University of California
20 Completely Ridiculous College Courses Being Offered At U.S. Universities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2013 18:04 -0500
Would you like to know what America's young people are actually learning while they are away at college? It isn't pretty. Yes, there are some very highly technical fields where students are being taught some very important skills, but for the most part U.S. college students are learning very little that they will actually use out in the real world when they graduate. Some of the college courses listed below are funny, others are truly bizarre, others are just plain outrageous, but all of them are a waste of money. If we are going to continue to have a system where we insist that our young people invest several years of their lives and tens of thousands of dollars getting a "college education", they might as well be learning some useful skills in the process. This is especially true considering how much student loan debt many of our young people are piling up. Sadly, the truth is that right now college education in the United States is a total joke... and still a generation of jobless youths borrow from a feckless Fed to indenture themselves...
Frontrunning: May 31
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/31/2013 06:53 -0500- 8.5%
- AIG
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Crack Cocaine
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- European Union
- Ford
- GE Capital
- Gross Domestic Product
- India
- Japan
- Keefe
- Lazard
- Managing Money
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Nationalization
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Oaktree
- Obama Administration
- Personal Consumption
- Prudential
- Raymond James
- REITs
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Saudi Arabia
- Tender Offer
- Unemployment
- University of California
- Volvo
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
- Yuan
- Record unemployment, low inflation underline Europe's pain (Reuters)
- The ponzi gets bigger and bigger: Spanish banks up sovereign bond holdings by more than 10% (FT)
- California Lawmakers Turn Down Moratorium on Fracking (BBG)
- China’s Growing Ranks of Elderly Beset by Depression, Study Says (BBG)
- Tokyo Prepares for a Once-in-200-Year Flood to Top Sandy (BBG)
- Morgan Stanley Cutting Correlation Unit Added $50 Billion (BBG)
- IMF warns over yen weakness (FT)
- Rising radioactive spills leave Fukushima fishermen floundering (Reuters)
- India records slowest growth in a decade (FT)
The World's Uberwealthy Scramble To Buy Greek Isles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/17/2013 11:38 -0500
The emir of Qatar is a busy man: in addition to providing funding and weapons to the mercenary group formerly known as Syrian "rebels" in order to boost his already incalculable wealth and promote his LNG interests in the region over those of Saudi Arabia, in the process isolating Russia as the marginal provider of energy to Europe and furthering western interests even if it means escalating the Syrian civil war, he is also diversifying his assets. And he is doing so in a way that would provide for a quick and painless getaway should things in his country turn sour (now that the US and Russian fleets are converging nearby, this is no longer a merely token possibility): by buying Greek islands. And now that the world has seen the "lead investors" step in, the uber-wealthiest are scrambling to ape one of the world's richest people and stake their own Greek island claim.
Frontrunning: April 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/25/2013 06:19 -0500- Apple
- Baidu
- Barclays
- BOE
- Bond
- Carlyle
- China
- Citigroup
- Creditors
- Crude
- Debt Ceiling
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- GE Capital
- GOOG
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- Keefe
- Market Conditions
- Merrill
- NASDAQ
- Nielsen
- Nomura
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Recession
- Reuters
- Time Warner
- University of California
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- UK economy shows 0.3% growth (FT)
- Texas University Fund Sold $375 Million in Gold Bars (BBG)
- Spain Jobless Rate Breaches 27% on Recession Woes (BBG)
- Letta calls for easing of austerity policies (FT)
- Italy Led by Letta Brings Berlusconi Back as Winner (BBG)
- Fed Debate Moves From Tapering to Extending Bond Buying (BBG)
- South Korea wants talks with North on shuttered industrial zone (Reuters)
- Republicans advance bill to prepare for debt ceiling fight (Reuters)
- Republicans claim White House failed to warn on severity of cuts (FT)
- Xi meets former US heavyweights (China Daily)
- Next BoE chief Carney says clear framework key to policy success (Reuters)
- Chinese roll out red carpet for Hollande (FT)
Study: 28% Increase In Thyroid Problems In Babies Born After Fukushima in Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington
Submitted by George Washington on 04/02/2013 23:14 -0500Is Fukushima Causing Health Problems In the United States?
