Category: News

  • Turkish Migration to the United States: From Ottoman Times to the Present

    Turkish Migration to the United States: From Ottoman Times to the Present

    From: A DENIZ BALGAMIS <balgamis@facstaff.wisc.edu>
    List Editor: Mark Stein <stein@MUHLENBERG.EDU>
    Editor’s Subject: H-TURK: New book [D Balgamis]
    Author’s Subject: H-TURK: New book [D Balgamis]
    Date Written: Mon, 8 Sep 2008 12:21:01 -0400
    Date Posted: Mon, 8 Sep 2008 12:21:01 -0400

     
    Dear Colleagues,

    The Center for Turkish Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison
    announces the publication of a new book titled “Turkish Migration to the
    United States: From Ottoman Times to the Present” edited by A. Deniz
    Balgamis and Kemal H. Karpat.

    You may order the book from the University of Wisconsin Press website
    at

    CONTENTS

    Introduction
    Kemal H. Karpat

    PART I SOURCES AND APPROACHES TO OTTOMAN/
    TURKISH MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES

    The History of Turkish Migrations: A Research Agenda
    Rudolph J. Vecoli

    Forging New Links in the Early Turkish Migration Chain: The U.S.
    Census and early Twentieth Century Ships’ Manifests
    John J. Grabowski

    PART II HISTORICAL OVERVIEW AND CASE STUDIES

    The Emigration from the Ottoman Empire to America
    Nedim İpek and K. Tuncer Çağlayan

    Reflections of the First Muslim Immigration to America in Ottoman
    Documents
    Mehmet Uğur Ekinci

    From Anatolia to the New World: The First Anatolian Immigrants to
    America
    Rıfat N. Bali

    Conflict and Cooperation: Diverse Ottoman Ethnic Groups in Peabody,
    Massachusetts
    Işıl Acehan

    “Home Away from Home: Early Turkish Migration to the United States
    Reflected in the Lives and Times of Bayram Mehmet and Hazım Vasfi”
    Emrah Şahin

    PART III RECENT IMMIGRATION

    New Migration, Old Trends: Turkish Immigrants and Segmented
    Assimilation in the United States
    Mustafa Saatçi

    A Profile of Immigrant Women from Turkey in the United States,
    1900-2000
    Ayşem R. Şenyürekli

    Migration from Giresun to the United States: The Role of Regional
    Identity
    Lisa DiCarlo

    Turkish Immigrants in the United States: Men, Women and Children
    Müzeyyen Güler

    The Turks Finally Establish a Community in the United States
    Kemal H. Karpat

    Turkish Islam (with Introduction by Kemal H. Karpat)
    Lloyd A. Fallers

    Contributors

    Bibliography

    Index

    ————-
    Deniz Balgamis, Ph.D.
    University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • NAVAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE SOUTH OSSETIAN CRISIS

    NAVAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE SOUTH OSSETIAN CRISIS

    By John C. K. Daly

    Wednesday, September 10, 2008

     

    Last month’s confrontation between Russia and Georgia over South Ossetia had a maritime dimension that continues to expand. Russia deployed elements of its Black Sea fleet to Georgia’s coast during its military operations and subsequently sank several Georgian naval vessels in Poti. During the clash Russia dispatched 10 vessels from Sevastopol to the Georgian coast.

    Following the conflict, the United States determined to send humanitarian relief to Georgia but found its efforts constrained by the 1936 Montreux Convention. Now Moscow, clearly irritated by Washington’s intrusion into what it regards as its southern maritime frontier, has announced that it is deploying significant naval forces next month to the Caribbean for joint naval exercises with Venezuela. Kremlin spokesman Andrei Nesterenko told reporters, “Before the end of the year, as part of a long-distance expedition, we plan a visit to Venezuela by a Russian navy flotilla” (Izvestia, September 8).

