Before 1919, Americans didn’t buy things on credit. General Motors changed that. The company realized it couldn’t sell enough cars for cash, so they started lending buyers the dough for a new set of wheels. Sears and other companies followed suit. Then Wall Street decided to get in on the action, “and started offering stock on credit—’on margin,’ it was called. By the thousands, middle‑class Americans opened margin accounts, putting up 10 or 20 percent of a stock purchase and borrowing the rest. When the market went up, the returns felt like free money.” And there’s nothing like free money, until the bill comes due. In those early days of credit, the bill came due in 1929, the greatest crash in American history. Andrew Ross Sorkin started writing his new book 1929 because he was interested in the finances and psychology behind an important moment in the country’s history, not necessarily because of parallels to today’s market. But in the months leading up to the book’s release, things started to feel a little too familiar in all the wrong ways. An adapted excerpt from The Atlantic (Gift Article): The Lesson of 1929. “Problems arise when we get greedy and take too much. Nobody knows for sure where the line is—or what to do when we discover that we’ve gone past it. At that point, panic is the natural reaction.” 2Protein Age WastelandThere’s always a major trend that drives the food industry and eventually lines the shelves of local of your local market. Today, that trend is high protein. Most people think they need more protein. And the increasing number of folks on GLP-1 drugs are probably right. Hence, protein is everywhere. And I mean everywhere. Protein Is Showing Up in Doritos, Waffles and Now Even Pop-Tarts. 3Free RadicalsThe remarkable hope for a “historic dawn of a new Middle East” represented by yesterday’s hostage release, prisoner exchange, and ceasefire deal has almost immediately run into some harsh realities on the ground in Gaza. For one thing, though dramatically weakened, Hamas is still Hamas. “On Monday, a video circulating on social media appears to show several masked gunmen, some of them wearing green headbands resembling ones worn by Hamas, shooting with machine guns at least seven men after forcing them to kneel in the street. Posts identify the video as filmed in Gaza on Monday. Civilian spectators cheer ‘Allah Akbar,’ or God is Great, and call those killed ‘collaborators.’” Hamas said to kill over 30 Gazans as terror group moves to reassert its grip on Strip. 4Beacon Bits“American culture is no longer synonymous with the aspiration to freedom, but with transactionalism and secrecy: the algorithms that mysteriously determine what you see, the money collected by anonymous billionaires, the deals that the American president is making with world leaders that benefit himself and maybe others whose names we don’t know. America was always associated with capitalism, business, and markets, but nowadays there’s no pretense that anyone else will be invited to share the wealth.” Anne Applebaum in The Atlantic (Gift Article): The Beacon of Democracy Goes Dark. “The image of the ugly American always competed with the image of the generous American. Now that the latter has disappeared, the only Americans anyone can see are the ones trying to rip you off.” 5Extra, ExtraTrending Neg on Heg Reg: “The Pentagon is telling beat reporters to sign restrictive new rules by Tuesday or surrender their press passes by Wednesday. Virtually every news outlet is rejecting the ultimatum and saying they will not sign.” (And that includes MAGA news outlets.) 6Bottom of the News“Now teachers avoid breaking kids into groups of six or seven, or asking them to turn to page 67, or instructing them to take six or seven minutes for a task. Six is a perfect number, and seven is a prime number, but only a glutton for punishment would put them together in front of a bunch of 13-year-olds.” WSJ (Gift Article) on the numbers meme that means absolutely nothing. The Numbers Six and Seven Are Making Life Hell for Math Teachers. (I always figured 67 was for people who don’t still have enough flexibility for 69.) |