Coping: With the Matter of Intension

Elaine work up in a kind of Yogi Berra mood this morning.  There’s nothing like a discussion at 4 AM about the boundaries of intention to kick-off Monday.

On  her side of the ledger, the science is pretty obvious:  She figures that when people are born,  they are like fresh sheets of paper – blank – and ready for imprinting. The “printers” are the parents, schooling, expectation-setting, and social context – all of which turns the blank-pieces of humans into nice, malleable republicans and democrats and keeps most people coloring inside the lines.

Not that I disagree. 

BUT I think when we get to a certain age – if we’re reflective about it – we can see back over Life and understand that who we are now intended it to play as it has.  In other words, while intention may be a 90-95% before the fact thing, there may also be a larger than expected after the fact power, as well. 

And we know this, how?

By examining our intentions both before and after an event, of course!

Here’s an example:  I intended prior to the weekend to get one MAJOR project done this weekend.  And, I did.  It happens that with all the instruction, our 2014 income tax return – this weekend’s project – ran 65 pages of print out from TurboTax (half or so was comparisons and non-filed stuff).  Like I said: MAJOR project.  And it only took about 7-hours of work because everything is scanned, and that which isn’t may be conveniently plug & played from people like brokerage accounts.  It’s really pretty slick.,  No more downloading compulsive gambler options reporting software.  Zing.  Done.

Here’s the thing:  Yes, I intended before the 7-hour project to have it done.  So that’s our  90-95% intention part.

However, the future self looks back, intending (ex post facto) that it be done.  And that’s the feeling I have this morning:  One of both intention and satisfaction.  Intending it be done and filed, if that makes sense.

But – here’s my point – the “satisfaction” one feels at the end of a big project may be a sense of accomplishment or whatever you want to label it, but I maintain there’s a backwards intention involved in getting there.

It’s open to debate, of course.

The one really useful thing to come out of the discussion was that children have a “parent gap.”

That is, there’s an age between about age 18 and 30-something when young people don’t call parents.  We’re not sure why, except it seems to coincide with whenever a parent puts the foot down and turns off the “National Band of Mom and Dad.”

At some point (early 30’s) it must occur to the young that the loan officers might know something about life, after all.  And, for many,  the period from 35 up is spent trying to set right things screwed up earlier in life.  And screwing up new things, too.

Is this what Monday mornings are for?

There is an Honest Rich Guy

After a governor stuck his foot in it, claiming the horror story writer Stephen King didn’t pay taxes in Maine, King has quickly set the record straight.

Governors sticking their feet in the mouth is nothing new, of course.  What is refreshing is that at a time when a lot of pseudo-patriots demand a “right” to keep secret accounts offshore, here’s a rich guy who’s willing to stand up and pay his fair share – and then some.

Nice!

All of which brings us to massive overhaul of the Tax Code which is unfair and unjust – but I didn’t see you’d filed for office with a better, alternative plan.  When you do, send me a note… but in the meantime, I don’t have much use for people who try to avoid taxes.  And I’m particularly not fond of corporations that hide big dough offshore in tax-havens.  Those I vote against with my wallet when I can.

Meantime, Stephen King earns our Monday Diogenes Sinope nod.

*Diogenes made a virtue of poverty. He begged for a living and often slept in a large ceramic jar[4] in the marketplace.

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The Canals of Earth and Mars

With the drought kicking up its heels again in California, we head out on a limb this morning and sketch up what could be the upcoming environmental fight of a lifetime. As usual, we’re going to be way ahead of the crowd on this, and it may not happen for another 100-years. The timing will be set by the oscillations of El Nino and La Nina, which seem to be at extremes presently, which is causing the drought to be quite horrific in the Southland. However, as we all know, it’s not the first time – and the great California drought from the 1840’s through the Civil War period – a period of similar terrible farming conditions – can hardly be blamed on global warming. That doesn’t stop modern tax and spenders, though.

Eclipses, Spring and Unimaginative People

If you’re reading this morning’s column, I assume you forgot to call in sick and fly your Gulfstream up to Greenland for the eclipse today.  Just a guess, mind, you.

Got to love the headlines about it, though.  Not to burst your bubble, or anything, when when you read headlines like “Total solar eclipse provides a spectacular celestial show” don’t get too worked up.

Around here, when we see stories like this, we take an East Texas Outback kind of practical approach, which includes laughing our butts off at live coverage of darkness on television.

Since you’re NOT in Greenland this morning, I’ll help you simulate an eclipse:   I simply get a paper bag, go outside, and put it over my head.  When I’m tired of seeing darkness, I take the bag off.  (I’ll ignore the peanut gallery suggestion I use a plastic bag…)

People who get worked up over eclipses aren’t particularly bright unless they want to have some fun with it.

For example, say you are driving on a freeway just as a total eclipse happens.  And let’s say the eclipse is around noon and you don’t slow down to the posted “Night” speed limit.

THAT would be an interesting court case – because it would depend on whose definition of night is used and in today’s legally bound-up-in-a-ball-of-yarn world, everyone has their own definitions.

The FAA uses one hour after sunset for flying.  Boaters have nautical twilight, civil twilight (the implication is sailors aren’t civil, ahem) and regular sunrise which is when the upper limb of the sun cracks the horizon.  But what if you’re in the mountains?  I know some places up in Idaho and Washington State where, ‘specially in winter where because of the steep mountains) the sun doesn’t come up until an hour or two after it’s supposed to.

But you see the point, right?  People who get worked up about eclipses define the attention-deficit, super-saturation economy of idiotic consumers who can’t remember that it was dark last night.

Hell, I should sell “Eclipse simulator” bags.  I’d be rich.  FMTT people are dumb.

Now, as to the point (“You’re not there, YET???” – no, I get paid by the word, lol), let me point out this starts a very important clock ticking toward my odd dream back in January about a major quake in April.  That’s because the Kahunas (religious types of the Polynesian people) noted over the centuries that eclipses come along and they are followed by earthquakes.  From an October 20143 column I wrote:

Michael K. Lee is reportedly a teacher of religion and history out in Hawai’i and somewhere along the way of studying how the Kahunas work their stuff, he did some work and Presto!  Out popped some working earthquake predictions.