    The Caribbean deployment is not insignificant, as it includes the guided missile cruiser Peter Velikii, the largest surface vessel constructed by the Russian Federation since the collapse of the USSR, along with the anti-submarine ship Admiral Chabanenko (El Universal, September 8). Venezuelan Rear Admiral Salbatore Cammarata Bastidas said, “This is of great importance because it is the first time it is being done [in the Americas].” For Caracas, next month’s deployment is a timely riposte to the American administration’s announcement earlier this year that it was reactivating its Fourth Fleet, last deployed in southern hemisphere waters during World War Two.

    In the aftermath of the South Ossetian confrontation, when the U.S. decided to dispatch humanitarian aid by sea to Georgia, it found its initial efforts constrained by the 1936 Montreux Convention, whose 29 articles limit the number of foreign warships that non-Black Sea powers can send through the Turkish Straits to no more than nine vessels with a total of 45,000 aggregate tons. Moreover, they could remain there for no longer than three weeks. The United States had initially considered dispatching the hospital ships USNS Comfort and the USNS Mercy, both converted oil tankers, but as each displaced 69,360 tons, they fell outside the Montreux convention limits. While Washington chafed under the restrictions, there was little it could do.

    Last month NATO dispatched four ships from its Standing NATO Maritime Group 1 to the Black Sea for an exercise scheduled last October. The flotilla included Spain’s SPS Almirante Don Juan de Borbon, Germany’s FGS Luebeck, Poland’s ORP General Kazimierz Pulaski, and the USS Taylor. On August 22 the USS McFaul guided-missile destroyer loaded with humanitarian aid passed the Bosporus headed for Georgia with supplies such as blankets, hygiene kits and baby food, to be followed two days later by the USCGC Dallas cutter passing the Dardanelles. The USS Mount Whitney was also dispatched into the Black Sea with humanitarian aid, which it offloaded in Poti (Stars and Stripes, September 2).

    Before the Montreux Convention was negotiated, both Turkey and Russia had suffered from foreign naval intervention through the Turkish Straits during and after World War One. The Gallipoli campaign was preceded by a joint Anglo-French maritime effort in March 1915 to force the Dardanelles, and the Royal Navy subsequently occupied Constantinople after the war and dispatched vessels into the Black Sea to assist anti-Bolshevik forces.

    The Montreux Convention was intended to replace the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which had demilitarized the Bosporus and Dardanelles. Given their recent experience, both the Soviet Union and the Turkish Republic were interested in limiting foreign warships in the Black Sea; and for Ankara, the Montreux Convention was the first international agreement that fully acknowledged its sovereignty and position as successor to the “sick man of Europe,” the Ottoman Empire. Britain, Bulgaria, France, Greece, Japan, Turkey, the Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia ratified the Montreux Convention, which formally recognized Turkish sovereignty over the Turkish Straits. Given that Britain at the time was the predominant naval power in the Mediterranean, the United States was so uninterested in the diplomatic conference that produced the convention that it did not even send an observer to the negotiations.

    The Russian media is now reporting that Washington is negotiating with Georgia and Turkey to establish a naval base at one of Georgia’s Black sea ports in Batumi or Poti, but Ankara is reportedly carefully assessing its position in order to avoid further political tension with Moscow (Gruziya Online, September 7). In a replay of a dispute earlier this year, Russia has temporarily blocked the shipment of Turkish produce into Russia, citing sanitary concerns; and the dispute, which has cost Turkey an estimated $500 million in lost trade, has triggered speculation in the Turkish media that Russia is trying to punish Turkey for allowing U.S. warships to transit the Bosporus (Hurriyet, September 8).

    For those with a sense of history, a factor behind the 1962 Cuban missile crisis was Washington’s deployment of Atlas IRBMs in Italy and Turkey, which, in the wake of the confrontation, Washington quietly agreed to remove, as the development of ballistic missile submarines, the final component of Washington’s nuclear triad, obviated the need for forward basing of nuclear missiles off Russia’s southern shore. Forty years later, Turkey, sea power, and the Caribbean as subplots in rising U.S.-Russian tensions seem as interconnected as ever.

