雄关漫道真如铁,而今迈步从头越
"Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect." - Mark Twain
2008-10-12
Finance Students Keep Their Job Hopes Alive
For students who set their sights on Wall Street during the boom years, the end has come just as they are getting ready to join the party.

Wall Street recruiters have canceled or postponed visits to elite universities like Harvard, Princeton and Stanford, citing the turmoil in the markets.

“Jobs are being taken down by the day on our career services Web site,” said Kenton Murray, 20, a senior at Princeton, where J. P. Morgan Chase, Lehman Brothers, Deutsche Bank and others canceled recruitment sessions since the start of the semester.

But even as the markets spiraled downward, business and finance students at top universities said they were not panicked about their futures and were confident that the financial markets would recover. For the young achievers drawn to finance, expectations die hard.

Mr. Murray described the mood at Princeton as cautiously optimistic.

“No one I’ve talked to is worried about moving back home yet,” he said. “But everyone I know is studying for the LSATs right now, people who a month ago had no intention of ever going to law school.”

Financial companies shed 150,000 jobs last year and more than 100,000 so far this year, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a national job placement company. Yet amid the downturn, applications to graduate business schools rose this year, as they have in other periods of uncertainty.

Adam Hallowell, 20, an economics major at Harvard, said his classmates were not overly upset by the market because they were prepared to change direction. “Mine is a generation that’s been told from high school onward, ‘You’re going to change careers five or six times throughout the course of your life,’ ” he said. Even as the Dow plunged day after day, Mr. Hallowell said the mood on campus had not changed, adding that “most students don’t personally have stock portfolios and 401(k) plans yet, which is probably why they aren’t very concerned.”

This resilience has surprised Charissa Asbury, who runs a program at Columbia University’s School of Continuing Education for graduates who want to go to business school. Ms. Asbury said she expected to see a panic among her students. Many were working on Wall Street; some had lost their jobs.

“I wondered if they would say, ‘Maybe this isn’t the time; I don’t want to spend the money if the salary is not going to be there,’ ” she said. “But instead they’re even more interested in finding exactly what they need to get into a top business school. Everyone’s worried about their prospects, but it’s translated into, ‘How do we get better credentials?’ ”

She added, “Now they feel, if they want to go to business school, they need to be from one of the top ones.”

Even at Harvard, students were more attentive at sessions and résumé round tables, said Robin Mount, interim director of career services. In previous years, they often spent these sessions sending text messages; this year, the sessions have been purposeful and heavily attended. Ms. Mount said she could have heard a pin drop.

Beverly Principal, assistant director of employment services at Stanford, said she had already seen a reduction in campus recruitment by banks, though a spokeswoman at J. P. Morgan Chase said it would continue recruiting at target universities throughout the semester.

When students do receive offers, they come under more scrutiny, before and after hiring, said Ronald Storch, a partner at Marcum and Kliegman, a large accounting firm. “A couple years ago there was too much work and not enough bodies,” Mr. Storch said. “We were hiring just to get bodies, and people could bounce from firm to firm. Now they’re not getting the same opportunities.”

Jian Yang, 25, who is in his second year at the University of Chicago’s graduate business school, recently considered his prospects in this new climate. Mr. Yang said he had friends who had lost jobs or taken internships at Lehman and Bear Stearns expecting to land full-time jobs, only to watch the companies fail. He expects to graduate with $200,000 in student debt.

“It’s definitely impacting the mood of the student body,” Mr. Yang said. “We’re all watching the news every day.” Where students in past years set their course on a single field, like investment banking, now they are looking in several areas to improve their chances, he said.

But Mr. Yang said he was not reconsidering his career path because he felt there would still be good jobs available to people like him, who come from top schools and are willing to work abroad. He said he and his friends had not changed their lifestyles, either. “Life kind of goes on,” he said.

“It’s almost a blessing to be in school while the economy is down; it’s a shelter,” Mr. Yang added. “So in one way I feel unlucky, because I missed the boom, but in another way I’m lucky. It’s a good way to spend three years of downturn.”

 

In a June poll by the Rockefeller Foundation, people ages 18 to 29 were more pessimistic about the economy than any other age group, with half saying that America was a better place in the 1990s and would continue to decline. But they did not apply this pessimism to themselves; they were most likely to say that if they work hard and play by the rules, they will be able to achieve the American Dream.

John Challenger, chief executive of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, said that even as investment banking suffered, opportunities remained in health care, energy, international business and consulting. “It’ll be interesting to see if the top graduates flow to other industries,” Mr. Challenger said. “It remains to be seen whether we’ll see an increase in idealism or public service like we did after 9/11 or Hurricane Katrina.”

For Tina Phoolka, 28, a graduate business student at Bentley College in Waltham, Mass., the new reality means staying in school, even after she earns her M.B.A.

“I thought I was going to get a $100,000-plus job and everything would be great, with lots of opportunities,” Ms. Phoolka said. “Now I’m wondering if I should extend my graduation date, enroll in a Ph.D. program or get a dual degree. I’ll probably study more or look for a job in another country.”

For those who are out of school, the changes in the horizon have been more immediate.

When Jon Cifuentes, 28, landed a job at Smith Barney out of college, he believed that within three years, he would be making more than $100,000 a year, reaping ever larger bonuses.

Then this May, after two job changes, Mr. Cifuentes lost his job in a large layoff at Nomura, an investment bank based in Asia, leaving him with a $3,000 mortgage payment and a case of disillusionment.

