Tuesday, May 22, 2007

The End.


So here it is the end of the semester. I'm sure all students are stirring as we speak imagining all the possibilities for them. I wanted to leave this class with one last spiel that wasn’t related to something specific but hopefully related to everyone. Each and every one of us has worked and slaved this semester and believe it or not, so have the teachers. I say this because I believe that we all need a little down time. It’s the reward for our labors and sometimes we forget that even we deserve a little something now and then. We’re still young or young at heart and there are adventures out there waiting for us. So we should follow the old saying of grabbing the bull by the horns and get out there. This summer, do a little something to remember whether it’s a trip our just a wild weekend. We need to DO SOMETHING, something that defines who we are and make us a little bolder than before. All these saying may sound clichéd or hard to do but if you set your mind to it, it’s possible. So here’s hoping to a great and climatic summer of 2007 and that you will all be refreshed when you come back in the fall. For those who don’t come back, here’s to the roads ahead.

Out,

Elizabeth

Sunday, April 29, 2007


After reading an article about Chevron's profit surges, I felt that everyone should know the how the oil companies are playing us for the gas needy citizens we are. While the average person frets about rising gas costs, soon it will be a luxury to drive instead of a necessity. For the people trying to make ends meet, rising gas prices can mean a world of difference getting to work. Out of all the companies out there, oil companies seem to care the least about its consumers. It’s increasing prices even if consumer demands stay the same. The company is pushing the selling point higher than it ever was before. However, we as consumers are just sitting idly by as the oil companies bully us. As we enter a new future of renewable resources and green living, we should learn to use alternatives to fuel and only use fuel when needed. We need to teach a lesson to the next generation about the dangers of the oil companies.

People have already started to think about how we could ever survive without oil. An online game was recently created called World Without Oil (www.worldwithoutoil.org). The design was based on what would we do without oil? How would it change our lives? How can we better ourselves without it? These are important questions to ask and as the oil prices rise, we should consider if we really need that much oil. Maybe we’re just being excessive, but soon, oil will be just another extravagance in our everyday lives unless we all do something to change it.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Pre-election BS.


With the upcoming preliminaries, it is hard to say who will win or who should win. Obama and Clinton are similar but yet differ so much in taste. While Clinton is leading with a famous name, her name seems somewhat falsely given. Bill Clinton has given much popularity and background to Hillary and it’s easy to see who wins the name recognition part but without it, she wouldn’t have much to stand on. Riding the coattails of another to gain position can be a positive boost but a negative hit to the actual credentials of the candidate. I’m for the idea of having a female president as well as the movement away from traditional male presidents but there are many pluses as there are minuses.

Obama on the other hand seems like the underdog. He’s often quoted to be “well spoken”, which could be open to different interpretations, and known for his “hot body”. As the younger generation of girls learns to vote, I guess it doesn’t hurt to be good looking. Obama also represents another minority lead; if Obama wins, he’ll get the chance to be the first black president. His major criticism of Hillary’s is that she supported the war at one point where as he has always been against the war.

The war is the most important issue now. It almost seems that we aren’t voting on a person but whither we should continue the war or not. Everything is decided by pro-war or anti-war. I’d be surprised if most people even knew what the other issues were. I guess we can’t go wrong considering last time the nation apparently voted for a president that they all claimed to hate. However, if you think about the way that was portrayed, it was the president that Hollywood hated but the rest of the country couldn’t care less. What about the Republican Party? Who knows and who cares.

If you couldn’t tell already, this was a satirical rant of the race for president.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Do you know what you're buying?


With the recall of so many pet food brands during the wheat-gluten scare, it gave me time to think a little bit about product liability. Is it too much to ask as consumer for businesses to properly check their sources and conditions before shipping its products to grocers? It seems that slipshod work is acceptable and that it’s only a requirement to take responsibility after something bad has already happened. The results weren’t only health hazards to pets but to humans too as other brands of food were found to contain salmonella contamination. Beloved pets were killed in the process all because companies didn’t take proper responsibility in checking the manufacturing of their products.

Due care should be an essential to any product that businesses produce. Companies should not produce products that harm because they are wrong in doing so. Stricter regulations need to be imposed on business that deal with health and food since these are essential to people and pets. Even well known companies can have slips like the recent recall of Listerine mouth wash for children that was found to contain microorganisms. If companies like this don’t take priority in their products, they will lose customer loyalty as well as their good name.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Behind that smiley face.