  • Amazon Mechanical Turk

    Amazon Mechanical Turk

    The Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) is one of the suite of Amazon Web Services, a crowdsourcing marketplace that enables computer programs to co-ordinate the use of human intelligence to perform tasks which computers are unable to do. Requesters, the human beings that write these programs, are able to pose tasks known as HITs (Human Intelligence Tasks), such as choosing the best among several photographs of a storefront, writing product descriptions, or identifying performers on music CDs. Workers (called Providers in Mechanical Turk’s Terms of Service) can then browse among existing tasks and complete them for a monetary payment set by the Requester. To place HITs, the requesting programs use an open Application Programming Interface, or the somewhat limited Mturk Requester site.

    Requesters can ask that Workers fulfill Qualifications before engaging a task, and they can set up a test in order to verify the Qualification. They can also accept or reject the result sent by the Worker, which reflects on the Worker’s reputation. Currently, a Requester has to have a U.S. address, but Workers can be anywhere in the world. Payments for completing tasks can be redeemed on Amazon.com via gift certificate or be later transferred to a Worker’s U.S. bank account. Requesters, which are typically corporations, pay 10 percent of the price of successfully competed HITs (or more for extremely cheap HITs) to Amazon.[1]

    About the name

    The name Mechanical Turk comes from “The Turk”, a chess-playing automaton of the 18th century, which was made by Wolfgang von Kempelen. It toured Europe beating the likes of Napoleon Bonaparte and Benjamin Franklin. It was later revealed that this ‘machine’ was not an automaton at all but was in fact a chess master hidden in a special compartment controlling its operations. Likewise, the Mechanical Turk web service allows humans to help the machines of today to perform tasks they aren’t yet suited for.

    History of the service

    The service was initially invented for Amazon’s in-house use, to find duplicates among its web pages describing products.[1]

    The service was launched publicly on November 2, 2005, and is currently in beta. Following its launch, Mechanical Turk user base grew quickly, in part the result of the Slashdot effect. At that time there were a huge number of “Human Intelligence Tasks” (HITs) in the system. In early to mid November, 2005, there were tens of thousands of HITs, all of them uploaded to the system by Amazon itself for some of its internal tasks that required human intelligence. Web traffic grew to a massive amount near the beginning of December 2005. Since then, the number of HITs in the system has decreased, and by December 20, 2005 there were less than 100 groups of HITs on the average page load. By January, new types of HITs were set up, such as selecting the three best restaurants in a city, and third party HITs began to appear as well. As of April 2006, there were only the occasional batch of 25 HIT groups being offered, and the service had slowed to a crawl. As of January 2007 there were new HITS being offered of podcast transcribing and rating and image tagging (which is becoming very popular). In March 2007 there were reportedly more than 100,000 workers in over 100 countries.[1]

    In 2007, the service began to be used to search for prominent missing individuals. It was first suggested during the search for James Kim, but his body was found before any technical progress was made. That summer, computer scientist Jim Gray disappeared on his yacht and Amazon’s Werner Vogels, a personal friend, made arrangements for DigitalGlobe, which provides satellite data for Google Maps and Google Earth, to put recent photography of the Farallon Islands on the Mechanical Turk. A Slashdot effect sparked by Digg led to 12,000 searchers signing up, who were supplemented with imaging professionals working separately with the same data. The search was unsuccessful.[2] In September 2007 a similar arrangement was repeated in the search for aviator Steve Fossett. Satellite data was divided into 85 meter square sections, and Mechanical Turk users were asked to flag images with “foreign objects” that might be a crash site or other evidence that should be examined more closely.[1]

    Third party programming

    Programmers have developed various browser extensions and scripts designed to simplify the process of completing HITs. According to the Amazon Web Services Blog, however, Amazon appears to disapprove of the ones that automate the process 100% and take out the human element. Accounts using so-called automated bots have been banned.

    Related systems

    Main article: Crowdsourcing

    MTurk is comparable in some respects to the now discontinued Google Answers service. However, the mechanical Turk is a more general marketplace that can potentially help distribute any kind of work tasks all over the world. The Collaborative Human Interpreter by Philipp Lenssen also suggested using distributed human intelligence to help computer programs perform tasks that computers cannot do well. MTurk could be used as the execution engine for the CHI.

