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    SDI 2008 HBR LABCALIFORNIA ECONOMY DA

    CALIFORNIA ECONOMY DA INDEX

    ContentsCALIFORNIA ECONOMY DA INDEX............................................................................1

    SHELL................................................................................................................................ .2

    SHELL................................................................................................................................ .3

    UNIQUENESS EXTENSIONS...........................................................................................4

    UNIQUENESS EXTENSIONS...........................................................................................5

    LINK EXTENSIONS..........................................................................................................6

    US ECONOMY KEY TO WORLD ECONOMY...............................................................7

    INTERNAL LINK EXTENSIONS.....................................................................................8

    IMPACTS ECONOMIC COLLAPSE OUTWEIGHS WAR...........................................9

    IMPACTS LAUNDRY LIST..........................................................................................10

    IMPACTS BEARDEN....................................................................................................11

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    SHELLa) UNIQUENESS

    The California and US economy are teetering on the brink of recession.RogerVincent June 18, 2008, (Staff writer for the Times, THE ECONOMY; UCLA foresees norecession; But there will be little or no growth in GDP this year or next, Anderson experts say, lexis)

    Under pressure from falling home values, high oil prices and rising unemployment, the economyin California and the nation will perform anemically in the coming months -- but there still

    won't be an actual recession, UCLA forecasters say. "I am holding on to what is now a shakyview: no recession this year," said economist Edward Leamer, director of the quarterly UCLAAnderson Forecast, which is being released today. The predictions, however, call for somewhatmore pain in the months ahead than previously forecast, with little improvement this year ornext.Not good, but not a recession, which is commonly defined as two consecutive quarters ofnegative growth in gross domestic product."In a recession, things happen quicker and nastier," said David Shulman, a senior economist at

    UCLA.Normal growth will not resume until 2010, Shulman said.

    b) LINK AND INTERNAL LINKCounterplan cost pushes Californias budget overboard, collapsing the US economy.

    ReutersMay 16, 2008 (James Saft, California leads the way to recession; INSIDE THE MARKETS,lexis)

    'California is big enough that it is going todrag a lot ofthe nation down with it,'' saidChristopher Thornberg of Beacon Economics, a consulting firm in Los Angeles. ''You can'thave collapsing consumer demand in California and not expect it to have an influence.''Thornberg sees a recession in California being more similar to the recession of the early 1990s

    in severity rather than the briefer recession after the Internet boom ended. But while Californiais not suffering from an industrial bust, as it did when aerospace was hit after the Berlin Wallcame down, its consumers are poorly set to weather a recession.''People have racked up a phenomenal amount of debt, savings rates have been at zero andthe piper has to be paid,'' Thornberg said.Vallejo, a city in Northern California, said last week that it would file for bankruptcy, promptedby rising costs and falling tax receipts because of the housing slump.Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of California, is expected to present plans for $15billion in bonds backed by lottery revenues to help plug a state budget hole.

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    SHELLc) IMPACT

    Economic collapse leads to world war three.Walter Russell Mead August 27, 1998 (Senior Fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy at the Council on ForeignRelations, Financial markets threaten global peace, lexis)

    Forget suicide car bombers and Afghan fanatics. It's the financial markets, not the terroristtraining camps that pose the biggest immediate threat to world peace.How can this be? Think about the mother of all global meltdowns: the Great Depression thatstarted in 1929. U.S. stocks began to collapse in October, staged a rally, then the market headedsouth big time. At the bottom, the Dow Jones industrial average had lost 90 percent of its value.Wages plummeted, thousands of banks and brokerages went bankrupt, millions of people lost theirjobs. There were similar horror stories worldwide.But the biggest impact of the Depression on the United States -- and on world history --wasn't money. It was blood: World War II, to be exact . The Depression brought Adolf Hitler topower in Germany, undermined the ability of moderates to oppose Joseph Stalin's power in

    Russia, and convinced the Japanese military that the country had no choice but to build an Asianempire, even if that meant war with the United States and Britain. That's the thing aboutdepressions. They aren't just bad for your 401(k). Let the world economy crash far enough, andthe rules change. We stop playing ''The Price Is Right'' and start up a new round of ''Saving

    Private Ryan.''

