Toms Corner
 
text size

News Junkies

Updated: Thursday, March 21 2013, 06:52 PM EDT
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) - Even for diehard news junkies, it's getting hard, and sometimes depressing, these days to keep all the storylines straight.

There are people who say it's gotten so bad their outlook only brightens when they shove aside the morning paper and turn from TV news to, say, an old movie.

Tonight, in Tom's Corner, Tom Van Howe concedes that news has gotten a bit hard to take, and has a way to cope.

===============================

Here we are only three weeks into the new year and I feel like I'm on overload.

I think I started going catatonic a few days ago when some talking heads started talking about who the Presidential candidates would be four years from now.

Really? Does anybody care in these days after his inauguration who might try to replace President Barack Obama four years from now?

And then a friend of mine said to me: "I'll tell you...I've been a news freak all my life. A total freak; and what do I have to show for it? I hate to say it, but...nothing. All that effort, all that interest, and worry, and time invested, and I haven't helped change one darn thing. I know a lot, but what do I do with it?"

I don't know.

I know what he's talking about. I get it. It's tough.

And then last night, I got an e-mail from a spiritual leader, a woman, a long-time friend, who always seemed to have an even-handed handle on just about everything.

"My desire to be well-informed," she wrote, "is at odds with my desire to be sane."

Whoa...

Maybe its 24-hour news machine overload. Maybe it's that try as we might, these days, the issues are so complex we really don't understand them except vaguely.

Like the whys and wherefores of universal health care. How it'll work, or if it'll work at all. Either way it'll be without me quite understanding why.

How can the NRA fight universal background checks on people who want to buy guns. What can be so sinister about learning a little more about this guy who wants to buy that revolver or that guy who wants to buy this assault rifle?

No one I've heard so farno onehas said anything about wanting to circumvent the second amendment.

No one wants to take your rifle, your shotgun, or your  handgun. No one, believe me, no one is going to force your son to marry a gay Muslim.

It's true the people who live in the beltway of Washington, D.C. don't really get it.

If they did  would they spend tens of millions on the President's inauguration celebration?  Some reports have it at more than a hundred million dollars.

The first lady's gowns for the event and the ball are said to have cost $20,000.

The median income in this country right now is $26,000 dollars. One suspects even the Romneys wouldn't be so clueless. The Obamas just out-Romneyed the Romneys.

What's wrong with more and more states, including Michigan, spending morea lot moreon locking people up than on education?

How did Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell become millionaires as public servants?

When did politics become a dirty competition between parties instead of leadership and consensus for the people?

Why can't somebody fix our tax code to get rid of loopholes  for the rich and make it simple enough that I don't have to get professional help to file a tax form?

I don't care that Michelle Obama had bangs. I don't care that Beyonce lip-synched, although Carrie Underwood and James Taylor didn't.

I do care that corporations were allowed to give unlimited donations to help pay for the inaugural parties. Not that they're trying to buy future favors or anything.

News junkies keep up on everything. And they're starting to wonder why. All it does is get in the way of their sanity.

But...know what? Somebody has got to do it. And as with anything, ya gotta learn which stuff you can pitch and which stuff you ought to hang on to. The important stuff has a way of rising to the top. Let the rest go.

We have elections every two years, and each and every time an educated citizenry is what makes us who we are. We, who can't help but read and watch all we can have just got to hang on, know that, eventually...in some way...something will happen to make us all profoundly glad that we did.

In this corner...Oh...and you know what else...conversations are better.

In this corner...I'm Tom Van Howe.
News Junkies


Advertise with us!

Related Stories

Business News

Last Update on May 22, 2013 07:35 GMT

WORLD MARKETS

BANGKOK (AP) -- Asian stock markets were mostly higher today after investor confidence was boosted by a Federal Reserve official's comments that the U.S. central bank should stick with its super-easy monetary policy.

Fed chief Ben Bernanke testifies before a joint congressional committee today.

Regional Fed chief James Bullard said in a speech Tuesday that the Fed should continue its monthly $85 billion in bond purchases, which drives down interest rates and thus encourages lending and spending, to help spur the U.S. economic recovery.

Benchmark crude oil fell below $97 per barrel. The dollar fell against the euro and was little changed against the yen.

BERNANKE

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Investors and analysts will be hanging on every word uttered Wednesday by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke when he testifies before a joint economic committee on Capitol Hill. They'll be looking for any sign of a policy shift.

The Fed is currently pursuing an aggressive program of bond purchases to try to keep long-term interest rates down and encourage borrowing and spending.

Some Fed officials have said the central bank should start to curtail its bond purchases before year's end, so long as the economy has improved. Other officials have suggested the opposite -- an expansion of bond buying if the economy needs it.

In recent weeks, the job market and the broader economy have shown renewed vigor.

The economy has benefited from a resurgent housing market, rising consumer confidence and the Fed's stimulus actions, which have helped ignite a stock market rally.

AUTOS-BUSY SUMMER

DETROIT (AP) -- Growing consumer demand for cars and trucks has automakers changing their usual summer vacation plans.

