Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Thank You For Covering Our Assets


(Not the bill in the article - but close enough.)

Like most Americans, Laura Gilbert is outraged by the stock market mayhem, and she would like to wring the necks of those responsible. Failing that, she'd like to ask them soul-searching questions such as, "How do you feel about tanking the economy?" and "Can we have our money back?"

Unlike most Americans, Gilbert devised a plan to vent her anger and pose her questions. A full-time artist based in New York, Gilbert used a computer and her drawing skills to create the "The Zero Dollar," a slightly shrunken version of the greenback. Yesterday, she headed to Wall Street, hoping to find the masters of finance who have just body-slammed our economy and, as she put it, "confront them with my art."

... the rest after the click.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Politics As Usual

The McCain Video Library


Sarah Palin Strips for McCain


The Angry John McCain Song


John McCain Kicks It "Old School" - Maverick Rap Song

For those who are having a little trouble figuring it all out

Wonkette nails it - Economics 101, kids:

1) A lot of banks made bad housing loans. A lot of financial people bought up these bad loans. A lot of people insured these bad loans. Add several more layers on a global scale.

2) Housing prices fell.

3) Much wealth was lost.

This actually happened, and it has a lot to do with why we’re digging into a deep global recession! On Wall Street, this means asset values… drop! They drop and drop and drop, because no one has much money or credit, and then everyone sells because they’re going to keep dropping dropping dropping. And then when the Dow has dropped 800 points, Wall Street says to itself, “Whoa, 800’s a lot, so now we buy shit?” So it only ends down 350 points — manageable! — and people pretend for another day that maybe our economy won’t contract during a recession, definitions and comeuppance be damned.

... more after the click.

I guess the question now is who knew what and when did they know it?

A good buddy was reassuring. He said the market ALWAYS comes back.

Cramer, on Mad Money, says figure out how much money you're going to need over the next five years and get it the hell out of the market. I found that somewhat less reassuring ...

Can you spell "depression"? I know I'm depressed.

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Someone just like me? I don't think so ...

"She came across like everybody!" -- that's what someone said on one of those post-debate panels of uncommitted voters. "She sounds just like me!" -- how many times have you heard that about her? "She sounds just like me!" That's nice. Maybe she can be Secretary of Next-Door Neighbor. But -- no offense -- I don't want someone who's "just like me" to be Vice President of the United States, any more than I'd want somebody who's "just like me" to be my dentist, or my heart surgeon, or my air-traffic controller. I'd want somebody who's qualified, unless you think that all the problems we're facing are so simple that anyone can solve them.

The rest after the click ...

Herman Melville's assessment of Sara Palin

"A man thinks that by mouthing hard words he understands hard things."

-- Herman Melville

It works for women, too.

Bin Laden Wins

Thank you, George.

In the beginning, bin Laden said he couldn't bring us down. But, he said he'd figured out how to sucker us into bringing ourselves down. The attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001 was not a military maneuver, it was an economic gambit.

Knowing full well that we would follow him into the wastelands of Afghanistan, his initial plan was to retreat (which he did) and we'd get bogged down in an endless war of attrition that would eventually bankrupt us. His precedent was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. In ten years of fighting, the Soviet Union found it had a tremendous drain on its economy. The unpopular war divided the people of the USSR. The end result was a Soviet withdrawal and the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union. They went bankrupt!

But Bush went bin Laden one better. Finding that Afghanistan lacked significant targets for a glorious war, the Bush administration used the 9/11 attack as an excuse to pursue plans to invade Iraq ... a priority from day one of the administration. Bin Laden must have cheered! The move took the pressure off bin Laden, provided an unprecedented recruiting tool for his cause throughout the Middle East, and we found ourselves embroiled in an unwinable war. Our lack of intellectual curiosity led us into a quagmire with multiple enemies - the Sunni, the Shi'a, the Kurds, and the former Baathists of the deposed Saddam Husein regime. Our ignorance turned it into an exercise in "learning on the job" and the lesson we learned was that no matter what we did in Iraq, we pissed off one heavily armed faction or another.

