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Making America Hate Again: Donald Trump and the Art of the Con

01 Jul

Initially I thought it would be wise to wait until it was closer to the November 2016 election to write this piece, but given the current level of Trump-mania (or hysteria depending on your perspective) and the fact that he has somehow increased his lead amongst Republican voters after more insane rhetoric I could wait no longer.

I will begin with a simple question for Americans: How could you let this happen?

Or maybe the question should be: Why is this happening?

In 2008 when Barack Obama was elected President under the promise of change it was supposed to usher in a new era of hope. To be clear this hope was not just for America, but the whole world, and especially for visible minorities in Western countries who could breathe a collective sigh of relief in thinking that this new future ushered in with the election of the first black president would finally help heal the scars of historic discrimination by demonstrating that the majority of people in one of the most advanced nations on earth would finally allow themselves to be led and represented by a man of color.

Did Barak do his part? Despite bi-partisan challenges and xenophobic probes (including his place of birth) the answer is absolutely yes, and the evidence to support this is clear: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CYkPASOUQAAj_Af.jpg:large.  President Obama not only led the United States out of the worst economy since the depression but backed social reforms that ameliorated the lives of millions of disenfranchised and marginalized Americans.

In light of Obama’s performance, the question again is why is this happening? Why does it appear that Western society appears to have collectively taken a giant leap backward? If Obama had failed at his job the answer would have been understandable, or at least predictable: Despite the fact that many world leaders have failed at their jobs, conservatives and Obama’s critics who have their own agenda would pound the table with Obama’s failure, directly state that we can never let this happen again with the indirect agenda of never allowing a person of color even get a whiff of the White House again.  But in light of his success another path to intolerance had to be found and it is perhaps this reason why we are seeing what we are seeing out of American Politics.

Still unable to accept the fact that there was a black president and now infuriated by the fact that he was successful, society as a whole must now understand that intolerant forces that many had hoped were extinguished, were instead merely in hostile dormancy. Not foolish enough to competitively challenge a sitting president who was shining at his job, these intolerant forces waited until the first black president could not run for re-election to finally unleash themselves upon the world. The manifestation of these forces is Donald Trump.

Once dismissed as an obvious affront to common sense, in 2016 humanity is once again under siege by an afterthought being propelled to relevance by misguided people poisoned by hate. Although many of these people call themselves Republican and Donald Trump himself is running under the Republican banner it would be an insult to actual Republicans to equate the two. Simply because someone calls themselves something or represents themselves in a certain light does not make it true and it is the responsibility of the populous to question and validate dubious declarations. Unfortunately however, when people en masse choose to ignore facts and do not meet their responsibilities, lies have a way of becoming the truth when the people instead actually believe and blindly take to heart what they hear. And that is where we are now.

Radical conservatives and hate fuelled intolerance have found a symbol to attach themselves to and their collective action has now brought the world to the precipice of socially dystopian existence. When questioned about their allegiance to man who has openly made bigoted statements and conceived racist policies that would make pre-1960 America blush, they state that their support for Donald Trump as president is built on one or more of the following:

1)      He says what’s on his mind and he is honest;

2)      He is confident and brave;

3)      He is a successful businessman;

4)      He is self-funded;

5)      Ted Cruz is THE insidious cheater;

6)      He is what we need to make America great again.

However, even a superficial investigation of these claims leads demonstrates either their (at best) misguided falsity or (at worst) their espoused collective racial hatred. Examining each claim closely demonstrates not only what a farce Donald Trump is, but what a mockery is made of civilized society.

1)      He is what’s on his mind and he is honest; Let us be clear, there is a difference between these two things. While Donald Trump might say outlandish things that either pop into his mind or he deliberately says to provoke attention that does not mean that this statements are true or that he himself is honest. Obviously Donald Trump is both outspoken and brash and while that can be a good thing when done for a cause or the betterment of society, when done for one’s own selfish interests and personal prejudices, this lack of decorum not only renders you far from a capable diplomat or effective leader but makes the entire populous you claim to represent look like a joke on the world stage. In regards to Donald Trump’s honesty, this is simply another joke. Although books could be written on the man’s dishonest and nefarious practices pre-2015, but post-2015 not only does Politifact confirmation that over 75% of what he says is bullshit http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2015-12-21/fact-checking-website-donald-trump-lies-76-percent-of-the-time , but his feigning ignorance when questioned about David Duke and the White Supremacist vote is all the confirmation even the most mentally infirm would need to properly rate his honesty.

2)      He is confident and brave; I can understand how some people can get this impression. There is little question that Trump talks with a lot of gusto and power. Unfortunately, this tough talk is built only on hot air and exceptionally thin skin. Have you ever noticed what happens to Trump when he is challenged on a point or called on an inaccurate and/or malicious statement he has made? If you have not just visit your local school ground and observe a petulant child who does not get their way or is scolded by parent for misbehavior as it is essentially the same thing. The only real difference is that children usually do not use the kind of vitriol or personal attacks that comes out of Trump’s mouth nor do they have the imagination to make up some of the nonsensical garble or evade the subject the way he does. Other than that everything is pretty much the same; Get Red (check) Get Loud (check) Get Mad (check) Try and Change the Subject (check) Rant and Rave (check) Claim Someone Else is Responsible or Started it First (check). It is all there and as such someone with this sort of paper thin confidence level or flippant temperament can hardly be considered brave or confident.

3)      He is a successful businessman; This is actually the easiest claim to disprove since subjectivity is removed from the equation as countless Trump products have been spectacular failures. From Trump steaks to Trump University the flops and borderline scams renders the line of his failed brand extensions to stretch around the block. With respect to his core business, while his gorilla math somehow equates him to having a net-worth in the billions, even if this were true it is more of a testament to the failed state of corporate America and America’s bankruptcy laws than anything else. How someone can repeatedly declare business bankruptcy and have been on the brink of personal bankruptcy highlights all you know need to know about the need for reform in this area of the law. To his credit he has made his father’s business more prominent, but when you do so in manner where bankruptcy is the norm and your financing strategy involves no intention of paying back investors at agreed upon terms and subsequently threaten bankruptcy to “get a better deal” your degree does not read from the Wharton School of Business but rather it reads like it is from the Don King’s Institute of Ripping People Off. How Trump has not been indicted for fraud based on his practices and public statements which prove his has no interest in abiding by contracted terms is beyond comprehension.

4)      He is self-funded; Another great deception perpetrated on the American public by Trump is that his campaign is completely self-funded. Although one could say that this is technically accurate as the money is derived from him, the money appears to be nothing more than a loan advance from Donald Trump the dubious businessman to Donald Trump Presidential Campaign where one can assume that just like any other normal loan, the lender will be paid the full amount plus interest (every loan except when Donald Trump is the recipient). And given that the majority of funds Donald Trump Presidential Campaign will be derived from donations made by members of the American public, the claim that his campaign is self-funded is at best misleading and at worst fraudulent. To be fair, Donald Trump has recently come out and stated that he will be forgiving a large portion of the funds he has lent his campaign, however, given Trump’s propensity to lie http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2015-12-21/fact-checking-website-donald-trump-lies-76-percent-of-the-time this should be taken with a silo of salt until he actually does so.

5)      Ted Cruz is THE insidious cheater; Although Ted Cruz might turn out to be an insidious cheater who repeatedly cheats on his wife, that presumption is only just that, as there is currently no evidence produced confirming his alleged adultery. However, what is not up for debate and what is matter of public record is that Donald Trump IS a notorious philanderer who has repeatedly cheated on his spouse(s). Although I was hesitant to include this item on this list and one could argue that one’s personal life has little impact on one’s professional abilities, the fact that there are people out there (and as noted by Ted Cruz, likely cronies of Donald Trump) who can somehow peddle the notion that someone other than Donald Trump is the nefarious adulterous without highlighting the Donald’s own doings is an injustice I just could not tolerate. If Donald Trump interest in the Miss Universe and Miss America pageants is anything other than him trying to establish a high end harem of women to fawn over I would be utterly shocked.  

6)      He is what we need to make America great again; Finally we have the biggest misconception of all. Many have rallied around Trump and his catchphrase with the genuine belief that he is what America needs to be great again. But in what rational world can this be true? Leaving aside President Obama’s accomplishments and the fact that he took America out of the economic toilet it was in back in 2008, how can having a man with the (stated) convictions of Trump be a benefit to America or the rest of the world by extension? If Trump genuinely advocates for the removal and/or ban of immigrants which does nothing more than divide Americans and pit them against each other, pursues isolationist policies in an era of globalization, continues to be a stooge for the NRA when the streets are paved with the blood of over 10,000 Americans a year, continues to demonize women with his misogynistic vitriol, and basically continue to be the babbling hate-filled liar that he is, then again I must ask how this can be a positive for any rational person? The answer is simple, he cannot.

After examine each aspect of Trump’s appeal one thing is clear, it is all one big deception. This November America will find itself at the precipice of sanity and good government. Beyond that though, and more importantly, it will also find itself at the precipice of hope, kindness, and love. Is Hillary Clinton a perfect embodiment of the latter? If one is being completely honest the answer is unknown, but probably not.  That being the case, what even her most ardent critics would have to agree upon is that she is not the death of those sentiments. Donald Trump President however would be without question the death of the sentiments (along with being a death knell for American politics, both foreign and domestic).

When Barack Obama was elected in 2008 the fact that he was the first black President was not what was truly amazing, it was the fact that a country with as deep a history of discrimination had finally appeared to put its darkest racist and intolerant days behind it as the majority of its people had finally signified to the world that a person’s skin color was no longer of consequence. The significance of this was multi-dimensional but at the most basic level it meant that despite its misguided and devastating deviations, the United States was finally ready to fulfill the promises made during its declaration. In deciding whether to cast their vote for an ugly hate filled man intent on ruining the nation with divisive politics, the question Americans must ask themselves is: despite one’s political affiliations and personal biases, are we truly willing to let the social progress our beautiful country has finally achieved be dissolved? Do we even want to?

When it comes time to cast to vote all I will ask when even debating to vote for the most overt demagogue seen mid-twentieth century Germany is to trust your instinct and consider the spirit embodied in the following words: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

If Gandhi is right and hope and love always triumphs over evil, Americans working together   can ensure that they will surely trump Trump.

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2015 Best Picture Review in 1120 Characters or More

26 Feb

It has been almost a year since the 2015 Oscars were handed out, and while one could say this piece is late (obvious and true), one could say it is also quite innovative and timely given that the 2016 Oscars are this Sunday (big lies). In any event here are my reviews of all eight best picture nominees because while a year overdue  I wanted to put the 16 hours or so I invested in watching each of these nominated movies (a rare feat in itself) to some use…

American Sniper: Although both leads acted incredibly well in this movie, there was something unsettling about the whole glamorization of war, or more specifically the war machine itself. Whereas classics like All Quiet on the Western Front and Platoon depicted the horrors of war, this movie although depicting some of the internal conflict of the individual solider, as a whole came off as rather indifferent to the causalities, human rights abuses, power-politics, and overall horrors inherent in war. I heard a plastic baby was the reason this movie did not win best picture, but common sense tells me it was common sense.

Birdman: The review of this movie is simple: Worst. Best-Picture. Ever. When gimmicks far exceed the quality of the story you have a problem and this movie has one of the biggest chasms between story quality and (cheap) theatrics I have ever seen. As such, while the acting may have been solid, this genre of over the top yet pointless movie-making filled with inane chatter is not for those who enjoy quality cinema and at times it made me wonder if Quentin Tarantino had directed this movie in addition to that repugnant spaghetti western of his. While I praise those who try to be avant-garde like Scorsese (Goodfellas), Hitchcock (Psycho), or Kubrick (in anything), just like those cinematic triumphs one must cautiously balance between story and the cinematic and carefully walk that fine line between genius and bullshit. This movie, along with just about Tarantino has done, fails miserably to do so.

Boyhood: Although I could simply write “see above”, I will not and just state that once again we have a film that attempts to engage the audience with novelty over substance. You filmed a movie over 14 or so years, terrific, perhaps next time during those 14 years you could devise an interesting storyline or some likable characters. In fact the only triumph this movie had was avoiding a Razzie nomination for its young lead because in no way was I convinced that this whimsical kid was some kind of ladies’ man.

The Grand Budapest Hotel: Simply awful. I have no idea what this was supposed to be and if this movie had somehow won best picture it would have not only supplanted Birdman as the worst picture ever, but would have been the greatest travesty in Oscar history. Well, maybe Dances with Wolves beating out GoodFellas would still reign supreme but it would certainly have been close.  

The Imitation Game: In my opinion this was the best movie of the year and its producers should have gone down to the Beverly Hills police station and filed a robbery report against whoever was behind that atrocious Birdman. The film was gripping from start to finish, was paced beautifully, and brilliantly acted. In any almost any other year Benedict Cumberbatch walks away with the Best Actor but unfortunately he was narrowly bested by another Brit, Eddie Redmayne. 

The Theory of Everything: Like The Imitation Game a this film was a touching and sensitive movie with amazing force. Although pacing of the movie was problematic in parts, overall this film is an excellent movie which is character driven, brilliantly acted, and had an excellent and compelling story. More proof you do not need cheap theatrics to win over audiences (but I guess they do help in bowling over impressionable critics and dubious Oscar voters).

Selma: Both the story and visual presentation were absolutely on point making for a very good movie. The acting was also very good, however I would have like to have seen a greater back story and more in the aftermath of Martin Luther King’s life. However, what the film did excellently was to show both the strengths and weaknesses of one of history’s greatest men making the film all the more realistic and engaging.

Whiplash: Although somewhat of a niche film, it was brilliantly acted by both Miles Teller and J.K. Simmons. With respect to the former, Teller’s performance in this film which stands in contrast to his humorous performances iwithinn the comedy genre provide for a very broad spectrum of acting abilities that he navigates so well that he reminds me of a young Tom Hanks. In regards to Simmons his Oscar gold is proof that sometimes, despite the travesties, the Oscar brass and the voters still can get it right.  

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Enough with 1%er Weddings and Attempting to Succeed with Excess

18 Jan

The following is tragic example of the world in which we live. To be so oblivious to one’s own excess is disturbing on so many levels. Sadly this kind of excess and shallow materialism has been the hallmark of the 1% for some time. If the rest of the world knew how the wealthy really lived there would be riots in the street. Ironically though, even the wealthy cannot afford to live like this and in order to keep up with their well to do acquaintances (I will not even write friends) they cut corners, go into debt, manipulate the markets, and steal from the less fortunate. I have been fearing for some time not only for America and the entitled across the globe, but everyone due to the inevitable clash of classes and instability to come. Here’s hoping the upper classes wake up and a more equitable redistribution of wealth becomes a way of life and not a (violent) remedy.

http://www.vogue.com/13384686/weddings-lauren-schwab-bobby-webster-east-hampton-longhouse-reserve/

 

 

 

 

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The Rise of Faux Feminism

12 Jan

Let me begin by stating that I consider myself to be very much of a feminist. If feminism means that men and women should both have the right to equal opportunities like equal pay and equal education along with other common sense approaches like equal treatment and recognition under the law, than I am all for that just as much as any other person could be. In fact, sometimes I wonder why women are not given reparations or tax breaks given the centuries of injustice they have suffered. However, while I consider myself to be a feminist in the true sense, here is what I am not: a faux-feminist, and there is a very clear and simple reason why. First, however I should define what faux-feminism is.  Faux-feminism is the process of blindly trying to promote women to act in a manner similar to men which not only ignores modern realities but has a three prong effect of undermining the true feminist movement, placing women in a worse position (in almost every way), and perhaps worst of all, allows women to be exploited in greater fashion by the male patriarchy. For these reasons as a feminist I can have no tolerance for faux-feminism and why you should not either. If my theoretical point is not clear maybe some examples will illustrate what I am trying to advocate.

