1935-1939 Pictures Of The United States

LOOK AT THE PICTURES!

WE ALL NEED A REMINDER!

America …during the years of 1935 – 1939

For those who have not read “Grapes of Wrath”

We are whining over $5.00 per gallon gasoline?

 

Meanwhile in Los Angeles, California there was a growing class of well to do.

 

Scanned photo from Auto club of Southern California Westways magazine dated March/April 2011. the following explanation of the photo and a history.

Emporium Moderne

BY MORGAN P. YATES

Rising above its motor court of wheeled subjects, Bullock’s Wilshire (the apostrophewas later dropped) radiates high fashion and architectural panache in this 1938 image. When the store opened to the public a month before the stock market crash of 1929, the Los Angeles Times said that the art deco ziggurat, located at 3050 Wilshire Boulevard, about a mile-and-a-half west of downtown, added “a meaningful sentence to the poem of progress that is the Los Angeles skyline.”

 

In the 1920s, residential growth and congested downtown districts led many department stores to start opening branch stores in outlying areas to complement their flagship stores. When this part of Wilshire Boulevardwas rezoned from residential to commercial in 1926, the stage was set to transform the area into L.A.s own version of New Yorks Fifth Avenue. Bullocks led the way, and its success attracted further commercial development. By the late 1930s, the Wilshire corridor exemplified the apex of fine shopping in the region.

 

Retailers in the 1920s also increasingly recognized the importance of infusing distinctive architectural designs into their establishments to attract shoppers. Bullock < s embraced the movement to synthesize art and commerce by construct­ing the building in art deco, a new and modern style ema­nating from France. Designed by Los Angeles father-and-son architects John and Donald Parkinson, type resulting structurefrom its distinctive exterior to its eyepopping decor­ became a beacon visible for blocks around, announcing the citys comingofage on a national stage.

Best of all, the cathedral to commerce is still with us todayy thanks to its elegant transformation into a law library under the stewardship of the Southwestern School.

Egypt – Oh! It’s Just Another Protest


February 9, 2011: What part of this Daily Beast summary from Reuters do you believe?

The third week of protests in Egypt could be the biggest: Following Tuesday’s enormous demonstrations, in which record numbers of protesters poured into Cairo’s Tahrir Square and Google executive Wael Ghonim spoke, the opposition to President Hosni Mubarak is organizing another big protest for Friday. The White House, meanwhile, had Joe Biden push Vice President Omar Suleiman to end Egypt’s 30-year emergency law and for “prompt, meaningful, peaceful, and legitimate” transition. The BBC says the U.S. is no longer focusing on President Hosni Mubarak’s future, but rather pushing for concrete reforms.

—-

 The United States is the leader of the free world. Most of our presidents throughout the 20th century espoused the idea of democracy but made deals with dictators. Both President Barack Obama and former President George W. Bush have been outspoken advocates of spreading democracy. Most recently it was George W. Bush who insisted that removing Saddam Hussein as the dictator of Iraq would spread democracy throughout the Middle East. So America can’t back down. The problem is the confrontation between America’s political values and its economic interests.

Look at the results of democracy in the Middle East. Iran now has a theocracy with a government that does not permit free elections. Gaza had free elections that the United States supported and the consequence is Hamas in control and little chance there will ever be another free election. Iraq’s government is in turmoil because too many people in that country do not subscribe to the idea that there are winners and loser in every election.

We have seen uprisings before and few have ended as we had hoped. The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 ended with the Chinese army killing several hundred people. The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was a spontaneous nationwide revolt against the government but ended when the army and security forces killed 41 people. The uprising in Tahrir Square, Cairo will most likely end as those two events did. There is no indication that anyone will remove the government of Hosni Mubarak.

I believe that U.S. economic and security interests will prevail within the American federal government. Thus next February all of this will be just a memory. Perhaps this will be a lesson to Obama and subsequent presidents.

Goodbye Keith Olbermann

The New York Times reports Keith Olbermann has left his MSNBC program. “In a closing statement on his show, Mr. Olbermann said simply that it would be the last edition of the program. He offered no explanation other than on occasion, the show had become too much for him.”