I’m not the first guy to notice his work.  Graham Hancock (great fan of his work) had a write-up on it a while back.  Apparently, the EQ risk is greatest after the eclipse has gone by.

So not to be eclipsed by events – and since everyone is a predictor of the future, anymore – I’m going to step out on a limb and predict a 7.0 earthquake somewhere in the eclipse area in the next three days.

Lee’s work, notes a Hawaiian earthquake site, has windows after an eclipse that can go for upwards of 16-days.

So if a quake comes along, is a biggie, and happens in the eclipse path, and happens in the next two weeks, or so, remember where you heard it first.

Unfortunately, there may not be enough data to discern how the Kahunas dealt with total eclipses.  We should find that out with the big quake I expect in April.  My dream says US West Coast, but if it’s a 9+, remember where you read it first.  April 9 in the dream, but other people have darts later in the month.  We shall see.  But yes, the eclipse might matter as foreplay if the dreams –and the Kahunas – are right.

Oh, and a coincident indicator to keep an eye on:  Train derailments.  Like the big one in India this morning which killed 31 people in the northern part of the country.  Also note there was a derailment up in Poughkeepsie this past week.

If you’ve been following how memes “leak” from the future into present reality, the coincidence of timing of headlines like “Only Congress can derail the Iran appeasement train.”

Elaine reminds me about Lynn McTaggart’s The Intention Experiment and we’re investing another cup of coffee into wondering if mass media has more impact than most commonly believed.

Quadruple Witching Day

The market always seems to bounce around a bit at the end of the quarter.  Things were down a bit yesterday – 117 points on the Dow – but the futures argue all of that will come roaring back today.

There’s like a mechanical reason for it:  Thursday is when the index options come off the table.  And today is when stock options come off.

I assume you understand the principle called arbitrage?  Wiki it sometime:

“In economics and finance, arbitrage (US /??rb?tr???/, UK /??rb?tr?d?/, UK /??rb?tr????/) is the practice of taking advantage of a price difference between two or more markets: striking a combination of matching deals that capitalize upon the imbalance, the profit being the difference between the market prices. When used by academics, an arbitrage is a transaction that involves no negative cash flow at any probabilistic or temporal state and a positive cash flow in at least one state; in simple terms, it is the possibility of a risk-free profit after transaction costs. For instance, an arbitrage is present when there is the opportunity to instantaneously buy low and sell high.”

Understand this concept, you might be able to look at the action around the quadruple witching today and make some inferences about the market’s next turn.

People who bought the options at yesterday’s low will be forcing delivery at today’s higher prices.  It’s like printing money if you’re a big enough player.

Biggest commodity gainer this morning is orange juice, futures up over a hundred now, and the Baltic Dry keeps inching its way back up….up a baker’s dozen this morning to 584, which is still in the 2009 range.  Oil $45 and change.

Great Set-Up Line

My one-man “Anyone but Hillary, Please!” campaign apparently makes sense:  Rasmussen Reports shows “54% Think democrats should run a Fresh Face in 2016.”

Meantime,  After the tax hikes while Martin O’Malley was guv d’ Maryland, we wonder if he could carry his own state…but that still leaves 49 other states filled with “some of the time.”  CBS Affiliate in DC quip of the day “Expert: ‘It’ll Take A Lot More Than Drudge To Push O’Malley Up In The Polls’.

Meantime, Senator Chuck Grassley is still trying to nail Hil on her “special assistant” but that is sounding like a broken record.  Hil’s stonewalling has worked so far;  remember what I said about some of the time.

Fractured Muslims

One Prophet?  Peaceful, did you say?   So why are all the dead people around from the mosque attacks overnight in Yemen?  Look for 50+ as a final body count.

Own the Future Through Search Results?

It’s an interesting question – one which I kick around especially since Grady and I look at www.nostracodeus.com data daily and note the gap between coming events and what gets reported/emphasized by the MSM.  I wonder, for example, if the future can be molded by changing search results just so by the big search engines?

A story exactly on point in the Wall St.

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Coping: With Q2 Begins and Work Incentives

Yes, spring arrives today and with it, time for a sobering look at where my various projects are and that leads to a discussion of “firehouse rules:”

  • Get down to 190 or under before May.  I might make this.  For the past three days my weight has hit one of those immovable plateaus that I’ve read about.  If I got Tim Ferriss’s idea right, though, your body needs a periodic break from serious weight loss, so eat well with a “bonus day” (yesterday) and then start up again.   Keep walking a mile a day, yada, yada.
  • Get the garden in.
  • Get the taxes done
  • Burn the burn piles
  • Finish the two decks that are patiently waiting for Mr. Chop Saw.
  • Visit the kids in Arizona
  • Visit the kids in Greely, CO
  • Spend some time with Chris McCleary of the National Dream Center on this odd dream I had about the West Coast earthquake to come in April.
  • Get new attitude indicator in airplane.
  • Finish my www.musicengineerandproducer.com website (need to finish writing and mounting content)
  • Finish my novel, DreamOver.  (158 pages and 18 chapters so far)
  • Update software on the Peoplenomics.com website – Graphics have been simplified already.
  • Plus do real work now and then consulting and such.

Sometimes, though, life just comes at you harder and fasted than expected.  The septic guy, for example will be back out for “round 2” today.

I still haven’t gotten the tractor tire changed…so yes, another one for the list.  But that one hasn’t bothered me too much since I decided to refill all the propane bottles at the same time, so that will likely happen before anything else on the Spring List of Stuff to be done.

Reason?  When we were in Tyler, TX yesterday we picked up a couple of steaks.  Real beauts. There is nothing that gives me more focus to get a task done than having a big reward at the other end of the project.

Kind of like a big reward for a job well done.  Old firehouse trick.

The first time I ever used it was back in 1974, or so.  I had plans to put in a fireplace in the rec room downstairs.  The house, brand new Wick Homes 4-bedroom in the northwest, came with the fireplace roughed in:  Fire brick and all, but the outside finish was concrete block.

I decided to put an outside air vent in the raised hearth, and got that all built.  But mixing up the mortar and laying the bricks for the big hollow hearth and all the way to the ceiling wasn’t, how do we say this, something I was looking forward to.

Then one weekend, my folks dropped by and Pappy said “I thought you were going to lay the brick?” It was obvious that I hadn’t touched it…they were still neatly stacked along with a dozen bags of mortar, or sop – maybe 18 of them.

