miercuri, 8 decembrie 2010

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog


Google the Answer Engine

Posted: 07 Dec 2010 07:31 AM PST

Post image for Google the Answer Engine

One of the topics that emerged from Pubcon was “Should SEO’s Focus on Where Google is Heading”, and I’m going to agree with Aaron that focusing on short term algorithmic holes isn’t a smart thing for most people (churn and burn folks–you keep on keeping on). I agree that most publishers should focus on where Google is going. However, the one thing I think publishers need to be aware of and be wary of is Google’s transition to becoming an answer engine.

this represents a clear and present danger to every web publisher…
When I refer to Google trying to become an answer engine, what exactly do I mean? I mean that Google will provide the answer right on the SERP itself if possible and, more frequently, from a Google-owned or Google-maintained property. What exactly do I mean by that? I would be willing to bet that at least one Googler is hunched over a monitor somewhere trying to figure out how to convert voice searches into standardized results. Get out your best Jean Luc Picard impersonation, grab your android phone, and say “COMPUTER … Show me airline prices from Los Angeles to Las Vegas on March 15th.” Now imagine that Google, using its recently acquired ITA travel data, could show you the 5 cheapest flights without needing to send you to the airline, travelocity, or any of the other intermediaries.  Good for Google, good for the user … but scary if you are a publisher.

Google has been moving in this direction for years with queries like [what is george washington's birthday]

There’s no need for the person performing that query to visit any website because Google became the answer machine.  Earlier this year, they began making inroads in commercial searches for things like [mortgage rates]

Google’s latest incursion into becoming the answer machine came from its local results when they began stealing … err aggregating … reviews from other sites and mixing them with their own on place pages.

IMHO this represents a clear and present danger to every web publisher. For a while, Google will be content to let publishers keep serving the information that Google hasn’t figured out how to gather efficiently/profitably, even if that means referring users to low quality, demand media style pages from About.com and eHow.com. However there’s no doubt in my mind that once Google thinks they can do better, they will scrape your data and throw you under the bus without a second thought … cause it’s all about the users, right?

The one exception that may leave you a leg to stand on is if you are a brand and are building some sense of brand loyalty. If users type in [<brand name> + <keyword phrase>] Google will show less “Google answers”. For example [george washington's birthday wikipedia] or [bank of america mortgage rates] contain none of the Google properties. Of course, it would seem to me that this is a massive conflict of interest as far as Google is concerned, but I’m not a legislator, so what do I know.

The days of being a pure affiliate and building sites without any thought to branding are coming to a close. They will never disappear completely, but there will be less of them. The purely keyword-based traffic without a hint of branding is going to become more competitive and, in some cases, you will be competing with Google itself or with Google owned properties like Boutiques.com. Heed these warnings Caesar and fear the Ides of March …
Creative Commons License photo credit: Michal Osmenda

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. Does W3C compliance and accessibility impact your Search Engine Optimization Douglas Karr sent me a question that I get asked...
  2. Search Engine Spiders I’ve been conducting some experiments with search engines, spiders and...
  3. What Search Engine Conferences Should I Attend One of the questions I get asked frequently is “which...
  4. Search Engine Glossary Review SO I was asked to take a look at Aaron...
  5. Redirect Single Page for Search Engine Query So if anyone reading this is an htaccess expert and...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Glass Whiteboards - For a professional durable white board with no ghosting, streaking or marker stains, see my Glass Whiteboard Review
  5. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  6. KnowEm - Protect your brand, product or company name with a continually growing list of social media sites.
  7. Scribe SEO Review find out how to better optimize your wordpress posts.
  8. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis Wordpress Theme review.

Google the Answer Engine

"A Good Deal for the American People"

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Wednesday, Dec. 8,  2010
 

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day

President Barack Obama waits in the Lower Press Office of the White House before the start of his press conference, Dec. 7, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog.