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    UNIQUENESS EXTENSIONS

    __) California is on the brink of bankruptcy now.Las Vegas Review June 25, 2008 (Wage freezes, layoffs a fact of life, lexis)Mr. Schumacher obviously does not know that business taxes and income taxes depend on theincome derived by businesses and individuals. If our income goes down, we pay smaller or notaxes. Like sales and gaming taxes, if our income goes up, we pay more taxes. He also does notseem to know that businesses generally pass tax increases on to their consumers.I guess Mr. Schumacher really wants to cause havoc in our economy and drive Nevada into adepression. Maybe he would like us to be on the verge of bankruptcy, like California.

    He doesn't seem to care thatNevada has a relatively small population and should not becompared with California and New York. And while he and university Chancellor Jim Rogerslament our poor education system, has anyone noticed how the once-proud Californiaeducation system has become one of the worst?

    __) Californias poor economic standing shows on its cities.

    Business WireMay 30, 2008 (From Boom to Bankrupt: Vallejos Chapter 9, According toBankruptcyData.com, lexis)

    In like fashion, Vallejo has expense obligations it can not afford. According to Courtdocuments, its financial condition has deteriorated over the past three years. The failinghousing market, and a slowing economy, significantly decreased general fund revenues whileoperational costs continually increased. One significant expense source is the City employeesalary and benefit packages. A majority of general fund revenues are dedicated each year to paylabor costs; and the City's largest creditor is the California Public Employees Retirement System,which is owed $135 million.Vallejo is not alone in this crisis and is by no means the only one to be hit by the housing

    market crash and California's struggling economy. Adverse economic conditions have directly

    impacted the City's primary revenue sources: property taxes, sales taxes, assessments and fees.These combined economic conditions have industry pundits wondering if Vallejo's titanicbankruptcy is the tip of the Chapter 9 iceberg.

    __) California is in a budget crisis and on the verge of bankruptcy.

    States News ServiceApril 28, 2008 (GOVERNOR SCHWARZENEGGER PARTICIPATES INBUDGET REFORM DISCUSSION IN GARDEN GROVE, lexis)

    And then we have a budget problem, because our budget system itself in California doesn'twork. And what I'm talking about is, when you look back at the history, you always saw that inCalifornia that whenever the economy slows down we have a budget crisis, we run out of

    money. Just recently, in 2003, we were almost in a state of bankruptcy in the state of Californiabecause our economy slowed down and we didn't have enough money.

    So you would think that Sacramento eventually would learn, just like you would learn whenyou see an intersection and you see people crashing and having accidents, you say let's put up atraffic light. You do something about it. Well, in California, Sacramento has never doneanything about that, so that whenever we have a slowdown in the economy we run out of

    money.

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    UNIQUENESS EXTENSIONS

    __) Californias economy is slowing and is on the verge of bankruptcy.Sacramento Bee May 25, 2008(Claudia Buck, An Estate plan may be needed, lexis)A: California tax-free municipal bonds have the perception of being safe and secure. Butthe slowing economy can have an impact on the viability of such bonds. Recently, forinstance, the city of Vallejo voted to seek bankruptcy protection, partly because of a slumpingreal estate market. This could mean the city's municipal bonds might not yield their full value.

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    LINK EXTENSIONS

    __) Alternative energy is expensive and would cause Californias economy to

    collapse.

    The RepublicanMay 28, 2008 (Tax incentives for a greener future, lexis)It's a hopeful vision. But,just as money doesn't grow on trees, green industries can't becomegrowth industries without serious investment.

