Thursday, June 16, 2011
David Tyree Stands Up For Traditional Marriage
"You can't teach something that you don't have, so two men will never be able to show a woman how to be a woman."
"This [gay marriage] will be the beginning of our country sliding toward, it's a strong word, but anarchy."
"How can marriage be marriage for thousands of years and now all the sudden because a minority, an influential minority, has a push or agenda ... and totally reshapes something that was not founded in our country."
Quoted here.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Another One Who Hates Your Mortgage Interest Deduction: Felix Salmon
Here.
By his own admission he wants to spend the $100 billion tax loss expenditure on some big government fantasy of his own, instead of letting you keep it to raise a family in a safe environment of your own choosing where the kids don't have to be exposed to the low lifes who inhabit . . ..
Well, you get the idea.
These people have no use for families. Where the hell do you think the future country comes from?
Pawlenty, Huntsman and Daniels are Not Real Conservatives: They're Bushies
And owe fealty to the family which turned its back on the Reagan revolution:
Huntsman is the second 2012 GOP White House hopeful to meet with the former president. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty visited with Bush at the former president's office in Houston, Texas a few weeks ago.
The meetings raise eyebrows, as many senior political advisers from both Bush administrations still don't have a candidate to support in the battle for the GOP nomination, especially with Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniel's announcement Sunday that he would not make a bid for the White House.
(source)
Jon Huntsman Admires Not Getting Many Things Right The First Time
Lyrics from one of Jon Huntsman's favorite artists, as heard on The Laura Ingraham Show, this morning:
I don't get many things right the first time,
In fact i am told that a lot.
Now i know all the wrong turns ands tumbles and falls
Brought me here. ...
Ben Folds Five, "The Luckiest"
Yeah, that's all we need . . . another president who doesn't get many things right the first time.
The Eerie Way 'Obama' Rhymes With 'Hoover'
From Walter Russell Mead:
Like Obama, Hoover was the child of a broken home with an unconventional background. He was far more widely traveled than most Americans in his day, and his time overseas made him a globalist in his thinking in many ways. His wife (Lou Henry Hoover) was unusually well educated and assertive — at a time when few women went to college, she graduated from coeducational Stanford with a degree in geology. Hoover was an unconventional candidate who came into office on a tidal wave of support. Hoover, Secretary of Commerce during the Roaring Twenties, had never held elected office before winning the presidency. His campaign went deep into enemy territory, winning over solidly Democratic states in what was still the deep blue South including (like Obama) Florida, Virginia and North Carolina. Hoover was the great progressive hope of his day — he had supported Teddy Roosevelt’s 1912 Bull Moose campaign and was seen as much more forward looking and progressive than the party machine. He ran on the most diverse presidential ticket until Barack Obama’s own election in 2008; Hoover’s running mate, Kaw nation member Charles Curtis, was the first Native American and the first American with significant non-European ancestry to serve as Vice President of the United States. Hoover continued to burnish his diversity credentials in the White House; he was the first president since Theodore Roosevelt to invite an African American to a White House dinner and he wanted progress on Native American issues to be a hallmark of his administration. Hoover was also deeply concerned about the health of the middle class and the condition of the poor. He was an early backer of the long term, low interest mortgage that became the cornerstone of middle class finance, and he came into office hoping that prosperity would eliminate poverty in the United States.
The similarities in office are just as interesting, here.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
class,
Herbert Hoover,
mortgages,
poverty,
Walter Russell Mead
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Gov. Walker Wins in WI, Supreme Court Smacks Down County Circuit Court Judge as Usurper
As reported here by The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel:
In its ruling Tuesday, the Supreme Court said it took up the case because the lower court had "usurped the legislative power which the Wisconsin Constitution grants exclusively to the Legislature."
The Democrats, the unions and courts in Wisconsin all behaved disgracefully in trying to stop the legislatively elected will of the people to find its expression through the due process which the Republicans followed.
Rush Limbaugh: "Agreement between people does not make something true."
On the show, Friday, June 10, 2011.
States of Disaster Depended on $316 Billion of Federal Stimulus in Last Fiscal Year
And that help for current operations is coming to an abrupt end as the new fiscal year begins on July 1.
The Associated Press reports, adding these staggering numbers on top of the current budget data:
The 50 states have a combined $689.5 billion in unfunded pension liabilities and $418 billion in retiree health care obligations.
Read the complete details here.
ObamaCare, Medicare, and Social Security aren't the only back-breakers out there. The individual states have plenty of their own which they can't pay for, either. The whole country is stuck on stupid spending.
Quantitative Easing and its Affects in Three Sentences
"[The Fed's] Treasury purchases reduce the quantity of risk free assets, forcing investors to buy riskier assets. Commodities are among those risky assets.
By monetizing the debt, the Federal Reserve is debasing paper money and investors are seeking for tangible assets, things that hurt when you drop them on your foot, as one colorful commentator put it."
