Wednesday, December 31, 2008

2009 Tax Tips


With your 2008 tax return due just around the corner, it's time to brush up on those tax skills.  Here are some helpful hints that may help you when filing your return:

  • If you are self employed, open and fund an SEP-IRA before filing your tax return. You can claim the deduction in 2008, even if you make a contribution to the plan in 2009.
  • If you don't normally itemize your deductions, consider "bunching" expenses every other year to exceed the standard deduction.
  • Estimate your federal and state tax liabilities. If you didn't withhold enough, increase your withholding for this year's last few paychecks.
  • To exempt yourself from any penalty for underestimating Federal or state taxes, it is critical is that your withholdings of federal or state taxes meet one of the following:
    • at least equal to 90% of your tax liability for 2008
    • at least the same as your 2007 tax liability.
  • If you estimate you will owe state taxes, you can chose to prepay those before January 1, and increase your itemized deduction for 2008.
  • Remember, taxes fund torture and war.  If you object to this, consider filing a Peace Tax Return.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Martin Studio Blog


Introducing: the Martin Studio Blog.  This is where Karen and I can contribute in joint and post on behalf of the whole family.  It'll have things like announcements and other fun stuff.

I still have my original blog, and it'll be the place I post on my own.  I also still plan on keeping my Home Front category on my own blog too.  But that's where I'll make my personal observations and such.

Posted via email from Martin Studio

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

"... you look a-like that guy from 'Dumb and Dumber' ... thanks ..."


Overheard on my bus-ride to work.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Economist Humor


Well, it appears that I have sunken to a new low; I actually find this funny (on top of that, I use semicolons):


One of the more funny paragraphs from part one:

Hair samples from Ben Bernake, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, were much more difficult to obtain for obvious reasons. However, the efforts paid off. In 10,102 samples studied by scientists globally, Bernanke's DNA sports the only known instance of multiple, repetitive, alternating K-Marker M-Marker pairs.

Hilarious.  There must be a virus associated with economist humor.  I caught it.  Oh well.  But as always, Mish really does convey the point extremely well.  Too bad it's largely just lost on most people.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Benjamin Waved


Today, Benjamin waved.  I know it doesn't impress anyone to find out a five-year-old waved, but as you may recall, Benjamin has been diagnosed with autism, and it's the first time I can recall him ever doing it.  In addition, he was waving backwards, such that his palm was facing himself.  This is very typical of how kids start off waving.

As I mentioned before, he has been reaching a number of early childhood milestones, lately.  This is interesting because he largely skipped most of them.  Actually, the accurate way to describe it is he just never reached them in the first place, so now he's finally getting around to it.

The really great milestone lately is that he has been copying a lot.  This is completely new behavior.  Here's something Karen noticed him copying:

Source: YouTube 

He would bounce on the couch when he'd watch it.  I couldn't get him to demonstrate for the camera, though.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Fred Thompson on the Economy


First, take 10 minutes and watch this joker:



That's Fred Thompson, former United States Senator from Tennessee and former presidential candidate.  No, it's not a Saturday Night Live skit, but it may as well be, for all the good it'll do.

Obviously, he's being coy.  He's trying to get you to think about what you've done, voting in Obama and all those other democrats into office.  And of course, he felt this way when he was Senator and while running for President.  Only he never explained any of this during those stints.  There were very few people who would explain this.

People who study economics were saying this all along.  But those people were ignored.  Now that he and his party have been ignored, Thompson now has a bad case of sour grapes.

So if Thompson couldn't articulate these trends beforehand, why should I be upset now that he can see the truth after the fact?  I could show you a timeline of people like Peter Schiff and Murray Rothbard who could predict the overall trends we're seeing.

But we never listened to the Schiffs and the Rothbards.  Now we're going to listen to the Thompsons who didn't know what was happening until after it all went sour?  Give me a break!

Maybe we should be listening to Madoff.  He might have had a better scheme than Social Security has to offer.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Saturday, December 20, 2008

End Times Drivel


Spurgeon was cautious that prophecy, when misused, would be a detriment to the proclamation of the gospel; that it was foolish at best, and wicked at worst, to delve into such speculation.  Yet in Spurgeon's day, like today, silly arguments over things like the number of the feasts, beast, and the identity of the anti-christ were topics of deep discussion.

