Oil Ministry will work together "in good faith with each other and shall not participate in any similar activities with any third parties."
 
(by ben lando and alaa majeed, United Press International and The Washington Times, 7 November 2008)

 

Feature5 – ClothesAreBusiness

There’s a universal language – clothing – and it’s time to deconstruct what people have been mutely declaring on the world stage. These are leçons des choses, lessons from things.
 
Michelle Obama’s dress on Election Night was stunning, a black satin Narciso Rodriguez dress blasted with two patches of crimson spatters, with black bands criss-crossing her torso to emphasize her tiny waist.
 
Ugh, said a woman named Elaine commenting on NYMag.com’s fashion blog. "I thought the dress drew the eye to her breasts and stomach."
 
It did, Elaine. That’s what made it alluring. Women have breasts; both they and men are pleased that it should be so. Bellies are where babies come from. There’s the result: Sasha and Malia.
 
Here finally was a Democratic woman on a political stage not concealing her sexuality but happy to celebrate it. She has been rightly praised for her fashion sense – and true, there are very few clothes that don’t flatter a tall, athletic woman like Michelle – but what’s startling is that her clothes reflect her self-confidence in her femininity. She is a high-earning, Harvard-trained lawyer and she doesn’t have to tone herself down for anyone.
 
You may think you’re reading mere fashion chat here, but I’m afraid we’re deep into semiotics, the study of signs and symbols. Look, the dimple in the narrow knot of Obama’s tie isn’t slightly off-centre by accident. In politics, everything matters. Trust me on this.

 

Until the Obama campaign, femininity wasn’t allowed. Look at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in loose-fitting gray pantsuits and Hillary Clinton’s standard-fit pantsuits in airport seating colours from pumpkin to teal. These women were wearing body upholstery that concealed their breasts, stomachs and legs (a big shoutout to you, Elaine); in other words, clothes not suited to women’s bumpy bodies. See, women rarely get elected. So many of them try to blend in with the men to see if they can pass.

Male politicians also have my sympathy. Republican politicians wear fabric boxes too, known as Brooks Brothers suits, tailored for the torso-heavy American body. Note that the comedian Stephen Colbert, who parodies Bill O’Reilly, wears Brooks Brothers because that’s what a "right-wing idiot," as the real Colbert refers to his character, would wear. Colbert’s full of rage. He’s a shark. He’s a shark in a box. He’s a Damien Hirst sculpture with the sharpest comic mind in America.
 
The only Republicans who don’t dress this way are the moneyed southern senators and representatives with silk pocket squares and fitted blazers that mean Business (I’m thinking of Representative Phil Gingrey, known as the Georgia Peach.)
 
But they don’t get elected president.
 
The Obamas are different. They are from a younger generation accustomed to comfort. Never has a nation been as baggy as Americans from the ’90s to the Noughties, so slapdash, spelling out their personalities with slogans on un-ironed T-shirts. College student style ruled the nation.
 
So the Obamas are going to be comfortable. But they’re young, they’re slim and Barack Obama especially is rail-thin, long-legged and ready for basketball. As one tall, skinny black writer – elated that his look-alike was president – said in the New York Times excitedly, "This guy is probably stuffed after a cup of minestrone!"
 
But Barack doesn’t want to wear a Brooks box, and Michelle doesn’t want to wear a chaste lady suit.
 
Oscar de la Renta dresses Republican women and does them a disservice … if only they knew it. Their matronly evening gowns state "I am a giant raspberry fool." Laura Bush’s pantsuits are oddly tight. They declare discomfort, they are not trousers so much as sausage casings. Why can’t these women wear something loose, flowing and draped? Because Oscar won’t let them. He doesn’t do Woman of the Desert, he does Elizabeth Dole and all the infrastructure that entails.
 
So what does Obama do? He wears a splendid version of a box, that is, a generously cut suit of fabric (rumours say merino wool/cashmere) so fine and beautiful that it flows and folds on his endless limbs. Tense people wear tight clothes; Obama is preternaturally relaxed and he likes to touch people when he’s campaigning.
 
I was puzzled by John McCain’s clothes, made of stiff fabrics that made him look like a man wearing a fresh brown paper bag. His collars were baggy, his shirts billowed, and his jackets didn’t fit. His suits wore him rather than the other way around.
 
Signifying what? Perhaps McCain was trying to look like an ordinary Joe. The great semiotician Roland Barthes had some taut remarks about this strategy when it was used by ’60s university students heartlessly appropriating the clothes of the poor.
 
Happily, McCain was a changed man when he gave his concession speech. Finally free of handlers, able to be the man he really is, his body softened. An Italian tailor could have done wonders with that version of McCain.
 
Cindy McCain is so rigid herself that if she bent at the waist she’d snap off. She wore irreproachable European retro-lady clothing that concealed her body and emanated Do Not Touch. Looking like something caught in a snare, her scarily thin Maris Crane-like body felt safe in those padded fabrics, and good for her.
 
I liked Sarah Palin’s new wardrobe, which did her a certain amount of justice. Her pencil skirts clung to her terrific curves but things got boxier up top so as not to trouble the base voters. A fecund woman in a political party that deplores sexual display, even in the context of a husband and five children, she had to look folksy-sexy, to celebrate her good looks while blurring them. She spent too much money only because she was in a huge hurry to approach a basically unachievable look.
 
A man’s clothes are what they are: shirt, pants, it’s pretty standard camouflage. But a woman’s clothes are her armour, to protect her from the antagonism regularly displayed to women in public life, and she adjusts her armour for each particular audience. It’s not easy to do – Princess Diana had years to perfect it and she had Catherine Walker, a genius of a dressmaker, on her side – Palin had two department stores, a credit card and a crazy dream.
 
She did well; Valentino for her first convention speech was perfect: a breast-concealing blazer in an ivory silk weave that looked like fish skin. She looked attractive but not offensively so, as a Republican might put it.
 
The GOP has sent a lawyer to Alaska to retrieve the clothes. Just as you crack open a lobster, the party is removing Palin’s carapace, and that’s harsh.
 
What puzzled me was that no one ever questioned Palin’s foreign purchases. Carla Bruni is trying to go French. Michelle Obama buys American-designed clothes, including from J. Crew. Barack Obama is said to buy from Hartmarx, a venerable Chicago firm with a union label. The McCains shouldn’t have worn Chanel and Ferragamo; it betrayed a lack of understanding of why Americans no longer manufacture much and what it feels like to lose your job to China.
 
I haven’t discussed the sartorial side of Canadian politics. It’s just weird beards and sweater vests here.
 
But keep an eye on the Obamas; next year we’ll be dressing like them and looking the better for it.

(by heather mallick, CBC News, 7 November 2008)

N&Q1 – MountainGlory

I’ve headed a fair number of hikes, and the weather usually behaves

itself. You’ll get a little freezing rain sometimes, but I have yet to

see anything that couldn’t be defeated by an umbrella.

 

The weather on October 25th was outright cruel. The sky was a dull

grey overcast, and there was heavy snow hovering over the Plain of the

Six Glaciers. The path was incredibly slippery, even on flat ground! The

hills were impossible, literally; another group of hikers turned back

before reaching the tea house, yet all of them had ice cleats.

 

 

                  

We had to settle for the end of the lake. No umbrella in existence could have changed that.

 

To rub salt on the wound, by the time we’d retreated to the Chateau

the weather had opened up. The snow stopped snowing, and the clouds were

parting. Within two hours, the only reminder of the horrible conditions

was a sharp wind. Of course the improved weather made the icy paths even

more impossible, and came too late to attempt a major hike anyway.

 

Still, any hike can be salvaged by a good lunch and a good walk. We

had both. Vermillion Lakes came to my rescue, and while my inner hiker

cringed at walking on the road, at least there wasn’t any ice! The

improved weather was perfect for this photogenic spot, and Maria and I

took full advantage.

