Saturday, March 21, 2009

Another inexplicable lie from Fox from Daily Kos

from http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/3/21/711335/-Another-inexplicable-lie-from-Fox

Less than a week after presenting a six-month old clip of Joe Biden as new, Fox's The Live Desk is at it again.

This time, Fox News's Trace Gallagher falsely claims the Dow dropped 56 points during a speech by President Obama. According to Gallagher, when the President began, the Dow was up 28 points; by the time the Presidnet finished, Gallagher said the Dow was down 28 points.

The reality: when President Obama started, the Dow was down 34; it was down 28 when he finished. So it actually gained 6 meaningless points.


Links: DKTV | digg | reddit

Of course, even if Gallagher's false claim were true, it wouldn't have been an interesting or relevant point -- you cannot measure the success of speeches by short-term fluctuations in the Dow.

But it wasn't at all true, and that underscores just how dishonest Fox News is when it comes to attacking President Obama.

h/t: Media Matters (video by DKTV)

Krugman Not Happy With Financial Policy from THE DAILY BANTER.COM

By Ben Cohen http://www.thedailybanter.com/tdb/2009/03/krugman-not-happy-with-financial-policy.html

The leaked Obama plan to rescue the banks has Krugman up in arms. He writes:

The Obama administration is now completely wedded to the idea that there's nothing fundamentally wrong with the financial system — that what we're facing is the equivalent of a run on an essentially sound bank. As Tim Duy put it, there are no bad assets, only misunderstood assets. And if we get investors to understand that toxic waste is really, truly worth much more than anyone is willing to pay for it, all our problems will be solved.

I hope to God Obama and Geithner come up with something better than this. The impression that Wall St and Washington are working to conspire against the people is stronger than ever, and nothing short of dramatic action will quell the fear. And that means putting Wall St in its place with more than testy language. It means action.


Protesters gather at AIG execs' homes from Raw Story

Protesters gather at AIG execs' homes

from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/03/21/activists-protest-bonuses_n_177669.html

FAIRFIELD, Conn. — A busload of activists representing working- and middle-class families paid visits Saturday to the lavish homes of American International Group executives to protest the tens of millions of dollars in bonuses awarded by the struggling insurance company after it received a massive federal bailout.

About 40 protesters sought to urge AIG executives who received a portion of the $165 million in bonuses to do more to help families.

"We think $165 million could be used in a more appropriate way to keep people in their homes, create more jobs and health care," said Emeline Bravo-Blackport, a gardener.

She marveled at AIG executive James Haas' colonial house, which has stunning views of a golf course and the Long Island Sound. The Fairfield house is "another part of the world" from her life in nearby Bridgeport, which flirted with bankruptcy in the 1990s and still struggles with foreclosures and unemployment."


Astronaut To Test New Non-Stink Underwear from Geekologie


space underwear.jpg That's right, Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is slated to test a new kind of underwear during his current visit to the space station. The "state-of-the-art" undies were designed "to reduce the smells in normal clothing, absorb sweat and provide insulation."
The underwear, developed by Japanese researchers, are made of antibacterial polymers and are fire-resistant. Astronauts normally change their clothes every three days.
Koichi will attempt to wear the underwear for a full seven days. Which, if successful, will only be 9 days short of my record. And, if you think I'm kidding, ask my dry cleaners. Well, my ex dry cleaners. I am so stinky! Astronaut tests non-smelly super pants in space [metro] Thanks to Thumperchica, who doesn't care because she doesn't wear underwear. I'm with you, girl -- high five! No? Helicopter!

rest http://www.geekologie.com/2009/03/astronaut_to_test_new_nonstink.php

Geithner = Warren? from Open Left

Is Tim Geithner another bad choice, like Rick Warren, that Barack Obama is simply incapable of recognizing, admitting and acting on?  And is his unwillingness to recognize this a symptom of some much deeper problem with how he will govern?  I fear it very well could be.

There was a headline at Huffington Post, it's gone now--I blinked and it went away--but it made a sharp impression before it was replaced with something far more benign.  I forget the exact wording, but basically it was the Obama told 60-Minutes there was no way he was letting Geithner go. It came across like it was a point of honor with him.  And I had a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach when I saw that.

I don't know what story Huffpo was linking to, but BBC puts it like this:

Obama fends off Geithner doubters
US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will not be allowed to resign amid criticism of his short term in office, President Barack Obama has said.

Mr Obama told CBS News he would turn down any offer by Mr Geithner to quit, and would tell him: "Sorry, buddy, you've still got the job."

I'm having a flashback right about now, to Barack Obama posting a diary at Daily Kos, telling all us dirty fucking hippies to lay off his buds in the Senate.  That was the first instance when Obama used his popularity with the Democratic base to shield his personal friends from justly earned criticism--criticism that had nothing, necessarily, to do with them as private people, and everything to do with their public duties.

Then, there was his still-unexplained infatuation with Rick Warren....  
who clearly tried to sabotage him with the ludicrous "cone of silence" debate--not so much that he colluded with McCain, but simple that it was a stacked debate from start to finish, and everyone with a lick of sense knew that long in advance.  If anything, that public betrayal only made Obama more determined to further elevate him at the inauguration, and simply dismissed the anguished objections of the GLBT community and its allies.

rest http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=12386

Madoff’s Victims Speak Out from Truthdig


Madoff

Some of them have only their homes, while others have no remaining assets and no means to earn income, but all of the former clients of Bernard Madoff whose statements were made public by the government on Friday described in nightmarish terms their experiences since Madoff's fraudulent investment empire crumbled.

Meantime, a U.S. federal appeals court ruled that the accused Ponzi schemer will have to stay in jail as he awaits sentencing in mid-June.

Bloomberg:

Some of the messages released today by prosecutors had senders' names blacked out. Others were written by relatives on behalf of elderly or ailing victims, including an 87-year-old Alzheimer's patient who lost her $500,000 life savings.

"That money was for her to live out the rest of her life in comfort," a child of the Alzheimer's patient wrote in a March 9 e-mail that had the name redacted. "She is very depressed and can't understand why this happened to her."

Until now, most attention has been given to celebrities, hedge funds and banks around the world that lost money in Madoff's scam. Many of the victims revealed [Friday] cite relatively smaller losses that accounted for larger shares of wealth.

"I am not rich," a 52-year-old self-employed woman in California wrote in a letter. "The entire amount I lost was nowhere near a million dollars, but I was proud I had saved it. I do not own a home to sell. I do not have anyone to support me in my old age."

Many of the letters called on the government to make an extra effort to help victims.

Given the SEC's failure, "it is certainly justice that everyone in the federal government do what he or she can to ameliorate this situation," said Eugene Wolsk, 80, of Montauk, New York, who invested with Madoff for 21 years.

rest http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/20090321_madoffs_victims_speak_out/

White House seeks broad new authority to reform financial system from Daily Kos

from http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/3/21/711446/-White-House-seeks-broad-new-authority-to-reform-financial-system

This is going to drive Republicans Rush Limbaugh crazy:

Administration Seeks Increase in Oversight of Executive Pay

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will call for increased oversight of executive pay at all banks, Wall Street firms and possibly other companies as part of a sweeping plan to overhaul financial regulation, government officials said.

The outlines of the plan are expected to be unveiled this week in preparation for President Obama's first foreign summit meeting in early April.

Increasing oversight of executive pay has been under consideration for some time, but the decision was made in recent days as public fury over bonuses has spilled into the regulatory effort.

The officials said that the administration was still debating the details of its plan, including how broadly it should be applied and how far it could range beyond simple reporting requirements. Depending on the outcome of the discussions, the administration could seek to put the changes into effect through regulations rather than through legislation.

One proposal could impose greater requirements on the boards of companies to tie executive compensation more closely to corporate performance and to take other steps to assure that outsize bonuses are not paid before meeting financial goals.

This proposal is no joke. It isn't limited to just AIG, or even just TARP recipients. It aims at a fundamental overhaul of the way things work at financial institutions and publicly traded companies, not only with respect to executive compensation, but also in terms of how complex financial instruments like derivatives are regulated.

It's going to draw a bright line between those who are simply bloviating about executive pay (Republicans focusing 100% on AIG's bonuses) and those who want the fundamental reform and change President Obama promised during the campaign (just about everybody else).

In short, it's going to make hacks like John Boehner and Eric Cantor put up or shut up. Take a guess at which they're going to do.

You Think The Bonuses Were Bad? Take A Look At Executive Retirement Plans from Crooks and Liar

from http://crooksandliars.com/susie-madrak/you-think-bonuses-were-bad-take-look-

The rich, they are different from you and me:

The furor over bonuses for some employees at AIG International Group has focused public attention on the sizable checks employees received at firms that were bailed out by the federal government or received some taxpayer support. Less noticed, though, are the rich retirement benefits. That's partly because firms only recently began to disclose the value of executive retirement benefits in their annual proxy statements, which are filed this time of year ahead of yearly shareholder meetings.

Equilar, a California compensation consulting company, said the average additional value in 2008 to a chief executive's retirement plan was $1.23 million, based on its review of those firms that have filed proxy statements. In 2007, the average was $1.38 million.

These executives continue to accumulate enormous benefits while fewer rank-and-file workers have guaranteed retirement benefits. Just one-third of workers in mid- to large-size companies were in so-called defined benefit plans in 2007, down from 52 percent in 1995, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

Some compensation specialists say the executives' sums are far more than what any individual needs for retirement.

"Retirement packages are supposed to help you if you're unable to save for retirement. I don't believe any of these guys could have spent all the cash they've earned in their careers as CEOs," said Paul Hodgson, senior researcher at the Corporate Library in Portland, Maine, which researches executive compensation and corporate governance issues for shareholders and insurers.

The costs if Obama fails: "an America run by religious fanatics, locked in holy (thermonuclear) wars abroad while engaging in ethnic cleansing at home"

The Cost

Right now, it's becoming particularly apparent that there's a real danger of Obama's Administration going really wrong.  I've long been hopeful that the historical logic Mike Lux writes about in his book will take hold, and that Obama will be forced to move to the left, to institute progressive reforms, as has happened at crucial times before.  But what if he doesn't?  What if his current support for Timothy Geithner and his misbegotten plan is the harbinger of all that's to come?  How bad could it get?

What Would Be The Cost?

In my last diary, "Geithner = Warren?", one answer was suggested by limpidglass, writting:

theocratic dictatorship, here we come!
Recipe:
  • A lot of God talk and flag-waving;
  • A lot of railing against the evil Fed and the banking class (which will be conflated with American Jews);
  • A lot of talk about we shouldn't waste money on "wasteful" and "bloated" government social programs, and how we should instead give it directly to the churches so they can help the poor like Jesus told them to do;
  • A little dose of the Dolchstosslegende about how the Democrats pussied out and retreated from Iraq and Afghanistan when those wars could have been won, + a sacred vow to go into the Middle East, wipe out all those "heathens," and take back the oil that belongs to the American people by right;
  • A lot of raving against Muslims (for "being terrorists"), immigrants (for "stealing jobs from honest, decent Americans"), homosexuals (for their "decadent lifestyles"), and liberals (for "hating America");

Bake for four years or so, and you've got yourself an America run by religious fanatics, locked in holy (thermonuclear) wars abroad while engaging in ethnic cleansing at home.

I don't think that's anywhere near guaranteed if Obama fails.  But I certainly think it's a distinct possibility.  And in responding to limpidglass, Master Jack sketched out a different sort of cost--the opportunity cost of what's potentially going to be wasted if we continue in this way:

What a wasted opportunity.
This banking meltdown COULD have led to a new progressive era -- as previous American economic collapses have done. It could have been a massive, once-in-a-generation teachable moment about the disastrous consequences of unbridled, unregulated capitalism.

And we have a "Democrat" in the White House, as well as "Democratic" majorities in both houses. The mechanism was in place to truly move beyond Reaganism.

The last time the Democrats availed themselves of that teachable moment, they set the stage to dominate American politics for a half-century.

This generation of "Democratic" leaders has used this opportunity to move the country even further to the right.

This will not end well. This is the first time I'm wondering if it would have been better if McCain had won -- he'd be coddling Wall Street just like Obama is now, but at least it would be Republicans he'd be setting up for permanent irrelevancy.

We have to think about these costs very seriously, because they are very serious costs, which are all the more serious because of how oblivious to them Obama and the rest of the Versailles Dems seem to be.  Do I hope that these are both overblown?  Of course!  But hope is not a plan.  We cannot ignore the costs we face if we allow failure to prevail.

Still losing from Daily Kos - John Boehner is misinformed or lying (or both)


Apparently, the GOP thinks they finally have a winning issue:

The Republican National Committee (RNC) today launched a new Web video, titled "Mystery Solved." The video highlights the mystery of the Democrats' slipping in the language to the stimulus bill that allowed AIG to deliver bonuses to its executives with hard-earned tax payer dollars.

John Boehner leveled the same attack on Thursday:

Had President Obama not signed the bill, AIG executives wouldn't be getting $165 million in bonuses funded by American taxpayers.

But that just wasn't true, as David Waldman explained at Congress Matters:

Had President Obama not signed the bill, not only would AIG executives in fact be getting $165 million in bonuses funded by American taxpayers, but there would also be no restrictions on any bonuses paid by TARP recipients going forward.

Aside from the fact that Boehner is misinformed or lying (or both), there's three very important things to remember from this:

  1. John Boehner and a substantial portion of the GOP caucus supported the original TARP legislation, and that legislation permitted AIG to make these bonus payments. In other words, Boehner and many of his cronies voted for the law that made it possible to pay these bonuses.
  1. The stimulus bill included new executive pay restrictions that were not in the original TARP. John Boehner and virtually every Republican voted against the stimulus bill -- and therefore against the new executive pay restrictions.
  1. It is true that the stimulus bill failed to impose new restrictions that would have blocked the AIG bonuses. But the stimulus bill did not create a new loophole allowing the AIG bonuses -- the bonuses were already legal.

The stimulus bill should have gone further. But it didn't, and it's not like the GOP was complaining about that aspect of the stimulus bill. Even moderate Republicans like Olympia Snowe kept quiet.

So when Republicans act like they've now found the issue that's going to propel them back to power keep in mind that this "issue" is mostly a fiction, driven by the GOP's willful distortion and misrepresentation of the facts and a compliant media eager to ride the wave of legitimate anger at the AIG bonuses and how they were handled.

Mistakes were made all around -- by the Obama Administration, including Tim Geithner; by Democrats in Congress who allowed TARP to pass with insufficient restrictions on compensation; and most of all by the Republican Party, who fought those restrictions every step of the way.

And let's not forget where the original AIG bailout came from: George W. Bush's Treasury Department. And who led Bush's Treasury Department? None other than Hank Paulson, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs -- the second largest beneficiary of funds from the AIG bailout.

So if Republicans want to make AIG the issue of the day, fine. Let's have at it. See how they lose.

Meanwhile, President Obama and the Democratic Party need to focus on what people ultimately care about: making sure these bonuses are repaid, that the problem never happens again, and most importantly, that we get this economy back on track.

There's plenty of blame to go around, but pointing fingers isn't going to get the job done.

So the GOP might think they finally have a winner on their hands, but this fact still remains: as long as they are the party of no, their one and only hope for victory is if the nation fails.

Maybe that's why they all love Rush Limbaugh so much.

Obama's Critical Early Test: Corporate Arrogance


from http://www.boingboing.net/2009/03/18/obamas-critical-earl.html

Posted: 18 Mar 2009 09:33 AM PDT

Dan Gillmor is a BoingBoing guest-blogger.

This is Obama's air-traffic controllers opportunity.

In 1981, not long after taking office, President Reagan faced a strike by the nation's air-traffic controllers. He fired them, broke the union and set in motion a generation of anti-labor policies that were a tenet of Republican orthodoxy. Whether those policies were ultimately more positive or negative is still a topic of political and economic debate, (I think the aggregate outcome was damaging) but Reagan's decisive action made a huge difference that reverberated through his presidency and several more.

Today, we face corporate arrogance that is almost transcendent and vastly more damaging than any of organized labor's excesses. Wall Street's barons, and the people who have been running and allegedly governing many of the nation's biggest companies, have raised a collective middle finger to America even as they've forced us to bail out the enterprises they've run into the ground. When commentators fret about corporate leaders' tone-deafness, they are implying that the executives simply don't get it. Oh yes they do.

In coming to Washington for bailouts, they said: "This is a stick-up. Give us the money or we'll kill the economy."

In creating their disgusting compensation schemes, they said: "Pay us as usual, not for performance but because this is our just due as masters of the universe. And because we deserve anything we can loot from whoever has the money, whether it's shareholders, customers, taxpayers or anyone else."

The puzzle of the past week is not that Americans are furious. Only an idiot (or a Wall Street banker) wouldn't be angry upon learning of the unconscionable "bonuses" renegade ward-of-the-taxpayers AIG wants to pay to its employees -- including well over $100 million to people in the same unit that completely screwed the company and then threatened to take down the entire global economy if we refused to subsidize (so far) to the tune of $170 billiion.

No, the mystery is why this outrage hasn't come to the surface sooner. And why it's not more dangerous.

Why, for example, didn't Americans take to the streets earlier this year when we found out that Merrill Lynch and its conniving buyer, Bank of America, had paid almost $5 billion in bonuses -- a number that makes the AIG bonus money seem small -- after taking tens of billions from taxpayers? Why didn't we scream bloody murder when the Bush administration flatly refused to disclose where the hundreds of billions in bailout money was going in any kind of detail?

One reason, perhaps, is that we are a soft and lazy and uncurious people. We are quick to being pissed off at relatively small things -- typically minor but sensationalized stuff that tabloid TV news programs (i.e. CNN, MSNBC and Fox and local stations) decide to make into issues -- but slow to grasp the significance of the really big and crucial stuff until it's so powerfully in our faces that we can't avoid it any longer.

AIG's bonus payout tipped the scales, or, maybe more accurately, removed another kind of scales from people's eyes. It demonstrated precisely what suckers the Wall Streeters have been taking us for.

How can we blame them for deciding that they were entitled to loot us, again and again? We were electing politicians of both parties who have been corrupted by and enablers of the very system that created the credit bubble and its catastrophic outcome. We weren't demanding accountability from anyone, including ourselves.

But now it's time. The American public is not blameless in what's happened. But we are finally waking up to the level of arrogance that dominates wide swaths of corporate America, particularly Wall Street. These transcendently greedy people, who aren't just indifferent to what the rest of us think but who actually believe they're entitled to loot the treasury and our children's futures, need a slapping down.

President Obama has a chance to turn this in a positive direction, but he's going to have to risk a lot of his political capital. He's going to have to admit that he, too, has been player in the corrupt system, albeit a relatively bit player.

Then he has to say, and mean it, that this crap is going to stop, right now -- and explain how he's going to do something about it.

We have a chance to reform the corrupt political and corporate governance that has created a system in which the people at the top brazenly tell the rest of us to go screw ourselves. It's a small chance, but if we don't do it now we will never do it, and the market economy itself will have no real future.

One institution can most effectively lead the charge in a way that can create change that doesn't turn into a mob-driven frenzy: the presidency. Is this president up to it?

NSFW: "New" Best Buy DVD Player Comes With Free "Buckets O' Cum" DVD from Consumerist


This picture is essentially the epitome of why it's really messed up that Best Buy will take a piece of used or returned equipment and sell it as new... eventually someone is going to get a DVD player with a copy of "Buckets of Cum" in the disc drive. The caption on the photo submitted to our Flickr pool reads,

When we went to Best Buy and purchased a cheap DVD player after our old one broke, we were surprised to find "Buckets of Cum" in the DVD player. Ewwwwww...apparently, even though it was sold to us as new, it was actually used. I tried to call Best Buy that night, but they were already closed.

rest http://consumerist.com/5177420/nsfw-new-best-buy-dvd-player-comes-with-free-buckets-o-cum-dvd

Georgia Republicans block resolution honoring Obama from Crooks and Liars


Legislative bodies vote for the passage of thousands of these types of resolutions all the time. Even in the House of Representatives. But in Georgia they just couldn't do the honorable thing:

The Georgia House voted Thursday 70-68 to reject a resolution that would have honored President Barack Obama as a politician with an "unimpeachable reputation for integrity, vision and passion."

The vote by the Republican-controlled chamber infuriated members of the Georgia Legislative Black Caucus, who designed the proposal to make Obama an honorary member of the group. They said it would have been the first such proposal in the country.

"I've never seen this type of action taken on the floor of the House, said state Rep. Calvin Smyre, a Columbus Democrat and 35-year veteran of the Legislature who is president of the National Black Caucus of State Legislators. "I'm appalled, I'm disappointed, I'm shocked. The fact of the matter is there's a dark cloud over Georgia."

rest http://crooksandliars.com/john-amato/georgia-republicans-block-resolution-ho

Inviting the Sheep for Another Shearing from The Existentialist Cowboy

from http://existentialistcowboy.blogspot.com/2009/03/inviting-sheep-for-another-shearing.html
By Ed Encho

What do you get for pretending the danger's not real.
Meek and obedient you follow the leader
Down well trodden corridors into the valley of steel.
What a surprise!
A look of terminal shock in your eyes.
Now things are really what they seem.
No, this is no bad dream.

-Pink Floyd (sheep)
In the ongoing madness of an America in terminal decline, the great Surge II is now underway. This one has nothing to do with mass brainwashing that all is ell in Iraq and that we are indeed winning thanks to our shining medal festooned superstar quarterback otherwise known as General God (aka David Petraeus) to divert the flocks attention away from a doomed imperialist crusade. Nope, this one hits closer to home, it started last Monday with a sly piece of internal propaganda from Citigroup's CEO Vikram Pandit having its best quarter since 2007 which triggered a sucker rally in the Wall Street casinos that dictate to the inhabitants of chumpland. The pocket media once again did their job, selling this latest call for the sheep to come and be sheared with all the effectiveness that they pimped the murderous lies of George W. Bush, Karl Rove and Dick Cheney. Things – ARE getting better you see, the gloom-gloomers, the glass is half-empty pessimists, the neurotic nervous nellies and the naysaying Eyores are all wrong, it's a disease, in their heads, the economy is rocketing its way back to robustitude. The most incredible example of just how thoroughly corrupt that the corporatist media has become is the pernicious cover story of the latest edition of Newsweek magazine that has a picture of good ole Uncle Sam saying that he wants YOU to START SPENDING!... YOU need to INVEST in America – before it's too late.

The Newsweek story, by Daniel Gross which inside is even more insidious in that it beats the reader over the head with STOP SAVING NOW! – in all caps and taking up the better part of page 27, page 26 is a picture of a squirrel (a cartoon representation of those greedy pigs who dare to save their own money rather than gamble in the Wall Street casinos who holding onto a backload of acorns has caused the branch of the tree to CRAK! Jesus fucking Christ, this is propaganda at its finest, even a cynic like me is astounded by the dastardly nature of this banker swill in one of the nation's premier 'news' magazines.

A more sophisticated version of Mad Money Cramer, Gross goes on to say:
The hum of ambient noise in midtown Manhattan is several decibels lower than it was a year ago. Fewer black Town Cars idle outside the investment-bank offices on Park Avenue. The aisles of the flagship Saks Fifth Avenue are so quiet you'd think you were in a library. The restaurants and shops at Rockefeller Center are open as usual, but they seem oddly depopulated. Where are all the tourists and office workers, the hordes of junior analysts lining up in Starbucks?

Something less tangible is also absent: the spirit of caffeinated, heedless risk taking. For a generation, risk has been the adrenaline of the nation's economy, the substance that made us all—from the denizens of midtown Manhattan to the residents of Manhattan, Kans.—run a little faster and stay up a little later. Now, with the economy in its 16th month of recession and the markets scythed in half, it seems we've all either switched to decaf or simply lost the taste for risk.

And

As consumers hibernate and investors hoard cash, the economy is withering. This new age of thrift is understandable. But for a recovery to take hold, Americans will need to start taking risks again.

And

Saving cash and building up reserves is a necessary first step to recovery. But eventually the mountain of cash has to be put to work. Last week's sharp market rally was certainly a sign—however fleeting it may turn out to be—that investors are putting money to work again. Retail sales in February provided another hint that purse strings may be loosening. But there's much more work to be done. Ironically, post-bubble periods are frequently great times to start new ventures. The best time to start a dotcom wasn't in 1999 when the IPO market was raging, it was in 2002, when the price of everything associated with the business—office space, programming talent—had plummeted. When Allied Corp. in the late 1980s didn't want to pursue the development of consumer products based on global-positioning-satellite technology, Gary Burrell left, raised $4 million and formed Garmin, which today employs about 7,000 people.
Great solution, just trust Wall Street with that money, think long term, be patriotic even if the malefactors of great wealth do not and are more than happy to wallow in international troughs and then come back to shit on America. Gross, a highly-paid, high profile stooge is just playing his part in the ongoing relaunch project to save Wall Street looters and protect their plunder. We have seen this story already, Americans with dollar signs in their eyes and cash register bells going off in their heads like some bizarre real life Uncle Scrooge cartoon, duped into thinking that they can actually become rich and powerful themselves just like The Donald line up to be fleeced by the flim-flam men with the political juice and insider knowledge as they seek to cash out one more time. Perhaps a final time before the country impoldes inward upon itself. All aided and abetted by the media, the Wall Street cadre occupying Barack Obama's White House, guys like Lawrence Summers and the conniving little twit Tim Geithner whose announcement as the new treasury secretary was greeted by a 6.5 % spike in the DOW, the crack-ho economy got a mainline spike into the arm and knew that the paper pusher inside the administration would ensure them that the game would go on and on. In the end of course, all has been enabled by the bewildered herd of sheeple themselves, brainwashed from birth into the bastardized capitalist system that is already drooling over being able to suck the blood from their grandchildren on account of their greed, stupidity and folly.

As a counter to the mainstream drivel that Gross and Newsweek are peddling as pearls of infinite wisdom I counter with an excerpt from a piece from his month's Harpers. Infinite Debt by Thomas Georghegan discusses the ruinous and usurious effects of the debt based economy and its victims The same ones that Gross and his fellow pocket media hacks are now trying to swindle out of whatever little they may now have in their piggy banks having been badly burned by the existing system that has beggared them and cast them out of jobs and homes in addition to destroying their pensions and 401k retirement plans. From the Harper's piece (which I will be addressing at length in my coming post Usurious Bastards):
What is history, really, but a turf war between manufacturing, labor and the banks? In the United States, we shrank manufacturing. We got rid of labor. Now it's just the banks.