I never liked Keith Olbermann. I also don’t like most of the hosts on Fox News. The reason is I am a moderate. Their bombastic attacks are outrageous. That is the difficulty us moderates face. There just aren’t many middle of the roaders appearing on radio or television. Right now I can only identify two commentators who are relatively moderate. John Avlon who appears as a guest commentator on CNN and Michael Smerconish, a Philadelphia talk radio host that is broadcast in other markets and an occasional host on MSNBC. Perhaps that is because being sensible is just not as entertaining. That is the duty of all television and radio programs. It’s all about ratings.

Perhaps this is a first act by Comcast now that they own MSNBC. If that is the case then say goodbye to Ed Shultz and Chris Matthews.

Comcast NBC Deal Thwarts Competition

In 2009 Comcast’s operating income was $7.2 Billion. NBC Universal’s 2009 operating income was $2.3 Billion.
 
Here we have two very large companies that are profitable combining into one with a reduction in competition.  Comcast provides internet, cable television, and phone services to the public.  The company competes with other similar providers such as AT&T, Verizon, Dish Network, Direct TV, and Time Warner Cable.  Once they have control of NBC won’t they have too much control over who will be allowed to broadcast content?  What will they charge other providers?  The answers are obvious.  This combination is inappropriate and should not have been permitted.  It’s all in who you know. 
 
GE wanted to sell NBC Universal and Comcast wanted to buy.  Is the public’s best interests upper most in the minds of the FCC? NO!!

11 Million Jobs

The number of jobs the American economy needs to create in order to return to the pre-recession unemployment rate of 5 percent.  The source of this data is the Economic Policy Institute and reported in Newsweek dated 11/29/10.

Last week’s Bureau of Labor Statistics weekly report indicated that Weekly Initial Job Claims were 407,000.  Weekly claims were in the 360,000 to 380,000 range when unemployment was last at 5 percent.   

Wellesley, Massachusetts Public School Students Learn to Pray to Allah

If you read or watch nothing else today, take the ten minutes needed to watch this shocking video.

Here is the story. A sixth-grade class in Wellesley, Massachusetts, was “dragged” by their teachers to the “notorious” Roxbury mosque — the $15 million Saudi-funded, minareted Islamic center started by Abdurrahman Alamoudi (now serving a 23-year terrorism sentence) and run by the Muslim American Society (the quasi-official arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in the United States). Capitalizing on the “goo” that passes for “social studied” curricula, parents were told the “field trip” was “to learn about the architecture of the mosque and observe a midday prayer service.” One parent was concerned enough to volunteer as a chaperone and bring along a camera.

The result is stunning: an unabashed exercise in Islamic dawa, the “call to Islam” and the manner by which the Brotherhood’s spiritual guide, Yusuf Qaradawi, promises that Islam will “conquer America” and “conquer Europe.” Qaradawi — wonder of wonders — is a trustee of the Roxbury mosque (although he is banned from the U.S. for sanctioning terrorism). As the video relates, “Dawa Net,” one Islamic organization that instructs on how to use the schools to inculcate the young, explains that public schools in America are “fertile grounds where the seeds of Islam can be sowed inside the hearts of non-Muslim students.”

The question is, Did this really happen?  Is this just another fear mongering video that has been taken out of context?  Anyone can post a video on YouTube.  Anyone can add what ever voice over they want.  If all this is accurate then we really do have a problem.

The Parent Model

This is worth reading.  The president and his White House economic council should be required to read this.  Paul Krugman too!

Op-Ed Columnist in the New York Times

By DAVID BROOKS

Published: August 26, 2010

During the first half of this year, German and American political leaders engaged in an epic debate. American leaders argued that the economic crisis was so bad, governments should borrow billions to stimulate growth. German leaders argued that a little short-term stimulus was sensible, but anything more was near-sighted. What was needed was not more debt, but measures to balance budgets and restore confidence.

David Brooks

The debate got pointed. American economists accused German policy makers of risking a long depression. The German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, countered, “Governments should not become addicted to borrowing as a quick fix to stimulate demand.”

