[Note: This is one of those posts that has been sitting as a draft for days but didn’t seem worth publishing. I think I’m realizing, though, that I’ve started this site as much for me as for anyone reading this. And I’d like to remember this show, however imperfectly. So here it is....]

I can’t stop listening to the sound
of two soft voices
blended in perfection
from the reels of this record that I’ve found.

Kings of Convenience — “Homesick”

We weren’t able to make it to the sold-out Kings of Convenience show at the Great American Music Hall last Tuesday. I was pretty disappointed until I fortuitously stumbled upon a radio interview with Erlend Øye just in time to hear that they had set up an additional show the next day at the more intimate Swedish American Hall.

If you haven’t heard Kings of Convenience before, you should know that they are an acoustic duo whose songs feature tightly blended harmonies. For that reason alone, it’s really no surprise that many of their reviews make some sort of comparison to Simon & Garfunkel. I guess that’s accurate to a point, but it would be better if you could imagine Paul and Artie as Norwegians. Who play Brazilian-tinged indie pop.

The concert was on the unusual side. Erlend had a cold, so he let Eirik lead the way in the early songs. They started off by requesting that the house lights be brought up and the spotlights brought down, as they wanted to be able to see the audience. After three such pleas, it was clear that their request was not going to be fulfilled, so they gave up trying. But as they were about to launch into their third song, the lights went out completely. Not only that, but their amps went out as well. After standing patiently for half a minute or so, waiting for any indication that the problem was being dealt with, they decided to go ahead with the song, offering us an unplugged, off-mic rendition of “Cayman Islands.” The audience was hushed and the acoustics in the wooden hall were pure enough that the sound carried beautifully. Halfway through this magic moment, the amps kicked back in. Moments later, a red spotlight bathed the stage. They finished the song to loud applause, but it set a zany tone for the evening.

It was a remarkably loose concert. They kept pulling friends out of the audience to perform with them (the night’s opener Leslie Feist [formerly of Broken Social Scene], Berkeley’s own Bart Davenport, and Simone Rubi of Call and Response). The garnet glow of the stage was constantly shattered by audience members’ flash photography. From time to time, Erlend would come out into the audience like a towering Nordic Andy Dick to goad us into singing or dancing along with him.

Despite Erlend’s illness and the chaos of the evening, it was a fine, fine show. And if you’ve made it this far and want to hear more from Erlend and Eirik, you can stream their latest album here.

Within the Veil

Over at Arts & Faith, I just learned that George Scott, one of the founding members of The Blind Boys of Alabama, passed away on Wednesday. He was 75.

I was fortunate enough to see the Blind Boys twice, including a special Christmas concert last December. I will miss his rich, resounding voice.

The group’s leader, Clarence Fountain, had this to say:

We’re grateful to the Lord for letting us have George for as long as we did. He and I grew up together and sang together from little boys to old men. George was a great singer, he could sing any part in a song. We loved him and he was one of the ‘Boys.’ He lived a life of service and now he’s gone on to his reward.

The memorial service will be this Tuesday, which (in a sadly ironic turn of fate) is also the release date for their newest album, Atom Bomb.

One of the first songs I heard them sing was their riveting rendition of “Amazing Grace.” I can only imagine the joy he must feel now to be able to sing

Amazing grace! How sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost, but now am found,
Was blind, but now I see.

When we’ve been there ten thousand years
Bright shining as the sun,
We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise
Than when we’ve first begun.

How sweet the sound, indeed.

Crawling to Potter

Y’know, it may just be momentum, but I can’t help but add to my previous posts on the bankruptcy bill.

I’ll start by saying this: if you aren’t already reading Slacktivist on a regular basis, you should be. Fred has posted a series of thoughts on the bankruptcy bill and the state of the lending industry in general that are well worth checking out:

  1. Morally Bankrupt
  2. Morally Bankrupt (Continued)
  3. On Usury
  4. On Usury 2
  5. On Usury 3

In his last three posts, Fred explores the Biblical understanding of usury and how the meaning of that word has changed for the modern Christian church. The early church considered lending money (or land, grain, oil, etc.) at any interest at all to be usurious and worthy of condemnation. Today’s church no longer has a problem with charging interest, but would define usury as charging “excessive interest.” How do we determine what is “excessive”? Fred has this to say:

Lending can empower or it can exploit. The former is a good, the latter is evil — the sin of usury. Lending at interest enables lenders to continue their business of empowering. It was in recognition of this that Christians — right around the same time as the modern market economy was developing — began reconsidering the meaning of the prohibition against usury.