Well, been really busy at work, had a lot of other stuff today and – honestly – I’m having a hard time getting started….”

With that, out came the old fireman’s off-shift house-builder’s secret.  “Your uncle used to  eat have a Payday candy bar when he got something done.  Califano, he didn’t seem to need much.  But here’s how you do it.   Mix up your first bag of mortar, and just before you start to lay your first course of brick, put a cold been down at the other end of the course.  Drink it when the first course is done.  Then put another down down at the far end, and you get it when you lay down the second course…and so on.  Works like a charm.”

And it did.  That day, I ended up with 9 cold beers, or nine courses of brick laid.  That included the complicated stuff around the ducting inside.  But I was young, sweating like a pig, and with cold beer powering each course, in four days time the whole thing was looking great.

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The Real Economic Stimulus

The Federal Reserve meeting Wednesday went exactly as our Model had been suggesting (on our www.peoplenomics.com subscriber site):

The global index we measure had broken out a couple of weeks ago to new all-time highs and this, argued our domestic (US, Aggregate Index) was set to drag the US markets higher.

By implication, then, the Fed would do nothing to upset the markets and since mention of the word “patience” was conspicuously missing, it became clear to Fed-watchers that no news was good news and rates would be where they are right now, for a long time to come, and it opens the door for even lower rates and – as my friend Jas has been predicting – a drop in long-term treasuries to the 0.75% range.  Which, to put things into perspective would be less than half the 10-Year’s current 2.05%, or so.

What’s not appreciated widely, is where we will be 10 years from now.  While it’s true that nearly free money is great for high capex projects, like oil and gas exploration, when the worm turns, we will get to see some horrific energy prices.  But those could be as much as 10-years out.

It all depends on how long the Fed holds money rent so incredibly low.

A look at the chart from the US Energy Information Agency of crude oil prices over the past several decades doesn’t describe Peak Oil very well, nor was it intended to.  This is price only, not production (which is where you can see the peak). 

The price information is key in setting the ultra-long-term price expectations, though:  And since we know oil prices were up around $136 a barrel in 2008, an inflation adjust price today would be in the vicinity of $151.  It’s obviously nowhere near that.

What we’re seeing, instead, is a good old-fashioned deflationary spiral.

To be sure, there are economists who push off concerns of a deflationary spiral and excessive pessimism, and it’s exactly this sort of thinking that qualifies as a “wall of worry for stocks to climb.”  So we’re still expecting higher prices immediately ahead – or at least that’s what our Model says.

As long as oil prices stay in the recent price channel to the downside, the administration is getting a freebie economic stimulus.  And while that may sound peachy on the surface, it’s not, quite.


Being an economist in contentious times is some of a risk.  Paul Krug man is finishing this out first-hand.  Despite having a better track record of understand what’s going on than 99% of his peers,  a key Swedish Riksbanker is telling whoever will listen, that Krugman should read more and write less.

Which is rich, coming from a bank that is complicit with the EU, which in turn gets us into discussion of the ECB’s $1.4 billion dollar ego monument to banksterism which almost opened in Frankfurt, German on Wednesday.  I say almost because of the demonstrations of Blockupy that went seriously sour with some 350 people arrested.

P.T. Barnum was partly right, you can’t fool all of the people, all of the time, and at least 350 of them live in Germany, or elsewhere and have the brains to see the economic handwriting on the wall:  The EU as an economic experiment is likely to fade – the topic of a finely timed Peoplenomics piece Wednesday.

We also reminded readers of the long-term option for the megalomaniacs who will continue to hold sway in northern Europe have been honing:  A kind of Grand Teutonic Lodge of Money Masters.  (That would be what it will be in fact, but for marketing purposes they might fuzz it up to the “Not going to pay freeloaders (like Greece) that is running your life whether you like it or not, and we’re going to ensure you have to rent your life and will never own anything of consequence without our control Bank.”

Slow to Learn in America

Tom Udall may be retiring from the Senate shortly.  The reason?  A bill which he introduced turned out (says so right in the document properties) was written by? The American Chemical Council according to this report. Tisk, tisk.

Wait!  I know, you’re thinking wasn’t Udall a strong New Mexico  environmental guy and why would he back a bill that would replace tough state laws with a national dangerous chemicals bill that would be a plum  (or cherry) for the chemical industry and would save them billions and allow a return to more toxic times?

.A couple of weeks back, the NY Times revealed this about Udall and his co-sponsor  David Vitter from Louisiana:

“Millions of dollars in campaign contributions were also distributed among the political accounts of the lawmakers involved in the debate, including Mr. Udall. First elected to the House in 1998, Mr. Udall had never before received a contribution from the Chemistry Council. The industry also made donations to Mr.

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Coping: With Robots, Intelligence, and Awareness

That thing over to the right is a robot…a quadruped…and one of the fastest in the world.

And of high interest to the military.

Reason?  Because when you take off a couple of hundred pounds of packs, the robot, which has an onboard engine to power it, makes a dandy mobile weapons platform or battlefield surveillance drone.

And that gets me back to a childhood where I read every scrap of science fiction I could get my hands on, because deep down inside, robots are (and were) a major fascination.

Let’s cut to the chase, though, because the precision of our collective thinking will define future choices in terms of policy. 

I have, on several occasions been less than 100% precise in my language use about robots and often lump them into the same bit-bucket as robotics and the evolution of the “replacement for your bag of skin filled with bones that presently passes for human bodies. 

Good news and bad here:  The human body comes with a whole range of sensual pleasures such as food, sex, sound for the sake of art, eyes to behold majestic scenery, and so forth.

The Kurzweilian future envisions a world where the line between humans changes up a bit.  A robotic arm here, an artificial leg there, a nano-tube artificial lung, and first thing you know, the major parts have been replaced and we begin to become something else.

Reader Keith called me out, on a further level of distinction, and I’d like to share this with you because it is very good insight into a whole range of problems describing the evolving world of possibilities and how we use language amongst ourselves to talk about it.

Specifically, he’s worried about precision when it comes to discussion about robots becoming “aware.”

“George,

   Not to “pick nits,” but isn’t “self-awareness” actually better characterized as “other-awareness”? 