During his ministry there was a great deal of prophetic speculation that Jesus would return in the year 1866.  When Christ did not return in that year, the very thing Spurgeon feared began to happen.  Unbelievers began to ridicule all Christian preaching.  Regarding this Spurgeon stated, "I am afraid of that spirit —'where is the promise of His coming? etc. etc.' And to pronounce 'all prophets as liars' came to me exceedingly harsh; yea, more than that, it was calculated, I feared, to influence thousands of minds, and lead them in a wrong direction."

It's not that Spurgeon didn't value prophesy, quite the contrary.  He just saw it as a secondary matter to the Gospel; a valuable endeavor, but one which should never "overlay the commonplaces of practical godliness," or start before "first you see to it that your children are brought to the saviour's feet."

Salvation is a theme for which I would fain enlist every holy tongue. I am greedy after witnesses for the glorious gospel of the blessed God. O that Christ crucified were the universal burden of men of God. Your guess at the number of the beast, your Napoleonic speculations, your conjectures concerning a personal Antichrist —forgive me, I count them but mere bones for dogs; while men are dying, and hell is filling, it seems to me the veriest drivel to be muttering about an Armageddon at Sebastopol or Sadowa or Sedan, and peeping between the folded leaves of destiny to discover the fate of Germany. Blessed are they who read and hear the words of the prophecy of the Revelation, but the like blessing has evidently not fallen on those who pretend to expound it, for generation after generation of them have been proven to be in error by the mere lapse of time, and the present race will follow to the same inglorious sepulcher.
Source: Spurgeon, Lectures, 100

And it goes on like that to this very day.

To me, Revelation is predominantly a book of worship.  I would rather showcase the worship and basically ignore the prophesy.  Like Spurgeon, I would rather be guilty of too little emphasis on the timing of the prophesy than too much.

If we Christians are to be like Jesus, then shouldn't the emphasis on certain topics follow the examples Jesus gave?  For example, Jesus talked about taxes more than eschatology.  So it stands to reason, especially in this day of over-taxing, we have a perfect opportunity to be biblical and speak on this topic more often than the end-times.

Please understand, none of this means Jesus' return is unimportant.  I just means the timing is unimportant.

Only fools and madmen are positive in their interpretations of the Apocalypse.
Source: Spurgeon, The Sword and Trowel, review on B. C. Young's, Short Arguments about the Millennium

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Monday, December 15, 2008

Added Shopify


I signed up for a Shopify account that can now tie into my Posterous account.  Did I really want this?

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

It's leaking inside the freaking metro.


Posted via SMS from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Hoax Spurgeon


There's an article floating around the Internet attributed to Spurgeon that was not written by him.  It is written in a way to make one think "how prophetic" that such a man of God could predict with such clarity the exact outcome of where the church ended up.

If it could stand on its own, that's one thing.  But it just is evil to attribute it to a great preacher like Charles Haddon Spurgeon when it's not, umkay?  I've checked the various Spurgeon archives and found nothing like this.  So the burden of proof is on those who believe he wrote it to produce some evidence.  That's it.  It is not up to me or anyone else to prove a negative.

Anyway, here's the article.

An evil resides in the professed camp of the Lord so gross in its imprudence that the most shortsighted can hardly fail to notice it. During the past few years it has developed at an abnormal rate evil for evil. It has worked like leaven until the whole lump ferments. The devil has seldom done a more clever thing than hinting to the Church that part of their mission is to provide entertainment for the people, with a view to winning them. From speaking out as the Puritans did, the Church has gradually toned down her testimony, then winked at and excused the frivolities of the day. Then she tolerated them in her borders. Now she has adopted them under the plea of reaching the masses.