President Obama on the Middle Class Tax Cuts and Unemployment Insurance Agreement: "A Good Deal For The American People"
President Obama holds a press conference on the middle class tax cuts and unemployment insurance agreement.

President Obama on Tax Cuts and Unemployment Extension: "The Right Thing to Do"
The President lays out the framework for a compromise that ensures no middle class family sees a tax increase, those looking for work keep their lifeline, and the economic recovery gets a welcome boost.

On a Day Of Infamy, Remember
On National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, we honor those who gave their lives that December day and all those in uniform.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

9:30 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:15 AM: The President holds a bilateral meeting with President Komorowski of Poland

10:30 AM: The President holds an expanded bilateral meeting with President Komorowski

11:05 AM: The President and President Komorowski deliver statements to the press and take questions

1:00 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:15 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of State Clinton

2:30 PM: Open for Questions: One-Year Anniversary of The Open Government Directive WhiteHouse.gov/live

3:30 PM: The President holds a Cabinet meeting

4:50 PM: The President meets with senior advisors

5:30 PM: The President signs the Claims Resolution Act of 2010 WhiteHouse.gov/live

WhiteHouse.gov/live   Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

Get Updates

Sign Up for the Daily Snapshot 

Stay Connected

 

 
 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Manage Subscriptions for e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Sign Up for Updates from the White House

Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111 
 
 
  

 

Seth's Blog : Where's your platform?

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

Where's your platform?

That needs to be the goal when you seek out a job.

Bob Dylan earned the right to make records, and instead of using it to create ever more commercial versions of his old stuff, he used it as a platform to do art.

A brilliant programmer finds a job in a small company and instead of seeing it as a grind, churning out what's asked, he uses it as a platform to hone his skills and to ship code that changes everything.

A waiter uses his job serving patrons as a platform for engagement, for building a reputation and for learning how to delight.

A blogger starts measuring pageviews and ends up racing the bottom with nothing but scintillating gossip and pandering. Or, perhaps, she decides to use the blog as a platform to take herself and her readers somewhere they will be glad to go...

There's no rigid line between a job and art. Instead, there's an opportunity. Both you and your boss get to decide if your job is a platform or just a set of tasks.

  • Email to a friend

More Recent Articles

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.


Click here to safely unsubscribe now from "Seth's Blog" or change your subscription, view mailing archives or subscribe

Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

Seth's Blog : The Domino Project

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

The Domino Project

Book publishing is changing. It's changing faster than it has in a hundred years. I've been persistent enough to be part of that change, provoking and poking and wondering about what comes next.

Today, I'm thrilled to report on what's next for me.

  • To reinvent the way books are created when the middleman is made less important.
  • To reinvent the way books are purchased when the tribe is known and embraced.
  • To reinvent the way books are read when the alternatives are so much easier to find.
  • To find and leverage great ideas and great authors, bringing them to readers who need them.

The notion of the paper book as merely a package for information is slowly becoming obsolete. There must be other reasons on offer, or smart people will go digital, or read something free. The book is still an ideal tool for the hand-to-hand spreading of important ideas, though. The point of the book is to be spread, to act as a manifesto, to get in sync with others, to give and to get and to hand around.

Our goal is to offer ideas that people need and want to spread, to enjoy and to hold and to own, and to change conversations.

Working with a great team at Amazon, I'm launching a new publishing venture called The Domino Project. I think it fundamentally changes many of the rules of publishing trade non-fiction.

Trade publishing (as opposed to textbooks or other non-consumer ventures) has always been about getting masses of people to know about, understand and read your books. The business has been driven by several foundational principles:

1. The middleman (the bookstore) has a great deal of power. There's only a limited amount of shelf space, and there are more books (far more books) than we have room for. No display, no sale. That's one reason books are published with the economically ridiculous model of 100% returns from bookstores. Huge stores can carry thousands of books and return them if they don't sell. Large chains get a say about what's on the cover, what the title is, and they even get paid for shelf displays.