Humans (and smarter animals…you should meet my parrot) are completely self-absorbed until they realize that there are entities “out there” which are separate from themselves; but can be manipulated into serving the greater good of the newly aware “self” intelligence. 

For instance, a healthy human child becomes aware of “the other” (usually Mom and those big soft serve feeding devices) at a very young age.  The child quickly learns that the “other” can be manipulated into action to serve the self by screaming it’s foul little head off until this mysterious other arrives with pacification devices.  Animals however take longer to develop this sense of self. 

For instance, we’ve all (we country folk) seen a rooster “attack” its own image in a reflective surface.  The bird has no sense that the reflection is “itself.” 

However, IMHO, animals who are raised by humans develop this sense of self at a relatively early age (quicker than they do in the wild).  You can accuse me of anthropomorphizing, however a parrot chick that is raised by hand understands “me” and “mine” very clearly. 

They may think their people are birds; but they, like the infant, know that if you make enough noise, you will get that other to bring you objects of pacification.  Mango is nesting so the “need” is balls of newspaper for her to shred for her nest box.  She asks for them: “Mango want paper.” It’s not grammatically correct; but it is as clear as a bell.

I’ve blithered enough…I’m trying to be aware of the needs of the other…so I’ll hush.”

Hardly a blither!  Indeed, if anything, it gets us to the problem which algometicians (new word, use it often and PayPal me a dime each time, please.;  It’s the people who create algorithms for programmers…) and their acuity of thought.

On the one hand, we know that first robots will learn the basis of looking ahead x-number of moves.  Then, with some work, they will develop weighted future-potential matrices and will be programmed to make choices based on a programmable set of “values.”  From there, they will self-optimize, and presumably the onboard values will include high-standing for “others”.

As with any marketing analysis, we can see how the “new niches” will lay out, using this type of model.  We can see not only where we are, where we might be going, but with a new Star Trek movie ion the works, it also gives us some keen insights into the Prime Directive.

Our guest level (and PhD level prof, by the way) who points out the importance of otherness as a key metric is exactly right.

A couple of reads on point are worth reviewing:  “Chappie and the Future of Moral Machines” is one of them.  The other is a note in Forbes about how “Clearpath Robotics Raises $11.1 Million To Build Ethical Industrial Robots.”

We run into all kinds of problems looking at the borderlines:  A “thing” becomes a “machine” becomes a “robot” becomes a “human?”

That’s a stretch, but we need to begin looking at definitions carefully, since we are building and deploying all of them right now.  A thing might be a load of iron ore, a machine might be an ingot of iron, a machine might be that iron changed into a production line part, a robot welding up product under computer control, and the human might be the banker behind the scenes, making sure to take enough “skim” so that no one else gets to make or keep as much money as he/she/they do.

Sounds like a pretty quirky thing to be talking about, but another articles out in the past week about a robotic arm that can reproduce itself is also very disconcerting to me and folks like reader Ken:

computer arm that replicates itself.. this is scary.. what is even scarier is the new software in the cloud seri Or Watson that answers questions.. I have an acquaintance  that is a retired scientist and worked on robotics.. anyway in his retirement he is attempting to write his legacy in the form of a computer program that can be self recognizing and learning from what it encounters..For me that is a scary thing to have a computer that has access to the cloud..

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The Case for Europe’s Coming Currency Collapse

There’s been some talk about Europe’s currency (the Euro) coming to parity with the U.S. dollar.  This morning, we’re going to prepare by taking that data a bit farther, along with some other deflationary indicators, and see if there’s not a bit of opportunity for us “wannabe world traveler” types.

Meantime, the monumental egomaniacs of EU banking have been called out in demonstrations against their $1.4 billion Euro offices in Frankfurt.  And you wonder by the EU has been dropping?  No EUkraine sweep and now this….tisk, tisk.

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Fed Daze, Housing Collapsing?

The market’s jump yesterday was very good news, indeed.  With the Dow popping up 228-points there are a couple of ways to read the Dow. 

One way – and this is the one I’m inclined toward – is this is a massive “Buy the rumor” event.

If you watch the market long enough, you can get a sense of it:  Sometimes, when “planned news” like the Fed announcement tomorrow afternoon is due, you’ll see a big run-up ahead of time.  This is oftentimes followed by a major decline after the news comes out.

That’d be about the least surprising result.

There is, however, reason to expect the markets to keep going up; not the least of which is our Trading Model which has been a poster child for this particular blend of crack and Starbucks that seems to be powering the market upward.

Same kind of thing as was going on in 1928-1929  until things broke.

Sit back and you can see why stocks are something of the “only game in town” at the moment:  Housing prices are going up about like the general rate of inflation as measured by the CPI.  With that stuck at less than 2 percent, it’s not too enticing to run out and buy a home.

To be sure, there are still hot markets.  Our San Francisco real estate broker/watcher was reporting brisk growth in sales and prices there.  But just last night, Sacramento Channel 13 was running a story about how Drought is forcing new restrictions on water use at hotels and restaurants.  And west of Suisun, (locals call it “sih-SOON”) there isn’t much better to report. The whole state is still stuck in drought and it looks to Ures truly like the Dust Bowl replay for the Greater Depression will be centered in the California agricultural heartland.

Not that it stops there:  Two more counties up in Oregon are looking at drought restrictions, now, too.

Somewhere, along in here, you’re going to be glad you didn’t build that marina to retire to up at late Shasta. 

For those who missed Ure’s Complete Economic History, Volume IV, you’ll see the explanation of what’s at work in California right now, despite all the protestations from naysayers who insist it will be pouring buckets any old minute, now.  Volume IV consists of single page, reproduced upper right:  Humans got along for millions of years without the web or software, but few can go more than 120-days without food.

Without calories, your body will lose 0.5% of its weight, just supporting itself.  (Marvels of writing up my diet book…).  Which means, even from being technically obese, I can tell you with fair precision that I would be down to 93w pounds by September 18th on the current diet plan.

That said, I could turn off all my computer gear, and leave it off for a couple of years, and let’s toss in the television while we’re at it.  Come back in 5-10 years, but keep shoving calories into the old pie-hole, and I will be as rotund as ever, and perhaps a bit brighter, too.

And that’s the problem of California in a nutshell.

Just like an overweight person (obese) a little belt tightening is a good thing – helps slow the drain on natural resources.  But carried too far (to September with no rain, for instance) and the state will be taking on all the aspect of anorexia.