 

(by hj hornbeck)

ForYourContemplation1 – IcelandIsUs

Friends -
 
From a friend.
 
For your contemplation.
 
Jim Szpajcher
 
 
 
Six month, nine months from now, you could be anyone, anywhere in the world and this could be you plight.  
 
REYKJAVIK, Iceland — The collapse came so fast it seemed unreal, impossible. One woman here compared it to being hit by a train. Another said she felt as if she were watching it through a window. Another said, “It feels like you’ve been put in a prison, and you don’t know what you did wrong.”
 
This country, as modern and sophisticated as it is geographically isolated, still seems to be in shock. But if the events of last month — the failure of Iceland’s banks; the plummeting of its currency; the first wave of layoffs; the loss of reputation abroad — felt like a bad dream, Iceland has now awakened to find that it is all coming true.
 
It is not as if Reykjavik, where about two-thirds of the country’s 300,000 people live, is filled with bread lines or homeless shanties or looters smashing store windows. But this city, until recently the center of one of the world’s fastest economic booms, is now the unhappy site of one of its great crashes. It is impossible to meet anyone here who has not been profoundly affected by the financial crisis.
 
Overnight, people lost their savings. Prices are soaring. Once-crowded restaurants are almost empty. Banks are rationing foreign currency, and companies are finding it dauntingly difficult to do business abroad. Inflation is at 16 percent and rising. People have stopped traveling overseas. The local currency, the krona, was 65 to the dollar a year ago; now it is 130. Companies are slashing salaries, reducing workers’ hours and, in some instances, embarking on mass layoffs.
 
“No country has ever crashed as quickly and as badly in peacetime,” said Jon Danielsson, an economist with the London School of Economics.
 
The loss goes beyond the personal, shattering a proud country’s sense of itself.
 
“Years ago, I would say that I was Icelandic and people might say, ‘Oh, where’s that?’ ” said Katrin Runolfsdottir, 49, who was fired from her secretarial job on Oct. 31. “That was fine. But now there’s this image of us being overspenders, thieves.”
 
Aldis Nordfjord, a 53-year-old architect, also lost her job last month. So did all 44 of her co-workers — everyone in the company except its owners. As many as 75 percent of Iceland’s private-sector architects have probably been fired in the past few weeks, she said.
 
In a strange way, she said, it is comforting to be one in a crowd. “Everyone is in the same situation,” she said. “If you can imagine, if only 10 out of 40 people had been fired, it would have been different; you would have felt, ‘Why me? Why not him?’ ”
 
Until last spring, Iceland’s economy seemed white-hot. It had the fourth-highest gross domestic product per capita in the world. Unemployment hovered between 0 and 1 percent (while forecasts for next spring are as high as 10 percent). A 2007 United Nations report measuring life expectancy, real per-capita income and educational levels identified Iceland as the world’s best country in which to live.
 
Emboldened by the strong krona, once-frugal Icelanders took regular shopping weekends in Europe, bought fancy cars and built bigger houses paid for with low-interest loans in foreign currencies.
 
Like the Vikings of old, Icelandic bankers were roaming the world and aggressively seizing business, pumping debt into a soufflé of a system. The banks are the ones that cannot repay tens of billions of dollars in foreign debt, and “they’re the ones who ruined our reputation,” said Adalheidur Hedinsdottir, who runs a small chain of coffee shops called Kaffitar and sells coffee wholesale to stores.
 
There was so much work, employers had to import workers from abroad. Ms. Nordfjord, the architect, worked so much overtime last year that she doubled her salary. She was featured on a Swedish radio program as an expert on Iceland’s extraordinary building boom.
 
Two months ago, her company canceled all overtime. Two weeks ago, it acknowledged that work was slowing. But it promised that there would be enough to last through next summer.
 
The next day, everyone was herded into a conference room and fired.
 
Employers are hurting just as much as employees. Ms. Hedinsdottir has laid off seven part-time employees, cut full-time workers’ hours and raised prices. The Kaffitar branch on Reykjavik’s central shopping street was perhaps half full; in normal times, it would have been bursting at its seams.
 
While business is dwindling, costs are soaring. When the government took over the country’s failing banks in October, Ms. Hedinsdottir’s latest shipment of coffee — more than 109,000 pounds — was already on the water, en route from Nicaragua. She had the money to pay for it, but because the crisis made foreign banks leery of doing business with Iceland, she said, she was unable to convert enough cash into foreign currency.
 
“They were calling me every day and asking me what the situation was, and they got really nervous,” Ms. Hedinsdottir said of her creditors. They got so nervous that they sent the coffee to a warehouse in Hamburg, Germany, where it now sits while she tries to find the foreign currency to pay for it.
 
Her fixed costs are no longer fixed. Five years ago, the company built a new factory, borrowing the 120 million kronur — about $1.5 million — in foreign currencies. But the currency’s fall has increased her debt to 200 million kronur. This summer, her monthly payments were 2.5 million kronur; now they may be double that — the equivalent of $38,500 in Iceland’s debased currency.
 
“My financial manager is talking to the banks every day, and we don’t know how much we’re supposed to pay,” Ms. Hedinsdottir said.
 
In a recent survey, one-third of Icelanders said they would consider emigrating. Foreigners are already abandoning Iceland.
 
Anthony Restivo, an American who worked this fall for a potato farm in eastern Iceland and was heading home, said all of the farm’s foreign workers abruptly left last month because their salaries had fallen so much. One man arrived from Poland, he said, then realized how little the krona was worth and went home the next day.
 
At the Kringlan shopping center on the edge of Reykjavik, Hronn Helgadottir, who works at the Aveda beauty store, said she could no longer afford to travel abroad. But the previous weekend, she said, she and her husband had gone for a last trip to Amsterdam, a holiday they had paid for months ago, when the krona was still strong.
 
They ate as cheaply as they could and bought nothing. “It was strange to stand in a store and look at a bag or a pair of shoes and see that they cost 100,000 kronur, when last year they cost only 40,000,” she said.
 
In Kopavogur, a suburb of Reykjavik, Ms. Runolfsdottir, the recently fired secretary, said she had worried for some time that Iceland would collapse under the weight of inflated expectations.
 
“If you drive through Reykjavik, you see all these new houses, and I’ve been thinking for the longest time, ‘Where are we going to get people to live in all these homes?’” she said.
 
The real estate firm that used to employ Ms. Runolfsdottir built about 800 houses two years ago, she said; only 40 percent have been sold.
 
By Icelandic law, Ms. Runolfsdottir and other fired employees have three months before they have to leave their jobs. At the end of that period, she will start drawing unemployment benefits.
 
Meanwhile, her husband’s modest investment in several now-failed Icelandic banks is worthless. “They were encouraging us to buy shares in their firms until the last minute,” she said.
 
She feels angry at the government, which in her view has mishandled everything, and angry at the banks that have tarnished Iceland’s reputation. And while she has every sympathy with the hundreds of thousands of foreign depositors who may have lost their money, she wonders why the Icelandic government — and, in essence, the Icelandic people — should have to suffer more than they already have.
 
“We didn’t ask anyone to put their money in the banks,” she said. “These are private companies and private banks, and they went abroad and did business there.”
 
Despite all this, Icelanders are naturally optimistic, a trait born, perhaps, of living in one of the world’s most punishing landscapes and depending for so much of their history on the fickle fishing industry. The weak krona will make exports more attractive, they point out. Also, Iceland has a highly educated, young and flexible population, and has triumphed after hardship before.
 
Ragna Sara Jonsdottir, who runs a small business consultancy, said she had met for the first time with other businesses in her office building. “We sat down and said, ‘We all have ideas, and we can help each other through difficult times,’ ” she said.
 
But she said she was just as shocked as everyone else by the suddenness, and the severity, of the downturn. When the prime minister, Geir H. Haarde, addressed the nation at the beginning of October, she said, her 6-year-old daughter asked her to explain what he had said.
 