2. The audience (the reader) is largely unknown to the publisher, and thus to the author. Authors with large followings still have to start over with each book, because they don't have permission (or the data) to contact loyal readers directly.

3. Pricing and product are static and slow. Once a book is published, the price is set forever. Add to that the glacial speed from conception to publication date and you see a system that is set up to benefit neither the publisher nor the reader.

4. Books are inherently difficult to spread. The ideas in books might travel, but the act of recommending a book, having the idea stick and a new sale get made is slow or broken. Given how important the ideas in books are, this chain has many weak links. It's worth rethinking how a publishing house could organize around its ultimate goal, which is to spread ideas.

The internet and the Kindle are changing all of these rules. The Domino Project is designed to (at least by way of example) remap many of these foundations.

1. There is no middleman. Because there is infinite shelf space, the publisher has more control over what the reader sees and how. In addition, the Amazon platform allows a tiny organization to have huge reach without taking significant inventory risk. "Powered by Amazon" is part of our name—it describes the unique nature of the venture... I get to figure out the next neat idea, and Amazon can handle printing, logistics and the platform for connection.

2. The reader is tightly connected with the publisher and the author. If you like the sort of things I write or recommend, you can sign up here (for free, using your email) and we can alert you to new works, send you free samples and otherwise make it easy for you to be smart about the new ideas that are generated. (RSS works too).

3. Pricing can vary based on volume, on timing, on format. With this project, I've made the decision to ignore the rules that publishers follow to get on the New York Times bestseller list. There's no point in compromising the consumer experience or the product merely to get a nice ego boost and a small shot of promotion. More on this in a future post, but I'll let you use your imagination.

4. Digital goods and manifestos in book form make it easier to spread complex ideas. It's long frustrated me that a blog post can reach 100 times as many people as a book, but can't deliver the nuance a book can. The Domino Project is organized around a fundamentally different model of virality, one that allows authors to directly reach people who can use the ideas we're writing about.

The Domino Project is named for the domino effect—ideas can quickly spread, moving through a previously static set up. Our mission isn't to become a promotional machine, focused on interrupting large numbers of people or having significant promotional chops through traditional media. Instead, we're grabbing the opportunity to choose and deliver manifestos that are optimized for the tribe, for the small group that wants to grab them, inhale them and spread them. The good ones will spread, first from person to person, then from one circle to another, and eventually into large groups.

That's a lot to absorb for one post. I've been working on the ideas behind The Domino Project since I published my very first book in 1986. The first manifestos won't be out for a few months, but you can learn more as we go by following the Domino Project blog here.

PS When we roll out our books, there will be sneak previews and other goodies for those first on the list...

  • Email to a friend

More Recent Articles

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.


Click here to safely unsubscribe now from "Seth's Blog" or change your subscription, view mailing archives or subscribe

Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

marți, 7 decembrie 2010

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Dr. Mr. Speaker

Posted: 07 Dec 2010 01:04 PM PST

Here are the Emails I sent to House Speaker John Boehner. The first is in regards to Ron Paul and the chairmanship of the Monetary Policy subcommittee.
Dear Mr. Speaker

As Speaker of the House, you have a duty to watch out for all citizens of the United States, not just your own Ohio constituency or the bank lobby.

As such I kindly ask you honor the will of the people and appoint Ron Paul as chairman of the Monetary Policy subcommittee.

Thank you.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
Budget Deficit Email

My second Email to House Speaker John Boehner is regarding the budget deficit.
Dear Mr. Speaker

Polls show 75% of the citizens of this country place a priority on reducing the budget deficit.

Yet, somehow we see a compromise proposal from President Obama that goes back against his promises to tame the deficit.

We cannot afford this proposal. You know, I know it, and the public knows it. In fact, the only group supportive of this alleged "compromise" proposed by President Obama is Congress.

Congress Thinks It's Time to Party

To congress, the word "compromise" does not mean giving up anything you want. Instead, it means giving the other guy something you do not want him to have.