After a summer of working part time in his father’s contracting business, Mr. Cifuentes now has a temporary job at Macquarie Capital Partners and is finishing his master’s degree in economics. He and his wife moved into an apartment owned by his sister; they can rent theirs out.

“Compared to some friends I used to work with, I’m doing well,” Mr. Cifuentes said. “Some guys are in their mid-40s, with a wife, kids, mortgage and a lot of bills. They’re in a much worse spot.”

Jonathan Miller, 24, who joined a midmarket investment bank in July 2007, just before the market started to fall, has also tasted the new reality. Mr. Miller had majored in philosophy and English but was drawn to banking in his senior year by the prospect of a high salary and “something with sparkle and shine” for his résumé, he said.

“When I got the job,” Mr. Miller said, “the recruiter told me, just don’t screw up and you’ll do well.” But he and his team were laid off last month — all now scrambling for work, along with thousands of others.

Mr. Miller said he thought his skills and contacts would pull him through the downturn. Asked what he was doing with the 12 to 14 hours a day he previously spent at his job, he said: “Looking for work. I spend nine hours a day on the phone, writing e-mails, talking to headhunters. You need to be aggressive and focused. My prospects aren’t terrible.”

He said if he did not find a job in the next few months, he would consider graduate school or a new field of work.

“I don’t feel cheated,” Mr. Miller said. “But it’s unfortunate that by lack of timing I missed it by a year or two.”

2008-10-04

Comment - by New Yorker Editor

The Choice

October 13, 2008

 

Never in living memory has an election been more critical than the one fast approaching—that’s the quadrennial cliché, as expected as the balloons and the bombast. And yet when has it ever felt so urgently true? When have so many Americans had so clear a sense that a Presidency has—at the levels of competence, vision, and integrity—undermined the country and its ideals?

The incumbent Administration has distinguished itself for the ages. The Presidency of George W. Bush is the worst since Reconstruction, so there is no mystery about why the Republican Party—which has held dominion over the executive branch of the federal government for the past eight years and the legislative branch for most of that time—has little desire to defend its record, domestic or foreign. The only speaker at the Convention in St. Paul who uttered more than a sentence or two in support of the President was his wife, Laura. Meanwhile, the nominee, John McCain, played the part of a vaudeville illusionist, asking to be regarded as an apostle of change after years of embracing the essentials of the Bush agenda with ever-increasing ardor.

The Republican disaster begins at home. Even before taking into account whatever fantastically expensive plan eventually emerges to help rescue the financial system from Wall Street’s long-running pyramid schemes, the economic and fiscal picture is bleak. During the Bush Administration, the national debt, now approaching ten trillion dollars, has nearly doubled. Next year’s federal budget is projected to run a half-trillion-dollar deficit, a precipitous fall from the seven-hundred-billion-dollar surplus that was projected when Bill Clinton left office. Private-sector job creation has been a sixth of what it was under President Clinton. Five million people have fallen into poverty. The number of Americans without health insurance has grown by seven million, while average premiums have nearly doubled. Meanwhile, the principal domestic achievement of the Bush Administration has been to shift the relative burden of taxation from the rich to the rest. For the top one per cent of us, the Bush tax cuts are worth, on average, about a thousand dollars a week; for the bottom fifth, about a dollar and a half. The unfairness will only increase if the painful, yet necessary, effort to rescue the credit markets ends up preventing the rescue of our health-care system, our environment, and our physical, educational, and industrial infrastructure.

At the same time, a hundred and fifty thousand American troops are in Iraq and thirty-three thousand are in Afghanistan. There is still disagreement about the wisdom of overthrowing Saddam Hussein and his horrific regime, but there is no longer the slightest doubt that the Bush Administration manipulated, bullied, and lied the American public into this war and then mismanaged its prosecution in nearly every aspect. The direct costs, besides an expenditure of more than six hundred billion dollars, have included the loss of more than four thousand Americans, the wounding of thirty thousand, the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqis, and the displacement of four and a half million men, women, and children. Only now, after American forces have been fighting for a year longer than they did in the Second World War, is there a glimmer of hope that the conflict in Iraq has entered a stage of fragile stability.

The indirect costs, both of the war in particular and of the Administration’s unilateralist approach to foreign policy in general, have also been immense. The torture of prisoners, authorized at the highest level, has been an ethical and a public-diplomacy catastrophe. At a moment when the global environment, the global economy, and global stability all demand a transition to new sources of energy, the United States has been a global retrograde, wasteful in its consumption and heedless in its policy. Strategically and morally, the Bush Administration has squandered the American capacity to counter the example and the swagger of its rivals. China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and other illiberal states have concluded, each in its own way, that democratic principles and human rights need not be components of a stable, prosperous future. At recent meetings of the United Nations, emboldened despots like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran came to town sneering at our predicament and hailing the “end of the American era.”