She answered that there was a crisis, but that the prime minister had not told the country how the government planned to address it. Her daughter said, “Maybe he didn’t know what to say.”

 

(by sarah lyall, New York Times, 8 November 2008)

ForYourContemplation2 – IsThisNegligence?

To this day, the willingness of a Wall Street investment bank to pay me hundreds of thousands of dollars to dispense investment advice to grownups remains a mystery to me. I was 24 years old, with no experience of, or particular interest in, guessing which stocks and bonds would rise and which would fall. The essential function of Wall Street is to allocate capital-to decide who should get it and who should not. Believe me when I tell you that I hadn’t the first clue.
 
I’d never taken an accounting course, never run a business, never even had savings of my own to manage. I stumbled into a job at Salomon Brothers in 1985 and stumbled out much richer three years later, and even though I wrote a book about the experience, the whole thing still strikes me as preposterous-which is one of the reasons the money was so easy to walk away from. I figured the situation was unsustainable. Sooner rather than later, someone was going to identify me, along with a lot of people more or less like me, as a fraud. Sooner rather than later, there would come a Great Reckoning when Wall Street would wake up and hundreds if not thousands of young people like me, who had no business making huge bets with other people’s money, would be expelled from finance.
 
When I sat down to write my account of the experience in 1989-Liar’s Poker, it was called-it was in the spirit of a young man who thought he was getting out while the getting was good. I was merely scribbling down a message on my way out and stuffing it into a bottle for those who would pass through these parts in the far distant future.
 
Unless some insider got all of this down on paper, I figured, no future human would believe that it happened.
 
I thought I was writing a period piece about the 1980s in America. Not for a moment did I suspect that the financial 1980s would last two full decades longer or that the difference in degree between Wall Street and ordinary life would swell into a difference in kind. I expected readers of the future to be outraged that back in 1986, the C.E.O. of Salomon Brothers, John Gutfreund, was paid $3.1 million; I expected them to gape in horror when I reported that one of our traders, Howie Rubin, had moved to Merrill Lynch, where he lost $250 million; I assumed they’d be shocked to learn that a Wall Street C.E.O. had only the vaguest idea of the risks his traders were running. What I didn’t expect was that any future reader would look on my experience and say, "How quaint."
 
I had no great agenda, apart from telling what I took to be a remarkable tale, but if you got a few drinks in me and then asked what effect I thought my book would have on the world, I might have said something like, "I hope that college students trying to figure out what to do with their lives will read it and decide that it’s silly to phony it up and abandon their passions to become financiers." I hoped that some bright kid at, say, Ohio State University who really wanted to be an oceanographer would read my book, spurn the offer from Morgan Stanley, and set out to sea.
 
Somehow that message failed to come across. Six months after Liar’s Poker was published, I was knee-deep in letters from students at Ohio State who wanted to know if I had any other secrets to share about Wall Street. They’d read my book as a how-to manual.
 
In the two decades since then, I had been waiting for the end of Wall Street. The outrageous bonuses, the slender returns to shareholders, the never-ending scandals, the bursting of the internet bubble, the crisis following the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management: Over and over again, the big Wall Street investment banks would be, in some narrow way, discredited. Yet they just kept on growing, along with the sums of money that they doled out to 26-year-olds to perform tasks of no obvious social utility. The rebellion by American youth against the money culture never happened. Why bother to overturn your parents’ world when you can buy it, slice it up into tranches, and sell off the pieces?
 
At some point, I gave up waiting for the end. There was no scandal or reversal, I assumed, that could sink the system.
 
Then came Meredith Whitney with news. Whitney was an obscure analyst of financial firms for Oppenheimer Securities who, on October 31, 2007, ceased to be obscure. On that day, she predicted that Citigroup had so mismanaged its affairs that it would need to slash its dividend or go bust. It’s never entirely clear on any given day what causes what in the stock market, but it was pretty obvious that on October 31, Meredith Whitney caused the market in financial stocks to crash. By the end of the trading day, a woman whom basically no one had ever heard of had shaved $369 billion off the value of financial firms in the market. Four days later, Citigroup’s CEO, Chuck Prince, resigned. In January, Citigroup slashed its dividend.
 
From that moment, Whitney became E.F. Hutton: When she spoke, people listened. Her message was clear. If you want to know what these Wall Street firms are really worth, take a hard look at the crappy assets they bought with huge sums of ­borrowed money, and imagine what they’d fetch in a fire sale. The vast assemblages of highly paid people inside the firms were essentially worth nothing. For better than a year now, Whitney has responded to the claims by bankers and brokers that they had put their problems behind them with this write-down or that capital raise with a claim of her own: You’re wrong. You’re still not facing up to how badly you have mismanaged your business.
 
Rivals accused Whitney of being overrated; bloggers accused her of being lucky. What she was, mainly, was right. But it’s true that she was, in part, guessing. There was no way she could have known what was going to happen to these Wall Street firms. The C.E.O.’s themselves didn’t know.
 
Now, obviously, Meredith Whitney didn’t sink Wall Street. She just expressed most clearly and loudly a view that was, in retrospect, far more seditious to the financial order than, say, Eliot Spitzer’s campaign against Wall Street corruption. If mere scandal could have destroyed the big Wall Street investment banks, they’d have vanished long ago. This woman wasn’t saying that Wall Street bankers were corrupt. She was saying they were stupid. These people whose job it was to allocate capital apparently didn’t even know how to manage their own.
 
At some point, I could no longer contain myself: I called Whitney. This was back in March, when Wall Street’s fate still hung in the balance. I thought, If she’s right, then this really could be the end of Wall Street as we’ve known it. I was curious to see if she made sense but also to know where this young woman who was crashing the stock market with her every utterance had come from.
 
It turned out that she made a great deal of sense and that she’d arrived on Wall Street in 1993, from the Brown University history department. "I got to New York, and I didn’t even know research existed," she says. She’d wound up at Oppenheimer and had the most incredible piece of luck: to be trained by a man who helped her establish not merely a career but a worldview. His name, she says, was Steve Eisman.
 
Eisman had moved on, but they kept in touch. "After I made the Citi call," she says, "one of the best things that happened was when Steve called and told me how proud he was of me."
 
Having never heard of Eisman, I didn’t think anything of this. But a few months later, I called Whitney again and asked her, as I was asking others, whom she knew who had anticipated the cataclysm and set themselves up to make a fortune from it. There’s a long list of people who now say they saw it coming all along but a far shorter one of people who actually did. Of those, even fewer had the nerve to bet on their vision. It’s not easy to stand apart from mass hysteria-to believe that most of what’s in the financial news is wrong or distorted, to believe that most important financial people are either lying or deluded-without actually being insane. A handful of people had been inside the black box, understood how it worked, and bet on it blowing up. Whitney rattled off a list with a half-dozen names on it. At the top was Steve Eisman.
 
Steve Eisman entered finance about the time I exited it. He’d grown up in New York City and gone to a Jewish day school, the University of Pennsylvania, and Harvard Law School. In 1991, he was a 30-year-old corporate lawyer. "I hated it," he says. "I hated being a lawyer. My parents worked as brokers at Oppenheimer. They managed to finagle me a job. It’s not pretty, but that’s what happened."
 
He was hired as a junior equity analyst, a helpmate who didn’t actually offer his opinions. That changed in December 1991, less than a year into his new job, when a subprime mortgage lender called Ames Financial went public and no one at Oppenheimer particularly cared to express an opinion about it. One of Oppenheimer’s investment bankers stomped around the research department looking for anyone who knew anything about the mortgage business. Recalls Eisman: "I’m a junior analyst and just trying to figure out which end is up, but I told him that as a lawyer I’d worked on a deal for the Money Store." He was promptly appointed the lead analyst for Ames Financial. "What I didn’t tell him was that my job had been to proofread the ­documents and that I hadn’t understood a word of the fucking things."
 