Which is why the middle class is shrinking. Basically, we're all waiters now; we're bowing and scraping and working for the banks. Look closely at any American, and it's even odds that he or she, directly or indirectly, is somehow employed by the "financial services sector," which covers insurance and real estate and financial instruments of any kind. As brokers, lawyers, loan collectors, loan consolidators, secretaries at big investment firms, chauffeurs of private limousines, or even the high-tech types who exist solely to service banks — all of us, millions of us, are part of it, living off it in some way, as three generations ago we lived off manufacturers.
The game is rigged people, and the hit job done on America by the rotten fuckers on Wall Street and their institutionalized system of debt slavery is all that is left, and STILL the banksters on the street and the gangsters in D.C. are doint everything that they can to continue to bleed the silly and naive masses of asses by doing all that is possible to get the debt/consumerism bubble reinflated. In a rare piece of sanity that slipped by the censors and minders of the memory hole a Reuters story, More debt: a curious solution to a credit crisis dared to utter the heresy that:
Indeed, a huge part of the Treasury's economic rescue plan is based on reviving securitization. This is the process by which everything from real estate and auto loans to credit cards and student debt gets repackaged into bonds and is then sold on to investors in a secondary market.

This worked wonders during the boom of the past couple of decades, leading to rapid capital formation that underpinned a huge rise in lending. But when the music stopped, many investors were left looking for an empty chair as these products of financial "innovation" proved ruinously difficult to value.

Given this history, Wray, also a senior fellow at the Levy Economics Institute, said asset-backed bonds are the problem, not the solution. "We need to kill off securitization and go back to banking -- loan officers and underwriting."
Wall Street is a con game, it depends on confidence in order for the moneychangers to book their fees and peddle their bad paper, given the Surge II it's apparent that the entrenched elitists are determined to wage war against any sort of change that Obama may have in mind. Given the first two months of the administration and while being mindful that it's still early, despite some initial guarded optimism I am becoming more and more certain that nothing is changing except the management of the whorehouse. I now find myself in agreement more or less with those progressives who were wary of Obama from the onset, with his government packed with recycled Clinton era swine, the usual assortment of Wall Street and Federal Reserve grifters running fiscal policy and his still stinging kick in the balls from the Israel lobby over the Freeman resignation it only looks like more of the same shit but in a different package. Helicopter Ben's announcement that the Fed would now be buying American debt to save their fucking system, the dollar immediately took a shit and with the coming wave of hyperinflationi as a result of this latest idiocy this story should send a cold chill up the spine of all who are onto what has really been going on as America has been gutted: The US is Facing a Weimar Moment. Read it if you dare.

As Orwell once wrote in the literary classic Animal Farm:

"All animals are equal, some are just more equal than others"

Republican 'free marketers' are unscrupulous and pathologically greedy, they also delight in the trafficking of human misery for profit. It makes them feel empowered. They are like the S.O.B. sitting at the Monopoly table who is not content in owning Boardwalk and Park Place as well as all of the utilities and railroads but also buys Baltic and Mediterranean and loads them up with houses and hotels then squeals with childlike glee when some poor bastard lands on one of them and is driven into bankruptcy. The game of Monopoly is very relevant to life itself in laissez-faire hell, where the rich are able to accumulate property on a rapidly escalating scale and as wealth rapidly increases the less fortunate are driven into bankruptcy with the winner being the monopolists.

This is Laissez-Faire 'free market' Capitalism in its ultimate form, the 'free market' is only truly advantageous and 'free' to those who have the most cash and assets and they are gathered at the expense of the poor who eventually are the losers but hey, that's what it's all about isn't it in the Wall Street Journal's perfect world. Now that the rape of the system has nearly been completed how long is it going to take until there is a realization of just how thoroughly the free market fanatics have cannibalized the country in pursuit of profit? And the denial needs to stop immediately, the existing system has already failed and failed miserably.

Capitalism is eating itself. Like a python slowly trying to digest it's own tail, the economic master plan, the Shock Doctrine has come home now and the sheep are being prepped for yet another shearing, soon they will served up with a side of mint jelly.

It is important to understand that a distinction needs to be made when it comes to capitalism between that which is regulated and the 'free market' aka Lassez Faire strain that the road to hell is paved with. The end result of unregulated capitalism is monopoly of the most extreme sort as well as the redistribution of wealth to those at the top of the class system, I wonder why nobody has ever dubbed this as 'trickle up economics' which is of course exactly what it is. One of history's most important and enduring lessons is that hundreds of thousands must toil in the muck in order to allow one rotten, greedy son of a bitch to have his face displayed on a sphinx. The American middle class are the ones who are forced by their Wall Street pharaohs to build the bricks for the monuments to the super wealthy under increasingly hostile conditions in increasingly dangerous work environments with an increasingly smaller amount of straw.

The establishment after all has a vested interest in the existence of a huge and desperate underclass. The accompanying crime and urban rot helps to breed the necessary fear that justifies increased police powers and surveillance so as to keep the interests of the elite safe and sound while they sleep behind the walls of their gated communities each night. We were swindled by the free market pimps and deregulation pushers, all that it all did was create conditions for monopolies and trusts and consumer gouging. Take an honest look at yourself, are you truly better off today than you were yesterday? Or the day before? Or five years ago?

Well understand one thing.....today is as good as you are going to have it for the rest of your life under this existing rotten system.

We Are All Losers: The system itself is designed to make losers of us all except that extreme few with the means to purchase influence and therefore protection.

rest http://existentialistcowboy.blogspot.com/2009/03/inviting-sheep-for-another-shearing.html

AIG Claims It Overpaid Taxes, Sues Government from Truthdig


AIG sign

Having succeeded in dispensing tens of millions of dollars to company executives last week as the country—and Congress—cried foul, the insurance titan is now suing the government to reclaim millions in taxes. Apparently AIG officials believe they paid the IRS too much and now are demanding a huge tax rebate.

The Washington Post:

The big insurer is trying to recover $306.1 million of taxes, interest and penalties from the Internal Revenue Service. Among other things, AIG is contesting an IRS determination last year that the company improperly claimed $61.9 million of tax credits associated with complex international transactions.

AIG has also asked a court to make the government reimburse it for money spent suing the government.

[...] AIG believes it overpaid the IRS, and it "has a duty to its shareholders, including the government and other shareholders, to insure that it pays the proper amount of taxes," spokesman Mark Herr said by e-mail.

rest http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/20090320_aig_suing_govt_over_taxes/

$2.5 Billion in Merrill Bonuses Would Elude Tax from AfterDowningStreet.org


$2.5 Billion in Merrill Bonuses Would Elude Tax
By Louise Story | NY Times

"By a technicality, the biggest giveaway on Wall Street will evade this bill," said Michael Garland, a spokesman with Change to Win, a federation of seven unions.

Merrill Lynch's $3.6 billion bonus pool has been among the most controversial payouts on Wall Street. But most of those bonuses, which included some 700 awards of over $1 million, would not be affected by a new bonus tax being considered in Congress.

The tax, which passed in the House on Thursday, would affect only bonuses paid during 2009. Typically, Merrill's bonuses are paid in January, along with the rest of Wall Street's. But the investment bank pushed $2.5 billion of the bonuses out the door in December in advance of its merger with Bank of America.

REST http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/40941

The Big Takeover from AfterDowningStreet.org

The Big Takeover
The global economic crisis isn't about money - it's about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution
Matt Taibbi | Rolling Stone

It's over — we're officially, royally fucked. no empire can survive being rendered a permanent laughingstock, which is what happened as of a few weeks ago, when the buffoons who have been running things in this country finally went one step too far. It happened when Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was forced to admit that he was once again going to have to stuff billions of taxpayer dollars into a dying insurance giant called AIG, itself a profound symbol of our national decline — a corporation that got rich insuring the concrete and steel of American industry in the country's heyday, only to destroy itself chasing phantom fortunes at the Wall Street card tables, like a dissolute nobleman gambling away the family estate in the waning days of the British Empire.

The latest bailout came as AIG admitted to having just posted the largest quarterly loss in American corporate history — some $61.7 billion. In the final three months of last year, the company lost more than $27 million every hour. That's $465,000 a minute, a yearly income for a median American household every six seconds, roughly $7,750 a second. And all this happened at the end of eight straight years that America devoted to frantically chasing the shadow of a terrorist threat to no avail, eight years spent stopping every citizen at every airport to search every purse, bag, crotch and briefcase for juice boxes and explosive tubes of toothpaste. Yet in the end, our government had no mechanism for searching the balance sheets of companies that held life-or-death power over our society and was unable to spot holes in the national economy the size of Libya (whose entire GDP last year was smaller than AIG's 2008 losses).

So it's time to admit it: We're fools, protagonists in a kind of gruesome comedy about the marriage of greed and stupidity. And the worst part about it is that we're still in denial — we still think this is some kind of unfortunate accident, not something that was created by the group of psychopaths on Wall Street whom we allowed to gang-rape the American Dream. When Geithner announced the new $30 billion bailout, the party line was that poor AIG was just a victim of a lot of shitty luck — bad year for business, you know, what with the financial crisis and all. Edward Liddy, the company's CEO, actually compared it to catching a cold: "The marketplace is a pretty crummy place to be right now," he said. "When the world catches pneumonia, we get it too." In a pathetic attempt at name-dropping, he even whined that AIG was being "consumed by the same issues that are driving house prices down and 401K statements down and Warren Buffet's investment portfolio down."

Liddy made AIG sound like an orphan begging in a soup line, hungry and sick from being left out in someone else's financial weather. He conveniently forgot to mention that AIG had spent more than a decade systematically scheming to evade U.S. and international regulators, or that one of the causes of its "pneumonia" was making colossal, world-sinking $500 billion bets with money it didn't have, in a toxic and completely unregulated derivatives market.

Nor did anyone mention that when AIG finally got up from its seat at the Wall Street casino, broke and busted in the afterdawn light, it owed money all over town — and that a huge chunk of your taxpayer dollars in this particular bailout scam will be going to pay off the other high rollers at its table. Or that this was a casino unique among all casinos, one where middle-class taxpayers cover the bets of billionaires.

People are pissed off about this financial crisis, and about this bailout, but they're not pissed off enough. The reality is that the worldwide economic meltdown and the bailout that followed were together a kind of revolution, a coup d'รฉtat. They cemented and formalized a political trend that has been snowballing for decades: the gradual takeover of the government by a small class of connected insiders, who used money to control elections, buy influence and systematically weaken financial regulations.

The crisis was the coup de grรขce: Given virtually free rein over the economy, these same insiders first wrecked the financial world, then cunningly granted themselves nearly unlimited emergency powers to clean up their own mess. And so the gambling-addict leaders of companies like AIG end up not penniless and in jail, but with an Alien-style death grip on the Treasury and the Federal Reserve — "our partners in the government," as Liddy put it with a shockingly casual matter-of-factness after the most recent bailout.

The mistake most people make in looking at the financial crisis is thinking of it in terms of money, a habit that might lead you to look at the unfolding mess as a huge bonus-killing downer for the Wall Street class. But if you look at it in purely Machiavellian terms, what you see is a colossal power grab that threatens to turn the federal government into a kind of giant Enron — a huge, impenetrable black box filled with self-dealing insiders whose scheme is the securing of individual profits at the expense of an ocean of unwitting involuntary shareholders, previously known as taxpayers.

I. PATIENT ZERO

The best way to understand the financial crisis is to understand the meltdown at AIG. AIG is what happens when short, bald managers of otherwise boring financial bureaucracies start seeing Brad Pitt in the mirror. This is a company that built a giant fortune across more than a century by betting on safety-conscious policyholders — people who wear seat belts and build houses on high ground — and then blew it all in a year or two by turning their entire balance sheet over to a guy who acted like making huge bets with other people's money would make his dick bigger.

That guy — the Patient Zero of the global economic meltdown — was one Joseph Cassano, the head of a tiny, 400-person unit within the company called AIG Financial Products, or AIGFP. Cassano, a pudgy, balding Brooklyn College grad with beady eyes and way too much forehead, cut his teeth in the Eighties working for Mike Milken, the granddaddy of modern Wall Street debt alchemists. Milken, who pioneered the creative use of junk bonds, relied on messianic genius and a whole array of insider schemes to evade detection while wreaking financial disaster. Cassano, by contrast, was just a greedy little turd with a knack for selective accounting who ran his scam right out in the open, thanks to Washington's deregulation of the Wall Street casino. "It's all about the regulatory environment," says a government source involved with the AIG bailout. "These guys look for holes in the system, for ways they can do trades without government interference. Whatever is unregulated, all the action is going to pile into that."

The mess Cassano created had its roots in an investment boom fueled in part by a relatively new type of financial instrument called a collateralized-debt obligation. A CDO is like a box full of diced-up assets. They can be anything: mortgages, corporate loans, aircraft loans, credit-card loans, even other CDOs. So as X mortgage holder pays his bill, and Y corporate debtor pays his bill, and Z credit-card debtor pays his bill, money flows into the box.

The key idea behind a CDO is that there will always be at least some money in the box, regardless of how dicey the individual assets inside it are. No matter how you look at a single unemployed ex-con trying to pay the note on a six-bedroom house, he looks like a bad investment. But dump his loan in a box with a smorgasbord of auto loans, credit-card debt, corporate bonds and other crap, and you can be reasonably sure that somebody is going to pay up. Say $100 is supposed to come into the box every month. Even in an apocalypse, when $90 in payments might default, you'll still get $10. What the inventors of the CDO did is divide up the box into groups of investors and put that $10 into its own level, or "tranche." They then convinced ratings agencies like Moody's and S&P to give that top tranche the highest AAA rating — meaning it has close to zero credit risk.

Suddenly, thanks to this financial seal of approval, banks had a way to turn their shittiest mortgages and other financial waste into investment-grade paper and sell them to institutional investors like pensions and insurance companies, which were forced by regulators to keep their portfolios as safe as possible. Because CDOs offered higher rates of return than truly safe products like Treasury bills, it was a win-win: Banks made a fortune selling CDOs, and big investors made much more holding them.

The problem was, none of this was based on reality. "The banks knew they were selling crap," says a London-based trader from one of the bailed-out companies. To get AAA ratings, the CDOs relied not on their actual underlying assets but on crazy mathematical formulas that the banks cooked up to make the investments look safer than they really were. "They had some back room somewhere where a bunch of Indian guys who'd been doing nothing but math for God knows how many years would come up with some kind of model saying that this or that combination of debtors would only default once every 10,000 years," says one young trader who sold CDOs for a major investment bank. "It was nuts."

Now that even the crappiest mortgages could be sold to conservative investors, the CDOs spurred a massive explosion of irresponsible and predatory lending. In fact, there was such a crush to underwrite CDOs that it became hard to find enough subprime mortgages — read: enough unemployed meth dealers willing to buy million-dollar homes for no money down — to fill them all. As banks and investors of all kinds took on more and more in CDOs and similar instruments, they needed some way to hedge their massive bets — some kind of insurance policy, in case the housing bubble burst and all that debt went south at the same time. This was particularly true for investment banks, many of which got stuck holding or "warehousing" CDOs when they wrote more than they could sell. And that's were Joe Cassano came in.

Known for his boldness and arrogance, Cassano took over as chief of AIGFP in 2001. He was the favorite of Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, the head of AIG, who admired the younger man's hard-driving ways, even if neither he nor his successors fully understood exactly what it was that Cassano did. According to a source familiar with AIG's internal operations, Cassano basically told senior management, "You know insurance, I know investments, so you do what you do, and I'll do what I do — leave me alone." Given a free hand within the company, Cassano set out from his offices in London to sell a lucrative form of "insurance" to all those investors holding lots of CDOs. His tool of choice was another new financial instrument known as a credit-default swap, or CDS.

The CDS was popularized by J.P. Morgan, in particular by a group of young, creative bankers who would later become known as the "Morgan Mafia," as many of them would go on to assume influential positions in the finance world. In 1994, in between booze and games of tennis at a resort in Boca Raton, Florida, the Morgan gang plotted a way to help boost the bank's returns. One of their goals was to find a way to lend more money, while working around regulations that required them to keep a set amount of cash in reserve to back those loans. What they came up with was an early version of the credit-default swap.

In its simplest form, a CDS is just a bet on an outcome. Say Bank A writes a million-dollar mortgage to the Pope for a town house in the West Village. Bank A wants to hedge its mortgage risk in case the Pope can't make his monthly payments, so it buys CDS protection from Bank B, wherein it agrees to pay Bank B a premium of $1,000 a month for five years. In return, Bank B agrees to pay Bank A the full million-dollar value of the Pope's mortgage if he defaults. In theory, Bank A is covered if the Pope goes on a meth binge and loses his job.

When Morgan presented their plans for credit swaps to regulators in the late Nineties, they argued that if they bought CDS protection for enough of the investments in their portfolio, they had effectively moved the risk off their books. Therefore, they argued, they should be allowed to lend more, without keeping more cash in reserve. A whole host of regulators — from the Federal Reserve to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency — accepted the argument, and Morgan was allowed to put more money on the street.

What Cassano did was to transform the credit swaps that Morgan popularized into the world's largest bet on the housing boom. In theory, at least, there's nothing wrong with buying a CDS to insure your investments. Investors paid a premium to AIGFP, and in return the company promised to pick up the tab if the mortgage-backed CDOs went bust. But as Cassano went on a selling spree, the deals he made differed from traditional insurance in several significant ways. First, the party selling CDS protection didn't have to post any money upfront. When a $100 corporate bond is sold, for example, someone has to show 100 actual dollars. But when you sell a $100 CDS guarantee, you don't have to show a dime. So Cassano could sell investment banks billions in guarantees without having any single asset to back it up.

Secondly, Cassano was selling so-called "naked" CDS deals. In a "naked" CDS, neither party actually holds the underlying loan. In other words, Bank B not only sells CDS protection to Bank A for its mortgage on the Pope — it turns around and sells protection to Bank C for the very same mortgage. This could go on ad nauseam: You could have Banks D through Z also betting on Bank A's mortgage. Unlike traditional insurance, Cassano was offering investors an opportunity to bet that someone else's house would burn down, or take out a term life policy on the guy with AIDS down the street. It was no different from gambling, the Wall Street version of a bunch of frat brothers betting on Jay Feely to make a field goal. Cassano was taking book for every bank that bet short on the housing market, but he didn't have the cash to pay off if the kick went wide.

In a span of only seven years, Cassano sold some $500 billion worth of CDS protection, with at least $64 billion of that tied to the subprime mortgage market. AIG didn't have even a fraction of that amount of cash on hand to cover its bets, but neither did it expect it would ever need any reserves. So long as defaults on the underlying securities remained a highly unlikely proposition, AIG was essentially collecting huge and steadily climbing premiums by selling insurance for the disaster it thought would never come.

Initially, at least, the revenues were enormous: AIGFP's returns went from $737 million in 1999 to $3.2 billion in 2005. Over the past seven years, the subsidiary's 400 employees were paid a total of $3.5 billion; Cassano himself pocketed at least $280 million in compensation. Everyone made their money — and then it all went to shit.

II. THE REGULATORS

Cassano's outrageous gamble wouldn't have been possible had he not had the good fortune to take over AIGFP just as Sen. Phil Gramm — a grinning, laissez-faire ideologue from Texas — had finished engineering the most dramatic deregulation of the financial industry since Emperor Hien Tsung invented paper money in 806 A.D. For years, Washington had kept a watchful eye on the nation's banks. Ever since the Great Depression, commercial banks — those that kept money on deposit for individuals and businesses — had not been allowed to double as investment banks, which raise money by issuing and selling securities. The Glass-Steagall Act, passed during the Depression, also prevented banks of any kind from getting into the insurance business.

But in the late Nineties, a few years before Cassano took over AIGFP, all that changed. The Democrats, tired of getting slaughtered in the fundraising arena by Republicans, decided to throw off their old reliance on unions and interest groups and become more "business-friendly." Wall Street responded by flooding Washington with money, buying allies in both parties. In the 10-year period beginning in 1998, financial companies spent $1.7 billion on federal campaign contributions and another $3.4 billion on lobbyists. They quickly got what they paid for. In 1999, Gramm co-sponsored a bill that repealed key aspects of the Glass-Steagall Act, smoothing the way for the creation of financial megafirms like Citigroup. The move did away with the built-in protections afforded by smaller banks. In the old days, a local banker knew the people whose loans were on his balance sheet: He wasn't going to give a million-dollar mortgage to a homeless meth addict, since he would have to keep that loan on his books. But a giant merged bank might write that loan and then sell it off to some fool in China, and who cared?

The very next year, Gramm compounded the problem by writing a sweeping new law called the Commodity Futures Modernization Act that made it impossible to regulate credit swaps as either gambling or securities. Commercial banks — which, thanks to Gramm, were now competing directly with investment banks for customers — were driven to buy credit swaps to loosen capital in search of higher yields. "By ruling that credit-default swaps were not gaming and not a security, the way was cleared for the growth of the market," said Eric Dinallo, head of the New York State Insurance Department.

The blanket exemption meant that Joe Cassano could now sell as many CDS contracts as he wanted, building up as huge a position as he wanted, without anyone in government saying a word. "You have to remember, investment banks aren't in the business of making huge directional bets," says the government source involved in the AIG bailout. When investment banks write CDS deals, they hedge them. But insurance companies don't have to hedge. And that's what AIG did. "They just bet massively long on the housing market," says the source. "Billions and billions."

In the biggest joke of all, Cassano's wheeling and dealing was regulated by the Office of Thrift Supervision, an agency that would prove to be defiantly uninterested in keeping watch over his operations. How a behemoth like AIG came to be regulated by the little-known and relatively small OTS is yet another triumph of the deregulatory instinct. Under another law passed in 1999, certain kinds of holding companies could choose the OTS as their regulator, provided they owned one or more thrifts (better known as savings-and-loans). Because the OTS was viewed as more compliant than the Fed or the Securities and Exchange Commission, companies rushed to reclassify themselves as thrifts. In 1999, AIG purchased a thrift in Delaware and managed to get approval for OTS regulation of its entire operation.

Making matters even more hilarious, AIGFP — a London-based subsidiary of an American insurance company — ought to have been regulated by one of Europe's more stringent regulators, like Britain's Financial Services Authority. But the OTS managed to convince the Europeans that it had the muscle to regulate these giant companies. By 2007, the EU had conferred legitimacy to OTS supervision of three mammoth firms — GE, AIG and Ameriprise.

That same year, as the subprime crisis was exploding, the Government Accountability Office criticized the OTS, noting a "disparity between the size of the agency and the diverse firms it oversees." Among other things, the GAO report noted that the entire OTS had only one insurance specialist on staff — and this despite the fact that it was the primary regulator for the world's largest insurer!

"There's this notion that the regulators couldn't do anything to stop AIG," says a government official who was present during the bailout. "That's bullshit. What you have to understand is that these regulators have ultimate power. They can send you a letter and say, 'You don't exist anymore,' and that's basically that. They don't even really need due process. The OTS could have said, 'We're going to pull your charter; we're going to pull your license; we're going to sue you.' And getting sued by your primary regulator is the kiss of death."

When AIG finally blew up, the OTS regulator ostensibly in charge of overseeing the insurance giant — a guy named C.K. Lee — basically admitted that he had blown it. His mistake, Lee said, was that he believed all those credit swaps in Cassano's portfolio were "fairly benign products." Why? Because the company told him so. "The judgment the company was making was that there was no big credit risk," he explained. (Lee now works as Midwest region director of the OTS; the agency declined to make him available for an interview.)

In early March, after the latest bailout of AIG, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner took what seemed to be a thinly veiled shot at the OTS, calling AIG a "huge, complex global insurance company attached to a very complicated investment bank/hedge fund that was allowed to build up without any adult supervision." But even without that "adult supervision," AIG might have been OK had it not been for a complete lack of internal controls. For six months before its meltdown, according to insiders, the company had been searching for a full-time chief financial officer and a chief risk-assessment officer, but never got around to hiring either. That meant that the 18th-largest company in the world had no one checking to make sure its balance sheet was safe and no one keeping track of how much cash and assets the firm had on hand. The situation was so bad that when outside consultants were called in a few weeks before the bailout, senior executives were unable to answer even the most basic questions about their company — like, for instance, how much exposure the firm had to the residential-mortgage market.

III. THE CRASH

Ironically, when reality finally caught up to Cassano, it wasn't because the housing market crapped but because of AIG itself. Before 2005, the company's debt was rated triple-A, meaning he didn't need to post much cash to sell CDS protection: The solid creditworthiness of AIG's name was guarantee enough. But the company's crummy accounting practices eventually caused its credit rating to be downgraded, triggering clauses in the CDS contracts that forced Cassano to post substantially more collateral to back his deals.

By the fall of 2007, it was evident that AIGFP's portfolio had turned poisonous, but like every good Wall Street huckster, Cassano schemed to keep his insane, Earth-swallowing gamble hidden from public view. That August, balls bulging, he announced to investors on a conference call that "it is hard for us, without being flippant, to even see a scenario within any kind of realm of reason that would see us losing $1 in any of those transactions." As he spoke, his CDS portfolio was racking up $352 million in losses. When the growing credit crunch prompted senior AIG executives to re-examine its liabilities, a company accountant named Joseph St. Denis became "gravely concerned" about the CDS deals and their potential for mass destruction. Cassano responded by personally forcing the poor sap out of the firm, telling him he was "deliberately excluded" from the financial review for fear that he might "pollute the process."

The following February, when AIG posted $11.5 billion in annual losses, it announced the resignation of Cassano as head of AIGFP, saying an auditor had found a "material weakness" in the CDS portfolio. But amazingly, the company not only allowed Cassano to keep $34 million in bonuses, it kept him on as a consultant for $1 million a month. In fact, Cassano remained on the payroll and kept collecting his monthly million through the end of September 2008, even after taxpayers had been forced to hand AIG $85 billion to patch up his fuck-ups. When asked in October why the company still retained Cassano at his $1 million-a-month rate despite his role in the probable downfall of Western civilization, CEO Martin Sullivan told Congress with a straight face that AIG wanted to "retain the 20-year knowledge that Mr. Cassano had." (Cassano, who is apparently hiding out in his lavish town house near Harrods in London, could not be reached for comment.)