The election of 2008 is the first in more than half a century in which no incumbent President or Vice-President is on the ballot. There is, however, an incumbent party, and that party has been lucky enough to find itself, apparently against the wishes of its “base,” with a nominee who evidently disliked George W. Bush before it became fashionable to do so. In South Carolina in 2000, Bush crushed John McCain with a sub-rosa primary campaign of such viciousness that McCain lashed out memorably against Bush’s Christian-right allies. So profound was McCain’s anger that in 2004 he flirted with the possibility of joining the Democratic ticket under John Kerry. Bush, who took office as a “compassionate conservative,” governed immediately as a rightist ideologue. During that first term, McCain bolstered his reputation, sometimes deserved, as a “maverick” willing to work with Democrats on such issues as normalizing relations with Vietnam, campaign-finance reform, and immigration reform. He co-sponsored, with John Edwards and Edward Kennedy, a patients’ bill of rights. In 2001 and 2003, he voted against the Bush tax cuts. With John Kerry, he co-sponsored a bill raising auto-fuel efficiency standards and, with Joseph Lieberman, a cap-and-trade regime on carbon emissions. He was one of a minority of Republicans opposed to unlimited drilling for oil and gas off America’s shores.

Since the 2004 election, however, McCain has moved remorselessly rightward in his quest for the Republican nomination. He paid obeisance to Jerry Falwell and preachers of his ilk. He abandoned immigration reform, eventually coming out against his own bill. Most shocking, McCain, who had repeatedly denounced torture under all circumstances, voted in February against a ban on the very techniques of “enhanced interrogation” that he himself once endured in Vietnam—as long as the torturers were civilians employed by the C.I.A.

On almost every issue, McCain and the Democratic Party’s nominee, Barack Obama, speak the generalized language of “reform,” but only Obama has provided a convincing, rational, and fully developed vision. McCain has abandoned his opposition to the Bush-era tax cuts and has taken up the demagogic call—in the midst of recession and Wall Street calamity, with looming crises in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid—for more tax cuts. Bush’s expire in 2011. If McCain, as he has proposed, cuts taxes for corporations and estates, the benefits once more would go disproportionately to the wealthy.

In Washington, the craze for pure market triumphalism is over. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson arrived in town (via Goldman Sachs) a Republican, but it seems that he will leave a Democrat. In other words, he has come to see that the abuses that led to the current financial crisis––not least, excessive speculation on borrowed capital––can be fixed only with government regulation and oversight. McCain, who has never evinced much interest in, or knowledge of, economic questions, has had little of substance to say about the crisis. His most notable gesture of concern—a melodramatic call last month to suspend his campaign and postpone the first Presidential debate until the government bailout plan was ready—soon revealed itself as an empty diversionary tactic.

By contrast, Obama has made a serious study of the mechanics and the history of this economic disaster and of the possibilities of stimulating a recovery. Last March, in New York, in a speech notable for its depth, balance, and foresight, he said, “A complete disdain for pay-as-you-go budgeting, coupled with a generally scornful attitude towards oversight and enforcement, allowed far too many to put short-term gain ahead of long-term consequences.” Obama is committed to reforms that value not only the restoration of stability but also the protection of the vast majority of the population, which did not partake of the fruits of the binge years. He has called for greater and more programmatic regulation of the financial system; the creation of a National Infrastructure Reinvestment Bank, which would help reverse the decay of our roads, bridges, and mass-transit systems, and create millions of jobs; and a major investment in the green-energy sector.

On energy and global warming, Obama offers a set of forceful proposals. He supports a cap-and-trade program to reduce America’s carbon emissions by eighty per cent by 2050—an enormously ambitious goal, but one that many climate scientists say must be met if atmospheric carbon dioxide is to be kept below disastrous levels. Large emitters, like utilities, would acquire carbon allowances, and those which emit less carbon dioxide than their allotment could sell the resulting credits to those which emit more; over time, the available allowances would decline. Significantly, Obama wants to auction off the allowances; this would provide fifteen billion dollars a year for developing alternative-energy sources and creating job-training programs in green technologies. He also wants to raise federal fuel-economy standards and to require that ten per cent of America’s electricity be generated from renewable sources by 2012. Taken together, his proposals represent the most coherent and far-sighted strategy ever offered by a Presidential candidate for reducing the nation’s reliance on fossil fuels.

There was once reason to hope that McCain and Obama would have a sensible debate about energy and climate policy. McCain was one of the first Republicans in the Senate to support federal limits on carbon dioxide, and he has touted his own support for a less ambitious cap-and-trade program as evidence of his independence from the White House. But, as polls showed Americans growing jittery about gasoline prices, McCain apparently found it expedient in this area, too, to shift course. He took a dubious idea—lifting the federal moratorium on offshore oil drilling—and placed it at the very center of his campaign. Opening up America’s coastal waters to drilling would have no impact on gasoline prices in the short term, and, even over the long term, the effect, according to a recent analysis by the Department of Energy, would be “insignificant.” Such inconvenient facts, however, are waved away by a campaign that finally found its voice with the slogan “Drill, baby, drill!”

The contrast between the candidates is even sharper with respect to the third branch of government. A tense equipoise currently prevails among the Justices of the Supreme Court, where four hard-core conservatives face off against four moderate liberals. Anthony M. Kennedy is the swing vote, determining the outcome of case after case.

McCain cites Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, two reliable conservatives, as models for his own prospective appointments. If he means what he says, and if he replaces even one moderate on the current Supreme Court, then Roe v. Wade will be reversed, and states will again be allowed to impose absolute bans on abortion. McCain’s views have hardened on this issue. In 1999, he said he opposed overturning Roe; by 2006, he was saying that its demise “wouldn’t bother me any”; by 2008, he no longer supported adding rape and incest as exceptions to his party’s platform opposing abortion.