Not that it’s the only economic fly in the ointment.  The people in Europe have figured out that printing up money is an easy fix to deflation, so they too are now in the Global Competitive Devaluation scramble.  Overnight, the Germany DAX blew through the 12-grand mark (or is that marks, lol). 

So it’s with this kind of pressure on that the Fed will gavel-in this morning and tomorrow afternoon will tell us what we already know:  We’re screwed.  But that’s just my sense of it, and remember:  I’m  a crazy man in the East Texas Outback who just doesn’t much give a rip one way, or the other, having designed (close as I can figure it) a “crash-free life.”

Few people understand this imperative well, let alone do something about it.  So even though the market is up, we’re reminded that markets are subject to gravity, too. 

Oh, and weather forecasts.

Housing:  Blame Weather?

A serious bummer is out from the Census folks this morning:  Housing is on its ear:

The U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development jointly announced the following new residential
construction statistics for February 2015:
BUILDING PERMITS
Privately-owned housing units authorized by building permits in February were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,092,000. This is
3.0 percent (±1.7%) above the revised January rate of 1,060,000 and is 7.7 percent (±2.0%) above the February 2014 estimate of
1,014,000.
Single-family authorizations in February were at a rate of 620,000; this is 6.2 percent (±0.9%) below the revised January figure of
661,000. Authorizations of units in buildings with five units or more were at a rate of 445,000 in February.
HOUSING STARTS
Privately-owned housing starts in February were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 897,000. This is 17.0 percent (±9.5%) below the
revised January estimate of 1,081,000 and is 3.3 percent (±12.5%)* below the February 2014 rate of 928,000.
Single-family housing starts in February were at a rate of 593,000; this is 14.9 percent (±10.0%) below the revised January figure of
697,000. The February rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 297,000.
HOUSING COMPLETIONS
Privately-owned housing completions in February were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 850,000. This is 13.8 percent (±9.0%)
below the revised January estimate of 986,000 and is 1.8 percent (±11.7%)* below the February 2014 rate of 866,000.
Single-family housing completions in February were at a rate of 595,000; this is 12.1 percent (±10.0%) below the revised January rate of
677,000. The February rate for units in buildings with five units or more was 236,000.

You just know this leaves government in a box:  How can housing collapse due to record cold and snow on the one hand, and a straight face be maintained about Global Warming?  A sane person would note that “Gosh, George, they’re calling in climate change, not warming anymore!”

Right – presactly: And your BS detector isn’t going off because????

I’m reminded of the guy who falls off a tall building.  On his way down, about the 25th floor, he says “You know, this ain’t so bad…”

And that’s how markets are taking this one so far:  The Dow futures are only down 35, and – many will rationalize – they really ought to give back a few cents of that 228-pointer Monday…

The pavement ought to be more in focus by tomorrow afternoon.  The surging dollar on the one hand, and is there a quiet “Weather War” on the other?

Israeli Elections

Big day for Benjamin Netanyahu today.  Since there are so many dual-citizens both in government and finance in the USA, I think a fair question to be asked is “How many of them get to vote?”  I’m not sure how voting in Israel works, that way; definitely a hole in Ure’s knowledge bank.

But that might have something to do with Netanyahu’s appearance in Congress…if dual citzs get to vote, that is.

Virulent Bid Flu?

Thousands of birds – snow geese – have fallen from the sky in Idaho.  So much for being good for the gander.

Revising St. Patrick’s Day: V.

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Coping: With Dangerous Cosmology

There’s a very good reason to start thinking about cosmological accidents.

My friend Chris McCleary has sounded the alarm about some new data that’s popping up in enough dreams at the National Dream Center to make it interesting.  It makes us suspect that some dangerous cosmology will be blowing up (or seriously malfunctioning) at CERN this summer or fall.

You need to go over to the National Dream Center site and read the posting here for background.

If you don’t know too much about CERN, it’s time now to begin absorbing just a bit.  As we get closer to July, I’ll pop in the occasional “self-education” pointer here and there, so that IF/WHEN news does begin to pop you’ll know something about it.

As to why this shows up in this column, please note that we have a long history of tracking use multiple technologies, such as predictive linguistics, as well as dream analysis and word/phrase frequency analysis to give us a better handle on “that which is coming.”  Often it’s wrong, but always thought-provoking.  I trust you’ve visited out www.nostracodeus.com website, as well as the National Dream Center/NDC?

So back to CERN (because this has huge potential to be bad:  Some bacgkround…

The European Organization for Nuclear Research (French: Organisation européenne pour la recherche nucléaire), known as CERN (/?s?rn/; French pronunciation: ?[s??n]; derived from “Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire”; see History) is a European research organization that operates the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. Established in 1954, the organization is based in the northwest suburbs of Geneva on the Franco–Swiss border,

( WikiMiniAtlas 46°14?3?N 6°3?19?E? / ?46.23417°N 6.05528°E? / 46.23417; 6.05528) and has 21 European member states. Israel is the first (and currently only) non-European country granted full membership.[3])

The term CERN is also used to refer to the laboratory, which in 2013 counted 2,513 staff members, and hosted some 12,313 fellows, associates, apprentices as well as visiting scientists and engineers[4] representing 608 universities and research facilities and 113 nationalities.[citation needed]

CERN’s main function is to provide the particle accelerators and other infrastructure needed for high-energy physics research – as a result, numerous experiments have been constructed at CERN following international collaborations.

CERN is also the birthplace of the World Wide Web. The main site at Meyrin has a large computer centre containing powerful data processing facilities, primarily for experimental-data analysis; because of the need to make these facilities available to researchers elsewhere, it has historically been a major wide area networking hub.

As to the claims about CERN being the birthplace of the Worldwide Web, that’s technically true: Tim Berners-Lee’s great insight into Hypertext Mark-Up Language (HTML) occurred there in 1989.

But, now that gets us onto the trail of this morning’s little mind-treats to ponder.

When I zoom-out to the maximum permitted by the feeble George-mind, I begin to see what almost looks like the classical battle of “good and evil” evolving around CERN.

You see – and this goes back to the original “here, have an apple” in the [purported] Garden of Eden – there are a couple of ways of looking at life.