The two countries followed different policy paths. According to Gary Becker of the University of Chicago, the Americans borrowed an amount equal to 6 percent of G.D.P. in an attempt to stimulate growth. The Germans spent about 1.5 percent of G.D.P. on their stimulus.

This divergence created a natural experiment. Who was right?

The early returns suggest the Germans were. The American stimulus package was supposed to create a “summer of recovery,” according to Obama administration officials. Job growth was supposed to be surging at up to 500,000 a month. Instead, the U.S. economy is scuffling along.

The German economy, on the other hand, is growing at a sizzling (and obviously unsustainable) 9 percent annual rate. Unemployment in Germany has come down to pre-crisis levels.

Results from one quarter do not settle the stimulus/austerity debate. Many other factors are in play. For example, Germany is surging, in part, because America is borrowing. Essentially, we Americans borrowed from our kids, spent some of that money on German machinery, and ended up employing German workers.

But the results do underline one essential truth: Stimulus size is not the key factor in determining how quickly a country emerges from recession. The U.S. tried big, but is emerging slowly. The Germans tried small, and are recovering nicely.

The economy can’t be played like a piano — press a fiscal key here and the right job creation notes come out over there. Instead, economic management is more like parenting. If you instill good values and create a secure climate then, through some mysterious process you will never understand, things will probably end well.

The crucial issue is getting the fundamentals right. The Germans are doing better because during the past decade, they took care of their fundamentals and the Americans didn’t.

The situation can be expressed this way: German policy makers inherited a certain consensus-based economic model. That model has advantages. It fosters gradual innovation (of the sort useful in metallurgy). It also has disadvantages. It sometimes leads to rigidity and high unemployment.

Over the past few years, the Germans have built on their advantages. They effectively support basic research and worker training. They have also taken brave measures to minimize their disadvantages. As an editorial from the superb online think tank e21 reminds us, the Germans have recently reduced labor market regulation, increased wage flexibility and taken strong measures to balance budgets.

In the U.S., policy makers inherited a different economic model, one that also has certain advantages. It fosters disruptive innovation (of the sort useful in Silicon Valley). It also has certain disadvantages — a penchant for over-consumption and short term thinking.

In the past decade, American policy makers have done little to maximize their model’s natural advantages or address its problems. Indeed, they’ve only made the short-term thinking problem worse, with monetary, fiscal and home-ownership policies encouraging even more borrowing and consumption.

Nations rise and fall on the intertwined strength of their cultures and governing institutions. Despite all the normal shortcomings, German governing institutions have functioned reasonably well, ushering in painful but necessary reforms. The U.S. has a phenomenally creative culture, but right now it’s an institutional weakling.

If you look around the world today, you see that a two-class system is coming into being. Some countries are undertaking fundamental reforms. In those places, weaknesses have been exposed. Orthodoxies have been shattered. New coalitions have formed.

This is happening in Britain, where a center-right government is reining in a government that had spun out of control. It’s also true in Sweden and other consensus-based countries, where there is so much emphasis on consistent, long-range thinking.

In other countries, political division frustrates long-range thinking. The emphasis is on fixing things for next month or next quarter. The U.S., unfortunately, is struggling to get out of Group 2.

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on August 27, 2010, on page A21 of the New York edition.

The Power of a Talk Show Host

Hundreds of thousands of people were at a Glenn Beck rally on the National Mall in Washington D.C.  His primary guest speaker was Sarah Palin.

Beck asked people to “Help us restore traditional American values.” He is also quoted as saying, “We must restore America and restore her honor.”  .

I did not know that America’s values or honor had ended or was reduced.  I was happy to learn that there were few political banners or signs at the rally. What does this all mean? What are his intentions?

There is something very eerie about this situation. The Associated Press reporter wrote, “Beck put a heavy religious cast on nearly all his remarks, sounding at times like an evangelical preacher.”

Other than his commentary that “America today begins to turn back to God” I do not know his intentions. Television reporters have been unable to provide any more insight than the vague AP report.

Sarah Palin recognized three soldiers who sacrificed both body and mind in their service to the country.  That message was clearer than Beck’s but brought nothing new to the stories of soldier sacrifices.  Her speech can be seen at Salon.com.