I have had some experience working with and around international relief and development agencies, and I’ve heard countless stories of the opportunities created by small community microlenders like the one Fred discusses in his post. Many of these banks start with generous gifts from charitable donors, but soon become self-sustaining through the minimal interest that they charge. These banks are a valuable communal resource and are very careful about who they support with loans, particularly early on. By doing so, the banks make sure that they are making sound investments while the resources they offer make a visible difference in the small businesses that they help start: a weaving collective, a rickshaw service, a grocery stand. These early successes encourage others in the community to seek these microenterprise loans, and it is the meager interest charged on these loans that allow the banks to expand their ability to empower their community.

Contrast that with MBNA or Citibank. Sure, these banks make it possible for consumers to make purchases, invest in their businesses, and take risks that thay might not otherwise have taken. And in that sense, the credit that they provide can be a positive economic force. But these same banks are also profoundly exploitative. As I’ve written in my previous posts, part of their business model is to market aggressively to customers who are clear credit risks, charge them high interest rates, and then when the customer misses a payment, raise the interest rates even more. These banks are no longer interested in empowerment, they are interested in exploitation, and they’re successful to the tune of $31 billion a year.

I don’t know how we go about encouraging the former kind of lending while working to curtail the latter. I’m open to ideas. But it reminds me of one of George Bailey’s monologues in It’s a Wonderful Life:

This town needs this measly one-horse institution if only to have one place where people can come to without crawling to Potter.

Eschatological Gorillas!

So remember way back in the last post a few minutes ago when I recommended five Slacktivist posts? Well, those are good and you should still read them.

But this one’s funnier.

Remodeling

I’m still getting the hang of this whole writing regularly thing. I have a couple posts germinating on other topics, but they’re coming along awfully slowly. I’ve also written a few posts that just don’t seem like they’re worth publishing. (I can hear you saying “You mean this is the good stuff?” Sadly, yes.) So I might write a bit more about the bankruptcy bill later tonight, because it’s still bothering me. And because I can tell by your silence that you’re dying for more.

I’ve also been spending a little more time on the overall design of this site. Last night, I tweaked the sidebar a bit. I think the design changes I have planned will come very gradually, but don’t be surprised if you stop by and find that things are a little different or even broken from time to time. I might just be testing out a new stylesheet or template. Since I haven’t figured out in WordPress how to do my futzing “behind the scenes,” I apologize if things are occasionally funky.

I’ll also admit that I haven’t spent much time testing any of this out on a computer running Windows. So if there are things going awry for you Windows folks, or if the type’s too small, or whatever, let me know.

All the Freaky People

Um…

So there’s a guy across the street yelling at the top of his lungs. It happens. Most of the time, when this happens, the message that is being screamed is largely incomprehensible. But not this time.

This time, the guy across the street is yelling the lyrics to “Angels We Have Heard on High.” As loud as he can. Every verse. It’s hard to say, but he might even be a little pissed about it.

I get back to my desk and Michael Franti & Spearhead are on the radio, in the middle of ”Stay Human”…

All the freaky people make the beauty of the world.

Gloria in Excelsis Deo seems about right.

This happens where you live, doesn’t it?

It Was a Dark and Stormy Night…

Nothing clears up the bad taste of bankruptcy in your mouth faster than a good ol’ forkful of funny.

If you’re in need of a little mouthwash for the soul, then ”The Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest” might be just the thing.

Edward George Bulwer-Lytton was a nineteenth-century British author known for his convoluted prose. His opening line to the novel Paul Clifford is perhaps the best known of his work, particularly after Charles Schultz decided to use that line as the starting point for all of Snoopy’s miserable literary efforts:

It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents--except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the house-tops, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness.

