07 October 2013

Notes - economic plague of thought / Dead 4 (final) / Brothers 4 (final)


         Late morning. Carol has been talking about the nation debt crisis looming white whale-like in the short distance and you had the thought, ‘What if there is a run on the banks? And, if there is a run on the banks what does the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation have to back up the private investors’ savings already in the banks?’ These lead to lots of questions that have not consciously bothered your mind until now. Carol doesn’t know the answers and neither do you; this in itself does not bother you nearly as much as wondering if anyone can answer these questions satisfactorily. – Amorella

         1122 hours. It is an economic plague of thought that hits home. One could write a novel, but then a novel was done with The Crash of ’79 by Paul Emil Erdman.

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The Crash of '79

The Crash of '79 is a book so real that its plot reads like today's headlines. The central figure is that world traveler, playboy, despot, and winter-sports enthusiast His Imperial Majesty the Shah of Iran, whose grandiose and megalomaniacal dreams, nurtured in secret and financed by oil money, engulf the lives of Erdman's characters, each of whom, unknowingly, is contributing to the event that will bring about the Crash of '79 and the demise of the industrial West.

Bill Hitchcock, the hero, is a successful banker, divorced skirt-chaser, confirmed cynic and financial genius. It is Hitchcock whom the Saudi Arabians pick to manage their vast hoard of accumulated oil profits and to fire a warning shot across the bows of the Western financial community. And no sooner has Hitchcock sat down at his desk in Riyadh than he learns just how precariously balanced the Western world's financial system really is.

Before long Hitchcock is wheeling and dealing at the highest levels of government, while pursuing Ursula Hartmann, beautiful Swiss daughter of one of the world's most distinguished nuclear scientists. Through her he becomes aware that the Saudi's, for all their oil and money, have a problem of their own - the Shah or Iran's ambition to control the entire Middle East and its precious oil...(less)

Hardcover, 350 pages
Published October 1st 1976 by Simon & Schuster
From goodreadsdotcom
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Paul Emil Erdman (May 19, 1932 - April 23, 2007 in Sonoma County, California. was one of the leading business and financial writers in the United States who became known for writing novels based on monetary trends and historical facts concerning complex matters of international finance.
Early life
Erdman was born in Stratford, Ontario, Canada, on 19 May 1932 to American parents. He graduated from Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service. He received his PhD from the University of Basel. In 1958 he worked as a financial analyst for the European Coal and Steel Community. Between 1959 and 1961, he worked as an economist at the Stanford Research Institute at Menlo Park.
Banking career
Erdman returned to Switzerland where in 1965, he founded and was the president of a Swiss bank - the Salik Bank. In 1969, the United California Bank in California bought a majority stake and renamed it the United California Bank in Basel. The bank collapsed after taking large losses speculating in the cocoa market. Erdman and other board members were accused of fraud and Erdman spent time in jail awaiting trial. Several officers of his bank were convicted and served prison terms, much to the surprise of American readers, who were unaccustomed to seeing corporate executives jailed for the activities of their companies. In television interviews, Erdman has observed that Swiss prisons had better food (he could have meals sent in by hotels and restaurants of his choice) but Swiss laws did apply to the "privileged classes" as well as to ordinary mortals. The whole episode has been well documented in Chapter 4: How My Swiss Bank Blew $40 Million and Went Broke of the book Supermoney by George Goodman written under his pseudonym Adam Smith.

From: Wikipedia
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         1139 hours. Obviously, today’s situation is not similar other than circumstances get in the way of normal human behavior when it comes to money. Something we have witnessed in New York as well as in politics in the last two decades. I’m done. I have nothing else to say on the subject. I wish it had not been brought up in the first place, but it was.

         No need to dwell on it, boy, once it is outside your head. Later, dude. Post. – Amorella


        You are pleased you signaling car stopper actually works as the directions said it would, and you still have about a foot and a half leeway before tapping the wall. Errands are to be run and then lunch. after which you may have some work and reading time in the park or cemetery. Meanwhile, you are working on Dead 4. - Amorella

         1324 hours. Dead 4 is complete.
***
The Dead 4 ©2013, rho, final draft of GMG.One