    Criticism

    Because HITs are typically simple, repetitive tasks and users are paid often only a few cents to complete them, some have criticized Mechanical Turk as a “virtual sweatshop.” Workers have no recourse if companies refuse to pay them for good work. Requesters do not have to file tax forms, and avoid minimum wage, overtime, and workers compensation laws. Workers, though, must report their income as highly-taxed self-employment income. However, at least some workers on Mechanical Turk are people who are middle class and do the work to end boredom or for fun.[3]

    References

    ^ Steve Silberman. “Inside the High-Tech Search for a Silicon Valley Legend”, Wired magazine, July 24 2007. Retrieved on 2007-09-16.

    ^ I make $1.45 a week and I love it Salon.com. July 24, 2006.

    External links

    Official website

    Wired Magazine story about ‘Crowdsourcing’ June, 2006

    Business Week Article on Mechanical Turk

    New York Times Article on Mechanical Turk

  • The Fannie and Freddie Rescue WELLINGTON LETTER

    The Fannie and Freddie Rescue WELLINGTON LETTER

     

    September 8, 2008 Volume 31: No. 17

     

    SPECIAL BULLETIN

     

    The Fannie and Freddie Rescue

     

    THE BIG NEWS EVENT OF THE WEEKEND

     

     

    On Sunday, Sept. 7, the Federal government announced that it would be putting Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into “conservatorship.” The CEO’s of both firms will be replaced and the dividends will be eliminated.

    The Treasury Department said it will immediately receive $1 billion in senior preferred stock, paying 10 percent interest, from each company. Over time, the government could be required to put up as much as $100 billion for each if the funds are needed to keep them afloat as losses mount. You can bet that the actual total will be many times that.

    The government will also receive warrants representing ownership stakes of 79.9 percent in each company. Apparently that means that shareholders would not be wiped out, but they would lose about 80% of the company. That’s substantial dilution.

    Furthermore, dividends on both common and preferred stock would be eliminated, saving about $2 billion a year. Mid-size and small banks own a lot of the many different classes of the preferred for their high dividends. With the dividend eliminated, what is the reason to own them? Some banks will take a substantial bath on these investments.

    STOCK MARKET

     

     

     

    However, the Treasury will not let these banks fail. Bloomberg reported:

     

    The Federal Reserve and three other bank regulators said that they will work to “develop capital restoration plans” with the “limited number” of smaller institutions that hold Fannie and Freddie stock as a significant portion of their capital.

    By ensuring that Fannie and Freddie maintain positive net worth, the Treasury will provide “additional security” to the owners of Fannie and Freddie bonds and “additional confidence” for the holders of their mortgage-backed securities, it said. The Treasury noted that Fannie and Freddie securities are held by central banks and “investors around the world.”

     

     

    In plain English, the banks will not have to write down the value of these securities immediately.

    The former president of the St. Louis Fed, William Poole, told Bloomberg that “I would not be surprised if their total losses aggregate about 5 percent of their obligations” of about $6 trillion. In my view, that’s much too conservative. I think the loss will be at least 20% of the portfolio, which would be over $1 trillion.

     

     

    Note that the takeover is by the government, not the Federal Reserve. After all, the Fed is not owned by the government, although most people think it is. However,the future status of these firms is still unclear. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said that “only Congress” can tackle the “inherent conflict” of serving both shareholders and a public mission. Currently, the plan doesn’t address the question of whether the companies will be nationalized, privatized or kept as government-sponsored enterprises that are shareholder owned.

     

    I think a significant part of the statement is that the Treasury said it would reduce the portfolios of both companies by 10 percent a year starting in 2010. That is a big negative because most private mortgage companies are already not lending. If these two GSE’s reduce lending, instead of expanding it, it means that the housing debacle will continue. And only a turnaround in housing can hope to stop the current credit contraction that is leading the world into a financial crisis.

     

    What is likely to happen to the markets?

     

    The initial “sigh of relief” rally may be much shorter than the bulls would like. Yes, the Fannie and Freddie problems are resolved – for now. The fact that the Treasury took these steps confirms that the liquidity situation of both firms was getting critical. But the rescue had already been built into the markets over the past seven weeks. It was obvious that the government could not let them fail.