What sank AIG in the end was another credit downgrade. Cassano had written so many CDS deals that when the company was facing another downgrade to its credit rating last September, from AA to A, it needed to post billions in collateral — not only more cash than it had on its balance sheet but more cash than it could raise even if it sold off every single one of its liquid assets. Even so, management dithered for days, not believing the company was in serious trouble. AIG was a dried-up prune, sapped of any real value, and its top executives didn't even know it.

On the weekend of September 13th, AIG's senior leaders were summoned to the offices of the New York Federal Reserve. Regulators from Dinallo's insurance office were there, as was Geithner, then chief of the New York Fed. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, who spent most of the weekend preoccupied with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, came in and out. Also present, for reasons that would emerge later, was Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs. The only relevant government office that wasn't represented was the regulator that should have been there all along: the OTS.

"We sat down with Paulson, Geithner and Dinallo," says a person present at the negotiations. "I didn't see the OTS even once."

On September 14th, according to another person present, Treasury officials presented Blankfein and other bankers in attendance with an absurd proposal: "They basically asked them to spend a day and check to see if they could raise the money privately." The laughably short time span to complete the mammoth task made the answer a foregone conclusion. At the end of the day, the bankers came back and told the government officials, gee, we checked, but we can't raise that much. And the bailout was on.

A short time later, it came out that AIG was planning to pay some $90 million in deferred compensation to former executives, and to accelerate the payout of $277 million in bonuses to others — a move the company insisted was necessary to "retain key employees." When Congress balked, AIG canceled the $90 million in payments.

Then, in January 2009, the company did it again. After all those years letting Cassano run wild, and after already getting caught paying out insane bonuses while on the public till, AIG decided to pay out another $450 million in bonuses. And to whom? To the 400 or so employees in Cassano's old unit, AIGFP, which is due to go out of business shortly! Yes, that's right, an average of $1.1 million in taxpayer-backed money apiece, to the very people who spent the past decade or so punching a hole in the fabric of the universe!

"We, uh, needed to keep these highly expert people in their seats," AIG spokeswoman Christina Pretto says to me in early February.

"But didn't these 'highly expert people' basically destroy your company?" I ask.

Pretto protests, says this isn't fair. The employees at AIGFP have already taken pay cuts, she says. Not retaining them would dilute the value of the company even further, make it harder to wrap up the unit's operations in an orderly fashion.

The bonuses are a nice comic touch highlighting one of the more outrageous tangents of the bailout age, namely the fact that, even with the planet in flames, some members of the Wall Street class can't even get used to the tragedy of having to fly coach. "These people need their trips to Baja, their spa treatments, their hand jobs," says an official involved in the AIG bailout, a serious look on his face, apparently not even half-kidding. "They don't function well without them."

IV. THE POWER GRAB

So that's the first step in wall street's power grab: making up things like credit-default swaps and collateralized-debt obligations, financial products so complex and inscrutable that ordinary American dumb people — to say nothing of federal regulators and even the CEOs of major corporations like AIG — are too intimidated to even try to understand them. That, combined with wise political investments, enabled the nation's top bankers to effectively scrap any meaningful oversight of the financial industry. In 1997 and 1998, the years leading up to the passage of Phil Gramm's fateful act that gutted Glass-Steagall, the banking, brokerage and insurance industries spent $350 million on political contributions and lobbying. Gramm alone — then the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee — collected $2.6 million in only five years. The law passed 90-8 in the Senate, with the support of 38 Democrats, including some names that might surprise you: Joe Biden, John Kerry, Tom Daschle, Dick Durbin, even John Edwards.

The act helped create the too-big-to-fail financial behemoths like Citigroup, AIG and Bank of America — and in turn helped those companies slowly crush their smaller competitors, leaving the major Wall Street firms with even more money and power to lobby for further deregulatory measures. "We're moving to an oligopolistic situation," Kenneth Guenther, a top executive with the Independent Community Bankers of America, lamented after the Gramm measure was passed.

The situation worsened in 2004, in an extraordinary move toward deregulation that never even got to a vote. At the time, the European Union was threatening to more strictly regulate the foreign operations of America's big investment banks if the U.S. didn't strengthen its own oversight. So the top five investment banks got together on April 28th of that year and — with the helpful assistance of then-Goldman Sachs chief and future Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson — made a pitch to George Bush's SEC chief at the time, William Donaldson, himself a former investment banker. The banks generously volunteered to submit to new rules restricting them from engaging in excessively risky activity. In exchange, they asked to be released from any lending restrictions. The discussion about the new rules lasted just 55 minutes, and there was not a single representative of a major media outlet there to record the fateful decision.

Donaldson OK'd the proposal, and the new rules were enough to get the EU to drop its threat to regulate the five firms. The only catch was, neither Donaldson nor his successor, Christopher Cox, actually did any regulating of the banks. They named a commission of seven people to oversee the five companies, whose combined assets came to total more than $4 trillion. But in the last year and a half of Cox's tenure, the group had no director and did not complete a single inspection. Great deal for the banks, which originally complained about being regulated by both Europe and the SEC, and ended up being regulated by no one.

Once the capital requirements were gone, those top five banks went hog-wild, jumping ass-first into the then-raging housing bubble. One of those was Bear Stearns, which used its freedom to drown itself in bad mortgage loans. In the short period between the 2004 change and Bear's collapse, the firm's debt-to-equity ratio soared from 12-1 to an insane 33-1. Another culprit was Goldman Sachs, which also had the good fortune, around then, to see its CEO, a bald-headed Frankensteinian goon named Hank Paulson (who received an estimated $200 million tax deferral by joining the government), ascend to Treasury secretary.

Freed from all capital restraints, sitting pretty with its man running the Treasury, Goldman jumped into the housing craze just like everyone else on Wall Street. Although it famously scored an $11 billion coup in 2007 when one of its trading units smartly shorted the housing market, the move didn't tell the whole story. In truth, Goldman still had a huge exposure come that fateful summer of 2008 — to none other than Joe Cassano.

Goldman Sachs, it turns out, was Cassano's biggest customer, with $20 billion of exposure in Cassano's CDS book. Which might explain why Goldman chief Lloyd Blankfein was in the room with ex-Goldmanite Hank Paulson that weekend of September 13th, when the federal government was supposedly bailing out AIG.

When asked why Blankfein was there, one of the government officials who was in the meeting shrugs. "One might say that it's because Goldman had so much exposure to AIGFP's portfolio," he says. "You'll never prove that, but one might suppose."

Market analyst Eric Salzman is more blunt. "If AIG went down," he says, "there was a good chance Goldman would not be able to collect." The AIG bailout, in effect, was Goldman bailing out Goldman.

Eventually, Paulson went a step further, elevating another ex-Goldmanite named Edward Liddy to run AIG — a company whose bailout money would be coming, in part, from the newly created TARP program, administered by another Goldman banker named Neel Kashkari.

V. REPO MEN

There are plenty of people who have noticed, in recent years, that when they lost their homes to foreclosure or were forced into bankruptcy because of crippling credit-card debt, no one in the government was there to rescue them. But when Goldman Sachs — a company whose average employee still made more than $350,000 last year, even in the midst of a depression — was suddenly faced with the possibility of losing money on the unregulated insurance deals it bought for its insane housing bets, the government was there in an instant to patch the hole. That's the essence of the bailout: rich bankers bailing out rich bankers, using the taxpayers' credit card.

The people who have spent their lives cloistered in this Wall Street community aren't much for sharing information with the great unwashed. Because all of this shit is complicated, because most of us mortals don't know what the hell LIBOR is or how a REIT works or how to use the word "zero coupon bond" in a sentence without sounding stupid — well, then, the people who do speak this idiotic language cannot under any circumstances be bothered to explain it to us and instead spend a lot of time rolling their eyes and asking us to trust them.

That roll of the eyes is a key part of the psychology of Paulsonism. The state is now being asked not just to call off its regulators or give tax breaks or funnel a few contracts to connected companies; it is intervening directly in the economy, for the sole purpose of preserving the influence of the megafirms. In essence, Paulson used the bailout to transform the government into a giant bureaucracy of entitled assholedom, one that would socialize "toxic" risks but keep both the profits and the management of the bailed-out firms in private hands. Moreover, this whole process would be done in secret, away from the prying eyes of NASCAR dads, broke-ass liberals who read translations of French novels, subprime mortgage holders and other such financial losers.

Some aspects of the bailout were secretive to the point of absurdity. In fact, if you look closely at just a few lines in the Federal Reserve's weekly public disclosures, you can literally see the moment where a big chunk of your money disappeared for good. The H4 report (called "Factors Affecting Reserve Balances") summarizes the activities of the Fed each week. You can find it online, and it's pretty much the only thing the Fed ever tells the world about what it does. For the week ending February 18th, the number under the heading "Repurchase Agreements" on the table is zero. It's a significant number.

Why? In the pre-crisis days, the Fed used to manage the money supply by periodically buying and selling securities on the open market through so-called Repurchase Agreements, or Repos. The Fed would typically dump $25 billion or so in cash onto the market every week, buying up Treasury bills, U.S. securities and even mortgage-backed securities from institutions like Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan, who would then "repurchase" them in a short period of time, usually one to seven days. This was the Fed's primary mechanism for controlling interest rates: Buying up securities gives banks more money to lend, which makes interest rates go down. Selling the securities back to the banks reduces the money available for lending, which makes interest rates go up.

If you look at the weekly H4 reports going back to the summer of 2007, you start to notice something alarming. At the start of the credit crunch, around August of that year, you see the Fed buying a few more Repos than usual — $33 billion or so. By November, as private-bank reserves were dwindling to alarmingly low levels, the Fed started injecting even more cash than usual into the economy: $48 billion. By late December, the number was up to $58 billion; by the following March, around the time of the Bear Stearns rescue, the Repo number had jumped to $77 billion. In the week of May 1st, 2008, the number was $115 billion — "out of control now," according to one congressional aide. For the rest of 2008, the numbers remained similarly in the stratosphere, the Fed pumping as much as $125 billion of these short-term loans into the economy — until suddenly, at the start of this year, the number drops to nothing. Zero.

The reason the number has dropped to nothing is that the Fed had simply stopped using relatively transparent devices like repurchase agreements to pump its money into the hands of private companies. By early 2009, a whole series of new government operations had been invented to inject cash into the economy, most all of them completely secretive and with names you've never heard of. There is the Term Auction Facility, the Term Securities Lending Facility, the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, the Commercial Paper Funding Facility and a monster called the Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (boasting the chat-room horror-show acronym ABCPMMMFLF). For good measure, there's also something called a Money Market Investor Funding Facility, plus three facilities called Maiden Lane I, II and III to aid bailout recipients like Bear Stearns and AIG.

While the rest of America, and most of Congress, have been bugging out about the $700 billion bailout program called TARP, all of these newly created organisms in the Federal Reserve zoo have quietly been pumping not billions but trillions of dollars into the hands of private companies (at least $3 trillion so far in loans, with as much as $5.7 trillion more in guarantees of private investments). Although this technically isn't taxpayer money, it still affects taxpayers directly, because the activities of the Fed impact the economy as a whole. And this new, secretive activity by the Fed completely eclipses the TARP program in terms of its influence on the economy.

No one knows who's getting that money or exactly how much of it is disappearing through these new holes in the hull of America's credit rating. Moreover, no one can really be sure if these new institutions are even temporary at all — or whether they are being set up as permanent, state-aided crutches to Wall Street, designed to systematically suck bad investments off the ledgers of irresponsible lenders.

"They're supposed to be temporary," says Paul-Martin Foss, an aide to Rep. Ron Paul. "But we keep getting notices every six months or so that they're being renewed. They just sort of quietly announce it."

None other than disgraced senator Ted Stevens was the poor sap who made the unpleasant discovery that if Congress didn't like the Fed handing trillions of dollars to banks without any oversight, Congress could apparently go fuck itself — or so said the law. When Stevens asked the GAO about what authority Congress has to monitor the Fed, he got back a letter citing an obscure statute that nobody had ever heard of before: the Accounting and Auditing Act of 1950. The relevant section, 31 USC 714(b), dictated that congressional audits of the Federal Reserve may not include "deliberations, decisions and actions on monetary policy matters." The exemption, as Foss notes, "basically includes everything." According to the law, in other words, the Fed simply cannot be audited by Congress. Or by anyone else, for that matter.

VI. WINNERS AND LOSERS

Stevens isn't the only person in Congress to be given the finger by the Fed. In January, when Rep. Alan Grayson of Florida asked Federal Reserve vice chairman Donald Kohn where all the money went — only $1.2 trillion had vanished by then — Kohn gave Grayson a classic eye roll, saying he would be "very hesitant" to name names because it might discourage banks from taking the money.

"Has that ever happened?" Grayson asked. "Have people ever said, 'We will not take your $100 billion because people will find out about it?'"

"Well, we said we would not publish the names of the borrowers, so we have no test of that," Kohn answered, visibly annoyed with Grayson's meddling.

Grayson pressed on, demanding to know on what terms the Fed was lending the money. Presumably it was buying assets and making loans, but no one knew how it was pricing those assets — in other words, no one knew what kind of deal it was striking on behalf of taxpayers. So when Grayson asked if the purchased assets were "marked to market" — a methodology that assigns a concrete value to assets, based on the market rate on the day they are traded — Kohn answered, mysteriously, "The ones that have market values are marked to market." The implication was that the Fed was purchasing derivatives like credit swaps or other instruments that were basically impossible to value objectively — paying real money for God knows what.

"Well, how much of them don't have market values?" asked Grayson. "How much of them are worthless?"

"None are worthless," Kohn snapped.

"Then why don't you mark them to market?" Grayson demanded.

"Well," Kohn sighed, "we are marking the ones to market that have market values."

In essence, the Fed was telling Congress to lay off and let the experts handle things. "It's like buying a car in a used-car lot without opening the hood, and saying, 'I think it's fine,'" says Dan Fuss, an analyst with the investment firm Loomis Sayles. "The salesman says, 'Don't worry about it. Trust me.' It'll probably get us out of the lot, but how much farther? None of us knows."

When one considers the comparatively extensive system of congressional checks and balances that goes into the spending of every dollar in the budget via the normal appropriations process, what's happening in the Fed amounts to something truly revolutionary — a kind of shadow government with a budget many times the size of the normal federal outlay, administered dictatorially by one man, Fed chairman Ben Bernanke. "We spend hours and hours and hours arguing over $10 million amendments on the floor of the Senate, but there has been no discussion about who has been receiving this $3 trillion," says Sen. Bernie Sanders. "It is beyond comprehension."

Count Sanders among those who don't buy the argument that Wall Street firms shouldn't have to face being outed as recipients of public funds, that making this information public might cause investors to panic and dump their holdings in these firms. "I guess if we made that public, they'd go on strike or something," he muses.

And the Fed isn't the only arm of the bailout that has closed ranks. The Treasury, too, has maintained incredible secrecy surrounding its implementation even of the TARP program, which was mandated by Congress. To this date, no one knows exactly what criteria the Treasury Department used to determine which banks received bailout funds and which didn't — particularly the first $350 billion given out under Bush appointee Hank Paulson.

The situation with the first TARP payments grew so absurd that when the Congressional Oversight Panel, charged with monitoring the bailout money, sent a query to Paulson asking how he decided whom to give money to, Treasury responded — and this isn't a joke — by directing the panel to a copy of the TARP application form on its website. Elizabeth Warren, the chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel, was struck nearly speechless by the response.

"Do you believe that?" she says incredulously. "That's not what we had in mind."

Another member of Congress, who asked not to be named, offers his own theory about the TARP process. "I think basically if you knew Hank Paulson, you got the money," he says.

This cozy arrangement created yet another opportunity for big banks to devour market share at the expense of smaller regional lenders. While all the bigwigs at Citi and Goldman and Bank of America who had Paulson on speed-dial got bailed out right away — remember that TARP was originally passed because money had to be lent right now, that day, that minute, to stave off emergency — many small banks are still waiting for help. Five months into the TARP program, some not only haven't received any funds, they haven't even gotten a call back about their applications.

"There's definitely a feeling among community bankers that no one up there cares much if they make it or not," says Tanya Wheeless, president of the Arizona Bankers Association.

Which, of course, is exactly the opposite of what should be happening, since small, regional banks are far less guilty of the kinds of predatory lending that sank the economy. "They're not giving out subprime loans or easy credit," says Wheeless. "At the community level, it's much more bread-and-butter banking."

Nonetheless, the lion's share of the bailout money has gone to the larger, so-called "systemically important" banks. "It's like Treasury is picking winners and losers," says one state banking official who asked not to be identified.

This itself is a hugely important political development. In essence, the bailout accelerated the decline of regional community lenders by boosting the political power of their giant national competitors.

Which, when you think about it, is insane: What had brought us to the brink of collapse in the first place was this relentless instinct for building ever-larger megacompanies, passing deregulatory measures to gradually feed all the little fish in the sea to an ever-shrinking pool of Bigger Fish. To fix this problem, the government should have slowly liquidated these monster, too-big-to-fail firms and broken them down to smaller, more manageable companies. Instead, federal regulators closed ranks and used an almost completely secret bailout process to double down on the same faulty, merger-happy thinking that got us here in the first place, creating a constellation of megafirms under government control that are even bigger, more unwieldy and more crammed to the gills with systemic risk.

In essence, Paulson and his cronies turned the federal government into one gigantic, half-opaque holding company, one whose balance sheet includes the world's most appallingly large and risky hedge fund, a controlling stake in a dying insurance giant, huge investments in a group of teetering megabanks, and shares here and there in various auto-finance companies, student loans, and other failing businesses. Like AIG, this new federal holding company is a firm that has no mechanism for auditing itself and is run by leaders who have very little grasp of the daily operations of its disparate subsidiary operations.

In other words, it's AIG's rip-roaringly shitty business model writ almost inconceivably massive — to echo Geithner, a huge, complex global company attached to a very complicated investment bank/hedge fund that's been allowed to build up without adult supervision. How much of what kinds of crap is actually on our balance sheet, and what did we pay for it? When exactly will the rent come due, when will the money run out? Does anyone know what the hell is going on? And on the linear spectrum of capitalism to socialism, where exactly are we now? Is there a dictionary word that even describes what we are now? It would be funny, if it weren't such a nightmare.

VII. YOU DON'T GET IT

The real question from here is whether the Obama administration is going to move to bring the financial system back to a place where sanity is restored and the general public can have a say in things or whether the new financial bureaucracy will remain obscure, secretive and hopelessly complex. It might not bode well that Geithner, Obama's Treasury secretary, is one of the architects of the Paulson bailouts; as chief of the New York Fed, he helped orchestrate the Goldman-friendly AIG bailout and the secretive Maiden Lane facilities used to funnel funds to the dying company. Neither did it look good when Geithner — himself a protรฉgรฉ of notorious Goldman alum John Thain, the Merrill Lynch chief who paid out billions in bonuses after the state spent billions bailing out his firm — picked a former Goldman lobbyist named Mark Patterson to be his top aide.

In fact, most of Geithner's early moves reek strongly of Paulsonism. He has continually talked about partnering with private investors to create a so-called "bad bank" that would systemically relieve private lenders of bad assets — the kind of massive, opaque, quasi-private bureaucratic nightmare that Paulson specialized in. Geithner even refloated a Paulson proposal to use TALF, one of the Fed's new facilities, to essentially lend cheap money to hedge funds to invest in troubled banks while practically guaranteeing them enormous profits.

God knows exactly what this does for the taxpayer, but hedge-fund managers sure love the idea. "This is exactly what the financial system needs," said Andrew Feldstein, CEO of Blue Mountain Capital and one of the Morgan Mafia. Strangely, there aren't many people who don't run hedge funds who have expressed anything like that kind of enthusiasm for Geithner's ideas.

As complex as all the finances are, the politics aren't hard to follow. By creating an urgent crisis that can only be solved by those fluent in a language too complex for ordinary people to understand, the Wall Street crowd has turned the vast majority of Americans into non-participants in their own political future. There is a reason it used to be a crime in the Confederate states to teach a slave to read: Literacy is power. In the age of the CDS and CDO, most of us are financial illiterates. By making an already too-complex economy even more complex, Wall Street has used the crisis to effect a historic, revolutionary change in our political system — transforming a democracy into a two-tiered state, one with plugged-in financial bureaucrats above and clueless customers below.

The most galling thing about this financial crisis is that so many Wall Street types think they actually deserve not only their huge bonuses and lavish lifestyles but the awesome political power their own mistakes have left them in possession of. When challenged, they 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.

"But wait a minute," you say to them. "No one ever asked you to stay up all night eight days a week trying to get filthy rich shorting what's left of the American auto industry or selling $600 billion in toxic, irredeemable mortgages to ex-strippers on work release and Taco Bell clerks. Actually, come to think of it, why are we even giving taxpayer money to you people? Why are we not throwing your ass in jail instead?"

But before you even finish saying that, they're rolling their eyes, because You Don't Get It. These people were never about anything except turning money into money, in order to get more money; valueswise they're on par with crack addicts, or obsessive sexual deviants who burgle homes to steal panties. Yet these are the people in whose hands our entire political future now rests.

Good luck with that, America. And enjoy tax season.

Top Geithner Aide Fought CEO Pay Reform from AfterDowningStreet.org


Top Geithner Aide Fought CEO Pay Reform
By David Corn and Jonathan Stein | Mother Jones

As a Goldman Sachs lobbyist, Mark Patterson once worked against a bill to curb executive compensation. The legislation's sponsor: Barack Obama.

On Wednesday afternoon, as President Barack Obama was leaving the White House for a town hall meeting in California, he spoke for 15 minutes to reporters about the AIG controversy. Responding to the rising rage over the $165 million or so in bonuses paid to executives at the bailed-out insurance firm, Obama noted that he was quickly developing policies to prevent future AIG-like catastrophes. And he slammed Wall Street's culture of "excess greed, excess compensation, excess risk taking." To demonstrate that he's committed to battling such greed, the president cited his work in the Senate to rein in executive compensation. Noting that he and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) had each introduced legislation on this front in 2007, Obama declared that "there were some people who attacked us, saying government has no business doing that."

REST http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/40946

Forget the Bonuses: AIG Can't Repay Its Loans, GAO says from AfterDowningStreet.org


Forget the bonuses: AIG can't repay its loans, GAO says
By Kevin G. Hall | McClatchy Newspapers

Lost in all the shouting over the $165 million in bonuses paid to executives of disgraced insurer American International Group was this sober message delivered to Congress on Wednesday by a government watchdog: AIG's ability repay its $170 billion in loans from taxpayers has eroded significantly.

Testifying before Congress, Orice Williams, the director of the Government Accountability Office's financial markets division, said that AIG has had only limited success in restructuring itself, despite more than $170 billion in federal aid in four separate bailouts since last September.

REST http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/40947

As Dodd Takes Heat, Republicans Smell Blood from The Washington Independent


Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) (WDCpix)

Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) (WDCpix)

For Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), it's been a difficult week.

As the wrath over AIG bonuses has swept across the country and overtaken Washington, the Senate Banking Committee chairman has borne much of the blame for softening a law to allow those payments to be made. The episode has evoked questions about Dodd's credibility, raised eyebrows about his industry ties, and left Republicans drooling over the possibility that his once-untouchable Senate seat might be up for grabs in 2010.

Illustration by: Matt Mahurin

Illustration by: Matt Mahurin

There's just one problem: It wasn't Dodd who engendered the AIG loophole.

Instead, White House economic officials swooped into congressional negotiations last month insisting that Dodd alter his own executive compensation proposal, passed by the Senate as part of the $787 billion stimulus package, so as not to restrict existing bonus contracts — the very type that ignited a firestorm this week when AIG began paying them out.

After implying earlier this week that he wasn't behind the changes, Dodd clarified his statement Wednesday, saying that he agreed to the White House modifications out of fear that the entire provision would be stripped out otherwise. That he's been blamed for empowering AIG's bonuses when his original proposal would have prevented them is just one of the absurdities to arise from the country's five-day obsession with AIG-gate.

REST http://washingtonindependent.com/35140/republicans-smell-blood-amid-dodd-scapegoating

MORE THAN 20 TYPES OF WAR CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN ASCRIBED TO /EX-PRESIDENT BUSH IN IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN from AfterDowningStreet.org


By Sherwood Ross

Torture has received the most attention among the many war crimes of the Bush administration. But those who support Bush's pursuit of the "war on terror" have not been impressed by recriminations over torture. Worse than torture are the murders of at least 50 prisoners in Abu Ghraib, Afghanistan, and Guantรกnamo, but again the hard-hearted are unimpressed when those whom they perceive as terrorists receive illegal extrajudicial capital punishment.

The case for abusing children, however, is more difficult to support. The best kept secret of the Bush's war crimes is that thousands of children have been imprisoned, tortured, and otherwise denied rights under the Geneva Conventions and related international agreements. Yet both Congress and the media have strangely failed to identify the very existence of child prisoners as a war crime. In the Islamic world, however, there is no such silence. Indeed, the prophet Mohammed was the first to counsel warriors not to harm innocent children.

From jailing children together with adults in prisons where they were raped to failing to notify their parents of their arrest, the U.S. committed numerous war crimes against children in Afghanistan and Iraq, a new book on President Bush states.

"American guards videotaped Iraqi male prisoners raping young boys but took no action to stop the offenses (and) children in Abu Ghraib were deliberately frightened by dogs," writes political scientist Michael Haas in his new book, "George W. Bush, War Criminal?"(Praeger), a question he answers in the affirmative.

"In most cases, weeks or even years elapsed before parents were informed of the imprisonment of their children," says Haas, noting that in Afghanistan alone during 2002 "at least 800 boys, aged 10 to 15 were captured", 64 of whom were sent to Guantanamo, Cuba, where some were flung into solitary confinement. Haas notes that Protocol 1 of the 1977 Geneva Convention states "No Party to the conflict shall arrange for the evacuation of children, other than its own nationals, to a foreign country" unless written consent of the parents is obtained.