But scrapping Roe—which, after all, would leave states as free to permit abortion as to criminalize it—would be just the beginning. Given the ideological agenda that the existing conservative bloc has pursued, it’s safe to predict that affirmative action of all kinds would likely be outlawed by a McCain Court. Efforts to expand executive power, which, in recent years, certain Justices have nobly tried to resist, would likely increase. Barriers between church and state would fall; executions would soar; legal checks on corporate power would wither—all with just one new conservative nominee on the Court. And the next President is likely to make three appointments.

Obama, who taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago, voted against confirming not only Roberts and Alito but also several unqualified lower-court nominees. As an Illinois state senator, he won the support of prosecutors and police organizations for new protections against convicting the innocent in capital cases. While McCain voted to continue to deny habeas-corpus rights to detainees, perpetuating the Bush Administration’s regime of state-sponsored extra-legal detention, Obama took the opposite side, pushing to restore the right of all U.S.-held prisoners to a hearing. The judicial future would be safe in his care.

In the shorthand of political commentary, the Iraq war seems to leave McCain and Obama roughly even. Opposing it before the invasion, Obama had the prescience to warn of a costly and indefinite occupation and rising anti-American radicalism around the world; supporting it, McCain foresaw none of this. More recently, in early 2007 McCain risked his Presidential prospects on the proposition that five additional combat brigades could salvage a war that by then appeared hopeless. Obama, along with most of the country, had decided that it was time to cut American losses. Neither candidate’s calculations on Iraq have been as cheaply political as McCain’s repeated assertion that Obama values his career over his country; both men based their positions, right or wrong, on judgment and principle.

President Bush’s successor will inherit two wars and the realities of limited resources, flagging popular will, and the dwindling possibilities of what can be achieved by American power. McCain’s views on these subjects range from the simplistic to the unknown. In Iraq, he seeks “victory”—a word that General David Petraeus refuses to use, and one that fundamentally misrepresents the messy, open-ended nature of the conflict. As for Afghanistan, on the rare occasions when McCain mentions it he implies that the surge can be transferred directly from Iraq, which suggests that his grasp of counterinsurgency is not as firm as he insisted it was during the first Presidential debate. McCain always displays more faith in force than interest in its strategic consequences. Unlike Obama, McCain has no political strategy for either war, only the dubious hope that greater security will allow things to work out. Obama has long warned of deterioration along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and has a considered grasp of its vital importance. His strategy for both Afghanistan and Iraq shows an understanding of the role that internal politics, economics, corruption, and regional diplomacy play in wars where there is no battlefield victory.

Unimaginably painful personal experience taught McCain that war is above all a test of honor: maintain the will to fight on, be prepared to risk everything, and you will prevail. Asked during the first debate to outline “the lessons of Iraq,” McCain said, “I think the lessons of Iraq are very clear: that you cannot have a failed strategy that will then cause you to nearly lose a conflict.” A soldier’s answer––but a statesman must have a broader view of war and peace. The years ahead will demand not only determination but also diplomacy, flexibility, patience, judiciousness, and intellectual engagement. These are no more McCain’s strong suit than the current President’s. Obama, for his part, seems to know that more will be required than willpower and force to extract some advantage from the wreckage of the Bush years.

Obama is also better suited for the task of renewing the bedrock foundations of American influence. An American restoration in foreign affairs will require a commitment not only to international coöperation but also to international institutions that can address global warming, the dislocations of what will likely be a deepening global economic crisis, disease epidemics, nuclear proliferation, terrorism, and other, more traditional security challenges. Many of the Cold War-era vehicles for engagement and negotiation—the United Nations, the World Bank, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty regime, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization—are moribund, tattered, or outdated. Obama has the generational outlook that will be required to revive or reinvent these compacts. He would be the first postwar American President unencumbered by the legacies of either Munich or Vietnam.

The next President must also restore American moral credibility. Closing Guantánamo, banning all torture, and ending the Iraq war as responsibly as possible will provide a start, but only that. The modern Presidency is as much a vehicle for communication as for decision-making, and the relevant audiences are global. Obama has inspired many Americans in part because he holds up a mirror to their own idealism. His election would do no less—and likely more—overseas.

What most distinguishes the candidates, however, is character—and here, contrary to conventional wisdom, Obama is clearly the stronger of the two. Not long ago, Rick Davis, McCain’s campaign manager, said, “This election is not about issues. This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candidates.” The view that this election is about personalities leaves out policy, complexity, and accountability. Even so, there’s some truth in what Davis said––but it hardly points to the conclusion that he intended.

Echoing Obama, McCain has made “change” one of his campaign mantras. But the change he has actually provided has been in himself, and it is not just a matter of altering his positions. A willingness to pander and even lie has come to define his Presidential campaign and its televised advertisements. A contemptuous duplicity, a meanness, has entered his talk on the stump—so much so that it seems obvious that, in the drive for victory, he is willing to replicate some of the same underhanded methods that defeated him eight years ago in South Carolina.

Perhaps nothing revealed McCain’s cynicism more than his choice of Sarah Palin, the former mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, who had been governor of that state for twenty-one months, as the Republican nominee for Vice-President. In the interviews she has given since her nomination, she has had difficulty uttering coherent unscripted responses about the most basic issues of the day. We are watching a candidate for Vice-President cram for her ongoing exam in elementary domestic and foreign policy. This is funny as a Tina Fey routine on “Saturday Night Live,” but as a vision of the political future it’s deeply unsettling. Palin has no business being the backup to a President of any age, much less to one who is seventy-two and in imperfect health. In choosing her, McCain committed an act of breathtaking heedlessness and irresponsibility. Obama’s choice, Joe Biden, is not without imperfections. His tongue sometimes runs in advance of his mind, providing his own fodder for late-night comedians, but there is no comparison with Palin. His deep experience in foreign affairs, the judiciary, and social policy makes him an assuring and complementary partner for Obama.

