Archive for September, 2008

Green Party Candidate Cynthia McKinney On The Financial Crisis

Sunday, September 28th, 2008 by Barry Deutsch

[Quoted from the Dollars and Sense blog. I’m posting this because I agree with much of it, and also because it shows how completely cut off the mainstream debate is; we here center-left, center-right and right-wing solutions, but left-wing solutions simply don’t exist, as far as our media is concerned. –Amp]

mckinney.jpg

A Gift for a Generation: A U.S. Financial System of Our Own

Last week, I posted ten points (that were by no means exhaustive) for Congressional action immediately in the wake of the financial crisis now gripping our country. At that time, the Democratic leadership of Congress was prepared to adjourn the current legislative Session to campaign, without taking any action at all to put policies in place that protect U.S. taxpayers and the global community that has accepted U.S. financial leadership. Those ten points, to be taken in conjunction with the Power to the People Committee’s platform available on the campaign website, are as follows:

1. Enactment of a foreclosure moratorium now before the next phase of ARM interest rate increases take effect;

2. elimination of all ARM mortgages and their renegotiation into 30- or 40-year loans;

3. establishment of new mortgage lending practices to end predatory and discriminatory practices;

4. establishment of criteria and construction goals for affordable housing;

5. redefinition of credit and regulation of the credit industry so that discriminatory practices are completely eliminated;

6. full funding for initiatives that eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in home ownership;

7. recognition of shelter as a right according to the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights to which the U.S. is a signatory so that no one sleeps on U.S. streets;

8. full funding of a fund designed to cushion the job loss and provide for retraining of those at the bottom of the income scale as the economy transitions;

9. close all tax loopholes and repeal of the Bush tax cuts for the top 1% of income earners; and

10. fairly tax corporations, denying federal subsidies to those who relocate jobs overseas; repeal NAFTA.

In addition to these ten points, I now add four more:

11. Appointment of former Comptroller General David Walker to fully audit all recipients of taxpayer cash infusions, including JP Morgan, Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and AIG, and to monitor their trading activities into the future;

12. elimination of all derivatives trading;

13. nationalization of the Federal Reserve and the establishment of a federally-owned, public banking system that makes credit available for small businesses, homeowners, manufacturing operations, renewable energy and infrastructure investments; and

14. criminal prosecution of any activities that violated the law, including conflicts of interest that led to the current crisis.

Ellen Brown, author of The Web of Debt writes, “Such a public bank today could solve not only the housing crisis but a number of other pressing problems, including the infrastructure crisis and the energy crisis. Once bankrupt businesses have been restored to solvency, the usual practice is to return them to private hands; but a better plan for Fannie and Freddie might be to simply keep them as public institutions.”

Too many times politicians have told us to support the “free market.” The unfolding news informs us in a most costly manner that free markets don’t work. This is a financial system of their making. It’s now past time for the people to have an economic system of their own. A reading of the full text on the Congressional “Agreement on Principles” for the proposed $700 billion bailout reveals the sham that this so-called agreement truly is. Today our country faces an economic 9/11. The problem that is unfolding is truly systemic and no stop-gap measures that maintain the current bankrupt structure will be sufficient to resolve this crisis of the U.S. economic engine.

Today is my son’s birthday. What a gift to the young people of this country if we were to present to them a clean break from the policies that produced this economic disaster, the “financial tsunami” that former Comptroller General David Walker warned us of so many months ago and instead offered them a U.S. economic superstructure that truly was their own.

Power to the People!

Cynthia McKinney
McKinney/Clemente 2008
US Green Party

And that’s all I have to say about that

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by August J. Pollak

Mightygodking:

1998, the Toronto International Film Festival. I’m interning. Paul Newman and Kevin Costner, among others, are doing press one-on-ones for Message In A Bottle, one of a long list of movies only notable for Newman’s performance. Costner was uncharacteristically rude all day long – the gossip was that he’d just come out of a bad relationship and was feeling it.

Whatever the case – I’m standing in the room where Newman’s doing his interviews. Costner’s in the room next door, and there are thin walls. We can all hear him bitching out his assistant over the phone. At length.

Newman looks at his interviewer, than at me, then snorts. “Kids,” he says, and doesn’t need to say anything more.

