The world’s gone topsy-turvy: Last night my wife read me this graphic novel. It’s funny, informative, honest, and rated R. Enjoy.
The world’s gone topsy-turvy: Last night my wife read me this graphic novel. It’s funny, informative, honest, and rated R. Enjoy.
Mar 3 2008
LiveScience quotes Ray Kurzweil. "It is doubling now every two years. Doubling every two years means multiplying by 1,000 in 20 years. At that rate we'll meet 100 percent of our energy needs in 20 years." Simple. Next problem? This is a case where I have a hard time believing an autoregressive model. At some point...
Mar 3 2008
It's "kidult":While many people in their forties have families and responsibilities, an increasing minority still resemble teenagers. Scary, wrinkled, grey-haired teenagers, with some kind of terrifying premature ageing disease, but teenagers nonetheless. It’s enough of a phenomenon to have been given its own portman...
Mar 1 2008
The world's gone topsy-turvy: Last night my wife read me this graphic novel. It's funny, informative, honest, and rated R. Enjoy.
READER COMMENTS
Giovanni
Mar 1 2008 at 8:54pm
Hilarious and informative. Thanks for posting 🙂
Matthew
Mar 1 2008 at 9:57pm
Thanks, that was hilarious! I haven’t laughed that hard since. . .
dearieme
Mar 2 2008 at 4:55am
It doesn’t tell us which ones get to go to jail.
David
Mar 2 2008 at 2:36pm
Dr. Caplan, is this something you have shared with your kids?
Dr. T
Mar 2 2008 at 6:33pm
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! Remember, our federal government colluded with the lenders to set up offshore pseudocompanies for handling the crappy mortgages. By doing that, the feds effectively gave out ‘Keep Out of Jail’ cards to all wrongdoers.
Bryan Caplan
Mar 2 2008 at 8:21pm
If The Simpsons does a subprime crisis episode, I may have to!
Matthew
Mar 2 2008 at 8:23pm
Speaking of mortgage madness, Arnold might want to weigh in on this interesting perspective about Fannie and Freddy. . .
j
Mar 3 2008 at 9:56am
Great!
The second part will deal with how these thingies contaminated the financial universe till credit stopped flowing (almost).
8
Mar 3 2008 at 2:43pm
If The Simpsons does a subprime crisis episode, I may have to!
More likely a South Park episode where Cartman sells his own feces to investment bankers.
Comments are closed.