MCCAIN & GRAHAM THINK THE WHOLE WORLD IS A BATTLEFIELD

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Posted on 8th March 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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WHY OBAMA SINGLED OUT S&P FOR RETRIBUTION

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Posted on 9th February 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Isn’t it funny that Obama is going after Standard & Poors, five years after the financial crisis. Moodys and Fitch also provided AAA ratings to worthless mortgage debt in collusion with the Wall Street banks and blessing of the Federal Reserve. They were smart enough to not downgrade the debt of the United States of America. S&P and Eagan Jones made the mistake of telling the truth about our debt situation and are paying the price. This is how a fascist government operates.

Why S&P is in the Crosshairs of the Department of Justice

By Scott S. PowellThursday, February 07, 2013

What has been distinct about Barack Obama’s presidency is his inclination to operate in continuous campaign mode, to deflect attention away from his policy failures and to undermine opposition by politicizing the issues and policy responses he chooses to take up. So now with the president’s attorney general Eric Holder having just announced the filing of a $5 billion Department of Justice suit against Standard & Poor’s—charging that fraudulent ratings were made on risky mortgage bonds that went into default during the financial crisis of 2008—one has to wonder what the political motivation might be.
First, why now? Why has it taken four years for the Obama Administration to bring this case? Second, why is it that S&P is singled out for alleged wrongdoing, when Moody’s and Fitch did the very same things in assigning top ratings to similar classes of dodgy mortgage securities? The plausible answer is that it’s all about political calculation on manipulating perception and outcome on the central issue of our time.
President Obama has been reminded from multiple quarters that the deficit spending and debt accumulation during his administration has the potential to undermine his legacy and precipitate a major financial crisis. Surely someone in the White House has paid attention to the various reports on the state of the U.S. Government debt rating, issued from all three credit rating agencies during the last few years.
A January 2011 Moody’s report noted that the ratio of national debt to national tax revenue in the United States is the worst of all the AAA-rated countries in the world. While the European debt crisis got more news coverage than the one brewing at home in the last three years, the U.S. fiscal condition has deteriorated to the point where its debt to revenue ratio is nearly three times higher than the AAA median, and more than twice that of Germany, the U.K., the Netherlands, Switzerland and Canada.
Later in 2011 Moody’s and Fitch hedged their AAA-ratings of U.S. Government debt—issuing negative outlooks. But it was S&P that took the heat in August of that year, being first to actually cut the nation’s rating to AA+. At the time the Obama administration lashed out at S&P, launching an unprecedented attack, specifically accusing the agency of “misleading calculations.”
Some now speculate that the Obama administration is merely getting revenge on S&P’s downgrade by taking legal action against the rating agency. But it is also plausible that the Obama administration made a shrewd political calculation in taking this action. First, it wants to deflect attention away from its failed leadership on budgetary matters resulting in record deficits and alarming debt accumulation as the debate over the sequester and debt ceiling heats up. Second, and perhaps more important, the Obama Justice Department’s suit puts Moody’s and Fitch on notice that they had better behave and save Barack Obama from the historical ignominy of the one who lost America’s AAA-rating.
Washington is increasingly defined by hubris, but in the end financial markets will overrule politics. Politically contrived AAA ratings on U.S. Government debt will no more hold up the markets for U.S. Treasury bonds and the dollar than did the falsely rated mortgage securities hold up the banking, housing and mortgage markets in 2008. Unfortunately the magnitude of this next crisis would make the previous look like a cakewalk.
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Scott Powell is senior fellow at the Discovery Institute in Seattle. Reach him at scottp@discovery.org.

KUNSTLER BRUTALLY DISAVOWS OBAMA

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Posted on 30th January 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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No bullshit from Jimmy this morning. He is spitting mad. He unloads both barrels on Obama and Holder. His opening description of America is an all-time classic in my humble opinion.

 

Jive Talkin

By James Howard Kunstler
on January 30, 2012 8:52 AM

     Well, he had to get up there and say something. In this particular winter of our discontent, the wispiest nostrums and baldest lies will do. America is not interested in reality. America is a nine-hundred pound man imprisoned in a fetid trailer bedroom begging for one more case of Little Debbie Cocoa Cremes before the front-end-loader bashes through the wall to haul him to intensive care. America just wants to hear another story about its own wonderfulness before that happens. America’s soul is so lost that it has disappeared into the same cosmic wilderness that MF Global’s client accounts were last seen entering.

