Tuesday, June 30, 2009

SIGN-SPOTTING AT 6/30/09

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Dear Friends:

THE GLOBAL FUTURIST is one of my favorite places to post. What I cannot offer in frequency I try to more than compensate for in quality. The information which follows can be used to either prepare for the future, or, more ambitiously, to alter its course. The time horizon at issue in this article is approximately two years...from July, 2009 to August, 2011.



1. The photograph to the upper-right was taken at a local Bank of America branch. Several possibilities, none of which is mutually exclusive, are worth investigating:
  • More and more major financial services and other service firms are going to be using text-messaging as a means of communication...and advertising (not coincidentally). Within the next two years, at least one-third of the population of the United States (and slightly less on the average for the G-8 Group of Industrialized Nations) over the age of 11 will be actively using text-messaging. Obama used it to coordinate his election; kids are using it to cheat on exams and to communicate when speaking aloud is prohibited; the percentage of communications sent via text will likely exceed the number of conversations via cellular telephone within the next two years.
  • Financial services firms and other service firms are focusing more of their marketing efforts on trying to attract high-school and college-age individuals to become customers. This audience is technologically more sophisticated and less interested in person-to-person non-social communication than their parents. As jobs are cut, automated communication becomes increasingly appealing.
  • Financial services and other services firms (especially utilities and other "service providers of necessity") are trying to improve their ailing images by being technologically "cutting edge" and getting to an audience that can be wowed by form over substance. The youth orientation is no accident.

2. Climate Change and Global Warming are spawning a wealth of new international organizations, projects, initiatives and regulations -- a trend that will continue. This is a positive development for international relations in general (i.e., addressing a potentially global problem -- not unlike those movies where the whole world unites against invaders from outer space, or where all of the world's governments put aside their differences to deflect a giant comet from impacting the Earth and decimating the entire Human Race). This will also spawn some employment and new activity in governmental and international regulatory agencies, and their symbiotic prosecutorial counterparts. Going further, crimes against the environment by cigar-chomping corporate bigwigs will be punishable by large fines (we must balance the budget!) and incarceration. On a humorous note, this will make for some amazing potential social interactions among drug dealers, hedge-fund managers and "shameless emitters of greenhouse gasses."

3. Social media (used both for social and business purposes) will be on the rise as a large consumer of time. The average G-8 citizen with social media access at home and/or at work, will be spending in excess of 6 hours daily utilizing these communication mechanisms and forums within two years' time. This seems lamentably appropriate in a civilization (which term I use loosely) where the distinction between office life and home life has become increasingly blurred, and where a six- to seven-day work week is growing increasingly common, with a decreasing quality of life and an ever-increasing frequency of emotional ills requiring attention.

4. Anticipate an increase in the number of government alerts about shrinking availability of funds for Social Security and Medicaid. Look for sweeping changes in healthcare (under the banner of "reform"), bringing the United States to a system of semi-socialized medicine, with public health insurance fueled by greater taxation of all social classes than ever before.

5. Look for an increasing number of U.S. citizens leaving the United States to find work in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Look for a corresponding increase in the number of first and second generation immigrants working in the United States.

On a somber note, I do not anticipate the beginning of a worldwide economic recovery until after the first half of 2012, with European (ECU, EU) markets recoving more rapidly and significantly than their U.S. counterparts. If I were to purchase publicly-traded equities at this time, I would only purchase with an eye toward corporate control.

On other fronts, I came across a very interesting article on certain unconventional indicators and indices of a recession on Yahoo! News, as reprinted from the KIPLINGER LETTER:

####

10 Quirky Economic Indicators
-by Candice Lee Jones, Friday, June 12, 2009:

These off beat barometers of the economy can give you much needed guidance for your portfolio or simply a good laugh.