To honor this patron saint of mangled beginnings, the English Department at San Jose State University began a competition to see who could write the opening line to the world’s worst novel. The contest has run for more than two decades and has produced some real doozies.

For a good laugh at some painfully tortured writing, head on over to the ”Lyttony of Grand Prize Winners” (their pun, not mine).

Some of them are a little gimmicky, but many of them are just magnificent. My particular favorite is the champion from 1986:

The bone-chilling scream split the warm summer night in two, the first half being before the scream when it was fairly balmy and calm and pleasant for those who hadn’t heard the scream at all, but not calm or balmy or even very nice for those who did hear the scream, discounting the little period of time during the actual scream itself when your ears might have been hearing it but your brain wasn’t reacting yet to let you know.

Read. Weep. Enjoy. And if you are inspired enough to submit an opening line of your own, make sure to let me know.

74-25

I’m sure you’re tired of reading my posts about the Bankruptcy Bill.

Well, it’s over. It passed a few hours ago with unanimous Republican support and the votes of 18 Democrats, including Minority Leader Harry Reid.

I know that it was obvious that this bill was going to pass, and I know that the Senators from Delaware and North Dakota were clearly going to cave in to the credit card industry. But it would have been nice to see a little more unified, principled opposition to such an ugly bill. My Senators voted against it, so I guess I don’t need to send any angry letters.

But for the first time, I’m beginning to worry about Social Security.

It’s bad form to have a Part I and not follow through with a Part II, dontcha think? Hell, one more and I might just have me an ongoing series.

The star of tonight’s episode is an anti-Bush sticker, as so many are in Berkeley. But this one seemed in need of a little message clarity:

“STOP BUSH: VOTE IF YOU STILL CAN”

Many hours later, I’m still having trouble parsing this one. It certainly starts out strong with a simple, bold imperative. But then things start to get a little hazy. Was this a special sticker just for election day, say, two hours before the polls closed? Are there places where you can still vote in a way that might actually succeed in stopping an inaugurated president with a majority in both houses of congress? The sticker is not quite paranoid enough to suggest that we should vote while we still can, but it still seems inordinately concerned that a portion of its audience is no longer able to vote. Perhaps the driver of this car works at a prison? If so, doesn’t that seem unnecessarily mean spirited?

Anyhow, um, godspeed, fair bumper sticker. Let us know how that whole “voting” thing works out, won’t you?

Believe it or not, I had a few more points that I wanted to make in my previous post about the bankruptcy bill in the Senate. But the post was already plenty long, so I just decided to end it where I did.

In some ways, though, I think I left out the part of this debate that bothers me the most. This bill was first written and put forward back in 1997 at the behest of the credit card industry. I don’t know how necessary the bill was at the time, nor do I know how much the bill has changed since then. But as things stand today, the credit card companies really don’t seem to need this bill.

It’s true that personal bankruptcies are near an all-time high. In 2004, roughly 1.6 million families filed for bankruptcy, almost double the number that filed a decade ago. And if these were mostly deadbeats and predatory borrowers, then you’d expect to see some pretty destructive effects on the profits of an industry that needs this reform so desperately. But as the Los Angeles Times demonstrated in a recent chart (displayed at right), credit card company profits are also at an all-time high, raking in $31.6 billion in 2004.

Why are credit card company profits so high at a time when more and more of their customers are defaulting on their debt? In part, it’s because the credit card companies have built the risk of default into their business model. The L.A. Times article explains it thusly:

By charging customers different interest rates depending on how likely they are to repay their debts and by adding substantial fees for an array of items such as late payments and foreign currency transactions, the major card companies have managed to keep their profits rising steadily even as personal bankruptcies have soared, industry figures show.

When a credit card company charges a high-risk customer a high rate of interest, or risk premium, they are essentially wagering that the money the company will make due to the high interest rate on all like customers will outweigh the money they would lose if a customer defaults through bankruptcy. And these companies have clearly decided that this wager is worthwhile, because they have become more and more aggressive in marketing their products to potential high-risk customers.