REST http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/40949


David Shuster's Hypocrisy Watch: Michelle Bachmann's Earmarks from Crooks and Liars


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David Shuster calls out Michelle Bachmann for her double talk on earmarks. After claiming that she requested zero earmarks for her state Bachmann now admits she requested millions of dollars in earmarks, but now says she took them but it's not a big deal:

Bachmann: Well, the average earmark I think for the state of Minnesota for the members of Congress is somewhere around 70,000– $70 million, so mine is very, very small on that level and that's in the first two years that was in. After I saw the way that the process worked, after being a freshman, I saw how corrupt it was and took an earmark pledge and that's why I personally have no earmarks in the current budget bill and the stimulus bill that was passed this year.

REST http://videocafe.crooksandliars.com/heather/david-shusters-hypocrisy-watch-michelle-bachmann

Embedded In Wall Street from Open Left

Jbearlaw in quick hits points to an article by David Corn and Jonathan Stein at Mother Jones as "More Evidence Geithner in Wall Street's Pocket", but I don't quite think that's the right metaphor.  Nor is Geithner necessarily the one to focus on.  Rather, I come away from the article feeling, more than ever, that the entire Obama Administration is embedded in Wall Street.

It's not a question of doing Wall Street's bidding, because they won't, necessarily.  Rather, it's a question of thinking Wall Street's thoughts, of having absorbed them by osmosis for so long, and through so many channels that even when they seek to oppose Wall Street on some issue or another, the form it takes is virtually indistinguishable from agreement to anyone who's not an insider themselves.  But let me run it down on the flip, and see what you think for yourselves.
The story concerns Geithner's Chief of Staff, Mark Patterson, and the setup for the story reads:

As a Goldman Sachs lobbyist, Mark Patterson once worked against a bill to curb executive compensation. The legislation's sponsor: Barack Obama.

But the reality is, the bill Obama sponsored wouldn't have curbed executive compensation.  All it would have done was give shareholders the chance to hold an advisory vote saying if they thought a CEO was getting paid too much.  In short, it was a bill to create the possibility for occasional minor embarrassment.  It was a perfect example of the aggressive toothlessness touted by Cass Sunstein, of Nudge fame.  Not that we can blame him for this one, as it started in the House, before Obama took it up in the Senate:

n 2007, Frank, the chairman of the House financial services committee, introduced H.R. 1257, the Shareholder Vote on Executive Compensation Act. The bill required public companies to allow shareholders to hold nonbinding votes on executive compensation plans. The measure-dubbed "say on pay"-was a modest step, though only one of the few attempts then to address exorbitant salaries. It did not limit pay for corporate managers; the legislation would merely permit shareholders to express their displeasure with compensation packages. Corporations would be free to ignore the outcomes of these symbolic votes. Still, the banking industry opposed the bill. And Goldman Sachs, for which Patterson was a registered lobbyist from September 2005 to April 2008, was no fan of "say on pay." Sachs' chief executive, Lloyd Blankfein, who took home at least $70 million in 2007, has argued that shareholders are "less sophisticated and have less understanding" of compensation issues than corporate board members.

REST http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=12374

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Unionbusting Firms Profiting from Corporate America's Fear of Workers' Rights


FROM http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131120/unionbusting_firms_profiting_from_corporate_america%27s_fear_of_workers%27_rights/

By Art Levine, Huffington Post
Posted on March 12, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131120/

As political wars broke out yesterday over union rights, at a hearing before the Senate health and labor committee, economic experts were joined by union members -- an electrical line repair woman from Alaska and others -- who explained the benefits of joining a union as a gateway to the middle class. The battle over the Employee Free Choice Act introduced yesterday, however, is also proving to be a full-employment project not just for lobbyists and flacks, but "union avoidance" firms such as Jackson-Lewis that are marketing "Employee Free Choice Act Defense Kits" for nearly $5,000 a set, if you act now. Jackson Lewis asks:

Is your company at risk for a union organizing attempt? Is everyone, at every level of your company, aware of the tactics unions are using today to gain new members? EFCA calls for revolutionary changes to labor law, changes that would allow them to organize your entire workforce by simply getting 50% +1 employee to sign a "union authorization" card. That means 100% of your employees could become union members without ever having been asked to voice their opinion on that representation ... representation that would obligate every employee to pay dues, that would obligate you to bargain on wages, benefits and working conditions, and could make your company liable to substantial fines for any infraction of the law. [Editor's note: Not really. Labor laws are virtually unenforced.] Introducing the EFCA Defense Kit: The Ultimate Union-Free Solution ...With the anticipated shifts in the political climate, its imperative that every company begin educating employees at all levels in order to protect those employees' rights. Companies that are caught unaware of the card check provisions in this law could find themselves facing a unionized workforce that never had the chance to hear the potential downside of union membership. A vital, time-limited offer The EFCA Defense Kit is worth every penny and more. In fact, many companies who understand the cost of a union organizing drive, or worse yet, unionization, consider the cost of this kit nominal for the powerful information it delivers. The kit contains 6 DVDs that educate upper management, supervisors and mid-level managers, existing employees and new employees. What's more, it offers ongoing communication that will help your company stay union-free for years to come - all through great communication tools and positive employee relations.

The alarmist instructional materials join the newly updated Jackson Lewis's fear-inducing seminars (like the one I reported on undercover for In These Times) that come sporting rave views from some leading American companies. The firm's latest brochure for "How to Stay Union Free" asks a panicked corporate America: "Is your organization fully prepared for the new NLRB, the new EFCA Law and the new Union Organizing Tactics?" The law firm warns in bold red:

*The union organizing threat is greater than ever before. *In these turbulent times the stakes are higher. *No organization is safe from the risk.

Is this describing the spread of a lethal smallpox virus or the right of workers to organize? Employers are naturally grateful for learning how to engage in various tactics that are generally perfectly legal if they avoid direct threats: These include one-on-one "sweat sessions" that essentially intimidate workers about joining a union, and captive audience meetings with groups of workers to warn how unionization could deplete their paychecks and possibly lead the company to shut down -- all, they argue, worsened by the dreaded Employee Free Choice Act. No wonder corporate executives offer high praise for the training they get:

"We all know you can never "over communicate" with employees, but "how" you communicate is just as important as "what" you communicate. Thanks to your efforts, we were able to communicate a difficult message in and engaging and effective way." Director, Global Labor and Employee Relations, Honeywell

And an official with the nursing home chain Golden Living is equally pleased with the advice it receives from Jackson Lewis. No matter that Golden Living has been investigated both by the federal government in a whistleblower complaint about alleged medical equipment Medicare fraud and as part of a still-pending wrongful death suit, both still-unproven allegations that have been firmly denied by the company. Even so, it took time out from its legal schedule and anti-union efforts to praise Jackson Lewis's strategic insights:

"I have been involved with training programs for associates on matters including union avoidance and unlawful harassment. It has been my opinion for many years that you put out the best videos on the subject of union avoidance." General Counsel, Labor and Employment Law, Golden Living

In contrast to the unionbusters and their corporate clients, workers and their allies see the benefit of unions for not only their own standard of living but the broader economy. At the hearing yesterday, Deborah Kelly explained how the Electrical Workers union (IBEW) she joined gave her the training needed to do dangerous electrical line repair work and then enabled her to get treatment for her thyroid cancer that she's since recovered from: "I know I'm never alone--my union provides a safety net and helps me ensure I have equal opportunity employment," she said. And Sharon Harrison, a Communications Workers of America member and call center employee in rural Virginia for ATT Mobility, saw an immediate difference after her then-non-union company, Cingular, merged with AT&T, which agreed to majority sign-up (labeled "card check" by opponents):

Because of that agreement, we weren't afraid anymore that management would retaliate against us for trying to form a union. When more than a majority of workers signed up for representation, all of us at AT&T Mobility were better for it. For workers, we were able to get better pay and benefits, lower health care costs, a grievance procedure and more opportunities. We know we're providing quality service and we know AT&T respects us. It's good for our employer, too. We're in a real partnership.

Even so, the introduction of the Employee Free Choice act by Rep. George Miller (D-CA) and Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA), who chaired the Senate hearings, was the trigger for a new round of vicious attacks by business groups who are suddenly posing as champions of workers by repeating the myth that the bill takes away the secret ballot. (In fact, it doesn't change the right of workers to ask for a secret ballot election, but offers them the option of seeking majority sign-up through authorizing cards if they want to avoid the intimidation and corporate terror tactics unleashed before the current NLRB "secret ballot" voting sham; currently that decision to opt for majority sign-up is now granted to employers only.) Not surprisingly, the business lobbies' new campaign of supposedly standing up for workers' rights comes after opposing for decades everything from the minimum wage to health and safety regulations to government-aided health insurance for kids, SCHIP. How has their approach of lower taxes for the wealthy and big businesses, deregulation and unionbusting worked out? It fueled massive income inequality, stagnant real wages and our current economic debacle. Stephen Lerner of the SEIU exploded this big business hypocrisy on Chris Matthews' Hardball show last evening:  The truth about the bill and the secret ballot myth was aptly summarized by Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley when co-sponsoring the bill:

"When workers are able to band together to improve their workplaces and wages, we strengthen the middle class. During this time of economic downturn, it is more important than ever that workers have the opportunity to earn a good wage and provide for their families," said Merkley. "The Employee Free Choice Act is a critical component of this effort." Currently, federal law allows employers to choose whether workers use a petition or election process to decide whether to form a union. The Employee Free Choice Act would allow the workers themselves to decide whether and how to organize, so they have a free and fair opportunity to make that decision. "Whether forming a union is in workers' best interests is a decision that should be made by workers, not management," said Merkley.

But despite all that, conservative Republicans and business groups are continuing their non-stop assault on workers rights and the Employee Free Choice Act in apocalyptic tones. At the hearing yesterday, the ranking Republican on the Senate employment subcommittee, Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-GA) proclaimed:

"Support for this legislation is based on the fear that, if left to their own devices in the privacy of a voting booth, some American workers might choose not to join a union. This legislation creates a situation of worker intimidation and prohibits the ability of management and labor to work together in an increasingly dynamic economy."

And in an email to legislators, the National Association of Manufacturers, host of the blog, Shopfloor, contended that it would wreck the economy and rob workers of rights. They peddled those claims although the proposed bill just amends current law to allow workers to choose majority sign-up and there is overwhelming evidence that unionization boosts incomes and standards of living. The group, whose members include companies and trade groups from the American Petroleum Institute to Xerox, provided its latest spin:

"Our manufacturing economy faces many challenges ahead. As Congress considers legislation to address these concerns, we urge you to oppose proposals that will further hinder manufacturers' economic competitiveness and our ability to create jobs. The recently introduced Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA H.R. 1409/S.560) is one of the most direct threats to economic growth and job retention and creation...While pro-EFCA ads attempt to blur this issue, the evidence is clear - the bill eliminates the secret ballot for union certification."

"Lying helps," as SEIU president Andy Stern explained on the Rachel Maddow show Monday night. But a new grass-roots campaign on behalf of the bill has spurred renewed confidence in passage of the bill. Despite some wavering now by moderate Democrats, union activists still see the likelihood that, as one AFL-CIO strategist puts it, "This thing will pass." When Al Franken is seated, they're confident they can get the 60 votes for cloture -- and that will enable the bill to pass with a majority of votes, even if a few Democrats then defect to placate business interests, but they're still counting on retaining all 60 votes. Increasingly, the key business organizations that are spewing misleading information about the legislation are being targeted by the union movement. The day before the bill was introduced, SEIU organized a rally outside the offices of the Chamber of Commerce. The business organization and its allied trade groups spent nearly $140 million on lobbying last year, much of it targeting legislation and tougher regulations that could possibly benefit workers. They, in turn, support a unionbusting network of consultants and lawyers advising corpoprations that brings in, by some estimates, nearly $4 billion a year. Such unionbusting firms are seizing on the opportunity to capitalize on misinformation and business fear over the proposed legislation: To fight back, it's not surprising, then, that a broad array of progressive, consumer, and religious groups are supporting the legislation and gearing up for a grass-roots campaign to overcome Big Business's money-fueled lobbying and PR blitz. As Robert Borosage of The Campaign for America's Future summed up:

The Employee Free Choice Act will help restore the right of workers to organize in this country. Over the last decades, that basic right has been shredded, as companies waged open warfare on union organizing, and administrations often failed to enforce the laws protecting that right. But the Employee Free Choice Act isn't just about worker rights. It's about whether we can return to an economy with a broad middle class....It will be a critical building block of the new economy that we must construct from the ashes of the old.

© 2009 Huffington Post All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131120/

Even More than Race, the South Is About Exploiting Workers


FROM http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131359/even_more_than_race%2C_the_south_is_about_exploiting_workers/

By Joseph B. Atkins, Progressive Populist
Posted on March 13, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131359/

Cheap labor. Even more than race, it's the thread that connects all of Southern history—from the ante-bellum South of John C. Calhoun and Jefferson Davis to Tennessee's Bob Corker, Alabama's Richard Shelby and the other anti-union Southerners in today's U.S. Senate.

It's at the epicenter of a sad class divide between a desperate, poorly educated workforce and a demagogic oligarchy, and it has been a demarcation line stronger than the Mason-Dixon in separating the region from the rest of the nation.

The recent spectacle of Corker, Shelby and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky leading the GOP attack on the proposed $14 billion loan to the domestic auto industry—with 11 other Southern senators marching dutifully behind—made it crystal clear. The heart of Southern conservatism is the preservation of a status quo that serves elite interests.

Expect these same senators and their colleagues in the US House to wage a similar war in the coming months against the proposed Employee Free Choice Act authorizing so-called "card check" union elections nationwide.

"Dinosaurs," Shelby of Alabama called General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler as he maneuvered to bolster the nonunion Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai and other foreign-owned plants in his home state by sabotaging as many as three million jobs nationwide.

Corker, a multi-millionaire who won his seat in a mud-slinging, race-tinged election in 2006, was fairly transparent in his goal to expunge what he considers the real evil in the Big Three and US industry in general: unions. When the concession-weary United Auto Workers balked at GOP demands for a near-immediate reduction in worker wages and benefits, Corker urged President Bush to force-feed wage cuts to UAW workers in any White House-sponsored bailout.

If Shelby, Corker, and McConnell figured they were helping the Japanese, German and Korean-owned plants in their home states, they were seriously misguided. The failure of the domestic auto industry would inflict a deep wound on the same supplier-dealer network that the foreign plants use. The already existing woes of the foreign-owned industry were clearly demonstrated in December when Toyota announced its decision to put on indefinite hold the opening of its $1.3 billion plant near Blue Springs in northeast Mississippi.

The Southern Republicans are full of contradictions. Downright hypocrisy might be a better description. Shelby staunchly opposes universal health care—a major factor in the Big Three's financial troubles since they operate company plans—yet the foreign automakers he defends benefit greatly from the government-run health care programs in their countries.

These same senators gave their blessing to hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies to the foreign automakers to open plants in their states, yet they were willing to let the US auto industry fall into bankruptcy.

In their zeal to destroy unions and their hard-fought wage-and-benefits packages, the Southern senators could not care less that workers in their home states are among the lowest paid in the nation. Ever wonder why the South remains the nation's poorest region despite generations of seniority-laden senators and representatives in Congress?

Why weren't these same senators protesting the high salaries in the financial sector when the Congress approved the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street? Why pick on blue-collar workers at the Big Three who last year agreed to huge concessions expected to save the companies an estimated $4 billion a year by 2010? These concessions have already helped lower union wages to non-union levels at some auto plants.

The idea of working people joining together to have a united voice across the table from management scares most Southern politicians to death. After all, they go to the same country clubs as management. When Mississippi Republican Roger Wicker warned of Democratic opponent Ronnie Musgrove's ties to the "Big Labor Bosses" in this year's US Senate race, he was protecting the "Big Corporate Bosses" who are his benefactors.

The South today may be more racially enlightened than ever in its history. However, it is still a society in which the ruling class—the chambers of commerce that have taken over from yesterday's plantation owners and textile barons—uses politics to maintain control over a vast, jobs-hungry workforce. After the oligarchy lost its war for slavery—the cheapest labor of all—it secured the next best thing in Jim Crow and the indentured servitude known as sharecropping and tenant farming. It still sees cheap, pliable, docile labor as the linchpin of the Southern economy.

In 1948, when the so-called "Dixiecrats" rebelled against the national Democratic Party, Strom Thurmond of South Carolina declared war on "the radicals, subversives, and the Reds" who want to upset the Southern way of life.

Seven years later, Mississippi's political godfather, the late US Sen. James O. Eastland, told other prominent Southern pols during a meeting at the Peabody Hotel in Memphis that the South will "fight the CIO" (Congress of Industrial Organizations) and unionism with just as much vehemence and determination as it fights racial integration.

Eastland, Thurmond and their friends lost the integration battle. Their successors are still fighting the other enemy.

Joseph B. Atkins is a veteran journalist, professor of journalism at the University of Mississippi and author of Covering for the Bosses: Labor and the Southern Press (University Press of Mississippi, 2008), a book that details the Southern labor movement and its treatment in the press. A version of this column appeared in the Hattiesburg (Miss.) American and the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger.

© 2009 Progressive Populist All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131359/

How Robert Rubin's Bright-Eyed Proteges Came to Dominate Wall Street


FROM http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131568/how_robert_rubin%27s_bright-eyed_proteges_came_to_dominate_wall_street_/

By Aaron Bartley and Kevin Connor, Eyes on the Ties
Posted on March 15, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131568/

In earlier posts, we've highlighted Robert Rubin's network of protรฉgรฉs, who have assumed nearly every economic policy post of consequence in the Obama White House.

In spite of his abysmal record of institutional leadership -- Citigroup entered penny stock territory on Friday, and Harvard, where Rubin's influence as a member of the Corporation is unrivaled, has all but run out of cash -- Rubin's "wise man" brand won over Obama, who moved most of the policy staff of the Rubin-founded Hamilton Project and top Rubin advisers from the Clinton era into key administration posts at Treasury, the Office of Management and Budget and the inner sanctum of the White House.

While Rubin's role in reshaping the Democratic Party has been chronicled (and discussed here), less attention has been paid to his adeptness in building a power base of hedge-fund capitalists that parallels his political network. Many of the techniques that allowed Rubin to pack the White House with friends -- such as deep mentorship of bright-eyed Ivy League recruits fresh out of school and subsequent placement of the recruits in strategic institutions -- have served also to place Rubin at the center of an unrivaled web of capital. 

The financial heft of Rubin's Goldman Sachs protรฉgรฉ network is staggering. According to our estimates, the hedge-fund managers who came up in the famed Goldman Sachs arbitrage department and count Rubin as their chief mentor controlled over $110 billion in capital before the fall 2008 crash. Three of Rubin's protรฉgรฉs were included in Forbes' 2008 list of the 400 richest Americans; two of them control hedge funds that rank in the top 10 in terms of assets under management as of this month. One of them made headlines in 2005 for paying himself more than $1 billion, at that time a record-setting level of compensation on Wall Street.

Clockwise, from top left: Eric Mindich, Richard Perry, Frank Brosens, Daniel Och, Tom Steyer, and Eddie Lampert

Clockwise, from top left: Eric Mindich, Richard Perry, Frank Brosens, Daniel Och, Tom Steyer, Eddie Lampert.

The story of Rubin's hedge fund network begins at the Goldman Sachs arbitrage desk. Rubin was the third trader to head the desk, which was founded by Wall Street legend Gus Levy and then passed to L Jay Tenenbaum when Levy became senior partner. Rubin took the torch in the mid-'70s.

What is arbitrage? Although sometimes shrouded in an esoteric veil of quaint theories on price differentials in volatile markets, much of arbitrage comes down to gleaning information using personal contacts. When asked about his job by the Times, Tenenbaum replied, "All I did was call directors and accountants or anyone in on the merger and be charming … I just wanted to know when the merger was going to happen." According to a New York Magazine article on Rubin's infamous Enron call, "the close-to-the-vest phone call has always been the hallmark of Rubin's style."

Rubin at work.

Rubin at work.

Acting on this kind of information runs perilously close to insider trading, but Rubin's phone habits never resulted in legal action while he was at Goldman.

At least one Rubin protรฉgรฉ, however, crossed the line of legality -- and was caught doing so. Robert Freeman, head of the Goldman arbitrage desk following Rubin's move to senior management, was indicted on insider trading charges in 1987. Freeman pleaded guilty in 1989 and received a one-year sentence (eight months suspended) and a $1.3 million fine. Rubin faced no charges.

In the 1980s, Rubin's closest colleague in arbitrage at Goldman was Richard C. Perry. Fortune reports:

After joining Rubin's arb desk, Perry quickly became a favored protรฉgรฉ. One reason Rubin says he took to Perry: "Richard is very thoughtful. His interests go far beyond the business world." Perry baby-sat for Rubin's kids. Rubin sometimes went to watch Perry play softball in Central Park. Perry also became Rubin's teaching assistant at NYU's Stern School of Business, where Rubin was an adjunct professor.

In the midst of the highly publicized Freeman affair, when Goldman, and the arbitrage desk in particular, was facing a barrage of questions from regulators and the media, Richard Perry followed the lead of Thomas Steyer, another Goldman arbitrage trader, who had left the firm in 1986 to found Farallon Partners, a management fund in San Francisco.

In 1988, Perry formed his firm -- Perry Capital -- with Paul Leff, an executive at the Harvard Management Co., which was a Goldman client with close ties to Harvard-alum Rubin, who has served as a director of both Harvard Management and its parent, the Harvard Corp.

Perry maintained close relationships with Goldman and Rubin following his departure, which suggests that he may have had their blessing for his experimental endeavor, perhaps to provide some distance from the heat Goldman faced from the Freeman investigation. Goldman continues to invest with Perry Capital, and Richard Perry himself has been a linchpin of Rubin's strategy to dominate the Democratic Party. Perry has donated more than $200,000 to the party and its candidates over the last 10 years. Perry is also a director of the Hamilton Project, Rubin's public-policy shop.

Meanwhile, Perry Capital blossomed, setting the stage for the explosion of hedge funds and hedge-fund returns over the last 20 years. According to an estimate from 2008, Perry Capital currently has about $12 billion under management, ranking it in the top 15 largest hedge funds. Steyer's Farallon Partners, the first fund founded by a Rubin protรฉgรฉ, prospered as well. Farallon now has more than $30 billion under management and ranks as the third-largest hedge fund in the world.

The partnership of Perry from Goldman and Leff from Harvard Management foreshadowed a series of hedge fund spin-offs from Rubin's two institutional domains. All told, at least six of Rubin's Goldman protรฉgรฉs have spun off the firm to form major hedge funds, typically getting seed money from Goldman.

In addition to Perry Capital and Farallon Partners, the firms founded by Rubin protรฉgรฉs at Goldman include: Edward Lampert's ESL Investments in 1988; Daniel Och's Och-Ziff Capital in 1994; Frank Brosens' Taconic Capital; and Eric Mindich's Eton Park Capital in 2004.

This is only the very inner ring of Rubin's elite hedge-fund network -- each of these individuals has been described as "protรฉgรฉs" of Rubin in press reports. Many other hedge-fund managers came up at Rubin-led institutions, but may not have had quite so strong -- or well-reported -- a connection to him as these six.

Rubin's proximity to vast amounts of youthful hedge-fund capital has played an extremely important role in shaping the new administration and in guiding its choices. This hidden means of influence has gone largely unreported over the past two years, even though it explains Rubin's strong standing with Obama (more than Rubin's record of, ahem, accomplishment).

An April 2007 BusinessWeek article on Wall Street and the presidential candidates had a perfect opportunity to highlight Rubin's influence over Obama in the early stages of the campaign. It offered the following account of a meeting with Obama in February 2007, one month into his campaign:

Like most voters, Wall Streeters are also trying to size up candidates' personal qualities. At a meeting on Feb. 3 in Manhattan, bankers grilled Obama about how he makes decisions. Present were Eric Mindich of Eton Park Capital, Frank Brosens of Taconic Capital Advisors, Michael Froman of Citigroup Alternative Investments (C ) and James S. Rubin of JPMorgan Chase's (JPM ) private equity fund, among others.

Sure, this was a meeting of "Wall Streeters," but "Rubin's inner circle" might have been a more accurate description of those in attendance: two of his hedge-fund protรฉgรฉs, his son, and his right-hand man (the subject of this post and a forthcoming one). All four became bundlers for Obama. Despite his extreme centrality, Rubin is never identified in the piece.

The policy consequences of Rubin's networked influence over the new administration are wide-ranging and will continue to play out in coming weeks and months. Eyes on the Ties will be watching. For one, as financial sector elites clamor for additional bailouts in the coming weeks and months, we will pay special attention to whether the White House -- where Rubin's close allies are a dominant force -- advances plans that favor the Rubin hedge-fund network.

The financial sector and sympathetic pundits are pushing the notion that, as part of the master plan for cleaning up balance sheets to be announced soon by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, certain hedge funds should be enticed to enter the market-to-be for toxic assets through a federal guarantee against loss.

Time will tell whether firms with Rubin connections are recipients of such largesse.

Aaron Bartley is a co-founder of People United for Sustainable Housing, Inc. (PUSH), a community action organization in Buffalo, N.Y., and is a regular contributor to Eyes on the Ties.

© 2009 Eyes on the Ties All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131568/

Burt's Bees, Tom's of Maine, Naked Juice: Your Favorite Brands? Take Another Look -- They May Not Be What They Seem


By Andrea Whitfill, AlterNet
Posted on March 17, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131910/

My first introduction to natural, organic and eco-friendly products stems back to the early '90s, when I stumbled upon Burt's Bees lip balm at an independently owned health food store in the heart of Westport, Kansas City, Mo.

Before the eyesore invasion of '98, when Starbucks frothed its way into the neighborhood, leading to its ultimate demise, Westport was the kind of  'hood I still yearn for. It was saturated with historically preserved, hip and funky, mom-and-pop-type establishments, delivering their goods people to people.

I was surprised more recently when I saw Burt's Bees products everywhere -- in grocery stores, drug stores, corner bodegas and big-box stores like Target and Wal-Mart. I thought to myself, fantastic; the marketplace is working, and good for Burt. He has made his mark, and the demand for his products is on the rise.