One method would have been to sit back, not accept the apple from the tree of knowledge, just accept that which is bounded by physical laws, but not challenge those laws or understand how they work, let alone manipulate them for our specific purposes.

The second method, which doesn’t need a bunch of superstitions built up around it, is the scientific method which is really little more than a take-it-apart-and-see-how-it-works project of enormous scale.

Considering 5,000 years ago, conveniences like indoor plumbing had yet to be invented in a meaningful (accompanied by Charmin) sort of way, the idea that you have a “magic box” which let’s you “plug-in” to an ocean of reality really makes it seem like the bite on the original apple was a good thing.

Until, that is, you start looking at the debris and leftovers from the process.

As you know, Elaine and I have been crisscrossing America by land and air for a good while now, and you’d be surprised at how crappy some of the country is.  And a good bit of it can be seen on aircraft sectional charts that have – gosh, must be over half of the land areas of Nevada – still marked as no-fly territory due to atomic tests and such.  Not to mention the down-winders who were exposed to high levels of radiation as children, especially in the Four Corners area of Arizona.

Then there are the massive dead zones in the ocean, brought about by the run-off of high-potency fertilizers and pesticides that slough-off the land and end up places like off the mouth of the Mississippi River, or the European version up in the ocean between Denmark and Sweden.

There’s a handy-dandy map off to the right, there –> which includes a link to oceanic dead zones that you can study at your own leisure.

And then there’s the problem of space-junk. m A Wikipedia note on that tells us:

As of 2009[update] about 19,000 pieces of debris larger than 5 cm (2 in) are tracked,[1] with 300,000 pieces larger than 1 cm estimated to exist below 2,000 kilometres (1,200 mi).[1] For comparison, the International Space Station orbits in the 300–400 kilometres (190–250 mi) range and the 2009 satellite collision and 2007 antisat test events occurred at from 800 to 900 kilometres (500 to 560 mi).[

Thus, when I assert that “biting into the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge” was an arguably bad move.

Humans seem to have schooled-up (to put it in marine biology terms for fish) on two center premises way back in the earliest of times.

Premise 1.  Do not eat the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge.  When you are ready and sufficiently advanced as a species, some great Other will come along, and you’ll all get to go off into (the) Heavens and that will be that.  Simply follow the ground rules we’re leaving behind on how to live right path that we’ve left and everything will work out find.

A great source on this (and with some serious corrections to currently popular Biblical texts that support the “We were planted” may be found at Chris Tyreman’s www.thechronicleproject.org website.  And no, there weren’t just 10 Commandments. 

Premise 2.  Eat all the fruit you want, as fast as you can because by doing so, you might be able to keep up with the Grim Reaper who seems – almost unstoppably – to jump out after every bite.

Some examples:    Atomic energy.  Sounds great but poll the folks in Fukushima or most of Japan and you might find some variance.  Or, ask American Down-winders about it. 

Of course, modern high intensity agriculture is a miracle, but go back to the kill-the-oceans runoff and rethink what I’m telling you about a Grim Reaper in every bite.

Same thing in antibiotics:  Penicillin is a miracle drug.  But it has worn-out to some degree, and so has almost everything up through Cipro.  In fact, about the best anti-bacterial out there may still be silver which I encourage everyone to have and use since there’s a reason both Permise 1 and Premise 2 people agree it is a precious metal

But it’s too late to put back the genie on this whole antibiotic thing; it’s being made and dispensed in such numbers that it’s showing up in water supply samples.

As long as I have my pet “bitch list” out about Premise 2 thinking, have you read about the dangers of bisphenol-A which is used to coat thermal printer paper, like your receipts from the store?  This stuff is definitely not good for you.  And it gets absorbed through the skin.

Could go on all day about the Grim Reaper aspect of Premise 1 versus Premise 2 thinking, but the next logical stopping place would be a book-length treatment (after my novel, maybe), but to report on the marvels of modern computers would simply get me into the GR’s work on carpel tunnel syndrome and viruses from innocent drive-by’s on the net.

So are you getting to a point?”

Oh, that.  Umm….yeah, sure, and here it comes:

We don’t KNOW as in mathematically provable science, but we suspect that the CERN quest for the God Particle may run into trouble.  Trouble with a capital “T” trouble.

Maybe the God Particle doesn’t want to be found.

Or, if it has been found, at least it doesn’t want to be isolated.  So as to where CERN is looking for consistent results of the Higgs-Boson?

On 14 March 2013 CERN confirmed that:

“CMS and ATLAS have compared a number of options for the spin-parity of this particle, and these all prefer no spin and positive parity [two fundamental criteria of a Higgs boson consistent with the Standard Model].

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Fed Money-Printing Near 16 Percent Annualized!!!

Now that I have your attention, we’ll freeze-frame that headline for a minute and run through some of the macro madness of this-here rock, and then we will get into the nitty-gritty of economic reality.

We’ll begin this morning – like we do every morning – with a look at the flow of the news and a quest for a common thread that ties it all together.

Some mornings it’s difficult:  Often the news seems as chaotic (and manufactured) as always.  But this morning was a no-brainer:  It’s all about predictions which is how the timid dress-up outlooks..

For example, here’s a story that looks ahead to the coming world of artificial intelligence.  The prediction comes through that somehow machines will be able to rise to the level of consciousness. 

Count us skeptical of this:  Few humans have accomplished that feat – consciousness –  so to say machines are going to do it faster than the mess of 7-billion people who haven’t gotten their (language alert) shit together, is a stretch.

I’m going out on a limb here and proposing Ure’s Rule of A.I. which reads as follows:

For any culture, the level to which A.I. will propagate will be limited to the evenness of the distributed consciousness of the global population.  While there may be individual breakthroughs in A.I., their widespread implementation to benefit the whole planet will be limited by economics, and these, in turn, are bounded by the consciousness of all participants.  Under this notion, A.I. may be self-limited.  Those of top will still want to rule.

Still, it’s an uneven prediction – either in the referenced article or my “rule” that suggests that if man is making machines in his own image, they will suffer from the same personality defects.  Seems to have worked that way on the religiousity front, mostly, throughout history.  We’re just building the next layer of the cosmic onion, more’n likely.

