Friday, April 3, 2009

The Miracle of the Bush Economy, cont.

Posted by Tengrain

A record 32.2 million people — one in every 10 Americans — received food stamps at latest count, the government said on Thursday, a reflection of the recession now in its 16th month.
…and this is one of the programs the GOP wants to cut in their budget.
The Labor Department said initial claims for unemployment benefits rose to a seasonally adjusted 669,000 in the week ending March 28, a 1.8 percent increase from the previous week and the highest level since early October 1982.
Update - and the stock market surges! Yet again, more proof that Wall Street hates America

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

The De-Facto Head of the Republican Party Waxes Eloquent

Limbaugh: Obama May Give Gordon Brown "Anal Poisoning"
By Jason Linkins
Wow. Whatever bet L.A. Times columnist Andrew Klavan thought he was making by daring people to listen to Rush Limbaugh and find one instance of the talk radio host saying a "single racist, hateful or stupid word" was lost today in dramatic fashion.
Limbaugh went waaaaaay over the top in insulting Gordon Brown with a mental image that one must work at to un-think about, warning that if the British Prime Minister keeps "slobbering" over President Barack Obama, he'll "come down with anal poisoning and may die from it."
Video here
Naturally, how Limbaugh gained such innovative insight into the epidemiological vectors of saliva-borne ass toxins remains an open question.

The Fox News Gallery of Shame















Colbert Went Where the New York Times Feared to Tread on Glenn Beck
by Greg Mitchell
It was shocking last night to watch the usually pro-right-wing Colbert persona lay into Beck without an ounce of sympathy. It came just one day after the New York Times' front page profile of Beck that failed to fully air his dirty laundry and mainly treated him as just another popular entertainer.

Bill O'Reilly's Ambush Journalism in 87 Seconds
Reported by Ellen
John Amato at Crooks and Liars put together this video which is worth more than a thousand words about Bill O'Reilly's sleazy ambush tactics. Amato sums it up nicely: It's all about intimidation plain and simple, and the falafel is now out of the bag.

Letterman Tells O'Reilly: "I Think Of You As A Goon" (VIDEO)
Marcus Baram
David Letterman, who infamously told Bill O'Reilly in 2006 that "about 60 percent of what you say is crap," had his old bĂȘte noire back on his show on Tuesday night.

Over The Top FOX News Teaser “Asks” If Obama Could Destroy Us
Reported by Ellen
Those "pro-America" folks at FOX News are showing their love again. A teaser for the March 26, 2009 edition of Hannity, seen during The O'Reilly Factor, stated: Obama's objective: Is the budget a way for the government to completely control our lives? And could it destroy us? Video after the jump.

More Beck Babble: Wind power needs nukes to work
By David Neiwert
Just to be a jerk, Glenn Beck yesterday used his show to demonstrate -- like a number of his fellow right-wingers -- his utter contempt for Earth Hour: running his klieg lights at full blast to show how much energy he could waste. Yeah, that's the kind of responsible rhetoric we need more of.

Convenient Patriotism By Bob Cesca
I hasten to note that criticizing the president during wartime is fine. Hypocrisy, on the other hand, isn't. You either unequivocally support the president in wartime or you don't. You can't have it both ways, wingnuts.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Senator Bernie Sanders introduces Single-Payer Healthcare Reform Bill S.703

By: selise
From the PNHP press release

Single-payer health reform bill introduced in Senate Would save $400 billion on bureaucracy, enough to cover all 46 million uninsured Americans
Challenging head-on the powerful private insurance and pharmaceutical industries, Vermont’s Sen. Bernie Sanders introduced a single-payer health reform bill, the American Health Security Act of 2009, in the U.S. Senate Wednesday.
The single-payer approach embodied in Sanders’ new bill stands in sharp contrast to the reform models being offered by the White House and by key lawmakers like Senators Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). Their plans would preserve a central role for the private insurance industry, sacrificing both universal coverage and cost containment during the worst economic crisis since the Depression.
In contrast, Sanders’ new legislation would cover all of the 46 million Americans who currently lack coverage and improve benefits for all Americans by eliminating co-pays and deductibles and restoring free choice of physician. The most fiscally conservative option for reform, single payer slashes private insurance overhead and bureaucracy in medical settings, saving over $400 billion annually that can be redirected into clinical care.
There's no reason healthcare reform should be designed to help big insurance and big pharma instead of us. More here

Sunday, March 29, 2009

The Sunday Funnies

Another Giant Steaming Pile of Republican Tax Deductions and Personal Exemptions Masquerading as a Viable Alternative to Obama's Proposed Budget
House Minority Leader John Boehner and other House Republican leaders called a press conference Thursday to unveil their much anticipated detailed "road-to-recovery" alternative budget. the 18 page proposal gives no real specifics, save one - an enormous tax cut for the wealthy.
More Funnies