Example One: Miley Cyrus and Musical Acts of this Ilk

Of course this example could pertain to any number of exploited pop-singers and actresses but I will go with Ms. Cyrus due to her current place in pop culture. To begin with I consider Miley Cyrus to be quite talented; she can sing, she has good timing when it comes to acting, and she does have natural charisma and honest personality which is refreshing. However, it is an absolute shame that a women with such talent is forced to writhe around on stage with next to nothing on, and often solely for the shock value. Now of course I am sure to be met with the standard “no no what she is doing is empowering, what she is doing is being sexually liberated and that is empowering” but my question is, is she really?  Or is this what her record company has convinced her is the best course of action in order to generate buzz in order to sell records? And whether or not her label directly or indirectly has this intention in either case is it not exploitative? If they directly tell her something akin to “hey Miley by taking off your clothes you will sell more records” they are exploiting her and if they act more clandestine manner and/or simply do not caution her given their level of experience with the countless acts who have gone before her that have had shortened careers due to the inevitable tiredness that comes from worn out shock value (i.e. there are only so many clothes one take off and teddy bears one can hump) then  that is just as exploitative.  However, moving past the individual exploitation, Miley Cyrus the act also has detrimental effects in other ways as well. Namely, that not only does her shock value act detract focus from important issues that desperately need attention (i.e. equal pay, access to education, entrepreneurial training, sexual education etc.), but she sets the standard that no matter what your talent level is you must take off your clothes and show your ass. That’s the message and that is the blueprint. Almost every female signer on the charts from Beyoncé to Katy Perry to Nicki Minaj makes music and videos where the focus is on their body and appearance and not really on the music. And those girls who have talent but wish to keep their clothes on? Well you can ask the Vanessa Carltons the Michelle Branches, Jewels, and Fiona Apples of the world, marginalized and kicked to the musical curb. That is not free choice and as such it is not empowerment. It is quite simply show your ass or get out, and as such is extremely exploitative. Miley Cyrus might not have created this machine, but her act ensures that the gears keep it turning. Finally, like any machine there is a purpose and the purpose is profit. And more specifically, profits to the very place where true feminism has fought its toughest and longest standing battle; against the male, white, privileged, patriarchal establishment. Miley Cyrus the act is therefore a classic example of faux-feminism as it undermines the true feminist movement, places women in a worse position, and allows women to be exploited in greater fashion by the male patriarchy.

Example Two:  Sex and the City, Girls, and Other Representations of this Ilk

Although I have previously outlined my opinions regarding the television program Sex and the City http://hundyspot.com/2011/08/ , I will briefly state that it is a show centered on selfish women, who shallowly attempt to find happiness through rampant materialism, random sexual encounters, and other mindless pursuits that somehow provided six seasons worth of content and managed to somehow garner critical acclaim and a large following. The show has spawned countless knock-offs including the prominent (yet not so popular) Girls written and directed by one Lena Dunham. In this Sex and the City derivative, although the four women are in their 20s and all sport alliterative names, the show is essentially the same save for the fact that it has been heralded as a more realistic depiction of sorts. This is truly sad because if one watches the show it appears that instead of being gritty, the show seems to be gross, and rather sad. Replaced with 5 star restaurants and fancy shoe stores are dingy thrift shops, murky apartments, and women urinating in the street. With respect to the content I would simply describe it as a more disturbingly enhanced version of its inspiration where selfishness, addiction, materialism, and sexual exploitation are taken to new heights (and that is saying something given the gauntlet laid down by Sex and the City). And while I am sure others would remind me that it is just a show, I would counter that when impressionable people are presented with messages, especially those that are labelled realistic, the effects can be significant. If we want to hold the mainstream accountable for the depictions of unrealistic beauty standards for women via magazines, and billboards, then so too must we hold other messages and mediums, especially when they are as revolting and harmful as those depicted on these type of me-first exploitation based shows. I cannot think of a more dis-empowering relationship then the one young Hannah has with her psychopathic boyfriend Adam whose actions are condoned and he simply excused as being aloof despite his abusive and selfish actions.  Yet this along with the glamorization of hard drug use, promiscuity, and the joy of abandoning one’s responsibilities when things get to rough (be it relationships, jobs, or higher education) are somehow and someway not only passed off as entertainment, but critically acclaimed and even cited as milestones in the women’s empowerment movement. In truth then one person’s milestone must be another person’s roadblock, as the messages I see conveyed in this show and passed off as reality do nothing but hurt the status of women. Drug use, promiscuity, materialism, and all of the other aforementioned hallmarks of these programs do nothing but hold people back, men or women. Moreover, when people are slaves to the sorts of vices promoted on these show not only is there self-worth undermined but they become more susceptible to manipulation due to low self-worth and the financial and emotional dependence on other people that comes along with that. Again while some people might say these types of shows are just entertainment, when society is submerged in these types of messages and when they are passed off as reality you cannot tell me that there are not people whose behavior is modified by what they see and what they interpret as common place (or worse yet when the behavior of some people whose behavior is excused because it now fits in with the new normal).  As such, given my definition of faux-feminism and the three prong effect which results, there can be no doubt that programs of this nature can be categorized as faux-feminist.

Example 3: Questionable Movements Which Detract from Feminism’s True Purpose

As previously stated, I consider myself a feminist if the goal of feminism is concerned with ensuring equal rights and opportunities for men and women, especially in regards to education, jobs, and equal pay. However, when certain “causes” arises that are labelled feminist yet in actuality do nothing but distract or undermine the true feminist movement those instances must be labelled faux feminist. The questionable activities to which I refer often come in two forms. The first are those I would label distractions and they are the type of choices and headline grabbing attempts which distract focus from the important and essential women’s issues (employment,  health and safety, reproductive rights etc.). These pseudo movements are largely focused on shock value or the belief that the road to equality is rooted in appearance and include such things as the right to go topless, shaving/not shaving one’s body, and even the refusal to use hygiene products during one’s menstrual cycle. Although these types of actions could be classified as frivolous or relatively minor, not only do they draw attention away from the larger needs of the feminist movement, but they are divisive, in that they cause feminism to be something to fear and alienated because of the shock value that can irritate and repulse the masses.

However, in addition to distraction there are certain movements which are believed to help the status of women but in the long run actually serve to undermine it in real and powerful ways. I have touched on the promiscuity aspect in the previous two parts, but the push amongst many feminists and the media for women to carry themselves in a sexualized and promiscuous manner in the same vein men have is not empowerment. And to be clear it is not empowering or something to embrace whether man or woman. Sexual activity without feeling although might seem like a great idea, but over time it serves to lower one’s self-worth and degrades the soul. Just because men have been associated with this type of dangerous activity in the past, does not mean that women should as well. Why have two flawed sexes? The same goes for the notion that because men are obnoxious, suspicious, selfish and downright Machiavellian in not only their approach to work/business, but in their lives in general, that somehow it is a good idea for women to become just as aggressive, suspicious, and hostile as well? If femininity defined by some philosophers as kindness, generosity, and compassion than why forsake those traits in order to adapt to the generalized shortcomings of men? Is the better route not to embrace those traits which have helped to hold humanity together for centuries and try with a kind hand and loving heart to make men better people? Is that course of action not the greatest prospect for the empowerment of not just women, but for all of humanity?

Before concluding I would like to finally caution against the increasingly popular push against such things like marriage and committed relationships and the greater acceptance of certain arrangements like prenuptial agreements. While there are many people who would advocate that this in some way is empowerment and that it should be accepted given its increased prominence, I would remind them that marriage in addition to being a formal declaration of love, was and is a way to protect the security of partners who often make sacrifices or certain choices that allow the other partner to be the primary earner in a family. As such, with the increased prominence of relationships without commitment and things like prenuptial agreements which often greatly benefit the primary earner, these things popularly swooped up in the talk of empowerment, often erode the security and true equal rights of one partner (often the woman) to the other partner (often the mane) when things do not work out. It also makes it that much easier for the financially stronger spouse to terminate the relationship without consequence and often whenever they wish to the great determinant and expense of the other spouse. Perhaps more importantly this arrangement in practicality ensures a power imbalance throughout the relationship and causes the less financially secure spouse to work that much harder at the relationship just to guard against being discarded. As such this can hardly be classified as equality or empowerment. Of course every situation is different and justice should be determined on a case by case basis, but the blanket preclusion of even the prospect of evaluating what is fair due to new cultural norms and pressures is not in the least bit just nor does it serve the interests of the women’s movement.

It is my great hope that after reading this piece that the reader does not consider this piece to be anti-feminist. To the contrary the purpose of this piece was to illuminate minds to the dangers of depictions and popular shifts that on the surface claim to serve the cause of women yet in reality actually undermine it. In so doing they hinder the progress, security, and future of the status of women. Faux-feminism defined in this piece as the process of blindly trying to promote women to act in a manner similar to men is an impediment to the feminist women and has three main effects; it undermines the true feminist movement, it places women in a worse position in a myriad of ways and it all allows women to be exploited in greater fashion by the male patriarchy.

This piece has described three prominent manifestations of faux-feminism, but those concerned with the true health, security, and general status of women must be vigilant to recognize and combat the many other forms it can take. As general rule perhaps a helpful test for faux-feminism would be; is that which claims to be feminist a friend of the misogynist? In other words, is that thing which claims to be a tool of woman’s empowerment actually welcomed and an asset to the classic male chauvinist or true enemy of feminism? Example 1- Sex and the City, Girls, etc. in their promotion of materialism and casual sex allows the chauvinist greater ease to secure that which he desires (i.e. meaningless and easy sex). Example 2- Not getting married or being in a committed relationship allows the misogynist to be involved in a relationship with a woman he knows he can exploit for his own needs that he can drop anytime without repercussion. Example 3- Aggressive often borderline sociopathic behavior on the part of women allows the chauvinist the opportunity to relate to more human beings in his comfort zone thereby helping to ensure that future generations replicate this unhealthy behavior and further helps to stomp out any remnant of good, kindness, and humanity left in the world today. If the world has become a worse place today than it ever was it is because we are ignoring what has truly made the world go round for centuries, love, kindness, compassion, patience- in essence what philosophers and scholars across time have called femininity. Let us not lose that, not make the mistake ok equating equality with one sex blindly copying the other but take the best traits of both sexes across on equal playing field to make the best world we possibly can. It is up to all of us to have a hand in crafting the world we want to have and recognize any and all threats to it.   

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Bridging the Gap: Examining the Differences Between Successful and Unsuccessful Microcredit Initiatives

19 Dec

“The key to ending extreme poverty is to enable the poorest of the poor to get their foot on the ladder of development . . . the poorest of the poor are stuck beneath it. They lack the minimum amount of capital necessary to get a foothold, and therefore need a boost up to the first rung.”[1]

                                                                                                                        -Jeffrey Sachs

Part One: Introduction

It truly is the best of times, yet also the worst of times. Despite the economic turmoil which continues to make headlines, Forbes states that the number of billionaires around the world has reached a record 1,826 in 2015, with 290 newcomers added to the list since 2014.[2] However, while the globe’s elite prosper, many remain firmly entrenched in the grip of poverty. Not only have groups like the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) noted that the gap between the rich and the poor continues to widen,[3] but the United Nations reports that half of the world’s population subsists on less than $2.50 a day.

On the surface, many people seem to care, with the United Nations, development NGOs and rich philanthropists like Bill and Melinda Gates all committed to combating poverty in a myriad of ways. Foreign aid is still thought of by many as one of the most effective tools, but just as the world’s billionaires continue to rise, so too does the number of developmental aid critics. For example, in her book entitled Dead Aid,Dambiso Mayo in describing the impact of foreign aid in Africa states:

At the end of it all, it is virtually impossible to draw on Africa’s aid-led development experience and argue that aid has worked. The broader consequences of the aid model have been ruinous…Donors, development agencies and policymakers have, by and large, chosen to ignore the blatant alarm signals, and have continued to pursue the aid-based model even when it has become that aid under whatever guise, is not working. Even when aid has not been stolen, it has been unproductive. The proof of the pudding is eating, and ever so clearly the preponderance of evidence is on this side. Given Africa’s current economic state it is hard to see how any growth registered is a direct result of aid. If anything, the evidence of the last fifty years points to the reverse-slower growth, higher poverty and Africa left off the economic ladder.[4]

While other scholars like Roger C. Riddell would counter Moyo’s negative account of foreign aid by stating that development aid has been shown to work, even he would concede that “overall, the contribution that aid makes to aggregate development is lower than the public has been led to believe,”[5] and that the results are even less promising when contrasting the short-term benefits with long-term ones.[6]

If the critics are right and foreign aid does not work (or at the very least has had mixed results), is there another way to uplift the poor? If not an external solution that is largely based on a top down approach, what about one that comes from within and from the bottom up? Moving away from traditional developmental approaches like foreign aid, Dr. Mohammed Yunus would innovate a twentieth century model which sought to empower the poor from the ground up:  microcredit.

Modern microcredit is essentially the extension of relatively small loans to people who would not otherwise have access to it, generally  from some of the most developmentally challenged countries around the globe. The thought is that by lending small amounts to those who could not follow the traditional model due to their lack of collateral and/or other financial impediments, they would have the means to set-up a self-run business. Although such an unconventional model built largely on good faith seems questionable, the Grameen Bank, one of the pioneering microcredit institutions founded in Bangladesh, along with other major microcredit institutions began reporting repayment rates as high as 98 per cent.[7] Unfortunately, some of the lustre around microcredit began to fade as more sceptics questioned its effectiveness at reducing poverty, arguing that it has actually been detrimental to those it means to empower (especially women). Are the critics right, is microcredit simply a developmental illusion? If not, why has there been such a varying degree of results within the microcredit regime? This piece seeks to undertake a critical examination into both the ongoing debate between the proponents and detractors of microcredit, and the underlying factors which account for the variation between successful and unsuccessful microcredit initiatives. It is argued that the variation of results are due in large part to inefficiencies in many contemporary microcredit lending models. More specifically, although some critics argue that the microcredit model is flawed in that they contend that high interest rates and loan funds spent on consumption lead to microcredit failure,[8] it is argued that the model is structurally sound and unfavourable results are the product of avoidable implementation strategies. Furthermore, it is argued that defects in microcredit performance measurement have also distorted microcredit’s true impact, further exacerbating the divide between successful and unsuccessful microcredit lending initiatives. After examining the history of microcredit in order to provide sufficient background for analysis and case specific examples from Bangladesh and around the world it becomes apparent that the mixed results pertaining to microcredit success is mainly due to rigid and inefficient operation, which in turn leads to a deviation from the tenets of microcredit resulting in high interest rates, misuse of funds, predatory practices, and in some instances a greater entrenchment into poverty.

Part Two: Microcredit Background

            Although the terms microfinance and microcredit seem interchangeable, it is important to note the difference between them. According to Sadegh Bakhtiari, microfinance is essentially “the provision of a broad range of financial services to low-income micro enterprises and households,” including “savings, loans, insurance, leasing, money transfers, and others.”[9] Microcredit on the other hand, “emphasizes the provision of credit services to low income clients, usually in the form of small loans for micro enterprise and income generating activities.”[10] Put another way, microfinance is an assortment of financial services available to low income individuals whereas microcredit is a type of financial service where small loans are made to low income individuals, often to pursue entrepreneurial endeavours. With respect to the latter, many of these loans are often provided collateral-free to groups of individuals who are then jointly liable for the dual purpose of fostering income generation and thus reducing poverty, while binding people together to help ensure repayment.[11]

While one may assume that microcredit lending is a fairly recent concept given the increased attention it has received in the second half of the twentieth century, authors Aiden Hollis and Arthur Sweetman highlight in their work entitled Microcredit: What can we Learn from the Past? thatits roots actually go back hundreds of years.[12] From English lending charities to the to the German Raiffesisen, the authors trace the history and modus operandi of the various forerunners to modern microcredit. Hollis and Sweetman also evaluate the relative success and failure of these initiatives while synthesizing which organizational structures were likely to be produce successful results:

                It would not be appropriate to apply the lessons from this brief review of historical microcredit          organizations to modern situations without due regard for the many differences in cultures and institutions               between historical Europe and modern less developed countries…It would be equally inappropriate,             however, to ignore the valuable knowledge about sustainability that historical MOs (microcredit                organizations) can teach us. The failure of so many microcredit schemes in the last 30 years might perhaps have been avoided had they been more closely modeled on the systems that worked in Europe in the last      century.