    That's why we're pleased that a wide-ranging tax package approved last week by the U.S. Houseof Representatives included tax incentives for the research, development and marketing ofalternative sources of energy. The provision, authored by U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield, who serves on the House Ways and Means Committee, extends by six years the taxinvestment credit for solar energy, as well as a three-year extension for a tax credit for energyderived from biomass, geothermal, hydropower, landfill gas and solid waste. It also includes taxbreaks for the production of renewable fuels and provides consumer tax credits for plug-in hybridelectric vehicles.

    "You are not going to get someone who will invest in wind power only to discover that the taxcredit is going to be gone," Neal said before the 263-160 vote. As investors "you need to be able tolook down the road at the tax incentives," he said.The tax incentives could help Massachusetts in its push to become a leader in the clean technologysector. Such incentives are needed because alternative energy sources are expensive to bring tomarket. But the payoff- beyond pumping up the economy - could be even greater if it helpedput us on the road to reducing our dependence on foreign oil.Going green is a worthy - and strategically important - goal. Tax incentives for alternative energyenterprises deserve support. When the provision goes to the Senate, we hope it sees it that way too.

    __) Alternative energy is expensive and would push California over the edge.

    Chattanooga Times Free PressMay 17, 2008 (A Vote To Keep Your Gas Prices High, lexis)Adding oil production in Alaska would by no means end our need for foreign oil. But boosting

    domestic supplies would give us a huge bargaining chip with which to press for lower prices forforeign oil. Existing oil production in Alaska -- developed when technology was far less advancedthan it is today -- has not harmed that state's flora and fauna. Blocking new development on thebasis of unfounded fears of danger to wildlife has become a means to push an environmental

    agenda that forsakes cost-effective traditional energy sources in favor of expensive,inadequate and unproven alternative energy. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, warned hercolleagues about what they are doing to consumers and declared: "Increasing our production ispart of a comprehensive energy policy. We cannot have an energy policy that is based on 'No.' "

    __) The price of alternative energy would push California over the edge.

    Christian Science MonitorJanuary 23, 2008 (Yereth Rosen Correspondent to CSM, In oil-richAlaska, an energy crunch, lexis)

    Geothermal, wind, hydro, and tidal power may hold the most promise in a state dotted with volcanoes, scoured by stiff breezes, and surrounded by water. Alaska'sDivision of Oil and Gas is soliciting bids for leases to develop geothermal energy beneath Mount Spurr, a volcano on the Anchorage skyline. Fairbanks's Chena Hot

    Springs Resort is renown for putting the underground heat that warms its pools to a variety of other uses. A handful of native villages have erected wind turbines,and Anchorage's electricity cooperative has wind-power plans. Solar energy - seemingly a long shot because of daylight-deprived winters - is getting a look, with

    panels installed in some communities. Even fish oil has fueled generators at Denali National Park. Suchsmall-scale projects faceeconomic hurdles, however. "Alternative energy is very expensive capital-wise," says Kohler,whose cooperative includes wind-powered villages. Federal grants have funded villages'alternative-energy projects, but prospects are dim for future aid, she says.

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    US ECONOMY KEY TO WORLD ECONOMY

    __) If the US economy collapses, the world economy will be soon to follow.

    The Austrailian June 14, 2006 (David Uren, Economics Corresponant, US Defecit risks worldrecession, lexis)

    THE head of the International Monetary Fund has warned that the US current account deficitrisks plunging the world economy into recession.

    Distortions in the oil market and fears of inflation are also threats to world economic growth,according to IMF boss Rodrigo de Rato.Although Australia would not escape the effect of a downturn, he said he believed the HowardGovernment's success in paying off its own debt gave it ''a very big cushion'' in managing a worldrecession.Addressing the National Press Club yesterday, Mr de Rato said the gathering threats contrasted with therapid, and increasingly broadly based, growth of the world economy, which was expected to accelerate5 per cent this year.''Should we describe the global economy as being as good as it gets, or too good to be true?'' he asked.Mr de Rato described the losses on markets over recent weeks as ''a fairly modest correction of previousincreases in asset prices''. But he warned that investors were becoming increasingly risk averse.

