Nicaragua? Yes, Nicaragua! 

On Tuesday, I told you about the results of a Gallup poll that listed Nicaragua as the “No. 1 country where people say they are ‘always’ or ‘almost always’ at peace.”

Nicaragua? Surprising? At first, yes. I was surprised. For the reasons I mentioned on Tuesday. But when I thought about the hundreds of Nicaraguan people I’ve lived with and worked with over the past 25+ years, I realized that I shouldn’t have been.

Nicaraguans are, by far, happier than Americans or Europeans or Middle Easterners or people in many of the Asian countries I know. The only people I’ve known that I’d say were happier than Nicaraguans were the Chadian people when I lived and worked there. And Chad, at that time, was one of the five poorest countries in the world.

You are no doubt familiar with the commonly quoted research on the correlation between wealth and happiness. It showed that once people have enough money to pay for their basic needs, the acquisition of more money does not directly affect their level of happiness. We usually understand “basic needs” to mean food and shelter, as well as plumbing, electricity, transportation, and so on. But that’s only true for wealthy countries. In poor countries, the basics truly are basic. A wooden shack and a well somewhere nearby is enough to make millions and millions of people happy with their lives.

And if this is true, why do we believe that (a) being poor is always and bad thing, and (b) helping poor people get richer is always a good thing?

Continue Reading

Finding Happiness – Even if You Are a Rich American

In his podcast this week, Peter Attia interviewed Bill Perkins, who explained what he learned about happiness and fulfillment when writing his bestseller Die With Zero.

Much of Perkins’ thinking is compatible with what I’ve learned from my experience with Nicaragua. You can watch the podcast here.

Continue Reading

Inflation and the Rise of Monopolies

Bill Bonner predicted the inflation we are experiencing now many times over the past year or two. His prognostication was based on basic economics: He watched how the Fed was trying to engineer the supply and demand of dollars.

It all happened pretty much as it should have happened,” he said in the Jan. 10 issue of Bonner Private Research. And then he noted that the people that support government overspending, including the government and the mainstream media, are not accepting responsibility for their machinations. They are pointing fingers elsewhere.

“They aim to distract your attention from what is right before your eyes,” he wrote. “They claim ‘capitalism failed’ or ‘corporate greed’ suddenly imposed itself or, for those with no ax to grind, simply that there were ‘supply chain interruptions.’”

As an example, Bill quoted an article in The Guardian by Robert Reich, the former US Labor Secretary, making the case that corporate monopolies are to blame. Here’s an excerpt:

“Worried about sky-high airline fares and lousy service? That’s largely because airlines have merged from 12 carriers in 1980 to four today.

“Concerned about drug prices? A handful of drug companies control the pharmaceutical industry.

“Upset about food costs? Four giants now control over 80% of meat processing, 66% of the pork market, and 54% of the poultry market.

“Worried about grocery prices? Albertsons bought Safeway and now Kroger is buying Albertsons. Combined, they would control almost 22% of the grocery market in 167 cities across the country.

“And so on. The evidence of corporate concentration is everywhere.

“Put the responsibility where it belongs – on big corporations with power to raise their prices.”

You can read Bill’s entire essay here.

Continue Reading

Speaking of Inflation…

Last month, Argentina reported year-over-year inflation of 92.4%. As the value of its peso has been decreasing, Sergio Guillermo Diaz, an artist in the city of Salta, has been painting on the banknotes, weaving the themes of inflation and the peso’s depreciation into his works. “Once I paint on it, I can sell it for much more than what the bill is worth,” he told Reuters.

Continue Reading

The Harsh Truth About Going Vegan

I once read a great book on the vegan/paleo debate called

The Vegetarian Myth

. It was written by  Lierre Keith, a self-described radical feminist and former vegetarian.

The Vegetarian Myth

covers four aspects of the debate: health, economics, environmental effects, and ethics. In every area, she argues that a meat-based diet is better.

I won’t say hers is the final word on the subject, but it was enough to make me feel like I should continue to eat meat.

Click here for more on Lierre Keith.

And click here to watch some guy – I don’t know who – ranting on about why vegans kill way more animals than do meat eaters. He’s a hunter. I doubt that he’s a radical feminist, but I do get the feeling that he read Keith’s book. In any case, I’m not recommending this video to persuade you of his argument. I just thought the presentation was funny.