Everyone is scrambling to get their fingers on the pulse of the economy. When will it turn around? Have we seen the worst? The answers may not be as elusive as you might think.
In the past, you might have relied on the old Hemline Theory to determine which way the market was heading: As hemlines rose, so did stock prices. Think model Twiggy in her super-short mod dresses of the '60s, followed by falling hemlines in the '70s as the economy weakened.

But these days you'll find all sorts of clues in everyday life to help determine where the economy really stands. Dry cleaners, for instance, may seem a bit more cluttered these days, and it's true -- many people are stalling an extra week before shelling out to pick up their clothes. Eyeliner sales are surging these days, and a cutback in eye makeup may signal a resurgent economy in which people are spending on costlier personal luxuries.

1. Packed Theaters
During the last seven recession years, box office sales have increased in five of them. The new Star Trek movie pulled in more than $200 million in the month of May, just one example of how well cinemas are faring these days. According to the National Association of Theatre Owners, the number of movie tickets sold in the first quarter of 2009 increased more than 9% from last year.

Better films? Hot new actors? People continue to fill theater seats, NATO says, because movies are one of the least expensive entertainment options out of the house. The average ticket price in 2008 was $7.18. So when the lines get shorter, go buy some stock.

2. Green Thumbs
The National Gardening Association finds that the number of households who will grow their own fruits, berries, vegetables and herbs this year is 19% higher than in 2008.
That makes 43 million gardeners in the United States this year. It's fun and relaxing, no doubt, but 54% of the respondents say the prospect of saving money on groceries motivates them to till the soil.

3. First Dates
Misery loves company, eh? Online dating service Match.com notices a pattern in its site activity during tough times. The fourth quarter of 2008 was their busiest in seven years (the site has been around since 1995). Match had a similar surge in late 2001, right after 9/11.
The company believes people are looking for someone with whom to try to forget about money troubles -- or share the pain. When the Dow Jones industrial average dropped to a five-year low last November, Match.com had its second busiest weekend of the year.

4. Romance Novels
The economy has broken your heart and stomped it to pieces and now you need to put it back together. At least that's what Harlequin, the giant romance novel publisher, says is happening. In 2008, Harlequin's sales were up 32% from the year before. In 2009, its sales are still rising.
The publisher credits this its uplifting stories that offer a haven, and to the low prices of the books relative to other entertainment. This theory has stood the test of time. Harlequin saw a similar sales increase during the recession of the early 90's. So if these stories start piling up unwanted on the discount table at the bookstore, alongside all those mis-timed guides to real estate riches, better news is on the way.

5. Droopy Eyes I
America is all tuckered out. A poll by the National Sleep Foundation found that nearly one-third of Americans lost sleep because they were worried about their finances. The 2009 Sleep in America Poll also found that 10% of those people tossed and turned specifically worrying about their jobs -- roughly the same percentage of Americans who are out of work.

6. Droopy Eyes II
Americans spent $10.3 billion in 2008 to endure 1.7 million cosmetic surgeries, which is 9% less than in 2007. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons cites the bad economy.
Without as much extra cash -- and facing depleted retirement funds and much less home equity -- fewer people can spend freely on plastic surgery. The number of liposuction procedures was down 19% in 2008 and tummy tucks down 18%. If you can get an appointment with a top surgeon without much of a wait, that's a sour sign for the economy. But, then again, maybe you can strike a deal.

7. Goopy Eyes
You've got that recession look in your eye. Total eye makeup sales at supermarkets and drugstores were up 8.5% in the one-year period that ended on March 22, compared to the previous year. In that time period, more than $260 million was spent on eye makeup -- in particular, eye liner was up 9% and mascara almost 13%.
The leading lipstick indicator -- the idea that lipstick sales rise in economic downturn as consumers settle for inexpensive luxuries -- is not holding up. Lipstick sales are down 11%. But eye make-up has replaced lipstick as the indicator, so the principle is the same.