Needless to say, I was shocked when I recently found out that Burt's Bees is now owned by Clorox, a massive corporate company that has historically cared very little about the environment, but whose main industry is directly associated with harmful chemicals, some of which require warning labels for legal sale.

Clorox; yes, that's right -- the bleach company with an estimated revenue of $ 4.8 billion that employs nearly 7,600 workers (now bees) and sells products like Liquid-Plumr, Pine-Sol and Armor All, a far cry from the origins of Burt.

I now understood. The reason Burt's Bees products were everywhere was precisely because they now had a powerful corporation in the driver's seat, with big marketing budgets and existing distribution systems.

The story of Burt is a charming one gone bad. Burt Shavitz, a beekeeper in Dexter, Maine, lived an extremely humble life selling honey in pickle jars from the back of his pickup truck and resided in the wilderness inside a turkey coop without running water or electricity.

In the summer of 1984, Shavitz was driving down the road and spotted a hitchhiker who needed a lift to the post office. He pulled over and picked up Roxanne Quimby, a 34-year-old woman who eventually became Shavitz's lover and business partner. Quimby started helping him tend to the beehives, and that eventually led to the all natural-inspired health care products made with Shavitz's honey and the birth of Burt's Bees products.

Burt's story and very powerful narrative gave Burt's Bees products their legitimacy in my book. Creative entrepreneurs and knowledgeable consumers together working their magic; not the results of a corporate behemoth out to dominate the marketplace.

However, Quimby and Shavitz's relationship became 'sticky' in the late '90s for reasons unclear, yet probably having little to do with honey. Their romantic break up carried over to the split of their business partnership as well. In 1999, Quimby bought out Shavitz's shares of the company for a small six-figure sum. Quimby then continued, becoming phenomenally successfully and growing sales to $43.5 million by 2002.

In 2003, a private equity firm, AEA investors, purchased 80 percent of Burt's Bees from Quimby, with her retaining a 20 percent share and a seat on the board. In 2006, John Replogle, the former general manager of Unilever's skin-care division became CEO and president of Burt's Bees. The company was sold to Clorox in late October 2007 for $925 million.

Quimby was paid more than $300 million for her stake in Burt's Bees. At the time of that deal, Shavitz reportedly demanded more money, and Quimby agreed to pay him $4 million. Quimby now refurbishes fancy, swank homes in Florida, travels the world and buys massive chunks of land in her free time. Our bearded man Shavitz, on the other hand, now 73 and unchanged, continues to reside amidst nature in his now-expanded turkey coop, which still remains absent of electricity or running water.

The Burt's Bees story is disconcerting. I vaguely remembered long ago that one of my favorite ice cream products, Ben & Jerry's, sold out. Unilever (which also owns Breyers), the giant conglomerate with an estimated market cap of $50 billion and close to 174,000 employees, bought Ben & Jerry's in 2000 for $326 million.

I began to wonder about the other products I liked, trusted and respected for their independence and their social responsibility. How many were really owned by big corporations, who were going out of their way to hide the link between the big corporate company with the small, socially responsible brand? It didn't take long for my list of disappointments to grow and grow.

Upon first meeting someone, I can usually tell a quite a lot about them by the contents of their bathroom. The brand I see most often behind medicine cabinets of people I consider to be environmentally conscious is Tom's of Maine. What Tom's says to me about the person is that they are willing to spend a little bit of extra cash in order to take proactive steps to help green the Earth.

Well, no more. My bathroom assessments will never be the same. Tom's of Maine is owned by Colgate-Palmolive, a massive, tanklike company with an estimated 36,000 employees and revenue of approximately $11.4 billion. Its big products include: Ajax, Anbesol and Speedstick.

I am only left to wonder, is Trader Joe's, popularly known to showcase Tom's of Maine in its hygiene department, just as much in the dark about all of this as I have been? Or is Joe's simply another conduit for big corporate products?

As my curiosity grew, I took a little field trip to the grocery store with one of my friends to be a "brand anthropologist." "Let's get to the bottom of this," I said, aiming to check out all of the brands that I and countless other good consumers were buying in our efforts to support grassroots business and not corporate behemoths. Little did I know how deep the hole was going to be, and in some cases, how hard to find out who owns what.

REST http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/131910/burt%27s_bees%2C_tom%27s_of_maine%2C_naked_juice%3A_your_favorite_brands_take_another_look_--_they_may_not_be_what_they_seem/?page=1

AIG's "Best and Brightest"? Try Dumb and Dumbest


FROM http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131939/aig%27s_%22best_and_brightest%22_try_dumb_and_dumbest/

By Maura Kelly, Comment Is Free
Posted on March 18, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131939/

You don't have to be a financial expert to appreciate the irony in the letter that Edward Liddy, the government-appointed chairman of AIG, sent to Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner on Saturday.

To explain why bonuses of $165 million were needed to keep the top guys at the insurance giant, Liddy wrote: "I do not like these arrangements and find it distasteful and difficult to recommend to you that we must proceed with them." And yet, he said, "We cannot attract and retain the best and the brightest talent to lead and staff the AIG businesses -- which are now being operated principally on behalf of American taxpayers -- if employees believe their compensation is subject to continued and arbitrary adjustment by the U.S. Treasury."

The best and the brightest, huh? We are talking about the dudes at AIG's financial products division, which helped effect the sub-prime mortgage crisis and to nearly level the global economy too. (Until February 2008, the division was headed up by Joseph Cassano, named by CNN as one of the "Ten Most Wanted Culprits" of the financial collapse.) And yet there are some of Cassano's remaining colleagues, receiving individual bonuses as large as $6.5 million.

AIG defended its action by saying the bonuses were promised last year, in contracts, and cannot be legally voided at this point. Lawyers at the Treasury department have agreed that the company would likely face lawsuits if it tried to refuse the bonuses. Fair enough, I suppose. But considering that AIG agreed to reduce its 2009 bonuses for the unit by 30% after being pressured by Liddy, I have to wonder if there isn't a lot more wiggle room. That dude who is getting $6.5 million, for instance: surely he'd stay on for a measly $5 million? Especially considering there can't be too many more jobs waiting for him out there in the financial world he helped to nearly destroy.

Moreover, if AIG had been allowed to fail, would it still have been legally obligated to pay these bonuses? And why didn't the government foresee that this might happen and insist on a bonus cap as a condition of AIG's bailout? Surely the company would have had to accept. That the government didn't take such a simple measure to prevent this kind of gross abuse seems wildly short-sighted, and unbelievably daft.

But I don't think it's the government that's primarily to blame here. I do believe they bailed out AIG with the best intentions -- knowing they'd have to face angry voters (and the unforgiving annals of history) if the economic disaster got even worse. It's those "best and brightest" over at AIG who are really to blame. It's a shame that those jerks don't have to answer to anything -- not even (if their continued greed is any indication) their consciences. But what they're doing -- cheating honest taxpayers out of their money -- isn't all that far removed from what Bernie Madoff did.

There is some consolation, however, in the words of President Obama, who called the AIG bonuses an "outrage" and instructed Geithner to "pursue every single legal avenue to block these bonuses and make the American taxpayers whole." We can always hope that happens. Too bad there's not much we can do if it doesn't.

© 2009 Comment Is Free All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131939/

America's Granny-Bashers: Different Facts but the Same Policies

FROM http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131945/america%27s_granny-bashers%3A_different_facts_but_the_same_policies/

By Dean Baker, AlterNet
Posted on March 17, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131945/

The granny basher crew constitutes one of the largest and most determined lobbies in Washington. The top priority for this lobby is to cut Social Security and Medicare.

The lobby includes the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, with an endowment of more than $1 billion from the private equity tycoon himself. It also includes The Washington Post, which liberally sprinkles assertions about the need to cut Social Security and Medicare in both its news and editorial pages. Many prominent members of Congress also belong to the club, along with much of the punditry who make their living pronouncing on public policy.

The granny bashers' theme is that Social Security and Medicare constitute an enormous generational injustice because the young, and those yet to be born, will be forced to pay for the cost of these programs for retirees and current workers. Of course, the reality is that the vast majority of the granny bashers' horror stories about generational inequity stems from the cost of sustaining a broken health care system

If the United States fixed its health care system, then the granny bashers' horror story disappears. In fact, even if we don't fix the health care system, we can make most of the horror story disappear by just allowing seniors to buy into the health care systems of countries that have more efficient systems than the United States

But the granny bashers are not interested in fixing the health care system; that would involve confronting powerful interest groups like the insurance and pharmaceutical industries and the doctors' lobby. In fact, the granny bashers are not really even particularly interested in generational equity. This is just an excuse for their real agenda: cutting Social Security and Medicare.

This point is demonstrated by the fact that their policy recommendations never change even when the evidence changes in very big ways. The granny bashers have treated us to three very dramatic examples of this "different facts, same policy" approach in the last 15 years.

The first example is slightly technical. It has to do with the claim that the consumer price index (CPI) overstates inflation.

The CPI is our yardstick for measuring how much better off people are getting through time. If wages grow 4.0 percent and the CPI tells us that inflation is 3.0 percent, then real wages have grown by 1.0 percent. However, if the true rate of inflation is just 2.0 percent because the CPI overstates inflation by 1.0 percentage point a year, then real wages have grown by 2.0 percent (4.0 percent wage growth, minus 2.0 percent inflation).

Fifteen years ago, many economists and pundits (including much of the granny basher lobby) embraced the claim that the CPI overstated the true rate of inflation by at least 1.0 percent a year. If this claim was true, then it undermined the core of the granny bashers' story. It would mean that our children and grandchildren would be far richer than we ever imagined possible and that many older workers and elderly grew up in poverty.

If annual wage growth was 2.0 percent rather than 1.0 percent, then in 40 years, wages will be more than 220 percent of the current level, instead of just 50 percent higher. The granny bashers embraced the claim of the overstated CPI in order to justify cutting Social Security (retiree benefits are indexed to the CPI), but they never followed through the logic of this claim for their generational equity story.

This would be comparable to Al Gore maintaining a drive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions even after new evidence showed that the planet was actually cooling. Honest people don't ignore such evidence.

The exact same issue arises with the speed up in productivity growth in the mid-90s. The granny basher crusade against Social Security and Medicare dates from the mid-80s when productivity growth was just 1.5 percent a year.

Productivity growth determines the rate at which society can, on average, get richer. In the mid-90s, the rate of annual productivity growth increased by a full percentage point - in effect bringing about the more rapid gains in real income that would have been implied by an overstated CPI. However, none of the granny bashers noted how the productivity growth speedup had enormously improved the prospects of future generations. They just maintained their insistence on cutting Social Security and Medicare.

Finally, the recent collapse of the housing bubble and the resulting stock market plunge have reduced the wealth of older workers and retirees by close to $15 trillion. This is a transfer to the young, since they will be able to buy the housing stock and the corporate capital stock for a far lower price than they would have expected to pay just two years ago.

Remarkably, the granny basher crew has somehow failed to notice this enormous transfer of wealth from the old to the young. They just continue their crusade to cut Social Security and Medicare as though nothing has happened.

It should be evident that the granny bashers don't care at all about generational equity. They care about dismantling Social Security and Medicare, the country's most important social programs. It is important that the public recognize the granny bashers' real agenda so that they can give them the respect they deserve.

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

© 2009 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131945/

U! S! A! We're Number .... 15?


By Dalton Conley, The Nation
Posted on March 16, 2009, Printed on March 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/131382/

The president's proposed budget will do much to bring progressivity back to the tax code. Upper-income households -- which have gained the most over the past three decades -- will contribute around 80 percent of federal revenues, and more modest incomes will finally catch some real tax relief. Meanwhile, the vast majority of Americans have applauded the administration's move to impose limits on executive compensation by attaching strings to bailout money. The reason is one of basic fairness, of course. But it turns out that limiting the windfalls of the few may actually be good for us all. That's because there appears to be a relationship in the United States between inequality -- which is largely driven by an explosive rise in incomes at the top -- and overall levels of human development.

    In the ticker tape of economic bad news, there is perhaps one dire statistic that has not gotten as much attention as it deserves: the American Human Development Index (HDI), released for the first time last year. The American HDI is especially troubling because it puts all this economic gloom and doom in stark human terms. And the results are somewhat surprising: in good times as well as bad, in terms of aggregate health, education, purchasing power, security and general well-being, we have been in decline.

    The HDI has long been used by experts and officials concerned with advancement in poor countries. In 1990 Mahbub ul Haq -- a former World Bank official who had also served as Pakistani finance minister -- created the indicator to capture the actual experiences of people in a given country or region in a way that GDP and other indicators of economically measurable output could not.

    With some slight adjustments, the index was retrofitted to work for rich countries. The score consists of three dimensions: health, as measured by life expectancy at birth; access to knowledge, captured by educational enrollment and attainment; and income, as reflected by median earnings for the working-age population. And now the results are finally in.

    The first bit of bad news is that America was slipping well before our most recent downturn. Whereas during the 1980s we were consistently No. 2 in the world (Switzerland occupied the top slot in 1980, while Canada did from 1985 to 1990), by the mid-1990s we had slipped to six. And by 2006 (the most recent year available), we had even fallen out of the Top 10 (to slot 15). Income clearly doesn't capture every dimension, since the United States still holds the No. 2 position in terms of income per capita. Rather, other aspects of American society make it less "developed" than it should be, given the resources available here.

    This decline proceeded apace through the Reagan and first Bush administrations, during the go-go Clinton '90s, and through the regime of George W. Bush. We have slipped in periods of budget deficits and during the largest surplus in US history. So something deeper about the structure of American society is probably responsible.

    Of course, there are some pretty good suspects. There is, for example, the issue of nearly 50 million people who don't have health insurance. There is the fact that college completion rates have been flat since the '70s despite an increasingly technological economy. And there is the wage stagnation for the bottom half, a problem that has dogged us since the oil shock of 1973. But there is one larger force underlying these trends that has been gaining steam over the past three decades, and that's income inequality.

    Income inequality has been rising since the late '60s and is greater in the United States than in any other developed (i.e., rich) country. Income inequality can matter for general health, knowledge and our shared standard of living, for several reasons. First, the more that Americans have vastly different economic means at their disposal, the harder it is to generate political support for investments that would raise all boats. For instance, inequality often leads well-to-do people to abandon the public school system -- or to move to particularly well-funded districts, where house prices are highest. Some scholars even posit that high inequality harms our health, as a result of the stress from relative deprivation and increased efforts to keep up with the Joneses (or, as the case may be, the Gateses). While this claim remains highly controversial among health economists, the observation that more-unequal countries generally display worse health than more-equal ones is not in dispute. Such high (and rising) degrees of inequality in the United States (we are closer to Turkey on such measures than we are to France) are reflected in the HDI scores. Some Americans are a full fifty years behind others in terms of their level of development.

    REST http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131382/u!_s!_a!_we%27re_number_...._15/

    Obama's Moment is Passing Quickly from AfterDowningStreet.org


    The actions of Obama's Chief Financial Adviser Larry Summers and his Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in permitting the payment of $165 million in bonuses to AIG executives (Summers, according to the Wall Street Journal, actually pressed Sen. Chris Dodd, D-CT, to secretly remove a bar to the payment of such bonuses from the bailout bill) and storm of public outrage that has followed public disclosure of those payments, provides President Obama, whose administration is stumbling badly on many fronts, to turn things around and avoid political disaster.

    He should promptly demand Geithner's and Summers' resignations, and should also fire the CEO of AIG, Edward Liddy (as 80% owner of AIG, the US has the power to do that anytime). It would also be a good idea at the same time to fire the CEOs of all the leading banks that are at this point surviving on government bailouts.

    This would allow Obama to correct the fundamental mistake he made during the transition period following the November election in installing a bunch of Clinton-era economic advisors and Bush holdovers to be his economic team.

    The US economy is in disastrous shape, and it is going to take new ideas, and people untarnished by the last 30 years of deregulatory excess and unsavory links to Wall Street, to rescue it. Obama has no shortage of good people to turn to: Nobel economist and NY Times columnist Paul Krugman, former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz and economist James Galbraith all spring immediately to mind as people who could offer new and better approaches to addressing both the immediate crisis and the longer-term challenge of restoring the health of the nation's economy, and of making it work for everyone, instead of just the wealthy few.

    Of course, it could be that Obama is really not interested in radically changing the US economy, and its financial system. He has certainly accepted the tarnished coin of the Wall Street establishment during his campaign, and could simply be doing their bidding, but one has to operate on the hope that this is not the case. After all, the Obama campaign also raised an unprecedented amount of cash from ordinary folks, and if money is influence, he owes those little people big time.

    In any event, it seems clear that if this president who spoke during his campaign of "hope and change" continues to cater to the bankers and the corporate interests that want to see no major revamping of the economic system and the regulatory apparatus, he is headed for a one-term presidency--and a sad and failed one at that.

    The voters who sent Obama to Washington have been willing to extend him the benefit of the doubt, even when he made his almost uniformly lousy cabinet picks. They were willing to grant that he had been handed a disastrous situation by the last administration.

    But as each week passes, the disaster becomes less Bush's and Cheney's, and more Obama's.

    The same can be said of Obama's other big crisis: the two endless wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Again, Obama has largely retained and accepted the advice of the same people who helped run these huge policy disasters during the Bush/Cheney years, and is buying the basic assumptions of those two wars. He is most certainly not ending the Iraq conflict, and is now talking about leaving as many as 50,000 US troops in Iraq for years--as many as were in Vietnam in the fall of 1965. He is reportedly talking about doubling the number of troops in Afghanistan to over 60,000, and about expanding the war into Pakistan, and not just the tribal areas, but Baluchistan province, a heavily populated part of that country. This latter decision, which could lead to an explosion in Pakistan, and the collapse of the central government, could lead to an huge demand for more US troops in the area--perhaps hundreds of thousands more--and even to India's entry into the conflict.

    This is as outrageous and doomed a strategy as is his economic program of trying to salvage the nation's zombie banks while nickel-and-diming a "stimulus" program for ordinary people.

    He should seize the moment of s**tcanning his corrupt and inept economic team to also sack his military advisers, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates and his Centcom commander David Petraeus, and bring in people who will tell him how to get the US out of both conflicts pronto.

    rest http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/40879


    HOUSE passes bill to tax 90% of AIG bonuses from Crooks and Liars

    from http://crooksandliars.com/john-amato/house-passes-bill-tax-90-aig-bonuses

    The HOUSE just passed a new bill that will tax 90% of the AIG bonuses and others who receive bail out money.

    The House passed a bill on Thursday that would impose punishing taxes on big employee bonuses from firms bailed out by taxpayers.Democrats pressed for the quick action. "The American people demand protection and that's what we're doing today," said Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.
    --
    A tax expert said there is plenty of precedent for levying punitive taxes on behavior that lawmakers find objectionable. Robert Willens, a corporate tax lawyer in New York, cited the steep excise taxes levied on money paid to firms to keep them from launching hostile takeover bids, known as "greenmail." "You can write very narrowly tailored laws," Willens said. "And they can do it for bonuses already paid."

    Republicans as usual cried about the measure as was evident by Crying John Boehner who called it a political circus. I'm sure Limbaugh and Beck will tell their audiences that President Obama will be taxing right wing talk show hosts next.

    And Chris Dodd was wrong in the way he handled the bonus issue. Everyone is blaming the economic team, but he should never have misled CNN and the public by declaring he had nothing to do with it. No matter what happened. He waffled his way through the questions Blitzer and Bash asked him about his flip flop. I'm sorry, that wasn't good. All he had to do was say he was looking into it when asked about it a few days ago. I like Chris Dodd a lot and I'm not blaming him personally for the problem, but he did not distinguish himself the last couple of days.

    After Successfully Protecting Wall St. Bonuses, Financial Lobbyists Turn Focus To Defeating Obama’s Budget from Think Progress

    from http://thinkprogress.org/2009/03/19/financial-roundtable-lobbyists/

    As Roll Call reported this morning, financial services lobbyists "have moved into hyperdrive" in an attempt to soften taxes on bailed-out bonuses. The lobbyists working for the financial industry are organized into a group known as the Financial Services Roundtable.

    Last year, the Roundtable lobbied aggressively to prevent "legislation from limiting executive compensation." Scott Talbott, a senior lobbyist for the Roundtable, told the New York Times, "we are opposed to provisions on executive pay."

    During the debate over the economic recovery package, the Senate passed the Wyden/Snowe amendment, which would have severely limited the bonuses paid by bailed out firms. However, the amendment was removed from the legislation at the last minute in conference. The removal was agreed to by staffers working for Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) and the Obama administration. On Rachel Maddow's show earlier this week, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) said that financial industry lobbyists were the individuals primarily advocating the change:

    What happened, Rachel, was we got it through the United States Senate and then like, with so many issues, all the lobbyists came out in droves and somehow magically, the amendment disappeared. It seems to me now we've got an opportunity to get this job done right but it didn't have to happen.

    Watch it:

    Popout

    Protecting bonuses and excessive compensation aren't the only goals for the lobbyists. They are now working with other special interests to defeat key provisions of Obama's budget:

    – Talbott and Roundtable lobbyists are fighting provisions in the Obama budget to administer "fees on banks and maybe even the entire financial industry to recoup the costs of the U.S. government's financial rescue efforts." [Dow Jones Newswire, 3/6/09]

    – The Roundtable is taking "aim at the president's proposal to end subsidies for private student loan providers." [Bloomberg, 2/27/09]

    – The Roundtable is teaming up with mortgage industry lobbyists to defeat provisions in the Obama budget to end loopholes for America's wealthiest people, [Mortgage Orb, 3/13/09]

    The AIG bonuses and the current efforts by Roundtable lobbyists add new weight to the challenge issued by President Obama to special interest lobbyists: "I know they're gearing up for a fight as we speak. My message to them is this: So am I."

    There was no "secret provision" to allow AIG bonuses from Daily Kos

    from http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/3/19/710606/-There-was-no-secret-provision-to-allow-AIG-bonuses

    A storyline is emerging in Republican circles and throughout media land that Chris Dodd and the Treasury Department secretly inserted a provision into the stimulus bill that allowed AIG to pay its failure bonuses.

    There's only one problem with this narrative: it is completely false.

    With or without the stimulus bill, AIG would have been allowed to pay its failure bonuses. In fact, at no point in time was there every a law barring the bonuses.

    Given that the bonuses were never illegal, there was never any need to create a new loophole to allow them. They were allowed all along.

    What actually happened was that the stimulus bill put new restrictions on bonuses, but only applied those restrictions on bonuses that were given out after the legislation passed.

    Early drafts of those new restrictions were retroactive, and would have applied to the AIG failure bonuses, but by the time the final legislation was passed, the retroactive provisions had been eliminated. Chris Dodd, who wrote the restrictions, says he agreed to limit their scope at the request of Treasury.

    Figuring out why the new restrictions didn't go far enough is a valuable exercise, but it's also important to get the basic story right, and so far, far too many people are getting the simplest of facts wrong.

    Before they go wagging their finger in outrage, they ought to get the story right.

    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    Chris Dodd: OK, I Allowed the AIG Bonuses from Gawker

    http://gawker.com/5174458/chris-dodd-ok-i-allowed-the-aig-bonuses

    In a complete reversal from his stance Tuesday, Sen. Chris Dodd admitted he inserted language into the federal stimulus bill allowing $165 million in bonuses to those AIG executives. But the president made him!

    Dodd, chairman of the senate banking committee, finally admitted to CNN (see clip) that his stimulus amendment allowed the universally-reviled bonuses, which went to the very AIG executives responsible for tanking the company.

    In talking to CNN, Dodd used excruciatingly boring legislative/parliamentary language, probably to try and put the audience to sleep. But his argument boils down to this: The Obama administration asked him to put the bonus language in, and Dodd was afraid all other executive compensation limits would be stripped from the stimulus package if he didn't comply. He didn't do it because, you know, AIG executives and political action committees donated all that money to the Connecticut Democrat.

    It looks like there's some actual truth behind this buck passing; following Dodd's admission, the president said at a town hall meeting in California, "I'll take responsibilty. I'm the president."

    Also, "a Treasury Department official told CNN the administration pushed for the language."

    That points to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner as the one who pushed Dodd to allow the bonuses. That would make sense; at the New York Federal Reserve, Geithner served as a bridge between Wall Street and federal monetary regulators. Top finance executives like Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan Chase sat on his board.

    Geithner was also said to be instrumental in arranging the bailout of Bear Stearns — and of AIG.

    He's been something of an embarrassment to Obama. His senate confirmation hearings revealed Geithner had not paid self-employment taxes for several years. Then there was his disastrous bailout press conference, lacking the rich details promised by no less than the president himself the day before.

    Now comes evidence Geithner was instrumental in allowing most outrage-stirring act of corporate greed in some times. It seems likely Obama's "complete confidence" in Geithner will be transformed into the Treasury Secretary's inevitable firing even sooner than we thought.

    depressing and eye opening: AIG Scandal: America Wakes Up To Extent of Capitalist Thievery from TPR: The Public Record


    from http://www.pubrecord.org/commentary/774-aig-scandal-america-wakes-up-to-extent-of-capitalist-thievery.html

    The news that AIG executives were to receive hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses (maybe as high as $450 million!), even after a $170 billion dollar bailout, has fueled a populist revolt not seen since the initial shock of the economic crisis hit Americans last October. When Obama Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told AIG the government would American Insurance Group CEO, Edward M. Liddy, reported that government loans might be renegotiated as a result, Liddy responded with "grave concern" over the firm's ability to retain "talented staff."

    Talented in rip-off, that is. But former New York governor and supposed scourge of Wall Street, Elliot Spitzer, is reporting over at Slate that the outrage in the media over the bonuses is a diversion. (H/T Inky99 at Daily Kos.) Not that they aren't an outrage, the scandal misses the larger crime: the siphoning off of billions of taxpayer dollars to a handful of companies, who insured their highly risky investments with AIG. These companies have received hundreds of billions of dollars in bailout money. Now they are to receive 100% on the dollar reimbursement for their losses from AIG. Spitzer comments:

    The payments to AIG's counterparties are justified with an appeal to the sanctity of contract. If AIG's contracts turned out to be shaky, the theory goes, then the whole edifice of the financial system would collapse.