And boy is it paying off. When you add punitive interest rates and penalty fees to the equation, customers can quickly find themselves in a situation called “negative amortization” where they make regular payments but their debt continues to increase. The same L.A. Times article tells the story of Ruth Owens, a woman living off of Social Security disability who was taken to a Cleveland court by Discover Bank:

According to court papers, Ruth M. Owens, a 53-year-old disabled woman, paid the company $3,492 over six years on a $1,963 debt only to find that late fees and finance charges had more than doubled the size of her remaining balance to $5,564.

When the firm took her to court to collect, she wrote the judge a note saying, “I would like to inform you that I have no money to make payments. I am on Social Security Disability�.... If my situation was different I would pay. I just don’t have it. I’m sorry.”

Judge Robert Triozzi ruled that Owens didn’t have to pay, saying she had “clearly been the victim of [Discover’s] unreasonable, unconscionable and unjust business practices.”

You could certainly make the argument that many people who sign up for a credit card know what they’re getting into. And there’s truth to that. Certainly, Americans could stand to learn more about financial responsibility, particularly when it comes to debt. But it’s also true that credit card companies know exactly what they’re getting into when they peddle their products to high-risk customers.

In a more fair marketplace, the threat of bankruptcy would be a necessary counterweight that would prevent credit card companies from giving credit to those who are likely to use it in a self-destructive manner. But it’s not a fair marketplace. The financial industry has donated millions of dollars to the campaigns of candidates at every level in the hopes that a bill like this bankruptcy bill will weaken that counterweight even further.

Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren, a guest poster on Talking Points Memo posts an email from a colleague who puts it this way:

Here’s what’s so strange: The credit card companies collect this risk premium, year in and year out. But when the risk actually happens and the borrower cannot pay, the lenders want the Federal government to intervene to force the debtor to pay, by passing a law prohibiting them from filing bankruptcy and discharging the debts. It’s as if a life insurance company took premium payments for years and then asked the government to pass a law prohibiting death!

The point is this. Credit card companies seek out high-risk customers, charge them high interest rates, charge them higher punitive rates and fees when they predictably miss a payment, and usually make back their initial investment plus a profit before their customer ever makes it to bankruptcy court. And this practice is making them billions of dollars. But that’s not enough. They want to make it even more difficult for these customers to free themselves from this destructive black hole of debt by passing an bill called, in part, the “Consumer Protection Act of 2005.”

The real tragedy is, this bill is going to pass. Unreasonable, unconscionable and unjust? You tell me. Better yet, tell your Senator; there’s a vote scheduled for this afternoon.

Forgive Us Our Debts

My church recently made a quiet switch from saying the version of the Lord’s Prayer with “forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors” to the version that says “forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.” (I really don’t know the reason behind the change, but it’s turned me into someone who can’t help but say “forgive us our debt...passes.")

I miss the old version, and it’s those words that keep running through my head as I read more and more about the bankruptcy bill that the Senate is scheduled to vote on early this week.

On the face of it, the bill sounds appropriate enough. It’s “The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005” or S. 256. The more I read about it, the more it’s clear that the authors of this bill and the party that is supporting it are much less interested in preventing abuse and protecting consumers than in helping the credit card industry maximize its ability to make a buck.

One of the major provisions of the bill is to substantially lower the income threshold under which someone is allowed to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, instead of the more stringent Chapter 13. Apparently, the credit card industry believes that Chapter 7 bankruptcy, as currently structured, makes it easy for people to game the system and avoid paying massive debts owed. And certainly, as with any system, some people will seek to figure out how to abuse the system for their advantage.

But a vast percentage of the people filing for bankruptcy are not “deadbeats” or “predatory borrowers.” They are people up and down the economic ladder who have been hit by something unexpected (illness, job loss, death in the family, divorce, etc.), didn’t have enough financial reserve to weather the storm, and haven’t been able to pull themselves out from under a continually compounding pile of debt. They turn to bankruptcy not because it’s easy and painless, but because they are willing to submit themselves to a humiliating process in order to get a little breathing room in their attempt to get back on their feet.