8. Gators
What do 100,000 alligators have to do with the economy? The gators are all residents at Savoie's Alligator Farm, one of the largest alligator farms in Louisiana. The farm, which sells gator skin hides to tanners who in turn sell them to luxury designers like Louis Vuitton, has not sold a single hide since November, according to Savoie's.
This business is awful because people are not buying alligator skin handbags and luggage. The makers of designer labels therefore don't need to buy hides. This is tough on the gator farmers who are losing money fast and trying to keep the hides they already have in stock from spoiling. But it's good news for alligators everywhere -- if they only knew.

9. Dry Cleaning
The International Drycleaning and Laundry Institute is hearing gripes from many of its 5,000 members. The poor economy has customers are visiting less frequently and leaving clothes for longer. Weekly customers visit every two weeks, monthly customers visit bi-monthly, and some people delay their pickups even longer to avoid the bill. This has been a staple indicator of hard times before.

10. Mosquito Bites
We know the real estate bust has done a number on the economy, but did you know it can actually make you itch? In Maricopa County, Ariz., enormous numbers of foreclosed or abandoned homes have vacant swimming pools and unattended ponds. The stagnant waters -- known as green pools -- are a hotbed for mosquito breeding.
Maricopa County Environmental Services Department's Johnny Diloné says crews have treated more than 4,000 green pools already in 2009. During the same period in 2007, before metropolitan Phoenix's housing market collapsed, they had treated only 2,500. While most of the "green pools" are on vacant properties, some do belong to residents who just cannot afford to maintain their pools and ponds.

The above Article Appeared c/o Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc.
####

AUTHOR'S NOTE: While the above indicators may seem a bit silly at first blush, they speak volumes about the Human psyche, and the things that bring us comfort in times of a perceived recession. This starts to become a forecasting approach (consumerism patterns) worth taking very seriously when once gives effect to the fact that all recessions and depressions are initiated by the failure of a venerable, time-honored institution, and are followed and steepened by disillusionment and fear on the part of the consumer public, .i.e., a major crisis of confidence precipitating a catastrophic self-fulfilling prophesy.

A friend was trying to make the case for a recovery within the next two fiscal quarters in the U.S. and Britain brought about by "pent-up consumer demand". I responded by saying that consumer demand for numerous goods is elastic depending upon the price of the goods in question, the requirement for other goods which are competing for the same consumer dollars (but which are perceived to be necessities which have been foregone for too long), and the availability of disposible personal income, or of credit from banks and other financial institutions. Disposible personal income comes primarily from post-tax earnings, less housing and other essential cost items -- no employment, no disposible personal income -- and credit comes from banks and finance companies, but only when they are willing to lend, either by a feeling of moral obligation, or by court-ordered or regulatory compliance.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle

Friday, June 26, 2009

A BRIEF DEPARTURE: The "One Percent" Rule

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The 1% Rule
Note: This brief article was originally published in the author's own blog at DOUGLAS CASTLE, http://aboutdouglascastle.blogspot.com on 25 June 2009.

Dear Friends:

People (most of them self-professed pundits) are always citing the anecdotal wisdom of the "80 -20 Rule," which refers to the typical business situation where a mere 20% of your customers provide you with 80% of your business volume. It follows that a prudent business person should allocate 80% of his or her time on that critical 20%. Walking ahead just one more step, it would seem to me that it might truly be clever to focus more effort on segregating the 20% from the 80%, downsizing (I apologize for the dismal term) the 80% and building the 20% -- the ultimate result, if Murphy's Law and the Heisenberg Principle do not tamper with us too much, would be that the 20% would become our new 100%. Operating at optimal efficiency (which requires dispensing with the unfruitful investment of time in the 80%), we would then spend 100% of our time on the 100% of our customers who truly matter.

The inference in the 80-20 Rule is that the minority produces the majority of our wealth, and that they are of greater significance to us.

There is also a "Two Percent Rule," which refers to the belief that approximately 2% of the world's population (a very small, very powerful group, apparently) controls 98% of its wealth. The implications are obvious...as are the results.

Without making any value judgment, and just making an observation, I believe that both of the above rules are basically sound, albeit somewhat imprecise statistically.

