Friday, March 20, 2009

Who throws a shoe?

Ok, so this blog sucks (for those of you reading it on facebook, these posts are coming in from a blog). It clearly has little or nothing to do with France, and posts are sporadic. Maybe I'll make a general blog someday, and start over. Or maybe I'll just get lazy and quit. Not having internet in my residence in France has been a major impediment to blogging.

In other news, Wikipedia continues to be awesome. Have you ever noticed pairs of shoes hanging over power lines? Wikipedia has an article on it. It's mostly unsourced hearsay, but it's more than I've ever seen about the topic anywhere else.

Actually, I've never seen anything about the topic anywhere else.

I don't feel any better informed, but I now no longer feel alone in having noticed lonely pairs of shoes strung over power lines.

Iceland

This is from an article on Iceland's temporary insanity and subsequent bankruptcy:

"I spoke to another hedge fund in London so perplexed by the many bad LBOs Icelandic banks were financing that it hired private investigators to figure out what was going on in the Icelandic financial system.

The investigators produced a chart detailing a byzantine web of interlinked entities that boiled down to this: A handful of guys in Iceland, who had no experience of finance, were taking out tens of billions of dollars in short-term loans from abroad. They were then re-lending this money to themselves and their friends to buy assets—the banks, soccer teams, etc.

Since the entire world’s assets were rising—thanks in part to people like these Icelandic lunatics paying crazy prices for them—they appeared to be making money."

If you ever had a nagging feeling over the past few years that the world was insane....it was.