Jan 152010
 

I trust you know that there is a big teabagger convention coming up next month, featuring the Dingbat Diva. and that the teabaggers had announced there will be a press blackout for the event.  They lied.

teabagger Having previously announced that the National Tea Party Convention would be closed to the press, organizers announced yesterday that they would reverse course. However, the Nashville Post reports that only five media organizations will receive credentials for the entire convention, and they all conveniently happen to be right-wing outlets:

The five approved outlets are: Fox News, Breitbart.com, Townhall.com, World Net Daily and The Wall Street Journal. All five are widely considered to be Right-leaning organizations.

The press release explains that the requests for credentials have been overwhelming and that to preserve the nature of the event they are limiting press availability… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

It’s not that they don’t want press coverage.  They don’t want HONEST press coverage.

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Jan 152010
 

It’s never fare and seldom balance.  Its sheeple don’t even get the truth on what’s coming up.

Fox-sheep As Media Matters documented, Fox News’ three top-rated programs for 2009 — The O’Reilly Factor, Hannity, and Glenn Beck — devoted a combined total last night of less than 7 minutes of coverage to the earthquake in Haiti. By contrast, the content of MSNBC’s three top-rated shows underscored the significance of the Haiti disaster; Countdown, The Rachel Maddow Show, and Hardball devoted a total of more than two hours to the earthquake.

Nevertheless, during last night’s programming, Fox News repeatedly ran a promotion of their coverage of the earthquake in Hati [sic] where the announcer asserted: "After a devastating earthquake kills thousands and leaves a country stranded, Fox News has the very latest information as events unfold. Stay with Fox News for the latest reports and up to the minute coverage of the horror in Hati [sic]."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Media Matters>

If anything, I found the coverage on MSNBC frustrating, because Haiti dominated to the extent of squeezing out other important items.  But even that is preferable to the Faux Noise lies.  Given O’Reilly’s, Hannity’s and Beck’s history of racism, I suppose that the death of tens of thousands of black people mattered to them only in that it could be uses as a teaser.

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Jan 152010
 

Yesterday I managed to catch up replying to comments and visiting every blog in my blogroll that has an article two days old or less.  I’ll be falling way behind again, because I’ll be at the doctor again today.  It’s just a meeting with my primary care provider to coordinate all the health care I’m getting, but the trip is over 90 minutes each way.  Then I’ll try to run errands I missed on Wednesday.

On the health care front, I’m waiting for more definitive information on the deal struck yesterday, but I understand that the unions are on board now and that Obama has agreed to end the anti-trust exemption.

Today’s Jig Zone puzzle took me 4:01.  To do it, Click Here.  How did you do?

Here’s your cartoon:

TGIF!!

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Jan 142010
 

I’m amazed that I have heard no statements from GOP politicians on this tragedy and Obama’s excellent response to it.  However, the politicians are not the party leadership.  In a poll conducted by 60 Minutes and Vanity Fair, Rush was voted most influential conservative, becoming the de facto leader of the GOP.  He beat second place finisher, Glen Beck, by more that two to one.  Under the Bush/GOP regime, graduates of Pat Robertson’s Regent University were several times more likely to receive federal appointments than Ivy league graduates, indicating that he is a spiritual leader of the GOP.  Here is how they responded to the disaster.

First, let’s examine Rush’s response:

LimbaughHate Mr. Limbaugh wasted no time trying to turn the horrific tragedy in Haiti into a sleazy partisan attack on the very people working around the clock to save as many lives as possible:

[Paraphrased via Media Matters here and here] I want you to remember, it took [Obama] three days — three days! — to respond to the Christmas Day fruit of ka-boom bomber … He comes out here in less than 24 hours to speak about Haiti … [later in same program] … they’ll use this to burnish ahhh their, ahhh shall we say, ahhh credibility with the black community, both the light skinned and, ahhh, hmmm … dark skinned black community

Wow. At this very moment the streets of Haiti’s capital are still littered with bodies of the dead and dying. Thousands of men, women, and children — including an unknown number of Americans — are buried alive under tons of rubble, many no doubt crying out in agony for help that will come too late. And this sick twisted racist monster doesn’t even have the decency to wait for them to finish dying before equating their death and suffering to an incident where no one got a scratch except the bad guy… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Daily Kos>

I know that’s hard to believe, so here’s the video:

 

That just turns my stomach.

