Monday, April 29, 2013

Multi-party Parties



The world has laughed at Italy for being unable to form a government. Perhaps the in the USA we should be laughing out of the other side of our mouth. Or be crying as the case may be. Having only two parties, fairly equally balanced has led only to stalemate. With many parties and no majorities compromise is required to even rule. The possibilities of compromise increase on the events that matter to the populace.

Governments, political parties and businesses should have and adhere to a firm set of principles. They don’t need a firm set of attitudes. Hardening of the attitude is referred to by Wayne Dyer as psycho-cirrhosis. This is a killing disease. Absolutes are paralyzing government to the point of self destruction. If government were a business, it would be bankrupt. Not just because of financial issues, but because of unhappy customers.

Most politicians seem to be only interested in getting re-elected. This would not be all bad if it forced them to listen to their constituents. Unfortunately their constituency is not as important as their campaign fund. It seems that in most cases, the best funded candidate wins. If the NRA says one thing and the voters say another, the NRA wins.



David Segrest is an International REALTOR in Charlotte, NC. His email is david@segrestrealty.com , His webpage is http://davidsegrest.com , and his international real estate blog is http://dointernationalrealestate.blogspot.com/



Friday, April 19, 2013

The Trap Snaps



An article on the Charles Schwab website this morning predicted that Europe was going into a depression. The only reason they are not already in a depression is that no one actually knows how to define a depression. One of the metrics is the unemployment. When one’s neighbor is out of work, that is a recession. When that same person is out of work, that is a depression. In many parts of Europe the unemployment is over 25%. The unemployment in some demographic groups is over 40%. A lot of people might perceive that as a depression.

In the “great depression”, there were rampant bank failures. The bailouts are the only thing preventing those failures now. The retirement systems in most European countries are absolutely ridiculous and should be reformed. Now is not the time. That money needs to go into the economy. Retired people spend money and don’t take up space in the workplace.

The German economy is tightly tied to the rest of Europe. Austerity is a way of life in Germany anyway. Imposing this austerity on the rest of Europe has cost Germany a big part of its market. Germany has the last successful economy in the Eurozone. When it crashes, the trap will snap.



David Segrest is an International REALTOR in Charlotte, NC. His email is david@segrestrealty.com , His webpage is http://davidsegrest.com , and his international real estate blog is http://dointernationalrealestate.blogspot.com/