And that’s all I have to say about that

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by August J. Pollak

Mightygodking:

1998, the Toronto International Film Festival. I’m interning. Paul Newman and Kevin Costner, among others, are doing press one-on-ones for Message In A Bottle, one of a long list of movies only notable for Newman’s performance. Costner was uncharacteristically rude all day long – the gossip was that he’d just come out of a bad relationship and was feeling it.

Whatever the case – I’m standing in the room where Newman’s doing his interviews. Costner’s in the room next door, and there are thin walls. We can all hear him bitching out his assistant over the phone. At length.

Newman looks at his interviewer, than at me, then snorts. “Kids,” he says, and doesn’t need to say anything more.

Even more debate thoughts…

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Abell Smith

I’m going to be hammering on McCain some more in the next ‘toon, so I’ll document here what’s bothering me about Obama’s performance last night.

What we have here is a tale of two Obamas. First, we have the Obama who is an electrifying presence and a dynamic public speaker, who energizes his base and motivates people to vote for him because he is Barack Obama. This is the guy we saw during the DNC.

Then we have the Obama who stumbles through his arguments and gets weighed down by figures, who kow-tows to the far right in an effort to ingratiate himself some mythical Democratic notion of the “reg’lar Amer’can,” and who makes proud independents ultimately not trust him and feel ambivalent about their choice since they don’t really see any difference between the two candidates. This, of course, is the Obama we saw last night, for the most part (congratulating John McCain for his stance on torture? What?! The same guy who voted against the ban on waterboarding?).

This second guy is the type who merely motivates people to vote for him just because… well, he’s not quite as bad as the other guy. Ask John Kerry how this guy does in elections that should, by all accounts, be easily winnable.

Personally, I’d like to see the first Obama in the next debate.

Quote of the day

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Matt Bors

Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!
Bake Sale for Obama!

The guy outside has stopped yelling this at cars with his bullhorn, but it’s still echoing in my head.

John Is Right

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Kevin Moore

Republicans are trying to make something out of Obama’s gentlemanly acknowledgment that McCain made reasonable points in last night’s debate.

Which may have inspired this site. Or not. But it’s pretty fitting, nonetheless. Especially the erratic way the text moves about the page. I imagine that’s how thoughts behave inside McCain’s mind.

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Posted in politics, presidential election      

Comics

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Matt Bors

Joel Pett on the debate:

Joel Pett
Lexington Herald-Leader
Sep 27, 2008

Mike Lester does one on something I’ve been thinking about lately: If we frame issues like freecreditreport.com commercials, voters will actually memorize them. (Admit that you know at least three of those commercials by heart.)

Mike Lester
Rome News Tribune
Sep 27, 2008

My Thoughts on the Debate

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Jen Sorensen

…are here.

Obama-McCain Debate: My Favorite Moment

Saturday, September 27th, 2008 by Kevin Moore

Pre-empted by my son’s millionth viewing of Prisoner of Azkeban, I am just now catching up on the Obama-McCain debate being rerun on PBS. I think my favorite moment so far is McCain making an asshole out of himself insisting that a high-level talk between the President and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad legitimizes the Iranian President’s antisemitic statements against Israel. McCain not only kept beating that horse long after it was dead, he started improvising the possible dialog in an attempt to mock Obama. The look Obama shot him registered somewhere between “give me a break” and “dick.”

So what about their bone of contention, the opinion of McCain adviser Henry Kissinger on the matter of negotiating with Iran without preconditions. ABCNews has a “fact check” straight from the horse’s mouth. Kissinger does indeed favor negotiations without preconditions “at a very high level,” but clarifies that that means the secretary of state level, not the presidential level. So Obama is only half right on the specifics, but right on the spirit; McCain has the other half, but is otherwise a total douche.

And Kissinger is still a fucking war criminal.

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Posted in politics, presidential election      

Debate “whaaaaaa?”

Friday, September 26th, 2008 by Abell Smith

Did McCain just try to compare Obama to Bush on Iraq at the end there?

That’s an impressive little bit of hypocritical bullshit jujitsu to make that argument…

MORE THOUGHTS: Don’t get me wrong, here… I wasn’t entirely blown away by Obama’s performance tonight.

But I did think he landed the zinger of the night when he finally came back at McCain’s deranged mocking of the concept of international diplomacy with, “Look, nobody is saying we’re gonna sit down and have TEA with these people, you disingenuous piece of shit!!!!

Obviously, I added a bit there…