My first contention is that providing amusement for the people is nowhere spoken of in the Scriptures as a function of the Church. If it is a Christian work why did not Christ speak of it? 'Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.' That is clear enough. So it would have been if He has added, 'and provide amusement for those who do not relish the gospel' No such words, however, are to be found. It did not seem to occur to Him. Then again, 'He gave some apostles, some prophets, some pastors and teachers, for the work of the ministry.' Where do entertainers come in? The Holy Spirit is silent concerning them. Were the prophets persecuted because they amused the people or because they refused? The concert has no martyr roll.

Again, providing amusement is in direct antagonism to the teaching and life of Christ and all His apostles. What was the attitude of the Church to the world? 'Ye are the salt,' not sugar candy—something the world will spit out, not swallow. Short and sharp was the utterance, 'Let the dead bury their dead.' He was in awful earnestness!

Had Christ introduced more of the bright and pleasant elements into His mission, He would have been more popular when they went back, because of the searching nature of His teaching. I do not hear Him say, 'Run after these people, Peter, and tell them we will have a different style of service tomorrow, something short and attractive with little preaching. We will have a pleasant evening for the people. Tell them they will be sure to enjoy it. Be quick, Peter, we must get the people somehow!' Jesus pitied sinners, sighed and wept over them, but never sought to amuse them. In vain will the Epistles be searched to find any trace of the gospel amusement. Their message is, 'Come out, keep out, keep clean out!' Anything approaching fooling is conspicuous by its absence. They had boundless confidence in the gospel and employed no other weapon. After Peter and John were locked up for preaching, the Church had a prayer meeting, but they did not pray, 'Lord grant Thy servants that by a wise and discriminating use of innocent recreation we may show these people how happy we are.' If they ceased not for preaching Christ, they had not time for arranging entertainments. Scattered by persecution, they went everywhere preaching the gospel. They 'turned the world upside down.' That is the difference! Lord, clear the Church of all the rot and rubbish the devil has imposed on her and bring us back to apostolic methods. Lastly, the mission of amusement fails to affect the end desired. It works havoc among young converts. Let the careless and scoffers, who thank God because the Church met them halfway, speak and testify. Let the heavy-laden who found peace through the concert not keep silent! Let the drunkard to whom the dramatic entertainment has been God's link in the chain of their conversion, stand up! There are none to answer. The mission of amusement produces no converts. The need of the hour for today's ministry is believing scholarship joined with earnest spirituality, the one springing from the other as fruit from the root. The need is biblical doctrine, so understood and felt, that it sets men on fire.

By the way, even Karen's grandmother, who is not Internet active in any way, carries this article on her person (in tract format) and hands it out to anyone who seems to enjoy Rock and/or Roll music.  I wrote what could pass as a reply on my previous blog.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Americans' debt shrinks - 1st time EVAR!


According to a CNN article: Household debt fell by 0.8% as Americans' net worth fell by largest amount on record on declining home and stock prices.

Is it a coincidence that household debt fell while our nation's net worth fell at the same time?  No.  Keep reading.  Here's the article (indented) with my comments (non-indented):

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- In a sign that Americans' spending habits are shifting, their household debt fell for the first time ever, as their net worth declined by the largest amount on record based on data going back to 1951.

According to the Federal Reserve's flow of funds report released Thursday, consumer debt fell an annualized $30 billion, or 0.8% in the third quarter to $13.91 trillion.

Americans holding less debt may sound like a positive, but it also means consumers are spending less, as debt has become more expensive and harder to come by.

Are you starting to see it, kids?  Holding less debt is positive, but the establishment and status quo (like CNN) is having a hard time admitting it.  The people are starting to see it, though.  Finally.

Money is debt.  Debt is money.  See the video in a previous article for an explanation of this paradox.

As the credit crunch intensified in the third quarter - and exploded late in the period with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers - Americans were increasingly unable to finance big purchases like homes, cars and big-ticket goods.

"Interest rates have shot rapidly higher in the last few months, and people are borrowing less because they don't want expensive credit hanging over their heads," said Michael Englund, chief economist for Action Economics. "The other component is the credit crunch, where qualified borrowers are unable to get credit."

That's a worrisome sign for the economy, as consumer spending makes up 70% of overall U.S. gross domestic product. The economy entered a long and deep recession in December 2007, and the prospect of a turnaround will weigh heavily on consumers' confidence to spend money.

