Posts Tagged ‘Wall street

29
Apr
09

Talkarazzi

Tuesday afternoon a judge granted the temporary order against Osama Lutfi and his attorney to stay away from Britney Spears. The restraining order is in place for the next 3 years and the two will have to remain 100 yards from Britney and her boys
Legal papers filed by Daddy Spears claimed that the two were “working in concert to disrupt the conservatorship, with an utter disregard for Ms. Spears’ health and well being.”

According to PerezHilton.com Aubrey O’Day is going to be the newest bisexual bachelorette on MTV’s A Shot of Love. The source says she is in final negotiations and is going to be singing the theme song in hopes to launch her solo career

The Jesus loving freak Heidi Montag is in negotiations with Playboy to do a spread for a reported $500,000, according to life & style. Husband, manager and friend of the block’s Spencer is encouraging her to do so but she is not required to get naked

Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick are putting divorce rumors to rest by getting pregnant and going the distance by having twins. Parker is due this summer and is going to deliver the babies through a surrogate pregnancy

Production of The Real World: Cancun has been shut down due to the Swine Flu. The crew and 7 cast mates were at a beach resort when the production was halted on April 17th.

So remember that movie we all watched in High School called Wall Street with Michael Douglas? Well, he’ll soon be returning in a Wall Street sequel and Shia LaBeouf is in negotiations to join the movie

29
Sep
08

The Pressing Question No One is Asking…

Ronald Reagan, in his first inaugural address, famously declared that “government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

Twenty-seven years later, in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, and seven-plus years into the reign of Bush and Cheney, Reagan’s anti-government battle cry should be on trial. But, stunningly, it is not.

This needs to change. The presidential candidates’ view of the role of government should be one of the central questions of the last 36 days of the campaign. And it should definitely be a question they are asked at their next debate:

“Sen. McCain, given the part deregulation played in the current economic crisis and your support of a massive government bailout of the financial industry, are you now ready to break with Ronald Reagan’s assessment?”

And, to be even handed: “Sen. Obama, in 1996, Bill Clinton cheerfully announced that ‘the era of big government is over.’ As the Dow plummets and Wall Street and Main Street turn to Washington for big government bailouts, are you now ready to break with President Clinton’s assessment?”

The shift in my own thinking on the role of government was what led to my disillusionment with the Republican Party, and the transformation in my political views. I’ve always been progressive on social issues: pro-choice, pro-gun control, pro-gay rights — even when I was a Republican. The big difference is that I once believed the private sector would address America’s social problems. But the hope that people would roll up their sleeves and solve this country’s social ills without the help of government was never fully realized. There were never enough volunteers or donations — and the problems were just too massive and intractable to tackle without the raw power of appropriations that only government can provide.

Our economy is not the only thing that is crumbling. So is the philosophical foundation of the modern Republican Party — also known as the Leave Us Alone Coalition, led by its spiritual guru, Grover Norquist. His dream of making government so small “we can drown it in a bathtub” has been embraced by the GOP mainstream.

Indeed, during his 2003 inauguration, Jeb Bush stood in front of Florida’s capitol building and said: “there would be no greater tribute to our maturity as a society than if we can make these buildings around us empty of workers; silent monuments to the time when government played a larger role than it deserved or could adequately fill.”

I sadly suspect that Jeb and Grover and their Republican compatriots have not yet updated their views of government — they have not yet made the connection between demonizing government and looking to it to save the day.

The financial meltdown has put the Grand Old Party’s schizophrenia on full display. But why are so many in the media, the Democratic Party, and the Obama campaign averting their eyes from the spectacle of a party that wants to drown government until they need it to bail out Wall Street or AIG — that wants to vanquish government workers, unless they are listening in on our phone conversations or working hard rolling back government regulations?

It’s like the story, probably apocryphal, of the agitated — and obviously confused — senior citizen imploring a GOP politician not to “let the government get its hands on Medicare.”

With the madness of this contradictory mindset exposed, voters will have a chance to decide if they agree with Norquist and Jeb and W and Cheney and the Republican Messiah himself, Ronald Reagan and, yes, with John McCain. And even Cindy McCain who, in her otherwise bland convention speech, called for “the Federal government” to “get itself under control and out of our way.”