    So, what’s for an encore? Does it resolve the write-down problems of assets in the banking system? What about the Wall Street firms? And what about the future problems of the private equity firms as their acquired companies have trouble making debt service?

     

     

    The serious problems are still out there. Everyone knew that these two GSE’s would not be allowed to go out of business. That is no surprise. It only gives a psychological boost, but it will take more than psychology to compensate for trillions of dollars of derivatives melting down.

    What will be the reactions in the markets? The dollar will have a brief rest in its strong rise, meaning a brief correction before it goes higher. That will also cause a brief pop in the commodity markets, including the precious metals. Late last week, these markets had met first technical levels which normally causes brief counter-trend moves. No one can know if the rally will last one or two days, or maybe even a week. In fact, it may not even last to the end of Monday. We will see. But an end to the credit crisis is far, far away.

     

     

    Its important to remember that everything that the Fed and the U.S. Treasury have done over the past 12 months, which includes the Fed using half its balance sheet, i.e. $400 billion of Treasury securities, has not resolved anything, but only prolonged the inevitable.

     

    The major indices last week started breaking down to new bear market lows, unemployment is soaring, and the economy is in a certain recession which the guys with their Ph.D.’s won’t recognize until next year.

    The ill-defined Fannie and Freddie bailouts won’t be any different. It’s like using an aspirin to fight terminal cancer.

     

    THE SILENT CREDIT CRUNCH AND THE ECONOMY

     

    While the bullish analysts tell you about the good earnings of companies, and the exciting “widgets” they make, and the virtually unlimited demand for them, they totally ignore the primary driving factor in economies and investment markets, i.e., credit availability. Without credit, economic growth comes to a screeching halt.

    And that’s where we are now. Most banks can’t lend because they are close to their capital reserve requirements. They must raise more capital, which is very difficult, or just stop lending and call in loans.

    Major firms, such as Lehman, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, GM, Ford, etc. are totally unable to raise long-term capital to strengthen their balance sheets. Their preferred stock yields, and yields on long-term debt, are sky high, implying that the market believes they will not be able to survive. The preferred issues yield from 13%-18%. They can’t raise new capital issuing new preferred at these yields, as it would accelerate their demise. GM’s short-term debt is now yielding well over 20%. Investors obviously are not worried about the return ON their money, but OF their money.

    Apparently, many investors are being fooled by the $4-5 billion write-offs repeatedly taken by large financial firms. The amounts seem manageable, so they don’t worry. But you have to add them up. For example, MER wrote down $5.5 billion last October. It got a capital injection from Singapore to compensate. However, at this time, the write-offs of MER amount to $48 billion.

     

     

    Hundreds of billions of dollars in short-term financing used to be conducted in the commercial paper (CP) market. Consider these Federal Reserve figures on commercial paper outstanding: The “asset-backed” CP outstanding has plunged by about $500 billion dollars, or 40%, from last year’s peak of about $1220 billion. That’s the biggest decline of any credit market in history. How can anyone believe that it won’t cause a serious recession?

     

    However, there is a small positive, namely that “non-financial commercial paper” has seen a rise lately. This is the CP issued by large, non-financial companies. It means that someone is able to raise money in the commercial paper market.

    But it’s the banks that usually provide credit to smaller and mid-size firms. They are not able to do so now except on a minor scale. And that’s where the problem lies. During the 14-year stagnation in Japan, the banks could basically not lend because they were still loaded up with all the bad loans created during the 1980’s bubble. Their government should have created a mechanism to get those bad loans out of the banks so that they could lend again. The Fed knows the Japanese problem, and is trying to make sure that it doesn’t happen in the U.S. Their answer is “Term Facilities,” where the Fed trades liquid U.S. Treasury paper it holds for the illiquid paper assets held by the banks. But these are loans, not permanent capital infusions.

    While the Fed holds these securities, they continue to lose value. Wouldn’t the banks be smarter to just dump them before they become worthless? They probably hope that eventually the Fed, or the Treasury, will just keep them, because reversing the swaps would mean instant bankruptcy for the banks, as they have to write down the value.

