Thursday, October 31, 2019

Carvana 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Ernie Garcia's dad made a good point - that people are skeptical about used cars, that they want to see and drive it before buying. But Carvana is changing that. They make the process reliable, convenient, and fun. They are disrupting the used car business.


Only one in ten cars (that they look at) joins the 22,000+ inventory on their website. Each one gets "fine-tuned" by their staff. When a buyer makes a choice, the car is delivered, or it can be picked up at a vending machine. There's a 7-day window to return it if you change your mind.

Some think it sounds too good to be true: "One customer even had 20 co-workers waiting with him when his car was delivered. They had a bet on if Carvana was real and if the car would even show up."

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Carvana 1

"I wasn't sure people would buy a used car online without seeing it," said Ernest Garcia II. Sounds like a reasonable doubt. But his son, Ernest Garcia III, thought differently. 

The dad already owned used car dealerships across America. The son wanted to sell those cars online. He got started with his business idea in 2012.

You've seen the gimmicky commercials with cars in a huge vending machine. That's for real. The business is Carvana, and it does almost $2 billion in sales. Their stock has doubled in value since January of this year.

Ernie (III) says, “Our mission is to remove the stress and anxiety from the car-buying experience and make the process fun and exciting."

(cont'd tomorrow)

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Q3 surprise

Tesla's third quarter of 2019 surprised both its investors and its "haters" (distractors) because they all expected a poor showing. It was a good surprise.

Tesla built and delivered about 95,000+ cars in Q3, a record number. For the year to date, that's ~255k, and Elon Musk promises a total of about 360,000 by year end. The more built, the more sold, so investors are happy.

After missing various over-optimistic deadlines in the past, there was more good news: the gigafactory in Shanghai, China, is ahead of schedule. Very soon it will be making both batteries and cars for the Asia market. That's going to save a lot of shipping costs.

Coming events include the unveiling of a new pickup truck and the new Model Y crossover.

Tesla's stock went up about 20%.


Monday, October 28, 2019

Religious freedom 3

Note: Sorry about the delay! This post was planned for Friday, then my laptop died.

(cont'd from Thursday's post) 

Stark contrast stands between China's denial of religious freedom and America's protection of religious freedom. In China, the people exist for the government. In America, the government exists for the people.

The U.S. Attorney General made the case for religious freedom at Notre Dame University earlier this month. In short, something must restrain the dark side of human nature so that evil and violence don't run roughshod over society.

America's founders knew that voluntary, free religious faith should shape morality . . or government would have to do it by laws that grow increasingly tyrannical.

 So less genuine faith = more government control. That's how the Chinese political class sees it, and the Chinese Communist Party is all in on that movement.

China's government destroys churches, mosques, and free religious expression - while at the same time setting up 600,000,000 cameras to watch and judge every citizen's actions. 

Even here in America, as the influence of Christian faith declines, the size and power of the government grows. 

Our founders were right.

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Religious freedom 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

China is persecuting Muslims in more ways than forcing some into "re-education camp" prisons. Domes and minarets have been torn down. Mosques have been padlocked or destroyed. Arabic signage has been banned. Imams are threatened.

China is also persecuting Christians. Children are banned from going to church. Thousands of crosses have been torn down. Government cameras keep watch in sanctuaries. And, churches have been destroyed.



Just this past weekend, a 3000-seat Christian church was destroyed in Funan (though it was government-approved) . . during a worship service.

The Communist Party of China and its "president-for-life," Xi Jinping, attack religious thought and practice to force unchallenged loyalty to the communist government. 

This is the opposite of "religious freedom."

(cont'd tomorrow)

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Religious freedom 1

“I was very much afraid to sign,” Sauytbay recalls. “It said there that if I did not fulfill my task, or if I did not obey the rules, I would get the death penalty. The document stated that it was forbidden to speak with the prisoners, forbidden to laugh, forbidden to cry and forbidden to answer questions from anyone."

Sayragul Sauytbay was forced into one of the "re-education camps" China has built in its northwestern region. She is Muslim, like many citizens in this region, and China claims that it has clamped down here because of terrorist incidents in the past. She eventually escaped the camp and fled to Sweden where she reported her experiences to a journalist.

Her job was to teach Communist Party songs and propaganda slogans: "I love Xi-Jinping [the president]. I am Chinese. Thank you to the Communist Party." Punishment, torture, and squalid conditions filled daily life.