The longer the campaign goes on, the more the issues of personality and character have reflected badly on McCain. Unless appearances are very deceiving, he is impulsive, impatient, self-dramatizing, erratic, and a compulsive risk-taker. These qualities may have contributed to his usefulness as a “maverick” senator. But in a President they would be a menace.

By contrast, Obama’s transformative message is accompanied by a sense of pragmatic calm. A tropism for unity is an essential part of his character and of his campaign. It is part of what allowed him to overcome a Democratic opponent who entered the race with tremendous advantages. It is what helped him forge a political career relying both on the liberals of Hyde Park and on the political regulars of downtown Chicago. His policy preferences are distinctly liberal, but he is determined to speak to a broad range of Americans who do not necessarily share his every value or opinion. For some who oppose him, his equanimity even under the ugliest attack seems like hauteur; for some who support him, his reluctance to counterattack in the same vein seems like self-defeating detachment. Yet it is Obama’s temperament—and not McCain’s—that seems appropriate for the office both men seek and for the volatile and dangerous era in which we live. Those who dismiss his centeredness as self-centeredness or his composure as indifference are as wrong as those who mistook Eisenhower’s stolidity for denseness or Lincoln’s humor for lack of seriousness.

Nowadays, almost every politician who thinks about running for President arranges to become an author. Obama’s books are different: he wrote them. “The Audacity of Hope” (2006) is a set of policy disquisitions loosely structured around an account of his freshman year in the United States Senate. Though a campaign manifesto of sorts, it is superior to that genre’s usual blowsy pastiche of ghostwritten speeches. But it is Obama’s first book, “Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance” (1995), that offers an unprecedented glimpse into the mind and heart of a potential President. Obama began writing it in his early thirties, before he was a candidate for anything. Not since Theodore Roosevelt has an American politician this close to the pinnacle of power produced such a sustained, highly personal work of literary merit before being definitively swept up by the tides of political ambition.

A Presidential election is not the awarding of a Pulitzer Prize: we elect a politician and, we hope, a statesman, not an author. But Obama’s first book is valuable in the way that it reveals his fundamental attitudes of mind and spirit. “Dreams from My Father” is an illuminating memoir not only in the substance of Obama’s own peculiarly American story but also in the qualities he brings to the telling: a formidable intelligence, emotional empathy, self-reflection, balance, and a remarkable ability to see life and the world through the eyes of people very different from himself. In common with nearly all other senators and governors of his generation, Obama does not count military service as part of his biography. But his life has been full of tests—personal, spiritual, racial, political—that bear on his preparation for great responsibility.

It is perfectly legitimate to call attention, as McCain has done, to Obama’s lack of conventional national and international policymaking experience. We, too, wish he had more of it. But office-holding is not the only kind of experience relevant to the task of leading a wildly variegated nation. Obama’s immersion in diverse human environments (Hawaii’s racial rainbow, Chicago’s racial cauldron, countercultural New York, middle-class Kansas, predominantly Muslim Indonesia), his years of organizing among the poor, his taste of corporate law and his grounding in public-interest and constitutional law—these, too, are experiences. And his books show that he has wrung from them every drop of insight and breadth of perspective they contained.

The exhaustingly, sometimes infuriatingly long campaign of 2008 (and 2007) has had at least one virtue: it has demonstrated that Obama’s intelligence and steady temperament are not just figments of the writer’s craft. He has made mistakes, to be sure. (His failure to accept McCain’s imaginative proposal for a series of unmediated joint appearances was among them.) But, on the whole, his campaign has been marked by patience, planning, discipline, organization, technological proficiency, and strategic astuteness. Obama has often looked two or three moves ahead, relatively impervious to the permanent hysteria of the hourly news cycle and the cable-news shouters. And when crisis has struck, as it did when the divisive antics of his ex-pastor threatened to bring down his campaign, he has proved equal to the moment, rescuing himself with a speech that not only drew the poison but also demonstrated a profound respect for the electorate. Although his opponents have tried to attack him as a man of “mere” words, Obama has returned eloquence to its essential place in American politics. The choice between experience and eloquence is a false one––something that Lincoln, out of office after a single term in Congress, proved in his own campaign of political and national renewal. Obama’s “mere” speeches on everything from the economy and foreign affairs to race have been at the center of his campaign and its success; if he wins, his eloquence will be central to his ability to govern.

We cannot expect one man to heal every wound, to solve every major crisis of policy. So much of the Presidency, as they say, is a matter of waking up in the morning and trying to drink from a fire hydrant. In the quiet of the Oval Office, the noise of immediate demands can be deafening. And yet Obama has precisely the temperament to shut out the noise when necessary and concentrate on the essential. The election of Obama—a man of mixed ethnicity, at once comfortable in the world and utterly representative of twenty-first-century America—would, at a stroke, reverse our country’s image abroad and refresh its spirit at home. His ascendance to the Presidency would be a symbolic culmination of the civil- and voting-rights acts of the nineteen-sixties and the century-long struggles for equality that preceded them. It could not help but say something encouraging, even exhilarating, about the country, about its dedication to tolerance and inclusiveness, about its fidelity, after all, to the values it proclaims in its textbooks. At a moment of economic calamity, international perplexity, political failure, and battered morale, America needs both uplift and realism, both change and steadiness. It needs a leader temperamentally, intellectually, and emotionally attuned to the complexities of our troubled globe. That leader’s name is Barack Obama.