     Mr. Obama keeps telling nationwide audiences that “we have a supply of natural gas that can last America nearly 100 years.” That is just not true. If he believes it then he is either 1) getting treasonously bad advice from dishonest advisors or 2) not reading reports issued by his own agencies or 3) just making shit up. This was the same week, by the way, when the US Department of Energy dropped its estimate for the Marcellus shale gas play by 66 percent, while the estimate for all US shale basins went down 42 percent. The shale gas industry is another Ponzi bubble that is about to founder on a scarcity of investment capital. Just watch.

     The “energy independence” trope is a lie, too. At least in the sense that Mr. Obama means – that we can run the suburban clusterfuck and all its accessories by other means than fossil fuels. He just says it because it makes voters feel better. By the time they find out it was just a story, he won’t need their votes anymore. Meanwhile, we’ll do nothing to prepare for a different way of life, and so, necessarily, the result will be an obscene scramble for power and resources that will leave a lot of people dead.

     The topper for me, though, was the President’s cheeky announcement that he’d ordered the Department of Justice to form a “special unit” to investigate mortgage fraud and other lethal irregularities in the banking sector. The fact that his congressional audience did not bust out laughing shows what a convocation of craven and perfidious cat’s paws they are. Note to readers: the DOJ has a long-established criminal division fully empowered to prosecute all the familiar scams of our time from NINJA lending to the robo-signing of titles to MERS mortgage mischief, to the bundling and sales of booby-trapped CDOs – up to and including whatever Jon Corzine thought he was doing at MF Global.

     Notice how lame the major newspapers and cable news networks were in responding to Mr. Obama’s impudent japery. None of them, including The New York Times, bothered to ask Attorney General Eric Holder what he’s been up to along these lines for the past three years. It is really hard to account for the stupendous incompetence of the news media in recent years. Of course, I’m allergic to conspiracy theories and the only explanation that adds up for me is the diminishing returns of technology. Among other untruths we’ve embraced collectively is the idea that computer-distributed information amounts to knowledge and understanding, tending toward judgment. Apparently, it’s only made our society much dumber and more irresponsible. After all, none of the supposed media watchdogs even asked The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal, or CNN and a hundred other outlets why they didn’t interview the Attorney General of the United States and ask him why he has not been taking care of the business now assigned to this special unit.

     Not included in the State of the Union message was any reference to the provision in the recently signed National Defense Authorization Act that allows the US government to suspend due process of law and use the military to arrest and indefinitely detain US citizens on vague and opportunistic charges of “suspicion” You will remember a month ago when Mr. Obama signed the law and issued a “signing statement” that said his administration would not carry out these specific provisions. Did anyone notice that it is an impeachable offense for the president to state his opposition to enforcing the law? In which case, why isn’t there a bill of impeachment making its way through Congress right now?

      I’ve had enough of Obama, though I voted for him in 2008. I won’t vote for him again. But I’m not altogether confident that any of us will be voting for anyone in the fall of 2012. Too many systems we depend on are spinning out of control. I suppose we will continue feeding ourselves a diet of lies and evasions until circumstances become so extreme that language itself loses all relevance and only real action will answer. I believe that moment is approaching in the yet-to-be-acted-out political uproars of the spring and summer. In the meantime, American leadership is bankrupt. Just accept the fact that America has no legitimate leadership. The vacuum is total and we know how nature feels about a vacuum.

JOBS NOW, STOP THE FORECLOSURES, JAIL THE BANKSTERS

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Posted on 6th November 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Bill Black needs to be brought back into the Federal Government and given the authority to implement the ideas he puts forth in this video. He is thinking outside the box. He has solutions that will probably make no one happy, but they would work. I love his idea to use Charitable organizations across the country to put people to work, rather than have them watching TV for 99 weeks. I think his ideas on foreclosures could be adjusted with John Hussman’s idea about reducing the principle, but if the house appreciates and they sell it, the bank would recoup the appreciation. His final point about Holder and Geithner being fired is dead on. Until the criminal Wall Street bankers are thrown in jail, we will never get our financial system back where it needs to be.