Wal-Mart is one of the biggest corporations out there, expanding from the US to foreign countries around the globe. However, in recent events, Wal-Mart has found itself unable to sustain a store in NYC. I find that amazing that such a big corporation that managed to open stores in China, finds it difficult to open a store in NYC. With a history of unethical practices, Wal-Mart has almost become all that is evil in corporate America. Sure, bright yellow smiley face greet you every where in the store, despite the fact that most of its 1.4 million employees who have to survive without health insurance. Since Wal-Mart is anti-union, it pays the average worker much lower than that of union members, at an astonishing average of $8.23/hr. A congressional report stated that a two-hundred-employee Wal-Mart store can rack up cost of $42,000 a year in house assistance, $108,000 a year in children’s health care, and $125,000 in tax credits and deductions for low-income families. These government effects are only for one store.

NYC has my congratulations for being able to keep Wal-Mart out. As Wal-Mart expands, the store is causing destructions in communities by closing down competitors, shutting out unique stores, and putting people out of jobs. Wal-Mart brings little contribution and requires tax credits when opening a store instead of paying the required taxes to help the local community. By keeping Wal-Mart out, NYC has managed to obtain their originality.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Not so reliable, not so dependable.


Article for Circuit City Layoffs


Circuit City was said to cut more than 3,500 jobs from its store workers due to falling sales. Workers who were laid off were allowed to reapply for their jobs after a 10-week delay. By doing so, workers would get lower pay and have to work at the same job they did before. With the urban sprawl of companies such as Wal-Mart, Circuit City has lost its competitive edge against these major corporations. It is hard for companies to sell specifically one item when a major store sells almost everything at a much lower price. The article makes a good point when it talks about the wrong way in which Circuit City fired its workers. The majority of their store workers are knowledgeable, and because they are, customers are more likely to shop there to get information and help. Unlike Wal-Mart, which mainly focus on price, Circuit City can use their workers for a competitive advantage but since it chooses not too, the future of this company looks bleak.

I can see why Circuit City would make such a decision, since the majority of its responsibilities are due to stock holder and not to their employees. What Circuit City did could be considered legal but in no ways moral. There are many employees who depend on this job and the massive layoffs could have affected the life of many. Circuit did not choose its employees and from the view point of consumers, it can make the company look cold and heartless. It is not detailed what the severance package contains but by the lack of mention, it is probably nothing much. In the short run, Circuit City may have benefited from this decision but the results for the long run is yet to be seen.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Change(v.) for Change(n.)




Article of the New Dollar

Four score and many years ago, to be more specifically 1979 and 2000, our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new coin. The one dollar coin to be precisely but it just didn’t catch on the way it should have. Efforts were put forth to be rid of one dollar bills and integrate one dollar coins with the famous faces of Susan B Anthony and even Sacagewea but to no avail, all these coins were laid to rest along with their American heroes. Coins, as used in many countries is a wonderful currency for smaller bills because it allows the circulation to last longer. Countries like Canada, China, Europe, and many more all use smaller dollar increment coins to conserve. However, this being American we have already included the dollar bill into our culture and simple plans set by the government just might not be enough.

The new coin will take much longer to catch on. Americans have taken upon themselves mentally that coins are known as worthless change. While this idea stays in our heads, it is hard to get the one dollar coin into use. Moreover, we find that carrying change is heavier in comparison with a bill. Wallets are built to carry bills and especially in most male wallet, there is just no compartment for even carrying change. Finally, what will we do when the dollar coin has rippled its impact on our businesses? Stripper clubs that are built on the foundation of dollar bills tucked into clothing will prove quite negatively when attempted with coins. In years pass, there have been attempts with magnetic clothing but that has proved to go ghastly wrong. Machines of all types have to change too—including gaming, vending, and service providing—and these are not cheap details to do so. The government maybe considering changing the way we deal with money but it doesn’t realize that we are also changing the way American citizen think. So by trying to offer President’s heads on 37 coins over the next 9 years won’t be as effective as offering 50 states on quarters. One point being: We already use the quarter.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Whatever happened to Asian Media?

This topic might be a little off from the usual business article but I'll still proceed since I feel this is important and relevant.

