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Doing business in Tokyo

    David Braverman
Geography
The Economist has given me a timely help. Their "doing business in" series I've found accurate and useful; I hope this one keeps up the pattern.
Oh, not here. Heavens. We don't have a lot of real conservatives; they're all in the U.K. Like the Prime Minister, for example: I once stood before a Conservative conference and said it shouldn't matter whether commitment was between a man and a woman, a woman and a woman, or a man and another man. You applauded me for that. Five years on, we're consulting on legalising gay marriage. And to anyone who has reservations, I say: Yes, it's about equality, but it's also about something else: commitment....

Jean-Paul Gaultier at MBAM

    David Braverman
General
Owing to the unceasing rain over the weekend, we visited a couple of museums while in Montréal, including the Musée des Beaux Arts: My friend particularly wanted to see the exhibit on Jean-Paul Gaultier, the clothing designer whose work I only knew from The Fifth Element. I confess, I did not understand much of the work. This, for example, completely eluded me, though it looks kind of cool: (That one comes with webbed pumps.) That's the point of a museum, though: to get exposure to things you wouldn't...

The Rogue

    David Braverman
PoliticsUS Politics
The router at my remote office appears to have a cold, poor thing, which means only my phone and not my laptop can connect to the Intertubes right now. So after finishing this post (in Notepad), I'll go back to reading Joe McGinniss's The Rogue. Now, I never thought Sarah Palin qualified for any office, let alone U.S. vice president, but even I'm stunned. So, I imagine, is John McCain, who has made unexpectedly reasoned and clear statements that make me think he was abducted by aliens from 2007 to 2009....
On a quick weekend in Montréal, where it's mostly grey and rainy, I find bits of color: 14:15 ET today, Canon 7D at ISO-400, f/5.6 at 1/100, 55mm, here. Further down the street:
I just posted this on as a comment to an unfortunate friend's Facebook status. Forgive me; I'm at O'Hare, and kind of punchy: I left my keys in Boston, My phone at SFO, My shoes and belt, I lost 'em too, But where I just don't know. I think I saw my keychain last In Logan's Terminal B. I only hope the TSA Will get them back to me. I'd call them now, those helpful guys Who kept me from my gate, But like I said, my phone's long gone, And now's no time to wait. At least I know my keys are safe At Logan's...
Chicago-based United Continental Airlines followed this week's ANA publicity with a me too: Jeff Smisek, head of the parent company for United and Continental airlines, on Thursday said he was last told by Boeing that the first of the 50 aircraft ordered by the company will be delivered to have in service in the second half of 2012. "We ordered that aircraft in December 2004. So I've been a very patient person," said Smisek, the president and CEO of United Continental Holdings Inc. I'm writing this from...

Odd little milestone

    David Braverman
General
From the Department of Nerd Studies comes a bit of research even I barely noticed: I'm 15,000 days old today. Like I said, nerd studies.

Photo of the Day

    David Braverman
ChicagoGeneral
Dar Williams performing tonight at Park West, just a few blocks from my house: Canon 7D at ISO-6400, 1/50 at f/5.6, 250mm As an added bonus, Joan Osborne opened for her: Both of them:
Via Krugman, economist Lawrence Mishel shows that businesses aren't concerned about uncertainty: An examination of current economic trends, and especially what employers are doing in terms of hiring and investment, debunks this story about regulatory uncertainty as the cause of our dismal job growth. An examination of what employers and their economists are saying again and again in private surveys (cited later in this paper) makes it clear that what businesses actually identify as their challenges does...

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