A staggering 83 percent of Americans believe that we are heading in the wrong direction. And, I’m sorry, Sen. McCain, I don’t think it’s because of too many earmarks or because $3 million was spent in 2003 to study bear DNA in Montana.

Size matters in some things, but when it comes to government, it’s not the size of the government, it’s the way it is utilized.

“Big government” didn’t get us into Iraq. It didn’t spy on Americans or open black op rendition facilities all over the world. “Big government” didn’t create Guantanamo or okay the use of torture. “Big government” didn’t leave the residents of New Orleans to suffer in the wake of Katrina. “Big government” didn’t cause the financial industry to run off the rails. Indeed, the free market is what created all the new, risky ways for banks to game the system and, eventually, implode — then come calling on “big government” to ride to the rescue.

So let’s hear what McCain and Obama think the fundamental role of government should be. I can think of no better way to underline the massive gulf between the two candidates — and the two parties they represent — at the very moment when McCain is so desperately trying to blur the differences (see his recent shopping spree at the second-hand populism store: “Big discounts on ‘fat cats’ and ‘Wall Street greed’!”)

Stanford professor Lawrence Lessig says that if Americans recognize that the financial crisis — and the need for a government bailout — is due to “policies McCain still promotes… this could well be the event that effected a generational shift in governmental attitudes. Think Hoover vs. (the eventual) FDR.”

But if we want to make sure that Americans make that connection, we need to put the question of the role of government front and center in the campaign. Economic policy and foreign policy and domestic policy are all important areas of debate. But before we continue looking at the (falling) trees, let’s take a step back and consider the forest.

-Arianna Huffington

22
Sep
08

Watching History Being Made

From Huffington Post…

You hear that implosion reverberating through financial markets? It’s the sound of decades of conservative ideology collapsing.

This raises many pressing questions, both short- and long-term. What’s the deal with the Paulson deal? There’s a lot of well-aimed skepticism about this plan, and myself and my EPI colleagues will be commenting on it all week (I’m not liking what I’m seeing–not enough safeguards to protect taxpayers from banks perfectly happy to dump toxic debt on the government; not enough quid pro quos for Main Street). But for now, I’d like to focus on an even more important question: what next?

The week that just ended revealed the myth of market fundamentalism: the notion associated with mainstream, Milton Freidman’esque economics, and amplified by anti-government conservatives that unfettered markets will provide society with the best outcomes. Such simplicity, such elegance…such nonsense.

For many of us, it didn’t take a market failure of the magnitude we’ve witnessed in recent weeks to belie this myth. We’ve been documenting the slow bleed of much subtler market failures for decades. Most recently, we’ve stressed that despite years of growth before the recent downturn, the real income of middle-class working-age families fell $2,000. Poverty rose. The share of the population without health coverage went up. For the first time in years, the rate of homeownership declined.

If that’s Bush’s ownership society, please don’t sign me up (in truth, it’s too late to refuse membership: as taxpayers, we’re now proud owners of a growing pile of toxic debt–thanks, George).

But slow bleed or sudden shock, the idea that I’ve described as YOYO (you’re on your own) economics is seriously on the ropes. I still encounter some old school ideologues on the CNBC airwaves, but they’re fewer and more contrite, and, interestingly, they generally support the bailouts. Apparently, their mantra is actually “you’re on your own; we’re lookin’ for a bailout.” It’s privatize the profits, socialize the losses; patriotism for the masses, socialism for the rich.

Such chatter will always be heard, but progressives have a rare opportunity to change the economic debate in this country by injecting some glaringly obvious truths into the fray, such as:

–Deregulated markets cannot police themselves; they tend toward speculation, vastly underpriced risk, and deeply damaging bubbles;

–An economy that generates growth while leaving most families behind is a broken economy;

–We can neither achieve broad prosperity nor compete globally without robust growth in key sectors which we have ignored or underfunded, including manufacturing, green production, and cradle-to-retirement public education; crafting evermore clever financial instruments will not pave the way to dependable, broadly shared growth;

–No private sector firm should be too big to fail; any firm of that magnitude must be nationalized;

–Capital markets are dysfunctional; borrowing and lending standards are ignored; lax capital requirements lead to constant over-leveraging; shadow accounts thwart transparency;

–We apparently can quickly find (or borrow) the money to do the stuff the authorities deem necessary, be it war or bailout; thus, we can also find the money we need for investment in people, from health care to education to infrastructure, etc.