                The most striking conclusion emerging from this review is that depositor-based MOs tend to last longer and                 serve many more borrowers than MOs finance by donations or government loans.[13]

In addition to the link they draw from depositor based microcredit initiatives, the authors also found that lowering administration costs,[14] increasing local education,[15] and providing savings avenues for lenders,[16] were all positive steps microcredit institutions could undertake to ensure initiative success. However, before getting into a detailed analysis of microcredit lending models, perhaps it would be prudent to first examine the background of modern microcredit in order to provide sufficient context for the discussion.

            The environment that helped to foster the rise in modern microcredit was largely the result of failures in traditional development strategies and the unfulfilled promise of uplifting the impoverished peoples of the world.[17] Complicating matters for the world’s poor was the fact that even if they had the entrepreneurial will to succeed, self-reliance was difficult. Various restrictions and high lending rates from the formal sector severely hindered loans to low income earners with little to no collateral from institutions like central banks, commercial banks, savings banks, social security schemes, and insurance companies.[18] Many developing nations also have an informal sector which consists of individual money lenders, relatives, friends, landlords, or other acquaintances normally within the ambit of the rural poor. On the surface, this sector maybe more attractive to prospective (collaterally challenged) borrowers, but itis not without limitation. As Bakhtiari states:

A common feature of many rural communities is that much of the local information does not flow freely; it tends to be segmented and circulates only within specific groups. Usually the informal credit market is based on local and thus limited by wealth constraint and the covariant risks of the local environment.[19]

Coupling the aforementioned limitations of the formal and informal financial sectors with the fact that the impoverished still need basic financial services to help manage their assets and generate income to improve their situation, the situation is quite dire. If traditional forms of development like foreign aid have had limited results, and domestic financial systems are at best limited (and at worst predatory and ineffective), what is the next step?

Against this backdrop and in the face of a severe Bengali famine in 1974,[20] Dr. Muhammed Yunus searched for a solution that would not only limit foreign dependence, but would address many of the shortcomings of the domestic financial sectors. Shortly after completing a Ph.D. in economics, Dr. Yunus returned to his home country of Bangladesh. Instead of the taking the more traditional route and joining the financial sector, he joined the University of Chittagong’s economics department and initially pursued a career in academia.[21] Shunning the idea of becoming a banker and distraught over the starving and impoverished, Dr. Yunus desperately sought to make use of his training in economics, which until that point had been nothing more than “fairytales” and “utterly useless”.[22]

In his quest to eradicate poverty, his fortunes changed in 1976 during a visit to the impoverished village of Jobra.[23] He noticed that many villagers had a solid business making bamboo furniture, but much of their revenue was siphoned away by money lenders charging interest at usurious rates.[24] In response, he lent $27.00 of his own money to forty-two villagers and found that small loans had a positive impact on the lives of the poor.[25] He came to the conclusion that even without giving up any collateral, the poor worked to pay back their loans at rates even higher than the 60% rates charged by traditional commercial banks, simply for the opportunity to have a livelihood.[26] Dr. Yunus had found a viable way to help the less fortunate, by helping them to help themselves.

After securing a credit line from the Janata Bank with himself as the guarantor, Dr. Yunus began the large scale adaptation for his loan project in Jobra.[27] By 1983, the project transformed into a formal banking institution known as the Grameen Bank (Village Bank) that specialized in giving small (micro) loans to the impoverished, throughout Bangladesh.[28] As Katherine Esty highlights in her work entitled Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank, most pilot projects encounter turbulent times when attempting to scale. However, Yunus’ endeavour steadily expanded throughout Bangladesh, going from 86 branches and 58,000 borrowers in 1983 to 2,800 branches and seven million borrowers in 2010.[29] Even more astonishing is that while Bengali women once made up only 2% of bank borrowers,[30] under Yunus’s model 98% of the borrowers are women,[31] the repayment rate of these microloans has been estimated at 98%,[32] and the vast majority of current funds (95%) provided by Grameen is derived from the depositors of the bank.[33] With statistics like these, it is should come as little surprise that the microcredit model has been replicated in over 100 countries around the world,[34] with its reach even extending into many developed nations like the United States and Canada.

However, the microcredit model has been challenged by numerous critics who have gone as far as to suggest that microcredit plunges the poor further into poverty, rather than alleviating them from it.[35] Beginning first with Bangladesh and then examples from around the world, these claims along with the (empirical) evidence will be examined to determine their merit. It is hoped that this investigation will uncover the true factors which account for the difference between successful and unsuccessful microcredit initiatives.

Part Three: Microcredit and Bangladesh

            In order to understand what is meant by a successful microcredit initiative, one must first know what is meant by “success”. As previously examined, microcredit loan repayment rates have been reported as approximately 98% within the Bengali context.[36]However, while this statistic appears to indicate tremendous success with respect to loan repayment, it does not directly indicate that these microloans have served their true purpose of to uplifting the poor out  of poverty. More specifically, although one could assume that borrowers repaying their loans is the result of a successful entrepreneurial endeavour made possible by the microcredit loan, all the repayment truly indicates is that the loan was paid back. And while proponents of microcredit might argue that repayment of the loan indicates that the entrepreneurial investment is successful, which is why repayment resulted instead of default, logic of that nature is purely circumstantial as one could argue that repayment funds were generated by nefarious means or through the advent of new loans (i.e. a new loan to pay back the old loan). As such, in order to determine the impact microcredit has had on poverty alleviation, more direct evidence is required.

            In making the case for microcredit, Dr. Yunus has emphasized not only loan repayment rates, but that 5% of Grameen Bank loan borrowers get out of poverty every year.[37] While loan repayment rates could be considered circumstantial evidence that might only indicate a tenuous correlation between high loan repayment rate and successful microcredit initiatives (where success is more than just a rewarding business but uplifts borrowers out of poverty), the 5% statistic cited by Dr. Yunus, if true, would be a powerful indicator of microcredit’s ability to alleviate poverty. The only question is where does that figure come from and how valid is it?

            A review of the microcredit literature traces this 5% statistic to a joint research project of the Bangladesh Institute of Developmental Studies (BIDS) and the World Bank with key findings outlined in a  paper written by Pitt and Khandker[38] (along with a book published by Khandker in 1998) which popularly disseminated these findings throughout the field and supported the claim that, “microfinance programs promote investment in human capital (such as schooling) and raise awareness of reproductive health issues (such as use of contraceptives) among poor families”.[39] Moreover, this study also found support for the claim that microcredit is a tool of female empowerment as it was found to increase annual household consumption by a significantly higher amount then men. As Pitt and Khandker state, “annual household consumption expenditure, the most comprehensive measure available of program impact, increased 18 taka for every 100 additional taka borrowed by women from these credit programs, compared to 11 taka for men.”[40] As such, Khandker summarizes that these findings, “shed light on the role of gender based targeting and its impact on household and individual welfare, finding that microfinance helps women acquire assets of their own and exercise power in household decision making.”[41]

            However, due to the fact that the results were challenged by critics and that Khandker himself admitted that the impact studies highlighted in 1998 were “sensitive to the method applied”, in the 2005 paper entitled Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh Khandker examined whether the results could be substantiated in another period and with another method, namely via panel data analysis.[42] More specifically the study looked at the long-term impacts of microlending to determine whether the earlier results found in 1991-1992 (and reported in the 1998 piece by Pitt and Khandker) could be sustained overtime and what impact (if any) it had on aggregate poverty.[43] Not only is Khandker’s work considered a seminal piece in the field of microcredit even by critics,[44] it is also relevant to this piece as it attempts to substantiate the claim that microcredit does indeed alleviate poverty. In so doing, the Khandker piece not only counters the position of many microcredit critics, but can also help provide new lines of inquiry or clues for what accounts for the variation between successful and unsuccessful microcredit initiatives.

            As previously stated, the 2005 Khandker study examined whether the positive  microcredit program impacts found in 1991-1992 could stand the test of time and be replicated by another method known as panel data analysis. As such, in 1999 field surveyors in Bangladesh revisited the 1,769 households that were engaged in the 1991-1992 three rounds of data collection concerning microcredit impact. However, because many of the households had split and grown to 2,599 and because the 2005 study would rely on panel data to measure the impact from microcredit participation, the sample was restricted to the households that were interviewed in both periods and this represented a figure of 1,638 households.[45] The results of the study found some interesting developments regarding household participation rate in the program and who was borrowing. With respect to the former the study found that from 1991-1992 to 1998-1999 the participation rate had more than doubled (25.9 v. 52.5) and in regards to the latter, while male participation rate had declined, the female participation rate had skyrocketed. As Khandker states:

Summary statistics for individual and household-level borrowing and consumption outcomes show that while average male borrowing for participating households declined from 3,472 taka (Tk) to Tk 2,483 in real terms, or by 28.5 percent over the seven year period, average female borrowing for participating households increased by 94 percent in real terms. This suggests that microfinance programs provided loans mainly through female members of poor households, with female borrowing on average accounting for 82 percent of microfinance borrowing in 1998/99, up from 63 percent in 1991/92.[46]

While the aforementioned finding regarding the large amount of microcredit participation would seem to fly directly in the face of critics that are of the position that microcredit does little to help women escape poverty,[47]high participation rates would seem to refute the critics if it only could be demonstrated that microcredit actually reduced poverty. Fortunately for proponents of microcredit, Khandker’s 2005 study did just that.

            After analysis of the impact assessment data using the 1998-1999 follow-up survey to the 1991-1992 survey, not only did data on consumption and the consumption poverty line demonstrate that, “that moderate poverty in the sample villages declined overall by 17 percentage points between 1991-1992 and 1998-1999 and extreme poverty by 13 percentage points,”[48] but it also reported poverty reduction for participants amounted to a 1.6 percentage point annual reduction in moderate poverty and a 2.2 percentage point annual reduction in cases of extreme poverty.[49] In addition, the study also found that there was a poverty reduction benefit to both program participants and non-participants at the aggregate level microfinance reduces poverty by about 1.0 percentage point and extreme poverty by 1.3 percentage points a year.[50] Finally, it was found that these microlending initiatives can account for approximately 40% of the overall reduction in moderate poverty with its positive impact found to be even higher (though slightly) with respect to extreme poverty.[51]

Although other studies like those presented by M. Jahangir Alam Chowdhury et. al. (The Impact of Micro-credit on Poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh)[52] and Jonathan Murdoch (The Microfinance Promise)[53] are empirically driven and highlight the positive impact microcredit can have on poverty alleviation, according to some, the Khandker study remains perhaps the most comprehensive and reliable study undertaken to date.[54] In fact, the president of Freedom from Hunger, which is itself a global microfinance group, describes Khandker’s work as the “one major study of microfinance on poverty that stands out.”[55] However, simply because it is a seminal piece in the field, this fact does not mean that other scholars and critiques have not tried to undermine its findings. For example, in their 2009 piece entitled The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence, authors David Roodman and Johnathan Murdoch undertook a critical examination of the impact of microcredit on the poor of Bangladesh and did so via a replication study that applied the same methods to the same data set as some of the most influential studies in the field of microcredit, including the Pitt-Khandker and Khandker studies, in order to test whether the previous results related to microcredit could be verified in a different period.[56] In the comparative politics context, this undertaking by Roodman and Murdoch is similar to the re-examination by Oskarsson and Ottosen of Michael Ross’s seminal resource curse piece Does Oil Hinder Democracy[57] with their critical follow up entitled Does Oil Still Hinder Democracy?[58] Just as Oskarrson and Ottosen sought to challenge the findings of Ross by demonstrating that the findings were substantially less valid when set in a more contemporary time period, Roodman and Murdoch also attempted to challenge the ground breaking literature of their own field by stating from the outset that their replication exercise performed years after Khandker’s study demonstrates that the evidence from his and other previous studies is weak. Moreover, they promise that their evidence will demonstrate that there is little to support the idea that microcredit works. As they state, “30 years into the microfinance movement, we have little solid evidence that it improves the lives of clients in measureable ways.”[59]

However, despite their bravado and hefty promises, by the end of their analysis the authors ultimately appear to fall short in their attempt to meaningfully undermine the results of Khandker’s work within the field. More specifically, Mark Pitt responds to these criticisms by stating that all of the critiques levelled by Roodman and Murdoch can be systematically rendered ineffectual and “readily refuted.”[60] In addition, after an analysis of their work it would seem that all the Roodman and Murdoch study indicates is that at best the evidence in previous studies is simply not as strong as it could be, however they cannot refute many of the prominent findings found in said studies. For example, in relation to one particular study they examine in conjunction with the Khandker pieces they state:

“Morduch (1998) disseminated the idea that microcredit helps families smooth their expenditures, lessening the pinch of hunger and need in lean times. In our view, nothing in the present paper contradicts those ideas. We assert however, that decisive statistical evidence in favor of them is absent from these studies and extraordinarily scarce in the literature as a whole.”[61]

After lacking the coup-de-grace against microcredit that their study promises, Roodman and Murdoch conclude by essentially calling for more studies in the field and cite that the main difficulties for studying the effects of microfinance are due to a lack of “clean” quasi-experiments and an absence of more randomized studies.[62] This can hardly be considered the empirical blow against microcredit that critics had hoped for.

            If the positive association between microcredit and poverty reduction made by Khandker and others is as legitimate as the results seem to indicate, one wonders what further conclusions can be drawn? Most obviously, it would appear that it validates the assertions made by Dr. Yunus and other microcredit proponents surrounding microcredit’s standing as a self-help development tool and its ability to alleviate poverty.[63] However, confirming that microcredit can work in practice illuminates a peculiar puzzle because of the various microcredit shortfall cases  highlighted by critics. These examples of microcredit failures forwarded by critics include not only failed initiatives which have done little to eradicate poverty, but consequences that have actually harmed the marginalized people it was meant to uplift, particularly impoverished women. In essence, if microcredit, especially in the Bengali context, has been proven to work so well, how can it also produce results which support the opposite conclusion? Is it simply a matter of fortune, that in a vacuum and all things being equal, some initiatives will fail and some will succeed no matter what, or are there underlying factors which indicate a propensity for microcredit success? Perhaps a closer examination of microcredit at the more micro-level will help solve the puzzle.

