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Ten Years Ago

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Oh, what the hell, I’ll use any excuse to find a reason to post…

Ten years ago:

  • I had just turned seventeen and I was getting ready to begin my senior year of high school.
  • I had been back from the NYLC trip to Washington for a few months.
  • My hair, for the first time, was cut with clippers down to a #2 guard. My mom wasn’t exactly happy with the sudden change, but my head has been cool, happy, and ready to wear ever since.
  • The number one song on the Billboard charts was Uninvited, by Alanis Morissette.
  • Heather and I were both relatively heavily involved in the high schol marching band, which took up quite a bit of our time, even over the summer.
  • This was the first year in four or five that I didn’t go to Boy Scout summer camp, because by ten years ago, I had already earned my Eagle badge and didn’t really need any more merit badges.
  • Besides my normal slate of activities, I had also followed Drew’s advice and gotten a great job working the photo lab at CVS. This deserves its own post, so I’ll have to talk more about later.

I found a photo of me rocking three of my 1990s fashion staples here.




Nine Months Without a Car

Majesty It has now been nine full months since I sold my car and started commuting daily via scooter. Here are the vital stats:

  • Miles driven:1500
  • Fuel costs: ~$15/month
  • Estimated savings: $250/month*

All in all, I am pleased with my “lifestyle change”. The scooter is a hell of a lot of fun, and I am no longer constantly complaining about paying for a car I don’t use all that often. There’s no grander “save the planet” motive at play, but at the same time, I do like to compare monthly fuel expenditures with my friends and see how we compare. (For the record: four gallons.)

Yes, there are downsides. Sometimes it rains and I’m unprepared. Sometimes the helmet and jacket get really hot. And there are one or two times each month where I’m slightly inconvenienced by our single-car existence. For example, if I’m at work and need to pick up more groceries than the scooter will carry–16 gallons of storage under the seat–I have to go pick up the car. But the fact that this situation comes up so rarely underscores just how little we really needed to have two cars.

*Note: This back-of-the-envelope guesstimate takes into consideration the facts that A) we spend slightly more on gas for the other car now that we’re down to one, B) the scooter itself did have a cost, and C) I am actually spending less on Marta now than when I owned a car.




Huh?

Can anybody ’splain me why there is a “MARTA Tax” on my cable bill? What does Comcast have to do with MARTA?




Politics and books

  • Going to vote in the primary tomorrow after a week of trying and failing to find time to advance vote. Ron Paul needs all the help I can give him, especially given that his buzz has waned quite a bit on the internet. It seems like Ron Paul Fever is giving way to the ever growing Obamania. Obamassacre? Obamanslaughter? I guess I’m just not as good at coining neo-bama-logisms as Ken Jennings. Segue alert!
  • Going to meet Ken Jennings (again) at the Margaret Mitchell House tomorrow evening to hear him discuss–and see him sign–his latest.
  • Finished The Birthday Party last week. I finally read this on a year-old recommendation on boingboing.net. This is a very good story, recounted chillingly, if a bit amateurishly, by the federal prosecutor who was kidnapped in 1998. A stellar example of an unputdownable book, this one had me up until 2am finishing it the same day I got it from the library.
  • Also read Then We Came to the End, completely on the recommendation of Tony Simon’s metaphorical pizza of literature. This is not the kind of novel I usually read. The summary wouldn’t have piqued my interest in the least: “A group of copywriters and designers at a Chicago ad agency face layoffs at the end of the ’90s boom.” But this is something substantial. It’s about office life, something which which I am intimately familiar, and about cancer, with which I am not. The book will resonate clearly, as it did with me, with anyone who works in an office.
  • Currently checked out: Altered Carbon and The World Without Us. Not sure which I will finish first.




Welcome!

By the way, Scott, welcome to the world of blogging.




Thought of the Day

If our country had been founded by pirates, our money would look a lot cooler.




The Database

I just saw this quote in an article about the Virginia Tech shootings. Does this send chills down anyone else’s spine?

Some news accounts have suggested that Cho had a history of antidepressant use, but senior federal officials tell ABC News that they can find no record of such medication in the government’s files. This does not completely rule out prescription drug use, including samples from a physician, drugs obtained through illegal Internet sources, or a gap in the federal database, but the sources say theirs is a reasonably complete search.

It doesn’t really surprise me that they have a huge, privacy-invading database of our prescriptions, but what is unnerving to me is how definitive they consider it. I can just picture a Shadowy Government Official at his computer… “Why, he must not have been on antidepressants,” *clickety-clackety* “I don’t see it anywhere in our records.”

Edit: Someone at Boing Boing noticed the quote too and has a little more information on this database.




Saving is for suckers?

If I said to you, “You can have $10,000 to spend now—or $9,500 to spend in 10 years,” which would you choose? Probably the $10,000 now. And in doing so, you would be making the same choice many Americans make when deciding whether to save or spend their hard-earned cash.

The problem is how we tax investment gains. Over the past 80 years, the average annual return on Treasury bills (a proxy for savings accounts) has been 3.7 percent per year. Inflation, meanwhile, has averaged 3.1 percent per year. This combination has produced a “real return” of a paltry 0.6 percent per year.

