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Berkshire bargain. The cloud powers technology.

Berkshire Hathaway is easing back. Good time to pick up a few shares:

BRKA2,jpg

If you think we’re going to have tax reform any time soon, think again.

Closing loopholes?

Every loophole has a zillion lobbyists, who believe closing that one particular loophole will loose jobs, tank the economy, let in the bad guys, and warm the planet, at the very least. Did I mention “tank the economy?” You get the idea.

Washington is still eight square miles surrounded by reality.

The best news is that the economy is on a tear. And some stuff — e.g. technology — is doing very well. Look at Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Flex, Google, Microsoft, Netflix and Square.

What’s powering technology is the cloud. The largest, most innovative, player is Amazon.

Am I making my point?

I am giving up on opening a bank account with an online bank.

Friends said I was wasting my time for 1% APR on my cash. They’re right. Total waste of time. Especially once you see how stupid these banks are. You answer all their questions. You eventually sign up.  But you can’t deposit any money. They have this insane policy:

CITBank

Talk about wasting time. GS (Goldman Sachs) Bank also does this. Ally Bank seems to be one that doesn’t. The whole process is not worth 1%. Trust me.

More travel stuff

+ XCom rents portable WiFi hotspots that work overseas. I’ve used them several times. They work reliably and amazingly fast — often faster (and certainly more secure) than your local hotel. Best, they’ve reduced their day rental. It’s now $7.77. Click here. 

+ I get a lot of emails. Most are a pain. But some remind me. XCom reminded me I’m traveling (to Australia on Saturday). Rent a hot spot, they said. I did. They said use Springfling as a $10 promotion. I did. Spam emails work for your customers.

+ Want to bookmark web pages for later reading — when you have time? Use InstaPaper. Fantastic service. Click here. 

Fast Internet

The town of Rancho Santa Fe is about to run a one gigabit fiber line to every house. No local telecom provider would provide the service, because “the density” was too low. The town is now looking to do it itself. Good on them.

Imagine that speed at your house. Streaming movies. Online gaming. Virtual reality. Host your own web site and email server, etc. Spoil the kids and the grandkids.

Crazy on waste 

My friends gulp vitamin/dietary supplements. The stuff may be “natural”, but it’s also expensive and potentially harmful. Worse, it’s unregulated. No one checks its quality or efficacy — if it’s well-made or if it actually works. Here’s a piece from This Week by Becca Stanek, which sums it all up:

I took multivitamins every day for a decade. Then I found out they’re useless.

Save for a few lapses in my irresponsible college days, I’ve popped a multivitamin every single day since middle school.

First it was the chalky multivitamins that left a lump in my throat for minutes after I’d gulped one down. Then it was the slightly grainy, massive pills that my mom bought in bulk at Costco. (They were technically for post-menopausal women, but my mother assured me they would be just fine for my 17-year-old self.) Then last year, tired of big, bad-tasting pills, I bought gummy vitamins. Who doesn’t like noshing on some candy that holds the promise of great health?

Well, last week I threw my vitamins away. I’ll miss that sugary, fruity taste — but, according to my doctor, that’s about all I’ll be missing.

At my appointment last Wednesday, my doctor bluntly informed me that my multivitamins weren’t doing a darn thing for me. Though the idea of getting just a little bit more of all the most important vitamins may seem like a foolproof idea, she informed me that more isn’t necessarily better. Few people have vitamin deficiencies. Moreover, for those who do have a deficiency in, say, Vitamin D or Vitamin B12, those little grape-shaped gummies — or any multivitamin, for that matter — don’t pack anywhere near enough of any one vitamin to correct that deficiency, she explained.

That could be passed off as just one doctor’s opinion … except there are a plethora of studies out there that back up her argument. A much buzzed-about study published in Annals of Internal Medicine in 2013, for instance, came to this clear-cut conclusion after reviewing three trials of multivitamin supplements and 24 trials of “single or paired vitamins that randomly assigned more than 40,000 participants”:

Evidence is sufficient to advise against routine supplementation, and we should translate null and negative findings into action. The message is simple: Most supplements do not prevent chronic disease or death, their use is not justified, and they should be avoided. This message is especially true for the general population with no clear evidence of micronutrient deficiencies, who represent most supplement users in the United States and in other countries. [Annals of Internal Medicine]

Specifically, the study found vitamins to be ineffective when it comes to reducing the risk of heart disease, cancer, declines in cognitive ability, and premature death. And, Quartz noted, some vitamins can even be “harmful in high enough quantities”:

Our bodies can easily get rid of excess vitamins that dissolve in water, like vitamin C, all the B vitamins, and folate, but they hold onto the ones that are fat soluble. Buildup of vitamin A, K, E, or D — all of which are necessary in low levels — can cause problems with your heart and kidneys, and can even be fatal in some cases. [Quartz]

Though the FDA says on its vitamins information page that there “are many good reasons to consider taking supplements,” it indicates vitamins only “may be useful when they fill a specific identified nutrient gap that cannot or is not otherwise being met by the individuals’ intake of food.” The CDC estimated in 2014 that “nine out of 10 people in the U.S. are indeed getting enough of some important vitamins and nutrients.”

