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Saturday, 1 March 2008
Pride In Home Ownership

For most Canadians, housing has increased in value. It has increased the most in the western provinces because of economic expansion in the oil fields.

Please note that a house in Canada is used primarily as a place to live rather than as a way to make a quick buck.

For many Canadians, "house appreciation" in done through renovations which improve the resell value of the home. You could also call this "Pride In Ownership" because it's a personal win to add value to something that didn't look that good in the first place.

With interest rates and house prices going down in the U.S., there are marvelous opportunities to obtain a bargain property that if cared for will appreciate with time. 

The products of get-rich-quick-housing speculators are run down empty buildings.  In the end, "the ownership papers" and their owners get trashed and burned.

A true real estate investor buys at a low price with a low interest rate and enhances the value of his/her property for resale or retirement without a mortgage.

There's a big difference between short range greed/stupidity and long range planning for the future.

The housing market in American is at a new beginning. The only place to go in UP.


Posted by qualteam at 11:01 PM EST
Updated: Saturday, 1 March 2008 11:18 PM EST
Thursday, 28 February 2008
Mike Smith Of Dave Clark Five Passes Away

Mike Smith (far left) on keyboards was the lead singer of "The Dave Clark Five". He will be missed.

The Dave Clark Five was the heaviest rock group in the 1960s that I ever heard: "Glad All Over", "Anyway You Want It", "Do You Love Me", Bits And Pieces", "You Got What It Takes" were powerful tunes in their arsenal.

The band is going to be inducted into "The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame" this March.

There's not that many good videos of Mike and the band, but here's a decent one on YouTube. The song is "Catch Us If You Can":

My favourite DC5 song is "You Got What It Takes"


Posted by qualteam at 9:45 PM EST
Updated: Thursday, 28 February 2008 10:14 PM EST
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Thinking Outside The Mental Trap (i.e. The Box)

The mental trap or "The Box" as it is often called came  from "experts" and their followers on such subjects like religion, science, economics and foreign affairs.

"Thinking Outside The Box" is just another way of engaging in "Independent Thinking". Please check out those hyperlinks. There's  relevant material on those webpages.

These mental boxes are created by know-it-all authorities who probably do a great deal of debunking of other people's creative ideas. An outstanding example of this is the criticism levelled at inventor, Thane Heins,  with regards to his offbeat electrical motor.

"Conventional wisdom" and "expert opinion" often trys mold us into sheeplike victims of fate.

If we followed these "shamans", we'd probably still be hurling rocks at each other in caves.


Posted by qualteam at 3:06 PM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 26 February 2008 3:29 PM EST
Sunday, 24 February 2008
Tracking Lost Souls In The Afterlife

Our perceptions of the afterlife, usually come from religious mythology or paranormal psychics.

Many investigators and new age prophets have investigated this subject in depth.

Some people are more sensitive to paranormal activity and visions than others. I don't belittle anyone's research in this area. For human beings, life is full of frightening mysteries.

Personally, I believe that we are looked after by a powerful ancient civilization (i.e. "The Kingdom of God") where spiritual activity outside of bodies was and still is the norm.

The tracking, rescue and restoration of lost souls on Earth  is standard practise for this organization.

A cloaked space ship sends out light probes which contain all kinds of pleasant sensations and perceptions for a spirit. This light is also a powerful tractor beam which draws the being into the ship.

There are other malevolent aliens around this sector like the Grays and Marcabs who abduct humans for their own perverse experiments.

This is part of my cosmic viewpoint on this subject that goes beyond "The Star Trek Universe" and religious mythology.


Posted by qualteam at 3:52 PM EST
Updated: Sunday, 24 February 2008 9:26 PM EST
Friday, 22 February 2008
Blue Chip Companies With Many International Customers

Sure green stocks are really sexy these days, but how can you separate the winners from the losers? No doubt, green companies will become the next big bubble on the worlds' stock markets.

In the short term, there will probably be a flight to quality blue chip stocks by smart investors. The speculators can chase can chase gold and energy securities until the cows come home. Who wants to be another crazy in crazy sectors?