    But wait a moment, aren't we in the midst of reopening contracts all over the place to share the burden of this crisis? From raising taxes—income taxes to sales taxes—to properly reopening labor contracts, we are all being asked to pitch in and carry our share of the burden. Workers around the country are being asked to take pay cuts and accept shorter work weeks so that colleagues won't be laid off. Why can't Wall Street royalty shoulder some of the burden? Why did Goldman have to get back 100 cents on the dollar? Didn't we already give Goldman a $25 billion capital infusion, and aren't they sitting on more than $100 billion in cash?....

    The appearance that this was all an inside job is overwhelming. AIG was nothing more than a conduit for huge capital flows to the same old suspects, with no reason or explanation.
    No reason? No explanation? But there is always a reason. Always an explanation, though Spitzer may not want to go there.

    Private ownership of the wealth and capital, freed of most regulatory restraints, is the distal cause, while the proprietors of this capital have gone on an orgy of thievery that may have never been seen in the history of civilization, outside of a world war.

    Consider the new TALP plan ("Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility"), which bobswern has dissected so well over at Daily Kos (bold in original).
    1.) $2 trillion in taxpayer funds with no salary restrictions to recipients....
    2.) Shadow Bankers get almost all of their investment money for free, from you.
    [Shadow bankers consist of "non-bank financial institutions that, like banks, borrow short, and in liquid forms, and lend or invest long in less liquid assets... via the use of credit derivative instruments which allow them to evade normal banking regulations," e.g., hedge funds, investment banks, "structured investment vehicles," etc.]
    3.) Shadow bankers will skim administrative fees off the top of $2 trillion, first.
    4.) Government has virtually no say in terms of regulating what these entities must do with the money once they give it to them.
    [And on and on...]
    Congress has responded to constituent anger, and hearings are being held even today (see liveblogging of those hearings by Emptywheel over at FDL). But while more details will leak out, it's unlikely we will see much more than the spectacle of what Chris Floyd describes as "faux shock in the Beltway over Wall Street fat cats paying themselves big bonuses with the free money that Washington knowingly gave them."

    The following points will never be mentioned:
    ... the capitalist class is a definite concrete group composed of those who own and have a monopoly over the means of production (including loanable capital). The capitalist class is bound together by innumerable personal, familial and organizational filiations; the atomized non-capitalist entrepreneur -—the central figure of bourgeois economic theory -— is a fiction. The capacity to borrow is strictly limited by one's ownership of the capital assets required for security against loans. In reality, credit under capitalism is always rationed, on the basis of specific monopoly complexes involving financial, industrial and commercial capitalists.
    The ingrown nature of the capitalist class, who has united to unleash a frenzy of greed and stealing, is no better illustrated than by the biography of Obama's Treasury Secretary Geithner. Born to a scion of the capitalist class -- his father was a prominent leader of the Ford Foundation -- Geithner's early career (after attending the best Ivy League schools) was working for Kissinger and Associates in Washington, D.C. He began working for various divisions of the Treasury Department as early as 1988, when he was 27 years old. He was close to two former Treasury secretaries, Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers. During the George W years he worked at the Council of Foreign Relations and the International Monetary Fund. In October 2003, he became president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and a few years later joined the elite, Rockefeller Foundation organized "Group of Thirty."
    In March 2008, he arranged the rescue and sale of Bear Stearns... in the same year, he is believed to have played a pivotal role in both the decision to bail out AIG as well as the government decision not to save Lehman Brothers from bankruptcy.
    Hmmm... the same guy who organized the AIG bailout, with its non-regulation of monies, including millions for "bonuses" to the same execs who helped manufacture the crisis... naw, that can't be true, can it? (It is.)

    Oh, and he "forgot" to pay $35,000 in self-employment taxes over several years.

    rest at http://www.pubrecord.org/commentary/774-aig-scandal-america-wakes-up-to-extent-of-capitalist-thievery.html

    KBR Says Abiding By U.S. Laws Puts it At a 'Competitive Disadvantage' from TPR: The Public Record

    from http://www.pubrecord.org/nationworld/773-kbr-says-abiding-by-us-laws-puts-it-at-a-competitive-disadvantage.html

    In a recent Securities and Exchange Commission filing, former Halliburton unit KBR complained that it will be at a "competitive disadvantage" to win "large-scale" international contracts because it is being forced to comply with U.S. laws.  

    Last month, KBR pleaded guilty to violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and admitted that it paid $180 million in "consulting fees" to two agents for use in bribing Nigerian government officials to win a lucrative construction contract for the Bonny Island natural gas liquefaction plant while former Vice President Dick Cheney headed the corporation. KBR paid a $402 million fine as part of its plea deal.

    Under the terms of the plea agreement, KBR agreed to retain an independent compliance monitor for three years to ensure it is abiding by U.S. laws, limit its use of foreign agents, and promised to file regular reports on the compliance program with the Department of Justice.

    KBR, which was spun off from Halliburton into a separate company in 2007, said in a 10-K filing with the SEC, however, that "limitations on our use of agents as part of our efforts to comply with applicable laws, including the FCPA, could put us at a competitive disadvantage in pursuing large-scale international projects."

    Dodd caught lying about bonus change

    Dodd says he reluctantly agreed to bonus provision change

    After first denying reports of his involvement, Chris Dodd is now saying that he reluctantly softened a provision intended to restrict executive compensation at companies receiving bailout funds at the request of unnamed Treasury Department officials.

    Initially, Dodd's provision restricted bonuses for all companies receiving bailout funds. The change created an exemption for bonus contracts -- such as AIG's -- entered into before the legislation took effect.

    Dodd's provision did not create a loophole. In fact, it was attached to the stimulus bill and created new restrictions on the usage of TARP funds. Nothing in Dodd's legislation weakened existing law, though the provision didn't go far enough to block the AIG bonuses.

    There are discussions going on in NewDealer's and in laughingriver's diaries.

    HRH Limbaugh: “The Peasants Are Revolting!” from Firedoglake

    from http://firedoglake.com/2009/03/18/hrh-limbaugh-the-peasants-are-revolting/

    "Let them eat shit!"

    Someone fetch my whalebone corset and powdered wig, for there's a revolution brewing. Citizens of the realm have swarmed on AIG Castle!

    Holding forth on the airwaves yesterday, the Oxycontin King, who had heretofore presented himself as a "man of the people" to better enrich his coffers, dismissed the public's boiling anger at the taxpayer-owned AIG with a disdainful wave of his manicured hand, sneering:

    "A lynch mob is expanding: the peasants with their pitchforks surrounding the corporate headquarters of AIG, demanding heads. Death threats are pouring in." 

    Call out the Brute Squad! King Rush will not tolerate such insolence from the little people.  After all,

    Without the super wealthy in New York, it's over. ... This -- it's just a populist ruse. It's just designed to people go, 'Yeah, yeah!' "

    Properly agitated, the courtiers loyal to the Viscount of Viagra clamored around his throne, hurling charges of McCarthyism and decrying the inexplicable impudence of the American rabble.

    In the wake of Rush Limbaugh's defense of American International Group (AIG) on his March 16 and March 17 broadcasts, several conservative media figures -- including Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck and Fox News contributor and syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin -- have joined him in condemning criticism of the company's employee retention bonuses

    While the King could take comfort in the support of those kissing his buckled shoes, he found himself at odds with the cunning government ministers in his court who share the people's disgust:

    GOP Congressional leaders have roundly condemned AIG and its executives, as part of a strategy to position themselves as heroic defenders of the taxpayers and to paint the Obama administration as weak and ineffectual. Mitch McConnell recently blasted AIG's bonuses as an "outrage." John Boehner said that the "American people are rightly outraged." And Eric Cantor bemoaned the "stunning lack of accountability" on AIG's part.  

    Oh, villainous contradictions! This cannot bode well for the continuation of the Reign of Rush . . . though I now foresee wider potential in the pitchfork market, mayhap.

    How Geithner's Bailout Plan Created The AIG Bonus Scandal from Open Left

    Back in January and February, there were some votes to try and block excessive employee compensation at financial institutions receiving bailout money. In the Senate, this took the form of the Snowe amendment, which was supported by all 58 Democrats, and only three Republicans. In the House, it took the form of the TARP Reform Act, was favored by 242 Democrats but only 18 Republicans. Overall, across the House and the Senate, only 10 Democrats, compared to 193 Republicans, voted against legislation that might have stopped the bonuses.

    Unfortunately, despite overwhelming Democratic support for limiting executive compensation, in order to save their public-private partnership bailout plan, the Obama administration worked against these limits:

    As word spread Friday about the new and retroactive limit -- inserted by Democratic Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut -- so did consternation on Wall Street and in the Obama administration, which opposed it.(...)

    The administration is concerned the rules will prompt a wave of banks to return the government's money and forgo future assistance, undermining the aid program's effectiveness. Both Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Lawrence Summers, who heads the National Economic Council, had called Sen. Dodd and asked him to reconsider, these people said.

    Tim Geithner's public private partnership plan caused the AIG bonus scandal. This is because Geithner's plan needs voluntary private participation and, as many of those private investors and institutions have made clear, they won't join in if their compensation packages are threatened. As such, on behalf of the Obama administration, Tim Geithner and Larry Summers joined with congressional Republicans to block legislation that would have retroactively blocked the bonuses. This was done in the hope of securing more private participation in the administration's public-private partnership bailout plan.

    REST http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=12304

    White House, Congress Complicit in AIG Bonus Scandal from The Washington Independent

    FROM http://washingtonindependent.com/34551/white-house-congress-complicit-in-aig-bonus-scandal

    AIG CEO Edward Liddy pleads for civility with a sometimes hostile crowd at his congressional hearing. (WDCpix)

    AIG CEO Edward Liddy pleads for civility with a sometimes hostile crowd at Wednesday's congressional hearing. (WDCpix)

    On day four of AIG bonus-gate, the message from Capitol Hill has emerged as clear as it is unanimous: The $165 million paid this week to executives of bailed-out American International Group is "appalling," "outrageous" and "a breach of public trust."

    Illustration by: Matt Mahurin

    Illustration by: Matt Mahurin

    Yet as pitchfork populism continues to fuel the congressional castigation, a vital element of the debate has gone largely ignored: Congress, going back to September, has had numerous opportunities to limit executive pay for bailed-out banks, only to ignore or abandon those efforts in the face of opposition from the finance industry, the White House or both.

    The result has been that hundreds of billions of dollars in bailout funds have left Washington with virtually no conditions on how the money would be spent. The banks have taken advantage of that freedom, collectively paying out billions in bonuses, retention salaries and other perks to the same employees who helped run the companies into the ground.

    Julian E. Zelizer, congressional expert at Princeton University, said the failure of policymakers to limit executive pay for bailed out banks was no accident. "Neither Congress nor the president wanted to look as if they were 'taking over' financial institutions," Zelizer wrote in an email, "nor did they want to anger business."

    The result, he added, was "predictable:" a bailout strategy with plenty of leeway for the companies receiving the money.

    Indeed, allowing most bonus payments to continue was a central element of both the Bush and Obama administrations' bailout strategies. When Henry Paulson, Treasury secretary under the Bush White House, first unveiled the Troubled Asset Relief Program in September, the public wailed about the absence of conditions on the money. Congress intervened to add some limits on executive pay — provisions that Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) labeled "anything but mild." But liberal critics of those compensation limits, including a number of congressional Democrats, pointed out loopholes allowing the companies to pay their executives virtually any sum they wanted. Most provisions, for example, apply only to companies receiving more than $300 million in TARP funds.

    REST http://washingtonindependent.com/34551/white-house-congress-complicit-in-aig-bonus-scandal

    Black judge: We're always 'cleaning up white folks' messes' from Chicago Sun-Times News


    FROM http://www.suntimes.com/news/nation/1483611,w-racism-dallas-black-judge031809.article

    DALLAS — The top municipal judge in Dallas faces calls for his resignation over a racially charged column he wrote in a weekly newspaper.


    ROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

    DALLAS — The top municipal judge in Dallas faces calls for his resignation over a racially charged column he wrote in a weekly newspaper.

    Administrative Judge C. Victor Lander apologized Tuesday for writing in the Dallas Weekly that "black folks have been cleaning up white folks' messes for hundreds of years."

    Lander, who is black, said he wrote the column earlier this month to praise reform efforts of the city's first black prosecutor, Craig Watkins.

    A member of the Dallas City Council isn't buying the explanation — calling for Lander's resignation. The council appoints municipal judges in Dallas.

    Lander has been a municipal judge for 12 years.


    David Frum: "What the Hell Is Going On at Fox News?" from Gawker

    from http://gawker.com/5173823/david-frum-what-the-hell-is-going-on-at-fox-news

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6rmAf2-1aQ

    Former Bush speechwriter and attempted GOP image remaker David Frum caught Glenn Beck Friday, and he didn't care for it.

    Beck (pictured here, at home) has gone off the deep end, rehashing ancient John Bircher conspiracy theories, pointing his growing audience toward extremist literature, and gleefully (and tearfully) playing at unstable demagoguery. This doesn't sit well with Mr. Frum, who'd maybe like to see the Republican party win elections instead of forming paramilitary militias in fortified rural compounds. (YOU ARE NOT ALONE, WE SURROUND THEM, I'M WORRIED FOR THIS COUNTRY—we think we know where that sort of argument is headed!)

    There's always been a market for this junk of course. Once that market was reached via mimeographed newsletters. Now it's being tapped by Fox News.

    Conspiracy theories always flourish during economic downturns. They flourished during the terrible slump of the 1890s (when they captured even so fine a mind as Henry Adams) and again in the 1930s. Today's slump – so vast, so difficult to understand – opens the door again.
    [...]
    It's not a new message of course. In fact, big parts of it seem almost self-consciously copied from Peter Finch's legendary declamation in the movie Network.

    Of course, Finch was only pretending to be crazy. He was an actor performing a role. Then again – so probably is Glenn Beck.

    But what about Fox News? What's their excuse?

    Hah, Frum, their "excuse" is "ratings." You know this full well! Sorry it doesn't help your plan to "build a conservatism that can win again." We recommend kicking back and watching Glenn Beck paint, exercise, and stoke the deep-seated dangerous paranoid psychosis that lurks in the American psyche.

    (Up top, Glenn Beck continues to work on his cult of personality, and maybe predicts his own martyrdom?)

    Goldman Using FDIC-Backed Debt to Finance “Job-Killing Mergers” from Firedoglake

    rest at http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/4283

    Guess who wrote this?

    Both companies are benefiting from government initiatives to pump liquidity into the markets, including a program that lets many financial companies sell debt with maturities as long as three years and backed by the FDIC. Morgan Stanley has issued $23 billion of such debt; Goldman, $25 billion. Although banks pay a fee of as much as 1% for it, the FDIC guarantees amounts to a subsidy. Without it, the companies likely would have to offer interest rates two to three percentage points higher to attract buyers. So, the two may be getting a subsidy of $500 million or $750 million a year.

    The aim of the program, which began in October, is to trim bank-funding costs and encourage consumer and business lending. Goldman and Morgan Stanley, however, make few loans, save for the kind that many in Washington detest -- those for job-killing mergers like the pending Pfizer/Wyeth combination.

    If you guessed some wild-eyed DFH, guess again. It's from a story in Barrons (subscription required) touting Goldman and Morgan Stanley as good bets for investors.

    If you're not familiar with Barrons:

    Barron's is America's premier financial weekly, with in-depth news reports and analyses on global financial markets.

    When it veers into politics, it's decidedly to the right.

    Here's a bit more from the Barron's story:

    The firms dislike acknowledging the benefits they derive from various government liquidity programs, including $10 billion each from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and a less-publicized bond-guarantee program from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. that has produced more than $20 billion of cheap financing for both Morgan Stanley and Goldman since it began in October.

    After the collapse of Lehman, the debt markets were closed to Goldman and Morgan Stanley. Their competitors like JPMorgan derive about 50% of their short-term financing from deposits and 50% from the debt markets. But Goldman and Morgan Stanley have no deposits to speak of. They would be dead in the water without access to this financing. That's one of the reasons Geithner and Paulson let them become bank holding companies overnight last September, to give them access to this program and others. (A bit tangentially, in July, 2008, two months before its collapse, Goldman/Morgan competitor Lehman asked Geithner to let it become a bank holding company. Geithner refused. My guess is that's where he got the idea.)

    Goldman stuck its toe back into the water in late January with a $2B issue with no FDIC guarantees. The yield on them was 7.79% (as opposed to between 2 and 3% on the FDIC-backed bonds). But they haven't been back

    Bonds issued earlier this year by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and General Electric without the government's backing have dropped to 96 cents on the dollar and 73 cents on the dollar, respectively, in recent days. Their government-backed debt trades at or close to their full value of 100 cents on the dollar.

    Morgan Stanley hasn't even tried.

    The FDIC program that backs these bond issues is called the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program (TLGP). Recently, Chris Dodd introduced a bill, the Depositor Protection Act of 2009, which would allow the FDIC to borrow $500B from the government. "Depositor Protection", a lovely sentiment, indeed. Some even surmised that this was an indication that the government was ready to bite the bullet on nationalizaion for Citibank and/or Bank of America. But a little birdy has told me that the true purpose of this is to backstop the TLGP program. As things are now, FDIC-backed debt can have a maturity of no more than 3 years. But they are planning to extend that to 10 years.

    I wrote a diary recently, where I think I make a pretty good circumstantial case that Chris Dodd, at the direct request of Goldman, put language in the stimulus bill making it much easier to repay the TARP money (firms would no longer be required to raise private capital to replace the money). Some of you may wonder, "What's wrong with that Janushka? Isn't paying back the money a good thing?" Yes, it is a good thing. But right now, the only legal restrictions on employee compensation apply to TARP recipients. So now many of the TARP recipients are heading for the exits, starting with Goldman. Like Goldman, many of them are big issuers of FDIC-backed debt and, no doubt, will continue to be. Also like Goldman, many of them will also no doubt participate as sellers and buyers in Geithner's Public Private Investment Fund (PPIF , or as I like to calll it,the no-strings, stealth TARP). Dodd has said that the TARP compensation limits do not apply to the PPIF.

    And then there's the mother of all bailouts, AIG, whose beneficiaries include Goldman and a host of foreign banks (Deutsche Bank, UBS, Societe General, Barclays), who are not TARP recipients.

    A bailout is a bailout is a bailout.

    A subsidy is a subsidy is a subsidy.

    Anyone who gets one must play by our rules.

    Meet Chris Dodd, the Senator from AIG [Politics] from Gawker


    Two AIG executives fingered by the New York Post as recipients of blood-money bonuses personally donated to the presidential campaign of Chris Dodd, who inserted language into the stimulus package allowing for their bonuses.

    AIG execs Douglas Poling and Jonathan Liebergall, both of Connecticut, each donated $2,100 to Chris Dodd for President in late 2006.

    The stimulus package severely limited the ability of bailout-recipients to pay bonuses. But Dodd inserted language that provided an "exception for contractually obligated bonuses agreed on before Feb. 11, 2009," which allowed for the AIG payouts.

    It's been noted that Dodd has received $280,238 in campaign cash from AIG executives and political action committees over the past 20 years; now we know that two of the actual Bonue Villains personally cut checks. With a nice return on the investment, one assumes.

    Tuesday, March 17, 2009

    'Obama Fingers' Invented By Sensitive Germans from Gawker

    from http://gawker.com/5170367/obama-fingers-invented-by-sensitive-germans

    Europeans just love Barack Obama, since he's not constantly calling them names and touching them inappropriately like his predecessor. So the Germans named some terrible fried chicken product after him, as an homage.

    Mmmm, "Obama Fingers:" These "tender, juicy pieces of chicken breast" are "coated and fried." Then they're served with a delicious curry dip. So: Fried chicken and a sauce that could be from Indonesia or maybe Pakistan. (And to think the White House was once upset over some silly Sasha and Malia dolls.)

    German food company Sprehe says: you're welcome, America's first black president!

    rest http://gawker.com/5170367/obama-fingers-invented-by-sensitive-germans

    Lou Dobbs a Terrible Racist, In Honor of St. Patrick's Day from Gawker

    from http://gawker.com/5172815/lou-dobbs-a-terrible-racist-in-honor-of-st-patricks-day

    The image associated with this post is best viewed using a browser.Lou Dobbs is usually a belligerent xenophobe in honor of something Mexican, like a migrant worker, leprosy, asphalt or maybe just a cheese enchilada. Not today: The Irish made the CNN anchor insult everyone.

    Dobbs wished everyone "Happy St. Patrick's Day" on his radio show, because otherwise the UN guys in black helicopters will sniper him to death, immediately. Then, in defiance, he said he detests the drunken Irish holiday, along with that one for the Eye-talians, the Catholics and filthy Anglicans ("St. Joseph") and whatever those Asians do, "you know, 'St. Jin-Tao-Wow."

    And also what's with the Jews? Don't they have some kind of day to worship their version of "Saints?" No? Of course not.

    Thanks to Media Matters for discovering and recording this gem, a fine basis for a drinking game. How about a shot every time Lou insults, oh, a million ethnics? That will make it a short night.

    O’Bama Refuses To Battle Snakes from Firedoglake


    from http://firedoglake.com/2009/03/17/obama-refuses-to-battle-snakes/

    One of the changes I most hoped for (but did not, however, expect) was to have a president who puts the rule of law and well-being of the country ahead of the narrow self-interest of the rich and powerful.  Admittedly, it's still very early in Obama's term, but so far I've seen precious little evidence that he has the stomach for it.

    No matter how high the stakes, he tiptoes around the elephant in the room rather than confronting it head-on.  Consider:

    1) The Economy.  Instead of taking over and restructuring rotten financial institutions, Obama throws money at them and hopes for the best, because he doesn't have the nerve to fire incompetent executives or force shareholders to take a loss.  And when all is bluffed and done, he probably won't force AIG execs to give back their bonuses, either.

    2) Healthcare.  Obama wants to achieve the goal of universal affordable healthcare without bypassing its biggest obstacles, like the health insurance and pharma industries.  Instead of seriously considering the single-payer approach, he wants to use subsidies and mandates to keep the insurance and pharma industries in the game.  If anything, this system will only make them stronger, their reward, I suppose, for being such model corporate citizens and treating us so well over the years.

    3) Accountability.  Not only has Obama shown no interest in investigating or prosecuting the crimes of the previous administration, but his Justice Department appears to be actively covering for them.  BushCo. will get away with every single awful thing they've done over the last eight years, and their young apprentices will be emboldened to do the same when they take the reins of government (which may be sooner rather than later if 1 & 2 turn out badly).

    Yes, in each of these examples, doing the right thing would encounter resistance: The financial, insurance, and pharma industries all have powerful lobbies and lots of congresscritters in their pockets, but they're also less popular than Rush Limbaugh.  Real reform at their expense would generate a groundswell of popular support that would be hard to resist.

    And sure, holding the Bush administration accountable for its many crimes would spark outraged shrieks of "Political witch hunt!" from Republicans and Villagers, but does anyone seriously believe that America would turn on Obama for prosecuting The Worst President Ever and his henchmen?

    More than anything, Obama strikes me as a man who will spare no expense on balms and ointments to soothe a painful boil, but simply cannot bring himself to lance it.

    Obama's lobbyist rule: Promise Broken from Politifact.com stories


    FROM http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2009/mar/17/obamas-lobbyist-rules-promise-broken/

    Of the 513 promises we're tracking, this one has become the most controversial. It is the cornerstone of President Obama's campaign theme about limiting the influence of special interests.

    During the campaign, Obama said many times that lobbyists would not run his White House, and the campaign delighted in tweaking rival John McCain for the former lobbyists who worked on McCain's campaign.

    Obama's ethics proposals specifically spelled out that former lobbyists would not be allowed to "work on regulations or contracts directly and substantially related to their prior employer for two years." On his first full day in office, Obama signed an executive order to that effect.

    But the order has a loophole -- a "waiver" clause that allows former lobbyists to serve. That waiver clause has been used at least three times, and in some cases, the administration allows former lobbyists to serve without a waiver.

    After examining the administration's actions for the past two months, we have concluded that Obama has broken this promise. See Promise No. 240 for the full details.

    Monday, March 16, 2009

    McCain flips on AIG bailout one more time: We never should have rescued them. from Think Progress

    FROM http://thinkprogress.org/2009/03/16/mccain-twitter-flip/

    Last fall, as AIG teetered on the edge of collapse, then-Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) came out against using government resources to rescue the firm. Less than 24 hours later, McCain decided that a bailout was necessary because, as he put it, "there are literally millions of people whose retirement, whose investment, whose insurance were at risk here." But today — after learning of the AIG's plans to award $165 million in bonuses to its employees — McCain apparently decided that saving "literally millions of people" from financial ruin wasn't worth it:

    mccain_tweet.jpg

    While McCain seems to believe that the only way to deal with AIG's misuse of its bailout funds is to not to offer such bailouts in the first place, other options exist. As Pat Garofalo explains, nationalizing AIG and giving the Treasury Department "outright control over the hiring and firing of executives and the payment of bonuses and dividends" would be a far more efficient strategy.

    8,000 Comcast Passwords Exposed, Phishing Scam Suspected from Consumerist


    The New York Times has reported that a list of over 8,000 Comcast user name and passwords were available to the public via Scribd for two months, before a Wilkes University professor discovered it over the weekend after doing a search for his identity online. Comcast is saying it looks like the result of a phishing scam and isn't an inside job, and that there are so many duplicate entries on the list that it's closer to 4,000 customers.

    The man who discovered it, Kevin Andreyo, deserves a slap on the back for using the power of the web to track down personal information about himself—he used pipl to perform a search on his name and address—and he deserves a slap somewhere else for using the same password on every account.

    "That isn't just my password for Comcast, it's my password for everything that is not tied to my credit card," Mr. Andreyo said in an interview.

    People! Do not do that! Unless you suffer from brain damage or some form of learning disability, your brain can remember more than one password. Do not make it easy for scammers by using a master key that can open any door into your personal life.

    If you're worried that you were on the list, the easiest way to tell is to see if your Comcast email account has been frozen—Comcast is taking this measure as well as "contacting them to educate them about using safe passwords."

