Sunday, January 15, 2012

Some Jottings on What I'm Reading

I've been reading Wall Street financial analyst Mike Mayo's new book Exile on Wall Street for a review of fiancial books that I want to do at Daily Kos.

Mayo comes off as too much of a moral scold for my tastes, personally, but there is this:

I think the meaning of life is to find something that you're good at, something you love and work to make that situation just a little bit better than it would have been without you. There's a phrase in Judaism, tikkum olam, which means "repairing the world." The concept is that people shouldn't do something simply because the religion requires it but rather because it makes things-- something, anything--a little bit better.
Now that, I do believe in. I have always resented the notion of simply being a worker bee simply to survive; which is what I learned and despised as I saw it growing up.

It's a big tension in my life as I've been going through this unemployment phase.

I also browsed through The Devil's Derivatives: The Untold Story of the Slick Traders and Hapless Regulators Who Almost Blew Up Wall Street . . . and Are Ready to Do It Again by Nicolas Dunbar. The entire notion of those who were taking the huge risks on Wall Street and in London...is a way that I have envisioned myself and which I would haved loved to emulate.

More on that later. But the tension between the two states; risk taking and tikkun olam stiil would fit a useful description of me.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

What was the New York Times REALLY trying to say?

I was reading this story in the Old Grey Lady yesterday about a black pastor buying some property that used to be owned by a racist Klansman and I couldn't help but notice this:

Mr. Burden adopted the doctrine of white supremacy enthusiastically. He became a grand dragon in the South Carolina branch of the Klan and developed a deep relationship with Mr. Howard that went beyond convert, according to his former wife, Judith Burden, and others in Laurens who know him.

Mr. Burden, a man with a court-documented history of substance abuse and a prison record for grand larceny and burglary, still lives nearby but could not be reached for an interview.
Beyond converting the young man to being a Klansman, what else could the Times-or Ms. Burden- mean?

Sunday, January 8, 2012

I have not forgotten

No, I haven't forgotten about this blog but I have neglected. Will have some new posts up hopefully within the next couple of days.