            In a 2010 piece by Jason Cons and Kasia Paprocki entitled Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh, the authors examined the microcredit experiences by borrowers in a rural northern village of Bangladesh known as Arampur.[64] The purpose of the study was to help the ongoing debate in the field of microcredit and more specifically to, “explore the implications of using community-based research and engagement strategies to re-centre the debate over credit within locales that are the target of microcredit institutions (MFIs).”[65] The authors felt this exercise was important because it was a rare opportunity to engage with the recipients of microcredit and uncover some of the voices behind the statistics. As the authors of the study state it, “provides critical insights into the ways that the cultural and economic effects of microcredit are experienced, suffered and contested in particular contexts.”[66] With respect to the field work at the heart of the investigation, it essentially consisted of community-based oral testimony undertaken by community researchers who conducted interviews of 150 recipients of microcredit loans in Arampur (a number which represents approximately 10% of the village’s total households).[67] Although the undertaking is perhaps not as robust as it could have been had the field work engaged with a greater number of Arampur residents, there are still some very interesting conclusions. Perhaps most notable is that the lived experiences of the residents are often in contrast to the idealized vision of many microcredit institutions and this situation creates new and exploitative development scenarios which in reality results in microcredit failing the impoverished.[68]A vivid example of this is provided on page 644 of their work:

Yet more notable than the persistence of mohajans (rural money lenders who can charge upwards of 100% interest) is the intertwining of MFIs and rural moneylenders into a single system…As one borrower explained, ‘If I owe 1000 taka but I don’t have any money to make my payment, I go to the mohajan to repay the NGO loan. After repaying the NGO loan, I take another loan from them to repay the money I took from the mohajan…But while this may constitute a manipulation of the credit system in Arampur, it ultimately deepens cycles of debt and dependency not just on microcredit, but on the mohajans themselves.[69]

While the aforementioned is a disappointing reality at the ground level, it appears that inflexibility surrounding late payments during the annual period of food insecurity (known as Monga) and/or lack of emergency funds when one is sick can have even greater consequences:

Where MFIs could provide emergency grants, temporary loan forgiveness or subsidized food, they stick to rigid repayment structures. Indeed many residents seemed bitterly to suggest that Monga provided a way for MFIs to further indebt them…These pressures lead to regular shortfalls, which, in turn, often lead to unauthorized, though tacitly accept, asset confiscation. One woman, a landless labourer, shared a story of such a confiscation. She had been ill and unable to work to earn a day wage. She asked for a week long extension in her payment schedule and was refused. ‘Then they sent a message to other field officers in town to seize my husband’s rickshaw. When they found him, they stopped him, and told him that he could get the rickshaw back when he repays the instalment. Then it was even harder! We had nothing to eat, and yet we had to somehow find the money to pay them back.’[70]

The preceding lived experiences of microcredit borrowers illuminate some interesting realities. Namely that by not being flexible in times of emergency need, microcredit initiatives actually serve to undermine the quality of life of the very people it is meant to uplift. However, when the initiatives deviate too far the theoretical model when implemented in practice such as when unauthorized confiscations and local moneylenders are tacitly allowed into the equation, even more devastating consequences can occur.

            Despite the pitfalls that these lived experiences have brought to the forefront, Cons and Paprocki are still very much behind the idea of microcredit as a development tool, however despite their enthusiasm one of the critical points they wish to make is that it is imperative that the realities of microcredit are accounted for and addressed in the practical sense in order to ensure the best chance of initiative success for all recipients.

            In a more recent paper entitled Can Microcredit Worsen Poverty? Cases of Exacerbated Poverty in Bangladesh, a similar conclusion to that of Cons and Paprocki is made by the authors of that piece. The study at the heart of the paper examined the impact of microcredit based on the experiences drawn from a pool of 320 women.[71] More specifically, although it was found that the majority of the sample had attained positive results from microcredit, 18 of these women did not and this study sought to focus on these negative experiences (relayed via in-depth interviews) to uncover the underlying factors which account for this less than favourable result.[72] In the end the authors had uncovered four key sets of circumstances in which microcredit loans exacerbated poverty among borrowers:

  1. Long periods between start-and revenue generation from the investment
  2. Financial setbacks or losses incurred during the initial stages of business
  3. Use of loan money to meet unforeseen contingencies/emergencies; and
  4. Use of loan money for day-to-day consumption or one-off, ‘luxury’ expenditure[73]

After highlighting these results the authors conclude by stating that while microcredit has been proven successful in the majority of cases with respect to reducing poverty, that the ‘poorest of the poor’ are susceptible to adverse effects due largely to pre-existing conditions of poverty resulting from the reality of their circumstances.[74]

This piece by ATM Jahirudin et. al. is notable for several reasons. Not only does it confirm that variation occurs in terms of microcredit ability to have a positive impact on poverty alleviation, much like the Cons and Paprocki piece the authors find that certain realities, which normally are invisible in most microcredit studies that do not take into account lived experiences, are circumstances that hinder microcredit from being successful in some cases. Moreover this study also comes to the conclusion that in order for microcredit to have the best overall chance of success that certain administration changes must be undertaken. As the authors state:

Given the particular nature of the circumstances in the which these adverse impacts occur, some modifications to microcredit arrangements, at the operational level, are likely to reduce the incidence of microcredit worsening poverty….In order to deliver clear benefits to the poorest of the poor, it is imperative that microcredit lenders and their international funding agencies devise policies that ensure not only that the operations of the microcredit lenders remain at some distance from the central structures and relations of the market economy, but also that they focus principally upon guiding and empowering borrowers to succeed in small business enterprises, the latter being a key component of poverty alleviation, the stated goal of microcredit.[75]

After analyzing the literature to this point it would appear that although microcredit initiatives do have tremendous success in alleviating poverty in general, that variation in terms of results is still present within the field. However, what the contemporary literature demonstrates is that the variation is not due to chance, but rather that circumstances exist amongst certain (vulnerable) groups which preclude them from utilizing microcredit in the manner it was intended. Although these findings are important, perhaps more illuminating is that the literature seems to advocate a greater and more active role for microcredit administrators in order to ensure efficient and effective implementation of the microcredit model. In sum, the variation between success and failure in terms of microcredit’s ability to alleviate poverty seems to be premised on active and engaged microcredit lending rather than some deficiency in the (theoretical) microcredit model, at least in the contemporary Bengali context. 

While the global perspective is examined in the next section of this piece, at this stage of the analysis it is perhaps appropriate return to the work of Hollis and Sweetman in order to evaluate how well the contemporary suggestions for improving the viability of microcredit lending programs measure against lessons from the past. As previously stated, in their historical analysis Hollis and Sweetman found that microcredit lending institutions that were intimately and actively connected with their borrowers (demonstrated via the depositor based microcredit institutions) had a stronger correlation with success. As they state:

                That this is the case should hardly be surprising: organizational theory-and intuition- strongly predict that    institutions require strongly correctly aligned incentives to be successful. MOs with depositors benefited        from having interested parties overseeing the operations and withdrawing their deposits when problems         began to emerge. Depositors also provided information on, and monitored, borrowers, and performed administrative tasks in some instances.[76]

This statement reflects the position that the more microcredit programs are closely associated with borrowers and the more actively involved with the services they provide, the greater the benefit to the borrowers. In addition, they also state that past lessons should not be ignored because the failure of many contemporary microcredit initiatives over the last 30 years might well have been avoided had these initiatives been modelled more like the European models of centuries past that were intimately involved and provided as many practical services as possible. As they conclude:

            This study also suggests that MOs (microcredit organizations) can indeed be sustainable,                 even financially    successful, in very poor countries for long periods of time, and that the           key to such success is getting the    organizational structure right.[77]

After contrasting the contemporary literature and evidence surrounding microcredit along with the historical record it would appear that not only does microcredit in fact work to alleviate poverty in the majority of cases, but that improving the operational structure by tailoring the implementation strategies to the realities and needs of borrowers improves the chances that the borrowers will have a positive experience from microcredit, and in turn increases the likelihood that microcredit will achieve is primary goal of poverty alleviation at an even greater rate. At least in regards to the Bengali context this appears to be the case. The global perspective is examined next.

Part Four: Microcredit and the Rest of the World

While this piece has placed a considerable amount of emphasis to the Bengali experience, even if such consideration is warranted given modern microcredit’s genesis within Bangladesh and the fact that Bangladesh still remains home to more microcredit institutions than any other country,[78]a more complete picture surrounding what accounts for the variation in microcredit success can be attained after considering the global perspective.

In his piece entitled Microfinance And Poverty Reduction: Some International Evidence Sadegh Bakhtiari examines the impact of microcredit in a variety of countries around the World including Indonesia, Thailand, India, and the Philippines. After analyzing the data Bakhtiari concludes that not only does microcredit contribute to poverty reduction in general, but that microcredit institutions that continue to evolve and adapt to the needs of their borrowers while also providing additional financial services like savings accounts for instance, offer further benefit to loan recipients and lenders alike.[79] For example in relation to the Bank Rakayat in Indonesia (BRI) he states:

Since 1984, BRI has evolved into a major microfinance provider. Massive staff retraining in the new                 microbanking culture, with its new financial services and incentives schemes, was of crucial importance. Its          3,700 local units serve some 29.8 million savings accounts and 3.1 million borrowers (Dec 2001). With    non-targeted loans from $5 to $5000 at rural market rates of interest and unrestricted deposit services, it               reaches out to vast number of the poor and non-poor. Making good use of a start-up liquidity injection, it     has fully replaced external funds with local savings since 1989.[80]

The preceding passage is interesting because not only does it further demonstrate the link between microcredit success and adaptable microcredit institutions that provide a variety of practical financial services, but it provides an example of how microcredit institutions can be viable long term without a dependence on subsidies. Through microsavings (savings accounts) and other financial services these banks can draw new loans and revenue streams thereby becoming self-funding and independent. This strategy regarding the provision of financial services like savings accounts for long-term sustainability beyond subsidies is also something that had been echoed by Hollis and Sweetman.[81]

            Building on the concept of practical and adaptable institutions, in her work entitled Transaction Costs in Group Microcredit in India Savita Shankar examines the problem of high interest rates and what (if anything) can be done to prevent rates (which are supposed to be low according to the microcredit model) from rising. In terms of methodology, the case study method was utilized because according to the author, “the study required in-depth insight on the processes being followed within a microfinance institution (MFI),”[82]and three established MFIs who engaged in microcredit via the group lending model were examined.

            In terms of notable results, although the study concurred with the existing literature with respect to transaction costs being a major contributor to high interest rates on microcredit loans, the results of the study indicated that, “the key drivers of direct transaction costs are field worker compensation and number of groups handled per field worker.”[83] Not only do these findings rest transaction costs and corresponding (high) interest rates at the feet of the MFIs, but that transaction costs if properly managed could keep rates stable and in so doing, help guard against microcredit initiative failure due to loan payment default. More specifically, while the author agrees with the existing literature concerning the correlation between high interest rates and failure and that transaction costs are a major driver of interest rates, she nonetheless highlight that there is much that MFIs can do in the face of these challenges if prudent:

            Based on the above findings, implications are drawn for MFIs. It is suggested that MFIs, in order to reduce direct transaction costs, should increase the number of groups per square kilometer, as this will save both field worker time and conveyance cost. MFIs should examine the possibility of reducing the collection frequency and the impact it could have on repayment. The ways in which field worker productivity could be improved are by utilizing them better during the day hours when they are not in the field and kinking their incentives to profit from their portfolio rather than merely to number of groups formed and repayment levels.[84]

In addition to the proactive changes suggested for MFI, Shankar also has a message for policymakers regarding what they can do to help in the area of interest regulation and information campaigns:

The study also has implications for policymakers. Policymakers need to take into account transaction costs when examining the interest rates charged by microfinance institutions. The regional variation in transaction costs that the study has found is an important factor that suggests that no uniform view can be taken on the rates charged by MFIs in different regions. In order to spread microcredit to newer areas, Government funded information campaigns could help in bringing down group formation costs there by attracting MFIs to these areas.[85]

These conclusions made by Shankar are of tremendous importance to the field of microcredit. Not only do they reiterate previous findings that the chances of microcredit success are improved by ameliorating the operational aspect of microcredit, but that policymakers also have a hand in guiding this operational aspect and should not defer their responsibility to the microcredit institutions.

            Finally, in their work entitled Determinants of Repayment in Microcredit: Evidence from Programs in the United States authors Nitin Bhatt and Shui-Yan Tang examine four prominent microcredit programs in the United States in order to determine under what circumstances is loan repayment most ensured.[86] This microcredit piece is different than others in the field because while most investigations center on the developing world, this piece examines microcredit impact in the first world setting. However as the authors note, although the places are different many of the results appear to be the same in many respects.[87] After examining the evidence from their four cases studies the authors conclude that higher levels of education and proximity to the lending agency increase a borrower’s chance of loan repayment.[88] While higher levels of education are something more common in the first world, should microcredit institutions of the developing world offer practical business education seminars in conjunction with loan distribution this would appear to put both types of recipients on an even playing field as the criteria used to gauge effective education level in the study related mostly to rudimentary business training and book keeping.[89]

            In terms of other conclusions made in this study, the authors of this piece, much like the authors of so many other pieces examined, advocated for proactive and adaptive microcredit institutions that not only provided financial services besides loans, but that also design and implement strategies designed to maximize success and minimize loan default.[90] These strategies include (but are not limited to): ensuring low transaction costs (perhaps akin to the  recommendations made by Shankar), ensuring the homogeneity of borrower groups under the group lending model, and implementing effective (but not overly punitive) sanctions in cases of non-repayment.[91]

            After examining the microcredit studies which center on places outside of Bangladesh a few noteworthy conclusions can be made. Not only do the authors endorse microcredit as proven development tool that can effectively uplift the poor out of poverty, but they demonstrate with compelling evidence that microcredit initiatives can be most successful with efficient, yet adaptive, implementation strategies and operation. As such, this literature appears to be in accordance with the literature of the previous section, namely the body of work which focussed on microcredit in the Bengali context and the historical lessons garnered from microcredit initiatives of centuries past. In addition, while all of the literature appears to primarily connect successful microcredit initiatives with dynamic implementation strategies that are adaptive to the practical needs of the poor, in essence one can conclude that the difference between microcredit success and failure is often attributable to model operation. As such, while many critics would attribute microcredit failure to high interest rates and funds spent on consumption, the evidence seems to indicate that these are symptoms of what is truly the root cause of the problem; inefficient microcredit implementation and operation. By extension this root cause is also accountable for the variation between successful microcredit initiatives which alleviate poverty and those that do not. Before proceeding to concluding remarks, this piece would be remiss if it did not cover one final element concerning microcredit, that of performance measurement. In addition, to poverty alleviation another goal of the program has been that of women’s empowerment. While the data appears to be robust concerning microcredit’s potential to empower women, several critiques have highlighted that microcredit not only does not help women it makes them subject to a greater incidence of domestic violence.[92]However, in their piece entitled Microcredit and Domestic Violence in Bangladesh: An Exploration of Selection Bias Influences authors Ashish Bajracharya and Sajeda Amin address these criticisms head on. By using a sample of married women from the 2007 Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey (BDHS) (N=4,195) the authors utilized propensity score matching (PSM) in order to determine the level of selection bias in this relationship.[93]After analyzing the empirical evidence what the authors concluded was that although previous studies have linked microcredit with an increased level of domestic violence against women by speculating that microcredit membership increases conflict between husbands and their wives who now have access to microcredit loans, when one  adjusts for selection bias using the PSM analysis there appears to be no significant difference in terms of domestic violence between microcredit participants and non-participants.[94] As such these conclusions not only reinforce the position that microcredit is indeed a tool of female empowerment, but it also highlights the need for adequate performance measurement techniques to gauge the true effectiveness of microcredit’s impact. Therefore it is only logical to conclude that that effective microcredit implementation and operation strategies encompass some degree of reliable performance measurement.