Here are my top ten old economy stocks with international exposure that I believe will do well in 2008. They are based in Canada and the United States:

  1. General Electric Co. ($34.37): It now derives 50 per cent of its sales of power-station generators, locomotives, lighting supplies and medical equipment from outside its home market.
  2. Caterpillar Inc. ($69.95): Despite its exposure to the troubled U.S. construction market, it is forecasting a rise in 2008 profits of 5 per cent to 15 per cent. Offshore orders for its heavy equipment, accounting for half its total sales, have more than compensated for softer sales growth at home.
  3. Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. ($149.35): It's the world's largest potash supplier, accounting for roughly 15 per cent of global production. Increasingly, its output of fertilizers and related feed products is shifting to developing-world markets where rising incomes are bringing agricultural self-sufficiency within reach.
  4. Coca-Cola Co. ($58.76): The cola giant, which once insisted on peddling only Coke abroad, has learned humility in recent years, building market share in the Pacific Rim and South Asia by reformulating its soft drinks and juice products to local tastes, and acquiring dominant local beverage brands.
  5. International Business Machines Corp. ($106.16): It generated 65 per cent of fourth-quarter 2007 sales from outside its homeland and retains its near-monopoly on mainframe computers. These are much in demand from emerging-economy governments and corporations upgrading their computer networks. Lucrative contracts to service its equipment will further entrench IBM in its newest markets.
  6. Bank of Nova Scotia ($47.38 Canadian): The most international of Canada's Big Five banks. It operates in more than 40 countries outside Canada and the U.S. Over the past five years, BNS stock has outperformed all but Toronto Dominion Bank.
  7. Procter & Gamble Co. ($66.30): It long ago transplanted its vaunted marketing prowess overseas, and currently is threatening to push long-established rival Unilever PLC to the margins in the booming Indian market.
  8. Whirlpool Corp. ($88.49): The world's largest appliance maker (Maytag, KitchenAid, Amana, Jenn-Air), which we think of as a "household infrastructure" firm, enjoyed a 2007 payoff from its assiduous studies of how consumers in Mumbai, Singapore and Rio de Janeiro use its products. (For instance, washing machines are stored in the small kitchens of Russian and Central European households, and must be small enough to tuck under the kitchen counter.) In 2007, healthy overseas growth compensated for the weakening North American demand.
  9. United Technologies Corp. ($71.53): It's the world leader in elevators (Otis) and air conditioners (Carrier), and with big stakes in aircraft engines (Pratt & Whitney) and helicopters (Sikorsky), is a low-key infrastructure supplier with outsized performance, including a stock that bested the S&P 500 by a 2-to-1 ratio over the past five years, and boosted profits by 91 per cent during that time. UTC is largely insulated from the North America consumer economy, and its rising offshore profits have compensated for the U.S. housing meltdown.
  10. Bombardier Inc. ($5.53): As the world's largest rail-equipment maker, it supplies streetcars to Brussels and monorails in Asia. And the former stock-market darling, still recovering from the 2001-02 recession, continues to fatten its order book for private planes, despite the U.S. downturn, thanks to the recent proliferation of Russian and Asian tycoons.

In days gone past, experts in "new technology" were sometimes very wrong. Are you aware that Thomas Edison fought with Nicola Tesla over how electricity should be produced, "Direct Current Versus Alternating Current"?

Nicola Tesla won and the alternating current has lighted our homes and ran our appliances for the last hundred years.


Posted by qualteam at 10:16 PM EST
Updated: Sunday, 24 February 2008 10:49 AM EST
Thursday, 21 February 2008
The Benefits Of Early Retirement

Of course, if you love your job, you wouldn't retire from it, you'd just take a long vacation like the man above.

I've worked close to 35 years for Canada Post and I don't love my job. I don't hate it either, but I get the feeling that I should move on to something more creative like writing.

Having a pension will enable me to devote more of my time to writing and other creative pastimes like karaoke singing, basketweaving and religious myth collecting. 

More than a week ago, I added up my non income tax expensives from my pay stubs for 2007. They totalled over $7,000. This included CUPW union dues, Canada Pension Plan premiums, Canada Post Pension premiums, Unemployment Insurance premiums, Disability Insurance premiums, etc.

By next year at this time, I won't be paying into plans where I get nothing back. I'll be collecting from investments that I paid into for a long, long time. 