Bush Was a Total Disaster ... Obama Is WORSE
Submitted by George Washington on 02/14/2013 17:08 -0500Even Democrats Are Starting to Admit It
Student Loan Bubble Forces Yale, Penn To Sue Their Own Students
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/05/2013 15:23 -0500
We have not been shy about exposing the massive (and unsustainable) bubble of credit being blown into the economy via Student Loans from the government. We have not been afraid to note the dramatic rise in delinquencies among these loans - and the implications for the government. However, as Bloomberg reports, it appears the impact of this exuberance has come back to bite the colleges themselves. In what can only be described as a vendor-financing model, the so-called Perkins loans (for students with extraordinary financial hardships) have seen defaults surging more than 20%. The vicious circle, though, has begun as the ponzi of using these revolving loan funds to 'fund' the next round of students is collapsing thanks to the rise in delinquencies. Schools such as Yale, Penn, and George Washington are becoming very aggressive at going after delinquent student borrowers. While financially hard-up graduates complain of no jobs, the schools are not impressed: "You could take a job at Subway or wherever to pay the bills ... It seems like basic responsibility to me," but perhaps that is the point - avoiding responsibility is seemingly rewarded in the new normal.
Guest Post: The Hipster Techie Mental Map
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/23/2013 20:38 -0500
We all have inner maps that assign awareness, priority and importance to geographic features. For those who work inside the Beltway, Washington D.C. dominates their mental map of the world. Residents of Manhattan famously regard it as the center of the financial, art, fashion, etc. world. In the hipster techie mental map, Washington D.C. doesn't exist, and New York has a small tech innovation footprint. In this world view, politics, finance and fashion are not what changes the world for the better; only tech does that.
Up To 3.5% Of US 2013 GDP Could Evaporate Due To Enacted Tax Hikes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2013 15:16 -0500
We were surprised to learn that according to at least one model created by Goldman, the total consumption hit for all of 2013 (not just H1), may well be higher than what most people assume (roughly 1.5%). In fact, as Goldman shows, based on a model conceived by Christina and David Romer, it is possible that US GDP growth in the second half is slashed by an additional 2-2.5%, something which very likely will tip the country into recession as the combined impact over the entire year could be as high as 3.5%, eliminating even the most optimistic forecasts for organic growth in the US for the new year. But it gets worse. As Goldman observes, "based on our reading of the debate in Washington, we have become more concerned about our assumption that the automatic spending cuts (or "sequester") will be delayed into 2014. If the sequester takes effect as scheduled from March 1, this would present an additional downside risk to our growth forecast in the later part of the year." So the worst case scenario for GDP growth from tax hikes alone is already 3.5%, and one may have to add to that another several percent in GDP reduction from an spending cuts, which might well lead to a 4-5% GDP drop in 2013 in the worst case, a case determined solely by the dysfunction in Washington.
Guest Post: The United States Of Delusion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2013 11:27 -0500
We are living in the United States of Delusion. The delusion has four key sources. The irony is that clinging to delusion rather than face the necessity of deep cuts in borrow-and-squander budgets will lead to the involuntary reset of the entire system, depriving every vested interest of their share of the swag. Is delusion a sustainable state? No. Thus we can confidently predict that causality, factuality and karma will eventually sweep aside delusion and all those who cling to it.
Breast-Squeezing – and Sex In General – Improves Health
Submitted by George Washington on 12/19/2012 14:28 -0500Our Interests Are - Of Course - STRICTLY Academic
Guest Post: The Obesity Puzzle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2012 13:23 -0500
There are almost as many theories about why obesity has exploded in America and the world since the 1980s as there are researchers compiling data. The rise in Body Mass Index (BMI) appears to correlate with the rise of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), a simple carbohydrate. Unfortunatley, obesity and well-being are not just a matter of carbs/no-carbs; the causal chain is just not that simple.
Guest Post: The American Diet: Self-Destruction Never Tasted So Good
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2012 10:38 -0500
We know it may appear unduly harsh to discuss America's self-destructive dietary "monster Id" right before the Thanksgiving day feasting, but when is it more appropriate? There are a great many disconnects between reality and what Americans believe out of convenience ("no snowflake feels responsible for the avalanche") or propaganda, but perhaps none is more visible than the disconnect between what we're collectively doing to our health with the food we consume. The Chinese have an apt saying" "Disease comes through the mouth," meaning disease comes from what we eat. There are several parts to the food-illness disconnect.
Guest Post: No Undue Fallout From Money Printing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/07/2012 14:09 -0500
John Williams, president of the San Francisco Fed, yet another noted dove, thinks nothing can go wrong by printing gobs of money. There is no inflation, and there never will be. They have the 'tools' to avert it. Never mind the explosion of the money supply over the past four years – it is all good. Have no fear though, as Williams notes: "Once it comes time to exit its super-easy monetary policy, the Fed will target a 'soft landing,'" The hubris of these guys is jaw-dropping. We are struck by the continued refusal by Fed officials to even think for a second about the long range effects of their policies. In the meantime, money printing continues to undermine the economy. Wealth cannot be generated by increasing the money supply – all that can be achieved by this is an ephemeral improvement in the 'data' even while scarce capital continues to be malinvested and consumed.