-- Marc Chandler, here
Why Quantitative Easing is Here to Stay
It looks like in saving the banks from drowning, the Fed, the dollar, and the country are headed for Davy Jones' Locker.
From Michael Pento:
The truth is that without the ability to fully withdraw prior liquidity the Fed is incapable of significantly raising interest rates. After all, the Fed can't raise rates by fiat. It must sell assets to do so. Similarly, to support the dollar it must take money out of circulation, which is also accomplished by asset sales.
But the Fed's arsenal is no longer stocked with high grade weaponry.
As the rest makes plain, here, its stockpile is full of duds.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Why Hold Bonds in Tax Protected Accounts and Stocks Outside Them?
"Bond coupons are taxed as ordinary income. Stock dividends are taxed more lightly."
-- Brett Arends, here, on a completely different topic.
The Turning Currents of Sarah Palin's Vulgarized Mind
Even after a very long relationship, John Ziegler can't quite seem to put his finger on Sarah Palin's problem in the essay excerpted below. There's hardly a man alive who can diagnose the feminine disease, blinded as men are to women by their own passions, but Jonathan Swift came close: "The current of a female mind stops thus, and turns with ev'ry wind."
Ziegler didn't realize it, but he was on to it, here:
“Hi, John Ziegler, this is Governor Sarah Palin,” said the familiar voice on my phone message. There was a pause. “From Alaska,” she added. It’s typical of Sarah’s underappreciated sense of humor to pretend this needed to be clarified. “I just sat down and watched your movie about 9/11,” she went on, “and it’s unflippin’ believable”—”flippin’” is one of her favorite expressions—”I would like to talk with you about this next documentary. Could you give me a call?”
At this point, Sarah and I had met only once, but we were already developing a bizarre relationship. Over the almost three years that followed, we would often act like friends—while at other times she would act like she barely knew me.
The Current Shape of the 78 Year Emergency
Robert G. Wilmers, a defender of community banking, doesn't explicitly mention the abolition of Glass-Steagall, but he lays out some of the consequences of that nonetheless, one of which is that the FDIC is now on the hook for the mistakes of speculators, something it was never intended for:
In 1990, the six largest financial institutions accounted for 9 percent of all U.S. domestic deposits. As of Dec. 31, 2010, the six biggest banks accounted for 36 percent of deposits. ...
In 2010, the six largest bank holding companies generated $56.1 billion in trading revenue, or 74 percent of their $75.7 billion in pretax income. ...
The Big Six institutions earned more than 93 percent of the trading revenue generated by all American banks during the past two years. ...
The major Wall Street banks operate under the taxpayer-backed umbrella of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and, as we saw in 2008, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve. To pay for the cost of such protection, legislators and regulators have forced thousands of Main Street banks like the one I run to absorb a larger, more expensive set of regulatory costs, including higher capital and liquidity requirements. ...
Regulators have failed to distinguish between trading activity and traditional banking, or to recognize that the activity of an institution, not its form, should be the proper focus of oversight.
New Rules Needed
Main Street banks are heavily regulated -- and have been for generations -- to ensure their safety, soundness and transparency. A new generation of regulation must now be applied to what has become a virtual casino. ...
Those financial institutions that engage in trading should live and die by the pursuit of their fortunes, rather than impose a burden on the whole economy.
It’s time to disentangle the trading of big financial institutions from their more traditional commercial banking operations and put an end to this unsafe business model.
Make sure to read his entire op-ed at Bloomberg, here.
Will 'Buy and Hold' Soon Mean Just Minutes?
Jack Hough wonders in a fascinating little story about high frequency trading, here, in which we learn that program trading by some estimates now accounts for more than 75 percent of the volume.
Just one of the reasons I remain out.
'High Frequency' or 'Program Trading' is on the Rise in Asia
So says a recent story from Reuters, predicting it will take only three to four years for Asia to catch up to the US:
Japan is the only market that comes close right now to the HFT seen in western markets. ... [T]he proportion of trades classified as high frequency [is] around 30 percent . . ..
High frequency trading now accounts for as much at 70 percent of turnover in US equity markets, where have HFT systems are dealing with up to 2.3 million messages per second in some cases.
Read the full story here.
Sarah Palin: The Vulgarian Streak Runs Deep
If Sarah Palin is supposed to represent a resurgent social conservatism, her fascination with all things 'WTF' speaks against it.
I had forgotten this one, which Toby Harnden of The UK Telegraph recalls here a couple of days ago, breezing right over it:
The notion of Mrs Palin as White House kingmaker would have seemed wildly improbable if anyone had raised it before August 2008.
It was then that she was catapulted to international fame by Senator John McCain’s surprise decision to make her his vice-presidential running mate. Her reaction? “Can you flippinbelieveit?!”
Cleaning out the alcohol from the Alaska governor's residence was easy by comparison.
"Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man."
-- Matthew 15:11
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