Yearly Archives: 2005


I’ve been away 2

I’ve been away for a few days. We went over to the west side of the state and hung out a place called the snooty fox. They have six little cabins and it is pretty nice. Check out their site for more info.It is only a few minutes from the beach. The beach is great but the water in lake michigan is really cold. I have posted some pics at http://abuelsamid.com/media/snooty_fox/
The weather was great and we found a couple of really great places to eat. For breakfast I highly recommend the blue plate cafe and for dinner definitely check out Cafe Gulistan


Real Estate is a lousy investment

The NY Times had an article yesterday about the true investment returns on real estate. In the long run you are much better off buying a house you can afford to live in, and investing in the stock market. In spite of the run up in house prices in recent years, the actual rates of return over time when you factor in inflation are actually pretty poor:

When Marti and Ray Jacobs sold the five-bedroom colonial house in Harrington Park, N.J., where they had lived since 1970, they made what looked like a typically impressive profit. They had paid $110,000 to have the house built and sold it in July for $900,000.

But the truth is that much of the gain came from simple price inflation, the same force that has made a gallon of milk more expensive today than it was three decades ago. The Jacobses also invested tens of thousands of dollars in a new master bathroom, with marble floors, a Jacuzzi bathtub and vanity cabinets.

Add it all up, and they ended up making an inflation-adjusted profit of less than 10 percent over the 35 years.

That return does not come close to the gains of the stock market over the same period. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index has increased almost 200 percent since 1970, even after accounting for inflation.

Definitely read this article before you go out make a speculative real estate buy.

BTW if you are using Firefox (you are using firefox aren’t you?) go grab the bugmenot extension so that you don’t have to register at sites like the ny times and other papers.


War is profane 2

Cindy Sheehan had a good post on Dailykos.com today.

“I got an email the other day and it said, `Cindy if you didn’t use so much profanity …. there’s people on the fence that get offended.’

“And you know what I said? `You know what? You know what, god damn it? How in the world is anybody still sitting on that fence?’

“If you fall on the side that is pro-George and pro-war, you get your ass over to Iraq, and take the place of somebody who wants to come home. And if you fall on the side that is against this war and against George Bush, stand up and speak out.”

I don’t understand how anyone who is paying any attention could possibly be on the fence about this war. Shrub and his posse lied to the American people from day 1 and continue to tell lies about what is going on. They lie about anyone who dares to criticise their policies and they lie about the situation in Iraq. Anyone who is hesitates to support the anti-war movement just because someone happens to speak bluntly and uses some strong language needs to get their head out of their ass and take a look at what is really going on. The situation in Iraq is not improving and people will continue to die until we walk away and let the Iraqi’s fix their own situation. We cannot fix Iraq because we are not impartial and don’t really understand the culture of the region.

You should also read Frank Rich’s column today in the NYtimes about how the bushies are trying to slander Cindy Sheehan and all other critics.


Take your kids to work day

For some reason my employer observes take your kids to day in August instead of in the spring like just about every other company in America. So today was the day and Max went to work with me and they had tours of the various facilities for the kids. They also combined this employee depreciation day and had a barbecue for everyone in the parking lot at lunch along with various activities like a mechanical bull, a water balloon slingshot and a sumo wrestling thing where people put on a sumo suit and go at each other. Max decided he wanted to try the sumo wrestling. Here’s a link to a video I shot on my phone. Enjoy!

Max the sumo


Bubble warnings

Dan Gillmor has a good post today linking to stories in a couple of Bay Area newspapers about the housing bubble. I have written about this before and I believe that it is really important that people pay attention to this. It is downright stupid for people to be committed to paying upwards of 40% of there income on a mortgage(s) that they are not even accumulating any equity in. If you cannot afford to pay enough to actually pay down some principal on a mortgage you should be renting. I don’t want to exclude anyone from homeownership but if someone can’t afford they are not doing themselves any favors by taking on crushing amounts of debt with no realistic hope of ever paying it off. And with the changes in bankruptcy law this year, when the bubble does burst people are not going to be able to escape the debt like they might have in the past. If you are in this kind of position, get out now while you still can.

Today’s San Francisco Chronicle and San Jose Mercury News both have articles about the crazy Bay Area housing market. I read both as warning shouts from the rooftops, but I suspect most readers will see a more Pollyanish angle.

The Merc’s story, headlined “Home buyers get comfy with debt,” begins:

Brett and Sarah Klynn could be poster-children for a new, innovative generation of California home buyers that, despite soaring prices, has taken on crushing debt to push homeownership to its highest level in decades. The Klynns, both in their 20s, took out five loans to buy a two-bedroom, two-bath condo near San Jose’s Kelley Park in May. They are spending roughly 45 percent of their income on their home, a not uncommon portion for new home buyers.