    ''In the face of rising inflationary expectations and concerns that higher interest rates may

    choke off growth, the balancing act that central banks around the world must undertake hasbecome more difficult.''

    The market fall yesterday was sparked by fears that the US Federal Reserve Bank will raise ratesat its meeting at the end of this month.Mr de Rato said Australia should aim to get its own deficit down from its present level of 6 per cent ofGDP to between 4 and 4.5. But he stressed that the IMF did not regard Australia's deficit as a threat toits economic health.''Australia's external deficit reflects high investment, rather than inadequate domestic saving, andinvestment is especially strong in the resources sector -- which boosts prospects for future exports,'' hesaid.Australia's deficit did not need any government policy response but would look after itself as the surgein business investment levelled off.''A correction of your current account deficit to a more sustainable path should not create big changes ineconomic circumstances.''

    However, the US deficit was being used to finance consumption and this would not be supportedby other nations indefinitely. ''The risk is that if nothing is done, imbalances will not be reducedgradually, but suddenly, and in a disruptive way.''If investors suddenly became unwilling to hold US financial assets, the US dollar would

    plummet and rates would rise, causing global financial turmoil and a recession. ''For the

    world, for the region and for this country, this is a problem that needs to be addressed.''

    __) The US Dollar has an impact on prices worldwide.

    The Morning Star June 19, 2008 (World China blames dollar for economic woes, lexis)China's top banker blamed the falling US dollar for driving up oil and other commodity

    prices, stoking inflation and undermining development in poor countries, at a meeting inAnnapolis on Tuesday. Speaking after talks with US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke andTreasury chief Henry Paulson, People's Bank of China governor Zhou Xiao Chuan said that rocketing

    commodity prices were putting undue pressure on the Chinese currency and driving up inflation inChina. "Many developing countries are already feeling the pinch," he observed. The Bushadministration wants the Chinese to open their financial system to foreign banks and investmenthouses. But that effort met strong resistance from China, in light of the billions of dollars in losses

    suffered by US financial giants in the credit crisis that erupted last August. Mr Zhou said: "In thepast, in the dialogue or discussions between China, the biggest developing country, and the

    United States, the most advanced economy in the world, China always hoped to draw

    experience from the US to guide its own development.

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    INTERNAL LINK EXTENSIONS

    __) The Terminator has the power to destroy the world.

    Washington Times June 15, 2007( Wesley Pruden, The Terminator gets a life, lexis)But nothing recedes like success, particularly in Hollywood, and soon the Terminator's opinion-poll approval sank to the neighborhood of 30 percent - a neighborhood Harry Reid might envy, butnothing worth amending the Constitution for. The Terminator decided to become a Kennedy. Ifhe couldn't be president of the United States he would become the president of California,

    with an economy already bigger than Canada, as Californians will tell you (and tell you and tellyou). "The power influence we have is the equivalent of a nation, or even a continent," he toldan audience the other day in British Columbia. He didn't identify the continent, but it wassomething bigger than Antarctica, presumably. Analyze that, Uncle Teddy.

    __) California is the testing ground for the future of Americas economy.

    ReutersMay 16, 2008 (James Saft, California leads the way to recession; INSIDE THE MARKETS,lexis)One particulararea of concern is the way in which California's faltering economy and risingunemployment interact with falling home values to prompt greater rates of mortgagedefaults. This could hit banks with exposure to California in their mortgage loan portfolios, not tomention Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.''There is a very strong relationship between delinquencies and the coupling of job losses withfalling home prices,'' Ajay Rajadhyaksha and Derek Chen of Barclays Capital in New York wrotein a note to clients.For example, in the areas of Modesto, Stockton and Merced, the unemployment rates are above 10percent while more than 60 percent of loans are close to being underwater, or larger than the valueof the house. Serious delinquencies in those areas are above 18 percent, while the national averageis 3.6 percent, according to Barclays.But beyond the implications for banks,

    California canreally

    beseen as

    the testing ground forwhat the U.S. consumer looks like in coming years, and how he or she manages. If, somehow,

    the move from spending to savings can be done gradually, the downturn in the United States

    may be gentle.