            Sophia stepped off the stage and floated feather-lite onto Merlyn's private sanctuary wearing a linen Doric chiton, a violet linen cloth draped over her left shoulder dropping in folds around the blouse and over the hips to the ankles. Merlyn smiled, thinking how the style in the twenty-first century might be considered a beautiful woman in a delightfully intimately woven dress with a long shawl, suggestively set to crawl into bed with her best friend.
            Merlyn reached out younger handed than the moment before, clasped her right hand with both of his and said, “I am honored my friend, you are always a welcome sight my Sophia.”
            “I understand our Mother was recently here,” commented Sophia in a voice melodically soft and honest. “What a beautiful meadow you commend yourself to be, Merlyn.”
            “This place is where I may touch the living,” responded Merlyn. “I think the Dead who are fit, find this an irresistible challenge.” He paused, “Mother Glevema stopped by asking for you.” Merlyn continued with a confident smile and pointed to the northeast. “On the other side of the cemetery mountain one can touch the present Living.”
            “Can you show me beyond that granite rock one day, Merlyn?” To be alive again, the wonderment raced from Sophia's heartansoul into her mind alone.
            Calmly, Merlyn suggested, “We have forgotten much of what Life is in the moment. I see and feel through Richard Greystone, a spirit already partially ensnared with his identical twin Robert's spirit. One day you may walk with me among the living.” Merlyn watched Sophia's features dissolve.
            Heart's memory cocked the trigger, the soul rose as the sun itself, the mind formed the billiard table and Merlyn saw the solids and stripes scattered about slate's green field beyond the cue mark. Refocusing, Merlyn noted a purple stripe, the 12 ball rested on the cue mark. Sophia clothing was violet dyed linen he thought then surmised, she is the uncued 12 ball.
                        The 12 ball disappeared from the mark, from three dimensions in his mind to a shade. I have only seen this once before, thought Merlyn the Bard, in ancient Elysium. Panagiotakis, the shaman who had said, “We are from there, to here,” was below me.
            We were on this side of the Styx where no earthly tremors exist. The Prophet, Ezekiel, was alongside Takis and two others. I was sitting cross-legged high in the tree behind the shamans lying on the shoreline. Their souls, each alone, danced in the center of a shaded circle on the riverbank. The shades disappeared to a place below the bank of the Styx.
            Takis, Ezekiel and the two others formed four billiard balls in the mind, but I saw them William Blake-like as fiery souls dancing not as full rounded balls on the table. The Rebellion of the First Ten Thousand Greek Dead had begun not soon before. This action of human will beyond the Grave rose among the twelve major cultures of the World of the Dead in those early days.
            No human spirit was full-minded, nor could sheorhe be a common letter in any alphabet spoken or signed. Each spirit scooted about no better than the common letter 'i' until it eventually rose to a capital height.
            Then a question rose to the left side of the capital 'I' and a period rose on its right. Length and width had risen straight up adding an undiscovered dimension to the Dead, a third dimension, height, which had only been experienced while living and framed by time and distance from There to Here.
            Merlyn returned to his rock, his thinking throne to a cocoon of wonder. No chance to be a butterfly. In Earth’s today though, since the Second Rebellion of the Dead, we still have perspective, a sun in the sky and earth below. Collectively within the spirit, the heartansoulanmind, we continue to have a place of solitude, a suit to wear to disguise our nakedness, a clothing, opened to visitors of our free choice. Many of the Dead huddle together in a patchwork quilt, afraid of strangers, or worse, afraid of themselves. No one with any sense of deadanliving can return to the living experience in any manner but memory. Presently no one but me can learn what it is to be a deadanliving bridge between the spirit-an-physics in higher consciousness.
725 words
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         Later in the afternoon. You are facing west in the center of Rose Hill Cemetery after running errands and taking your walks at Pine Hill Lakes Park. Let’s go to Brothers 4 as Carol continues with her short nap. – Amorella

         1643 hours. I forgot to put Pouch 3 in appropriate documents. I also realize I have not come up with a Chapter 4 ‘word’.

         How about crème de la crème’? – Amorella

         I know the word generally but I will have to review it for chapter context: “best of the best”. I assume Merlyn is considered the best of the best as far as context is concerned among the Dead. However, as these are his dreams, it sounds rather conceited does it not?

         I chose the words orndorff not Merlyn, and not you either. – Amorella

         1655 hours. You have a point. Carol is on page 8 of Stuart Woods’ Bel-Air Dead, a Stone Barrington novel according to Wikipedia Offline. – I’ll set up the chapter as you wish (since I would and do not know any better anyway).

         You are home and stopped working on Brothers 4 with two more paragraphs to clean up. – Amorella

         1814 hours. Time for a break. We had lunch at Panera/Chipotle’s so tonight, who knows, we might have scrambled eggs or cereal for supper. Maybe we’ll watch one of last night’s shows before the news.