 

Bad Advice from America’s Royal Class 

One of the most irksome bits of advice, stated repeatedly by successful athletes and entertainers, is to “follow your dream.”

This is dumb. So dumb, I won’t insult your intelligence by explaining why. I will leave it to Charles Barkley, here

 

How Many Friends Do You Really Need?

I was talking to a friend about friendship. He was wondering if I felt I had too many. He felt he had too few. 2My opinion is that the “right” number is “more.”

But is there a right number? Check out this article from The New York Times and let me know what you think. 

 

Was Caroline Ellison Nuts?
Caroline Ellison, the “casual” girlfriend of Samuel Bankman-Fried, is analyzed by Dr. Todd Grande in this video. I subscribe to Grande’s website out of some inexplicable and indefensible fascination with his soporific speaking style. Watch this only after taking amphetamines.
Continue Reading

A soporific (suh-puh-RIF-ik) is something – especially a drug – that induces sleep. As an adjective, it refers something that is boring or dull. I used it this way, above: “I subscribe to Grande’s website out of some inexplicable and indefensible fascination with his soporific speaking style.”

Continue Reading

Vespers for a New Dark Age 

K had this on Sonos this morning when I came into the kitchen. I didn’t notice it at first, but then I did. I think it is hauntingly beautiful.

It was composed by Missy Mazzoli for the 2014 Carnegie Hall Ecstatic Music Festival. You can listen to it here. 

Continue Reading

The Pale Blue Eye 

A Netflix original, released Dec. 23, 2022

Based on the novel by Louis Bayard

Directed by Scott Cooper

Starring Christian Bale and Harry Melling

Somebody recommended it. And it was listed as trending on Netflix. So, I watched it. And I absolutely loved it. Until the last 20 minutes.

Never mind.

The Pale Blue Eye stars Christian Bale as Augustus Landor, a former prosecutor recruited to solve a murder mystery at West Point in or about 1830, and Harry Melling as Edgar Allen Poe, one of the cadets attending the school.

I’m a fan of Christian Bale – but, in this story, he didn’t work for me. Harry Melling, though, who I didn’t recognize as an actor I’d seen before, was absolutely riveting. That, and the fact that I’m a fan of E.A. Poe, was more than enough for me.

There is, by the way, a good reason that I didn’t recognize Melling.

He is best-known for playing chubby little Dudley Dursley in the Harry Potter movies. But he lost so much weight between his appearance in The Order of the Phoenix and The Deathly Hallows, Part 1 that the role was almost recast. He managed to keep the part by wearing a fat suit. “I can now shed the child actor thing, like the fat, and start a new career because no one sees me as Dudley,” he said. And that’s what he did.

Critical Reception 

* “The Pale Blue Eye holds together remarkably as a gothic piece of horror… right up to the point that it doesn’t.” (Matthew Monagle, Austin Chronicle)

* “It’s a film that, on an aesthetic level, casts an eerie spell. Shame about its story, though.” (Nick Schager, Daily Beast)

* “A stylish and smart telling of what is at heart macabre malarkey.” (Michael O’Sullivan, Washington Post)

You can watch the trailer here.

Continue Reading

Nicobar Palm

Binomial name: Bentinckia nicobarica

The Nicobar Palm is native to the Nicobar Islands in the Andaman Sea (near Malaysia). With its elegant arching leaves and distinctive pale green crownshaft, it is one of the most beautiful palms we have in our gardens. It was listed as an endangered species by the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) in 2016.

For more information about Paradise Palms, click here. 

Continue Reading

Could I Have Had PTSD? 

 A friend wrote to say:

After my heart surgery, the cardiologist talked to me about PTSD. I didn’t think much of it at the time.  Last week, I read an article about PTSD in stroke patients. 25% of them get PTSD.

I was wondering if you’ve had any symptoms. I think about people who never experienced PTSD, and how would they know if they were suffering from it.

My Response: I suppose it’s possible, especially considering that the symptoms I had, including fatigue and brain fog, are said to be symptoms of PTSD. But I think it’s more likely that my symptoms are the result of the statin drug I was taking, because (1) fatigue and brain fog are two of the most common reactions to statins (more than 50% of those that take statins report these symptoms), and (2) since I stopped taking them a week ago, I am feeling noticeably better.

Continue Reading