The Editors

ILLUSTRATION: TOM BACHTELL
2008-09-18
据媒体报道,耶鲁大学经济学教授陈志武去年在北大演讲时,谈到毒黄鳝问题。他说,当年七月,他到苏州参加会议用餐时,一位科学院环境研究所知名学者对他说:“你们知道如今的黄鳝为什么长得这么快吗?就是因为饲养者用了激素,人吃了黄鳝,这些激素在人体内七、八年还要发挥作用。”陈志武说,听到这话之後,吓得那些与会学者们没人再敢吃黄鳝了。陈志武还说,“我有一个亲戚是卖豆芽的,他对我说:这些豆芽不能吃,用了激素,本来要五天才能长大的豆芽只要一天就长好了。本村人知道这些,都不去买这种豆芽,都是卖给广州,一卡车一卡车,一夜之间就到了广州的菜市场。”
  
  不仅黄鳝、豆芽,还有广东、香港人最爱吃的大闸蟹,也是用激素喂养的。江苏是中国盛产大闸蟹之地,有600多个蟹场。香港广东的大闸蟹,多是从江苏运来的。香港《壹周刊》去年十月报道说,“香港人喜欢吃大闸蟹,蟹价越来越便宜,几乎成为市民家常便菜。大闸蟹卖得愈便宜,市民吃得愈凶。”大闸蟹怎么越卖越便宜,是大丰收吗?
  
  该刊记者专程到江苏蟹场采访,结果发现,那些大闸蟹都是用激素快速养成的。
  
  湖里的大闸蟹一般至少两年才能长到二两以上,但江苏养殖场的大闸蟹,使用激素之后,都是一年蟹,当年下苗,当年养成上市。《壹周刊》的记者把从江苏蟹场买回来的螃蟹送到香港“标准及检定中心”化验发现,蟹肉里不仅有激素,还有多种对人体有害的抗菌素。
  
  江苏使用“高科技”养蟹闻名的“大发水产养殖场”徐场长对香港记者说,“从蟹苗到上市,至少要十种药,例如:氯霉素、土霉素、乙醇、痢特灵、诺氟沙星、恩诺沙星、病毒灵、多西霉素、己烯雌酚等等。”他还谦虚地说,他们比较守本份,福建人更毒,在蟹产卵时喂避孕药,这样母蟹不会变瘦,蟹苗更容易长大。说着,这位蟹场负责人捞出两只大蟹对记者说: “你看看,多凶,不吃药哪有这么凶!”当记者问这么做不是害人吗?这位场长直率地说,“现在的鱼类、家禽类,哪一样不是*药物长大的!”你不这样做,别人做,你还能做生意吗?
  
  香港记者在江苏蟹场看到,“工人将药物搀入饲料,站在船上撒饲料,有如天女散花。”江苏的大闸蟹,多数外销香港、广东,而且使用飞机运,当晚捞蟹,次日上午就运到香港、深圳,下午就上市,晚上香港人就吃到嘴了。那位徐场长透露,为了防止运输途中大闸蟹死亡,他们在捕蟹前再喂一次抗菌素。而24小时后,那些抗菌素就经蟹肉到了港人肚子里。香港记者说,在“大发养殖场”附近路上,随处可见“蟹药店”。他们进去一家,卖药人一下子拿出十多包不同种类的药物,并告诉记者用法:土霉素每百斤饲料搀 500颗、痢特灵每百斤饲料搀8两、乙醇每百斤饲料搀9两……
  
  《壹周刊》记者把从港九、新界、深圳、江苏四个地方买回的12只大闸蟹,送去化验,结果发现11个样本有土霉素,6个样本有氯霉素。土霉素属“过时”抗菌素,因副作用太多,很少使用;而氯霉素属香港违禁物质,因会压抑骨髓功能,影响人体产生血球和血小板,导致贫血、抵抗力下降和凝血困难问题。孕妇吃了含有土霉素的毒蟹,胎儿的骨质会变灰、变脆。
  
  香港记者在江苏了解到,蟹场附近的女性,很多因吃了带毒的大闸蟹而有流产症。在“大发蟹场”附近住的周红梅说,“我生在水边,吃水产长大,怀上三个孩子都流产了。后来医生禁止我吃螃蟹,说里面的药物会对我不利,我照做了,才有了这个小宝宝。”
  
  除了使用激素、抗菌素,江苏的蟹场还使用死猫、死狗、死家禽等喂养大闸蟹。江苏“新群蟹场”被称为“李叔”的负责人的床下就放着两只未剥皮的死狗,还有一堆死鸡鸭。他说,“一星期放一次,蟹特别喜欢吃烂肉!”香港记者看到蟹塘中浮着一只剥了皮的死狗,两只大闸蟹爬在狗上进食。水面的狗血红中带紫,狗头呲牙咧嘴,样子很恐怖。但那位“李叔”却很轻松地从他的床下拖出一只死狗,剥去皮毛,拎着狗腿对记者得意地说:“这是天然饲料,我的蟹营养丰富,从小吃肉,不像别人的蟹从小吃药!”但这些狗都是走私团伙将路上的狗用剧毒氰化钾毒死後,拿来出售的,本身就是毒狗。
  
