Campaign Finance 101

A week ago, Kim started a new job with Common Cause. Her primary task is to get people aware of how the new campaign finance law works in Connecticut and to encourage candidates from any political party to run under the new system. Yesterday, she put up a blog post entitled Campaign Finance 101 which is posted on the CommonCause Blog, Connecticut Local Politics and MyLeftNutmeg.

Please spend a few minutes to read the post and if you know of other blogs that would be interested in cross posting it, let Kim know.

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Wordless Wednesday



Kim and Elizabeth, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Losses in the Housing Market

Today, Citigroup announced a $18.1 billion write down because of the housing crisis, passing UBS’s record $14.2 billion write down. Last quarter, Merrill Lynch to a $7.9 billion hit on bad mortgages and are expected to take another $10 to $15 billion dollar hit on Thursday. Bear Stearns got hit for $1.9 billion and is looking for a new CEO. BankAmerica had $2 billion in write downs.

All of this helps keep things in perspective a little bit. You see, I am expecting to write down hundreds of thousands of dollars in Chapter 7 bankruptcy. As my life and my career changed, I could no longer afford the expensive house I had in Stamford, CT. Just like the thousands of people being laid off by Wall Street firms, I have not been able to find jobs that pay well enough to cover my mortgage.

So, a year ago, we put our house on the market. At the time, we were told the market was soft and the best we could expect was about 80% of what it had been appraised for when we got our last mortgage. Other people were less optimistic and said we wouldn’t be able to get even 70% of what it had been appraised for.

We worked with a great realtor who recognized the value of the house and marketed it well. In July we went to contract. One of the issues in the contract was removing an underground oil tank, which was done in early August. The buyers claimed that their inspection said there might be another underground oil tank, which we found out was not the case when the tank was removed. In attempting to clarify that and make sure that all underground oil tanks were properly removed, the buyers got cold feet and reneged on the contract, claiming we did not have a meeting of minds on removing the oil tank.

Their deposit is now tied up in a court suit as they try to get back the money that came with the contract. It is my belief that they acted immorally, unethically, and that they are obligated for not only what they’ve paid so far, but for additional damages as well. The question remains if the judge will agree.

Yet all of this gets to timing issues. If they had been willing to settle, perhaps we could have forestalled bankruptcy, maybe even long enough to find a buyer. We do have several interested parties. The problem is not only on their side. We’ve attempted repeatedly to work with the companies holding our first and second mortgages to find ways of mitigating the loss short of Chapter 7. Neither company has followed through, even though they have said they would. So, it looks like the buyers that reneged on the contract and the mortgage companies that are attempting to foreclose on us will get a chance to fight it out in court. Perhaps they deserve each other.

I feel horrible about writing down hundreds of thousands of dollars in the housing crisis. I worry about other people that will get hurt by our filing Chapter 7. I worry about how we will heat the house this winter. Yet the write downs of the major banks helps keep our write downs in perspective, and perhaps helps add a little perspective on their write downs.

Damage Control?

When I read a blog post by a PR firm asking users of a product to write stories about the wonderful experiences they’ve had using the product, I tend to think one of two things are going on. Either the company is being smart and cutting edge and is building community and buzz, or the company is in trouble and is doing damage control. Today, Linden Lab had a post like that and my first thought was damage control.

It may be because I am too close to the financial community in Second Life, and have been to too many sessions recently discussing Linden Lab’s decision to ban most in world banking. So, I did a search on Google News about Second Life. Half of the stories when I checked were about the banking crisis. “Even virtual economies are bearish: Second Life bans banking”, “Financial Crisis in Second Life”, “Banking meltdown infects the virtual world”, “Not even virtual worlds can escape cowboy banks” and so on.

So, it does look as if Linden Lab is trying to do a little damage control. So, let me offer my snarky suggestions on the damage control efforts. People that I would like to see listed include Nicholas Portocarrero, LukeConnell Vandeverre, Midas Commons, Jasper Tizzy, IntLibber Brautigan, Monkey Canning, Travis Ristow, Tryian Camilo, Lindsay Druart and others. Note: I do not want to imply that all of these folks are cut from the same cloth. Some have done great damage to the economy in Second Life. Some have do great jobs in repairing the damage. I’ll leave it up to you to decide who you think is doing what.

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The Hero with A Thousand Friends

I grew up on the New England Transcendentalists, reading Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “Self Reliance” and Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden Pond”. When my eldest children were young, I would read W.B. Yeats’ “Lake Isle of Innisfree” to them at bedtime and they would drift off to sleep dreaming of small cabins of clay and wattles made.

As I work on my own writing and ponder what we see in contemporary media, I read Joseph Campbell’s Hero with a Thousand Faces. Yet again, I see the individual fighting against great odds for some great boon. It reflects in the media since so often the hero myth is repeated. Too often, the enemy is the collective. It is the “borg” in Star Trek, it is a government run amok in the anti-utopian novels. Where do we find examples of teamwork, friendship and the value of community?

We do find it in our advertising. “Be a Pepper”, “The Pepsi Generation”, “Membership has its privileges”. If we look closely, we find it in some children’s shows such as the Wonder Pets always singing about teamwork.

So, where does friendship, teamwork and community fit into our stories?

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