Marc Abrahams: A science award that makes you laugh, then think – YouTube

As founder of the Ig Nobel awards, Marc Abrahams explores the world’s most improbable research. In this thought-provoking (and occasionally side-splitting) talk, he tells stories of truly weird science — and makes the case that silliness is critical to boosting public interest in science.

 

Adair Turner: The Consequences of Money-Manager Capitalism – INET Economics

In the wake of World War II, much of the western world, particularly the United States, adopted a new form of capitalism called “managerial welfare-state capitalism.”

The system by design constrained financial institutions with significant social welfare reforms and large oligopolistic corporations that financed investment primarily out of retained earnings. Private sector debt was small, but government debt left over from financing the War was large, providing safe assets for households, firms, and banks. The structure of this system was financially robust and unlikely to generate a deep recession. However, the constraints within the system didn’t hold.

The relative stability of the first few decades after WWII encouraged ever-greater risk-taking, and over time the financial system was transformed into our modern overly financialized economy. Today, the dominant financial players are “managed money”—lightly regulated “shadow banks” like pension funds, hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, and university endowments—with huge pools of capital in search of the highest returns. In turn, innovations by financial engineers have encouraged the growth of private debt relative to income and the increased reliance on volatile short-term finance and massive uses of leverage.

What are the implications of this financialization on the modern global economy? According to Adair Lord Turner, a Senior Fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking and a former head of the United Kingdom’s Financial Services Authority, it means that finance has become central to the daily operations of the economic system. More precisely, the private nonfinancial sectors of the economy have become more dependent on the smooth functioning of the financial sector in order to maintain the liquidity and solvency of their balance sheets and to improve and maintain their economic welfare. For example, households have increased their use of debt to fund education, healthcare, housing, transportation, and leisure. And at the same time, they have become more dependent on interest, dividends, and capital gains as a means to maintain and improve their standard of living.

Another major consequence of financialized economies is that they typically generate repeated financial bubbles and major debt overhangs, the aftermath of which tends to exacerbate inequality and retard economic growth. Booms turn to busts, distressed sellers sell their assets to the beneficiaries of the previous bubble, and income inequality expands.

In the view of Lord Turner, we have yet to come up with a sufficiently robust policy response to deal with the consequences of our new “money manager capitalism.” The upshot likely will be years more of economic stagnation and deteriorating living standards for many people around the world.

 

NYC cops on Ebola case dump gloves and masks in sidewalk trash can  | Daily Mail Online

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2805930/Should-Officers-marking-Ebola-patient-s-NYC-apartment-toss-gloves-masks-caution-tape-PUBLIC-trash-city-sidewalk-leave.html

Sent from my iPad

Happiness is Only Thing We Seek for its Own Sake – Rupert Spira

A conversation exploring the connection between intention and attention and their relation to the search of happiness.

 

Canadian Terror Attacks: What You Need to Know! – Stefan Molyneux

Soldier, 24, shot dead by Muslim convert Michael Zehaf-Bibeau who opened fire on Canadian Parliament in terrifying attack that left capital on lockdown. Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, 32, was shot dead after opening fire at Parliament Hill. He was born in Quebec but reportedly recently converted to Islam and had his passport seized after being designated a ‘high-risk traveler’. He shot reserve soldier Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial before running inside Parliament and exchanging gunfire with guards. Heroic Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers shot him dead. Police initially said there were multiple gunmen and at a press conference, they would not rule out other suspects. Witness accounts of a suspect include descriptions of him as short with long hair, overweight, wearing a dark jacket and ‘Arabic scarf’. What is the history behind the recent attack on Canada’s Parliament by reported Muslim convert Michael Zehaf-Bibeau? Why do these attacks happen? How can we stop them? Stefan Molyneux, host of Freedomain Radio, breaks down the deep history behind religious terrorism, and the relationship between ISIS, the war on terror, and modern terrorism.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WWKN3587mo

What Pisses Me Off About The Michael Brown Shooting – Stefan Molyneux

Stefan Molyneux is irritated – a scathing look at the rush to judgment and fervent race-baiting in the Michael Brown shooting case. New evidence and witness testimony has emerged as the grand jury decides the future of Officer Darren Wilson in the aftermath of the Ferguson, Missouri riots.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMnMmxZgTlg

 