    Values of all these paper “assets” are shrinking. Merrill Lynch recently dumped its CDO’s, which was a smart move. These CDO’s were declining every day, and finally MER decided to get a dwindling asset off of its books before everyone else decides to dump their own holdings.

    Mortgages held by financial institutions are losing their value on a weekly basis. The huge bond investment firm, PIMCO, estimates that $5 TRILLION of mortgage loans are in the “risky asset” category. That’s about 40% of all mortgages. If you are one of the bulls, just think, how can the Fed, or the Treasury, bail out $5 trillion in bad mortgages?

    RAISING RATES? IDIOTIC!

     

    The credit crunch is worsening, yet a number of economists, including some presidents of Federal Reserve districts, are urging the Fed to raise interest rates. This is a great argument for not letting human beings be in charge of something as important as setting interest rates. The markets can do a much better job. The hawks on rates fail to see that the “low” Fed Funds rate of 2% has nothing to do with market rates, which is what the average person, and the average corporation, pay. The low Fed Funds rate creates a steep yield curve, which allows banks to improve their profitability. Higher rates will cause more bank failures. Is that what we want?

    This technique of creating a steep yield curve helped resolve the banking crisis of 1990-1991. Banks borrow at the low short-term rates and invest the money into much higher-yielding U.S. Treasury bond rates, thus making a nice profit. That is also the reason that the prices of these Treasuries continue to rise, totally confusing economists who have been saying that bond prices should decline because of higher inflation. These economists just don’t know how the markets work.

    The number of business bankruptcy filings rose 42% in the 12-month period through June 30. The numbers are still relatively small, but the trend is definitely negative.

     

     

    GMAC and its Residential Capital LLC home lending unit announced that they plan to fire 5,000 employees, or 60 percent of the staff, and close all 200 GMAC Mortgage retail offices because of weak real estate markets. Loans originated by outside brokers through the company’s Homecomings unit will cease and business lending will be curtailed, the company said.

     

    And that’s how credit becomes tighter.

     

     

    Ford reported that domestic sales fell 27% in August. That’s the 21st decline in 22 months. Ford is reducing its planned second-half production in North America by 50,000 vehicles. In July, sales of U.S. carmakers declined to the lowest sales rate in 16 years.

     

    Meanwhile, Nissan of Japan reported that its sales gained 14%. What’s wrong with Detroit management?

    REALITY IS NOW BECOMING RECOGNIZED—BUT SLOWLY

     

    We are now coming to the phase of the bear market and recession where there is a realization by the majority of the investment establishment that the credit crunch is accelerating. Such an acceleration acts like an avalanche, where the lenders and other sources of liquidity suddenly realize that their previous “bargain hunting” has resulted in big losses and they are no longer willing to provide capital.

    Banks shut their lending windows for two reasons: they don’t have the capital, and they don’t want to take the risk.

    Bill Gross, founder of PIMCO, the largest bond firm in the world, and a very astute analyst of the credit markets, was very candid and revealing last week on CNBC. He admitted that PIMCO had been too quick to provide capital to financial firms early this year when they thought the worst was over.

     

     

    Obviously, they don’t subscribe to our WELLINGTON LETTER, where we warned last year that the bargain hunters were much too early. He said that currently, they and other investment firms are no longer willing to provide capital.

     

    He said that, to resolve the current crisis, the financial markets need $500 billion of capital. This is huge.

     

    No one can provide that except the government. Remember, the investments by the large, foreign “Wealth Funds,” which invest in governmental surpluses, have been investing the amount of $4-6 billion. And they now hesitate to invest more. Well, the $500 billion required is nowhere to be found, except at the U.S. Treasury printing press.

    Late last year we said that a capital infusion of that much by the Federal government was the only way to restore confidence, not the small amounts of $20 billion and $50 billion which the Fed actually did provide. Paulson had it right a few months ago when he said that when everyone knows you have a bazooka, instead of a little pistol, you don’t have to use it.