Part of this plan involves buying and paying off the mortgage on a well maintained house. You can then live mortgage free or sell the house and take every red cent as profit.(In Canada, you can do this.)

One, also, has to invest in a pension plan that's into the stock market. This will help pay off the mortgage and pay for an income distribution plan that you'll need in your golden years.

The long range view is that some risks have to be taken to earn some decent savings. Unless you inherit a great deal of money, your mental smarts have to be there in house buying/selling and in stockmarket buying/selling.

If you do the above, maybe you can obtain early retirement or a long, long vacation.

 

 


Posted by qualteam at 9:40 PM EST
Updated: Saturday, 23 February 2008 10:57 AM EST
Sunday, 17 February 2008
A Top Ten "Funny" Word List

  1. The Popeye Motivational Principle: "That's all I can stands. I can't stands no more."
  2. McDogfood: Any sandwich bought at McDonalds.
  3. Death: Nature's way of telling you to slow down.
  4. Work: A place to go after breakfast.
  5. Pupsqueak: The sound a yawning dog emits when it opens its mouth too wide.
  6. P-Spot: The area above the urinal in a public restroom that men stare at, knowing a glance in any other direction would arouse suspicion.
  7. Metrosexual: A gay man who would bitch-slap or hit you with his manbag if you irritated him.
  8. Fauxhemian: Someone who adopts the trappings of the Bohemian lifestyle without actually straying too far from the straight and narrow of social conventions.
  9. Little Bugger: A gay midget wrestler.
  10. Hell: Spending an evening with an insurance saleman.

 


Posted by qualteam at 9:54 PM EST
Updated: Sunday, 17 February 2008 10:10 PM EST
Saturday, 16 February 2008
Creepy Transit Ads About The Drug "Obay"

Ads like the above have been appearing in bus shelters throughout the Greater Toronto Area. Another ad states "My son used to have his own ideas. Now he doesn't."

This whole campaign seems like something out of a sci/fi movie like "The Stepford Wives" or "They Live".  Aliens take over the bodies of parents and start turning their kids into "The Stepford Teenagers." Very scary.

Using drugs to produce docile easily controlled people, definitely sends a negative message to me. Most of the free nations of the world have fought against totalitarian regimes like Nazi Germany that advocated unquestioning obedience to a superior power.

 


Posted by qualteam at 10:14 PM EST
Updated: Tuesday, 19 February 2008 10:37 PM EST
Thursday, 14 February 2008
Happy Valentine's Day

I hope you're enjoying the sensation of "feeling good" that exists between a man and a woman who have chemistry together. Little things like a look, a word, a touch and a kiss at the right moment can send the pulse racing. Add in some good music and some fond memories and the night is ready for romance.

On the other hand, maybe Valentine's Day is simply spending some quality time together with your sweetheart.

Whatever it is to you, passionate or subdued, enjoy each other's company to the maximum.

If you're alone this Valentine's day, touch the hand of an imaginery lover and enjoy this beautiful romantic song below:

Sweet Caroline/Neil Diamond


Posted by qualteam at 10:16 PM EST
Wednesday, 13 February 2008
Happy Fifth Anniversary Of The Barron Blog

The Barron Blog started on Feb/13/03 and after 1255 entries, it's still here on Feb/13/08.

Mainly, this blog reflects the world and the universe from my point of view. I try to deal fairly with issues concerning religions, economics, the environment, wars, aliens, gambling and other things that capture my attention from time to time.

Often, I try to connnect with "The Mind of The Christian Brotherhood" to gain extra insights into realities not easily perceived by human beings.

"The Mind Of The Christian Brotherhood" is the interconnection of minds of all the Christians who died since year 33 A.D. These are the experiences and the insights of millions of spirits who have eternal life and who share "The Mind of Christ" with their brethen.

"As it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be: World without end."

I feel that I have one foot on Earth and one foot in eternity.

Self-help books, history, the arts, sci/fi, computers, and science in the 20th and 21st centuries have unfolded mysteries before our eyes. 

Hopefully, "The Barron Blog" will continue to link up to knowledge that is helpful to all of us.

 


Posted by qualteam at 10:52 PM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 13 February 2008 11:06 PM EST

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