As House Re-votes on Bailout, New Concerns Raised
by Danny Schechter
How quickly the news frame changes.
Discussions of the bailout have given way to speculation about the
Palin-Biden debate or NY Mayor Michael Bloomberg's decision to run for
a third term. Even a good old apocalyptic crisis only gets its 15 seconds of fame these days. Today, the House votes again.
NEWS DISSECTOR October 3, 2008
"Last Friday, editors of the center-right German newspaper Allegemeine Zeitung compared the U.S. financial crisis to 911 saying "this time, the attack on all-American doctrines is not the work of some foreign enemy. It comes from within, from the depths of the system. Largely unobstructed by its own state controls, American capitalism has created its own suicide bomber whose explosives - derivatives - have had an even greater effect than the flying bombs of the jihadists. The whole world - and not just New York - has a new ground zero now - Wall Street."
WILL THE BAILOUT DO THE JOB?
AFGHANISTAN COLLAPSING
MORE PERSPECTIVES ON CRISIS
AFGHANISTAN COLLAPSING
MORE PERSPECTIVES ON CRISIS
Believing the Republic would somehow survive, I skipped the "debate" last night- sounded more like a two person ever so polite Q&A in which two pols sought more to avoid mistakes than make points- and went for more drama to Broadway for the opening of Christopher Hampton's new version of Chekhov's Seagull, a magnificently staged exploration of deeper issues including the frustrations of being a writer.
If you like yelling, you probably would have enjoyed Bill O'Reilly's mental breakdown-like grilling of Barney Frank. Good Morning America ran an except probably to insure its viewers that they are safer watching ABC than Fox.
After the debate was pretty much ruled a draw by journalists saying she "exceeded expectations," she wrote to her supporters:
After the debate was pretty much ruled a draw by journalists saying she "exceeded expectations," she wrote to her supporters:
- "Tonight's debate gave me the opportunity to bypass the biased media filter and communicate our shared values of reform directly to the voters. I know millions were watching as I went toe-to-toe against Senator Biden to explain our plans."
Duh?
Somehow, when it comes to the destruction of the country, Sarah Palin pales when compared to the big Bailout that will make it hard for any new administration to fund their plans, and which will get a Congressional nod, thanks to outright bribary and much arm twisting. What's the real story. Writer Joe Bageant takes his whack on Counterpunch, as reprinted by Alternet.
For one thing it would be a good idea to offer some analysis of what is actually in the bill as opposed to the IDEA of the Bill or its INTENT, as it did climb in size from 3 page document to 451 pages as it moved from Paulson to the House and then the Senate. There's nothing like a good old exaggerated emergency to poke the pigs and stir the pork.
Buried in all the legalspeak are some rather fightening provisions that few in the media bother to examine.
Former Wall Steeeter Pam Martens writes on Counterpunch:
"But the most duplicitous and frightening aspect of the plan, as always, was to found, buried in the back of the document, located there in the hopes everyone would have fallen asleep from the legalese before they made it that far. There's the innocuous sounding Section 128, which was in both the original and amended versions, and says simply:
"Section 203 of the Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 (12 U.S.C. 461 note) is amended by striking 'October 1, 2011' and inserting 'October 1, 2008.'"
What would this effectively do? It was intended to speed up the enactment of this section of the law from 2011 to this week.
And what is the impact of the change in this law? (Take a moment to let this sink in.) This wonderful bipartisan bailout proposal, negotiated into the wee hours of the morning by sleep-deprived members of Congress was designed to come with a furtive Trojan Horse embedded by Wall Street lawyers. Banks already in trouble for lack of capital would get to hold as little as "zero" capital for transactions.
But it does solve one giant mystery. All of Wall Street has been attempting to understand why firms like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, who have concentrated on mergers, acquisitions, stock and bond underwriting for more a cumulative 212 years, decided in a heartbeat to enter the bean counter world of retail banking and transform into bank holding companies. (That's like asking General Motors to retool overnight for washing machines.)
