Kant, Hobbes and Wall Street

Some excellent Q&A in the NYT on the latest epic morphing of Wall Street elucidates the ongoing relevance of timeless questions such as “the individual vs. society”…”is inaction better than negative action”….etc. Excerpts below, with certain emphases added, and one more pitch to go to http://www.yourmorals.org – go there.

However, in lieu of solving such intractable problems, I’m focusing my small brain on tackling things like: given the fact that everyone will now be working for a bank*, will we all now be VPs and work “bankers’ hours”? Take me now…..

Q. So is it fair to say that Americans who are neither rich nor reckless are being asked to rescue people who are? …

A. Yes, you could argue that people who cannot tell soybean futures from puts, calls and options are being asked to clean up the costly mess left by Wall Street. To make the bailout palatable to the public, it is being described as far better than inaction, which administration officials and members of Congress say could imperil the retirement savings and other investments of Americans who are anything but rich.

But it is a good bet that the negotiations between the administration and Capitol Hill will include ideas about ways to help middle-class homeowners avoid foreclosure and perhaps some limits on pay for executives….

Q. How is it that the administration and Congress…can now be ready to come up with $700 billion to rescue the financial system? And is it realistic to think that the parties can reach agreement and get legislation passed in a hurry?

A. …As for rescuing the financial system, elected officials in both parties became convinced that, while a couple of venerable investment banks could fade into oblivion or be absorbed by mergers, the entire financial system could not be allowed to collapse.

*What will these new banks be called? My mind gravitates to Steve Martin’s “Fred’s Bank” embedded in one of his best works

Sometimes I actually encourage denial

Not only is it so much more alluring than reality….but I’m finding that in certain cases, it may yield positively for society!

1) “Sen. Barack Obama has widened his lead over Sen. John McCain, according to CNN’s latest “poll of polls.” – yeah, while this may not be the case in November, this is TRUE as of 9:18 a.m. EDT, Fri September 19, 2008 so I’m sucking the marrow out of it and snuggling it close as long as I can so I can be in my happy place if only for just a little while longer.

As promised, the following two cases of denial may actually yield some real, positive societal results:

2) “I’ve got to be honest with you,” Christopher Gruber, a vice president who oversees admissions at Davidson College, told me. “I’m not spending a ton of time navigating those student-driven sites. It’s too much to manage. My sense is that the traditional big players, like Princeton Review, are the major sources for online information too, in part because those are the names that parents still recognize.

Don’t stop believin’, Christopher. We won’t go into the fact that parents aren’t the only market segment, and they’re certainly not the …future…one…

3) ““SVG support is something that we have been evaluating for some time,” Microsoft said in a statement. “We recognize the demand for vector graphics from Web developers, and realize this is a high-priority demand.”

As Matt said…

“We recognize the demand for vector graphics from Web developers, and realize this is a high-priority demand…” but we just don’t care.

…and thank Someone for that: perhaps MSFT’s resistance to creating usable products will, in fact, finally be met by justice, and Apple in fact wasn’t so wrong to exclude IE in its MobileMe strategy???

Microsoft’s IE market share drops again

September 3, 2008 (Computerworld) Microsoft Corp.‘s Internet Explorer lost nearly a full percentage point in market share during August, the browser’s biggest drop in three months, a Web metrics firm said today.

IE’s rivals — Mozilla Corp.‘s Firefox, Apple Inc.’s Safari and Opera Software ASA‘s Opera — all extended their shares at IE’s expense last month…

….IE’s August drop was the second largest for the year, lower only than May’s 1.1-percentage-point fall.

“I can’t really explain what happened,” admitted Vince Vizzaccaro, Net Applications’ executive vice president of marketing. “Perhaps there was some relationship with the launch of IE8 Beta 2. If users are looking at IE8, maybe they’re looking at other browsers at the same time, trying to decide which one to use.”

Vince, I know you’re a marketing guy and have to say that – and that’s great! Don’t stop believin’ either!

Innocence by association




I am thrilled to report that I am

Economic Left/Right: -3.75
– and –
Social Libertarian/Autoritarian -2.00

…. on http://www.politicalcompass.org/test

Delightfully close to Gandhi & Mandela and mercifully far from Thatcher…. Hitler…W….