Ames Financial belonged to a category of firms known as nonbank financial institutions. The category didn’t include J.P. Morgan, but it did encompass many little-known companies that one way or another were involved in the early-1990s boom in subprime mortgage lending-the lower class of American finance.
 
The second company for which Eisman was given sole responsibility was Lomas Financial, which had just emerged from bankruptcy. "I put a sell rating on the thing because it was a piece of shit," Eisman says. "I didn’t know that you weren’t supposed to put a sell rating on companies. I thought there were three boxes-buy, hold, sell-and you could pick the one you thought you should." He was pressured generally to be a bit more upbeat, but upbeat wasn’t Steve Eisman’s style. Upbeat and Eisman didn’t occupy the same planet. A hedge fund manager who counts Eisman as a friend set out to explain him to me but quit a minute into it. After describing how Eisman exposed various important people as either liars or idiots, the hedge fund manager started to laugh. "He’s sort of a prick in a way, but he’s smart and honest and fearless."
 
 "A lot of people don’t get Steve," Whitney says. "But the people who get him love him." Eisman stuck to his sell rating on Lomas Financial, even after the company announced that investors needn’t worry about its financial condition, as it had hedged its market risk. "The single greatest line I ever wrote as an analyst," says Eisman, "was after Lomas said they were hedged." He recited the line from memory: " ’The Lomas Financial Corp. is a perfectly hedged financial institution: It loses money in every conceivable interest-rate environment.’ I enjoyed writing that sentence more than any sentence I ever wrote." A few months after he’d delivered that line in his report, Lomas Financial returned to bankruptcy.
 
Eisman wasn’t, in short, an analyst with a sunny disposition who expected the best of his fellow financial man and the companies he created. "You have to understand," Eisman says in his defense, "I did subprime first. I lived with the worst first. These guys lied to infinity. What I learned from that experience was that Wall Street didn’t give a shit what it sold."
 
Harboring suspicions about ­people’s morals and telling investors that companies don’t deserve their capital wasn’t, in the 1990s or at any other time, the fast track to success on Wall Street. Eisman quit Oppenheimer in 2001 to work as an analyst at a hedge fund, but what he really wanted to do was run money. FrontPoint Partners, another hedge fund, hired him in 2004 to invest in financial stocks. Eisman’s brief was to evaluate Wall Street banks, homebuilders, mortgage originators, and any company (General Electric or General Motors, for instance) with a big financial-services division-anyone who touched American finance. An insurance company backed him with $50 million, a paltry sum. "Basically, we tried to raise money and didn’t really do it," Eisman says.
 
Instead of money, he attracted people whose worldviews were as shaded as his own-Vincent Daniel, for instance, who became a partner and an analyst in charge of the mortgage sector. Now 36, Daniel grew up a lower-middle-class kid in Queens. One of his first jobs, as a junior accountant at Arthur Andersen, was to audit Salomon Brothers’ books. "It was shocking," he says. "No one could explain to me what they were doing." He left accounting in the middle of the internet boom to become a research analyst, looking at companies that made subprime loans. "I was the only guy I knew covering companies that were all going to go bust," he says. "I saw how the sausage was made in the economy, and it was really freaky."
 
Danny Moses, who became Eisman’s head trader, was another who shared his perspective. Raised in Georgia, Moses, the son of a finance professor, was a bit less fatalistic than Daniel or Eisman, but he nevertheless shared a general sense that bad things can and do happen. When a Wall Street firm helped him get into a trade that seemed perfect in every way, he said to the salesman, "I appreciate this, but I just want to know one thing: How are you going to screw me?"
 
Heh heh heh, c’mon. We’d never do that, the trader started to say, but Moses was politely insistent: We both know that unadulterated good things like this trade don’t just happen between little hedge funds and big Wall Street firms. I’ll do it, but only after you explain to me how you are going to screw me. And the salesman explained how he was going to screw him. And Moses did the trade.
 
Both Daniel and Moses enjoyed, immensely, working with Steve Eisman. He put a fine point on the absurdity they saw everywhere around them. "Steve’s fun to take to any Wall Street meeting," Daniel says. "Because he’ll say ‘Explain that to me’ 30 different times. Or ‘Could you explain that more, in English?’ Because once you do that, there’s a few things you learn. For a start, you figure out if they even know what they’re talking about. And a lot of times, they don’t!"
 
At the end of 2004, Eisman, Moses, and Daniel shared a sense that unhealthy things were going on in the U.S. housing market: Lots of firms were lending money to people who shouldn’t have been borrowing it. They thought Alan Greenspan’s decision after the internet bust to lower interest rates to 1 percent was a travesty that would lead to some terrible day of reckoning. Neither of these insights was entirely original. Ivy Zelman, at the time the housing-market analyst at Credit Suisse, had seen the bubble forming very early on. There’s a simple measure of sanity in housing prices: the ratio of median home price to income. Historically, it runs around 3 to 1; by late 2004, it had risen nationally to 4 to 1. "All these people were saying it was nearly as high in some other countries," Zelman says. "But the problem wasn’t just that it was 4 to 1. In Los Angeles, it was 10 to 1, and in Miami, 8.5 to 1. And then you coupled that with the buyers. They weren’t real buyers. They were speculators." Zelman alienated clients with her pessimism, but she couldn’t pretend everything was good. "It wasn’t that hard in hindsight to see it," she says. "It was very hard to know when it would stop." Zelman spoke occasionally with Eisman and always left these conversations feeling better about her views and worse about the world. "You needed the occasional assurance that you weren’t nuts," she says. She wasn’t nuts. The world was.
 
By the spring of 2005, FrontPoint was fairly convinced that something was very screwed up not merely in a handful of companies but in the financial underpinnings of the entire U.S. mortgage market. In 2000, there had been $130 billion in subprime mortgage lending, with $55 billion of that repackaged as mortgage bonds. But in 2005, there was $625 billion in subprime mortgage loans, $507 billion of which found its way into mortgage bonds. Eisman couldn’t understand who was making all these loans or why. He had a from-the-ground-up understanding of both the U.S. housing market and Wall Street. But he’d spent his life in the stock market, and it was clear that the stock market was, in this story, largely irrelevant. "What most people don’t realize is that the fixed-income world dwarfs the equity world," he says. "The equity world is like a fucking zit compared with the bond market." He shorted companies that originated subprime loans, like New Century and Indy Mac, and companies that built the houses bought with the loans, such as Toll Brothers. Smart as these trades proved to be, they weren’t entirely satisfying. These companies paid high dividends, and their shares were often expensive to borrow; selling them short was a costly proposition.
 
Enter Greg Lippman, a mortgage-bond trader at Deutsche Bank. He arrived at FrontPoint bearing a 66-page presentation that described a better way for the fund to put its view of both Wall Street and the U.S. housing market into action. The smart trade, Lippman argued, was to sell short not New Century’s stock but its bonds that were backed by the subprime loans it had made. Eisman hadn’t known this was even possible-because until recently, it hadn’t been. But Lippman, along with traders at other Wall Street investment banks, had created a way to short the subprime bond market with precision.
 
Here’s where financial technology became suddenly, urgently relevant. The typical mortgage bond was still structured in much the same way it had been when I worked at Salomon Brothers. The loans went into a trust that was designed to pay off its investors not all at once but according to their rankings. The investors in the top tranche, rated AAA, received the first payment from the trust and, because their investment was the least risky, received the lowest interest rate on their money. The investors who held the trusts’ BBB tranche got the last payments-and bore the brunt of the first defaults. Because they were taking the most risk, they received the highest return. Eisman wanted to bet that some subprime borrowers would default, causing the trust to suffer losses. The way to express this view was to short the BBB tranche. The trouble was that the BBB tranche was only a tiny slice of the deal.
 