The process is much like asking a group of kids at a birthday party if they want cherry pie, chocolate cake, or fudge for desert and if there is no consensus winner, everyone gets a full slice of each, with chocolate chip cookies thrown in for good measure because that's what Cousin Susie likes. It's irrelevant whether or not Cousin Susie is even at the party.

I am thoroughly disgusted with Congressional "compromises" that look like a birthday party for 8-year olds. Yet that is exactly what we saw in this "compromise".

Chocolate Chip Cookies for Susie

Susie was not at the party. Nonetheless, like a bolt out of the blue, president Obama proposed that kiddies get two additional cookies not previously on the menu.

1. A two percent payroll tax reduction
2. A full, upfront deduction for equipment purchases, in lieu of depreciation

The deficit-busting problem is the huge out-of-the-blue payroll tax reduction coupled with the "temporary" extension of income tax reductions for everyone.

I am all in favor of cookies, especially tax-cut cookies. However, I want to know how the deficit-hawk hypocrites on both sides of the aisle intend to pay for them. The answer is they don't intend to, which of course is what makes them deficit-hawk hypocrites in the first place.

The war-mongering will continue and so will the earmarks and so will a host of other things we cannot afford and do not even need.

But, hey, let's pig out. Cookies are on the table.

Bond Market Revolt

Mr. Speaker, the bond market reaction to the Fed's QE policies and to this disgrace of a budget proposal was swift and severe. I have a picture of it for you right here.



That is what the bond market thinks of Ben Bernanke's plan to spur inflation but hold down treasury yields.

The ovals show today's bond-market reaction to the budget deficit that Bernanke will no doubt monetize as part of QE III and QE IV when this round of "quantitative easing" blows up in his face.

Mr. Speaker Where is Your Backbone?

We need genuine watchdog over the Fed. You can and should do that yourself by chairman of the Monetary Policy subcommittee.

We also need backbones from deficit-hawk hypocrites in both parties who claim to be fiscal conservatives yet they support this ludicrous compromise everyone knows we cannot afford.

Finally, Mr. Speaker, you need backbone as well. Please tell the President and your party that you insist on a genuine plan, not a party for 8-year-olds who do not know how to say no to more cookies.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
Please email House Speaker Boehner Regarding Ron Paul to let him know how you feel. That link will put in a subject line of Ron Paul for Monetary Policy Chairmanship.

Please email House Speaker Boehner Regarding the Budget. The second link will put in a subject line of $900 Billion Budget Compromise.

Just click on the links and type away to your heart's content. If your browser does not interface with email, then simply email Boehner at AsktheLeader@mail.house.gov

Send an Email a day until the chairmanship is decided and this Budget Compromise is scrapped.

Phone: (202) 225-4000
Fax: (202) 225-5117

Please phone, Fax, and email today. Please forward to anyone willing to email Boehner.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Trend of Unemployment Claims as % of Continuing Unemployment; US Population vs. Employment, vs. Labor Force, vs. Continued Unemployed

Posted: 07 Dec 2010 10:18 AM PST

Inquiring minds might be interested in a pair of charts courtesy of reader Tim Wallace. Click on either chart to see a sharper image.



Note the trendline of new unemployment claims as a percentage of continuing unemployment.

Over time, the chart suggests it takes longer and longer to find a job. There was a brief respite in the Clinton years, no doubt because of the internet boom, not because Clinton did anything particularly special.

The trend is unbroken all the way back to 1967. It just was not noticeable before because overall unemployment was lower.

US Population vs. Employment, vs. Labor Force, vs. Continued Unemployed



The recent spike in continued unemployed is especially aggravating given the flat growth in employment.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Lies, Half-Truths, and 100% Hubris on 60 Minutes; Deficit-Chicken Republicans; Middle-Class Crucifixion; Ron Paul Needs Your Support

Posted: 07 Dec 2010 03:56 AM PST

I am very disheartened but not at all surprised (given that I predicted it), the complete fiscal irresponsibility of the "compromise" tax proposal by president Obama that Democratic sheep will no doubt approve right along with deficit-hawk deficit-hypocrite Republicans.