  养蟹的人说,现在大闸蟹饲料有两种:素和荤。吃素就是喂激素,以及土霉素、氯霉素,金霉素等抗菌素;吃荤就是往蟹塘里扔死狗、死猪、死鸡、死老鼠、死鱼、死虾,这叫“天然饲料”。
  
  江苏阳澄湖出产的大闸蟹最出名,但据水产部门统计,阳澄湖的一级大闸蟹,每年只产一万三千只。但去年香港人吃了一千三百万只螃蟹(平均每人吃两只),可见大部份都是冒牌货。江苏淡水研究所工程师唐天德说,现在全中国除西藏外,都说出售正宗阳澄湖大闸蟹,但八成以上是杂种蟹;是毒蟹。
  
  广东人、香港人还喜欢吃乌龟,认为大补。但养殖户用避孕药替乌龟增肥,本来五、六年才长大的乌龟,现在一两年就能上市。香港人和广东人还喜欢吃蛇,但据深圳《晶报》报道,蛇场为了使蛇在短期内份量加重,也喂避孕药。深圳、香港市面出售的蛇,体形肥肥大大的都是食药蛇。
  
  据广州《南方周末》报道,中国每年生产 700吨诺酮类(一种抗菌素),但其中有一半被蟹场、蛇场、乌龟场、黄鳝场等养殖业用掉;再加上其他种类的抗菌素,不知总数有多少吨,最后全部转到了香港人、广东人,以至各地中国人的肚子里,不知慢性杀死了多少国人。谁知道这萨斯病是不是这些毒药经毒动物再转化到人体后产生的呢?专家们不是说这种病毒以前只在动物体内产生过吗。
  
  这些毒螃蟹、毒蛇、毒黄鳝、毒乌龟等,只是当今中国掺毒食品的巨大冰山一角。在中国人突然有了发财致富的机会、却又处于一个无法无天的道德真空(既无宗教信仰,传统伦理也全部沦丧)状态下,那种不顾一切赚钱的欲念,可以诱发出人性中最冷漠、最恶毒、最疯狂的部份。像往西红柿、葡萄等水果上撒药、涂色以增加鲜亮等,都根本不足一提了。在这种情况下,中国的食品检验制度又远远不完善,同时人为的*漏洞比大闸蟹还多。例如香港记者曾在江苏蟹场问那位徐场长,“国家有没有禁止或者化验标准?” 徐场长毫不忌讳地说,“笑话,你不了解国情吧!放药多少*经验。上市测试也没个准,他高兴就放行,不高兴,再干净也没用!”
  
  当年第一个吃螃蟹的人,被称为最勇敢的人。但今天,敢吃中国大闸蟹的人,还是世界上最勇敢的人,进入了一不怕苦(吃蟹好辛苦)、二不怕死的境地。但他们不是正在被“谋杀”吗?
 
在这片神奇的土地上
外国人喝牛奶结实了
中国人喝牛奶结石了
日本人口号:一天一杯牛奶振兴一个民族
中国人口号:一天一杯牛奶,震惊一个民族
此时此刻伊利,蒙牛最想对三鹿说什么
伊利:你他妈加就加了,不能少加点?
蒙牛:我从来都是奶粉里加三聚氰胺,你他妈三聚氰胺里加奶粉?
三鹿(委屈):那天漏斗坏了,没控制住量
完达山:还好那天料都被蒙牛给收光了,不卖给我,妈的,现在看看,老子没上榜,哈哈

从大米里我们认识了石蜡
从火腿里我们认识了敌敌畏
从咸鸭蛋、辣椒酱里我们认识了苏丹红
从火锅里我们认识了福尔马林
从银耳、蜜枣里我们认识了硫磺
从木耳中认识了硫酸铜
今天三鹿又让同胞知道了三聚氰胺的化学作用
2008-08-14
“他的体重是30岁!” 央视主持集体“笑奥”江湖

  新闻来源: 中新网


  韩乔生之后,韩氏意识流解说风格大热。本届奥运会开幕以后,这种解说方式更是异常流行。焦研峰、张萌萌、钱红等主持纷纷加入意识流解说团体,集体“笑奥” 江湖。为电视机前的观众详细解说赛事的同时,也带来了无数意外的笑声。昨日,热心观众纷纷收集奥运会开幕以来令人捧腹的解说词,其中,央视名嘴韩乔生仍凭其风格独特的“韩氏语录”当仁不让地成为搞笑第一人,新鲜出笼的韩乔生语录在一天时间内引来网友热捧。

  “笑奥”第一式 信马由缰

  “运动员只要身体任何一个部位触壁都可以,你就是用头去撞都可以!”韩乔生在解说运动赛事时随手拈来都是笑料的功力不是盖的。在本次解说游泳赛事时,这一招他又使用得得心应手。他用“水里的大鸟”来比喻最受关注的选手菲尔普斯,并赞叹他“除了一对大耳朵,身上就没有其它异物了。”令电视机前的观众云里雾里,水里为什么会有“大鸟”?“耳朵”为什么称“异物”?