But those rules are not the drivers in the limo of my current life: No, I would have to say that the Rule that affects me the most is the "1% Rule" [which will be referred to as "THE ONE PERCENT RULE" by both my detractors and by my twelfth-grade Creative Writing Teacher immediately after the release of this article].

My friend and business partner, Adam J. Kovitz, and I were discussing many wonderful upgrades to THE NATIONAL NETWORKER, and my role in mapping out and orchestrating many of these substantial changes. Adam's compliment to me was that I was a "One Percenter." He had used this expression on numerous occasions. I now understand it well enough to give it a definition. Following is the Rule, which I attribute jointly to Adam and myself...

THE ONE PERCENT RULE: Approximately One Percent of all Human Beings create and construct, while the remaining Ninety Nine Percent criticize and destroy. In sum, it is so much easier to be a critic and a complainer than it is to be a problem-solver, that most among us are virtually programmed (by our propensity toward inertia and indolence) to be critics and complainers, while only a few among us defy our baser instincts and actually create, build and problem-solve. To make matters worse, the special 1% is generally acknowledged and praised posthumously, i.e., following a crucifixion, burning at the stake, suicide, and the like. To be a One Percenter may be a thankless job, but it is necessary to every step that Humankind advances. This tenacious 1% fights against Humankind's collective drive toward either stagnation or self-annihilation. And we spend so much of our time and resources trying to discourage or eliminate this pivotal component.

Are you a One Percenter? Take the matter up with your own conscience. The sooner, the better. Time is fleeting.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle
DOUGLAS CASTLE
*Follow DOUGLAS CASTLE on TWITTER - http://twitter.com/douglascastle
*Follow DOUGLAS CASTLE on THE NATIONAL NETWORKER - http://twitter.com/TNNW_BUZZWORKS

Friday, June 19, 2009

Determinism - Tough Questions

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FROM: The Global Futurist - "Determinism - Tough Questions"

Dear Friends:

Sometimes it seems as if all of the future were predetermined by a force or forces beyond the scope of our control. Are we wasting our time trying to change things...or can we genuinely create constructive change and truly shape our own destinies?


Just as curiously, do we permit the future to "run its course" by the self-fulfilling prophesy associated with believing that the future is predetermined? An example, culled from real life:

If I do not believe that my vote will make a difference, and I therefore choose not to cast any vote, am I acknowledging the inevitable, or am I passively creating an outcome? Is it possible that those other prospective voters who do not feel as I do ultimately gain the power (by their participation in the voting process) to shape the future? By my failure to vote, am I decreasing my ability to write the script to my future, and empowering the voting population to write the script for me?


Just what effect do we (and can we) have on the future? What effect, if any, do our belief systems have on our ability to shape the future?


Pause for a moment, just to think about these matters.


Faithfully,


Douglas Castle


Wednesday, June 17, 2009

QUICK SURVEY - LEADERSHIP

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What are the critical responsibilities of a True Leader? Be Heard! Quick survey http://twitlik.com/Leadership88 #TNNW #douglascastle

Thursday, June 11, 2009

ORDER OUT OF CHAOS - A Socio-Economic and Behavioral Commentary

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Dear Friends:

My question for my colleagues is a simple one: Are you motivated more by FEAR, or by the OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN? Be fully honest. Christine West's Seminar: http://ping.fm/SH3ov . My personal commentary follows.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle

ORDER OUT OF CHAOS - A SOCIO-ECONOMIC AND BEHAVIORAL COMMENTARY

Throughout the United States and the rest of the world that surrounds us (I sound a bit paranoic, don't I?), people are frightened. The economy is in a contractionary state; many formidable and once-credible "bedrock" institutions have failed amid allegations of major misjudgments and corruption -- and the distinctions between the public and private sectors are becoming increasingly unclear. People tend to be frightened by rapid change and general uncertainty.

