The Death of Planet Finance

British his­to­ri­an Niall Fer­gu­son has achieved the aca­d­e­m­ic holy trin­i­ty, hold­ing posi­tions at Har­vard, Oxford, and Stanford’s Hoover Insti­tu­tion. Only 44 years old, he has 9 books to his cred­it (includ­ing a new one: The Ascent of Mon­ey: A Finan­cial His­to­ry of the World), and you’ll often find him writ­ing in the pub­lic press. In the lat­est edi­tion of Van­i­ty Fair, Fer­gu­son takes a good look at the demise of the glob­al finan­cial sys­tem and locates the cri­sis “in the long run of finan­cial his­to­ry.” The sto­ry he tells is how the 20th cen­tu­ry — and par­tic­u­lar­ly Amer­i­ca’s urge to become a “prop­er­ty-own­ing democ­ra­cy” — brought us into “The Age of Lever­age,” which car­ried with it a â€śdel­uge of paper mon­ey, asset-price infla­tion, [an] explo­sion of con­sumer and bank debt, and the hyper­trophic growth of deriv­a­tives.” The Lever­age Age is now over. But will its col­lapse have eco­nom­ic and social effects as dis­as­trous as the Great Depres­sion? Or will gov­ern­ment action pull us back from the brink? Def­i­nite­ly give this piece a read, and thanks to “Hanoch” for mak­ing us aware of it. As always, it’s great to get read­er sug­ges­tions.

As a relat­ed aside, I should direct your atten­tion to a new arti­cle by Michael Lewis, who first wrote about Wall Street’s excess­es in Liar’s Pok­er. It’s called “The End,” and it offers an inside account of how Wall Street sowed the seeds of its own destruc­tion. It’s also appar­ent­ly the basis for a new book.

Final­ly, you may want to check out a fas­ci­nat­ing piece in the Wall Street Jour­nal called “Mem­o­ries of the 1930s Still Sear.” It fea­tures inter­views with the old­er gen­er­a­tion who endured the Depres­sion, how they coped, and what lessons they learned.

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Funny, If It Wasn’t So Sad

Sev­er­al years ago, I had lunch with the for­mer head of a large invest­ment bank who talked about how Wall Street had a built-in bull­ish bias, and any­one who goes against the grain, does so at their own per­il. Below you’ll find a good exam­ple of that. Here we have Peter Schiff, head of Euro Pacif­ic Cap­i­tal, sound­ing the alarms repeat­ed­ly on Fox “News” in 2006-07, mak­ing pre­dic­tions that turned out to be remark­ably right, and watch the scorn that gets heaped on him. Imag­ine if the grown ups had both­ered to mind the store dur­ing the past decade, to see some of the obvi­ous prob­lems mount­ing. We might all be breath­ing a bit more eas­i­ly today.

via The Dai­ly Dish

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Decoding the Obama Victory: The Geography of US Presidential Elections

We have reached the final week of the pres­i­den­tial elec­tions course. This week, Mar­tin Lewis slices and dices the elec­toral results of the ’08 elec­tion and high­lights the big and poten­tial­ly far-reach­ing shifts in US vot­ing pat­terns. No doubt, this is one of the more detailed analy­ses that you’ll find on the web. You can watch the last lec­ture in high­er res­o­lu­tion on iTune­sU here, or watch it below on YouTube. The com­plete course will be per­ma­nent­ly housed in our col­lec­tion of Free Online Cours­es under Geog­ra­phy and Polit­i­cal Sci­ence.

Fire Ants Create a Living Lifeboat in the Amazon

Yet fur­ther proof that ants are end­less­ly fas­ci­nat­ing, and, on a relat­ed note, see our ear­li­er piece: Cen­tral Intel­li­gence: From Ants to the Web.

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Puppies for These Hard Times

In case you were won­der­ing what kind of media we would be most hun­gry for in hard times (big bud­get action movies? escapist sit-coms), don’t for­get that this is reces­sion 3.0. Intro­duc­ing The pup­py cam, with 22,000 view­ers and count­ing. The shibu pup­pies are adorable, wor­ry-free, and of course, non-union.  Click here and tell us are you not enter­tained? (Thanks SA for the tip.)

Vintage Nabokov

Tak­en from a French tele­vi­sion pro­gram, this vin­tage clip fea­tures Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977) read­ing from Loli­ta and reveal­ing his list of the most impor­tant nov­els of the 20th cen­tu­ry, among oth­er things. Nabokov speaks in Eng­lish here. So don’t let the ini­tial French throw you off. We’ve added this gem to our YouTube playlist.

Loli­ta, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue tak­ing a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.

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Thomas Friedman on the Green Revolution

Thomas Fried­man has a new book out, Hot, Flat, and Crowd­ed. And it gets into the whole ques­tion of what a “green rev­o­lu­tion” is real­ly all about. New books mean book tours, and here we have an out­take from a spir­it­ed talk he recent­ly gave in North­ern Cal­i­for­nia. You can watch the full talk on Fora.tv here.

By the way, Fried­man starts talk­ing at the out­set about “ET,” and it hap­pens to stand for “Ener­gy Tech­nol­o­gy.”

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Oxford Scholars Name Top Ten Irritating Phrases

What are some of the most annoy­ing phras­es in the Eng­lish lan­guage? In a new forth­com­ing book, A Damp Squid: The Eng­lish Lan­guage Laid Bare, Oxford researchers list the com­mon phras­es that we use incor­rect­ly or just all too exces­sive­ly. Here’s the list (and if you have your own dis­liked expres­sions, list them below in the com­ments).

1 — At the end of the day
2 — Fair­ly unique
3 — I per­son­al­ly
4 — At this moment in time
5 — With all due respect
6 — Absolute­ly
7 — It’s a night­mare
8 — Should­n’t of
9 — 24/7
10 — It’s not rock­et sci­ence

via The Tele­graph

 

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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.