But the scarcity of truly crappy subprime-mortgage bonds no longer mattered. The big Wall Street firms had just made it possible to short even the tiniest and most obscure subprime-mortgage-backed bond by creating, in effect, a market of side bets. Instead of shorting the actual BBB bond, you could now enter into an agreement for a credit-default swap with Deutsche Bank or Goldman Sachs. It cost money to make this side bet, but nothing like what it cost to short the stocks, and the upside was far greater. 
 
The arrangement bore the same relation to actual finance as fantasy football bears to the N.F.L. Eisman was perplexed in particular about why Wall Street firms would be coming to him and asking him to sell short. "What Lippman did, to his credit, was he came around several times to me and said, ‘Short this market,’" Eisman says. "In my entire life, I never saw a sell-side guy come in and say, ‘Short my market.’"
 
And short Eisman did-then he tried to get his mind around what he’d just done so he could do it better. He’d call over to a big firm and ask for a list of mortgage bonds from all over the country. The juiciest shorts-the bonds ultimately backed by the mortgages most likely to default-had several characteristics. They’d be in what Wall Street people were now calling the sand states: Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada. The loans would have been made by one of the more dubious mortgage lenders; Long Beach Financial, wholly owned by Washington Mutual, was a great example. Long Beach Financial was moving money out the door as fast as it could, few questions asked, in loans built to self-destruct. It specialized in asking home­owners with bad credit and no proof of income to put no money down and defer interest payments for as long as possible. In Bakersfield, California, a Mexican strawberry picker with an income of $14,000 and no English was lent every penny he needed to buy a house for $720,000.
 
More generally, the subprime market tapped a tranche of the American public that did not typically have anything to do with Wall Street. Lenders were making loans to people who, based on their credit ratings, were less creditworthy than 71 percent of the population. Eisman knew some of these people. One day, his housekeeper, a South American woman, told him that she was planning to buy a townhouse in Queens. "The price was absurd, and they were giving her a low-down-payment option-ARM," says Eisman, who talked her into taking out a conventional fixed-rate mortgage. Next, the baby nurse he’d hired back in 1997 to take care of his newborn twin daughters phoned him. "She was this lovely woman from Jamaica," he says. "One day she calls me and says she and her sister own five townhouses in Queens. I said, ‘How did that happen?’" It happened because after they bought the first one and its value rose, the lenders came and suggested they refinance and take out $250,000, which they used to buy another one. Then the price of that one rose too, and they repeated the experiment. "By the time they were done," Eisman says, "they owned five of them, the market was falling, and they couldn’t make any of the payments."
 
In retrospect, pretty much all of the riskiest subprime-backed bonds were worth betting against; they would all one day be worth zero. But at the time Eisman began to do it, in the fall of 2006, that wasn’t clear. He and his team set out to find the smelliest pile of loans they could so that they could make side bets against them with Goldman Sachs or Deutsche Bank. What they were doing, oddly enough, was the analysis of subprime lending that should have been done before the loans were made: Which poor Americans were likely to jump which way with their finances? How much did home prices need to fall for these loans to blow up? (It turned out they didn’t have to fall; they merely needed to stay flat.) The default rate in Georgia was five times higher than that in Florida even though the two states had the same unemployment rate. Why? Indiana had a 25 percent default rate; California’s was only 5 percent. Why?
 
Moses actually flew down to Miami and wandered around neighborhoods built with subprime loans to see how bad things were. "He’d call me and say, ‘Oh my God, this is a calamity here,’" recalls Eisman. All that was required for the BBB bonds to go to zero was for the default rate on the underlying loans to reach 14 percent. Eisman thought that, in certain sections of the country, it would go far, far higher.
 
The funny thing, looking back on it, is how long it took for even someone who predicted the disaster to grasp its root causes. They were learning about this on the fly, shorting the bonds and then trying to figure out what they had done. Eisman knew subprime lenders could be scumbags. What he underestimated was the total unabashed complicity of the upper class of American capitalism. For instance, he knew that the big Wall Street investment banks took huge piles of loans that in and of themselves might be rated BBB, threw them into a trust, carved the trust into tranches, and wound up with 60 percent of the new total being rated AAA.
 
But he couldn’t figure out exactly how the rating agencies justified turning BBB loans into AAA-rated bonds. "I didn’t understand how they were turning all this garbage into gold," he says. He brought some of the bond people from Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, and UBS over for a visit. "We always asked the same question," says Eisman. "Where are the rating agencies in all of this? And I’d always get the same reaction. It was a smirk." He called Standard & Poor’s and asked what would happen to default rates if real estate prices fell. The man at S&P couldn’t say; its model for home prices had no ability to accept a negative number. "They were just assuming home prices would keep going up," Eisman says.
 
As an investor, Eisman was allowed on the quarterly conference calls held by Moody’s but not allowed to ask questions. The people at Moody’s were polite about their brush-off, however. The C.E.O. even invited Eisman and his team to his office for a visit in June 2007. By then, Eisman was so certain that the world had been turned upside down that he just assumed this guy must know it too. "But we’re sitting there," Daniel recalls, "and he says to us, like he actually means it, ‘I truly believe that our rating will prove accurate.’ And Steve shoots up in his chair and asks, ‘What did you just say?’ as if the guy had just uttered the most preposterous statement in the history of finance. He repeated it. And Eisman just laughed at him."
 
"With all due respect, sir," Daniel told the C.E.O. deferentially as they left the meeting, "you’re delusional."
 
This wasn’t Fitch or even S&P. This was Moody’s, the aristocrats of the rating business, 20 percent owned by Warren Buffett. And the company’s C.E.O. was being told he was either a fool or a crook by one Vincent Daniel, from Queens.
 
A full nine months earlier, Daniel and Moses had flown to Orlando for an industry conference. It had a grand title-the American Securitization Forum-but it was essentially a trade show for the subprime-mortgage business: the people who originated subprime mortgages, the Wall Street firms that packaged and sold subprime mortgages, the fund managers who invested in nothing but subprime-mortgage-backed bonds, the agencies that rated subprime­mortgage bonds, the lawyers who did whatever the lawyers did. Daniel and Moses thought they were paying a courtesy call on a cottage industry, but the cottage had become a castle. "There were like 6,000 people there," Daniel says. "There were so many people being fed by this industry. The entire fixed-income department of each brokerage firm is built on this. Everyone there was the long side of the trade. The wrong side of the trade. And then there was us. That’s when the picture really started to become clearer, and we started to get more cynical, if that was possible. We went back home and said to Steve, ‘You gotta see this.’"
 
Eisman, Daniel, and Moses then flew out to Las Vegas for an even bigger subprime conference. By now, Eisman knew everything he needed to know about the quality of the loans being made. He still didn’t fully understand how the apparatus worked, but he knew that Wall Street had built a doomsday machine. He was at once opportunistic and outraged.
 
Their first stop was a speech given by the C.E.O. of Option One, the mortgage originator owned by H&R Block. When the guy got to the part of his speech about Option One’s subprime-loan portfolio, he claimed to be expecting a modest default rate of 5 percent. Eisman raised his hand. Moses and Daniel sank into their chairs. "It wasn’t a Q&A," says Moses. "The guy was giving a speech. He sees Steve’s hand and says, ‘Yes?’"
 
"Would you say that 5 percent is a probability or a possibility?" Eisman asked.
 
A probability, said the C.E.O., and he continued his speech.
 
Eisman had his hand up in the air again, waving it around. Oh, no, Moses thought. "The one thing Steve always says," Daniel explains, "is you must assume they are lying to you. They will always lie to you." Moses and Daniel both knew what Eisman thought of these subprime lenders but didn’t see the need for him to express it here in this manner. For Eisman wasn’t raising his hand to ask a question. He had his thumb and index finger in a big circle. He was using his fingers to speak on his behalf. Zero! they said.
 