Next is Robertson’s contribution:

RobertsonHate Every disaster that befalls a nation — hurricanes, floods, terrorism, earthquakes — constitutes God’s punishment of a people gone astray, according to Pat Robertson, who famously blamed feminists for 9/11 and gays for Hurricanes Katrina and Andrew. In the case of Haiti’s devastating earthquake, he blames an ostensible deal that black Haitians made with the Devil in order to win their emancipation and independence from the French colonials who enslaved them. So, in Haiti’s case it might not be God who did the nation in, but rather the Devil calling in his chit.

 

From today’s edition of "The 700 Club":

 

[S]omething happened a long time ago in Haiti and people might not want to talk about it. They were under the heel of the French, uh you know Napoleon the third and whatever. And they got together and swore a pact to the Devil. They said we will serve you if you’ll get us free from the French. True Story. And so the Devil said "Okay, it’s a deal." And they kicked the French out. You know, the Haitians revolted and got themselves free. But ever since they have been cursed by one thing after the other, desperately poor. That island is Hispaniola is one island. It’s cut down the middle. On one side is Haiti, on the other side is the Dominican republic. Dominican Republic is prosperous, healthy, full of resorts, etc.. Haiti is in desperate poverty. Same island. Uh, they need to have, and we need to pray for them, a great turning to God and out of this tragedy. I’m optimistic something good may come.

 

Because, of course, black people couldn’t possibly have the wherewithal to defeat their white oppressors without a little supernatural help — and it sure wouldn’t be coming from God, right?

 

The association of black people with the devil goes back to Puritan times — remember the role of the slave Tabitha in the Salem witch trials? — and it lives in the unconscious of a certain sort of white evangelical Christian. The sort like Pat Robertson…  [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Alternet>

And, because this is so incredible, here is the video:

 

What a hypocrite!

I remember a few years back, Disney World adopted a policy not to discriminate against openly gay employees.  Robertson called on his sheeple to pray that a hurricane would hit Orlando to show God’s judgment against Disney World.  The next hurricane to hit the US made landfall at Virginia Beach, Robertson’s HQ.  Doesn’t God have a divine sense of humor?

As I was doing my research this morning I felt so angry that I was considering how to express my outrage without coming off like a wing-nut.  Then I heard Keith Olbermann’s comment, so I’ll leave you with that.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

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Jan 142010
 

This is something I would have assumed, but it’s nice to have the data to back it up.

Over the past decade or so, divorce has gradually become more uncommon in the United States. Since 2003, however, the decline in divorce rates has been largely confined to states which have not passed a state constitutional ban on gay marriage. These states saw their divorce rates decrease by an average of 8 percent between 2003 and 2008. States which had passed a same-sex marriage ban as of January 1, 2008, however, saw their divorce rates rise by about 1 percent over the same period.

The table below details the divorce rates for the 43 states that reported their divorce statistics to the CDC in both 2003 and 2008. It is calculated by taking the total number of divorces in the state that year, and dividing it by the number of married persons, as reported by the Census Bureau. The result is then multiplied by two, since each divorce involves two people. This is different than how the divorce rate is sometimes calculated, which may be as a share of the overall population rather than the number of married persons; I prefer my approach because it will not penalize a state for having a lot of marriages (and therefore more opportunities for divorce). However, there are also more complicated versions of the divorce rate calculation that account for the age of the married couples, and so forth; these are probably superior, but mine is intended to be a simple approach. The table also lists the percentage change in the divorce rate between 2003 and 2008, and the current status of gay marriage and domestic partnerships within each state…

Inserted from <FiveThirtyEight>

ssmstats

Wouldn’t it be grand if bigoted hypocrites would live and let live rather than flaunt the institution in which they fail to measure up?

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Jan 142010
 

Yesterday was gruesome.  It was windy and wet, and because I left my cell phone on a desk where I was volunteering, I had to wait an extra hour at bus stops with no shelters.  I’ll catch up on replying to comments and visiting blogs today.  I have a grocery delivery coming and I’ll have to break to put away a month’s shopping, but I should make a big dent in my backlog.

Today’s Jig Zone puzzle took me 5:14, just under the average.  To do it, Click Here.  How did you do?

I love today’s cartoon!

What’s happing in your world?

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Jan 132010
 

Today the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission will be interviewing criminal banksters: Lloyd Blankfein (Goldman Sachs), Jamie Dimon  (JPMorgan Chase), John Mack (Morgan Stanley) and Brian Moynihan (Bank of America):  Here are questions that financial experts would like to ask them:

banksters …1. Bankers are dealers in money. The Federal Reserve is a creator of money — since the crisis began in August 2007, it has conjured up $1.1 trillion. Given the ease with which these dollars are materialized on a computer screen, how can they be worth anything?