Now we know. Effective this week, if this bailout proposal would have passed in its current form, these firms would have had a new best friend at the Fed that was going to let them hold zero reserves for transactions. No wonder the stock of both firms sold off yesterday when Congress rejected the plan: Goldman closed down 12 per cent; Morgan down 15 per cent.
RALPH NADER LOOKS AT THE LAW
"The revised bailout legislation is the same $700 billion piece of burnt toast, with some window dressing, sugar coating, and $150 billion of pork tax cuts covering everything from casinos to coal.
But this isn't even the main course that Senate is serving up for Congress on Friday. The main course is on page 92 of the 451 page document:
BORROWING LIMITS TEMPORARILY LIFTED. - During the period beginning on the date of enactment of this Act and ending on December 31, 2009, the Board of Directors of the Corporation may request from the Secretary, and the Secretary shall approve, a loan or loans in an amount or amounts necessary to carry out this subsection, without regard to the limitations on such borrowing under section 14(a) and 15(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1824(a), 1825(c)).
Translation: Bush, McCain, and Obama want Congress to co-sign off on the mother of all blank checks, paving the way for a sinking dollar and higher interest rates."
WHAT TO DO? RENOWN BEAR SAYS IT S COMING DOWN
INVESTMENT NEWS: Glass almost empty, noted bear says
Gloom, doom, pain and much suffering are all in the forecast for at least the next five years, according to renowned market bear David Tice, founder and president of David W. Tice & Associates LLC in Denver.
He spoke during a conference call this morning to address the current economic environment as it relates to the $700 billion federal bailout plan passed by the Senate and up for a second vote in the House. perhaps as early as tomorrow.
Mr. Tice provided a litany of reasons why he believes the U.S. economy is headed toward recession, if not a full-blown depression.
"We don't believe these bailout packages will fix the Wall Street credit mechanism," he said.
"Credit will be restrictive no matter what happens with the bailout package."
FROM OVERSEAS: JOHANN GALTUNG OFFERS SOME IDEAS TO SOLVE CRISIS
[1] Massive keynesianism: massive funding to improve the crumbling US infra-structure, creating millions of jobs, including building schools and polyclinics. Job preference to disadvantaged groups. More acquisitive power at the bottom.
[2] Massive redistribution: push taxation upward, progressive, luxury taxes; and tax relief for the bottom 70%, with subsidized housing and health. More acquisitive power lower down.
[3] Government takeover of housing mortgages contracted between bubble start and bubble burst, relieving the debtor of the burden while also bailing out the banks. Drop any distinction between deserving and non-deserving; the system was at fault.
[4] Stop all foreclosures, find a fair solution for each one.
[5] Finance this by cutting the Pentagon budget for too much American Empire (Ron Paul) like bases. Take what the taxpayer must pay for US reconstruction from the budget for destruction around the world, not from health care, education, welfare.
[6] Let the worst banks/financial institutions sink, the most greedy with the least backing for their transactions and the highest ratio between CEO salary/benefits and average employees. The Japanese pattern of public CEO apology on TV for betrayal of customer confidence might be enforced. Suicide not.
[7] Rule out as illegal most new financial products, unless they come with a tested guarantee that both buyer and seller of such products are fully cognizant of their working and consequences.
[8] Celebrate banks that keep direct client-bank relations, those that announce clearly that the loans stay with us and our guarantee and make sure that all small script is understood.
[9] Publish M2 to make the US economic system more transparent.
[10] Massive dollar devaluation, maybe a third or a half, to a new dollar to cut the debt service burden, to make remaining US products more competitive, and to avoid massive inflation.
WEALTHY INVESTORS NOT SO CONFIDENT (Investment News)
Confidence among wealthy investors fell to all-time lows last month as economic turmoil and market conditions had investors fretting, according to a report by Spectrem Group.
The Spectrem Millionaire Investor Index fell nine points last month to -18, marking the lowest level since its inception in February 2004.
The decline left the index four points beneath its prior record low of -14, which was reached in April.
Meanwhile, the Spectrem Affluent Investor Index, which measures the investment outlook of households with $500,000 to $1 million in investible assets, fell nine points to -22, which was its lowest reading since its inception.
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