"Yes?" the C.E.O. said, obviously irritated. "Is that another question?"
 
"No," said Eisman. "It’s a zero. There is zero probability that your default rate will be 5 percent." The losses on subprime loans would be much, much greater. Before the guy could reply, Eisman’s cell phone rang. Instead of shutting it off, Eisman reached into his pocket and answered it. "Excuse me," he said, standing up. "But I need to take this call." And with that, he walked out.
 
Eisman’s willingness to be abrasive in order to get to the heart of the matter was obvious to all; what was harder to see was his credulity: He actually wanted to believe in the system. As quick as he was to cry bullshit when he saw it, he was still shocked by bad behavior. That night in Vegas, he was seated at dinner beside a really nice guy who invested in mortgage C.D.O.’s-collateralized debt obligations. By then, Eisman thought he knew what he needed to know about C.D.O.’s. He didn’t, it turned out.
 
Later, when I sit down with Eisman, the very first thing he wants to explain is the importance of the mezzanine C.D.O. What you notice first about Eisman is his lips. He holds them pursed, waiting to speak. The second thing you notice is his short, light hair, cropped in a manner that suggests he cut it himself while thinking about something else. "You have to understand this," he says. "This was the engine of doom." Then he draws a picture of several towers of debt. The first tower is made of the original subprime loans that had been piled together. At the top of this tower is the AAA tranche, just below it the AA tranche, and so on down to the riskiest, the BBB tranche-the bonds Eisman had shorted. But Wall Street had used these BBB tranches-the worst of the worst-to build yet another tower of bonds: a "particularly egregious" C.D.O. The reason they did this was that the rating agencies, presented with the pile of bonds backed by dubious loans, would pronounce most of them AAA. These bonds could then be sold to investors-pension funds, insurance companies-who were allowed to invest only in highly rated securities. "I cannot fucking believe this is allowed-I must have said that a thousand times in the past two years," Eisman says.
 
His dinner companion in Las Vegas ran a fund of about $15 billion and managed C.D.O.’s backed by the BBB tranche of a mortgage bond, or as Eisman puts it, "the equivalent of three levels of dog shit lower than the original bonds."
 
FrontPoint had spent a lot of time digging around in the dog shit and knew that the default rates were already sufficient to wipe out this guy’s entire portfolio. "God, you must be having a hard time," Eisman told his dinner companion.
 
"No," the guy said, "I’ve sold everything out."
 
After taking a fee, he passed them on to other investors. His job was to be the C.D.O. "expert," but he actually didn’t spend any time at all thinking about what was in the C.D.O.’s. "He managed the C.D.O.’s," says Eisman, "but managed what? I was just appalled. People would pay up to have someone manage their C.D.O.’s-as if this moron was helping you. I thought, You prick, you don’t give a fuck about the investors in this thing."
 
Whatever rising anger Eisman felt was offset by the man’s genial disposition. Not only did he not mind that Eisman took a dim view of his C.D.O.’s; he saw it as a basis for friendship. "Then he said something that blew my mind," Eisman tells me. "He says, ‘I love guys like you who short my market. Without you, I don’t have anything to buy.’"
 
That’s when Eisman finally got it. Here he’d been making these side bets with Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank on the fate of the BBB tranche without fully understanding why those firms were so eager to make the bets. Now he saw. There weren’t enough Americans with shitty credit taking out loans to satisfy investors’ appetite for the end product. The firms used Eisman’s bet to synthesize more of them. Here, then, was the difference between fantasy finance and fantasy football: When a fantasy player drafts Peyton Manning, he doesn’t create a second Peyton Manning to inflate the league’s stats. But when Eisman bought a credit-default swap, he enabled Deutsche Bank to create another bond identical in every respect but one to the original. The only difference was that there was no actual homebuyer or borrower. The only assets backing the bonds were the side bets Eisman and others made with firms like Goldman Sachs. Eisman, in effect, was paying to Goldman the interest on a subprime mortgage. In fact, there was no mortgage at all. "They weren’t satisfied getting lots of unqualified borrowers to borrow money to buy a house they couldn’t afford," Eisman says. "They were creating them out of whole cloth. One hundred times over! That’s why the losses are so much greater than the loans. But that’s when I realized they needed us to keep the machine running. I was like, This is allowed?"
 
This particular dinner was hosted by Deutsche Bank, whose head trader, Greg Lippman, was the fellow who had introduced Eisman to the subprime bond market. Eisman went and found Lippman, pointed back to his own dinner companion, and said, "I want to short him." Lippman thought he was joking; he wasn’t. "Greg, I want to short his paper," Eisman repeated. "Sight unseen."
 
Eisman started out running a $60 million equity fund but was now short around $600 million of various subprime-related securities. In the spring of 2007, the market strengthened. But, says Eisman, "credit quality always gets better in March and April. And the reason it always gets better in March and April is that people get their tax refunds. You would think people in the securitization world would know this. We just thought that was moronic."
 
He was already short the stocks of mortgage originators and the homebuilders. Now he took short positions in the rating agencies-"they were making 10 times more rating C.D.O.’s than they were rating G.M. bonds, and it was all going to end"-and, finally, the biggest Wall Street firms because of their exposure to C.D.O.’s. He wasn’t allowed to short Morgan Stanley because it owned a stake in his fund. But he shorted UBS, Lehman Brothers, and a few others. Not long after that, FrontPoint had a visit from Sanford C. Bernstein’s Brad Hintz, a prominent analyst who covered Wall Street firms. Hintz wanted to know what Eisman was up to. "We just shorted Merrill Lynch," Eisman told him.
 
"Why?" asked Hintz.
 
"We have a simple thesis," Eisman explained. "There is going to be a calamity, and whenever there is a calamity, Merrill is there." When it came time to bankrupt Orange County with bad advice, Merrill was there. When the internet went bust, Merrill was there. Way back in the 1980s, when the first bond trader was let off his leash and lost hundreds of millions of dollars, Merrill was there to take the hit. That was Eisman’s logic-the logic of Wall Street’s pecking order. Goldman Sachs was the big kid who ran the games in this neighborhood. Merrill Lynch was the little fat kid assigned the least pleasant roles, just happy to be a part of things. The game, as Eisman saw it, was Crack the Whip. He assumed Merrill Lynch had taken its assigned place at the end of the chain.
 
There was only one thing that bothered Eisman, and it continued to trouble him as late as May 2007. "The thing we couldn’t figure out is: It’s so obvious. Why hasn’t everyone else figured out that the machine is done?" Eisman had long subscribed to Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, a newsletter famous in Wall Street circles and obscure outside them. Jim Grant, its editor, had been prophesying doom ever since the great debt cycle began, in the mid-1980s. In late 2006, he decided to investigate these things called C.D.O.’s. Or rather, he had asked his young assistant, Dan Gertner, a chemical engineer with an M.B.A., to see if he could understand them. Gertner went off with the documents that purported to explain C.D.O.’s to potential investors and for several days sweated and groaned and heaved and suffered. "Then he came back," says Grant, "and said, ‘I can’t figure this thing out.’ And I said, ‘I think we have our story.’"
 
Eisman read Grant’s piece as independent confirmation of what he knew in his bones about the C.D.O.’s he had shorted. "When I read it, I thought, Oh my God. This is like owning a gold mine. When I read that, I was the only guy in the equity world who almost had an orgasm."
 
On July 19, 2007, the same day that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told the U.S. Senate that he anticipated as much as $100 billion in losses in the subprime-mortgage market, FrontPoint did something unusual: It hosted its own conference call. It had had calls with its tiny population of investors, but this time FrontPoint opened it up. Steve Eisman had become a poorly kept secret. Five hundred people called in to hear what he had to say, and another 500 logged on afterward to listen to a recording of it. He explained the strange alchemy of the C.D.O. and said that he expected losses of up to $300 billion from this sliver of the market alone. To evaluate the situation, he urged his audience to "just throw your model in the garbage can. The models are all backward-looking.
 