Part Five: Conclusion

After examining the background history and a wide array of literature pertaining to case specific examples from Bangladesh and around the world it indeed becomes apparent that the mixed results pertaining to microcredit success is mainly to due to rigid and inefficient implementation and operation which in turn leads to a deviation from the traditional microcredit model and high interest rates, misuse of funds, predatory practices, and in some instances greater entrenchment into poverty. In addition, what the examination has also revealed is that microcredit has been proven to be effective in alleviating poverty in the majority of cases when applied in a manner consistent with the changing needs of borrowers. Does microcredit always work, or will implementing effective operational strategies prevent microcredit failure across the board? Perhaps not, but what the evidence does suggest is that there is a distinct link between unrealistic and impractical implementation strategies made by certain microcredit institutions and microcredit initiative failure. As such, not only will increasing the level of practical efficiency as it pertains to microcredit operation increase the likelihood of microcredit success, it will also lead to minimize the overall variation in the field by closing the gap between successful and negative results. After an analysis of the literature, the provision of financial services like savings accounts, efficient management of transaction costs, emergency loans in times of emergency, business education programs, and effective performance measurement tools are all part of an exhaustive list of strategies microcredit institutions can utilize (and that policymakers can and should enforce) that will increase the chances that microcredit initiatives will be successful, both in terms of return on investment and, more importantly, alleviating poverty.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bibliography

Aargaard, Peter. “The Global Institutionalization of Microcredit” Regulation & Governance (2011) 5, pp. 465-479

Armendariz, Beatriz and Jonathan Morduch. The Economics of Microfinance (Cambridge: The MIT Press) 2010

Bajracharya, Ashish and Sajeda Amin. “Microcredit and Domestic Violence in Bangladesh: An Exploration of Selection Bias Influences” Demography, (2013) 50: pp. 1819-1843

Bakthiari, Sadegh. “Microfinance and Poverty Reduction” International Business & Economics Research Journal, Volume 5, Number 12 (December 2006), pp. 65-71

 

Bauer, Michal et. al. “Behavioral Foundations of Microcredit: Experimental and Survey Evidence from Rural India” The American Economic Review, Vol. 102, No. 2 (APRIL 2012), pp.118-1139

Beck, Steve and Tim Ogden. “Beware of Bad Microcredit” Harvard Business Review September 2007, pp. 20-22

Bhatt, Nitin and Shui-Yan Tang. “Determinants of Repayment in Microcredit: Evidence from Programs in the United States” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research Vol. 26.2 June 2002, pp. 360-76

Chowdhury, M. Jahangir Alam et. al. “The Impact of Micro-credit on Poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh” Progress in Development Studies October 2005, pp. 298-309

Cons, Jason and Kasia Paprocki. “Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh” Third WorldQuarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2010, pp. 637-654

Dowla, Asif. “In Credit We Trust: Building Social Capital by Grameen Bank in Bangladesh” The Journal of Socio-Economics 35 (2006), pp. 102-122

Esty, Katherine. “Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank” OD Practitioner, Vol. 43 No. 1, 2011, pp. 24-28

 

Ganle, John Kuumuori et. al. “Microcredit: Empowerment and Disempowerment of Rural Women in Ghana” WorldDevelopment Vol. 66 (2015), pp. 335-345

 

Goldberg, Nathanael. “Measuring the Impact of Microfinance: Taking Stock of What We Know” Grameen Bank USA Publication Series December 2005, pp. 1-56

 

Hilson, Gavin and Abigail Ackah-Baidoo. “Can Microcredit Services Alleviate Hardship in African Small-scale Mining Communities?” World Development Vol. 39, No. 7, 2011, pp. 1191-1203

Hollis, Aidan and Arthur Sweetman. “Microcredit: What can we Learn from the Past?” World Development Vol. 26, No. 10, 1998, pp. 1875-1891

Hoque, Mahmuda and Yoshihito Itohara. “Women Empowerment through Participation in Micro-Credit Programme: A Case Study from Bangladesh” Journal of Social Sciences 5(3), 2009, pp. 244-250

Hossain, Farhad ed. et. al. Microcredit and International Development (New York: Routledge) 2014

Jahiruddin ATM et. al. “Can Microcredit Worsen Poverty? Cases of Exacerbated Poverty in Bangladesh” Development in Practice, Volume 21, Number 8, November 2011, pp. 1109-1119

Karlan, Dean and Jonathan Zinman. “Microcredit in Theory and Practice: Using Randomized Credit Scoring for Impact Evaluation” Science 10 June 2011: Vol. 332 no. 6035 pp. 1278-1284

Keating, Christine, et. al. “The Rationality of Empowerment: Microcredit, Accumulation by Dispossession, and the Gendered Economy” Signs, Vol. 36, No. 1, Feminists Theorize International Political Economy Special Issue Editors Shrin M. Rai and Kate Bedford (Autumn 2010)m pp. 153-176

Khandker, Shahidur R. “Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh” The WorldBank Economic Review Vol. 19, No. 2, 2005, pp. 263-286

Li, Xia et. al. “The Welfare Impact of Microcredit on Rural Households in China” The Journal of Socio-Economics 40 (2011) pp. 404-411

Moyo, Dambisa. Dead Aid (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2009)

Murdoch, Jonathan. “The Microfinance Promise” Journal of Economic Literature Vol. XXXVII (December 1999), pp. 1569-1614

Oskarsson, Sven and Eric Ottosen. “Does Oil Still Hinder Democracy?”. Journal of Development Studies, vol. 46, no. 6 (2010), pp. 1067-1083

Pitt, Mark M. “Response to ‘The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence’” The Journal of Development Studies, 2014, Vol. 50, No. 4, pp. 605-610

Pitt, Mark M. and Shahidur R. Khandker. “The Impact of Group-Based Credit Programs on Poor Households in Bangladesh: Does the Gender of Participants Matter?” The Journal of Political Economy Vol. 106, Issue 5, October 1998, pp. 958-996

Rahman, Rafiqur and Qiang Nie. “The Synthesis of Grameen Bank Microfinance Approaches in Bangladesh” International Journal of Economics and Finance, Nov, 2011, Vol.3(6), p.207-218

Riddell, RC 2014 “Does foreign aid really work? An updated assessment”, Development Policy Centre Discussion Paper 33, Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University, Canberra.,  p. 1-61

Roodman, David and Johnathan Murdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 1-47

Ross, Michael L. “Does Oil Hinder Democracy?”. World Politics, vol. 53, no. 3 (April 2001), pp. 325-361

 

Sandberg, Joakim. “Mega-interest on Microcredit: Are Lenders Exploiting the Poor?” Journal of Applied Philosophy, Vol. 29, No. 3, 2012, pp. 169-185

Shankar, Savita. “Transaction costs in group microcredit in India” Management Decision Vol. 45 No. 8 2007, pp. 1331-1342

Schuler, S.R. & Hashemi, S.M. (1994). “Credit programs, women’s empowerment, and contraceptive use in rural Bangladesh” Studies in Family Planning, 25, 65-76

Sinclair, Hugh. Confessions of a Microfinance Heretic: How Microlending Lost its Way and Betrayed the Poor (San Francisco: Berrett-Kohler Publishers, Inc.) 2012

Yunus, Muhammad. Banker to the Poor: Microlending and the Battle Against World Poverty (New York: Public Affairs Books) 2007

 

Online Sources

“Quotes on Microfinance” Online: Microvisonmicro.org 2015, available at:

http://www.worldvisionmicro.org/downloads/quotes.pdf

 

“The World’s Billionaires” Online: Forbes March 2, 2015, available at:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/kerryadolan/2015/03/02/inside-the-2015-forbes-billionaires-list-facts-and-figures/

 

“Gap Between Rich and Poor ‘Keeps Growing’” Online: BBC May 21, 2015, available at:

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-32824770

 

“Mohamed Yunus: Bio” Online: Nelson Mandela Foundation 2015, available at:

https://www.nelsonmandela.org/content/page/muhammad-yunus-bio

 

Bateman, Milford “Microcredit has been a disaster for the poorest in South Africa” Online: The Guardian November 19, 2013, available at:

http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2013/nov/19/microcredit-south-africa-loans-disaster

 



[1] “Quotes on Microfinance” Online: Microvisonmicro.org 2015, available at:

http://www.worldvisionmicro.org/downloads/quotes.pdf

[2] “The World’s Billionaires” Online: Forbes March 2, 2015, available at:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/kerryadolan/2015/03/02/inside-the-2015-forbes-billionaires-list-facts-and-figures/

[3] “Gap Between Rich and Poor ‘Keeps Growing’” Online: BBC May 21, 2015 available at:

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-32824770

 

[4] Moyo, Dambisa. Dead Aid (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2009), p. 27-28

[5] Riddell, RC 2014 “Does foreign aid really work? An updated assessment”, Development Policy Centre Discussion Paper 33, Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University, Canberra., p. 1

[6] Ibid.

[7]Cons, Jason and Kasia Paprocki. “Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh” Third WorldQuarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2010, pp. 641

[8]Bateman, Milford “Microcredit has been a disaster for the poorest in South Africa” Online: The Guardian November 19, 2013, available at:

http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2013/nov/19/microcredit-south-africa-loans-disaster

 

[9]Bakthiari, Sadegh. “Microfinance and Poverty Reduction” International Business & Economics Research Journal, Volume 5, Number 12 (DECEMBER 2006), pp. 65

[10] Ibid., 66.

[11]Chowdhury, M. Jahangir Alam et. al. “The Impact of Micro-credit on Poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh” Progress in Development Studies October 2005, pp. 298

[12] Hollis, Aidan and Arthur Sweetman. “Microcredit: What can we Learn from the Past?” World Development Vol. 26, No. 10, 1998, pp. 1875-1891

[13] Ibid., 1888.

[14] Ibid., 1878.

[15] Ibid., 1879.

[16] Ibid., 1876.

[17]Bakthiari, Sadegh. “Microfinance and Poverty Reduction” International Business & Economics Research Journal, Volume 5, Number 12 (DECEMBER 2006), pp. 65

[18] Ibid., 66.

[19] Ibid., 67.

[20] Hossain, Farhad ed. et. al. Microcredit and International Development (New York: Routledge) 2014, p. 13

[21] Ibid.

[22] Esty, Katherine. “Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank” OD Practitioner, Vol. 43 No. 1, 2011, pp. 25

[23] Yunus, Muhammad. Banker to the Poor: Microlending and the Battle Against World Poverty (New York: Public Affairs Books) 2007, p. 43

[24] Rahman, Rafiqur and Qiang Nie. “The Synthesis of Grameen Bank Microfinance Approaches in Bangladesh” International Journal of Economics and Finance, Nov, 2011, Vol.3(6), p.208

[25] Esty, Katherine. “Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank” OD Practitioner, Vol. 43 No. 1, 2011, pp. 25

[26] Ibid.

[27] Yunus, Muhammad. Banker to the Poor: Microlending and the Battle Against World Poverty (New York: Public Affairs Books) 2007, p. 57

[28] Dowla, Asif. “In Credit We Trust: Building Social Capital by Grameen Bank in Bangladesh” The Journal of Socio-Economics 35 (2006), pp. 105

[29] Esty, Katherine. “Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank” OD Practitioner, Vol. 43 No. 1, 2011, pp. 25

[30]  Ibid.

[31] Ibid.

[32]Dowla, Asif. “In Credit We Trust: Building Social Capital by Grameen Bank in Bangladesh” The Journal of Socio-Economics 35 (2006), pp. 110

[33] Rahman, Rafiqur and Qiang Nie. “The Synthesis of Grameen Bank Microfinance Approaches in Bangladesh” International Journal of Economics and Finance, Nov, 2011, Vol.3(6), p.208

[34] Yunus, Muhammad. Banker to the Poor: Microlending and the Battle Against World Poverty (New York: Public Affairs Books) 2007, p. ix (introduction)

 

[35]Hossain, Farhad ed. et. al. Microcredit and International Development (New York: Routledge) 2014, p. 3

[36]Cons, Jason and Kasia Paprocki. “Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh” Third World Quarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2010, pp. 641

[37]Roodman, David and Jonathan Murdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 1

[38] Roodman, David and JonathanMurdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 2

[39] Khandker, Shahidur R. “Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh” The WorldBank Economic Review Vol. 19, No. 2, 2005, pp. 266

[40] Pitt, Mark M. and Shahidur R. Khandker. “The Impact of Group-Based Credit Programs on Poor Households in Bangladesh: Does the Gender of Participants Matter? The Journal of Political Economy Vol. 106, Issue 5, October 1998, pp. 988

[41] Khandker, Shahidur R. “Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh” The WorldBank Economic Review Vol. 19, No. 2, 2005, pp. 266

[42] Ibid.

[43] Ibid.

[44] Roodman, David and JonathanMurdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 2

[45]Khandker, Shahidur R. “Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh” The WorldBank Economic Review Vol. 19, No. 2, 2005, pp. 271

[46] Ibid.

[47] Schuler, S.R. & Hashemi, S.M. (1994). “Credit programs, women’s empowerment, and contraceptive use in rural Bangladesh” Studies in Family Planning, 25, 65-76

[48] Khandker, Shahidur R. “Microfinance and Poverty: Evidence Using Panel Data from Bangladesh” The WorldBank Economic Review Vol. 19, No. 2, 2005, p. 282

[49] Ibid., 283-284.

[50] Ibid., 284.

[51] Ibid.

[52] Chowdhury, M. Jahangir Alam et. al. “The Impact of Micro-credit on Poverty: Evidence from Bangladesh” Progress in Development Studies October 2005, pp. 298-309

[53] Murdoch, Jonathan. “The Microfinance Promise” Journal of Economic Literature Vol. XXXVII (December 1999), pp. 1569-1614

[54] Goldberg, Nathanael. “Measuring the Impact of Microfinance: Taking Stock of What We Know” Grameen Bank USA Publication Series December 2005, p. 19

[55] Roodman, David and Jonathan Murdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 3

[56] Ibid.

[57] Ross, Michael L. “Does Oil Hinder Democracy?”. WorldPolitics, vol. 53, no. 3 (April 2001), pp. 325-361

[58] Oskarsson, Sven and Eric Ottosen. “Does Oil Still Hinder Democracy?”. Journal of Development Studies, vol. 46, no. 6 (2010), pp. 1067-1083

[59]Roodman, David and Jonathan Murdoch. “The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence” Centre for Policy Development Working Paper No. 174, June 2009, p. 4

[60] Pitt, Mark M. “Response to ‘The Impact of Microcredit on the Poor in Bangladesh: Revisiting the Evidence’” The Journal of Development Studies, 2014, Vol. 50, No. 4, pp. 605

[61] Ibid., 40.

[62] Ibid., 40-41.

[63] Esty, Katherine. “Lessons from Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank” OD Practitioner, Vol. 43 No. 1, 2011, pp. 27

[64] Cons, Jason and Kasia Paprocki. “Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh” Third WorldQuarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2010, pp. 637

[65] Ibid., 638.

[66] Ibid.

[67] Ibid.. 638-639.

[68] Ibid.. 651.

[69] Ibid., 644.

[70]Ibid., 645.

[71] Jahiruddin ATM et. al. “Can Microcredit Worsen Poverty? Cases of Exacerbated Poverty in Bangladesh” Development in Practice, Volume 21, Number 8, November 2011, pp. 1111

[72] Ibid.

[73] Ibid., 1115.

[74] Ibid., 1119.

[75]Ibid.

[76] Hollis, Aidan and Arthur Sweetman. “Microcredit: What can we Learn from the Past?” World Development Vol. 26, No. 10, 1998, pp. 1888

[77] Ibid.

[78]Cons, Jason and Kasia Paprocki. “Contested Credit Landscapes: microcredit, self-help and self-determination in rural Bangladesh” Third WorldQuarterly, Vol. 31, No. 4, 2010, pp. 642

[79] Bakthiari, Sadegh. “Microfinance and Poverty Reduction” International Business & Economics Research Journal, Volume 5, Number 12 (December 2006), pp. 69

[80] Ibid., 68.

[81] Hollis, Aidan and Arthur Sweetman. “Microcredit: What can we Learn from the Past?” World Development Vol. 26, No. 10, 1998, pp. 1875-1891

[82] Shankar, Savita. “Transaction costs in group microcredit in India” Management Decision Vol. 45 No. 8 2007, pp. 1331

[83] Ibid., 1340.

[84] Ibid., 1341.

[85] Ibid.

[86] Bhatt, Nitin and Shui-Yan Tang. “Determinants of Repayment in Microcredit: Evidence from Programs in the United States” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research Vol. 26.2 June 2002, pp. 361

[87] Ibid.

[88] Ibid., 371.

[89] Ibid., 363.

[90] Ibid.. 373.

[91] Ibid., 367.

[92] Schuler, S.R. & Hashemi, S.M. (1994). “Credit programs, women’s empowerment, and contraceptive use in rural Bangladesh” Studies in Family Planning, 25, 65-76

[93] Bajracharya, Ashish and Sajeda Amin. “Microcredit and Domestic Violence in Bangladesh: An Exploration of Selection Bias Influences” Demography, (2013) 50: pp. 1819

[94] Ibid., 1838.