  在昨日男子200x4接力赛项目中,美国队获得第一并破了世界纪录,韩大嘴一时激动,自言自语地在那边探究“为什么世界纪录能在水立方不停地被打破?”最后得出结论“是因为泳池的水好,经过净化的水不但可以浇水、洗衣服、洗地板,还可以三次利用去冲大街和建筑物……”(画外音:这跟水质有什么关系?)当身边的女搭档向他解释:“是因为水立方泳池比其他的深了0.5米,其他泳池是2.5米,水立方是3米”时,他恍然大悟,马上接口:“哦,深了5 米。”听得一名观众直叹:“可爱的韩大叔当初怎么学的算术?十几年都没进步过,真是再紧张的比赛也能让他说得不紧张了。”

  “笑奥”第二式 低级算术错误

  本届除了韩乔生之外,还有大连台挑选来的解说员焦研峰,他负责举重项目的解说,以没话找话、胡乱加减乘除的功力被公认为“韩乔生第二”。在男子举重 62公斤级决赛中,他介绍一位国外选手:“这位选手的抓举成绩120公斤,还不到中国选手140多公斤的一半。”(画外音:都不知道解说员是怎么算出来的,央视解说都是数学白痴吗?可以集体补课去。)

  在举重女子69公斤级决赛中,当刘春红第二次挺举试举成功时,焦研峰大笑:“刘春红她成功了,眉清目秀的刘春红,就像一朵小花儿一样,她举起了世界纪录!”“就像一朵小花儿”是他的口头禅,至于“举起了世界纪录”,很多人反映:自己当时笑得喷饭了。看样子,焦老师不仅算术不好,连语文成绩也不及格。

  “笑奥”第三式 没话找话

  中国女足和阿根廷女足比赛,解说员突然来一句,“今天,阿根廷队是有备而来。”这不是废话吗?人家是来比赛的,不是来旅游的。这种“没话找话”的绝活也是焦研峰最擅长的,他最喜欢在没话说的时候给运动员配画外音。当一位外国选手第二次试举没有成功,下场在准备室里工作人员拿嗅粉给她闻。第一次给她闻的时候,焦研峰说:“嗯,她是闻点嗅粉,要自己清醒一下,想想刚才,唉,我是怎么回事啊……”过了一会儿,工作人员又拿嗅粉给运动员闻,焦研峰又配音:“ 恩,再闻一下,再清醒一下,加深程度。”第三次,那个助理又把嗅粉给运动员递过去。那个女运动员就摇头,表示自己不用闻了,结果焦研峰就开始大笑着说:“ 哈哈哈,够了,不要了,我不要闻了。”这种解说方式也引来热议,部分支持者认为“配音很动漫,很搞笑。”反对的观众则认为太无厘头了,解说员又不是运动员肚子里的蛔虫。

   “笑奥”第四式 张冠李戴

  当然解说时大搞“乌龙”,张冠李戴是广大解说员普遍拿手的一招。羽毛球比赛时,电视画面转到了女双杨维张洁雯的比赛,主持马上说:“这是男子羽毛球双打比赛。”然后一看,觉得不对,马上补充,“这是女子乒乓球双打比赛!” 男子佩剑决赛,选手仲满刺中对手一剑,只听解说员大叫一声:“好球!”

  不过,功力最深的还属韩乔生。女子蝶泳预赛时,韩大嘴就极其郑重地宣布:“每组的前八名进入明天的决赛。” 有一次他介绍某游泳运动员,更是突发惊人之语:“他的体重是30岁!”昨日上午的游泳比赛颁奖,他直接把国际奥委会委员喊成了奥委会主席,并且不断重复,听得电视机前观众纳闷不已,除了罗格,一共有多少奥委会主席?


  【部分搞笑语录】

  -希腊对德国的篮球小组赛,解说员说到某球员,“这是一个完全用脑子打球的球员。”

  画外音:虽然我们都知道这是称赞的话,但是听起来好恐怖。

  -“这位男选手腿部肌肉很发达,像穿着一个马裤一样……”

  画外音:马裤是什么样子的?跟肌肉发达有什么关系?

  -中国和西班牙篮球比赛一中国球员受伤,嘉宾主持人说:“如果只是脸部鼻子受伤,哪怕眼眶裂开也没关系,只要不是脚受伤就行。”

  画外音:只能想到一句中国名言——站着说话不腰疼。

  -“如果一定要用一个字形容现在的心情,那就是高兴!”

  画外音:这位是周星驰电影看多了?

  -“这个队员还没有拿奖牌的实力,冲击一下金牌倒差不多!”

  画外音:金牌原来这么不值钱。

  -游泳半决赛第一组头名游出52秒20破世界纪录,接着第二组头名游出52秒05的成绩,韩老师又激动了:“把刚刚创造的世界纪录提高了52秒。”

  画外音:熟悉韩老师的人都会笑,不熟的,就自己多死几个脑细胞。

  -中国男篮对西班牙,眼见大势已去,主持人一声长叹:“幸福曾经离我如此之近……”

  画外音:啥都不说了,这个主持人喜欢看琼瑶小说。

  -焦研峰:“她终于打破了金牌!拿到了纪录!”

  画外音:焦老师不要太激动,电视机前有小朋友在看的,不要教坏小孩。

  -“为啥菲尔普斯这么厉害? 嗯,看来得找些医生对他进行解剖,找找原因。”

  画外音:听到这里,我们都吓傻了……

  -“俄罗斯的伊佐托娃,哦,是伊佐托夫。”

  画外音:这回韩大嘴连人家性别都给弄乱了。

  -“韩国选手朴泰桓现在处在第一位,紧随其后的是朴泰桓!”

  画外音:难道朴泰桓在玩千手观音?
2008-07-06
If you want to know what a real geek looks like.. check this out..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcQ7RkyBoBc
2008-07-04
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