    Of course, at that time, most of the policy makers in Washington didn’t even think there was a crisis. Our leaders in Washington are reactive. When the meltdown really gets going, they’ll start scrambling. But wouldn’t it be better for them to come up with a program now, totally avoiding the next crisis?

     

    This is why bargain hunting right now in any asset, except U.S. Treasury bonds, is a sure loss investment. We are seeing the greatest un-leveraging in the history of the world. That means everything gets sold. And when it’s sold, the seller searches for a safe place for that money. The only safe place is U.S. Treasuries. As I wrote in March this year, I believe that we could even see a short period where investors will be willing to get a zero yield on 30-day T-bills, or less, just to have their money safe. Advice: avoid all money market funds which have other than U.S. Treasury securities.

    I gave the same advice in the middle of last year. But institutional investors thought they could improve yield by buying

     

     

    “Auction Rate Securities

    ” that were sold by Wall Street as being the same as money market funds. Well, now these securities cannot be sold. There is no market.

    The next wave of crisis is not far away, even with the rescue of Fannie and Freddie.

    (Note: Our next issue will be published in one week and will include the normal, complete assessment of the investment markets, with charts.)

     

    Seminar Appearance, Bert Dohmen

     

    I will be participating at a great seminar in Los Angeles (Century City) conducted by my long-time friend, Donald McAlvany. IT’S FREE! Details:

     

     

    Don McAlvany and David McAlvany cordially invite you to attend their

     

     

    FREE

    financial and geo-political briefing. Please make plans to attend an in-depth analysis on the following topics:

     

    ~ Death of the Dollar: The Ramifications of Losing the Status of the “World Reserve Currency”

    ~ Changing of the Guard: How to Prepare for a Global Shift of Power

    ~ Banks on the Brink: Your Money & How Safe Is It?

    ~ Mega Crash: The Coming Derivatives Meltdown

    Hyatt Regency Century Plaza, 2025 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067

     

     

    Tuesday, September 23

     

    rd at 6:30-PM

     

    Call 800.525.9556 x118 to Guarantee Your Place

    The seminar is FREE! I will be on a small panel to discuss some of the important situations in the markets and answer questions from the audience.

     

    Greetings,

    Bert Dohmen

     

     

  • Turkey’s state TV signals future broadcasts in Armenian

    Turkey’s state TV signals future broadcasts in Armenian

     

    Turkey’s state-run Turkish Radio Television (TRT) is moving toward cooperation with Armenia’s public television station to promote dialogue between the two neighbors, the Turkish Daily News (TDN) wrote on Tuesday.

    After President Abdullah Gul’s historic visit to Yerevan, the general manager of TRT, Ibrahim Sahin, announced TRT might start broadcasting in Armenian.

    TRT also signed a memorandum of understanding with Armenia 1 TV, according to the report in the TDN.

    “Cooperation will be made in formats that improve dialogue, programs that focus on Armenia and Turkey, exchange of information and experience, and other issues,” the document read.

    The memorandum of understanding between the two state television stations will be transformed into a business agreement in the near future to enable joint production of programs and documentaries.

    Sahin said the three main pillars of the cooperation are – cooperation in management, leading public opinion and education. He added a bridge would be built between two countries with the help of state television.

    He said the final decision for full-time broadcasting in languages, such as Kurdish, Arabic, Persian and English, which are mostly spoken in neighboring countries is in progress, adding an Armenian broadcast could be also possible in the second phase.

    He added broadcasting in Georgian and Russian was also under consideration.

    TRT’s official website, which currently only operates in Turkish, will be transformed to serve in 12 languages, Sahin said.

    Although Armenian is not among the 12 proposed languages, a new page might ultimately be added, he said.

    Photo: AA

  • Azerbaijani population negatively assessing Turkish President’s visit to Yerevan

    Azerbaijani population negatively assessing Turkish President’s visit to Yerevan

    Most citizens of Azerbaijan negatively assess the visit of Turkish President A.Gul to Yerevan on September 6 and consider that it will have a negative impact on the Karabakh conflict resolution.

    According to the report of the Ray monitoring center, which held a public poll regarding Gul’s visit to Yerevan, the reaction of the respondents turned out to be extremely negative. (more…)