    "Passwords of 8,000 Comcast Customers Exposed" [New York Times]

    FROM http://consumerist.com/5171041/8000-comcast-passwords-exposed-phishing-scam-suspected

    Former Cook County GOP Chairman beaten by wife for prostitutes from Crooks and Liars


    OK, what do you do when your wife comes home late at night unexpectedly, only to find you in the childrens playroom with two prostitutes, whereupon she begins beating on your dumb ass with a Guitar Hero controller and punching at you? Call the cops of course, and have her arrested! is the obvious answer.

    At least that's what you if you're a former GOP Chairman in Illinois.

    This story is from last week but is too good/awful to pass up.

    According to the police report, Eni Skoien became enraged and attacked her husband early Sunday morning when she discovered him with two prostitutes.

    The police report said Gary Skoien acknowledged to authorities that the women were prostitutes. But he later denied that and tried unsuccessfully to have the report changed.

    Barrington-Inverness Police Chief Jeff Lawler reiterated Friday that the department stands by the report.

    Furthermore, the department is eager to speak with the women, not to build a prostitution case but in their role as witnesses in the domestic battery case against Eni Skoien. The women had left the home by the time police arrived.

    "Ordinarily, our victims supply us with the names of witnesses," Lawler said.

    A prostitution case is unlikely, in any event, unless a police officer actually witnesses a solicitation of sex for money, Lawler added. Both women had left the premises before police arrived Sunday.

    According to the report, 36-year-old Eni Skoien came home about 1:15 a.m. Sunday and, after discovering the women in the home, struck Gary Skoien, 55, with a closed fist and several times with a toy guitar. The beating left him bloodied, police said.

    Charged with misdemeanor domestic battery, Eni Skoien is expected in court Thursday, March 19, in Rolling Meadows.

    REST AND VIDEO  http://videocafe.crooksandliars.com/scarce/former-cook-county-gop-chairman-beaten-wife

    Lenny Dykstra's Not A Racist — He's Had Three "Spearchuckers" On The Cover from Deadspin


    After a year's worth of positive Lenny Dykstra news glorifying his inexplicable financial genius, the unsurprising truth about The Dude is revealed. Shocker: Lenny is an asshole and completely full of shit.

    Well, he's definitely full of shit about one thing — his Players Club magazine. You remember that, right? The glossy mag he bankrolls that features content geared toward helping millionaire athletes live a prosperous life the right way. GQ ran a story in its April issue written by former Players Club editor Kevin Coughlin, who wrote thousands of unkind words about his ex-boss. Some of it's old news: the paychecks were inconsistent, the working environment was less than professional, and Lenny was a self-promoting retard. Then Coughlin gives us a glimpse about what it's like to spitball editorial ideas with Dykstra. It ain't pretty:

    Lenny's all-time favorite workplace prank is saying something outrageous just to see how those around him react. Sometimes the jokes are on himself. During one of my first visits to the office, Lenny-a known steroids user, according to the Mitchell Report, though he's repeatedly denied it-blurts out to me and two other employees that "back in the old days, we'd rub some HGH [human growth hormone] on our elbows and knees." No one knows whether he's joking or not. Other times, Lenny's attempts at humor can be downright offensive. At one meeting, Lenny goes off on how a particular layout looks "faggy"-despite the presence of a gay page designer in the room. (Later, Lenny says to me: "Did you see the look on that fag's face?") On another occasion, I field a call from Lenny about potential cover subjects while I'm at home; Lenny's on speaker when he proudly states, for both my wife and me, that "nobody can call me a racist-I put three darkies and a bitch on my first four covers."

    The first four Players Club covers featured Derek Jeter, Chris Paul, Tiger Woods, and Danica Patrick.

    rest http://deadspin.com/5170819/lenny-dykstras-not-a-racist--hes-had-three-spearchuckers-on-the-cover

    Use the Tax Code to Reclaim the AIG Bonuses

    from http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2009/03/use-the-tax-code-to-reclaim-the-aig-bonuses.html

    AIG Aaron Zelinsky (Yale 2L & son of Tax Prof Ed Zelinsky (Cardozo)) writes:  Larry Summers: Stop the AIG Bonuses. Yes You Can:

    Larry Summers claims that nothing can be done about the AIG bonuses. As a former Secretary of the Treasury, he should know better.

    Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner should direct the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to challenge the AIG bonuses as unreasonable compensation under the Internal Revenue Code. Finding the AIG bonuses to be unreasonable compensation would render them nondeductible for federal tax purposes, and would strengthen potential shareholder derivative suits to recapture The Great AIG Giveaway. ...

    If the AIG bonuses are determined to be unreasonable compensation, AIG would be unable to deduct such compensation for federal income tax purposes. The American taxpayers would thereby recoup some of the money they advanced to keep AIG solvent, money which wound up instead in the pockets of AIG's managers. Even if AIG does not owe any federal income tax this year, challenging the bonuses as unreasonable compensation prevents AIG from carrying the deduction forward for use as Net Operating Losses (NOLs) to offset future corporate earnings and thereby reduce AIG's future income taxes.

    Determining these bonuses to be unreasonable compensation will also benefit AIG's shareholders. Corporate law allows a shareholder to bring a derivative action against the board of a corporation for recovery of excessive executive compensation. These shareholder claims will be buttressed by an IRS determination that the AIG bonuses are unreasonable.

    AIG Bonuses Scandal: CEOs Take Our Billions and Are Accountable to No One


    from http://www.alternet.org/workplace/131721/aig_bonuses_scandal%3A_ceos_take_our_billions_and_are_accountable_to_no_one/
    By Robert B. Reich, Robert Reich's Blog
    Posted on March 15, 2009, Printed on March 16, 2009
    http://www.alternet.org/story/131721/

    The real scandal of AIG isn't just that American taxpayers have so far committed $170 billion to the giant insurer because it is thought to be too big to fail -- the most money ever funneled to a single company by a government since the dawn of capitalism -- nor even that AIG's notoriously failing executives, at the very unit responsible for the catastrophic credit-default swaps at the very center of the debacle, are planning to give themselves over $100 million in bonuses. The scandal is that even at this late date, even in a new administration dedicated to doing it all differently, Americans still have so little say over what is happening with our money.

    The administration is said to have been outraged when it heard of the bonus plan last week. Apparently Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner told AIG's chairman, Edward Liddy (who was installed at the insistence of the Treasury, in the first place) that the bonuses should not be paid. But it turns out that most will be paid anyway, because, according to AIG, the firm is legally obligated to pay them. The bonuses are part of employee contracts negotiated before the bailouts. And, in any event, Liddy explained, AIG needs to be able to retain talent.

    AIG's arguments are absurd on their face. Had AIG gone into chapter 11 bankruptcy or been liquidated, as it would have without government aid, no bonuses would ever be paid (they would have had a lower priority under bankruptcy law that AIG's debts to other creditors); indeed, AIG's executives would have long ago been on the street. And any mention of the word "talent" in the same sentence as "AIG" or "credit default swaps" would be laughable if laughing weren't already so expensive.

    This sordid story of government helplessness in the face of massive taxpayer commitments illustrates better than anything to date why the government should take over any institution that's "too big to fail" and which has cost taxpayers dearly. Such institutions are no longer within the capitalist system because they are no longer accountable to the market. To whom should they be accountable? As long as taxpayers effectively own a large portion of them, they should be accountable to the government.

    But if our very own Secretary of the Treasury doesn't even learn of the bonuses until months after AIG has decided to pay them, and cannot make stick his decision that they should not be paid, AIG is not even accountable to the government. That means AIG's executives -- using $170 billion of our money, so far -- are accountable to no one.

    Robert Reich is professor of public policy at the Richard and Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. He was secretary of labor in the Clinton administration.

    © 2009 Robert Reich's Blog All rights reserved.
    View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131721/

    Tax Time Dangers: Cyber Theives Are Licking Their Chops to Steal Your Info


    from http://www.alternet.org/rights/131724/tax_time_dangers%3A_cyber_theives_are_licking_their_chops_to_steal_your_info/
    By Diane Dimond, Huffington Post
    Posted on March 16, 2009, Printed on March 16, 2009
    http://www.alternet.org/story/131724/

    Do you have a home computer? You think you're being careful with what you read, save and share from it? Guess what? Chances are you could be a cyber-crime victim just waiting to happen.

    As the economy continues to tank criminals are rising to new heights in the number of scams and identity thefts they pull off on a daily basis. Their base of operation is anywhere in the world.

    "Back in the 90s, it was like kids on the block throwing rocks saying, 'Let me break something,'" says Martin Schmidt, founder of a major east coast based cyber security firm, "Now it's organized criminals saying, "Let me steal something,'" and they're stealing from both businesses and individuals in astounding numbers.

    Schmidt runs the Information Defense Corporation. He's usually explaining to Fortune 500 CEO's why they need to make computer security a top priority to keep their intellectual property and client lists safe. He agreed to give me a primer on how the rest of us can protect ourselves too.

    "I don't need to come to your house to find out what's in your house," he said. "I can just enter through your computer. Do not store information there that you don't want the world to see."

    Cyber identity theft is one of the fastest growing crimes around these days according to the U.S. Secret Service which, along with the FBI, investigates these crimes. Two major independent studies report an estimated 10 million Americans were victims of identity theft last year.

    Kathy and Tony Bucci were recently featured on NBC's Today Show and they told a disturbing story of how an identity thief breached their computer, stole a copy of their tax return and fraudulently submitted it to the IRS. The Bucci's hefty refund check was then diverted, via a wire transfer into an account no one can find now.

    It seems natural to save a copy of your taxes on your computer but Schmidt says that's a terrible idea. Once a thief gets a hold of a document like that he or she also gets your Social Security number, home address, date of birth and all the particulars about your income. Next, they assume your identity, applying for credit cards and bank loans in your name. They stain your credit history and generally make your life a living hell.

    So what can you do to keep the bad guys out of your computer and away from your personal information?

    First, don't give them a way in. "Always know who you're dealing with," says Schmidt. Do on-line shopping only with reputable merchants, use on-line banking sessions carefully and never over a wireless connection, be careful what your kids do on the family computer because the simple act of downloading music creates a pathway for hackers. These pathways work in both directions. You bring music in, hackers can take information out.

    "That computer is part of your person. It is an electric extension of you," Schmidt warns. Therefore, lesson number two: Curb yourself if you're tempted to open e-mail from a strange address. Hackers know how to get your attention and often use pleas for charity or promises of free goods or easy money as a way in. Their messages carry a hidden "Trojan", also called a virus, a worm or malware that infiltrates your computer and opens up a pathway back to the hacker. Before you know it the thief is scanning your files looking for information to exploit.

    And here's a scary revelation. When these criminals steal your vital information they're smart enough not to store it on their own computer. They pick a random repository site and dump it there where it can go undetected for months. It's also often sold to other criminals. That dodgy behavior recently resulted in more than a million tax returns, student loan applications and credit reports being available on line and easily accessible with a mere Google search. The Bucci's were shocked to find their stolen tax return displayed on line earlier this year for all the world to see.

    Computers are a way of life these days. They are also a criminal's delight. If you don't have good anti-virus security on your home computer it's like leaving the keys in the car or your front door wide open.

    So, when you finish up this year's tax return do yourself a favor. Resist the urge to store it electronically. Better to simply write down all your sensitive data and put it in a lock box. Once you delete it from the computer it won't be gone entirely but it will be harder and more time consuming for a hacker to find so perhaps they'll skip you and move on to the next target.

    Diane Dimond can be reached at Diane@DianeDimond.net or via her web site: DianeDimond.net.

    © 2009 Huffington Post All rights reserved.
    View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/131724/

    Outrage! AIG to Give Huge Bonuses After $170 Billion Bailout


    By Sam Stein, Huffington Post
    Posted on March 15, 2009, Printed on March 16, 2009
    http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.huffingtonpost.com//131700/

    Republicans and Democrats alike expressed "outrage" with the news that insurance giant AIG had decided to pay out $165 million in bonuses despite receiving $170 billion in taxpayer bailout funds. But while administration officials shared such populist indignation, they insisted that on this front their hands were tied.

    "There are a lot of terrible things that have happened in the last 18 months, but what's happened at AIG is the most outrageous," said Larry Summers, chairman of the White House National Economic Council, appearing on ABC's This Week.

    But Summers painted the Obama administration as largely powerless to stop the cash rewards. "We are a country of law. There are contracts. The government cannot just abrogate contracts. Every legal step possible to limit those bonuses is being taken by Secretary Geithner and by the Federal Reserve system."

    The dominant thread of the Sunday talk show circuit was, indeed, AIG. On Saturday, the insurance company, dependent on taxpayer largesse, let it be known that it would be issuing contractually stipulated bonuses to company executives for bringing in a certain amount of business. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner informed the firm about White House displeasure with the move and demanded that the bonuses be renegotiated. The next day, a whole host of lawmakers followed suit.

    rest and video http://www.alternet.org/blogs/video/131700/outrage!_aig_to_give_huge_bonuses_after_%24170_billion_bailout/


    'Jon Stewart, Look at Me!' ... Pathetic Tucker Carlson's Cry for Attention


    from http://www.alternet.org/blogs/mediaculture/131707/%27jon_stewart%2C_look_at_me!%27_..._pathetic_tucker_carlson%27s_cry_for_attention/
    By Steve Benen, Washington Monthly
    Posted on March 15, 2009, Printed on March 16, 2009
    http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/131707/

    I can understand why conservative media figure Tucker Carlson harbors some ill will towards Jon Stewart. There was that October 2004 episode of "Crossfire" -- on which Stewart called Carlson a "dick" -- which helped lead CNN to cancel the show.

    But Carlson's new criticism of Stewart may be more than just evidence of a grudge.

    Carlson, reached Friday, described Stewart as "a partisan demagogue."

    "Jim Cramer may be sweaty and pathetic -- he certainly was last night -- but he's not responsible for the current recession," Carlson told POLITICO. "His real sin was attacking Obama's economic policies. If he hadn't done that, Stewart never would have gone after him. Stewart's doing Obama's bidding. It's that simple."

    First, for anyone who watches the show, this is a baseless observation. Just over the last week or two, Stewart has mocked and/or criticized Obama repeatedly, on everything from his reception towards British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to his heavy-handed media operation to his Iraq policy sounding too reminiscent of his predecessor's. "Partisans" who do the president's "bidding" don't make these kinds of criticisms.

    Second, my hunch is that Carlson knows this, but is taking cheap shots in the hopes that Jon Stewart will respond on the air. Indeed, Carlson may have noticed the attention showered on Jim Cramer lately, and come to the conclusion that "feuding" with Stewart is a great way to get on the air.

    It's kind of sad, really.

    Steve Benen is "blogger in chief" of the popular Washington Monthly online blog, Political Animal. His background includes publishing The Carpetbagger Report, and writing for a variety of publications, including Talking Points Memo, The American Prospect, the Huffington Post, and The Guardian. He has also appeared on NPR's "Talk of the Nation," MSNBC's "Rachel Maddow Show," Air America Radio's "Sam Seder Show," and XM Radio's "POTUS '08."

    © 2009 Washington Monthly All rights reserved.
    View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/131707/

    Hacked podcasts can get your itunes username and passwords

    Hackers can create malicious podcasts to hijack usernames and passwords from Apple's iTunes software.

    According to a warning from Apple, a "design issue" in the iTunes podcast feature can be abused via rigged audio files to cause an authentication dialog to be presented to the user.  From that dialog, a hacker can hijack iTunes credentials and upload it to the podcast server.


    [ SEE: Apple plugs gaping iTunes hole, doesn't tell everyone ]

    From Apple's advisory:

    • A design issue exists in the iTunes podcast feature. A subscription to a malicious podcast may cause an authentication dialog to be presented to the user. This dialog may entice the user to send iTunes credentials to the podcast server.

    Apple has shipped a patch in iTunes 8.1 to clarify the origin of the authentication request in the dialog box.

    The iTunes update also corrects a denial-of-service flaw that can be caused via maliciously crafted DAAP messages.

    rest http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=2861&tag=nl.e550

    Obama's pick for fed CIO on leave after FBI sting

    The U.S. Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra, appointed by President Obama last week, has been placed on leave, following an FBI raid yesterday at the District of Columbia's IT offices. (Techmeme)

    Kundra, who was previously the District's Chief Technology Officer and worked in the offices, has not been linked to the raid, which stemmed from a bribery investigation involving employees and technology vendors.

    rest http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=14553&tag=nl.e550

    Ipod touch explodes causing childs pants to catch fire

    In another shocking-but-true post by Jacqui Cheng on Ars Technica, the mother of a child in Cincinnati, Ohio is suing Apple and 10 unnamed retail employees from a nearby Apple Store "over an iPod touch that allegedly exploded in the child's pocket."

    According to the complaint filed yesterday in the Southern District of Ohio (PACER: 1:09-cv-00170-HJW), the child had the "iTouch," as the suit calls the device, in his pocket during school. The iPod touch was in the "off" position when it unexpectedly popped and caused the child to feel a burning sensation. At that time, he stood up and noticed that his pants were, in fact, on fire.

    rest http://blogs.zdnet.com/gadgetreviews/?p=2058&tag=nl.e550

    Don Imus Has Cancer [Sick] from Gawker

    from http://gawker.com/5170550/don-imus-has-cancer

    Radio-talking Marlboro Man doppelganger Don Imus, a famous racist, has cancer. He announced it on his show this morning:

    "The day you find out is fine," Imus said. "But the next morning when you get up, your knees are shaking. I didn't think I could make it to work."

    He speculated that the cancer could be a result of stress.

    Sad. Wait, they let Don Imus back on the air? When did that happen? [NYP]

    Exec Who Brought AIG Down Still Living High from Firedoglake


    There's plenty of blame to go around in the AIG disaster, but a huge rashers certainly go to Joseph Cassano, head of the Financial Products Division that wrote $562 billion risky and dangerous unhedged credit default swaps. The office was located in London to take advantage of the country's lax financial oversight laws, and lavishly rewarded for their efforts:

    According to The Times, compensation ranged from $423 million to $616 million for Cassano's group. That would be about 20% of the unit's revenue, meaning Cassano was being paid like a hedge fund manager.

    Cassano was forced out of AIG in March of last year:

    Cassano, who has homes in London and Connecticut, was forced to retire from AIG on March 31. Critics say despite the fact that the company is hemorrhaging money and being kept alive with taxpayer cash, Cassano has been allowed to keep his windfall.

    In addition, according to Cassano's signed retirement agreement obtained by ABC News, he was to be paid $1 million a month by AIG for "consulting services" through the end of last year.

    AIG would have been a smoking hole had taxpayers not started bailing it out last year. It would not have had the money to pay anybody anything if it had gone bankrupt.

    rest http://firedoglake.com/2009/03/16/exec-who-brought-aig-down-still-living-high/

    Fwd: News Alert: Obama Tells Geithner to Block A.I.G. Bonuses

    Breaking News Alert
    The New York Times
    Monday, March 16, 2009 -- 12:29 PM ET
    -----

    Obama Tells Geithner to Block A.I.G. Bonuses

    President Obama has instructed the Treasury secretary to try
    to stop the faltering insurance giant American International
    Group from paying out hundreds of millions of dollars in
    bonuses to executives, as the administration scrambled to
    avert a populist backlash against banks and Wall Street that
    could complicate Mr. Obama's economic recovery agenda.

    Read More:
    http://www.nytimes.com/?emc=na


    from moveon.org

    Dear MoveOn member,

    If you had to find one single group of people to blame for our economic crisis, you'd definitely have to consider the financial products division of AIG.

    They made huge, bad bets on the housing market that have cost taxpayers $170 billion...so far. That's more than $500 from every American.1

    But get this: The Washington Post just reported that these people are receiving $450 million in bonuses—and they got their first installment yesterday.2 They destroyed our economy, and now they're being rewarded for it with our bailout money!

    We can't let this stand. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Congress need to do whatever it takes to get our money back. 

    Can you sign our petition today and then pass it on? We'll deliver it to Secretary Geithner and the congressional committees that supervise AIG. Clicking below will add your name:

    http://pol.moveon.org/aigbonus/o.pl?id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=3

    After you sign, please forward this to friends and family to make sure the outcry is impossible to ignore. The petition says: "Under no circumstances should the AIG executives who helped create the financial crisis receive bonuses. That's our money and you should do whatever it takes to get it back."

    The government may need to get creative to recover these bonuses, but where there's a will, there's a way. And some folks in Congress get it. Representative Barney Frank and Senator Russ Feingold are already investigating ways to get the money back.3

    Secretary Geithner already shamed AIG into reducing the bonuses they planned on paying out. But seven executives in the financial products division still received bonuses of more than $3 million each. These people wrote literally trillions of dollars in insurance contracts—those infamous credit default swaps—that they could never hope to cover. And they're getting huge bonuses for perpetrating this fraud.

    AIG's main defense is that they have to honor the contracts with these employees. But let's be clear: AIG would be bankrupt and these folks would already have been laid off if it weren't for the government's massive infusion of money. The big car companies took far less taxpayer money, and they're modifying their contracts with autoworkers. AIG should do the same with its employees.4

    Geithner and Congress need to do whatever it takes to recover that money.

    Wall Street has proven over and over that it's incapable of policing itself. So our elected representatives need to. Sign the petition below and we'll deliver it to Secretary Geithner and Congress to let them know that we're counting on them to step up. Clicking here will add your name:

    http://pol.moveon.org/aigbonus/o.pl?id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=4

    Thanks for all you do.

    –Daniel, Eli, Peter, Tanya and the rest of the team

    Sources:

    1. "A.I.G. Reveals Its Biggest Counterparties," The New York Times, March 15, 2009
    http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51236&id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=5

    2. "Bailout King AIG to Pay Millions in Bonuses," The Washington Post, March 15, 2009
    http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51235&id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=6

    3. "Romer: 'We're Pursuing Every Legal Means' To Undo AIG Bonuses," Huffington Post, March 15, 2009
    http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51239&id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=7

    4. "UAW says it has a deal on contract concessions," The Associated Press, February 17, 2009
    http://www.moveon.org/r?r=51237&id=15739-7569649-IhD467x&t=8

    5. "Bonus Money at Troubled A.I.G. Draws Heavy Criticism," The New York Times, March 15, 2009
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/16/business/16aig.html

     

    Want to support our work? We're entirely funded by our 5 million members—no corporate contributions, no big checks from CEOs. And our tiny staff ensures that small contributions go a long way. Chip in here.

    The scariest thing you'll read today "The Invisible One Quadrillion Dollar Equation -- Asymmetric Leverage and Systemic Risk"

    from http://www.siliconvalleywatcher.com/mt/archives/2008/10/the_size_of_der.php

    The Invisible One Quadrillion Dollar Equation -- Asymmetric Leverage and Systemic Risk

    According to various distinguished sources including the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) in Basel, Switzerland -- the central bankers' bank -- the amount of outstanding derivatives worldwide as of December 2007 crossed USD 1.144 Quadrillion, ie, USD 1,144 Trillion. The main categories of the USD 1.144 Quadrillion derivatives market were the following:

    1. Listed credit derivatives stood at USD 548 trillion;

    2. The Over-The-Counter (OTC) derivatives stood in notional or face value at USD 596 trillion and included:

    a. Interest Rate Derivatives at about USD 393+ trillion;

    b. Credit Default Swaps at about USD 58+ trillion;

    c. Foreign Exchange Derivatives at about USD 56+ trillion;

    d. Commodity Derivatives at about USD 9 trillion;

    e. Equity Linked Derivatives at about USD 8.5 trillion; and

    f. Unallocated Derivatives at about USD 71+ trillion.

    Quadrillion? That is a number only super computing engineers and astronomers used to use, not economists and bankers! For example, the North star is "just" a couple of quadrillion miles away, ie, a few thousand trillion miles. The new "Roadrunner" supercomputer built by IBM for the US Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory has achieved a peak performance of 1.026 Peta Flop per second -- becoming the first supercomputer ever to reach this milestone. One Quadrillion Floating Point Operations (Flops) per second is 1 Peta Flop/s, ie, 1,000 Trillion Flops per second. It is estimated that all the data found on all the websites and stored on computers across the world totals more than One Exa byte of memory, ie, 1,000 Quadrillion bytes of data.

    Whilst outstanding derivatives are notional amounts until they are crystallised, actual exposure is measured by the net credit equivalent. This is normally a lower figure unless many variables plot a locus in the wrong direction simultaneously. This could be because of catastrophic unpredictable events, ie, "Black Swans", such as cascades of bankruptcies and nationalisations, when the net exposure can balloon and become considerably larger or indeed because some extremely dislocating geo-political or geo-physical events take place simultaneously. Also, the notional value becomes real value when either counterparty to the OTC derivative goes bankrupt. This means that no large OTC derivative house can be allowed to go broke without falling into the arms of another. Whatever funds within reason are required to rescue failing international investment banks, deposit banks and financial entities ought to be provided on a case by case basis. This is the asymmetric nature of derivatives and here lies the potential for systemic risk to the global economic system and financial markets if nothing is done.

    Let us think about the invisible USD 1.144 quadrillion equation with black swan variables -- ie, 1,144 trillion dollars in terms of outstanding derivatives, global Gross Domestic Product (GDP), real estate, world stock and bond markets coupled with unknown unknowns or "Black Swans". What would be the relative positioning of USD 1.144 quadrillion for outstanding derivatives, ie, what is their scale:

    1. The entire GDP of the US is about USD 14 trillion.

    2. The entire US money supply is also about USD 15 trillion.

    3. The GDP of the entire world is USD 50 trillion. USD 1,144 trillion is 22 times the GDP of the whole world.

    4. The real estate of the entire world is valued at about USD 75 trillion.

    5. The world stock and bond markets are valued at about USD 100 trillion.

    6. The big banks alone own about USD 140 trillion in derivatives.

    7. Bear Stearns had USD 13+ trillion in derivatives and went bankrupt in March. Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Lehman Brothers and AIG have all 'collapsed' because of complex securities and derivatives exposures in September.

    8. The population of the whole planet is about 6 billion people. So the derivatives market alone represents about USD 190,000 per person on the planet.


    The Impact of Derivatives

    1. Derivatives are securities whose value depends on the underlying value of other basic securities and associated risks. Derivatives have exploded in use over the past two decades. We cannot even properly define many classes of derivatives because they are highly complex instruments and come in many shapes, sizes, colours and flavours and display different characteristics under different market conditions.