Friday, March 27, 2009

AIG, Market Meltdown, and Offshore Banking: Deception Incorporated

In all the discussions about TARP and AIG bonus payments and bailouts, have you ever heard a member of Congress ask Paulson or Geithner why we are bailing out financial corporations who have numerous offshore subsidiaries where they can hide money, transactions, and assets to avoid taxation -- and also to avoid reporting these assets on their balance sheets?
This needs much more discussion, and today David Shuster has some eye-popping statistics that explain why: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/29902627#29902481
To get a larger sense of how serious this problem is, check out Conason's latest Salon column: http://www.salon.com/opinion/conason/2009/03/23/big_clawback/index.html
Why did Wachovia need 18 subsidiaries in Bermuda, three in the British Virgin Islands, and 16 in the Caymans? Why did Lehman Brothers need 31 subsidiaries in the Caymans? What do Bank of America's 59 subsidiaries in the Caymans actually do? Why does Citigroup need 427 separate subsidiaries in tax havens, including 12 in the Channel Islands, 21 in Jersey, 91 in Luxembourg, 19 in Bermuda and 90 in the Caymans?
What would you wager that some of those 'subsidiaries' moved money used to hedge bets on the US mortgage market? Or buy CDS's in London from AIG?
Do you recall this topic being raised at any of the Senate hearings on the economic meltdown? Or being raised in any bailout hearings?
Why are we bailing out Citigroup when we haven't even had a chance to examine what's in any of it's "... 427 separate subsidiaries in tax havens, including 12 in the Channel Islands, 21 in Jersey, 91 in Luxembourg, 19 in Bermuda and 90 in the Caymans? And furthermore, why has Congress failed to ask about these 'subsidiaries' in bailout hearings?
It's easy to get distracted with the outrageous 'bonuses' of AIGFP's employees.But what's the relationship between AIGFP and offshore bank accounts?Why are we being asked to bail out banks that are operating hundreds of offshore banking 'subsidiaries'?!!
Are these institutions, and CEOs, simply 'offshoring the money' so that their balance sheets look dire enough to come pick Uncle Sam's pocket?
Is DNI Blair serious in saying that the economic meltdown is a national security issue? And if it is, then why are we bailing out ANY financial institutions -- or 'insurance providers' -- who have offshore subsidiaries?!
And why isn't Congress asking about these things?
In providing the links and information here, I'm relying on Joe Conason for the research; I have not confirmed the numbers stated here independently, so am taking them 'on faith' from Shuster's program, and Conason's article.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Capitalism’s Self-inflicted Apocalypse

By Michael Parenti
After the overthrow of communist governments in Eastern Europe, capitalism was paraded as the indomitable system that brings prosperity and democracy, the system that would prevail unto the end of history.
The present economic crisis, however, has convinced even some prominent free-marketeers that something is gravely amiss. Truth be told, capitalism has yet to come to terms with several historical forces that cause it endless trouble: democracy, prosperity, and capitalism itself, the very entities that capitalist rulers claim to be fostering. Read the rest of the article here:

Geithner Seeks Broad New Regulation of Financial Markets

By Susie Madrak
The nice thing about having the Democrats in charge is, you actually do get some much-needed regulation instead of idiotic blather about the self-healing properties of the Almighty Free Market:
In response to the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, Geithner outlined a six-part framework that would result in the most significant new regulation of the financial system since the broad changes made during that crisis more than 70 years ago.
"We have an opportunity we have not had in generations to put in place a stronger and more resilient system," Geithner said.

The key elements of the Obama administration's proposals are:

• Give a single government entity, possibly the Federal Reserve, the power and authority to oversee the entire economy for signs of "systemic risk."

• Establish a government mechanism to seize and dismantle large institutions whose failure threatens the nation's financial stability.

• Enact tougher requirements for the amount of money and assets financial institutions need to have on hand so they can withstand economic troubles.

• Require large private investment funds to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

• Set up a new, comprehensive framework of regulation of the complex financial instruments known as derivatives, including a central clearinghouse for trades in that market.

• Develop new, stronger requirements for money market funds so increased withdrawals won't threaten the broader financial system.

"What we need is better, smarter, tougher regulation," Geithner said.

GOP Senator: Stimulus Working Already

By Ryan Grim
Federal stimulus dollars have begun to flow, initiating an "amazing" number of projects and creating jobs, Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) said Wednesday.
Snowe was one of three Republicans to support passage of the $787 billion stimulus package and has taken a beating form conservatives for doing so. But now that the checks are going out, she said, people can feel the benefits.
It's "paramount [for people] to see that activity, creating jobs or averting job losses," she said.
"Even those who were opposed to the stimulus spending will see some of the projects that are underway in their communities as they're initiated," she added. "I've just been meeting with a lot of municipal officials and really it is amazing the number of projects that are getting under way."
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, predicted weeks ago that the terms of the debate would shift when the money went out.
"The anti-spending argument is at its strongest right now, because we've got the criticism without the benefits," he told the Huffington Post.
"If we're right, that spending is going to be more popular three and four and five months from now, because the economy starts to turn around, maybe at the end of the year, and there are police working and there are schools built. I expect to be taking credit for that all year."
Snowe said a number of water projects, among others, are getting under way soon in her home state. The intense discussion about wasteful spending has municipal leaders watching projects closely.
"They're all taking this responsibility very seriously," she said, adding that state officials "have an understanding that they have to deliver this funding and these projects but they have to do it efficiently and effectively -- not mismanage the way in which this money is distributed and which projects get underway."