So why are so many Americans still taking multivitamins? Steven Salzberg, a medicine professor at Johns Hopkins, told NPR multivitamins are “a great example of how our intuition leads us astray.” “It seems reasonable that if a little bit of something is good for you, then more should be better for you. It’s not true,” Salzberg said. “Supplementation with extra vitamins or micronutrients doesn’t really benefit you if you don’t have a deficiency.”

Americans’ abysmally bad diets also give vitamin companies some marketing ammunition. When the average American is eating just one or two servings of fruits and veggies a day (experts recommend as many as 10 servings of fruits and veggies a day for maximum benefits), a little boost of vitamins might seem like a good idea. But popping a pill isn’t going to make up for all those lost servings. “Food contains thousands of phyto-chemicals, fiber, and more that work together to promote good health that cannot be duplicated with a pill,” said nutritionist Karen Ansel.

And if it’s those tasty gummy vitamins we’re falling back on, there’s an even better chance we’re not offsetting our sugar- and fat-laden diets. The women’s gummy multivitamins I was taking pack three grams of sugar per gummy. A serving size is two gummies. Even before breakfast, I was consuming six grams of sugar — almost a quarter of the American Heart Association’s recommended maximum sugar intake for women.

So why, if there are so many signs pointing to no on multivitamins, had I never really heard any of them until that fateful visit to the doctor? Pediatrician Paul Offit explained in a 2013 New York Times opinion article that it might have something to do with a bill introduced in the 1970s:

In December 1972, concerned that people were consuming larger and larger quantities of vitamins, the FDA announced a plan to regulate vitamin supplements containing more than 150 percent of the recommended daily allowance. Vitamin makers would now have to prove that these “megavitamins” were safe before selling them. Not surprisingly, the vitamin industry saw this as a threat, and set out to destroy the bill. In the end, it did far more than that.

Industry executives recruited William Proxmire, a Democratic senator from Wisconsin, to introduce a bill preventing the FDA from regulating megavitamins. [Paul Offit, via The New York Times]

That bill became law in 1976. Some 30 years later, almost a third of Americans were still taking a daily multivitamin. But count this gal out.

You can find Stanek’s article here. 

Because of our upcoming trip to Australia, I read up on melatonin. That stuff may work for you. But there’s no research. It could be harmful. I’ll stay with sleep and sunshine.

Ways to live longly (new Trump word)

+ Eat lots of broccoli. According to Men’s Fitness magazine, broccoli “helps your body use energy more efficiently, slows age-related gain, boosts eyesight and improves insulin sensitivity.” This from the March 2017 issue of the magazine.

+ Certain types of exercise mitigate the effects of aging at the cellular level. Basically any exercise. Read more here.

+ Tennis players, swimmers and cyclists live longer. This also from the March 2017 issue of Men’s Fitness.

The Art Collector’s Wife

A New York attorney representing a wealthy art collector called his client.

“I have some good news, and I have some bad news.”

The art collector replied, “I’ve had an awful day. Give me the good news first.”

The lawyer said, “Well, I met with your wife today, and she informed me that she had just invested $5,000 in two pictures that she thinks will bring a minimum of $15 million to $20 million. I think she could be right.”

Saul replied enthusiastically, “Well done! My wife is a brilliant businesswoman! You’ve just made my day. Now I know I can handle the bad news. What is it?”

The lawyer replied, “The pictures are of you and your secretary.”

HarryNewton
Harry Newton, who continues to be impressed with www.EyeBuyDirect.com as a place to buy glasses. A lady friend couldn’t believe that I could buy a pair of glasses (with lenses) for $30 for what she had recently paid $800. I just got a delivery this morning from EyeBuyDirect. These guys are good and fast. I couldn’t be more impressed.

3 Comments

  1. Paul Livingston says:

    America will never be great again with the federal tax based on production (income, savings and investment). America’s Big Solution is the FAIRtax bill HR 25 / S 18. The FAIRtax moves the tax base from production to consumption with one simple progressive sales/consumption tax system with only one tax break, called the Prebate, that helps most the impoverished and lower income. With companion legislation the FAIRtax will renew our lost Freedom, Liberty and Civil Rights with the repeal of the 16th Amendment that enables direct taxation. Learn more and join the real/true tax reform cause at bigsolution.org and #FAIRtax

  2. Glenn says:

    Listen to Tax Hero (Episode 760) podcast on NPR planet money. Great story and further shows the power of lobbyist and how Republicans care more about campaign donations than making a difference.

    • Scooter says:

      Of course Democrats don’t care about campaign donations. Especially from Russia, China, and Iran.