Thursday, November 11, 2010

Child prostitution

Yesterday there was much ado on the news about a book for pedophiles being sold on Amazon to give advice about nurturing the adult-child "love" relationship. It created quite a negative reaction and today they took it down.

Today I learned that in Atlanta, Georgia, there are 500 children involved in child prostitution EVERY DAY. There are 12,400 men in Atlanta purchase sex with female children EVERY MONTH.

These numbers are staggering - and it's just one city in America. As our politicians debate tax cuts and spending and what's important in this country, I hope they will remember these children and the desperation and need to save their spirits and their very lives.

A study looking at this in Atlanta is available here http://afnap.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/The-Schapiro-Group-Georgia-Demand-Study.pdf.

Insurance companies have insurance companies

I sat next to someone today who sells "reinsurance." You and I, the average person, buy insurance. But sometimes our insurance companies have claims that exceed what they are able or set up to pay out. Enter reinsurance. The insurance companies have insurance policies that cover them in the event of a catastrophe - or "Cat Coverage" for short. If a catastrophe outpaces even the cat coverage, there is a pool of money that all insurance companies in a state pay into and it can be tapped. In New Orleans, however, the insurance companies, reinsurance companies, and the guarantee fund were all maxed out, and not all claims were covered, or covered to the full extent of the losses.

The world of finance gets more and more complicated. Because behind the insurance companies are tons of experts - medical, economic, law, and more - and the investments that are made to help insurance companies grow their asset base to keep up with claims are sometimes in high-risk investments. Exhibit A - AIG. AIG had the highest possible rating for an insurance company, but investments in British financial products went sour and BOOM goes the American economy.

Things are never as simple as they appear.