The models don’t have any idea of what this world has become…. For the first time in their lives, people in the asset-backed-securitization world are actually having to think." He explained that the rating agencies were morally bankrupt and living in fear of becoming actually bankrupt. "The rating agencies are scared to death," he said. "They’re scared to death about doing nothing because they’ll look like fools if they do nothing."
 
On September 18, 2008, Danny Moses came to work as usual at 6:30 a.m. Earlier that week, Lehman Brothers had filed for bankruptcy. The day before, the Dow had fallen 449 points to its lowest level in four years. Overnight, European governments announced a ban on short-selling, but that served as faint warning for what happened next.
 
At the market opening in the U.S., everything-every financial asset-went into free fall. "All hell was breaking loose in a way I had never seen in my career," Moses says. FrontPoint was net short the market, so this total collapse should have given Moses pleasure. He might have been forgiven if he stood up and cheered. After all, he’d been betting for two years that this sort of thing could happen, and now it was, more dramatically than he had ever imagined. Instead, he felt this terrifying shudder run through him. He had maybe 100 trades on, and he worked hard to keep a handle on them all. "I spent my morning trying to control all this energy and all this information," he says, "and I lost control. I looked at the screens. I was staring into the abyss. The end. I felt this shooting pain in my head. I don’t get headaches. At first, I thought I was having an aneurysm."
 
Moses stood up, wobbled, then turned to Daniel and said, "I gotta leave. Get out of here. Now." Daniel thought about calling an ambulance but instead took Moses out for a walk.
 
Outside it was gorgeous, the blue sky reaching down through the tall buildings and warming the soul. Eisman was at a Goldman Sachs conference for hedge fund managers, raising capital. Moses and Daniel got him on the phone, and he left the conference and met them on the steps of St. Patrick’s Cathedral. "We just sat there," Moses says. "Watching the people pass."
 
This was what they had been waiting for: total collapse. "The investment-banking industry is fucked," Eisman had told me a few weeks earlier. "These guys are only beginning to understand how fucked they are. It’s like being a Scholastic, prior to Newton. Newton comes along, and one morning you wake up: ‘Holy shit, I’m wrong!’" Now Lehman Brothers had vanished, Merrill had surrendered, and Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley were just a week away from ceasing to be investment banks. The investment banks were not just fucked; they were extinct.
 
Not so for hedge fund managers who had seen it coming. "As we sat there, we were weirdly calm," Moses says. "We felt insulated from the whole market reality. It was an out-of-body experience. We just sat and watched the people pass and talked about what might happen next. How many of these people were going to lose their jobs. Who was going to rent these buildings after all the Wall Street firms collapsed." Eisman was appalled. "Look," he said. "I’m short. I don’t want the country to go into a depression. I just want it to fucking deleverage." He had tried a thousand times in a thousand ways to explain how screwed up the business was, and no one wanted to hear it. "That Wall Street has gone down because of this is justice," he says. "They fucked people. They built a castle to rip people off. Not once in all these years have I come across a person inside a big Wall Street firm who was having a crisis of conscience."
 
Truth to tell, there wasn’t a whole lot of hand-wringing inside FrontPoint either. The only one among them who wrestled a bit with his conscience was Daniel. "Vinny, being from Queens, needs to see the dark side of everything," Eisman says. To which Daniel replies, "The way we thought about it was, ‘By shorting this market we’re creating the liquidity to keep the market going.’"
 
"It was like feeding the monster," Eisman says of the market for subprime bonds. "We fed the monster until it blew up."
 
About the time they were sitting on the steps of the midtown cathedral, I sat in a booth in a restaurant on the East Side, waiting for John Gutfreund to arrive for lunch, and wondered, among other things, why any restaurant would seat side by side two men without the slightest interest in touching each other.
 
There was an umbilical cord running from the belly of the exploded beast back to the financial 1980s. A friend of mine created the first mortgage derivative in 1986, a year after we left the Salomon Brothers trading program. ("The problem isn’t the tools," he likes to say. "It’s who is using the tools. Derivatives are like guns.")
 
When I published my book, the 1980s were supposed to be ending. I received a lot of undeserved credit for my timing. The social disruption caused by the collapse of the savings-and-loan industry and the rise of hostile takeovers and leveraged buyouts had given way to a brief period of recriminations. Just as most students at Ohio State read Liar’s Poker as a manual, most TV and radio interviewers regarded me as a whistleblower. (The big exception was Geraldo Rivera. He put me on a show called "People Who Succeed Too Early in Life" along with some child actors who’d gone on to become drug addicts.) Anti-Wall Street feeling ran high-high enough for Rudy Giuliani to float a political career on it-but the result felt more like a witch hunt than an honest reappraisal of the financial order. The public lynchings of Gutfreund and junk-bond king Michael Milken were excuses not to deal with the disturbing forces underpinning their rise. Ditto the cleaning up of Wall Street’s trading culture. The surface rippled, but down below, in the depths, the bonus pool remained undisturbed. Wall Street firms would soon be frowning upon profanity, firing traders for so much as glancing at a stripper, and forcing male employees to treat women almost as equals. Lehman Brothers circa 2008 more closely resembled a normal corporation with solid American values than did any Wall Street firm circa 1985.
 
The changes were camouflage. They helped distract outsiders from the truly profane event: the growing misalignment of interests between the people who trafficked in financial risk and the wider culture.
 
I’d not seen Gutfreund since I quit Wall Street. I’d met him, nervously, a couple of times on the trading floor. A few months before I left, my bosses asked me to explain to Gutfreund what at the time seemed like exotic trades in derivatives I’d done with a European hedge fund. I tried. He claimed not to be smart enough to understand any of it, and I assumed that was how a Wall Street C.E.O. showed he was the boss, by rising above the details. There was no reason for him to remember any of these encounters, and he didn’t: When my book came out and became a public-relations nuisance to him, he told reporters we’d never met.
 
Over the years, I’d heard bits and pieces about Gutfreund. I knew that after he’d been forced to resign from Salomon Brothers he’d fallen on harder times. I heard later that a few years ago he’d sat on a panel about Wall Street at Columbia Business School. When his turn came to speak, he advised students to find something more meaningful to do with their lives. As he began to describe his career, he broke down and wept.
 
When I emailed him to invite him to lunch, he could not have been more polite or more gracious. That attitude persisted as he was escorted to the table, made chitchat with the owner, and ordered his food. He’d lost a half-step and was more deliberate in his movements, but otherwise he was completely recognizable. The same veneer of denatured courtliness masked the same animal need to see the world as it was, rather than as it should be.
 
We spent 20 minutes or so determining that our presence at the same lunch table was not going to cause the earth to explode. We discovered we had a mutual acquaintance in New Orleans. We agreed that the Wall Street C.E.O. had no real ability to keep track of the frantic innovation occurring inside his firm. ("I didn’t understand all the product lines, and they don’t either," he said.) We agreed, further, that the chief of the Wall Street investment bank had little control over his subordinates. ("They’re buttering you up and then doing whatever the fuck they want to do.") He thought the cause of the financial crisis was "simple. Greed on both sides-greed of investors and the greed of the bankers." I thought it was more complicated. Greed on Wall Street was a given-almost an obligation. The problem was the system of incentives that channeled the greed.
 
But I didn’t argue with him. For just as you revert to being about nine years old when you visit your parents, you revert to total subordination when you are in the presence of your former C.E.O. John Gutfreund was still the King of Wall Street, and I was still a geek. He spoke in declarative statements; I spoke in questions.
 
But as he spoke, my eyes kept drifting to his hands. His alarmingly thick and meaty hands. They weren’t the hands of a soft Wall Street banker but of a boxer. I looked up. The boxer was smiling-though it was less a smile than a placeholder expression. And he was saying, very deliberately, "Your…fucking…book."
 