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FUTURE CALL LIST REVISTED

02 Aug

About three years ago I made some calls about the future in a piece called, “ Future Calls List Part 1”. After three years and a recent spell of heavy posts, perhaps it is time for a lighthearted look back. I am actually think I did very well but you can be the judge. I will try to post a part 2 in the future calls series shortly,

ENJOY..

 

Many of my readers have asked repeatedly for it, so here it is without delay. Obviously I doubt I will hit on all of them, but I heard as gambler you are doing well if you can hit at over 54%, I feel confident I will hit on at least 70% of the following…

Enjoy..AND PLEASE REMEMBER THAT THIS ENTRY IS CONSTRUED FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY!! IT IS MEANT TO BE HUMOURS AND A SATIRICAL TAKE ON PRESENT SOCIETY!!!

THINGS THAT WILL COME TO PASS AFTER JUNE 14, 2012

-Although I missed out on the initial Apple gravy train, Apple will hit $1000.00 dollars a share in the near future. With the iPhone 5 dropping soon, kids going back to school, Blackberry in turmoil, the launch of a new iPad things look gravy for Apple so buy ASAP and don’t be irked by the day-to-day swings. The next two quarters should be large for Apple.

ALMOST CORRECT: Despite the unscrupulous questionable tactics from several Wallstreet bears, Apple recovered from a mysterious drop of more than half its current value to set its highest share-price post (7-1) split of approximately $135/per share. That is good for a pre-split price of $945/share. Although that figure still represents a price of less than $1000/share, I have no doubt that barring any more nefarious tactics from the Wallstreet bears and dubious insiders that Apple will soon post a pre-split value of $1000/share.  

-Buy up all the Liquor Stocks you can. I have watch the market for the last year and can tell you that one of the most resilient assets to hold or liquor stocks like Diego and Budweiser (DEO and BUD). Although the market is rollercoastering what do people need in good time and bad? ALCOHOL. Somebody will always be celebrating or drinking there sorrows away, either way you’re a winner.

CORRECT: This is a big correct as several liquor stocks have not only posted record highs but have also outpaced the S&P over the same period. For example, Budweiser has gone from $90/share since July of 2012 to over $125/share as of July of 2015. My entertainment advice? Continue to buy, because Liquor is a product consumed in both good times and bad, and thus barring some kind of contamination the future is bright. 

-With the baby-boomers getting up there, the only safer bet then them watching the news 24/7 is them needing more pharmaceutical drugs. So be smart and grab some Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson and Proctor and Gamble while you can.

CORRECT: Correct, as these pharmaceutical stocks have done very well in the three years since I have posted. For example, over this period Johnson and Johnson has gone up over 30% in value with respect to its share price.

-If you can get Lionsgate stock (the film company) anywhere in the 11 dollar range buy it a shit load of it and hold it until the conclusion of this Hunger Games craze.

CORRECT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!: This is a massive correct and I am kicking myself for not taking more of my own advice on this. As of July 23rd 2015 Lionsgate’s share price sits at over 38 dollars a share, representing an increase of over 300%!!!!! Will this trend continue? Well the final Hunger Games chapter comes out later this year so one could continue to ride the wave until then, after that? Unknown.

-GOOGLE!! Now initially I had Google outperforming APPLE and reaching $1000.00 a share first, however a couple of things have since irked my confidence. Google’s odd proposed stock-split, its suspect diversification into things like self-driving cars (which could be a big hit, I know I will buy one), increased competition from Apple with respect to its navigation programs, increased competition from Yahoo with Yahoo’s picture based search engines and the increasingly difficult task of managing advertisements on mobile devices (a problem for Google since the majority of its revenue comes from ads), are all reasons to be weary of Google. None the less, in an information age where the internet is everything and Google (for the time being at least) is the internet, feel confident that Google will hit $800.00 a share at some point in the medium future. If you want to be smart wait for the proposed split and then buy it up like a biscuit in a bowl full of Gofer gravy.

CORRECT: Google’s post 2-1 share price as of July 23rd currently sits at $650/share giving it a pre-split value of $1350 well above my call of $800/share. Hope you bought.

-Lindsay Lohan’s death is on the horizon. I feel bad because the girl has talent, but way too many factors are working against her (i.e. jail, drug and alcohol abuse problems, bad parents, the press stalking her relentless, questionable finances, the shame of being relegated to do life time etc.) and so it is only a matter of time. I don’t know how what the ramifications are with respect to this latest Porsche crashing incident, but you can believe they won’t be good.  Also, WHAT THE HELL IS SHE DOING STILL GETTING BEHIND THE WHEEL OF ANY MOTOR VEHICLE???? You have a fucking assistant, let that schmuck drive!!!

THANKFULLY INCORRECT: Not sure what I was thinking posting such a grizzly prediction but thankfully I was incorrect and I am happy to report that Lindsay Lohan is alive and well.

-Tila Tequila’s death is also on the horizon, probably a lot sooner then Lohan’s

THANKFULLY INCORRECT: Again, I am grateful this was incorrect and not sure what I was thinking posting this morbidity.

-Charlie Sheen will tragically die within the next 5 years.

THANKFULLY INCORRECT: Please see above.

-This will be a big year for Leonardo DiCaprio. Depending on how Gatsby goes he might win his long overdue Oscar this year.

CORRECT: Actually this is more of partially correct, Leo has continued a tremendous run on the silver screen despite the fact that he did not receive an award for Gatsby or Wolf of Wallstreet. The gold is still coming though Leo fans, hang in there.

-The film Rock of Ages will tank miserably.

CORRECT: The movie looked terrible from the get go, and I guess the majority of people felt the same way.

-The film That’s My Boy will do well enough that Adam Sandler will continue to be allowed to make movies. God I hate the movie industry.

CORRECT: Since July 2012 Adam Sandler has released a string of terrible movies, each more terrible than the last and somehow continues to make movies. While my hatred for the movie industry that lets him operate continues I was extremely pleased when the Sony leak revealed that even industry bigwigs where tiring of Sandler’s pathetic performances: http://gawker.com/leaked-asshole-adam-sandler-demanded-200-million-ca-1673559291

 

-The movie industry will wonder why receipts are down despite the fact that they have pumped out nothing but terrible un-funny comedies (see above), monotonous sequels and comic-franchise reboots.

CORRECT: Before the sudden box office explosion largely the result of Furious 7 and the Jurassic Park reboot, sequel, prequel or whatever it was articles like this http://variety.com/2015/film/news/box-office-drops-5-in-2014-whats-behind-the-fall-1201389634/ commenting on box office woes were getting pretty routine since mid-2012. Here’s an idea Hollywood how about something original instead of comic book movies reboot, sequel, prequels and the dreaded half-sequel (a term I have coined for movies greedy execs make into twos just to capitalize on short term dollars. Prominent examples include Harry Potters Deathly Hallows Part 1 and 2, Twilight’s two part conclusions that I am proud I do not know the names of, and the Hunger Games’ Mockingjay Part 1 and 2. Wait each of those movies made over $500 million?? I guess the short term dollars are pretty sweet, but still I swear it turns off fans in the long run).

-The flop of Jon Carter will only inspire movie studios to “stick to what works” and pump out the same old crap. GOD I HATE THE MOVIE INDUSTRY!!!!!!

CORRECT: Big flop by John Carter and its back to the Harry Potters Deathly Hallows Part 1 and 2, Twilight’s two part conclusions that I am proud I do not know the names of, and the Hunger Games’ Mockingjay Part 1 and 2 for studio execs.

-Taylor Lautner will come out as Gay

INCORRECT: Ok technically while this person has not come out yet, I still maintain they will. But gay or straight more power to everyone, I just want to know now.

-Jason Derullo will come out as Gay

INCORRECT: Please see above.

-Missy Elliot will come out as Gay/Lesbian

INCORRECT: Please see above.

-Hugh Jackman will continue to live as a straight man despite being Gay

UNKNOWN: Please see above.

-Rhianna and Chris Brown will get back together (if they are not already)

CORRECT: Look at who called this. Well anyone who was paying attention knew this was coming as it was obvious she was still in too him (wow, cannot believe I wrote that last sentence).

-If the Miami Heat lose another NBA final, Erik Spolestra will be fired quicker then you can say Pat Riley

INCORRECT: Although the Heat won two more titles, they did lose one more which caused James to head back to Cleveland but Spo still remains the head coach of what remains of the big three.

-If Miami loses again, expect at least one of the big three to be moved

CORRECT: The biggest of the biggest three left (something else I prominently called) and headed back to Cleveland.

-The only way the public forgives Lebron James and gets behind him again is if he somehow goes back to Cleveland

CORRECT: Wow, did I ever cash in on these last three calls, LeBron went home and everyone loves him again.

-Mike Brown will be fired as Lakers coach either after this season on next

CORRECT: Ok I feel bad taking credit for this one, it was just too obvious.

-Larry Brown has a good chance of replacing Mike Brown as Lakers coach

INCORRECT: Big swing and a miss here, not sure where I was coming from here.

-Phil Jackson will be named coach of the New York Knicks

INCORRECT: How close, he was named GM (why?) and the Knicks are still terrible (of course).

-Amar’e Stoudamire will not last 2 more seasons with the Knicks

CORRECT: Ok so technically incorrect, but I am counting this because after only another hald

-Mikel Pokarvovs (sp?) of the New Jersey/Brooklyn Nets will be a spectacular failure as the Russian will soon lose complete interest in the venture.

CORRECT: Not only have the Nets been a spectacular failure under Mr. Pokarov’s tenure, he has welched on his get married or win a title in 5 years vow and there is much speculation that he is also fed up and looking to sell his squad. Good times had by none in the Brooklyn area.

-The Bulls roster as is will never compete for a championship despite their regular season runs. Either Derrick Rose will continue to disappoint come playoff time or they will need an established big man who can work the paint (both offensively and defensively).

CORRECT: Derrick Rose has continued to disappoint (although more via injury then fizzling in the playoffs) and the Bulls have yet to even compete in an NBA Finals.

-Dwight Howard has (mercifully) played his last season in Orlando.

CORRECT: Wow, it is amazing to think that Howard was still on the Magic just three years ago. Since then not only did he spurn them, but he spurned the Lakers in high fashion. Spurn on Dwight.

-Peyton Manning’s tenure in Denver will be largely disappointing.

CORRECT: Although Manning garnered more then his fair share of hoopla and press in Denver people still believed he was a Championship QB. Like I have always said, when it comes to the playoffs Manning isn’t even the best Manning at Sunday dinner.

-The Jags will regret not landing Tim Tebow. Either that or it was there plan all along to get the hell out of Jacksonville.

CORRECT: I am not sure what the Jags are doing but winning in any way shape or form has been out of the question. At least had they signed Tebow they could have gotten the attendance dollars but who knows what they are doing down there in Jacksonville.

-Adrian Peterson will be finished as a running back within 2 seasons.

UNKNOWN: This is unknown because AP was suspended all of last year due to domestic violence issues. I guess the true test will come this year when he has claimed he will go for 2500 yards!

-Terrell Owens will die under tragic circumstances. Feel bad for the guy, he had tremendous talent but could never hold it in check under the medias’ bear-baiting to find and keep a home in the NFL.

INCORRECT: What was I thinking with these morbid predictions. Shame on me for sure.

-Robert Griffen 3 will be a spectacular failing in the NFL

CORRECT: Even in the height of RG3’s hype I never bought in because he is the typical “mobile” quarterback who thinks that his athletic ability from college will translate to the pros. Sorry RG3 the game is too fast and makes you prone to injury.

-The Patriots will beat the Tennesse Titans in Week 1. BET THE HOUSE ON IT

CORRECT: They are unstoppable to start the season especially if the lost the last game of the season before.

-The Dallas Cowboys will lose to the Giants in Week 1.

INCORRECT: The Cowboys actually beat the Giants and then went on to one of many 8-8 seasons.

-The Patriots winning after a loss and Dallas losing any big game it needs to win shall continue to be the safest bets in sports unless Dallas’ secondary has a miraculous shift. Claiborne might be the spark.

CORRECT: Please see above.

-Despite losing in week 1 Dallas will go on to have a good season.

INCORRECT: 8-8, good but not great. Actually not even good.

-The Toronto Maple Leafs sign Robert Luongo.

INCORRECT

-Wilmer Valderamma will continue to score with chicks way out of his league and only cement his status as this generation’s Scott Baio.

CORRECT!!!: Big Will continues to slay starlets and is currently shacked up with media darling Demi Lovato. Keep getting them checks Wilmer.

-Taylor Swift will finally get called out for her dubious relationships (see Taylor Lautner, John Mayer) and lose the fake victim status she accrued when Kanye West rushed the stage.

CORRECT: Ahhhhhhhhh and I love it! I saw through Taylor Swift the moment I saw her. She is like a Milk Dud, sweet on the outside, poison on the inside. It was only a matter of time before her true opportunistic persona came shining through and people started to dislike her and said phony persona.

-Taylor Swift will make an album about it that will sound the exact same as all of her albums and all of her songs.

CORRECT: Well apparently they do not dislike her that much as her latest album 1989 has sold millions of copies and is the biggest seller of 2014 and probably going to be for 2015 as well.

-The Miss World, Miss America, Miss Universe or whatever else pagents that are run by Donald Trump will either be exposed as frauds or the scandal will force Donald Trump to give up ownership. Trump will be sad as he will lose control of something he truly covets, a breeding ground for potential mistresses.

CORRECT: How sweet was this call, got it in right at the buzzer as the scorn people heaped on Donald Trump for his opinion of Mexican’s through his harem, whore-pit into complete disarray and off the major networks.

-The next big trend in music will be producing songs that were meant to sound like they belong in the 80s.

CORRECT: Lot of songs, some of the biggest continue to be heavily 80s inspired. Too many to name, too lazy to look up, but feel free to do so yourself.

-Bill Hader will be officially recognized at the funniest man alive (long overdue by the way).

INCORRECT: Although he is in the runaway hit Trainwreck with another of my more recent calls, Amy Schumer, he has not lived up to my hope or promise. 

-Dark Knight Rises will be a massive hit, but will miss the mark set by Dark Knight.

CORRECT: While Worldwide Dark Knight Rises just beat Dark Knight, on the domestic side it was no contest. But I guess this could go either way.

-Megan Fox’s career is over.

CORRECT: Boy has it ever. That Turtles movie was torture for the senses and I have not seen or heard of her in anything else.

-Brooklyn Decker will come to her senses and leave perennial loser Andy Roddick.

INCORRECT: While Andy Roddick remains a perennial loser on the tennis court, or retired, he is an example to all of how to maximize one’s accomplishments. His one tennis major has provided him with more money, fame, and punching-over-weight encounters with more high-end women than if he was the one who cured Polio and landed that plane in the Hudson on the same day.

-The marriage of Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban will not last.

INCORRECT: Good for them, another ghoulish prediction that went nowhere. Although something tells me something might have been different if Jimmy Fallon had stepped his game up.

-Serena Williams will lose her standing as sports media darling and she will become the most disliked athlete in professional sports.

SEMI-CORRECT: This was well on its way to coming true after Serena through a tirade at the Australian Open some time back. However, after some apologizing and a really hot win streak she seems to be back in the public’s good books.

-Tiger Woods will no more then one more major.

CORRECT: And the incredible fall of Tiger Woods continues. Not only did his “return” not turn out the way the media had anticipated, he has fallen to the point where he does not even finish minor tournaments anymore. Some say his personal life got the best of him, but I will note that he had not won a major in the year before his wife bashed his car windows in. Even with the hype behind you, when you are done, you are done…plus its golf so who cares.

-Reality T.V. will undergo a tough phase due to the oversaturation of the medium (especially with this recent wave of knocks like the Choice, Glasshouse etc.). Even ratings heavyweight American Idol will continue to suffer. Score one for the Golden Age of television.

CORRECT: This is actually one of my favorite predictions that same true. I guess there is only so much contrived, formulaic, and pathetic TV that people will watch before enough is enough. In the case of American Idol after that Taylor Hicks season it was all downhill when people with zero charisma and bland looks began to routinely win the competition. Philip Philips? Please.