Obama's proposal will cost a whopping $900 billion over two years. For details please see Cookies for Susie and Obama's "Temporary" Tax Compromise

Bernanke let us all know this was coming in Sunday's Creampuff Interview on 60 Minutes

Pelley: Do you anticipate a scenario in which you would commit to more than $600 billion?

Bernanke: Oh, it's certainly possible. And again, it depends on the efficacy of the program. It depends on inflation. And finally it depends on how the economy looks.

Pelley: Some people think the $600 billion is a terrible idea.

Bernanke: Well, this fear of inflation, I think is way overstated.

I happen to agree with Bernanke's last statement (at least on the basis of $600 billion in QE alone). However, it's important to point out that I view inflation as an expansion of credit and I do not see that $600 billion in QE will spur lending.

Nonetheless, the Fed's QE policy is very misguided because it is likely to spur continued speculation in commodities. Think of it this way: China, Japan, or US investors do not have to finance $600 billion of US deficit spending, the Treasury simply printed enough money out of thin air to cover it.

That money will find another home, but I highly doubt it is the home Bernanke wants. There is little reason for businesses to hire workers in this environments and the odds of re-blowing the housing bubble are close to zero.

There are still other problems that adversely affect those on fixed income.

This is a very dangerous game Bernanke is playing. I talked about it yesterday in Multiple Simultaneous Games of "Chicken"; Price Controls on Walmart; China Declares Shift to "Prudent" Monetary Policy
Internationally, there are multiple simultaneous games of chicken.

For example, Bernanke plays chicken with China via a QE policy hoping to force China to jack up its interest rate, something China does not want to do.

Bernanke plays a second game of chicken with Congress, treading on fiscal policy while demanding Congress not comment on monetary policy.

Bernanke plays a third game of chicken attempting to spur inflation in the US while simultaneously holding down long-term interest rates. Can that possibly work? For how long? At what cost?

Bernanke Plays Chicken with the Bond Market

Outright Lies

Bernanke continued with statements best described a bald-faced lies.

"One myth that's out there is that what we're doing is printing money. We're not printing money. The amount of currency in circulation is not changing. The money supply is not changing in any significant way. What we're doing is lowing interest rates by buying Treasury securities. And by lowering interest rates, we hope to stimulate the economy to grow faster. So, the trick is to find the appropriate moment when to begin to unwind this policy. And that's what we're gonna do."

Bernanke is printing money. He is monetizing the national debt. He tried to hide it by saying "currency in circulation is not changing". That is not the definition of money the Fed uses at all. The Fed typically uses M2.

M2 1980-Present



It appears to me that money is changing in a significant way. Bear in mind there are better representations of money than M2, at least I think so, but M2 is what the Fed watches.

Bernanke stated he is lowering interest rates. What he should have said is that he hopes QE will lower rates. The irony in this is he wants inflation to rise.

First in Flight




The above courtesy of Scott Simonton at BlackHawk Capital Management.

Bernanke wants it both ways: higher inflation and lower treasury yields. Meanwhile his goal is to get China to hike interest rates hoping to get the dollar to drop. China is resisting and the global pressures build.

This is the market's response tonight in metals and in treasuries.

Metals



Treasuries



Yield Curve courtesy of Bloomberg.

Bear in mind one day does not a trend make.

However, the trend towards higher yields started the day after the election when QE formally went into effect. The yield on 5-year treasuries is up over 55 basis points (1/2%) since then. Gold had been rising long before that.

Expect More QE

To keep treasury yields low in the face of the $900 billion deficit-chicken "compromise" of Obama, Bernanke will need to monetize another $37.5 billion in treasuries a month, hoping this spurs inflation, spending, and hiring.