2. The Federal Reserve’s setting of its benchmark federal funds rate at nearly 1 percent in 2003 to 2004 was a primary cause of the housing and mortgage debacle. Yet, in an attempt to nurse the economy back to health, the Fed has set that rate at nearly zero percent. So what’s the next bubble, and how do you intend to profit by it?

3. For Mr. Blankfein: In capitalism, profits are no sin, yet Goldman Sachs keeps making excuses for its success in 2009. If you earned the money honestly, what are you apologizing for? And if you didn’t earn it honestly, how did you do it?

— JAMES GRANT, the editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer and the author, most recently, of “Mr. Market Miscalculates”

1. It still isn’t clear precisely how mortgage-related losses in the financial sector grew to be many times greater than the actual losses on the mortgages themselves. What role did synthetic collateralized debt obligations — a Wall Street invention that uses credit default swaps to mimic the payments from mortgages — play in multiplying the losses? Is there any way in which a synthetic debt obligation adds value to the real economy?

2. Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms argue that the clients to whom they sold mortgage-related securities were sophisticated investors who fully understood the risks. Goldman has said this was also the case when its clients bought the very same mortgage securities that Goldman, on its own behalf, was betting would default. Did these clients indeed understand all the gory details?

3. At the height of the panic in the fall of 2008, Wall Street firms blamed short-sellers for trying to destroy them. What short positions did Wall Street firms have in one another’s shares, and were they also betting against each other using credit default swaps?

— BETHANY McLEAN, a contributing editor for Vanity Fair, who is co-writing a book about the financial crisis with Joe Nocera of The Times

1. Without the Troubled Asset Relief Program, Wall Street banks would not have survived the shock to the financial system that occurred in September 2008. Nor would they have subsequently accrued large profits and bonus pools in 2009. Shouldn’t a substantial share of those bonus pools be sequestered on bank balance sheets for several years to increase the banks’ capital levels and shield taxpayers against another bailout?

2. All deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation that were held by Wall Street financial conglomerates should have been insulated in separate bank subsidiaries that were prohibited from trading, holding derivative securities and investing in risky assets like equities or bonds with less than a AAA rating. Wouldn’t such safeguards have reduced excess banker risk-taking, thereby reducing the need for taxpayer bailouts?

3. Wall Street turbocharged the subprime mortgage boom from 2002 to 2006 by providing billions in cheap warehouse loans to non-bank lenders that otherwise had virtually no capital or financing. Had the Federal Reserve kept short-term interest rates at a more normal 4 percent to 5 percent, rather than pushing them down to 1 percent, would this not have greatly curtailed the reckless growth of subprime loans?

— DAVID STOCKMAN, a director of the Office of Management and Budget under President Ronald Reagan

1. One result of the Pecora commission, the Depression equivalent of this investigation, was the Glass-Steagall Act, which kept investment banking separate from commercial banking until the act was repealed in 1999. Many experts now believe that divide should be reinstated. Yet commercial banks like Washington Mutual lost a lot of money during the crisis without having any investment banking activities, and pure investment banks like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers collapsed without being deposit-taking institutions. This suggests that the problem does not lie with mingling commercial and investment banking. Are you in favor of the return of Glass-Steagall, and why?

2. Many people argue that the financial industry now accounts for far too much of the gross domestic product and that it is unproductive, indeed counterproductive, to devote so much of the nation’s resources to simply moving money around rather than making things. Why has this shift occurred and what, if anything, can the government do about it?

3. Over the last 20 years, the world of finance has been irrevocably transformed: individuals have moved their money from savings accounts into money market funds, and institutional investors now keep their cash in the repo market, where Treasury securities are borrowed and lent, rather than as deposits in commercial banks. As a result, before the crisis, half of the credit provided in the United States was being channeled outside the commercial banking system. What regulatory changes do we need to ensure that our current financial system is as stable as the traditional banking system that served us so well from 1936 to 1996?

— LIAQUAT AHAMED, the author of “Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World”

1. Describe in detail the three worst investments your bank made in 2007 and 2008 — that is, those transactions on which you lost the most money. How much did the bank lose in each case?

2. What was the total compensation of each manager or executive supervising those three transactions — including yourself — in 2007 and 2008?

3. Are those executives still with your bank? What investments do they supervise today? How much will they be paid for 2009, including their bonuses?

— SIMON JOHNSON, a professor at the M.I.T. Sloan School of Management and a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics

Some of your firms received payouts on credit-default swap contracts with American International Group. Most of those guarantees resulted from hedging supposedly safe investments (they had AAA ratings, after all) with A.I.G. or other insurers. This hedging allowed traders to book “profits” that had not yet been earned — profits that would be counted in calculating their bonuses.