Outlook #2

Our second uneven outlook is courtesy of The Atlantic which normally gets things very close to right.  Their article today “Is it Time for Jews to Leave Europe” starts with a very uneven assumption.  I’d offer that the Jews have been in Europe for a very long time.  Since they were kicked out of England in 1200 something.

What the magazine ought really to have asked is “Is  it time to kick Muslim Invaders out of Europe – Again?”

However, in today’s age of political correctness, the longer-view of history is often muddled and muddied.  Whether this is by accident or design, I will leave to your discernment.

But I expect if someone were to suggest in a headline that we kick all Methodists out of North America that someone would call BS on such a headline.  So there:  Cat’s out of the Bag.

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Coping: With the Sugar-Coated Robots

It’s a fine time to be talking about these critters, in part because it is Monday morning, and in part because the onslaught is here, whether you want to see it, or not.

If you’re like me, you’d rather stay in bed this morning, sleep until about 10, get up, go shopping, do some puttering around the house, play some video games, put in some gym time, maybe watch a move, and have some perfect meals.

Even better, if you could find some way to do all this and still make a living, well, that’d be perfect, wouldn’t it?

The fact is, there seem only to be two roads leading to this little Private Idaho:  One is taking the dole (e.g. being on welfare) while the other is retiring.  Each has its own set of problems.

The dole means a lot of messy paperwork:  Documenting how you’ve been looking for work, actually wasting an hour or so every few days looking through postings on CL and Monster, and then adding your efforts to a log to demonstrate how sincere you are.  The positive side of taking the dole is that you’re young enough to spend some time in the rack with a honey (this is a non-gender specific term) and you can still get out and about.

Path #2, retirement, is a lot less fun, since the rack time is less frequent and the exercise is less appealing, even if you’ve shed a lot of pounds.  Things that didn’t used to hurt now do, and it just take a lot of the joy out of things to have pain shoot through your [whatever] when you try to do the things you do.

The problem – for the rest of the people who hold jobs – is that they’re not going to be holding them much longer if projections about the opportunities held by the blooming field of robotics are correct.  As we’re sitting around pondering this, experts have concluded that somewhere between a quarter and a half of the workforce out there will be SOL by the year 2025, which is just 10-years away.

That will cause the economic system to blow up on us because you can’t make everyone happy at the same time, unless you go to a plan my friend Howard Hill came up with, but we’ll save that for the Peoplenomics side one of these days.  The core idea, though, goes like this:

The government would begin sending out credit cards every month to every man, woman, and child in the US, so that they could get by with doing absolutely nothing, yet still be able to put some kind of a roof over their heads, even if it’s just the high tech version of the olden times “flop house.”  In addition, you’d get credits for food, basic communications like a cheap phone, government sponsored online entertainment, and basic healthcare.

Of course, none of this is free, so it would be paid for with a flat tax on everyone who chooses to work of 40%, or whatever it takes.

The beauty of such a system is that the % of tax would not only be levied on humans, but it could also be applied to robots, and this would mean, in a not-t0-distant future, that we will all be commanding armies of robots.

You know how people in the Bitcoin program use a computer to go out and “mine” for data on the Internet?  Well, the same thing would be true with robots.  Everyone would be given a robot, as say as 16 or some such, and they would be able to send the robot to work.  Robot works for XXXX-hours and is then entitled to an upgrade to more memory and capabilities.  And that would make my robot able to take on higher skill set jobs than yours, and you’d be scheming how to leapfrog ahead of me.

As crazy as it seems, it’s a logical extension of where we are now:  Most people don’t appreciate the power of the numbers involved.  But start with 55-million people on Social Security (at least that’s what their on-hold system says) and then toss in the unemployed, which in the latest jobs report came to something like 8.7-million unemployed.

A quick Google of the facts offers this data picture from 2013:

In total, the Census Bureau estimated, 151,014,000 Americans out of a population then estimated to be 306,804,000 received benefits from one or more government programs during the last three months of 2011. Those 151,014,000 beneficiaries equaled 49.2 percent of the population

So as wild as Howard’s idea seems on the surface (free subsistence level living) it’s really where we are anyway, so let’s just be honest about it, fund it, and call it good. 

Of course the present track blows up with too many illegals from South America (and everywhere else) over time, so it really makes sense.  Unfortunately, getting ahead of any problem is not something our “leaders” do.  They don’t really ‘lead’ at all.  They sit miles back of the pack, figure out where the ‘lead dogs’ are turning, and then spout this and that and see if the herd “follows” which to their mind achieves “leadership.”  Go figure.

In the meantime, though, robots are being sugar-coated so that we will all reach out and embrace them.  Stories like the one about the “Sioux City Mother Seeks “Magic Arms” For Daughter” make it seem like robotics could make everyone’s life happier.

And backing up this kind of happy talk are stories like how the “ATRIAS Bipedal Robot Endures Dodgeball Pummeling [Video].”

But the reality is that robots are coming to take your job.  They’re already rewriting the major papers and selling the results to news recyclers who post and pimp ads in order to avoid going on the dole, themselves.

And down under it all, if you read the small stories, you’ll hear the hoof beats of the Dancers and Prancers of human obsolescence up on the rooftop:  “Computer scientists enhance robotic manufacturing.”  Like this is a good thing?

If your  research goes far enough, the VDARE story “Business Is Thrilled That Automation Raises Productivity, but Doesn’t Mind Mass Unemployment.”

Howard’s idea is a solid one.

And it’s why it has no chance in hell of being adopted any time soon.  So get back to work…read a few more columns and do some online shopping.

The robots are coming anyway, and that sore reality is very slow sinking into people’s thick skulls, but it’s the truth as much as Henry Ford’s Production Line or the Philo Pharnsworth boxes we all live and breathe by are.

Life in the gap is never pleasant on Monday mornings.  But at “The Gap” becomes every more apparent, the social pressure continues to build giving us a social migraine that doesn’t need to be pushed along.

And it certainly didn’t need the assistance of one of the world’s earliest robots, the one that gets you up and insists that you go to work..

The alarm robot.

The Amazing Diet Results Continue

Since we returned from our cruise, March 1, with me weighing more than I ever have, I’ve now lost 1.23 pounds per day.  It’s really amazing!

As of this morning, I’ve dropped 18-pounds and 7.45% of body weight in just 15-days.