-Slate.com, Why U.S. tax policy makes saving a sucker’s game

It certainly makes some logical sense on its own. If inflation is 3% a year and taxes eat the rest of your gain, you accomplished nothing by saving that money. But there’s a huge omission in this strategy. Even if you lost a few bucks, you still didn’t spend that money.

It’s a point that my parents made to me early on. It matters very little where you put it or how you do it, but saving money and making sure that you are unable to easily spend it, even in “emergencies” is a key strategy. When I ran my list of prospective mutual funds by my dad for 401k advice, he basically said “Those all sound great; pick one that sounds good and don’t touch the money.”

And that’s the key point of saving that this article misses. It’s not about getting an awesome return on your money (although that’s definitely the goal for someone that’s already putting money into savings). It’s about saving money at all. People aren’t making the choice not to save their money because of oppressive taxation; I’m sure that a lot of families don’t even think about their return as compared to inflation. The people who aren’t saving don’t even get that far: they just don’t want to save their money, or are convinced they can’t afford to. The article does seem to acknowledge the real issues that demotivate saving– spending beyond your means with credit cards, “acquisitive consumers” spending to keep up with fashion or trends, etc.–but I think the author attributes far too much spending and non-saving behavior to tax disadvantages.

If I said to you, “You can have $10,000 to spend now—or $9,500 to spend in 10 years,” which would you choose?

He neglects to even consider the fact that if you come up with that $10,000 to save every year, in that tenth year, you’ll have $95,000 plus any compound interest on the earnings from each of the yearly contributions. If you spent the $10,000 on a life-saving surgery, well, yeah, it’s better to spend it now. But you’d probably spend it now even if you could be guaranteed to get a great return.

To slightly misapply a term from Econ 101, I just don’t think that the elasticity of the “demand” for saving money can be influenced all that much by a tax scheme. I just can’t imagine Joe and Flo Median Income looking at their paycheck and having this conversation:

Joe: “Golly gee, we can either buy a plasma TV or save this money for our retirement in treasury bills.”
Flo: “But if we save it for retirement in these T-bills, the inflation and taxes will just eat up any return we would have gotten!”
Joe: “Screw it, we’re buying the TV!”

It’s a false choice. It should really read “You’ll make $45,000 this year. Would you rather have $0 of it or $9,500 of it 10 years from now?




Wal-Mart has arrived

walmartWe have a new Wal-Mart right around the corner. It’s more of an “urban style” store, with a lower ceiling and less square footage than your typical Supercenter. Grocery-wise, we found just about everything we usually buy at Kroger for even better prices. For some reason, Wal-Mart has a few items to which they just can’t seem to apply their ultralow pricing wizardry. Beer and soda were both greater than or equal to the price at the Kroger next door. I’d imagine the Coke prices are set by the local vendor; that’s what my store manager told me when I worked at CVS. Beer, on the other hand, should be a different story. If I can get a case of Miller Lite from Green’s for $16, it shouldn’t be $19 at the World’s Cheapest Store Ever.

Beyond that, they’re advertising their $4 generic prescriptions, so they must have rolled those out in our market as well.

Now I just need to see if they have any copies left of Gears of War today.




2006 NCAA Football Simulation Round 1: Predictions

NCAA Football 2007As an experiment, Rusty and I are going to attempt to predict the outcome of several key college football matchups using nothing but our Xbox 360s and our copies of NCAA Football 2007. We’ll simulate the games and attempt to determine how accurate this $60 testosterone simulator really is.

Notre Dame (#3) vs. Georgia Tech (#25)

The trusty Xbox has Georgia Tech opening up with a field goal in the first quarter, but our virtual Notre Dame hammers the NATS with four touchdowns in the second quarter alone. Tech outscores Notre Dame 18-10 in the second half, but it isn’t enough.
Notre Dame wins 38-21

Tennessee (#18) vs. California (#15)

The boys in prison jumpsuit orange are on top until the fourth, when Cal mounts an impressive comeback. Unfortunately for the Golden Bears, Tennessee has a comeback of their own up their inbred sleeves, putting it in the end zone twice in the last 3:30 to squeak by. Cal posts 496 yards of total offense to Tennessee’s 378.

Note: We would have actually played this game, and perhaps others, if our online action hadn’t been cock-blocked by a flaky network connection.
Tennessee wins 36-33

Florida State (#12) vs. Miami (#11)

Miami lets FSU score 20 unanswered points before, er, answering. Another close one.
Miami wins 24-23

USC (#4) vs. Arkansas

The Trojans run up the score on the Razorbacks this week, passing for 447 yards on their way to 740 yards of total offense. Incredibly, Southern Cal only punts once in sixty minutes of play, despite never converting on 4th down.
USC wins 51-27

Auburn (#7) vs. Washington State

This one looks like a pretty boring game on the Xbox 360. Nobody converts on 4th down, nobody fumbles the ball, and there are only three trips to the end zone all game. Neither team even kicks a field goal. Come on, people spice it up a bit! These games had better be more interesting in real life.
Auburn wins 35-21

Speaking of keeping up interest, I can’t really say whether I’ll do this every week throughout the season. I guess we’ll see how prescient the simulations are.

Uh oh, I have to go… The Insider is showing the wedding videos of a couple who died in the Kentucky plane crash over the weekend. That’s just classy.

Update: Rusty posted his results. His Xbox predicts fewer nail-biters, and predicted Cal to win over Tennessee. Let’s hope it’s mine’s right.




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