There is another way.  But if we got into this mess with easy credit, more easy credit can't be the solution.

"Everyone over the past three months decided to become thrifty at the same time, but our incomes depend on other people spending," said Englund. "If we all start saving and cut back on our spending at the same time, it means more people will ultimately get fired."

Many who have not yet embraced frugality are going to have frugality embrace them.
- Mish

Yet, if we look at this year-over-year, American taxpayers are now on the hook for an estimated $8 TRILLION in total spending and "commitments" by the government in its desperate attempt to prevent a total meltdown of the financial system — yet stocks continue to tumble, banks refuse to lend, and the economy keeps sinking!

And I bet you thought Congress only authorized $700 billion.  I guess that depends on what your definition of "thought" is.

So while Americans try to save, and there's a mountain of debt piled on top of them involuntarily by their servant government.  What's the point in saving then?

Well, it can't get any worse, right?  I mean, as long as the government spends, we can at least keep our jobs, right?

The U.S. economy has shed 1.9 million jobs so far in 2008, with precipitous declines since September. As more Americans keep their wallets closed, Englund said the economy has entered a vicious cycle, in which Americans spend less and have less to spend.

D'oh!

And fourth-quarter debt data is likely to be even lower, as the peak of the credit crisis came in mid-October.

"There has been a particularly steep rise in the savings rate recently," said Englund. "With a large part of thriftiness due to panic, this trend could continue for a long time."

See that?  There's another example where the author links the problem to lack of spending, so savings are bad, umkay?  This s diametrically opposed to what we know is right.  Saving is good.  Just don't save dollars.  That's partially why everyone is confused; they've monkeyed with our money supply.

It's all related.  Prices in one sector falls, spending holds back to wait and see when the falling stops, which causes prices to fall further and spread to other sectors.  The government steps in to keep the prices from falling further which causes the market to become uncertain which causes prices to continue to fall.  The government solution is to keep bailing out by printing more money.  And they have promised they will never stop printing money.

Net worth in 12-month tailspin

Consumers watched their net worth decline for the fourth quarter in a row as it dropped by $2.8 trillion, or 4.7%, to $56.5 trillion, dragged down by precipitous declines in home values and the stock market. It was the largest decline in the 57-year history of the report.

It's interesting that the author tries to pass this off as unrelated to the previous section, other than the fact that they happened at the same time.  Of course, how does one imply causation in financial journalism?  So maybe by putting them in the same article, the reader needs to make that leap.  Good enough.

But if we're spending less and saving more, how can this be?  Because money is debt and debt is money.  Lower one, you lower the other.

The first quarter's decline follows wealth declines of $393 billion in the second quarter, $2.4 trillion in the first quarter and $1.5 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2007. Until then, net worth had been rising steadily since 2003, climbing nearly 31% over those five years.

Further confusion.  Trying to equate wealth with money is a problem.  You cannot print wealth, but you can print money.  And merely printing the money doesn't cause it to get into the economy.  It must be lent, thus easy credit.

The four quarters of declines have resulted in a net 11.1% decline in Americans' wealth in the last 12 months. During the bear market of 2000 through 2002, household's net worth dropped just 6.2%.

The net value of financial assets for households fell by $2.1 trillion, or 4.4%, led mainly by declines in stock holdings and mutual funds.

Americans' share of corporate equities plummeted $943.5 billion - an 11.5% drop - in the quarter to $7.3 trillion. With major stock indexes like the S&P 500 falling 40% or more since January, shares of mutual funds, a primary investment of 401(k) retirement funds, declined $597.4 billion, or 12.4%, to $4.2 trillion.

Financial assets account for about two-thirds of households' net worth, but consumers have also been hit hard by sinking home prices. Home values declined by $347 billion in the quarter to $19.1 trillion.

"Consumers are going through a major change in their spending and savings habits," said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed Governor. "Throughout the housing bubble, consumers had a savings rate of zero, relying on the rising price of their homes. Now they're saving money for the future instead of spending it."

