Tuesday, September 23, 2008

When Businesses are Failing... Raise the Minimum Wage?

Governor Corzine, I don't get it. According to the Courier Post Online, your reaction to the current financial crisis includes an increase of the minimum wage.
Among the proposals discussed:

Forming a syndicate of small banks and lenders to extend credit to small and mid-sized businesses and help homeowners fend off foreclosure.

Jump-starting infrastructure projects such as schools.

Luring businesses by touting New Jersey's real estate assets.

Raising the minimum wage and extending unemployment benefits.

Partnering with utility companies to create jobs in energy conservation.
I thought that when the economy is bad, we want to make it easier for businesses to survive. I can see the appeal of extending unemployment benefits, but giving people more money for the same work? Really? How exactly will that help?

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Friday, September 19, 2008

Is it time for Chris Dodd to resign?

We have heard all about Freddie Mae and Freddia Mac. We have heard all about how there is so much greed on Wall Street that clearly we need more regulation. Senator Barack Obama has on multiple occasions in the past few days bemoaned the lack of regulation by the Bush Administration in regard to regulating Wall Street.

However, we theoretically do have oversight on banking and on lending. It is called the US Senate Banking Committee which Senator Dodd is the Chairman. He is also the number one recipient of lobbying funds by the organizations that he was supposed to oversee. But wait, he is not satisfied to just stand on the sidelines now. He expressed his opinion today (Reuters):

U.S. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd on Friday warned the Bush administration that it must work with Congress this weekend on details of a Wall Street bailout package that has not been fully unveiled to lawmakers.

"None of us have any idea what the details are," said Dodd, adding that the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve should not present a package next week as a "fait accompli."


Why Mr Dodd? So you can make sure your currupt backside is covered? I don't think so. Resign now to reduce the damage to your party. You are now a liability and if you don't resign soon, Senator Barack Obama will have to explain why he is right behind you in lobbyist contributions and an active participant in this massive economic failure.

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Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Pelosi Orders Wall Street Probe - here is my list of witnesses.

From Politico:

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has ordered a broad, swift investigation of Wall Street and will demand testimony from Bush administration officials and captains of finance, congressional officials said

Let's help out with the witness list:

1. Franklin Raines
2. Jamie Gorelick
3. Chris Dodd
4. Barack Obama
5. Joe Biden
6. Andrew Coumo
7. William Jefferson Clinton
8. Hillary Clinton
9. John Kerry
10. Jim Johnson

And here is what you should ask. For all the former Democrat appointees from the Clinton administration, ask them why they lined their pockets while creating an environment that destroyed the mortgage industry in the United States by purposely breaking down the controls for mortgage lending to non-qualified buyers. And ask the politicians on this list what thhey received for the tens of thousands of donations they received from their corrupt friends.

After you are done with that, sure, go to Wall Street. But I suspect you won't have to or want to.

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Monday, September 15, 2008

Lehman and the mortgage crisis-Obama points finger...at himself.

We have all heard Barack Obama tell the world that he is a new kind of politician who "doesn't accept special interest money". That claim has always been dubious to me as fundraising statistics clearly show this to be untrue. But I figured that maybe he doesn't include unions and other organized labor donors in his definition of "special". But that apparently isn't the entire story. This morning, Barack Obama said this(from the AP):

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama said Monday the upheaval on Wall Street was "the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression" and blamed it on policies that he said Republican rival John McCain supports.

"This country can't afford another four years of this failed philosophy," Obama said after the shock-wave announcements that financial giant Lehman Brothers was filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy while titan Merrill Lynch was being bought by Bank of America for about $50 billion.


So, it's greedy CEO's, John McCain and Republicans that are the problem? Maybe not as this report from the Heritage Foundation makes perfectly clear:

In what some observers are calling a reshaping of Wall Street, two of the world’s largest investment banks, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, are set to disappear. Lehman has announced it will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and Merrill Lynch was bought by Bank of America. For all the complicated financial instruments and relationships involved in the current financial turmoil, the underlying cause is still relatively simple: the bursting of the housing bubble.

Ok. Step one is for Mr Obama to understand that the mortgage crisis caused this problem. But what drove the mortgage crisis?

When President Bill Clinton took office, Fannie and Freddie were viewed as “key” to Clinton’s plans to expand home ownership. The Washington Post reports: “The result was a period of unrestrained growth for the companies. … The companies increasingly were seen as the engine of the housing boom.” As the companies grew, conservatives repeatedly warned that their size posed a systemic risk to the financial system. As Sarah Palin put it, thanks to the implicit federal guarantee of their debt, Fannie and Freddie had become too big and too expensive to the taxpayers.

So, this clearly had double benefits for the Democrats. It drove economic expansion and allowed politicians to say more people owned homes (whether or not they could afford them is a different story). But how did this problem keep brewing for so long?

But Fannie and Freddie pushed back hard, turning to friends on the left for protection. Former Walter Mondale and Barack Obama campaign adviser James Johnson led a fierce lobbying campaign to fight reform of Freddie and Fannie. Clinton administration OMB director Franklin Raines told investors when he was Fannie Mae CEO in 1999: “We manage our political risk with the same intensity that we manage our credit and interest rate risks.” Fannie and Freddie’s lobbying power over the left continues to be strong to this day. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the top three recipients of campaign donations from Freddie and Fannie’s PACs and employees are all Democrats. From 1989 through today, Sen. Chris Dodd received $165,400, Barack Obama $126,349, and John Kerry $111,000. The Washington Post concludes: “Blessed with the advantages of a government agency and a private company at the same time, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac used their windfall profits to co-opt the politicians who were supposed to control them.”

Barack Obama should shut up for two reasons and avoid sticking his foot into his mouth on this topic. The first reason is that he and his fellow Democrats have their hands deep in this mess. As a matter of fact, to date the one person who has had to accept government settlement terms to avoid being convicted of defrauding investors is Franklin Raines (Clinton's former White House Budget Director). The second reason Obama should refrain is that to keep talking is to show what a complete hypocrite he is on the special interest issue. It took Chris Dodd 20 years to get his share of the loot. Obama almost caught up in three. It is Obama himself whose hands are not just dirty, they are filthy. McCain for the record received less than 1/6th the amount Obama did from this quasi-government mortgage and lobbying entity.

Again, who is at fault here?

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