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Homesteading and Retirement Tax Angles

This weekend we’ll look at a few western states to consider how “friendly” they are for retirement and homesteading for the small farmer/homesteader.

One of the things you’ll quickly find is that some states could give Mafioso loan sharks a run for their money when it comes to ripping off seniors.  Or, is it just sound public policy?  We’ll leave that to you to decide.

After some headlines and our Trading Model, and coffee, of course.

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Another Week, World Fails to End – Doomporn Collapsing!!!

Time for another one of our Adult Education Courses in How the World Really Works 101 from our guest lecturer, Mr. Who Me Skeptical?

This is not the week you want to be a prophet of doom.  Not enough bummers to go around 21-thousand news and doom channels.

As predicted by our trading model, the markets took a huge leap skyward off the recent bottom of trend line that we use as our keen insight into whether the world will end (financially), or not.

Not being the operative word.

Still, there are a few things the doom-porn types are hanging onto that deserve consideration, so before we hit the PPI numbers, a few economic realities to consider:

1.  The markets in Europe have stabilized a bit.  Since we all knew that the Continent would be making up $60-billion this month out of a trillion Euro QE, a genius trader would have purchased the German DAX AND 11,470 Monday and be bailing today around 11,795.

Sure, that’s only 2.8% for the week, but if you could do that every week, for a whole year, it would pencil out to returns of (the magic of compounding here): 427%…or better than four times your money.  (Trust me, it’s easier to write than actually, do however; I’ve spent a fortune trying.)

Investing in Germany has been a fine idea since World War II, and despite the fact they can’t get their gold back from us (the US is ‘babysitting it’ for their own good you undertsand), the fact is Germans are the only ones with enough brains to complain about the hoch uber-commandants of the EU trying to saddle Germany with the debts of Greece. 

France, meantime, is being out-screwed by immigrants, so it will fall – it’s just a matter of time.  It won’t be the first time that procreational sex has become a favored tool of conquest.  Go read your history.

True for both sexes:  The most dangerous weapons long-term are between the legs.

2.  Race rioting and hatred has failed to breakout nationally…and in fact, it was a quiet night up in Ferguson…much to the dismay of the doomporners.   Meantime, the police work continues looking for the shooter or shooters.

Seems you and I may not be the only ones beginning to wonder if the MSM is trying to play the race card in order to “make up news” to cover.  Sometimes, it seems so.

Like the old assignment desk editor told me back when “We will find the news…or make it…” and the jokes about the local teevee crews turning over cars on the freeway in order to have something  like “This just in…breaking news…A  truck carrying dangerous rabid chickens has just overturned on the 123 freeway and Ure-Witness News is there live from the scene…” for the 5 o-clock early news, isn’t exactly a joke among reporters.

The reporters call their live, on-scene gigs “Stand-ups.”  Like “Sally, you take Remote 2 and do a stand-up for the 5:30 on the mayor’s new…”  tweazel-wanker, or whatever.  Reporters seem to forget “stand-up” is comedy.

3.  Hillary Clinton’s odds of becoming the next uber-groB fuhrer of the US is becoming slimmer by the day.  A Google news search on clinton email popped more than 26-million hits this morning,  although in fairness, it’s not all Hil bashing (drat!).

In fact, seems New York State has a kind of Email Scandal Lite going…and it must be true because it’s in the NY Times this morning.

4. “Watch out for Ebola – it’s going to kill us all!”  When the doomporners write this, there’s actually an element of truth to it, since the WHO admits the body count is over 10,000 now.

A thoughtful Jerome Corsi piece on the re-emergence of the mandatory vaccine debate is over here.  It’s not just Ebola…measles is back, too.  Oh, goodie…get ‘em while they’re hot.

Still, most of the planet is still here.  Although about 56-million humans die annually. an additional 10,000 is budget dust.   (Specifically 1.7857142857142857142857142857143e-4 but this only makes sense if you are a b-school geek and like long strings of useless scientific notation to convince yourself something is true.) Unless you’re one of them, of course.

The real story continues to largely evade the doomporn crowd.  There is growing concern about what will happen next in EUkraine. 

One reason is Vlad Putin has dropped out of sight, leading to informed speculation he may be up to something.  “Kremlin Critics Fear Political ‘Hit List’ as Putin Drops Out of Sight” writes Time Magazine this morning.

Think about it:  The recent killing of a leading Putin critic, both the US and Europe are pouring military goods into Ukraine and back-up positions like there’s no tomorrow.  And, as we’ve said for a long time:  Wars cast long shadows before them.  Wars get focus off internal problems and hand out big boots to stomp dissidents.

This was something the US State Department botched more than a year ago by deciding to escalate what had been a standoff that might have worked between the EU and Russia.  But, of course, all that changed in April of last year when the EUrocrats started talking about extended EU boundaries all the way to Vladivostok.  You don’t say things like that to Russians who still remember the Great War where they lost millions.

If Ferguson, and a good chunk of cities around the country, are poster-children for “racially insensitive” the EUrocrats have written the definitive text with their moves on Russia.  Same issue, just scaled differently.  Humans with rights.

Ready, or not, time to face up to this being Friday and weeding through some “breaking news.”  Some of it is interesting/revealing.

Press Release of the Day:

This talks about digital addiction…though not by name…something very closely related to groupthink, hive-mind, and ADHD:

LOS ANGELES, March 12, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ For distracted drivers, actions do indeed speak louder than words.

Although large percentages of Americans of all ages say that driving while sending or checking texts or emails is unsafe, unsettling numbers of drivers in all age ranges – especially Millennials – are frequently or always engaged in distracted behavior behind the wheel, according to findings by the USC Annenberg Center for the Digital Future and Bovitz Inc.

“Large majorities recognize the dangers of texting while driving, but we found disturbing differences in actual behavior based on age,” said Jeffrey I. Cole, director of the USC Annenberg Center for the Digital Future. 

Overall, the survey found that a very large percentage of respondents — 87 percent — said that sending or checking online messages while driving is unsafe. Millennials (age 18-34) are somewhat less likely to believe that online communication while driving is unsafe – 81 percent.

However, when asked about their actual behavior, some drivers admit that they still engage in driving behavior that has been proven unsafe and is illegal in many states:

  • 18 percent overall said they cannot resist the urge to send or check online messages while driving. 
  • Eight percent said they text or email while driving always or often.

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