However, this insurance was likely to fail, as your risk managers surely knew. It involved so-called wrong-way risk: the guarantor (A.I.G.) was certain to be damaged by the same event (the housing market collapse) that would lead you to seek payment on the insurance. The insurance was effective only because the government stepped in, theoretically on the taxpayers’ behalf, and made payments for A.I.G., an otherwise bankrupt firm. Since employees’ bonuses, and ultimately yours, were based on these fraudulent profits, my questions are these:

1. How much profit did your firm record for bonus purposes on these trades that ultimately delivered huge losses? How much of those bogus profits were paid out in bonuses?

2. Have you made any effort to recover the bonuses? If not, why not?

— YVES SMITH, the head of Aurora Advisors, a management consulting firm, and the author of the blog Naked Capitalism and the forthcoming book “Econned: How Unenlightened Self-Interest Undermined Democracy and Corrupted Capitalism”

1. Why did Wall Street continue to package and sell as securities so many mortgages of questionable value and underwriting standards even as the housing market started to collapse?

2. Why were Wall Street traders and other moneymen permitted to make bets — through the use of so-called credit-default swaps — on the long-term value of securities they didn’t even own? (This is akin to everyone in your neighborhood being allowed to buy fire insurance on your house. Since the only way that bet can pay off is if your house burns down, it shouldn’t be any surprise when that is exactly what happens.)

3. Why aren’t bankers and traders required to have more skin in the game — that is, more of their own salary at risk — and not just a marginal part of one year’s bonus? (In the old days, when investment banks were private partnerships, a partner’s entire net worth was on the line, every day.)

— WILLIAM D. COHAN, a former Wall Street banker and the author of “House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street,” who writes a regular column on business at nytimes.com/opinion

1. How did you use the bailout money, and to what extent did it result in more lending or higher bonuses for your employees than you otherwise would have provided?

2. What, if any, changes do you contemplate making to your pay programs for executives and other high-level employees in light of recent events and related public concerns?

3. What have you done to modify your risk management and oversight structures to reduce the possibility that the problems of 2008 and 2009 will occur again?

— DAVID M. WALKER, the president and chief executive of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and the comptroller general of the United States from 1998 to 2008

Inserted from <NY Times>

What would you ask them?  I’ll start:

Considering the damage to the US economy and the suffering of the people of the US that you have caused, through your rampant greed, how much are you and your company willing to pay to the American people to mitigate the damage and suffering, to prevent the breakup of your company, and to keep your worthless hind parts out of prison?

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Action Alert: Stop Murkowski!

 Posted by at 2:54 am  Politics
Jan 132010
 

Credo Action sent me this one:

stopmurkowski-150w-1 Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska is launching a potentially devastating attack on the Clean Air Act. Majority Leader Harry Reid has granted her a vote for January 20 that would block the EPA from regulating greenhouse gas emissions from coal plants and other polluters in 2010.

The vote — on an amendment to a must-pass bill to lift the debt ceiling — will remove the EPA’s enforcement funding and power so big polluters like the coal industry can ignore the Clean Air Act.

You think this would be easy to stop, but the vote is predicted to be close with many Democrats considering voting for the bill. This attack is a rerun of the successful efforts by Newt Gingrich to hamstring the Clinton EPA in the 90s.

 

"Congress must not block the Clean Air Act’s limits on global warming pollution."

 

Republican and Democratic senators alike need to hear from you. The coal industry has been working furiously to close deals with senators across the political spectrum, including those who say they want to protect the environment. We cannot underestimate the Senate’s vulnerability to cynical attempts to handcuff the EPA.

The vote is expected to be close and we cannot take victory for granted.

 

Big Energy Lobbyists helped write this bill.  According to McClatchy DC:

cleanair Two lobbyists had a hand in writing language proposed by Sen. Lisa Murkowski that could curtail the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to regulate major emitters of greenhouse gases.

Their involvement, first reported Monday by The Washington Post, came at the request of a staffer on the Senate Energy and Environment Committee, where the Alaska senator is the top Republican. Both of the lobbyists, Jeff Holmstead and Roger Martella Jr., represent a number of high-profile energy clients. Both had top positions in the EPA during the Bush administration.

Murkowski has led the charge against the EPA’s role in regulating greenhouse gas emissions, saying she has concerns about an executive branch agency, rather than Congress, writing such regulations. Her original amendment would have been attached to a spending bill and it would have prohibited the EPA for one year from spending any money on developing regulations for greenhouse gases…

We all know what the Bush/GOP appointees in the EPA did to gut that agency.  I’m sure that their input is bad for everyone except the energy executives.

You can sign this petition at Credo Action.  I did.

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