    If it happens quickly, watch out.

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    IMPACTS ECONOMIC COLLAPSE OUTWEIGHS WAR

    __) Economic Collapse causes more deaths than war.Charles Ellwood 2003(Univeristy of Missouri, Sociology and Modern Social Problems, lexis)

    As already implied, then, economic depression exercise a very considerable influence upondeath rate, particularly when economic depression causes very high prices for the necessitiesof life and even widespread scarcity of food. This cause produces far more deaths in modernnations than war. The doubling of the price of bread in any civilized country would be a fargreater calamity than a great war. While modern civilized peoples fear famine but little, thereare many classes in the great industrial natiosn that live upon such a narrow margin of existencethat the slightest increase in the cost of the necessities of life means practically the same as afamine to these classes. Statistics, therefore, of all modern countries, and particularly of all greatcities, show an enormous increase in sickness and death among the poorer classes in times ofeconomic depression.

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    IMPACTS LAUNDRY LIST

    __) Global recession causes famine, war, anarchy and unemployment.Bernardo V Lopez September 10, 1998 (Global recession phase two: Catastrophic, page 10, lexis)What would it be like if global recession becomes full bloom? The results will be catastrophic.Certainly, global recession will spawn wars of all kinds . Ethnic wars can easily escalate in thegrapple for dwindling food stocks as in India-Pakistan-Afghanistan, Yugoslavia, Ethiopia-Eritrea,Indonesia. Regional conflicts in key flashpoints can easily erupt such as in the Middle East, Korea,and Taiwan. In the Philippines, as in some Latin American countries, splintered insurgency forcesmay take advantage of the economic drought to regroup and reemerge in the countryside.

    Unemployment worldwide will be in the billions. Famine can be triggered in key Third Worldnations with India, North Korea, Ethiopia and other African countries as first candidates. Foodriots and the breakdown of law and order are possibilities.

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    IMPACTS BEARDEN__) Economic collapse causes extinction

    Tom BeardenJune 24, 2000 (LTC U.S. Army now retired, "The Unnecessary EnergyCrisis: How to Solve it Quickly,http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3aaf97f22e23.htm)

    History bears out that desperate nations take desperate actions. Prior to the final economiccollapse, the stress on nations will have increased the intensity and number oftheirconflicts, to the point where the arsenals ofweapons of mass destruction (WMD) nowpossessed by some 25 nations, are almost certain to be released. As an example,suppose a starving North Korea launches nuclear weapons upon Japan and South Korea,including U.S. forces there, in a spasmodic suicidal response. Or suppose adesperate China-whose long rangenuclear missiles (some) can reach the UnitedStates-attacks Taiwan. In addition to immediate responses, the mutual treaties involvedin such scenarios will quickly draw other nations into the conflict, escalating itsignificantly.Strategic nuclear studies have shown for decades that, under such extremestress conditions, once a few nukes are launched, adversaries andpotential adversaries are then compelled to launch on perception ofpreparations by one's adversary.The real legacy of the MAD concept isthis side of the MAD coin that is almost never discussed.Without effectivedefense, the only chance a nation has to survive at all is to launch immediatefull-bore preemptivestrikes and try to take out its perceived foes as rapidlyand massively as possible.As the studies showed, rapid escalation to full WMDexchange occurs. Today, a great percent of the WMDarsenals that will beunleashed, are already on site within the United States itself. The resulting greatArmageddon will destroy civilization as we know it, andperhaps most ofthe biosphere, atleast for manydecades.

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