Sujal left this morning saying that he thought the bombings in London might help out both Blair and Bush in their approval ratings, and I’m sure he’ll elaborate later, but my first reaction, as I was watching CNN, was that since the British have been vehemently against the war from the getgo that they would would be extra upset about this and really want out. Of course then there’s the complexity that “we don’t want to send the message that the terrorists have won” — but I wonder how this will play out. It’s all just an icky mess. I also can’t help but notice that we seem to pay so much more attention to western lives lost than mideastern lives lost. I suppose proximity is a reason, but it’s still pretty sad.
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sujal
11/24/2008
Newsweek’s Daniel Gross explains the Consumer Price Index (here’s the official BLS site) in a very simple video. I could do without the goofy sound effects, but it’s a good, 2 minute explanation of how the government tracks inflation.
Per David Simon’s Berkeley talk, though, the video doesn’t go into why this matters. Perhaps they’ll cover that in the next installment of the Economics 101 series.
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July 7th, 2005 at 10:16 am
my comment was just an observation, not an implication that the two of those would appreciate or like an attack… just that we’re going to see more rallying around the flag, so to speak. It makes any sort of debate about related issues difficult (Iraq, Homeland Security spending priorities, etc.) and I worry about that.
I hope that London stays strong with this and my condolences go out to everyone who has lost someone today. This stuff is horrible and I really don’t have much more to say…