She says, "I cannot forget the eyes of the prisoners, expecting me to do something for them. They are innocent. I have to tell their story, to tell about the darkness they are in, about their suffering. The world must find a solution so that my people can live in peace. The democratic governments must do all they can to make China stop doing what it is doing in Xinjiang.”

(cont'd tomorrow)

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Blockchain 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Money can be digital. There are 700 crypto currencies, bitcoin being just one of them. 

A young entrepreneur explains here that these currencies have no central control. Up til recently, all money transactions had to go through a central control of some kind, like a bank or credit card. But digital money doesn't.

Transactions flow freely between individuals who choose to participate in this open network, very like email, and tamper-proof blockchain is its ledger. That's what this young "digital  native" says:

Monday, October 21, 2019

Blockchain 1

Is trust important in friendship? Of course. Don't give sensitive information to someone you can't trust. 

A business must also be trustworthy. Clients or customers will go to the business that they think they can trust: "Trust is the fundamental currency of commerce." You want to interact with people and businesses that will tell you the truth.

According to this TED speaker, that's the essence of "blockchain" - it ensures that you can be certain of receiving truthful information.



(cont'd tomorrow)

Friday, October 18, 2019

The Suffering Q

This man is a "pure mathematician," a professor of mathematics at Oxford University - and  he describes himself as a kind and friendly Irishman. 

Since childhood, he's been curious about how other people think. He welcomes dialog with people who think differently than he does. His Christian parents gave him The Communist Manifesto to read when he was 13 years old, and he doesn't shy away from hard questions.

At about 9 minutes in the video below, he says, "I believe in evidence-based faith . . and if my faith cannot meet objections, it's not worth believing in . . ."

Here he speaks to a group at Harvard Medical School in America on the topic, "Where is God in Suffering?" 

Thursday, October 17, 2019

WI Lighthouse

He bought the old lighthouse without seeing it, for $159,000, and he's going to restore it.


After five tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, this former Army Ranger now works in San Francisco for a tech company. 

He's never owned a property before, but he's been searching for ten years to find a lighthouse to buy. 

It will be his own getaway, and he may rent it as a writer's retreat. His architectural consultant says, “A good roof and somebody in the building are the two most important things you can do for an old building."

from MPR News

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Materialism 7

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

How can Carl Sagan be sure that the "cosmos is all there is, or ever was, or ever will be"? He can't. But he agreed with Richard Lewontin, a Harvard scientist, who made his view of reality and science very clear:

Evolutionists ... have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door.

At the end of each ScienceUprising video in my Materialism 1-6 posts, the voice over said:

"We are not materialists. We see the human soul. We experience love. We live with purpose. We fight for justice. We are the quiet majority, and we will be quiet no longer." Many people, Christian or not, stand here. Materialists will not allow "a Divine Foot in the door." But when we see evidence for the Creator in nature, we welcome it.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Materialism 6

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Evolutionary theory (neo-Darwinism) claims that random genetic mutations account for inherited differences. No one doubts that. Mutations that are beneficial get passed along to later generations of that species. No one doubts that. It's called "micro-evolution."

But neo-Darwinism also claims that huge numbers of those beneficial mutations over the whole history of life gradually produced all the species on earth. Have there been enough beneficial mutations to build amazing features like wings and  eyes?

Dr. Michael Behe of Lehigh University in Pennsylvania says, "No."


(cont'd tomorrow)

Monday, October 14, 2019

Materialism #5

(cont'd from last week)

Origin of life research, trying to answer the question of how the very first living cell began, has been going on for at least fifty years. Instead of finding the answer, the more science discovers about the living cell, the worse the complications get.

It's like a "factory that contains an elaborate network of interlocking assembly lines, each of which is composed of a set of large protein machines. 

But the cell goes far beyond the function of a factory. Cells replicate themselves.

Friday, October 11, 2019

Fats & carbs

Much more is known about nutrition today than, say, 60 years ago. But . . more people are overweight now than in the 1950's.

Why is that, when people eat much less fat today? Something's not right.

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Materialism 4

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

"There is no evidence of design or purpose to our universe," according to Lawrence Krauss.

Really, Dr. Krauss? No evidence that our universe is finely tuned? No hints that our planet is not just habitable for humans but that it's actually hospitable to humans?

He's unable to think outside his materialist box. Because if you're open to the possibility, there's a lot of evidence for the hand of a designer. But if you're determined to not see the evidence, then you won't see the evidence.



"Science Uprising" videos will continue next week.