The exercise drained our economy at a rate of $10 Billion a month while the economic house of cards we'd built over decades of domestic deregulation started showing signs that it was coming apart at the seams.

Our Keystone Cops response to bin Ladin's simple act of hijacking a couple planes and flying them into a couple of prominent buildings in Manhattan became a text book demonstration of chaos theory which posits that the motion of a butterfly's wings on the slopes of Mount Fuji can set currents in motion that eventually result in typhoons in the South China Sea. Bin Laden was a butterfly and the economic consequences of his single act on 9/11 have set in motion economic currents that are about to swamp our ship of state.

It's hard to say you're winning the War on Terror when you just went bankrupt. With a national debt rapidly approaching $11 Trillion that forces us to borrow vast amounts just to service the interest, it's difficult to make the case that we are not.

Monday, September 29, 2008

The Bailout Fails

The Republican leadership including President Bush and John McCain couldn't deliver the promised votes from their side of the aisle. The Republican defectors blame Speaker of the House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, for her overly "partisan speech" as their reason for not voting for the measure as their leadership had promised.

Senator Barney Frank summed it up best, "... one of the truly great coincidences in the history of numerology; the number of deeply offended Republicans who put feeling over country turned out to be exactly the number you would need to reverse the vote."

In response to Republican bruised egos, the Dow Jones Average closed DOWN 778 points. That represents well over a Trillion dollars lost in the stock market this afternoon ... enough money to cover the bailout about one and a half times. The market is lower now than it was when Bush took office in 2000! At least now we know what Republican egos are worth and that is far more than we can say for the assets held by their deregulated buddies in the financial sector.

The Australian market was down over 4% in the first fifteen minutes of trading ... opening after the vote of the US House of Representatives had been counted.

COUNTRY FIRST!!!!

Can you spell "C-o-n-g-r-e-s-s-i-o-n-a-l C-l-u-s-t-e-r-f-u-c-k"?

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Hard to tell fact from fiction



... and then there's this from the Couric-Palin Interview Transcript:

COURIC: Why isn't it better, Governor Palin, to spend $700 billion helping middle-class families who are struggling with health care, housing, gas and groceries; allow them to spend more and put more money into the economy instead of helping these big financial institutions that played a role in creating this mess?

PALIN: That's why I say I, like every American I'm speaking with, were ill about this position that we have been put in where it is the taxpayers looking to bail out. But ultimately, what the bailout does is help those who are concerned about the health-care reform that is needed to help shore up our economy, helping the—it's got to be all about job creation, too, shoring up our economy and putting it back on the right track. So health-care reform and reducing taxes and reining in spending has got to accompany tax reductions and tax relief for Americans. And trade, we've got to see trade as opportunity, not as a competitive, scary thing. But one in five jobs being created in the trade sector today, we've got to look at that as more opportunity. All those things under the umbrella of job creation. This bailout is a part of that.

Hay, Sara? I can see the end of your political career from my house!

Friday, September 19, 2008

Perhaps a new McCain Campaign slogan?

"I didn't really say everything I said."

-- Yogi Berra

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Not Everyone in Alaska Hearts Palin

Keep in mind, a 1,500 person rally in Alaska is the equivalent of about 81,000 getting together for the same purpose in California (based on state populations).

Get the story after the click ...

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

John McCain, The Fighter! Fighting for You?

Senator Barbara Boxer comments on John McCain:

In the 16 years that we have served together in the Senate, I have seen John McCain fight.

I have seen him fight against raising the federal minimum wage 14 times.

I have seen him fight against making sure that women earn equal pay for equal work.

I have seen him fight against a women’s right to choose so consistently that he received a zero percent vote rating from pro-choice organizations.

I have seen him fight against helping families gain access to birth control.

I have seen him fight against Social Security, even going so far as to call its current funding system “an absolute disgrace.”

And I saw him fight against the new GI Bill of Rights until it became politically untenable for him to do so.

John McCain voted with President Bush 95 percent of the time in 2007 and 100 percent of the time in 2008 — that’s no maverick.

We do have two real fighters for change in this election — their names are Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Presidency

(passed along to me by a good friend ... )



... or catch the video here after the click ...