Panic makes for some terrible decisionmaking, while maintaining a calm and analytic state of mind while those about us are in a state of irrationality can reveal some contrarian investment bargains. While fear has locked many investors and businesses into a paralytic holding pattern, a distinct minority, virtually a special social class, is quietly buying up controlling stakes and future monopolistic positions in a variety of industries, companies and commodities. This minority, for the most part, is comprised of very wealthy, privileged families...families who have prospered through generation after generation, almost regardless of the political or economic environment. We will refer to them (for the purposes or simplicity) as dynastic families. Their blueblooded names are familiar to many of the rest of us, and they have held tremendous power for quite some time -- centuries, in fact.

I am betting that amongst the pedestrian, "common" population, fear is a far superior motivating force than the promise of an opportunity for gain. I believe that we travel long, circuitous routes in order to avoid confrontation, pain and loss, while we seldom leave the living room couch for an opportunity, which might require effort on our part. Inertia, indolence and a lack of ambition combine to work against the potential efficacy of positive reinforcement, while fear actually creates a physiological reaction (i.e., the secretion of adrenalin, cortisol, etcetera) which actually produces the means for rapid movement in a "fight or flight" response.

The endorphin "rush" produced by the mind's complex neurochemical apparatus is, in contrast, usually much slower to gain a foothold and much weaker in terms of its sway over our responses to the environment and circumstances. It is interesting to note that fear is regarded by many as a visceral reflex, while ambition, and the excitement that accompanies it, is seen to be more of a cerebral, learned action.

Is it possible that the actual physiology of the members of these dynastic families has changed, through some sort of evolutionary genetic mechanism, over the generations? Is it possible that the progenitors who spawned these imperial families started out with an anomalous physiological/ psychological makeup which permitted them to seize ever-increasing stakes of wealth and power while others panicked and fled? Is there a "contrarian gene" that makes these people different, or is it a function of a learned response which is handed down from each generation to its successor?

These few have triumphed through virtually every tragic chapter in the course of Humanity's erratic, ungainly evolution. I am fascinated by the fact that such a small group of persons can continually control the bulk of the world's resources.

These dynastic families all have one thing in common -- they are not motivated by fear.

I am equally fascinated by my almost dull, ho-hum, all-too-calm expectation, in my dual roles as a Strategic Planner and a Futurist, that these dynastic families will become even wealthier and more powerful as a result of the severe economic recession that has befallen us; and that they will emerge, as they always have, with an even greater percentage of the world's wealth when the current crisis has ended. The irony is that these families always benefit by their uncanny ability to maintain their cool in the midst of the confusion -- to make order (and money) out of chaos. This observation has made conspiracy theorists out of many of us. We are indeed, by and large, a fearful group of primitives running from the lightning, while these others are out flying their kites.
__________________________________

Labels: Christine West, fear, The Castle Consultancy, reinforcement, behavioral psychology, blogs by Douglas Castle, THE NATIONAL NETWORKER (TNNW), Humanitas Maximus, The Global Futurist, The Internationalist Page, Links 4 Life, Internal Energy Plus, relationships, Twitter, Linked In, social media, Facebook, INTERNAL ENERGY PLUS, Buzzworks, TNNW_BUZZWORKS, SrMeetUp!, Braintenance, Taking Command!, Strategic Planning, Stress, SEO, Procrastinertia, Omnigadget, Douglas Castle, Wikipedia, Google Alerts, Better Blogs, Yahoo! Alerts, Artificial Intelligence (AI),

Saturday, June 6, 2009

PLS --> -->

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PLS --> --> Dear Friends:

If you do not already have a free Twitter account, you can get one at http://twitter.com. Twitter affords you a unique opportunity to refine your brevity skills -- you have exactly 140 characters within which to express your thoughts. Every character counts!

To follow us on INTERNAL ENERGY PLUS, log into your Twitter account and head for http://htxt.it/MIy9 To follow us on THE NATIONAL NETWORKER, log into your Twitter account (what's that? you're already logged in? Great!) and head for http://htxt.it/5vac

I'll look forward to our Tweeting each other (with wespect).