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Materialism 3

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

All the varieties of life, including all plants and animals, have their own DNA code. Does all of this develop from DNA-copying errors? Or does it require a programmer?



(cont'd tomorrow)

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Materialism 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Human beings do consist of material things: blood, bone, muscle, fat, etc. But most of us believe we are more than material. We have dreams, values, choices, loves, convictions - in short, we have a mind that goes beyond the physics and chemistry of our brain.

You are not just a collection of body parts. You are more.



(cont'd tomorrow)

Monday, October 7, 2019

Materialism 1

Back in the 1970's, popular scientist Carl Sagan was speaking with conviction to millions of people on tv, standing in a place of breathtaking beauty, when he famously said:



How much of reality does that point of view leave out? A lot - the conviction and experience of millions of people throughout history, as the 6-minute video below explains.


(cont'd tomorrow)

Friday, October 4, 2019

SpaceX Mk-1

SpaceX has been developing its 100-passenger"Starship" for years, the vehicle that will help humans colonize Mars. The first small prototype, Starhopper, was a stubby version used for testing purposes and retired in August. More prototypes (Mk-2, Mk-3, Mk-4) will follow.

Last Saturday Elon Musk revealed the very first full-size (165 feet tall) Starship prototype, Mk-1. Its test mission will be an uncrewed launch within two months, reaching about twelve vertical miles.

Elon's comment: "This is the most inspiring thing that I've ever seen."

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Cambodia 4

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Freer market reforms during the 1990's opened the door to optimism. Mr. Lim's parents had no hope for a better future, but his own generation saw that grinding poverty as rice farmers was no longer the only option: they saw freedom to improve their lives.

From 1995 to 2017 Cambodia's economy grew at an average rate of 7.7% per year. (To compare, good growth in the U.S. is about 3%/year.) In 2007 the poverty rate was still about 47%, but by 2014 it was at 14%.

What does Cambodia look like now? This author recently visited Mr. Lim and reports:

"Mr. Lim works in tourism. He drives a Lexus SUV on paved roads. He buys groceries from a thriving local market, and his daughters go to school. His brother owns a pharmacy in Phnom Penh. Another brother is a nurse at a major hospital . . There are entrepreneurs everywhere . . I witnessed family-owned coffee shops, restaurants, general stores, and roadside markets."

In one generation the grim poverty was turned around. Mr. Lim says it came because of: "Peace, education, technology, and the entrepreneurial spirit of Cambodian people.”

from "Entrepreneurship Lifts Cambodia from the Clutches of Extreme Poverty in a Single Generation"

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Cambodia 3

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Pol Pot's hideous regime (Khmer Rouge) was ended by Vietnam, which captured and plundered the capital (Phnom Penh) in January of 1979. The ruined nation of Cambodia became the "People's Republic of Kampuchea" (the PRK) and remained a communist state.

"Under Vietnamese control, the PRK was established in the wake of the total destruction of the country's institutions, infrastructure and intelligentsia wreaked by Khmer Rouge rule."

Lim Pengkhun was born to rice farmers in 1980. "For the first 15 years of [his] life, Cambodia was a command economy controlled by communist and socialist policies and remained one of the most impoverished nations in the world."

But things changed in 1989 when the last Vietnamese occupiers left Cambodia, and reforms started transitioning their economy from "command" to free market. New private property rights turned state-owned enterprises into person-owned enterprises. The U.N. invested in education, infrastructure, and health.


(cont'd tomorrow) 

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Cambodia 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

About two million is the number of Cambodian people murdered by their own government during the "killing fields" period between 1975 and 1979. That's 20-25% of the total population, but the suffering went even further than the appalling number of deaths..

A boy of five or six lived through it and tells his memories as an adult in the video below. He lost his whole family:




A woman soldier in the Khmer Rouge army now grieves her own participation in the brutal war of the government against the people here.

(cont'd tomorrow)

Monday, September 30, 2019

Cambodia 1

Disaster came to Cambodia in 1975. Here's how it happened.

A boy who had been educated in Cambodia's elite schools went to Paris, France, and became a follower of Marxist-Leninist communism there. Returning in 1953, he joined communist forces fighting the Cambodian government. The boy was Pol Pot.

Eventually he led his armies to defeat the government, and took control of Cambodia's politics and economy in 1975. His goal was to create an "agrarian socialist society," so he forced people out of cities and onto collective farms. 

His vision demanded social uniformity. His solution to dissent was to kill dissenters.