Too bad they're saving dollars that are backed by nothing (backed by debt, which is nothing physical).  The less debt, the less "value."  So we should trash this debt based economy.  It's such a waste of effort.

But the government will never see it that way.  At some point, Obama's New New Deal will kick in to replace the spending, then the real fun begins.  The government credit will replace the consumer credit.  Bailout after bailout, leading to more war, more overall destruction.  Can't we see where this is going?  Total nationalization of the US Economy?

Want change?  We all want change, don't we?  How about small change?  That's all we'll have when this is over.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Friday, December 5, 2008

Perpetual Bush


My previous prediction is still forthcoming.  While we're waiting, I think I'll add some more detail and make another prediction contingent on it.  It's all just speculation, but indulge me.

On the 18th of this month, or thereabout, I think we will see:

  1. The Dow fall by 3,000 points in one day.
  2. SEC will halt trading.
  3. Some hedge funds will start to default.
  4. The Federal Government will start to guarantee hedge funds.

All this will result in a postponement of the inauguration, which means Bush will not step down on schedule.  How do I know this?  It's based on a hunch, but there is one objective principle: speed.

The administration will point out that The Plan needs a person with "temporary" emergency powers to fix the mess we're in quickly and with agility.  The administration will correctly claim that legislative bodies cannot act fast enough (central government pretty much never moves fast enough).  The administration may make use of the legislative process to hand over emergency powers or they may not.  Obama will back off and endorse this decision to avoid further deterioration in the crisis.

I really don't think this is part of some evil master plan.  I really do think this is just how these things play out.  There are some eerie signs of this going much wider ... e.g.:



In anticipation, I'm making my signs already ... e.g.:

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

$199k trades


You can't really see it anymore, but on the 26th, "Freddie Mac PRFD 'N'" (traded as NYSE:FRE-N) had a $200k trade (see discussion threads: WTF, Freedie preferred, impossible).

Well, it happened again on September 30th, this time "CLAYMORE US CAP ETF" (traded as AMEX:UBD) (see discussion threads: Another Screw Up By Google..., in at 48.21!).

I had not seen it happen again after that.  Must have been a glitch in the Google (isn't that supposed to cause déjà vu?).

Posted by email from Anthony Martin's Weblog (posterous)

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Strange NASDAQ Activity


At around 3:07 PM (EST), the NASDAQ flat-lined.  The chart below shows what Yahoo! saw at the end of the day with the NASDAQ in blue and the Dow Jones Industrial average in red.  Google shows the same thing and there's a message board with questions about it.

I'm sure it's a simple glitch in how the official data is being published because it affected all financial news outlets that I checked, including Yahoo!, Google, CNBC, MSNBC, et al.

Just one of those things, I guess.

Posted by email from Anthony Martin's Weblog (posterous)

Monday, December 1, 2008

Benjamin's Blocks

Benjamin is a bit of an enigma sometimes.  He has autistic symptoms but more than that.  Benjamin has always been delayed in things like gross and fine motor skills, and from what Karen and I have read, there's very little to link delayed motor skills with autism.  It has been brought to my attention that new studies have just recently linked lower gross motor skills with autism, but there is not a lot of data.  These studies look at children after they have been diagnosed with autism and found that some (20% or so) have lower muscle tone.  It's exciting to see studies like this because it does point to Benjamin, but not entirely.

For example, he has just now started playing with blocks by stacking them.  Neurotypical children (like his sister) tend to play with blocks like this at about two years.  It's not a rule, just a tendency.  Benjamin is five (six in March) and he has stacked blocks in school under direction from teachers, but this new behavior is different.  He gets out the blocks and spends hours stacking them, knocking them down, and stacking them again.  His approach to them seems almost like problem solving.  He seems like he's stacking them to see how high he can get.  On the carpet, he doesn't get more than five or six.  Knowing Benjamin, he'll be stacking blocks until he's seven, then he'll move on to the next stage.

So while a one-year-old can stack blocks, a two-year-old typically plays by stacking blocks.  Developmentally, in this particular area, Benjamin has been one, and now he is developmentally two (with blocks, anyway).