    2. Derivatives are unregulated, not traded on any public exchange, without universal standards, dealt with by private agreement, not transparent, have no open bid/ask market, are unguaranteed, have no central clearing house, and are just not really tangible.

    3. Derivatives include such well known instruments as futures and options which are actively traded on numerous exchanges as well as numerous over-the-counter instruments such as interest rate swaps, forward contracts in foreign exchange and interest rates, and various commodity and equity instruments.

    4. Everyone from the large financial institutions, governments, corporations, mutual and pension funds, to hedge funds, and large and small speculators, uses derivatives. However, they have never existed in history with the overarching, exorbitant scale that they now do.

    5. Derivatives are unravelling at a fast rate with the start of the "Great Unwind" of the global credit markets which began in July 2007 and particularly after the collapse of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in September this year.

    6. When derivatives unravel significantly the entire world economy would be at peril, given the relatively smaller scale of the world economy by comparison.

    7. The derivatives market collapse could make the housing and stock market collapses look incidental.

    Three Historical Examples

    1. The so-called rogue trader Nick Leeson who made a huge derivatives bet on the direction of the Japanese Nikkei index brought on the collapse of Barings Bank in 1995.

    2. The collapse of Long Term Capital Management (LTCM), a hedge fund that had a former derivatives and bond dealer from Salomon Brothers and two Nobel Prize winners in Economics as principals, collapsed because of huge leveraged bets in currencies and bonds in 1998.

    3. Finally, a lot of the problems of Enron in 2000 were brought on by leveraged derivatives and using derivatives to hide problems on the balance sheet.

    The Pitfall

    The single conceptual pitfall at the basis of the disorderly growth of the global derivatives market is the postulate of hedging and netting, which lies at the basis of each model and of the whole regulatory environment hyper structure. Perfect hedges and perfect netting require functioning markets. When one or more markets become dysfunctional, the whole deck of cards could collapse swiftly. To hope, as US Treasury Secretary Mr Henry Paulson does, that an accounting ruse such as transferring liabilities, however priced, from a private to a public agent will restore the functionality of markets implies a drastic jump in logic. Markets function only when:

    1. There is a price level at which demand meets supply; and more importantly when

    2. Both sides believe in each other's capacity to deliver.

    Satisfying criterion 1. without satisfying criterion 2. which is essentially about trust, gets one nowhere in the long term, although in the short term, the markets may demonstrate momentary relief and euphoria.

    Conclusion

    In the context of the USD 700 billion rescue plan -- still being finalised in Washington, DC -- the following is worth considering step by step. Decision makers are rightly concerned about alleviating immediate pressure points in the global financial system, such as, the mortgage crisis, decline in consumer spending and the looming loss of confidence in financial institutions. However, whilst these problems are grave, they are acting as a catalyst to another more massive challenge which may have to be tackled across many nation states simultaneously. As money flows slow down sharply, confidence levels would decline across the globe, and trust would be broken asymmetrically, ie, the time taken to repair it would be much longer. Unless there is government action in concert, this could ignite a chain-reaction which would swiftly purge trillions and trillions of dollars in over-leveraged risky bets. Within the context of over-leverage, the biggest problem of all is to do with "Derivatives", of which CDSs are a minor subset. Warren Buffett has said the derivatives neutron bomb has the potential to destroy the entire world economy, and is a "disaster waiting to happen." He has also referred to derivatives as Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD). Counting one dollar per second, it would take 32 million years to count to one Quadrillion. The numbers we are dealing with are absolutely astronomical and from the realms of super computing we have stepped into global economics. There is a sense of no sustainability and lack of longevity in the "Invisible One Quadrillion Dollar Equation" of the derivatives market especially with attendant Black Swan variables causing multiple implosions amongst financial institutions and counterparties! The only way out, albeit painful, is via discretionary case-by-case government intervention on an unprecedented scale. Securing the savings and assets of ordinary citizens ought to be the number one concern in directing such policy.

    read the rest at http://www.siliconvalleywatcher.com/mt/archives/2008/10/the_size_of_der.php

    Derivatives exposures is worth $190K/human being on Earth

    from http://www.boingboing.net/2009/03/15/derivatives-exposure.html
    The global derivatives market exposure is worth $1.144 QUADRILLION. That's $190,000 for every human being on Earth. Something tells me that most of those derivatives ain't worth the hard-drive sectors they're stored on.

    Whilst outstanding derivatives are notional amounts until they are crystallised, actual exposure is measured by the net credit equivalent. This is normally a lower figure unless many variables plot a locus in the wrong direction simultaneously. This could be because of catastrophic unpredictable events, ie, "Black Swans", such as cascades of bankruptcies and nationalisations, when the net exposure can balloon and become considerably larger or indeed because some extremely dislocating geo-political or geo-physical events take place simultaneously. Also, the notional value becomes real value when either counterparty to the OTC derivative goes bankrupt. This means that no large OTC derivative house can be allowed to go broke without falling into the arms of another. Whatever funds within reason are required to rescue failing international investment banks, deposit banks and financial entities ought to be provided on a case by case basis. This is the asymmetric nature of derivatives and here lies the potential for systemic risk to the global economic system and financial markets if nothing is done.
    The Size of Derivatives Bubble = $190K Per Person on Planet 

    AIG Ripoff Gets More Maddening

    from http://www.boingboing.net/2009/03/15/aig-ripoff-gets-more.html

    It's even more disgusting than we heard yesterday. According to the Wall Street Journal, AIG, the financial giant that has taken more than $170 billion of our money to save it from extinction -- and given lots of it to other financial companies -- is paying almost half a billion dollars in bonuses (my emphasis in first quoted paragraph)

    to employees in its financial products unit. That division was at the heart of AIG's collapse last fall, which compelled the U.S. government to provide $173.3 billion in aid to keep it running....

    Those payments are in addition to $121.5 million in incentive bonuses for 2008 that AIG will start making this month to about 6,400 of its roughly 116,000 employees. AIG, which was rescued in September as it faced potential bankruptcy, is also making over $600 million in retention payments to over 4,000 employees.

    Together, the three programs could result in roughly $1.2 billion in retention and bonus payments to AIG employees.

    Who's worse? The legislators and executive-branch people who let this happen, or the AIG executives who are showing themselves to be supremely greedy, and who must be laughing at the rest of us by now. Close call...

    Obama Continues Bush-Era Extremism on Liberties, Secrecy from boing boing

    from http://www.boingboing.net/2009/03/15/obama-continues-bush.html

    The Obama administration has undone a few of the Bush administration's worst policies, true. Yet when it comes to Obama's increasingly clear disdain for some core civil liberties and his administration's penchant for secrecy despite cheerful rhetoric to the contrary, Salon's Glenn Greenwald arrives at a dismal -- but sadly, logical -- conclusion:   

    After many years of anger and complaint and outrage directed at the Bush administration for its civil liberties assaults and executive power abuses, the last thing most people want to do is conclude that the Obama administration is continuing the core of that extremism. That was why the flurry of executive orders in the first week produced such praise: those who are devoted to civil liberties were, from the start, eager to believe that things would be different, and most want to do everything but conclude that the only improvements that will be made by Obama will be cosmetic ones.

    But it's becoming increasingly difficult for honest commentators to do anything else but conclude that. After all, these are the exact policies which, when embraced by Bush, produced such intense protest over the last eight years.  Nobody is complaining because the Obama administration is acting too slowly in renouncing these policies. The opposite is true:   they are rushing to actively embrace them.  And while there are still opportunities to meaningfully depart from the extremism of the last eight years, the evidence appears more and more compelling that, at least in these areas, there is little or no real intent on the part of the Obama administration to do so.

    Democrats in Congress and much of the political left have been silent or nearly so despite the evidence. You expect cowardice from Congress, which spent the Bush presidency in a perpetual bent-over posture. The Netroots folks who did so much to elect Obama should be screaming bloody murder by now. Too few are even slightly audible. A shame.

    Maybe the Republicans will re-discover civil liberties at some point. Nah.

    From the NYT

    American International Group
    Amid rising pressure from Congress and taxpayers, the American International Group on Sunday released the names of dozens of financial institutions that benefited from the Federal Reserve's decision last fall to save the giant insurer from collapse with a huge rescue loan.

    Financial companies that received multibillion-dollar payments owed by A.I.G. include Goldman Sachs ($12.9 billion), Merrill Lynch ($6.8 billion), Bank of America ($5.2 billion), Citigroup ($2.3 billion) and Wachovia ($1.5 billion).

    Big foreign banks also received large sums from the rescue, including Societe Generale of France and Deutsche Bank of Germany, which each received nearly $12 billion.

    A.I.G. also named the 20 largest states, starting with California, that stood to lose billions last fall because A.I.G. was holding money they had raised with bond sales.

    Go to Article from The New York Times»
    Go to Item from DealBook»
    Go to A.I.G Document via The New York Times»
    Go to A.I.G. Press Release via BusinessWire»

    The disclosure came shortly after it was revealed that A.I.G., which has received more than $170 billion in taxpayer bailout money from the Treasury and Federal Reserve, planned to pay about $165 million in bonuses to executives in the same business unit that brought the company to the brink of collapse last year.

    News of the bonuses brought nearly universal condemnation from the Obama administration and Republicans alike.

    Go to Article from The New York Times»
    Go to Article from The Washington Post»

    The secrecy surrounding A.I.G.'s counterparties has been a major reason why the A.I.G. bailout has rubbed so many the wrong way, The New York Times's Gretchen Morgenson wrote in her latest Fair Game column.

    Meanwhile, A.I.G.'s infamous financial products unit, the source of much of its woes, has kept a relatively low profile in the Connecticut town where it's based, Reuters' DealZone reports.

    Go to Column from The New York Times»
    Go to Item from DealZone»

    Perks Watch
    Which chief executives are getting private jet service or fancy corporate apartments? This proxy season, Michelle Leder of footnoted.org is scouring regulatory filings for mentions of these and other, more unusual company perks.

    Some of her discoveries are appearing exclusively on DealBook in a special feature called "Perks Watch," which launched this morning with a look at filings from Liz Claiborne and Ameriprise Financial

    Go to Perks Watch from DealBook»

    A Pain In The AIG - from Think progress


    One of the main reasons the federal government had to intervene and use billions of taxpayer dollars to prop up the nation's financial institutions is that they were considered to be "too big to fail." In other words, these companies had become so massive that their collapse would send shockwaves throughout the U.S. and global economies. No company has come to symbolize this problem more than insurance giant AIG, in which taxpayers now have an 80 percent stake after the federal government committed $170 billion to rescue it from bankruptcy. "Given the systemic risk AIG continues to pose and the fragility of markets today, the potential cost to the economy and the taxpayer of government inaction would be extremely high," wrote the Treasury and Federal Reserve in a joint statement on March 2. As New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has explained, "AIG is in trouble because it wrote many credit default swaps, in effect guaranteeing others against losses it lacked the resources to cover. We, the taxpayers, are now covering those losses. ... But this means that US taxpayers have now assumed the downside risks for all of AIG's counterparties." AIG has proved to be in no rush to repay this favor, highlighting the risk in the government's current strategy.

    BONUS OUTRAGE: On Saturday, AIG revealed that it still planned to pay $165 million in bonuses to executives in its financial products unit, the same unit "that brought the company to the brink of collapse last year." As the New York Times pointed out, these awards "are in addition to $121 million in previously scheduled bonuses for the company's senior executives and 6,400 employees." After finding out about the scheduled payments, Geithner called AIG chief Edward Liddy to tell him that they were "unacceptable and had to be renegotiated." In a letter on Saturday, Liddy replied that AIG was legally bound to "proceed" with the bonuses, and he did not want employees to "believe that their compensation is subject to continued and arbitrary adjustment by the U.S. Treasury." This response set off a wave of outrage from Obama administration officials, even though many of them have opposed tougher restrictions on CEO pay. Yesterday on ABC's This Week, National Economic Council Chairman Lawrence Summers said, "There are a lot of terrible things that have happened in the last 18 months, but what's happened at AIG is the most outrageous." House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA) also said that AIG was "abusing the system."

    FINDING OUT WHERE THE MONEY IS GOING: Yesterday, AIG also revealed the names of dozens of the big banks it has paid off with the bailout money. The Washington Post reports, "The disclosure, which the company said was made after consulting the Federal Reserve, revealed that AIG paid more than $75 billion in the final months of 2008 to numerous domestic and foreign banks, as well as to various U.S. municipalities." Major recipients included Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America. Approximately $12 billion also "went to pay off municipalities in dozens of states for whom the firm had created complex investment agreements." The disclosure was an "about-face" for AIG, which had been resisting lawmakers' calls for increased transparency. In fact, all firms that have received money under the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) have been able to escape with inadequate oversight. Bailed-out CEOs have retained their corporate jets and refused to answer questions about how they are spending taxpayer money. Just last week, a House oversight subcommittee grilled TARP watchdog Neil Barofsky on questionable investments made by bailed-out firms and what influence lobbyists have exerted. Barofsky promised officials that he would provide that information when he releases his report.

    THE RATIONALIZATION FOR NATIONALIZATION: What this weekend's disclosures highlight is the shortcomings of the Treasury's current strategy to prop up the financial system. Basically, the federal government continues to pump billions of dollars into these institutions without receiving full control over how taxpayer dollars are spent in return. Bank nationalization has been floated by people such as Krugman and NYU economist Nouriel Roubini, to former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). Geithner, however, has so far refused to say that nationalization is on the table. But it should be. "The American taxpayer would be ill-served to receive anything less for putting in the vast amount of money needed to restructure and recapitalize [the banks]," explained Adam Posen, Deputy Director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "And the American taxpayer, just like any acquirer of distressed assets, deserves to reap the upside from their eventual resale." Geithner has put forward a plan to subject the country's 20 biggest banks to "stress tests," in order to assess whether they have the resources to survive. Krugman has explained that these tests could be the key for an administration move toward nationalization, by "not hid[ing] the results when a bank fails the test, making a takeover necessary." As the Wonk Room's Pat Garofalo has written, "Geithner's public-private investment fund may get toxic assets off the banks' books," but it also depends on Wall Street "being willing to buy the junk currently clogging up the banks. And the longer nationalization is delayed, the longer the solvency of the entire banking system will be in question. Thus, more good banks will get dragged down into the mud with the bad."

    iPod Shuffle Headphones Contain DRM Chip



    from http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/03/15/holy-cats-there-is-a-drm-chip-inside-the-ipod-shuffle-earbuds/

    J&R over at BBG dissected the iPod Shuffle's tiny headphone control system and found an unidentified chip, marked 8A83E3, that appears to be some sort of proprietary digital control that prevents unauthorized transmission of commands to the Shuffle without an official Apple adapter. If this is true - and it seems old in-line adapters don't work with the Shuffle, which makes us believe that this proprietary to the Shuffle - this is kind of a big deal. Even if we're talking about a lock-in, it's a fairly egregious example of forcing compliance.

    Sunday, March 15, 2009

    "Forget al-Qaida - the world's most successful terrorist organization, by a margin of roughly $170 billion dollars, exists right here in the U.S."

    from http://zerohedge.blogspot.com/2009/03/americas-will-yield-to-aigs-demands-or.html

    ter⋅ror⋅ist  /หˆtษ›rษ™rษชst/ [ter-er-ist]

    –noun
    1. a person, usually a member of a group, who uses or advocates terrorism.
    2. a person who terrorizes or frightens others.
    3. (formerly) a member of a political group in Russia aiming at the demoralization of the government by terror.
    4. an agent or partisan of the revolutionary tribunal during the Reign of Terror in France.
    5. American International Group

    Forget al-Qaida - the world's most successful terrorist organization, by a margin of roughly $170 billion dollars, exists right here in the U.S... in fact we will make it easy for the FBI - its terrorist boot camp is located at 70 Pine Street, New York, NY 10270, and they even answer the phone at 212-770-7000. The organization in question, is of course, known as American International Group. And while the U.S. has claimed it will not negotiate with any ad hoc or designated terrorist organization ever, it has time after time succumbed to every single whim and demand that AIG has raised, from shelving out hard-earned taxpayer money to make sure the company does not disappear in the gravitational vortex of its derivatives Frankenstein, to protecting its cabal of crony amateur terrorists in waiting (read CDS counterparties who benefited from every bailout, for a complete list see here), to its employees who mindnumbingly keep receiving bonus after bonus payment. And if America was any country in Europe, with a touchy-feely sense of ethical propritery, this article in the New York Times would have resulted in mass looting.

    As the MSM disclosed a few days ago, Geithner, in a horrendous attempt to play Robin Hood for the masses pressured AIG to cut the $9.6 million its top 50 executives were going to receive. While that bit of information was purposefully circulated, the salvo that came from the NY Times was a bit of a fly in Geithner's ointment. Turns out AIG is paying out $165 million in "retention" bonuses over the next few days, with a range of as little as $1,000 to as much as $6.5 million for some lucky terrorist, and seven additional executives receiving bonuses more than $3 million. Now the logic for why these bonuses can not be reversed is that they were promised at some point last year, and AIG (aka US taxpayers) is contractually and legally bound to satisfy them.

    This development has made some new and even more toothless Robin Hoods appear on stage center, among them Obama's chief economic advisor Larry Summers, claiming the bonus situation at AIG "is outrageous. The whole situation at AIG is outrageous. What taxpayers are being forced to do is outrageous" however "We are a country of law. There are contracts. The government cannot just abrogate contracts. Every legal step possible to limit those bonuses is being taken by Secretary Geithner and by the Federal Reserve system." Other politicians taking the populist flag for a spin include Republican Mitch McConnell who said:

    "If you're going to take the government as a partner, the message here, I'm afraid, to any business out there that's thinking about taking government money, is "Let's enter into a bunch of contracts real quick, and we'll have the taxpayers pay bonuses to our employees." For them to simply sit there and blame it on the previous administration or claim contract — we all know that contracts are valid in this country, but they need to be looked at. Did they enter into these contracts knowing full well that, as a practical matter, the taxpayers of the United States were going to be reimbursing their employees? Particularly employees who got them into this mess in the first place. I think it's an outrage."

    Of course, none of this would have been necessary had the government done the right thing and put this bankrupt company where it belongs: into a controlled, pre-packaged or otherwise bankruptcy. Under bankruptcy law, not only would existing bonus contracts be renegotiable, but even historical bonuses would be subject to 3 year clawbacks under the terms of fraudulent conveyance. But of course, this would never happen as that would mean someone in the administration would have to make the right decision.

    rest http://zerohedge.blogspot.com/2009/03/americas-will-yield-to-aigs-demands-or.html


    'Americans still have so little say over what is happening with our money"

    from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-reich/the-real-scandal-of-aig_b_175105.html

    The real scandal of AIG isn't just that American taxpayers have so far committed $170 billion to the giant insurer because it is thought to be too big to fail -- the most money ever funneled to a single company by a government since the dawn of capitalism -- nor even that AIG's notoriously failing executives, at the very unit responsible for the catastrophic credit-default swaps at the very center of the debacle -- are planning to give themselves $100 million in bonuses. It's that even at this late date, even in a new administration dedicated to doing it all differently, Americans still have so little say over what is happening with our money.

    The administration is said to have been outraged when it heard of the bonus plan last week. Apparently Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner told AIG's chairman, Edward Liddy (who was installed at the insistence of the Treasury, in the first place) that the bonuses should not be paid. But most will be paid anyway, because, according to AIG, the firm is legally obligated to do so. The bonuses are part of employee contracts negotiated before the bailouts. And, in any event, Liddy explained, AIG needed to be able to retain talent.

    AIG's arguments are absurd on their face. Had AIG gone into chapter 11 bankruptcy or been liquidated, as it would have without government aid, no bonuses would ever be paid; indeed, AIG's executives would have long ago been on the street. And any mention of the word "talent" in the same sentence as "AIG" or "credit default swaps" would be laughable if it laughing weren't already so expensive.

    rest http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-reich/the-real-scandal-of-aig_b_175105.html

    Guy Loses Finger, Replaces With Flash Drive from Geekologie

    from http://www.geekologie.com/2009/03/guy_loses_finger_rplaces_with.php

    finger drive.jpg Jerry Jalava is a hacker who lost half his left ring finger in a motorcycle accident and decided to replace the digit with a USB drive. So now he sports a rubber half-finger with thumb(!)drive inside. Awesome. Plus, if he ever has to wear a wedding ring it won't count because it's not a real finger. Am I right? Because that's why I cut mine off. Just kidding, I was really high and trying to make a bong in shop class. Hit the jump for three more shots of the digital digitry.

    BREAKING: AIG Releases List of Counterparties, 65% To Foreign Banks from Firedoglake

    from http://firedoglake.com/2009/03/15/breaking-aig-releases-list-of-top-20-recipients-of-bailout-money/

    collateralpostings.thumbnail.jpgAIG just released its list of counter-parties (recipients of the bailout money that flowed through AIG); there are four nifty charts (PDF).

    Here's the take away:

    Chart A: $6.2 billion out of $22.4 billion goes to US financial concerns (that we know of--$41 billion is unaccounted for).

    Cart B: $10 billion out of $29.6 billion goes to US concerns.

    Chart C: $7 billion out of $12.1 billion (with $5.1 billion unaccounted for) goes to US concerns.

    Chart D: $14.7 billion out of $43.7 billion goes to US concerns.

    By "US concerns" I mean US banks and financial institutions--like Citbank or Goldman Sachs--or to States and municipalities in the US. The rest go to foreign banks, primarily in Europe.

    So, out of $107.8 billion of US taxpayer money, only $37.9 is specifically identified as going to US concerns.

    We only got 35% of our own money!

    I guess the message here is that if AIG fails, it takes down the EU with it.

    Send your comments to Congress here.

    AIG Will Still Pay Out $160 Million in Bonuses from Crooks and Liars


    Yes, I get the argument. Derivatives are complex, and maybe we can't wait for someone new to get up to speed. But what this really boils down to is extortion. They're claiming they can't legally breach the contract? I thought that's what bankruptcy is for! They think we'll knuckle under to blackmail from the same geniuses who got us into this mess?

    Insurance giant American International Group will award hundreds of millions of dollars in employee bonuses and retention pay despite a confrontation Wednesday between the chief executive and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner.

    But the company agreed to revise some executive payments after what AIG's leader, Edward M. Liddy, called a "difficult" conversation.

    The bonuses and other payments have been exasperating government officials, who have committed $170 billion to keep the company afloat -- far more than has been offered to any other financial firm.

    The issue came to a head when Geithner called Liddy and told him the payments were unacceptable and had to be renegotiated, said an administration official who was not authorized to comment on the Geithner conversation.

    In a letter to Geithner yesterday, Liddy agreed to restructure some of the payments. But Liddy said he had "grave concerns" about the impact on the firm's ability to retain talented staff "if employees believe that their compensation is subject to continued and arbitrary adjustment by the U.S. Treasury."

    rest http://crooksandliars.com/susie-madrak/aig-will-still-pay-out-millions-bonus

    Cheney has a ready excuse for the economic debacle: 'Stuff happens' from Crooks and Liars


    Cheney-King
    icon Download | Play   icon Download | Play

    Interviewed by John King on CNN's State of the Union this weekend, former vice president Henry F. Potter Dick Cheney wasn't really able to tell us why Republicans like himself should have any credibility whatsoever when it comes criticizing the Obama economic plan, considering how well theirs worked out.

    Here's how theirs worked out:

    rest http://crooksandliars.com/david-neiwert/cheney-has-ready-excuse-economic-deb

    Next Saturday, Let IRS Agents Fill Out Your Taxes [Taxes] from Consumerist


    Next Saturday, 250 IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers staffed with IRS agents will open their doors to anyone making $42,000 or less. With money tight for everyone this year, if you qualify, take the government up on its generous offer and let the IRS agents fill out your tax forms.

    "The IRS truly wants to go the extra mile to help taxpayers during these difficult economic times," said Jim Dupree, the IRS spokesman for Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia.

    Among other services provided on Super Saturday, tax filers will be able to get copies of tax returns and assistance with letters, notices and levies on their wages or bank.

    Make sure to bring along the following information:

    rest http://consumerist.com/5170189/next-saturday-let-irs-agents-fill-out-your-taxes

    Obama Announces Plans To Make Food Safe For Human Consumption [News From The Swamp] from Consumerist


    President Obama this week declared war on the Chinese Poison Train, announcing that the FDA will receive $1 billion in new funds for modern testing labs and additional food safety inspectors. Inspecting less than 5% of our food processing plants is apparently a "hazard to public health, and "it is unacceptable." So what's really behind the new policy shift? No, it's not those melamine murders or salmonella outbreaks. It's seven-year-old first daughter Sasha Obama!

    In the end, food safety is something I take seriously, not just as your President, but as a parent. When I heard peanut products were being contaminated earlier this year, I immediately thought of my 7-year old daughter, Sasha, who has peanut butter sandwiches for lunch probably three times a week. No parent should have to worry that their child is going to get sick from their lunch. Just as no family should have to worry that the medicines they buy will cause them harm. Protecting the safety of our food and drugs is one of the most fundamental responsibilities government has, and, with the outstanding team I am announcing today, it is a responsibility that I intend to uphold in the months and years to come.

    rest http://consumerist.com/5170385/obama-announces-plans-to-make-food-safe-for-human-consumption

    WTF?!! Perino: "the Bush administration deserved some credit for the modest uptick that Wall Street experienced this week"

    from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/03/15/perino-bush-deserves-cred_n_175062.html

    Former White House spokesperson Dana Perino said on Sunday that the Bush administration, while presiding over the start of the current recession, nevertheless deserved some credit for the modest uptick that Wall Street experienced this past week.

    Appearing on CSPAN's Washington Journal, the last of Bush's press secretaries said it was "not a secret" that the current economic mess started under her boss's watch. But, she cautioned, the public had yet to realize the full extent to which the past president's policies "alleviat[ed] the downturn." Take, for instance, the improvement in the Dow Jones Industrial average this week.

    "You were just speaking earlier about the possibility that since we had a little bit of a better week on Wall Street does that spell a turnaround?" Perino said. "Can all the credit go specifically to President Obama? Well, I would say no. We are just going to have to take a while to let all of this settle down and let the policies that our administration and the new administration are trying to put in place have a chance to work."

    rest at the link above