See you there.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle (http://htxt.it/6dHO )

Friday, June 5, 2009

Patrick Dixon, Futurist

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Dear Friends:

I am a long-term admirer of Patrick Dixon. He is an eclectic Futurist with a great deal to say about a vast number of facts and trends which will impact the lives of everyone. If you are truly interested (or invested) in planning for the future, or, more ambitiously, in shaping the future, you would be well-served to follow him. Visit http://www.globalchange.com.

I do not always agree with what Mr. Dixon has to say, but I find myself agreeing more often than not. What I respect most of all is not his ability to predict, or even his style of writing -- it is his reasoning process. http://www.globalchange.com.

By the way, I hope that you will also follow me on Twitter (stop groaning...please!), at http://twitter.com/douglascastle and at http://twitter.com/TNNW_BUZZWORKS.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle

FUTURIST Author Flips Twitter the Bird

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Dear Friends (and I know that your numbers are dwindling):

I have nothing to post at this moment. So... At ease, soldiers.

While we make camp, I would like to share (with you...that's right...you, over there!) what I feel is the ultimate 140 character Twitter Post. Twitter, the internet's most highly-acclaimed social media [i.e., noisemaking] apparatus, only gives you 140 characters within which to answer the age-old philosophical conundrum: What are you doing now?

Here's the post, which is a thinly-veiled solicitation for business networkers and relationship-builders throughout the known universe to follow THE NATIONAL NETWORKER's announcement page on Twitter. My gift for subtlety will immediately become apparent:

Follow us and get somewhere! http://twitter.com/TNNW_BUZZWORKS. Newsletter. Services. Relationships. And longer urls! #TNNW (Really.)

How about it, folks? In less than 140 characters, where even your s p a c e s are counted as characters, I perpetrated a "stealth advertisement insertion."

Do I deserve the day off?

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle*
*The "e" in my last name is silent, like the "p" in "swimming".

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

DCastleFT.GlobalEcon

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DCastleFT.GlobalEcon Merkel mauls central banks : Unconventional monetary policies being pu.. http://tinyurl.com/pmkd8k

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DouglasCastle.Digg Rwandan to face genocide charges in Finland: Finnish prosecutors will file.. http://tinyurl.com/ofbpkd

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DouglasCastle_FTnews Anti-Castro politicians fight thawing of relations : Cuban-American po.. http://tinyurl.com/q4ng52

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DouglasCastle_APNews Clinton details conditions for Cuba entry to OAS: SAN PEDRO SULA, Hond.. http://bit.ly/16fd9E

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DCastleFT.GlobalEcon Berlin breaks the unwritten rule : The chancellor's strong and clear c.. http://bit.ly/dthI1

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DouglasCasle.digg Air France plane: wreckage found 400 miles off coast: Brazilian military air.. http://bit.ly/NNxv0

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DouglasCastle_FTnews Geithner says China backs US stimulus: China has expressed confidence .. http://bit.ly/qPrdT

Douglas Castle Apologizes for Loitering and Littering.

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Douglas Castle Apologizes for Loitering and Littering.

Dear Friends:

As a man born with an irresistible propensity for apologies (I have actually apologized to neighbors about the weather), I had to take this moment to apologize to all of my readers. Please read on.

I spend a great deal of time railing and carrying on about being heard and being noticed in this noise-filled, e-media world. It is nothing short of magic to hear, and to be heard amidst the constant full-sensorial assault on the senses imposed upon on us in a promotion-obsessed high-technology society. It seems, too much of the time, that everyone is promoting and no one is producing...that everyone is selling, even if no one is buying. Ironically, if you truly want to purchase something, it's almost unimaginally difficult to get service -- "All of our representatives are currently assisting other callers..."