Benjamin has always shown progress like this.  He takes a long time to reach a developmental milestone, then he camps there for a very long time.  This is why I've always had hope.  It might take him longer than most children, but he will get there with time.  He has always progressed, just not at the speed people like.

It seems like he started getting interested in blocks after one of his favorite electronic toys broke from overuse.  There's a lesson there for us, I suppose.  Or maybe that was just a coincidence.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Posted by email from Anthony Martin's Weblog (posterous)

Momentary Socialists


I know a lot of conservatives.  I am a conservative.  At least, that's how I identify myself.  And by conservative, I mean:

conservative |kənˈsərvətiv; -vəˌtiv|
adjective
holding to traditional attitudes and values and cautious about change or innovation, typically in relation to politics or religion.
  • (of dress or taste) sober and conventional : a conservative suit.
  • (of an estimate) purposely low for the sake of caution : the film was not cheap—$30,000 is a conservative estimate.
  • (of surgery or medical treatment) intended to control rather than eliminate a condition, with existing tissue preserved as far as possible.
  • (Conservative) of or relating to the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party in another country.
noun
a person who is averse to change and holds to traditional values and attitudes, typically in relation to politics.
  • (Conservative) a supporter or member of the Conservative Party of Great Britain or a similar party in another country.
DERIVATIVES
conservatism |kənˈsərvəˌtizəm| |kənˈsərvədɪzəm| noun
conservatively |kənˈsərvəd1vli| adverb
conservativeness |kənˈsərvədɪvn1s| noun
ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense [aiming to preserve] ): from late Latin conservativus, from conservat- 'conserved,' from the verb conservare (see conserve). Current senses date from the mid 19th century onward.


The above definition is from the New Oxford American Dictionary.  I included the entire definition just to provide a bit more perspective.  Obviously, I don't identify as a member of the Conservative Party of Great Britain, but the word does carry such meaning.  The conservatives I know in the US are quite comfortable with this definition.

Yet a great many people who identify themselves as conservative completely throw out their conservative values under certain (momentary) circumstances.  To me, this demonstrates a compromised set of principles and it seems like a form of intellectual sloth.

For example, with the so-called War on Drugs, many conservatives become socialists, after all, the term was first used by President Richard Nixon in 1971, and his choice of words was probably based on the War on Poverty, announced by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.  It is socialism because the War on Drugs uses tax dollars to regulate substances in one state while seeking funding from another.  It is the classic redistribution of wealth, the very definition of socialism.  The War on Drugs forces one state with less of a "drug problem" to pay for enforcement in another state with more of a "drug problem," for example.   So regardless of how you feel about the social problems drugs cause, the laws are enforced federally and therefore require funding on a national scale.

The War on Drugs is just one example of how many conservatives sometimes turn into what I call "momentary socialists."  No Child Left Behind is another example.  It is a conservative idea to abolish the Department of Education because a free public education amounts to welfare for the middle-class.  Like the War on Drugs, it forces one state to fund education in another state.

In both of my examples, with the War on Drugs and No Child Left Behind, funding originates by each according to ability while funding is allocated to each according to need.  If a conservative cannot recognize the previous sentence as pure unfettered socialism, I think those conservatives are very lost or have compromised principles at work.

I believe these are examples why the conservative base has lost confidence in the Republican Party.  The slow erosion into momentary socialism and compromised principles has eroded support and cost the conservative movement the election.

To take from one, because it is thought his own industry and that of his fathers has acquired too much, in order to spare to others, who, or whose fathers, have not exercised equal industry and skill, is to violate arbitrarily the first principle of association, the guarantee to everyone the free exercise of his industry and the fruits acquired by it.
— Thomas Jefferson, letter to Joseph Milligan, April 6, 1816

When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.
— Benjamin Franklin

The above quotes and others make it clear that those who promote "redistribution of wealth" as a task for the government fly in the face against the very basic principles underlying the United States of America.  We couldn't trust the Republican Party this time around.  It's amazing they've lasted as long as they have.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Posted by email from Anthony Martin's Weblog (posterous)