100 Percent Hubris

What if this does not spur hiring but instead spurs gasoline prices and food prices? Oh not to worry ....

Pelley: You have what degree of confidence in your ability to control this?

Bernanke: One hundred percent.

Bernanke is a man with 100% confidence who did not see the housing bubble, who did not see a recession, whose worst case scenario for unemployment was 8.5% when it was already over 8%. Bernanke cannot find his ass with both hands and a roadmap, yet he is one hundred percent certain about his ability to control things.

After everything blows sky high we just may hear a statement like this.



Creampuff Non-Questions

That was not really an "interview" on 60 minutes, it was an infomercial for Bernanke. Many Fed governors disagree with Bernanke. Where was the other side of the story?

The most disgusting part for me was pathetic exchange.

Pelley: Falling prices lead to falling wages. It lets the steam out of the economy. And you start spiraling downward.

Bernanke: Exactly. Exactly. That's deflation and that's what happened in the Great Depression.

Spare me the sap. What caused the great depression was the runup in credit that preceded it. The idea that you can throw the biggest party the world has ever seen and not pay a price for it is preposterous.

Fixed Income and Middle-Class Crucifixion

The idea that rising prices is a good thing when there are 15 million unemployed is moronic.

Moreover, if Bernanke does manage to hold down interest rates while getting his wish for higher prices, those on fixed incomes will be crucified.

Inflation is a tax on the poor and middle class, benefiting those with first access to money: banks and the wealthy.

Ron Paul Under Attack

Ron Paul is under attack as discussed in Monetary Policy: Fed Critic Ron Paul's Power Play
Retiring New Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg, one of the Federal Reserve's most stalwart Republican supporters, showed up for a meeting at the central bank in November bearing a surprising gift: a box of End the Fed books. As he handed out the 2009 best seller by Representative Ron Paul, a longtime Fed critic, Gregg told the gathering it would be worth reading to see what the other side is plotting.

Although his book ploy was couched in humor, Gregg laid plain a new Washington reality: Moderate, probusiness lawmakers like him, who consistently protected the central bank's independence and ability to set monetary policy, are mostly gone. In their place are politicians who view the Fed with suspicion, or worse. Their unofficial leader is Paul, the 75-year-old Texan whose quixotic 2008 Presidential run on the twin themes of ending the federal income tax and abolishing the Fed vaulted him to prominence with the nascent Tea Party. Some of those admirers are among the 75-plus new Republicans about to join Congress. For the first time since he was elected to the House in 1976, Paul's followers are formidable.

If he gets the subcommittee gavel, Paul says he plans a thorough review of Fed policy. Fear of inflation is what motivates him the most. Paul is a devotee of the Austrian School, which teaches that manipulating money supply and interest rates are responsible for history's boom-and-bust cycles. "The Fed creates all of the bubbles and they create the inevitable bursting of all of the bubbles," says Paul.

He believes his oversight role is long overdue. "There has been a politically cozy relationship between Congress and the Federal Reserve," he says. That includes past efforts to keep him from heading the subcommittee. "Republican leadership, with the Fed's influence, has been working to keep me away from this for a long time. That's not going to happen this time."

His prediction may be premature. Five GOP leadership aides, speaking anonymously because a decision isn't final, say incoming House Speaker John Boehner has discussed ways to prevent Paul from becoming chairman or to keep him on a tight leash if he does.
Time's a Wastin'

Boehner will decide some of those chair subcommittees as early as Dec. 8. There is no time to waste. Please phone, Fax, AND email Boehner today. Demand Ron Paul be given chairmanship of the monetary policy subcommittee.

Please email House Speaker Boehner to let him know how you feel.

Just click on the link. If your browser does not interface with email, then email Boehner at AsktheLeader@mail.house.gov

Sens an Email a day until the chairmanship is decided.

Phone: (202) 225-4000
Fax: (202) 225-5117

Please phone, Fax, and email today. Please forward to anyone willing to email Boehner.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List