Two days ago, I tried to contact a domain registration service by telephone. I called the number for "Immediate Customer Assistance." The first time I phoned, I held for 15 minutes. The second time, 20 minutes. The third time, I started yelling into the telephone (at no one) after hearing a musical tape loop of Dave Brubeck's immortal "Take Five," which was, until very recently, one of my favorite songs. While I waited on the telephone, I went through in excess of one hundred emails which had accumulated in my computer inbox in the space of two hours.

Approximately one in every ten messages was spam. Ironically, in going through my spam filter's collected entries, I have generally found that approximately one in every twenty five spam messages is a miscategorized legitimate email. My computer can no longer effectively differentiate between them - the machine is as overworked and confused as I am (Note: I plan to publish the results of my study in the International Journal Of Useless, Unsponsored Research, August Edition. Adam J. Kovitz, of THE NATIONAL NETWORKER refused to finance this endeavor when I offered him a right of first refusal, citing it as "crap," or some variant thereof). Anyway:

Several days ago I started featuring several different newsfeeds on a number of the blogs which I administer, co-author or write. While International News is very important, the feeds have been posting to these blogs many times each day. Enough is enough. To make matters worse, the hyperlinks to the top news stories are not live [by the way, if you want to bring any of the links on these posts to life so that you can read the entire story, all you need to do is paste them into your browser].

I have been quite a hypocrite...filling my readers' blogs, widgets, RSS feeds and email with this avalanche of sobering and saddening news, instead of heartfelt, informative and stimulating content. I have been loitering and littering, and I am deeply sorry.

Starting tomorrow (because nobody ever starts today, whenever today may be - we Humans are prone to procrastination and indecision, which I should probably write about if and when I can get around to making up my mind about it), I will decrease the frequency of these feeds to once daily for each. The feeds in question are from Associated Press (AP), The Financial Times (FT) and Digg.

Please stay with me. I will make it up to you.

I am deeply in debt to those people who read what I write, and I will not abuse the privilege and honor of your interest and loyalty.

Faithfully,

Douglas Castle
*Follow DOUGLAS CASTLE on TWITTER - http://twitter.com/douglascastle

DCastleFT.GlobalEcon

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DCastleFT.GlobalEcon Global recession makes world less safe: Rising fuel and food prices fo.. http://bit.ly/rYWP1

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DouglasCasle.digg The Great Tiananmen Taboo: It is 20 years since students and lecturers fille.. http://bit.ly/1Afn3

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DouglasCastle_FTnews Pakistan court frees Mumbai attack suspect: A notorious Islamist milit.. http://bit.ly/jEJ4D

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DouglasCastle_APNews Investigators ponder what happened to Air France: RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) .. http://bit.ly/8TGEY

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DouglasCasle.digg Picture Gallery: Korea War 1950-53: A short history of the North-South conflict http://bit.ly/LkqNG

Monday, June 1, 2009

DouglasCastle_APNews

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DouglasCastle_APNews Vast search of Atlantic Ocean for Air France jet: RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) .. http://bit.ly/wTZ3M

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DouglasCasle.digg GM, Citigroup Replaced in Dow by Cisco, Travelers : General Motors Corp. and.. http://bit.ly/tFu03

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DouglasCastle_APNews Susan Boyle fairy tale sours as she enters clinic: LONDON (AP) -- Now .. http://bit.ly/18uWhs

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DCastleFT.GlobalEcon Robust output data boost markets : Stock markets round the world surge.. http://bit.ly/rugu9

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DouglasCasle.digg Muslims want tangible change on Mideast from Obama : Respect for Islam, a pr.. http://bit.ly/xCKaR

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DouglasCastle_FTnews Air France plane missing with 228 aboard: An Air France passenger jet .. http://bit.ly/Be3I1

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DouglasCastle_APNews Netanyahu rejects US calls for settlement freeze: HAVAT GILAD, West Ba.. http://bit.ly/RUIO5

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DouglasCasle.digg New ID rules begin June First for Mexico, Canada trips: New rules requiring .. http://bit.ly/QFRXA

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