Maybe I’ll write about this more in the next few days, but you should really read a series of articles written by Peter Gosselin and published last fall in the Los Angeles Times. The thrust of the series is that Americans face increasing risk and income volatility, and that any number of financial shocks can send households into an unrelenting cycle of debt. Gosselin has also penned a follow-up article in recent days focusing even more on the issue of bankruptcy.

If it is true that credit card companies are being hurt by rampant fraud or “predatory borrowers,” then sensible bankruptcy reform would tighten loopholes and make the laws tougher and better enforced in a way that would still allow honest, desperate filers to benefit fully from the protections that the current bankruptcy process offers. But as I watch the debate unfold in the Senate, it is becoming clear to me that the Republican Senators (and a handful of their Democratic colleagues whose states benefit immensely from the credit card industry) are not interested in sensible reform.

How can I tell? In the last few days, the Republicans have unanimously (with an occasional defection) rejected several amendments that would have modified the bill to:

Now, to be fair… I know that sometimes congresspeople will introduce “poison pill” amendments to try to sink a bill that looks like it may otherwise pass. So it’s possible that Sen. Durbin’s amendment to protect military personnel whose small business goes under because they’re serving overseas may have also contained a provision to enshrine the “Hokey Pokey” as our new national anthem or declared the second Thursday of every month Free Abortion Day.

But barring such legislative hijinks, it seems to me that a party interested in serious, sensible reform that was truly focused on preventing abuse and protecting consumers wouldn’t summarily reject any of these amendments.

A sensible party also wouldn’t remove a provision preventing companies like Enron from “venue shopping” for a lenient state or judge, particularly after that same party used that same argument in reverse only weeks ago to limit class-action lawsuits. A party serious about eliminating fraud might consider closing a loophole allowing wealthy bankruptcy filers to protect assets in trusts and massive homesteads.

But it seems the Republican Senators are neither sensible nor serious about this kind of bankruptcy reform.

Many of these Senators are outspokenly Christian. When they say the Lord’s Prayer in church, I wonder which version they say. And if they pray — as I am so used to praying — “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,” I wonder if they really know what they’re asking.

Maybe you should contact your Senator and find out.

All Hail Illinois!

Exciting news in this morning’s edition of Pitchfork

Sufjan Stevens is close to finishing the follow-up to his 2003 masterpiece Greetings from Michigan “The Great Lake State.” Tentatively scheduled for a release date of July 5, Sufjan’s next album is a tribute to the great state of Illinois. There’s no word yet on a track list or title, but since Illinois is probably the closest thing I’ve got to a “home state,” I’m pretty excited. While it sounds like he’s still putting the finishing touches on the album, it would be reckless speculation to say that he’s spent the last 12 hours feverishly rewriting his 17-minute ode to the formerly undefeated Illinois basketball team.

Pitchfork also indicates that Stevens may not rest on his Prairie State laurels but may knock off another state or two from his ambitious 50 States project by the end of the year. There’s no indication as to which states he’ll tackle next, but my bets are on Wisconsin: Chicago’s State Park (the tag line to an actual commercial created by an actual tourism agency for a state that clearly has no self pride).

In celebration of the good news and in the spirit of the recently-launched Digital Skillet, I’ll offer up the following links to legal downloads of a few recent Sufjan Stevens songs:

I Want My MP3

Kevin over at Wasp Jerky, perhaps the most frequent commenter in these here parts, writes to say that he’s started an MP3 site called Digital Skillet. He’ll be posting links to legal downloads of indie bands and other music goodies. I plan on poking my head over there from time to time to see if anything strikes my fancy, and I’d encourage you to do the same.

Other legal MP3 sites that have introduced me to some great new music include:

  • songs:illinois
  • 3hive
  • Audiofile at salon.com (may require you to view a short commercial before accessing if you’re not a subscriber)
  • Largehearted Boy not only provides links to live and rare (mostly legal) mp3s, but also provides a nice summary of recent live torrent postings, as well as presenting an eclectic mix of links to music stories

If there’s interest, maybe I’ll post a link or two here from time to time when I come across a track that I’d like to share. But for now, go check out Digital Skillet.

What are you waiting for? Go, I tell you.

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