Ford says the traditional two-week summer break is being cut to a single week and General Motors isn't doing any shutdowns. Chrysler plans a two-week break at just four of its ten North American assembly plants. Both GM and Chrysler are rolling out critical new models.

The three Detroit carmakers don't have the luxury this year of a two-week window to do maintenance and change the machinery for new models. U.S. demand for new cars and trucks has been strong, up 7 percent through April, led by soaring demand for full-size pickup trucks as home construction rebounds.

And after closing more than two dozen factories during the recession, U.S. automakers need to use their remaining capacity to its fullest.

JAPAN-ECONOMY

TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's central bank says the world's third-biggest economy is "picking up" as demand recovers in other countries and remains resilient at home.

The Bank of Japan ended a policy meeting on Wednesday with no change to its strategy of doubling the monetary base for the sake of reaching a 2 percent inflation target and jolting the economy out of two decades of stagnation. That outcome was expected.

The central bank said in a statement, though, that there is a "high degree of uncertainty concerning Japan's economy" and that prices show no signs yet of rebounding.

Japan's economy grew 3.5 percent in the last quarter, but progress in increasing exports and boosting corporate investment and wages has lagged.

JAPAN-TRADE

TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's trade deficit widened to a larger-than-expected 880 billion yen -- the equivalent of $8.6 billion -- in April as its weakening currency accentuated surging import costs.

Exports rose 3.8 percent from the same month a year earlier while imports jumped 9.4 percent, according to preliminary figures reported by the Finance Ministry on Wednesday. Japan's trade deficit stood at 362 billion yen in March, just over half the size of February's gap.

The yen has slid in value by over 20 percent against the U.S. dollar and euro, in turn pushing up other currencies in relative value. Its decline, due to expectations among market speculators and also monetary policies that are injecting huge sums of cash into the economy, is expected to lead to a recovery in exports. Stronger growth in the U.S. and some other major markets has also helped boost demand for Japanese products.

JPMORGAN-ANNUAL MEETING

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Jamie Dimon, the CEO and chairman of JPMorgan Chase, easily survived a vote Tuesday that would have called on him to give up his role as chairman of the nation's largest bank. But shareholders sent a message that the bank needed better oversight, giving only narrow approval to three of the bank's board members.

It was a mixed verdict in a closely watched test of corporate governance at U.S. companies. Dimon emerged in a stronger position after the proposal to split his roles won just 32 percent of the shareholder vote, less than the 40 percent a similar proposal got last year.

But the tepid support for the three directors came as a rebuke of the bank following a surprise $6 billion trading loss JPMorgan had suffered last year. Prominent shareholder advisory firms had urged JPMorgan shareholders to withhold their support for those directors, who served on the bank's risk policy committee at the time of the loss.

APPLE-UNTAXED PROFITS

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate dragged Apple Inc., the world's most valuable company, into the debate over the U.S. tax code Tuesday, grilling CEO Tim Cook over allegations that its Irish subsidiaries help the company avoid billions in U.S. taxes.

Cook said the subsidiaries have nothing to do with reducing its U.S. taxes, a message he struggled to convey to the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.

The Senate subcommittee released a report Monday that held up Apple as an example of the legal tax avoidance made possible by the U.S. tax code. It estimates that Apple avoided at least $3.5 billion in U.S. federal taxes in 2011 and $9 billion in 2012 by using its tax strategy, and described a complex setup involving Irish subsidiaries as being a key element of this strategy.

GAMES-XBOX

REDMOND, Wash. (AP) -- Microsoft thinks it has the one.

The company unveiled the Xbox One, an entertainment console that promises to be the one system households will need for games, television, movies and other entertainment. It will go on sale later this year, for an undisclosed price.

For the past two years, Microsoft has led the gaming industry in console sales with the Xbox 360. But it's been eight years since that machine came out, and Microsoft is the last of the three major console makers to unveil a new system.

EARNS-HOME DEPOT

ATLANTA (AP) -- Even though the weather was poor, Home Depot posted an 18 percent increase in its net income for the first quarter thanks to the ongoing housing recovery.

Its quarterly results topped Wall Street's view and the world's biggest home improvement chain boosted its full-year earnings and revenue forecasts Tuesday.

For the three months ended May 5, Home Depot Inc. earned $1.23 billion, or 83 cents per share. That's up from $1.04 billion, or 68 cents per share, a year earlier. Analysts predicted earnings of 76 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey.

EARNS-BEST BUY

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Best Buy Co. on Tuesday reported a loss for its fiscal first quarter as it sold its stake in Best Buy Europe and works on a turnaround plan that includes cutting costs and closing some stores.

Its adjusted earnings beat Wall Street expectations, as cost cuts helped offset tough pricing competition during the quarter. But shares fell 5 percent in midday trading.

The company has been working on a turnaround plan as it faces increased competition from online retailers and discount stores. The plan includes closing stores, cutting costs and investing in training for its employees. In April it also said it would sell its 50 percent stake in its European joint venture to streamline its business and strengthen its balance sheet.

 
Advertise with us!
Washington Guardian