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Larry Summers: Brilliant Mind, Toxic Ideas













by Arianna Huffington
According to most commentators, the president's press conference went a long way towards taking the spotlight off the roiling anger over AIG, bonuses, and Wall Street abuses -- and putting it back where the president wants it: on the imperative need to pass his budget.
But the best laid plans of our remarkable president may be laid to waste by a bank rescue plan that is the product of exhausted ideas put together by men far too beholden to Wall Street.
Even if the president desperately wants the spotlight to move on from the bank rescue, we should not allow it to. So today let me turn the high beam on one of the main architects of the plan -- less in the news than Tim Geithner, but no less important -- Larry Summers.
To understand why a man as brilliant and accomplished as Summers can be so wrong about what to do with the banks and Wall Street, it would be useful to turn to The Innovator's Dilemma by Harvard Business School professor Clayton Christensen. The book explains how even very successful companies, with very capable personnel, often fail because they tend to stick to the strategies that made them successful in the first place, leaving themselves vulnerable to changing conditions and new realities. So you can have brilliant managers who miss what's needed for success in the future because they are too tied to the past.
This describes Summers to a T.
He is one of the top economic minds of his generation, a tenured professor at Harvard by the time he was 28, with plenty of real word experience -- ranging from heading the Treasury to heading a major university. But his core beliefs and assumptions helped lay the groundwork for the current crisis.
As Treasury Secretary under Clinton, Summers played an important role in convincing Congress in 1999 to pass the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed key portions of the Glass-Steagall Act and allowed commercial banks to get into the mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations game. The measure also created an oversight disaster, with supervision of banking conglomerates split among a host of different government agencies -- agencies that often failed to let each other know what they were doing and what they were uncovering.
At the signing of the bill, Summers hailed it as "a major step forward to the 21st Century."
Summers also backed Phil Gramm's other financial time bomb, the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which allowed financial derivatives to be traded without any oversight or regulation. So it was on his watch that the credit-default swaps warhead that has blown up our economy was launched.

[clip]

Many Wall Street high-flyers could echo this -- if they had any self-awareness. Instead, they subscribe to our culture's veneration of exhaustion. Taibbi describes how Wall Streeters, when challenged, "talk about how hard they work, the 90-hour weeks, the stress, the failed marriages, the hemorrhoids and gallstones they all get before they hit 40."
The country would be better off if Wall Street execs and, more importantly, Summers and Geithner -- who, we are admiringly told, works 15 hours a day -- knocked off early and came back to work the next day refreshed... and with some fresh ideas. Rest of article here.

Also, if they are too big to fail - they are too big -Robert Reich Tells us Why Here:

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Memory Lane - by Jonathan Schwarz

From Tom Tomorrow's - This Modern World
Here’s the New York Times story about the 1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act:
Congress approved landmark legislation today that opens the door for a new era on Wall Street in which commercial banks, securities houses and insurers will find it easier and cheaper to enter one another’s businesses…
“Today Congress voted to update the rules that have governed financial services since the Great Depression and replace them with a system for the 21st century,” Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers said. “This historic legislation will better enable American companies to compete in the new economy.”
The decision to repeal the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 provoked dire warnings from a handful of dissenters that the deregulation of Wall Street would someday wreak havoc on the nation’s financial system.

Thank God this Summers guy no longer has any power over American economic policy.

Fox News VP: Fox is ‘the voice of opposition’ to the Obama administration.

By Matt Corley

Though Fox News is widely known to be biased in favor of conservatism, the network likes to claim that is “fair and balanced” and that the objectivity of the “hard news” they do is “is not in question.” But in an interview with NPR, Fox News’ Senior Vice President for Programming, Bill Shine, admitted that the network is consciously aiming to be “the voice of opposition” to the Obama administration “on some issues”:
“There were a couple of people who basically wrote about our demise come last November (and) December and were, I guess, rooting for us to go away,” said Bill Shine, senior vice president for programming at the Fox News Channel. “With this particular group of people in power right now, and the honeymoon they’ve had from other members of the media, does it make it a little bit easier for us to be the voice of opposition on some issues?”
Fox News has wasted no time in opposing the Obama administration’s agenda. For example, the network has unleashed a steady drum beat of misinformation and propaganda against the Employee Free Choice Act. In fact, when it comes to challenging the Obama administration, Fox News CEO Roger Ailes has compared the network to “the Alamo.”