Published:
NEWSWEEK: Media Lead Sheet/October 20, 2008 Issue (On Newsstands Monday, October 13, 2008).
COVER: The Bright Side (p. 26). Newsweek International Editor Fareed
Zakaria writes an essay looking at how there may be good things forthe United
States' economy in the long run to come out of the current crisis. "Amid all
the difficulties and hardship that we are about to undergo, I see one silver
lining. This crisis has-dramatically, vengefully-forcedthe United States to
confront the bad habits it has developed over the past few decades. If we can
kick those habits, today's pain will translate into gains in the long run." He
writes that two decades of easy money and innovative financial products meant
that virtually anyone could borrow any amount of money for any purpose. "At
some point, the magical accounting had to stop ...The United States-and
other overleveraged societies-has now gotten the wake-up call from hell. If we
can respond and change our behavior markedly, this might actually be a
blessing in disguise."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163449
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20081012/NYSU005 )
"The Anatomy of Fear" (p. 31). Senior Editor Daniel Gross reports on the
impact of the fear in the economic crisis. In recent weeks, the emotions
expressed by the people in finance include anxiety, panic, rage, and
resignation. "In the past several weeks, we've witnessed a 24/7, digital run
on financial institutions as investors, banks, corporations, borrowers and
lenders worry that their assets simply aren't safe. This panic has shown
similar dynamics to previous ones. But due to the rapid shift in the structure
of the global financial system, it's also completely different. As a result,
the amount of selling and declines are far greater than would be warranted by
the erosion in the fundamentals."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163478
TECTONIC SHIFTS-DAN LYONS: "Down in the Valley" (p. 34). Senior Editor Dan
Lyons writes that Silicon Valley has suddenly realized that the collapsing
economy means trouble for tech companies too. Especially at risk are the new
startups created in the wake of the last dotcom crash in 2001. The signal
traits of these Web 2.0 companies are cutesy logos, odd-sounding names and
flimsy business plans based on a vague notion of luring millions of people to
free Web sites and someday selling advertisements. Some have raised enough
venture-capital funding to survive for a year or more. Some may be able to
raise more from venture backers, albeit at onerous terms. But many are going
to flame out. The correction is long overdue.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163443
"OK You Two, What Would You Do to Solve This Mess?" (p. 42). Senior
Editor Michael Hirsh reports on the teams of economic advisers for Barack
Obama and John McCain and looks at how both of them are handling the economy.
Since the crisis began, Obama has gotten tight with the Bill Clinton
"A-Team"-Larry Summers, Robert Rubin, Laura Tyson-who now routinely travel
with him. McCain conducts occasional phone conferences with anywhere from
seven to 30 business people and economists who review his campaign material.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163456
THE MONEY CULTURE-DANIEL GROSS: "People Who Live in Glass Hauser" (p. 20).
Gross writes that in recent weeks, there has been gloating inEurope during
the spectacle of American bankers falling on their faces. The reckless pursuit
of profits, a disdain for regulation, manic risk-taking has led to widespread
embarrassment. But now the clog is on the other foot.Germany has been forced
to bail out the nation's second-largest property lender.Iceland has seized
several banks.Britain unveiled an expensive plan to inject up to $88 billion
of capital into proud financial institutions like Barclays. Several European
countries have hastened to boost deposit insurance.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163272
POLITICS: "Ready, Aim, Fire!" (p. 48). Science Columnist Sharon Begley
writes that the fine tradition of negativity and attacks in politics goes back
to the nation's founding document. By the count of political scientist John G.
Geer of Vanderbilt University, 70 percent of the statements in the Declaration
of Independence are attacks onEngland. Although conventional wisdom among
academics and political junkies had been that sleazy ads and dirty campaigning
depress voter turnout, both lab experiments and analyses of actual elections
show that the effect on turnout is more nuanced.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163476
POLITICS: "No Prize to the Noble Leader" (p. 52). White House
Correspondent Holly Bailey profiles McCain adviser Steve Schmidt, who is in
charge of the day-to-day campaign and who is tired of reporters saying he's
Karl Rove's "protege"-the implication being that he is willing to do anything
to win. Schmidt learned in 2004 what it means to play rough when your
candidate is behind. Now, four years later, he is back at it. McCain is down
in the polls, and the candidate has struggled to get a consistent message
across to voters. When that happened in 2000 and 2004, Rove unleashed meaner
speeches and uglier campaign ads. Under Schmidt's direction, McCain is doing
the same.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163621
CAMPAIGN 2008: "Shivs You Can Believe In" (p. 54). Senior White House
Correspondent Richard Wolffe and Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff
report on Obama's chief strategist David Axelrod. The real test for any
strategist is how to calibrate the positive and the negative. With Obama up by
11 points (52 to 41 percent) in the new Newsweek Poll, Axelrod wants to
maintain the "brand"-a candidate who can appeal in red and blue states, who
can pull people together, who aims for a more noble sort of politics-while
also showing that Obama's tough enough to govern in a dangerous and uncertain
world.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163623
BETWEEN THE LINES-JONATHAN ALTER: "Crushed by the Elephant" (p. 55).
Senior Editor and Columnist Jonathan Alter writes that in a season of ironies,
"the greatest of all might be that John McCain lacks the toughness to get
elected president." He had his best chance during the summer, but he wasn't
tough enough to remake the Republican Party in his own image. Alter writes
that the free-market party of Reagan is dead and the resentment party of Nixon
(in the form of ugly attacks unleashed by McCain and Sarah Palin) may find
that its best days are behind it. "Where is the party of McCain? The man who
survived five and a half years as a Vietnam POW and a thousand political
battles is being crushed by a dying elephant."
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163457
CULTURE: "Hoist One Last Glass" (p. 60). London Reporter William Underhill
reports that inGreat Britain, something essential to the national character
is disappearing. Britons fear that one of their most beloved institutions, the
neighborhood pub, is dying. Five pubs go out of business every day, leaving
empty spaces in the communities they once served. For the first time in nearly
1,000 years, more than half the country's villages have gone dry. The soaring
price of beer has cut consumption to the lowest since the Great Depression.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/163450
Read the issue and Web exclusives at www.Newsweek.com .
SOURCE Newsweek
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