-Despite the re-vamp of Simon Cowell’s X-factor it will remain a disappointment.

CORRECT: What a train wreck this show was. Even the Hail Mary of hiring a Kardashian (no talent + no talent = success?) did not work as the show was cancelled in short order.

-Despite the support of TBS ratings for Conan O’Brien’s talk show will continue to dwindle until he is embarrassingly cancelled.

SEMI-CORRECT: I feel sorry for Conan because he is talented and funny, but is his show even still on? If the other networks had any sense one of them would hire him to go up against Fallon because the no talents currently in place (i.e. Jimmy Kimmel) are getting killed.

-Jay Leno will remain the undisputed king of late-night (Ryan that one’s for you).

CORRECT: Not only did he remain the undisputed king of late-night until his retirement, his successor Jimmy Fallon continues to hold it down for NBC.

-David Stern will finally release his dubious grip on the NBA and finally resign under mounting pressure for his debacles.

CORRECT: While I thought David Stern would have been forced out with his highly dubious nixing of the Chris Paul to LA trade that set the Lakers franchise back decades, Stern has able to keep his shaky hand on the wheel for a little while longer until he resigned about a year after.

-Someone will die as a result of an on ice injury in hockey in the near future. Months of coverage by the sports media will follow.

INCORRECT: While this has not happened yet, I am sure that given the mounting violence in hockey, this tragedy and the ensuing media storm are still on the horizon.

-Ditto as the above for professional football.

INCORRECT: see above.

-Carly Rae Jespen (or whatever her name is ) will displace Tom Cochrane as the greatest Canadian one hit wonder ever. Unless of course she sadly “goes slutty” and moves to the United States. SEMI-CORRECT: Hard to say on this one. While yes, Carly Rae has not had a hit anywhere close to the level of her break-out song, she still has had some other small scale hits. I think she has also moved to the States, but the jury is still out on this one.

-People Magazine will come under fire for being racist due to it never selecting a minority as its ‘Sexiest Man Alive’ (only one time in the publication’s history has the title gone to a non-white).

CORRECT: Not only has the Bachelor taken heat for not having any minorities in the lead role in over 20 seasons, I have heard some rumblings about the same complaint with respect to People magazine. Of course these rumblings could just be in my head because the magazine continues to churn out its annual magazine with forgettable fly-by-night white men on its cover.

-Despite the recent swirl over head injuries in the NFL the game might change to accommodate more precautions, but will not lose any interest by audiences. Furthermore, the recent worry that athletes will be deterred from playing football thereby leading to some kind of shortage on the supply side will be a non-factor given  the massive talent pool in the United States and Canada. Somehow Bill Simmons and Malcolm Gladwell talked about each of these issues as problems but did not make the link.

CORRECT: While the state of concussions in the NFL is still as pronounced as ever getting to the point of the Seau family being banned from speaking at his NFL Hall of Fame induction ceremony, the sport continues to be a rating powerhouse and the centerpiece of American sports.

-The Office will be mercifully cancelled by NBC (about 3 years too late).

CORRECT: The poor Office, it was an amazing and groundbreaking concept when Ricky Gervais first invented it and the American knock off was pretty good too, at least for a while. The last few seasons were like torture and thankfully it was put out its misery.

-The overuse of Sheldon Cooper on CBS’s Big Bang Theory will lead to audience exhaustion and cause an early end to the show.

INCORRECT: Through some clever tricks which include the steady introduction of new characters and some semi-cliffhangers the show has kept itself going and remains a ratings force. I would point out though that this was the first year in a while Jim Parsons was not nominated for an Emmy for his role on the show. Maybe the critical exhaustion comes first?

-Oprah Winfrey’s OWN television network will continue to disappoint leading to its dismemberment. A return to her old program is possible.

SEMI-CORRECT: Although OWN has struggled and Oprah herself has admitted to the networks troubles, it creaks on so the jury is still out on this call.

-Every solo project undertaken by the members of ‘Jersey Shore’ will fail miserably.

CORRECT: Another one of my favorite calls. Not only did the show go on for far too long and the cast become incredibly lame and their antics tame (seriously moving plants around in the house was a prank?), but their spin-offs were even worse. The Show With Vinny? Who was the genius behind that one? 

-Barrack Obama wins re-election as President barring some massive scandal.

CORRECT: Sensational.

-In Canada (where I am from) the ruling Conservative Party will continue to rule until the two prominent left wing parties, the NDP and the Liberals, amalgamate.

CORRECT: The Conservative part of Canada continues to lead the Canadian government despite an ever growing list of scandals and stupid decisions. How do they keep office despite these setbacks and the fact that they have not had a surplus in any of their eight years in office (pretty shabby for a party that prides itself on economics and slashing social services)? Well by the age old tactic of blaming immigrants and visible minorities of course! Following the Mayor Quimby playbook the Conservatives have successfully been able to distract Canadians to the point that despite all of their failings they remain in office. Of course, the other problem keeping a failed government in power is that there is no alternative, or rather no definitive alternative. As many of you know Canada has two leftist parties, the Liberals and the Extreme-liberals known as the NDP. Unfortunately, these two parties have split the left-wing vote to the point that it divides most Canadians and continues to allow a party that lives on dividing Canadians to keep office. Sadly, until the Liberals and NDP amalgamate and unite the left, the Conservatives are likely to keep their hold on the government be it in minority or majority form. I have been saying this for years and while the idea has gained traction, there has not been enough traction by the left to get this done. Here is the e-mail I sent to both the Liberals and the NDP 7 years ago imploring them to unite:

Hello,
 
My name is Samir XXXXX I voted Liberal in this 2008 election and am a recent law school graduate. I am writing because I was wondering why the Liberal Party of Canada does not merge parties with NDP. It seems like the most logical thing to do, instead of dividing the left wing votes and allowing the conservatives to keep rolling into Office the two parties should merge, possibly including the Green party, and take the country back from the Conservative agenda,
 
Please try and accomplish this, Canada needs it,
 
Sincerely,

-The four evil masters of the Media Universe, Adam Sandler, Howard Stern, Seth Macfarlane and the phoniest man in show business Ryan Seacrest will continue to put out terrible projects that will rake in millions in undeserved income until the populace realizes that these guys are talentless, shallow hacks who don’t deserve anything!! I can’t wait for that day, but I can feel it coming!! Bring on the media revolution!!!

SADLY CORRECT: Before you ask me to run out and buy a lottery ticket, really this one was not hard to call. It makes me feel awful and this is definitely my least favorite prediction that came true. Each of the aforementioned individuals continues to reap millions despite their hack-ish nature and no talent. More specifically:

-Howard Stern with no talent still rakes in millions;

- Adam Sandler with no talent and being not funny in the least continues to see his projects green-lit and reaps millions (although I absolutely loved him getting ripped in those leaked Sony e-mails);

 Seth Macfarlane who has a somewhat talented skill set, continues to engage in projects he selects are just awful, repetitive, and vile;

-And of course Ryan Seacrest who although is going down with the American Idol ship, continues to be a media darling despite his phony persona and lack of talent all while earning more money than he should (which should be no more than 5 cents/hr) and scoring with women way out his league (which should be no hotter than Roseanne).

Again this is a sad state of affairs. And while I had hoped that in the near future these no talents would have been removed from the public sphere, they still remain earning more gobs of money and attention that they definitely should not be. Is there hope in the future? Well I am an optimist, so I would say yet, but with the ever growing expansion of the no talent fame-whore spectrum which includes Chris Harrison, the Kardashians, Jimmy Kimmel etc., when and where real talent will stand up and take back the light is yet to be seen. Of course I am not saying real talent is out there but as a society we definitely need more of consistent and proportional fame-to-talent ratio.

Until next time, and the next call list.

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Blown Away: How American Gun Control Remains Elusive

29 Jun

So here we are again. I never thought another incident as disgusting and senseless as Sandy Hook could happen again but here we are once more. In fact, here we have been since the prominence of the 1999 Columbine shootings which has helped to spark well over 160 mass shooting incidents in the United States claiming approximately 500 lives since that time.[1] However, what really shocks the core is that while these mass shootings grab the headlines, tens of thousands of American lives have been lost over that same span in a far more understated yet more catastrophic manner. For example, according to the Atlantic which quotes a figure from the Centers for Disease Control; in 2011 alone there were 32, 251 firearms related fatalities in the United States. Process that for a second…in 2011 alone.[2] And while that astonishing figure is the last one available by the Centers for Disease Control, the current per capita death rate attributable to firearms in the U.S. is close to 4 per 100,000 Americans or as President Obama articulates it, “297x more than Japan, 49x more than France, 33x more than Israel.”[3]

It is admirable that President Obama in the wake of the recent Charleston church shootings, where nine people were brutally slaughtered in a historic house of God, would take such a visible and seemingly entrenched stance against gun violence, but after the never ending stream of these incidents and the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans in just the last sixteen years alone, to quote the President himself, “Expressions of sympathy aren’t enough. It’s time we do something about this.”[4]

Unfortunately, for whatever reason be it desensitization, the right-wing lobby, the media (both left and right), the political system in general, or just plain apathy, the incidents like those of Columbine, Sandy Hook, and now Charleston play out in a sort of depressing lifecycle. I have enumerated this lifecycle below:

Stage 1-SHOCK AND AWE: First, you have the shock of the event followed by seemingly endless coverage of the of the incident which usually dominates headlines for about two weeks or so (probably less now thanks to the 24hr news cycle).

 Stage 2-CALL TO ACTION: This period is followed by outrage, demands for reform, an examination of the statistics pertaining to firearms related deaths, and a superficial look into the causes of gun violence.

Stage 3- KILLER BIO AND MANIFESTO: While the killer is usually identified at the outset, the next period post-incident is comprised of an expanded profile on the killer, his modus operandi, and depending on his race possible motives for his crimes.

Stage 4- THE GUN LOBBY STRIKES BACK: After enough time has passed the gun lobby which include media members and politicians who share the same agenda emerge from seclusion and begin to offer up counter arguments for the incident from their toolkit which largely depend on the shooters race (i.e. white= lone shooter and/or mental illness and/or defending his country; black= no good thug and/or systemic discrimination; Muslim = terrorist) and the ability to deflect from the real issue of gun violence with dubious sidebars about the media’s role in fostering gun violence and other distractions like for example the recent focus on the type of language the President uses when describing his outrage over firearms related fatalities and racism in America instead of the actual issues that need detail examination like the number of firearms related fatalities and racism in America.

Stage 5- BACK TO BUSINESS: The incident begins to fade from prominence with time (and of course with each passing incident this time period gets shorter) and the last references to the most current incident are usually swept away by the aforementioned gun lobby with an appeal to antiquated Constitutional provisions such as the right to bear arms (On a side-note how is this even a logical argument? Is this even the same period with the same realities as colonial times? Are the firearms of today even remotely comparable to those of that historical period? To these types of arguments I would say that methods of amending the constitution were enacted deliberately and precisely for this purpose so that outdated provisions, like the universal right to bear arms, could be extricated when they no longer had any relevance in contemporary society).

Stage 6- KILLER UPDATE (OPTIONAL): In the end all that are left are periodic updates about the killer(s)’s current place in the judicial process, which is contingent of course on whether or not they are still alive.

What comes next after the latest Columbine, Sandy Hook, or Charleston? Well as ridiculous as it may sound, it is simply on to the next one. The shock and outrage? Gone and on to the next one. The calls for reform? Gone and on to the next one. Our concern for the victim’s families and our promise to do better? Gone and on to the next one.

Again, I never thought that after Sandy Hook where over two dozen people, 20 of them children, where brutally murdered in a school that there could even be a question about the need for a total overhaul of the gun control regime in America but amazingly, tragically, here we are again. Politicians, including the President, and proponents of firearms reform blame the gun lobby for the lack of reform, but that can no longer be used as any sort of excuse not to try and attempt to use logic to defeat the backwards mentality that has somehow permeated and become a fixture of right-wing gun enthusiasts; that America is somehow a safer nation with more guns in the hands of more Americans. The facts speak for themselves as currently there are 88 guns for every 100 Americans and yet America has by far the highest gun related fatality rate of any First World nation and overall one of the highest per capita firearm related fatality rates in the entire world. Yet, somehow this ridiculous argument that more guns are the answer to gun violence continues to be a fixture of the gun lobby’s position of why guns are good for America.

Of course it is not only right wing media, lobbyists, and politicians who share this distorted view as actor Vince Vaughn recently came out and shared his thoughts about why having guns is good:

“Of course. You think the politicians that run my country and your country don’t have guns in the schools their kids go to? They do….And we should be allowed the same rights. Banning guns is like banning forks in an attempt to stop making people fat.”[5]

The kind of luminary thinking possessed by Vaughn illustrates why actors should stick to acting, and Vaughn in particular should stick to making sub-par comedies. Banning guns may not solve gun violence in totality but applying this type of simplistic logic that Vaughn advocates to other world problems would result in attempting to rid the World of its environmental concerns with more pollution, or solving hunger by starving people more, or even attempting to rid crime by ensuring that more criminals are on the street, or better yet criminals with guns on the street. You get the picture.

Of course the underlying principle of what Vaugh is saying ties into what a lot of likeminded people think as well; that guns do not kill people, people kill people. While this is technically true, unfortunately how these people kill people is by using guns and so even under that bizarre rationale how can it be wise to advocate for more firearms and even more incredibly, no new restrictions on gun ownership and gun control.

However, even accepting the ludicrous premise that guns do not kill people and that more guns make you and your family safer (even though statistics clearly demonstrate that one who owns a gun is much more likely to kill a family member or someone they know then any kind of exterior threat), the problem with any sort of more guns and guns in the right hands are better for society is this; what happens in the event your gun is lost or stolen. Although the gun debate has been raging for nearly two decades, this seemingly basic fact does not appear to have made its way into the debate. Taking Sandy Hook for example, the killer was able to secure his weapon by stealing it from its “rightful” owner and then turning the weapon on dozens of innocent people. So gun lobby I ask you, what then? If the whole pro-gun inniative is premised on the idea that more guns in the right hands will prevent gun violence and guns don’t kill people, people kill people; I ask you what happens when a gun in the “right” hands falls into the wrong hands? The answer is simple, it becomes a catalyst which exacerbates the current firearms epidemic in the United States and fosters a nation that not only has to look out for the wrong guys, but the “right” guys as well. And here we are again.

As such, the aforementioned circumstance coupled with the ludicrous regulations pertaining to gun ownership currently in place and the relative ease with which one can acquire a gun particularly at trade shows and the like, makes any desire to realistically improve firearms related fatalities in the United States an absolute impossibility. So long as the issue remains deadlocked in debate premised on one side with passion over logic tragedies like Sandy Hook and Charleston are (tragically) here to stay. Of course the real tragedy is that a country as progressive and advanced as America in almost every way has chosen this issue to remain locked (and loaded) in the past. 

Although I could have ended with the preceding paragraph, just because the issue of gun control remains in gridlock does not mean there is nothing conscious members of can do. I would implore people passionate about gun reform to encourage government and gun makers for change. This change does not only have to be general in nature but can include imploring them to ban the sale of certain high caliber and/or high impact firearms. Perhaps the instillation of something as simple as a 3 or 4 digit tumbler lock on the manufacture of all new guns is something we can all hope and push for until real legislative change becomes a reality. In truth what kind of world do we live in where our telephones have greater security for the individual then our firearms? 

**As an extra final note, is there any particular reason that the media and society as a whole feel that the best course of action in the wake of one of these tragedies is to immediately put the spotlight on the shooter(s)? To me it seems obvious that these deranged individuals often commit these crimes simply for notoriety and fame due to their marginalized/outcast status. Maybe instead of focusing on them and, in a way, glorifying them we can simply identify them as “deranged male” or “deranged female” during the reporting of these incidents and put the focus on where it should be, the victims, the impact to us as a society, and firearms control. It seems strange that the same logic behind turning the camera away from morons who rush sports fields (i.e. to avoid providing them the attention they seek), is somehow absent under much more serious circumstances.   