Tonight, as I was washing dishes, I saw a glimpse of the new season of the popular reality show, American Idol. I had heard recently about a Saratoga native who made it into the show, Paul Kim. However, the shock that came to me was that he was Korean-American. This might cause one to wonder why I was in shock and here is my reasoning:

There is no support from the Asian community so why bother auditioning?


His audition performance received praise from all the judges and one in particular mentioned that Kim has one of the best male vocals he has heard this season (Wikipedia). But in contrast, Kim barely made it to the final 24. It made me think, why wouldn’t he make it? Out of all the seasons of American Idol, there has only been one male singer to ever come out of it with partial fame and that is William Hung, or otherwise known to me as the single man who brought shame upon anything Asian. When it all boils down, Asians just can’t seem to cut it. The reason’s a little different than you might think. It’s not that we don’t have talent, because there’s plenty, and not because we don’t have the look, that’s proved with Ziyi Zhang, it’s because we don’t care.

Reality shows cost timed investment, possibly time that Asian-Americans are not providing. As I can say, my own parents watch the show when there is nothing else on, and even they don’t care enough to vote. Even when a performance is outstanding, there isn’t a reach for the phone. It makes it hard for me to imagine any other Asian family sitting down to watch a bunch of singer wannabes, critics, and Ryan Seacrest. It’s the underdog that gets rooted for but when there isn’t an audience for that underdog, well, the dog just gets put to sleep. Kim is just another victim of this awful tragedy but he doesn’t stand alone. Over the years, Asian immigrants have come to this great free land of America to fulfill their hopes and dreams but these dreams don’t include show business. Maybe the occasional success but overall we’re trapped in a mold that says if we can’t do martial arts, we might not be cut out for acting. So Asian parents tell these stories to their young about how each of them should grow up to have responsible jobs—these are lawyers, doctors, market analysts—and not thinking impractically. The response is great, we have successfully entered all of those fields but now our art has died. We have killed our own image in proving that we don’t shine as much as the rest and our names hardly go up in lights. It’s been long since an Asian actor has had achieved fame without being tied anything martial arts. And the few that do make it without a kick? They suffer because now no one cares enough to watch them give their award worthy performances. Instead, we have embarrassments like Hung who paraded himself with humiliation for the price of fame. Where was his dignity? People weren’t laughing with him, they were laughing at him! So now, without the support, we’re just left with a few “Hai-ya”s and Hung. It makes me pity how much we have lost when trying to achieve so much.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Does your shoe know where you are?

Article of the GPS SHOES

I read this article today and I can't say that I was too surprised. Technology has advanced so far as to use GPS for public tracking. I'm torn as to whether this is a good idea or a bad one considering that it can be a benefit for both. On the good side, parents can now rest assured that in case of emergencies, they can find their children. However, if this becomes wildly popular, I'm am quite sure that child kidnappers will throw away the shoes before proceeding anywhere with the kid. It is a must have for Alzheimer partients as stated in the article. It could save lives of those who have Alzheimers from hurting themselves or others.

The negatives of this product is the violation of privacy. What if these devices were used to track the wearer's whereabouts. It can be an invasion of privacy. As for the fine that is imposed if a report was made that was not an emergency, let us hypothetically say that the shoe is expensive, it would most likely be purchased by consumers with money. If these consumers already have the money, what is stoping them from paying the fine if they want to use it for spying purposes such as keeping track of a spouse who may be cheating, or where a teen is "actually" going. Usages like that defeat the main purpose of such a tracker.

I'm also a little weary about the niche for this kind of product. At the current time, consumers are not always willing to dish out $320-350 for a GPS and pay $19.95 a month for service fees. It seems a little extravagant for the average person. But who knows, maybe this could be the right time if people find that the new technology is so irresitable that they must get their hands on it.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Introductions

Hi everyone,

My name is Elizabeth Z. and I'm a Business Finance major with a minor in Deaf Education. Even though I'm in this field of study, I'm not particularly interested in it. I know it must be disappointing to hear but I'm quite sure that the majority of the people in the class are also not in it for the fun. I am a frank person so I'll end up saying what's on my mind all the time. Sometimes my bluntness will offend someone so I'd like to apologize ahead of time for any distress. I've had a fever of 102 the last few days so I'm not quite all "me" yet.

I graduated from Santa Teresa High School and I'm currently a junior at SJSU. My hobbies include Anime, Manga, and music. Currently I'm learning Tarot Card Reading and rearing a goldfish that still hasn't died yet (my last one passed away in less than a week).