         Later, old man. Post. - Amorella


         You had a makeshift supper of a cup of turkey soup and half a peanut butter sandwich on wheat bread while watching the news on NBC and ABC after watching the DVRed version of the first season show of “Blue Bloods”. Carol is watching “Dancing with the Stars” and you want to complete Brothers 4 then call it a night. – Amorella

         2053 hours. The Brothers 4 draft is completed.

         You are not fully confident of this or any other draft for that matter, but this is acceptable at the moment. Drop in and post. - Amorella

***
The Brothers 4 ©2013 rho, (final) draft of GMG One

            Richard awoke to hear their daughter Julie chattering from downstairs in the kitchen. Julie and Jenni are here with their kids, Ronda Ann and David. No doubt Rob will be popping in wondering why I am not up.
            In a tone of melodiously forced politeness, Cyndi shouted, “Are you up, Richard? Ronda wants to bring David to get you up.”
            Richard rolled over feigning sleep, something easily done. Noisy feet on the steps gave way to the door slightly creaked from the bottom hinge he had promised to lubricate a month ago. What a day and I’m not even up yet, he surmised with a smile. I hear my favorite four and two year olds on the steps. Do I feign a deep sleep or rise up from the sheet with a lion's 'I-m-going-to-get-you' roar?
***
            Later, after a family meal of a two steaks and potatoes, four chicken salads and two kids' macaroni and cheese lunches, at a nearby restaurant of choice, Robert and Richard returned to sit in the living room, each in a high back chair, with Julie on the left side of the living room couch followed by four year old Ronda Ann and two year old David and his mother Jennifer, Robert and Connie’s daughter. Robert mentioned on how good the kids were at lunch when David scooted off and under the gray marble topped coffee table looking for his blue Thomas the train engine. Ronda remarked, “I'm going to the kitchen to see Grandma,” and left a little annoyed she had been forced to sit properly in the first place. Julie being older spoke first, “Thank you for lunch, Uncle Richard. We always have a good time coming over.”
            “We have a good time,” mimicked Jennifer. “Dad, you and Uncle Rob going to babysit while we girls go shopping?”
            In a quiet demeanor like her mother’s Julie quickly added, “We are so glad you are retired and can take care of the kids once in a while. We appreciate it.”
            Looking directly at Richard, Cyndi commented, “We could not imagine living so far away, like your parents Jennifer.”
            In the bond of family togetherness, Jennifer remarked, “It is good what with my Calvin out of town at a conference, and Julie’s Allen working six days a week.” She then smiled graciously while commenting, “I am not complaining at least the kids' fathers both have jobs.”
            “We've been there,” said Rob and Rich almost simultaneously. The four grandparents laughed light heartedly and began chatting about how each set of grandparents was in the process of redecorating one room or another.
            Rob and Rich could both hear the strain of 'we-wish-we-had-the-time-and-energy-to-think-on-such-things' in their voices. The twin grandfathers thought back on how it was with each of their children, who were affectionately called ‘rug rats’ in the late seventies. Life and the business that ensues in one's thirties, forties, and into the fifties -- work, home, errands, chores and parenting; more parenting, errands, chores, home and work, all crammed in and on life's familiar rotating stages of such philosophical and practical goals of ‘We do whatever works best for the family first. Everything else is second’.
            Both brothers concluded their silent high back chair conversation in the general theme of 'the fifties were a much better time for growing up than today'. Fortunately, all sets of grandparents had some money saved and invested. The grandparents all, owned their homes and cars and had no debts. Every generation, from time to time, helped their children and grandchildren survive better.
            The great-grandparents grew up in the thirties. Hard economic times and then there was a great world war to resolve. The parents of the grandparents Rob and Connie and Richard and Cyndi grew older through the administrations of FDR, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton none had lived passed the tenure of George W. Not a one, as young children, would have dreamed a Negro would have become President of the United States shortly after their demise.
            The events in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries have subtly and not so subtly changed the social and cultural dynamics of people in every country of the world. Families of sorts resided in the thousands upon thousands of the ancestors and will reside in descendants of the brothers Robert Greystone, his spouse, Connie Bleacher and Richard Greystone and his spouse Cyndi Bleacher. Who, like the rest of humanity he feels, share a common genetic link. We are all fifty-second cousins, or so thinks Richard as he reflects on his personal and universal family in the species, Homo sapiens as he falls asleep that evening after an exhausting and fun day with family.
785 words
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