[1] http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/25/us/25shooters.html?_r=0

[2] http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/01/americas-top-killing-machine/384440/

[3] http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/21/obama-gun-control-debate-twitter

[4]ibid.

[5] http://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/jun/01/vince-vaughn-guns-in-schools-will-prevent-mass-shootings

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Why I Won’t Date the Girl Who Travels: A Guide to Happiness

17 Apr

Recently, I came upon a piece in the Huffington post entitled Don’t Date a Girl Who Travels in the Huffington post http://www.huffingtonpost.com/adi-zarsadias/dont-date-a-girl-who-travels_b_4704794.htmlwhich also provided a link to the author’s webpage.

The piece itself is a sarcastic and sort of tongue and cheek piece about why one should not date a girl who travels because this girl is too busy enjoying life and doing her to be interested in a conventional relationship or any societal norm in truth. After reading the piece and viewing the author’s website it is clear that while she is certainly doing her, there was also something about this piece and the type of person(s) exemplified by the writing that prompted me to write.

In case you have not read the piece, the author jabs at the most onerous aspects of traditional society and these of course include; having gainful employment, practicing within your field of study, a rooted existence, being there for ones’ family etc.- all in an attempt to sell or at least justify to herself a life whereby one flies by the seat of their pants, has no attachment to anything or anyone, and does nothing aside from what they want to do and when they want to do it. Upon reading this work, I could not help but think, ‘you know who else wants type of lifestyle? A petulant child’.  However I thought that the difference between being an adult and being a child is that the former is supposed to have some sense and some responsibility. Do not get me wrong though, while I agree with some of the things the author advocate such as travel, not being pigeon-holed with one’s degree, and trying new and interesting things, it is the tone and the overall message that I took issue with. Why you may ask? It probably has something to do with the seemingly endless “me-first” and “do-you messages” we are regularly bombarded with despite the fact that this type of mentality rarely (if ever) leads to any sort of lasting happiness. If it did the world would not be filled with so many dissatisfied and unhappy people and society as a whole would not constantly be demanding change.

In this day and age it is not uncommon to come upon certain people who seem obsessed with perpetually trying new things. Again, there is absolutely nothing wrong with trying new things, but it is the obsession aspect that is both peculiar and troubling. In my experience the common thread amongst these sorts of people is that they are desperate to find meaning and enjoyment from life externally without first looking and building themselves up from within. Somehow they have convinced themselves that the relentless pursuit of any and all things that may tickle their fancy will miraculously give them the inner peace and satisfaction they crave without actually focusing on what actually renders happiness. And that magical key is of course inner strength. Once again, in no way am I against new experiences, but life is truly about balance and as such to constantly seek fulfilment externally is to commit yourself to a life of soul searching without having first having a soul. There is a reason why people who do as they please are never truly happy and always looking for more, and the reason is simple; life and happiness are not rooted in people living for themselves and their selfish passions.

I am always amazed when people who can be so accomplished and so well educated are still so mystified by what it takes to be happy and what the meaning of life is. For whatever reason it seems elemental that happiness and the meaning of life are not two separate explorations, but rather that they are intrinsically linked and that the answer for both is to do for others while simultaneously trying to lead as moral (though not necessarily religious) a life as possible.

You may call me naïve or you may call me misguided (or worse), but the proof for which I advocate is all around. There is a reason why some poor and rich people are happy, and there is also a reason why some poor and rich people are not-and the reason is this; those people who are in life only for the pursuit of their self-interests-whether it be money, business, material goods, sexual conquests, intoxicants, social standing, acts of intolerance, hatred and/or oppression or whatever-are more often than not left sad, bitter, damaged, and unfulfilled precisely because life is not about doing you or living for oneself. Rather it is about doing for those around you and governing yourself in a manner that enables you to proudly look into the mirror each day. The peace that comes from, as I like to call it, living happy enables one to first have inner strength as their foundation and from there they are able to sensibly prioritize their life and truly appreciate and enjoy all the things and adventures life has to offer. In essence, they are prepared to attain what so many people are lacking from their lives; satisfaction. In essence happiness can be determined simply by examining what type of person one is or chooses to be; a me-first taker or an others first giver. The latter coupled with a moral compass is almost always a happy and fulfilled person and you do not have to take my word for it as the proof is all around us.

In truth what also compelled me to write on this topic is that there was also a story published recently about a person, not too dissimilar from the author of the Don’t Date piece. This young lady had recently died attempting a very bizarre yet supposedly cathartic experience in South America http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2941085/Jennifer-Logan-dies-drinking-tea-Peru-shaman-ceremony.html.

This person, much like many of the chronically unsatisfied who seek validation externally, was on one of her many self-exploration trips when she decided to enter into some sort of bizarre tribal ritual whereby she ingested something deep in the jungles of South America that was to supposed conduce vomiting and at the end of the vomiting spell, give her greater perspective in life. Tragically, she did not stop vomiting and after a prolonged vomiting fit she died right there in the middle of the Peruvian jungle leaving her life lost and her family forever in mourning. Although it is fortunate that most me-first people do not perish under tragic circumstances, what makes this tragedy relevant to my larger point is that still, often enough, the mindset which pushes people to do as they please not only costs them their chance at true happiness and time on this earth, but forever robs their family and those who love them of their peace and happiness as well as they are forced to spend a lifetime grieving over one person’s reckless (and selfish) decisions. In truth doing you often has far more reaching consequences than just you, and it is something everyone should keep in mind.

I will close by stating that happiness and fulfilment in the truest sense is absolutely possible even in the society and time in which we live, but that again, it does not come externally or in the relentless and/or reckless pursuit of whatever one desires. The world is a beautiful and wonderful place filled with many interesting experiences but only from the practice of doing for others and living a moral life will one ever be able to not only fully appreciate the world, but derive happiness from it.

As such, I will say to everyone live happy, have conviction, and do for others as much as possible; be it donating your time and/or money to those less fortunate, preparing a meal with your own hands for your family and friends, be good to your spouse or partner even when you may not feel like it, keep the promises you make to your children, read the works of great writers or even the biographies of great people and be inspired, and above all else do your best to be positive and willing to lend a helping a hand to anyone who needs it without expecting anything in return. Happiness is its own reward, and the greatest reward imaginable. As for not dating the girl who travels, thanks I won’t.

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SUPERBOWL RECAP

13 Mar

Yes, more than 5 weeks after the fact is always a good time to do a recap of an event no one is talking about anymore isn’t it. My apologies, and to make up for it I will do a quick Superbowl Recap and splice it with my thoughts on the NFL free agency and then promise to shorty post another recap regarding this year’s Oscar contenders (yes timely again I know, but I actually saw all of the best picture nominees for the first time). Sound good ok?

With respect to the game itself, what can you say? It was one of the greatest games (Superbowl or not) ever played capped by one of the dumbest decisions ever made (Superbowl or not). Backing up though, here is what I will say, Seattle had a real shot at coming into this game and by winning it, becoming this decade’s dynasty team (i.e. in the same vein as the Patriots of the 2000s, the Cowboys of the 90s, the 49ers of the 80s, Steelers of the 70s…you get the picture). Like New England, Seattle started slow this season and the moment Seattle fans really started to worry (or should have) was when my beloved Cowboys actually beat the Seahawks in Seattle. Yes, this was a banner year for Dallas, but with their suspect defense which was better but hit or miss all year, they had no point beating the Seahawks at that point in the season (my hats off to the much maligned Jason Garrett for the this game and the season in general). However, once the cancer that is Percy Harvin was removed and Marshawn Lynch’s acrimonious relationship with management began to heal, coupled with San Fran’s predictable implosion (Harbaugh vs. Management that began pre-season), you got the feeling that nothing was going to stop Seattle. Of course there was the conference finals against Green Bay, but as I have said many times good teams always find a way to win games they shouldn’t (more on this in a second however) and although Seattle probably loses if Williams doesn’t go down with 5 mins remaining after making a pick and the backup TE Brandon Bostick had not decided to be a hero and step out of his role and fumble away the one-side kick, Seattle’s own plays forced many of the situations which resulted in the come from behind win.

So once the stage was set, here Seattle is poised to make history as the first team in over 10 years to win back to back titles and establish itself as the dynasty of the decade against the dynasty of the last decade the Patriots. However before getting down to the game I want to say something about the Patriots and the whole deflategate incident. While popular opinion has seemed to be that because the Patriots defeated the Colts so soundly in the AFC championship game, that the fact that they somehow came into possession of 11 out 12 illegally deflated balls should be overlooked and have no bearing on their status as legitimate AFC champions. I however am not in this camp. Regardless of the result, if you enter into a contest having taken steps to cheat or act in a manner that runs afoul of established practice you should automatically be disqualified from play. Period. That’s the way in several level of sport from the highschool level where ineligible players render a team’s victory vacated, same way in college with teams forced to vacate wins due to team or player impropriety, and even at the pro-level in many sports. For example, is it logical to say ok well Ben Johnson cheated but because he won by such a large margin the fact that he took steroids is rendered inconsequential as he would have likely won anyway even without them? Hell no! So why are we as the public supposed to accept the argument that teams who cheated should be absolved due to their margin of victory? This is absolutely absurd. This is also why the drug related witchhunt is equally bogus and any retroactive punishment that has transpired thus far is mind boggling. When a player on team or several players are found to have taken drugs and if you are not going to vacate a team’s wins, suspend them from play, or personally doc players pay retroactively for the impugned period (and potentially the future) and automatically bar them from Hall of Fame’s then the rest of the talk surrounding penalties is just conversation. Teams mint money, fining them does nothing, the only way to punish them is to threaten their legacy. Furthermore if the only punishment to players for past transgressions are puny fines or other slaps and the wrist are the only penalties and they are allowed to keep their fortunes and allowed to continue to play then what is the point? Maybe the point is to drum up a lot of press for the sport with these bogus and insincere talks of being concerned about illegal drug use and fairness only as a tool to make more money? I know major sporting leagues and billion dollar corporate sponsors can’t be interested in making more money…can they?

Alright, cheating rant aside I will get back to the topic at hand. The Seahawks are playing for their dynasty in this game pure and simple. They match up EXTREMELY well against the Patriots as they are almost better versions of the only two other franchises that perpetually give them fits in the playoffs; the Ravens and the Giants. With a solid running game and stout defense anchored by a tenacious defensive line the game was screaming for the Seahawks to win this game. In fact when the Vegas odds were released, I was shocked that the Seahawks were the underdogs, so of course I took them:

 

Graded Bets

Ticket Accepted Decided Type Description WagerPrice Stake +/-
43294****-1

1

8:43pm 18-Jan-15 1-Feb-15 American Football
Handicap
New England Patriots vs Seattle Seahawks (-1) for Game.   1.900 55.00 -55.00
28 – 24
NFL
43402****1

2

0:26am 23-Jan-15 1-Feb-15 American Football
Handicap
New England Patriots vs Seattle Seahawks (+0) for Game.   1.970 101.00 -101.00
28 – 24
NFL
156.00 -156.00

And for a while things looked tremendous for the Seahawks. They were following the script to perfection stifle Brady in the pocket, lock down his receivers, and then run the ball on your end and kill the clock. However, not long after Katy Perry’s dancehow coupled with the now famous shark, the Seahawks began to ease up and make questionable calls. Not only that they were aided by the referees who sporatically developed blindness whenever Seattle was in possession of the ball. For example how the refs missed the interference call on Darnelle Dockett by future hero Malcolm Butler was inexplicable and really turned the tide in the game as Seattle punted shortly thereafter. In any event the sum of the game is that by the 4th quarter Seattle had blown a ten point lead and was now down 4 to team they were handily beating only a few minutes ago. Of course as we all know they were still not out of it and Russell Wilson and co. put on one of his best drives when it counted the most. Of course the most heralded play is universally recognized as the 1 and 10 bomb to Kearse which he caught after it being tipped by 6 different parts of his body. For me the catch was better than the David Tyree catch and it was almost enough to seal the game.

Almost.

On first and goal from the 5 with just over a minute and the score 24-20 you were almost expecting the Patriots to let the seas part and have Beast mode walk into the endzone similar to the Giants’ last Superbowl win where Ahmad Bradshaw was allowed to stroll into the endzone ass-first in an attempt to get the ball back with as much time for Brady. But no! The Patriots up 4 were in a totally different position. So Beastmode ran (almost quietly) for 4 quick yards and set his team up with three tries to get in from the one with the clock running. For me, the real hero of this game is the guys who tackled the Beast Patrick Hung and Dont’a Hightower. In any event Beastmode is shut down but with the clock ticking the Seahawks are right where you think they want to be…or are they? Much has been made about the fact that the Patriots did not call timeout and at the time I thought this was a huge mistake, because even if Lynch is stuffed here the clock continues to run leaving the Patriots less time and if he gets in you have also lost valuable time. However, the counter argument that I have heard is that this was a deliberate ploy by Belicheck to fluster the Seahawks and force them to throw in order for they themselves to not run out of time. Of course this is a results based league so the Belicheck supporters have it. On the very next play instead of giving the ball to the best short yardage and physical running back in the game the Seahawks inexplicably decide to throw it and worst of all not even with a run-fake but with the worst hat-tip off all with a 4 wide receiver set up totally parallel to the goal line. Of course the rest is history. The Patriots and Malcolm Butler read the play perfectly and in a manner of 3 seconds the Seahawks go from cinching the Superbowl to absolutely giving it away. If you saw Tom Brady on the sideline it was obvious that he was in Giants post-game mode already and this ring was an absolute gift from the heavens. And it really was.

Of course by now you are probably saying, well wait a minute, how come on the one hand you say good teams find a way to win games and that the Patriots had a Superbowl win gift wrapped to them. Well my answer is that the two can be mutually exclusive and not inconsistent. The x factor in distinguishing one from the other is how it came about and whether the perennially “good” team took the game from the jaws of defeat with their own playmaking. While one could say it was Belicheck’s craftiness in not taking the timeout is what forced Seattle to lose the game, I don’t buy that. At that point Belicheck if indeed that was what he was thinking was absolutely grasping at straws. And even if he somehow mindtricked the Seahawks into throwing the ball in that situation, it was Seattle decision to choose that terrible formation, not call a timeout themselves or simply throw the ball away. I get it if you find that it is a very thin line even under my own analogy but the difference between genius and stupidity is often a very fine line and so is the line between comedy and tragedy. Seattle’s loss was absolutely tragic, but they only have themselves to blame for this instance, all the other missed calls by the refs are one thing, but this goal line call is all on them and as such so is the ensuing loss because from that play on the game was only in their hands. Albeit briefly, until it wasn’t and the game all over. I may have been on the losing end of a $300.0 swing, but the Seahawks lost much much more.

Of course they are all millionaires so do not feel too bad. Now it is on to next season and let’s see if the Giants much like the Olympics are back again after 4 years.

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NFL PICKS: PLAYOFFS WEEK3

18 Jan

Ok no time to write this week so I will post a couple thoughts.

1) 3-0 last week with the picks= huge

2) Dallas was dirtied, that was a total catch by Dez Bryant. Three steps and switch of hands plus an extended to the goal line is two distinct moves which means the catch was made.

3) Green bay has no chance to beat Seattle in Seattle, so do not bet on them

4) I think New England will win today but by how much is unknown. A good shot however that the Colts cover the spread. I took NE to make the Superbowl in the preseason, so a Patriots win would be huge, but I still think that the Colts can very much cover the spread now that they have a run game and can cover people in the secondary as such I have placed the following wager..GOOD LUCK AND PLEASE GAME RESPONSIBLY

 
4328****-1

2

12:03pm 18-Jan-15 3:40pm 18-Jan-15 American Football
Handicap
Indianapolis Colts (+7) vs New England Patriots for Game.   1.917 35.00 32.10
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