I smiled back, though it wasn’t quite a smile.
 
"Your fucking book destroyed my career, and it made yours," he said.
 
I didn’t think of it that way and said so, sort of.
 
"Why did you ask me to lunch?" he asked, though pleasantly. He was genuinely curious.
 
You can’t really tell someone that you asked him to lunch to let him know that you don’t think of him as evil. Nor can you tell him that you asked him to lunch because you thought that you could trace the biggest financial crisis in the history of the world back to a decision he had made. John Gutfreund did violence to the Wall Street social order-and got himself dubbed the King of Wall Street-when he turned Salomon Brothers from a private partnership into Wall Street’s first public corporation. He ignored the outrage of Salomon’s retired partners. ("I was disgusted by his materialism," William Salomon, the son of the firm’s founder, who had made Gutfreund C.E.O. only after he’d promised never to sell the firm, had told me.) He lifted a giant middle finger at the moral disapproval of his fellow Wall Street C.E.O.’s. And he seized the day. He and the other partners not only made a quick killing; they transferred the ultimate financial risk from themselves to their shareholders. It didn’t, in the end, make a great deal of sense for the shareholders. (A share of Salomon Brothers purchased when I arrived on the trading floor, in 1986, at a then market price of $42, would be worth 2.26 shares of Citigroup today-market value: $27.) But it made fantastic sense for the investment bankers.
 
From that moment, though, the Wall Street firm became a black box. The shareholders who financed the risks had no real understanding of what the risk takers were doing, and as the risk-taking grew ever more complex, their understanding diminished. The moment Salomon Brothers demonstrated the potential gains to be had by the investment bank as public corporation, the psychological foundations of Wall Street shifted from trust to blind faith.
 
No investment bank owned by its employees would have levered itself 35 to 1 or bought and held $50 billion in mezzanine C.D.O.’s. I doubt any partnership would have sought to game the rating agencies or leap into bed with loan sharks or even allow mezzanine C.D.O.’s to be sold to its customers. The hoped-for short-term gain would not have justified the long-term hit.
 
No partnership, for that matter, would have hired me or anyone remotely like me. Was there ever any correlation between the ability to get in and out of Princeton and a talent for taking financial risk?
 
Now I asked Gutfreund about his biggest decision. "Yes," he said. "They-the heads of the other Wall Street firms-all said what an awful thing it was to go public and how could you do such a thing. But when the temptation arose, they all gave in to it." He agreed that the main effect of turning a partnership into a corporation was to transfer the financial risk to the shareholders. "When things go wrong, it’s their problem," he said-and obviously not theirs alone. When a Wall Street investment bank screwed up badly enough, its risks became the problem of the U.S. government. "It’s laissez-faire until you get in deep shit," he said, with a half chuckle. He was out of the game.
 
It was now all someone else’s fault.
 
He watched me curiously as I scribbled down his words. "What’s this for?" he asked.
 
I told him I thought it might be worth revisiting the world I’d described in Liar’s Poker, now that it was finally dying. Maybe bring out a 20th-anniversary edition.
 
"That’s nauseating," he said.
 
Hard as it was for him to enjoy my company, it was harder for me not to enjoy his. He was still tough, as straight and blunt as a butcher. He’d helped create a monster, but he still had in him a lot of the old Wall Street, where people said things like "A man’s word is his bond." On that Wall Street, people didn’t walk out of their firms and cause trouble for their former bosses by writing books about them. "No," he said, "I think we can agree about this: Your fucking book destroyed my career, and it made yours." With that, the former king of a former Wall Street lifted the plate that held his appetizer and asked sweetly, "Would you like a deviled egg?"
 
Until that moment, I hadn’t paid much attention to what he’d been eating. Now I saw he’d ordered the best thing in the house, this gorgeous frothy confection of an earlier age. Who ever dreamed up the deviled egg? Who knew that a simple egg could be made so complicated and yet so appealing? I reached over and took one. Something for nothing. It never loses its charm. 

 

(by michael lewis, portfolio.com, 11 November 2008)

ForYourContemplation3 – Weather

Folks -

 

As some of you may know, I’m not convinced that the debate over the rise in global temperature has been settled, as the IPCC claims to have done. Nor am I convinced that there is a conclusive anthropogenic footprint over recent climate change.

 

I keep running into articles which indicate that I am not alone.

 

For your contemplation.

 

Jim Szpajcher

 

 

 

The World Has Never Seen Such Freezing Heat

 

A surreal scientific blunder last week raised a huge question mark about the temperature records that underpin the worldwide alarm over global warming. On Monday, Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), which is run by Al Gore’s chief scientific ally, Dr James Hansen, and is one of four bodies responsible for monitoring global temperatures, announced that last month was the hottest October on record.

 

This was startling. Across the world there were reports of unseasonal snow and plummeting temperatures last month, from the American Great Plains to China, and from the Alps to New Zealand. China’s official news agency reported that Tibet had suffered its "worst snowstorm ever". In the US, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration registered 63 local snowfall records and 115 lowest-ever temperatures for the month, and ranked it as only the 70th-warmest October in 114 years.

 

So what explained the anomaly? GISS’s computerised temperature maps seemed to show readings across a large part of Russia had been up to 10 degrees higher than normal. But when expert readers of the two leading warming-sceptic blogs, Watts Up With That and Climate Audit, began detailed analysis of the GISS data they made an astonishing discovery. The reason for the freak figures was that scores of temperature records from Russia and elsewhere were not based on October readings at all. Figures from the previous month had simply been carried over and repeated two months running.

 

The error was so glaring that when it was reported on the two blogs – run by the US meteorologist Anthony Watts and Steve McIntyre, the Canadian computer analyst who won fame for his expert debunking of the notorious "hockey stick" graph – GISS began hastily revising its figures. This only made the confusion worse because, to compensate for the lowered temperatures in Russia, GISS claimed to have discovered a new "hotspot" in the Arctic – in a month when satellite images were showing Arctic sea-ice recovering so fast from its summer melt that three weeks ago it was 30 per cent more extensive than at the same time last year.

 

A GISS spokesman lamely explained that the reason for the error in the Russian figures was that they were obtained from another body, and that GISS did not have resources to exercise proper quality control over the data it was supplied with. This is an astonishing admission: the figures published by Dr Hansen’s institute are not only one of the four data sets that the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) relies on to promote its case for global warming, but they are the most widely quoted, since they consistently show higher temperatures than the others.

 

If there is one scientist more responsible than any other for the alarm over global warming it is Dr Hansen, who set the whole scare in train back in 1988 with his testimony to a US Senate committee chaired by Al Gore. Again and again, Dr Hansen has been to the fore in making extreme claims over the dangers of climate change. (He was recently in the news here for supporting the Greenpeace activists acquitted of criminally damaging a coal-fired power station in Kent, on the grounds that the harm done to the planet by a new power station would far outweigh any damage they had done themselves.)

 

Yet last week’s latest episode is far from the first time Dr Hansen’s methodology has been called in question. In 2007 he was forced by Mr Watts and Mr McIntyre to revise his published figures for US surface temperatures, to show that the hottest decade of the 20th century was not the 1990s, as he had claimed, but the 1930s.

 

Another of his close allies is Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chairman of the IPCC, who recently startled a university audience in Australia by claiming that global temperatures have recently been rising "very much faster" than ever, in front of a graph showing them rising sharply in the past decade. In fact, as many of his audience were aware, they have not been rising in recent years and since 2007 have dropped.

 

Dr Pachauri, a former railway engineer with no qualifications in climate science, may believe what Dr Hansen tells him. But whether, on the basis of such evidence, it is wise for the world’s governments to embark on some of the most costly economic measures ever proposed, to remedy a problem which may actually not exist, is a question which should give us all pause for thought.

 

(by christopher booker, The Telegraph, 16 November, 2008)