I would not use the word “innovative” to describe this kind of behavior. But then, I don’t think people should be taking such risks.

Meanwhile, the Chronicle’s story — more apty headlined “”How Do They Afford It?” — has a similar theme. It starts:

The housing market is red-hot in the Bay Area. So, who’s buying those pricey homes — and how are they able to do it? The answers: Young professionals. Riskier loans. Longer commutes. Smaller houses. And, in some cases, a lot of peanut butter and jelly. With Hayes Valley condos selling for $750,000 and Livermore tract homes fetching $1.3 million, the question is on everyone’s lips: Who’s paying these stratospheric prices? The answer, increasingly, is young professionals who are devoting exorbitant portions of their incomes to housing, according to a new study.

Will the message for readers be that these “home buyers” (an expression that makes little sense given the hyper-leverage involved) are doing the smart thing? Or that they’re running unbelievable risks that, for many, will end in tears?

I suspect the latter, but as prices continue to rise the optimists are controlling the game.

Oh, wait. Prices aren’t rising, or at least they didn’t last month — showing the first (albeit) tiny month-to-month dip in a while. But the year-over-year price is still at a record, by far.

Lenders keep raising the limits of what they’ll loan, meanwhile. They keep offering interest-only or nothing-down loans, to more and more people. It’s corporate irresponsibility and greed fueling individual irresponsibility and greed. So American. So risky. So scary.

The San Jose Mercury News story

The San Francisco Chronicle story


Cindy Sheehan vigil 6

Jules, Max and I just recently returned from one of over 1600 candlelight vigils held around the country in support of Cindy Sheehan and her quest for meet with the shrub. There were about 150 people there tonight at the University of Michigan Diag in Ann Arbor. There was also another gathering over on north campus.


A great idea

I just noticed this item on boing-boing:

Ministry of Reshelving puts 1984 in its proper place
This weekend, prankster/gamer/performance artist Jane McGonigal and The Ministry of Reshelving launched an effort to put copies of Orwell’s 1984 in its “appropriate” section of book stores. From the rule set:

1984Shelf 1. Select a local bookstore to carry out your reshelving activities.

2. Download and print “This book has been relocated by the Ministry of Reshelving bookmarks and “All copies of 1984 have been relocated” notecards to take with you to the bookstore. Or make your own. We recommend bringing a notecard and 5-10 bookmarks to each store.

3. Go to the bookstore and locate its copies of George Orwell’s 1984. Unless the Ministry of Reshelving has already visited this bookstore, it is probably currently incorrectly classified as “Fiction” or “Literature.”

4. Discreetly move all copies of 1984 to a more suitable section, such as “Current Events”, “Politics”, “History”, “True Crime”, or “New Non-Fiction.”

5. Insert a Ministry of Reshelving bookmark into each copy of any book you have moved. Leave a notecard in the empty space the books once occupied.

6. If you spot other incorrectly classified books, feel free to relocate them.

7. Please report all reshelving efforts to the Ministry. Email your store name, location, # of 1984 copies reshelved, and any other reshelving activities conducted, to reshelving @ avantgame.com. Photos of your mission can be uploaded to Flickr, tagged as “reshelving”, and submitted to the Ministry of Reshelving group.

Link to Flickr group

If you haven’t read 1984 I highly recommend going to your local bookstore or library and grabbing a copy to read. It is quite astonishing how the events of the last 5 years parallel the events of the book. Politicians (especially the republicans) perpetuating double speak, telling lies repeatedly until people believe it (eg. the connection between Saddam Hussien and 9/11, there wasn’t any connection there), perpetual war with a nebulous enemy (the global war on terror) etc.


More on upcoming digital music failures

Om Malik has a good post about how most of the digital music download services are doomed to fail. I wrote about this yesterday and Om’s post just reinforces what I wrote.

Mobile music on phones via cellular companies is going to be the most overrated business move. Why? Mobile operators are not known for their ease of use, and even today (barring voice) new phones are inherently complex. Have you tried to look up calendar or contact information on a Motorola? Imagine downloading music, and listening to it on a phone.

The services that I think will suceed in the long run (besides iTunes) are the likes of emusic.com
that offer music from independant musicians (DEATH TO THE RIAA!!) completely free of any drm. The service is easy to use, relatively inexpensive, and lets users listen to the music anywhere they want thanks to the lack of drm.