Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Monday, June 20, 2011
The Left in Wisconsin is Falling Back, and Calling in the Lawyers for Cover Fire
So says the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel's Pat McIlheran, here, who moves on to a new assignment.
We wish him well.
Here Come The Bird and Insect Drones: They'll Be Hiding in Plain Sight, Watching You
The New York Times has the story, here:
In February, researchers unveiled a hummingbird drone, built by the firm AeroVironment for the secretive Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which can fly at 11 miles per hour and perch on a windowsill. But it is still a prototype. One of the smallest drones in use on the battlefield is the three-foot-long Raven, which troops in Afghanistan toss by hand like a model airplane to peer over the next hill.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Fukushima Cooling Water Requirements Total 500 Tons Per Day
The water gets contaminated with radioactivity and must be stored on site. A new system to decontaminate this water was unsuccessfully tested on Friday.
NHK World reports here:
Contaminated water is increasing by 500 tons a day as fresh water is continuously being injected into the reactors to cool them down.
The storage facilities for the contaminated water are filling up and a delay in restarting the system could cause the water to overflow [into the sea] in about a week.
A story via Reuters here says 110,000 tons of the stuff has already accumulated since 3/11 and that space is running out.
The Indignants of Spain: 'We are not property in the hands of politicians and bankers'
Their story, here, is also our story.
Our politicians and bankers also view us as their property, indeed their slaves. It doesn't make much difference if it's your job that's theirs, or your mortgage, when the politicians are owned by the bankers.
We view them both as our tyrants, slaves also like us, but turned inside out.
Our answer?
NO, to either condition!
Christopher Hitchens: You Can Take the Liberalism out of the Brain Dead Liberal . . .
. . . but he'll still be brain dead.
"From a playwright, however, one might also have expected some discussion of what the Attic tragedians thought: namely, that tragedy arises from the fatal flaw in some noble person or enterprise."
In the New York Times, here.
And for someone who has concluded that the founders were playing swine off against each other in writing the constitution in the way that they did, the absence of the discussion of Attic tragedy is doubly disappointing.
A hole in his education, and that of his Republican rabbi, perhaps. No one knows everything, not even Hitch. Tragedy at 11.
After QE2 Ends It Continues, But on a Far Less Grand Scale
At least for the time being.
Tom Petruno for the LA Times notes:
The Fed may be slow to consider more stimulus for another reason: It still will be reinvesting the proceeds from its total $2.6-trillion securities portfolio in more Treasuries. And the central bank seems certain to keep short-term interest rates near zero for the time being. So in Fed parlance, policymakers remain very "accommodative" for growth.
Readers are left to wonder just how much money is involved when the Fed reinvests "the proceeds from its total $2.6-trillion securities portfolio."
According to the Federal Reserve, here, the earnings of the Fed in 2010 break down as follows:
The Reserve Banks reported comprehensive income of $81.7 billion in the year ended December 31, 2010, up from the year prior.
Total comprehensive income included interest earnings of $44.8 billion on the federal agency and government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) mortgage-backed securities (MBS) holdings,
$26.4 billion on holdings of U.S. Treasury securities,
and $3.5 billion on holdings of government-sponsored enterprise debt securities.
In addition, total comprehensive income included interest income of $3.5 billion on loans to depository institutions and others.
The consolidated LLCs contributed to the Reserve Banks’ comprehensive income, with net earnings of $7.6 billion for the year ended December 31, 2010. ...
Net earnings from the [System Open Market Account] portfolio were approximately $76.2 billion; most of the earnings were attributable to interest income on Treasury securities and federal agency and GSE MBS.
So compared to the QE2 program of $600 billion in purchases, the Fed's intention to reinvest the proceeds of about $75 billion annually in like instruments represents a continuation of the program, but scaled back by roughly 85 percent.
Various scenarios for the unwinding of the Fed's massive balance sheet are discussed here.
The Problem with the Public Schools is that the Teachers are Illiterate
From The Wall Street Journal:
"People who come out of college with a degree in education and not a degree in a subject are severely handicapped in their capacity to teach effectively," Mr. McCullough argues. "Because they're often assigned to teach subjects about which they know little or nothing." The great teachers love what they're teaching, he says, and "you can't love something you don't know anymore than you can love someone you don't know."
Much more here.
Under Bair, FDIC Sought and Won Powers Nothing Short of Fascist
With Sheila Bair out after five years, the authors of this piece in Forbes don't exactly call a spade a spade, but their message is unmistakeable nonetheless:
The legislation [Dodd-Frank] granted the FDIC additional powers, including the extraordinary power to liquidate systemically important non-bank institutions.
One nation, under the banks and for the banks, and anyone else large enough to give us a campaign contribution or a job when we leave office.
Working it, as ever.
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Joe Nocera Takes a Look at the Passage of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1933
For The New York Times, here.
Glass-Steagall separated investment banking from commercial banking and created the FDIC to protect the latter.
Nocera fails to note how the abolition of Glass-Steagall in our time left the FDIC in place to protect the former, which leaves taxpayers on the hook for the speculative failures of the trading desks of the big banks.
He poo-poos the Republican charge in 1933 that it all amounted to socialism. He's right. It's fascism, and it has gotten a whole lot worse.
Friday, June 17, 2011
Jim Cramer Defends His October 2008 Sell Advice
Here was his advice on Monday, October 6, 2008 on The Today Show:
“Whatever money you may need for the next five years, please take it out of the stock market right now, this week. I do not believe that you should risk those assets in the stock market right now.”
The market free-fall had already begun after September 19 when this index was still above 1200. Selling two weeks into this crash was like trying to catch a falling knife. The time to bank one's profits had been after a pull-back from the highs over 1500, at the 1400 or even the 1300 level, not after a "mere" 100 point pull-back from 1200 to 1100. By then the time for action had already passed, over 400 points off the highs on the S and P 500.
"I know I have been castigated for having told people to sell stocks to raise money for anything they might need for five years, a solid attempt by me to really warn people who were counting on stocks for retirement and college tuition when we were at Dow 11,000 and Dow 10,300.
The assumption at the time was that things were bad -- like now -- but that it was worth buying and holding and 'riding it out.'
I didn't think so. I thought it was better to sidestep it and then come back when the coast was clear . . .." (source)
He's now laying out what a worst case scenario going forward would look like this time around, apparently in order to be able to say "I told you so" if we have another crash.
Liberal Grotesque: Obama and the Cleft Lips
"During the fight over the financial reform bill, the administration consistently took the positions for which the banks were lobbying. Obama and his team were eager to weaken the “Volcker Rule" . . . [B]anks were given massive loans at or near 0 percent from the Fed . . . The administration sided with the banks in keeping the Consumer Financial Protection Agency inside the Federal Reserve . . .."
-- Eric Alterman, here, true believer, who nevertheless saves his real indignation for Wall Street
Incompetent FBI Stormtroopers Raid Address Vacated by Suspect Two Years Prior, Terrorize Renters
The incident occurred in March and is now the subject of a Fourth Amendment lawsuit.
The story is here.
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
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