"Following the examples of Stalin and Mao, Pol Pot brutally murdered more than one million Cambodians in the infamous Killing Fields of 1975-1979 as he implemented his vision of communist utopia. He abolished private property, money, prices, commerce, and even cities—a full descent into barbarism.

"Death sentences were levied against any number of “class enemies.” Simply being a former civil servant, student, artist, or capitalist of any variety—including a “street noodle vendor or a motorcycle taxi driver”—was enough to earn a spot in one of Pol Pot’s mass graves."

(cont'd tomorrow)

Friday, September 27, 2019

Got banking 2

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

Tala is not a non-profit charity. It's a business that must make profit to stay in business, so its banking services are not free. Customers must buy their services and pay for them.

Amylene Dingle, one of their customers, paid interest and a small fee for her first ($20) and subsequent loans. Like all business owners, she took a risk when she bet that people would want her product and that she could generate a profit of her own.  She was right, it was well worth it, and her family is much better off.


In a "free enterprise" or "free market" economic system, people like Amylene are free to do as she did. She is entitled to use her own intelligence, to act on her idea - and she's entitled to the rewards of her own work.

In socialism's "control or command economy," somebody in the government decides if she should be allowed to pursue her goal. And her business will never actually belong to her. Private ownership is abolished, and the business will belong to the collective which of course is run by the government.

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Got banking 1

Just a few years ago, Amylene Dingle and her family lived in an impoverished part of Manila, the Phillippines. Her life changed when she saw an ad on Facebook for "Tala," and she responded to it.



Amylene was granted a small ($20) business loan from Tala. She used it to buy cold cuts/hamburgers/hot dogs and then re-sold them. Her business grew, and today she's making about $70 per week in profit. They now live in a cleaner, quieter neighborhood.

Tala was founded in 2011 by Shivani Siroya, a former Wall Street analyst who was raised in New York by Indian immigrant parents. After working at the United Nations, she started Tala specifically to provide banking services (like loans) to people in parts of the world where banking is not accessible to them.

from Forbes

(cont'd tomorrow)

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Still socialism

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

 If socialism is called by another name, like "democratic socialism," is it better? 

Will the outcomes be good if people actually vote for it in an election? No, the outcomes still won't be good.

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Who is Marx?

Seems there's some confusion about what Marxism is. 

Why are so many people against it? How do its supporters defend it? Is it the same as communism? Or is it just about equality of incomes? 

Has it ever really been tried? Why do people associate it with violence? 

Let's start with the man whose ideas laid the foundation for socialism and communism - and inspired the Russian revolution of 1917.

Monday, September 23, 2019

Blind to it

A young woman sits in a hipster coffee shop, puts her phone down, and looks around. She sees "people talking freely, working on their MacBooks, ordering food they get in an instant, seeing cars go by outside, and it dawned on me. We live in the most privileged time in the most prosperous nation and we’ve become blind to it."

Even the American poor can hardly compare to the the poor of the rest of the world. "Virtually no one in the United States is considered poor by global standards. Yet, in a time where we can order a product off Amazon with one click and have it at our doorstep the next day, we are unappreciative, unsatisfied, and ungrateful."


A young politician claimed recently that her generation has never seen American prosperity.

"Never saw American prosperity. Let that sink in. When I first read that statement, I thought to myself, that was quite literally the most entitled and factually illiterate thing I’ve ever heard in my 26 years on this earth."

from "Thoughts from a Hipster Coffee Shop"

Friday, September 20, 2019

Is it fake? 4

Google has the trust of most Americans. Their search engine produces neutral, unbiased, reliable, factual results. That's the perception. But Dr. Epstein tells a different story when it comes to the last presidential election.

He starts out strongly identifying himself with one political side. It's necessary, because otherwise he will be dismissed as purely partisan. His message is bad news for his own party.

That's our state of affairs. Partisanship, manipulation, and outright lying are broadly expected from each side of our political divide. 

Sadly, the difficulty of finding out what is true now saps the moral energy of a pretty big segment of "we the people." They throw up their hands and refuse to engage in public debate at all because they have given up.



Google manipulated politically-related searches in 2016. Voters were fed results which delivered huge numbers of votes to Google's preferred political party. 

"Democracy, as originally conceived, cannot survive big tech as [it is] currently empowered," says Dr. Epstein. He's right.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Is it fake? 3

(cont'd from yesterday's post)

To be clear, is earth's polar bear population declining? No, so far that's not happening.

"[M]ost of the world's 19 populations [polar bear population groups] have returned to healthy numbers . . ," according to the WWF.