What if Age Is Nothing but a Mind-Set? – NYTimes.com

One day in the fall of 1981, eight men in their 70s stepped out of a van in front of a converted monastery in New Hampshire. They shuffled forward, a few of them arthritically stooped, a couple with canes. Then they passed through the door and entered a time warp. Perry Como crooned on a vintage radio. Ed Sullivan welcomed guests on a black-and-white TV. Everything inside — including the books on the shelves and the magazines lying around — were designed to conjure 1959. This was to be the men’s home for five days as they participated in a radical experiment, cooked up by a young psychologist named Ellen Langer.Continue reading the main storyRELATED COVERAGEThe Health Issue: Old Masters at the Top of Their GameOCT. 23, 2014The Health Issue: Can Video Games Fend Off Mental Decline?OCT. 23, 2014The subjects were in good health, but aging had left its mark. “This was before 75 was the new 55,” says Langer, who is 67 and the longest-serving professor of psychology at Harvard. Before arriving, the men were assessed on such measures as dexterity, grip strength, flexibility, hearing and vision, memory and cognition — probably the closest things the gerontologists of the time could come to the testable biomarkers of age. Langer predicted the numbers would be quite different after five days, when the subjects emerged from what was to be a fairly intense psychological intervention.

via What if Age Is Nothing but a Mind-Set? – NYTimes.com.

203-512-2161 – James Altucher

203-512-2161
by James Altucher

Claudia is a little upset at me. She doesn’t like when I give out my phone number.

“You’re going to get too many calls,” she said.

Ok, but I want people to text me with questions for our “Ask Altucher” podcasts. But sometimes I pick up the call.

Last night I got a call from someone going through a divorce and his family and his friends were taking her side. He was miserable about it. He loved his family but they were always angry.

“I’d rather be a janitor in another state,” he said, “then have the job I have now here and have them all arguing with me all the time.”

You know what job he had? He was the mayor of his small town. But he was miserable.

“You have to take a break from them,” I said. “What would you rather do: get your life together or let your friends and family slowly strangle you to death.”

When the plane is going down, the instinct is to put the oxygen mask on your baby. But you have to put the mask on yourself first.

“I would put the mask on my baby,” he told me.

“Then you both will die.”

If everyone is dragging you down, then you have to take a break from them.

“But they supported me for years,” he said, “how can I take a break from them now?”

“You’re going through something painful. A divorce. Why let people stick the knife in even further? You need to wait until the knife is out of your body first.”

I’m not sure I convinced him.

One time someone wrote me and said, “I’m practicing everything you say. Physical health, emotional, writing down ideas every day, feeling gratitude. But then I go out Friday night drinking with my friends and they laugh at me and trash all my ideas.”

I had one suggestion: “Stay at home on Friday night.” But I never heard from him again.

One time I was pretending to be a respiratory therapist in a hospital in Cleveland. Long story but a doctor got me in there and got me credentials. I was actually walking old people around the hallways until they were so out of breath I had to return them to their beds. They smelled.

I didn’t do any tracheotomies but it didn’t look that hard. I would’ve done one if asked.

I’ve watched doctors do it. You find the Adam’s apple. Go about a half inch lower, use a pocket knife to cut the skin open, and stick in a straw very quickly before they suffocate. If you put it in the wrong spot they die. Don’t try this at home. You’re not a professional like me.

At some point in our lives we have to start preparing for a good death. Just like for most of our lives we prepare for a good life.

For a long time I had a bad life and I was preparing for a bad death. Even the day seemed like a nightmare. And the nights were long. Me sitting. Me walking all night trying to make eye contact with strange women. Me starving for affection.

I saw what a bad death looked like. Nobody could breathe. They would suffocate in their beds, alone, nobody to care for them. One by one they’re all going to stop breathing. You too.

How do you prepare for a good death?

I think we live in four dimensions at the same time.

The physical world, where we can get stabbed in the heart and bleed. The emotional world, where we can get stabbed in the heart and cry.

The mental world, where we can get stabbed in the head and get demented. And the spiritual world where we get stuck living in the past, filled with regret and anxiety.

Stress is the knife of the emotional world. Stress leads to inflammation of the cells (again, I’m a doctor).

The major causes of death in the US: heart attacks, cancer, strokes, Alzheimers – all caused by inflammation. And then diseases caused by smoking. Don’t smoke.

If all you do is work on ways to reduce stress, avoid time travel (obsessing on past and future), and of course, don’t smoke, then you will start preparing for a good death.

Everyone wraps themselves in their dramas: their friends, their family, their divorces, their failures. We build up a mythology of our misery. The pantheon of people who “did this to us”.

Can you take a break from that for today? Just today please. And then maybe tomorrow. If you can’t, then text me why.

Because the truth is:

Nobody did anything to you.

Except your mother.

 

Mooji ♥ Answers ◦ Be Drunk in the Holy Spirit Tea Satsang – YouTube

Recognize who you truly are!

Sacred Sangha of Earth,

Beloved Beings of Presence,

Being One, we liberate Humanity

Be present! Be joyful! Be free!

~ Blessings to You ~