Sunday, August 6, 2017
Saturday, August 5, 2017
Sunglasses...
"Sunglasses at Night" is a song by Canadian singer Corey Hart. It was released in January 1984 as the first single from his debut album, 1984's First Offense, and became a hit single in the United States, rising to number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 in August 1984.
The song combines an unflagging synthesizer hook, characteristic arpeggio, rock guitar and cryptic lyrics. AllMusic has since described it as "an instant classic with its distinctive melody and catchy chorus.
According to co-producer Phil Chapman, the recording sessions for the album took place in a studio whose air conditioning/heating vents were directly above the mixing console. Air from the vents blew directly into the faces of the control room personnel, so they often wore sunglasses in order to protect their eyes. Hart, working on a new song, began to improvise lyrics that included the line "I wear my sunglasses at night."
Assurance...
China's foreign minister welcomed comments by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson offering reassurance to North Korea that Washington isn't seeking regime change there.
Tillerson said that the United States does not seek a collapse of the North Korean regime or an accelerated reunification of the Korean Peninsula.
Wang said China hopes all sides could "meet each other half way to find a fundamental plan to resolve the security concerns of the parties through equal dialogue."
Tillerson also continued to push for Chinese help in keeping pressure on North Korea because of their special economic relationship.
US desire to change regime caused destructions of countries like Iraq, Syria, Libya recently, and may have set other countries back generation. So let us keep our desires to ourselves.
US desire to change regime caused destructions of countries like Iraq, Syria, Libya recently, and may have set other countries back generation. So let us keep our desires to ourselves.
Jolie...
In a newly released interview with Vanity Fair, actress Angelina Jolie opens up about her struggle with Bell’s palsy, a rare and often mysterious neurologic condition.
Bell’s palsy is a condition that leads to paralysis of the facial nerve, the peripheral nerve responsible for facial movement. Sufferers develop one-sided facial weakness -- generally over a matter of hours or days -- that can result in eyebrow sagging, inability to close the eye and drooping at the corner of the mouth. Other symptoms may include sensitivity to loud noise, ear pain on the side of paralysis and an impaired sense of taste.
Friday, August 4, 2017
Crossing...
So many asylum seekers are crossing into Canada from the United States that Montreal's Olympic Stadium has been opened to house them. The first groups were bused to the stadium. Cots are set up in the windowless, domed facility. The mainly Haitian migrants will stay until they get government financial assistance.
Francine Dupuis, head of a Quebec government-funded program that helps asylum seekers, said her organization helped 448 people in June and 1,174 in July, far more than previously. Ninety percent are Haitians.
The U.S. is weighing ending a program that granted Haitians "temporary protected status" after Haiti's 2010 devastating earthquake. As many as 60,000 Haitians in the United States could be sent back to their homeland.
Dupuis said the YMCA and shelters are already full. She said the stadium has agreed to house up to 450 people for a few months but can't take more because they have other activities at the stadium.
She said her organization had usually been able to deal with an influx of migrants but the numbers now are unprecedented.
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Rookie Mistake...
Andy Hall, a trader nicknamed the "God" of the oil and energy markets, is closing down his main hedge fund at Astenbeck Capital Management. The flagship fund, Astenbeck Master Commodities Fund II, has tanked nearly 30 percent through June, Bloomberg reported,
In July, Hall told investors in a letter that the global crude market had "materially worsened." He said OPEC has little control of the oil markets, and that $50 per barrel is the new normal, according to Bloomberg.
Hall got his nickname for his ability to accurately predict the direction of oil markets. His main claim to fame came in 2008, a year in which he got a $100 million bonus as an oil trader at Citi.
Oil remains mired in a prolonged downturn that has seen crude prices crater from over $100 a barrel in 2014 to about $50 today. OPEC and other oil exporters have tried to drain a glut of oil by cutting their output, but the effort is taking longer than anticipated.
I knew that earlier. It was in the papers. Just a thought.
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