–Supply-side, trickle-down economics does not work; it exacerbates already excessive levels of market-driven inequalities and defunds government, which leads to:

–Clearly, we need government to be amply funded; as is the case today, we will always turn to federal government to meet the toughest challenges, and if the money isn’t there, we’ll borrow from the future. This means taxes cannot only be lowered; they must sometimes be raised.

–For decades, under the spell of mainstream theories like “rational expectations” (bubbles can’t form because prices can’t diverge from reality for long), economists and policy makers have missed almost every big market failure, including the last two bubbles (in IT and housing). Government intervention is only “distortionary” in these models, adding the anti-gov’t bias since Reagan. We desperately need policy makers and their economists to be much better analysts of markets and how they fail. It is not an exaggeration to state that much of what’s gone wrong in the current case could have been avoided by better oversight, common-sense regulation, and clear-eyed analysis of economic indicators that should not have been missed.

If I were Martin Luther, I’d hammer such a list–and this is just a rough draft–feel free to edit and comment–to the doors of the Federal Reserve, but I’d probably get arrested or worse the minute I took out my hammer.

The point is that these are potentially transformational times.

Transformations evolve out of crises. As the great Robert Kuttner stresses in his new book, the big social movements that have transformed our politics have often resulted from the collision of brave, visionary leaders and major upheavals: Lincoln and the Civil War, FDR and the Depression, Johnson and the Civil Rights movement. Kuttner believes the stage is set for the next transformation, this time from a broken economy that threatens American prosperity to one that works for everyone.

After reading Bob’s book, I sent him a note pointing out that it might well be a lot harder to motivate major change given the slow bleed we’ve experienced versus civil war, economic depression, or mass protests and burning cities.

But that was before the bust of the last few weeks, before the onset of a crisis of capitalism that is widely described as the worst market meltdown since the Depression, before the most aggressive government intervention into the economy I’ve seen in my lifetime. Maybe these recent events fail to rank with those motivating Kuttner’s insights, but they’re getting awfully close.

What has to happen to realize the transformational potential of the moment? It’s quite amazing that this is occurring during the very moment in a pivotal election when a) the electorate is starting to pay attention, and b) the economy is the dominant issue.

The candidates are already grappling with these issues, both stressing some versions of the lessons I noted above, which is a nice way of saying McCain is adopting the mantel of reformer and regulator in order to convince pissed-off voters of his midnight conversion from a legislator who accommodated a lot of this damage to one who will fix it. But he’s so changeable these days, even uninformed voters are seeing there not much there to his populist railing. It’s all starting to sound like a pretty unhinged “I’ll say anything to get your vote!”

Obama’s got a head start. He’s much less ideological about all this stuff, with a strong pragmatic bent and a willingness to listen to diverse views. He’s also been talking for a while about the need to regulate financial markets, and his ideas are sound. Had they been in place, a lot of this mess would not have occurred.

But, as Kuttner stresses, that doesn’t mean he will be transformational, or recognize the importance of injecting views like those above into the heart of the national debate. He certainly has that capacity–the vision, the intellect, and the ability to present the big picture in an extremely compelling way. This may be one of those times when the collision of a great leader and cataclysmic events can turn the tides.

Or not. It all hinges on the next few days, weeks, and months.

Jeez…watching history unfold in front of you like this is sure worth the price of admission, ain’t it?

15
Sep
08

The stupid stay stupid

On the day of the economy at its worst since 9/11/01,  the candidate that everyone should vote for, Obama, is standing up and speaking out about this mess we are in, acknowledging that this crisis is deep and needs a lot of attention. Yet the other candidate, McCain, thinks the “fundamentals of our economy are still strong” and Bush thinks the economy is strong enough to handle this!

I am not thinking we will have another Great Depression (yet) but I do think that it is scary what is going on and it will be even scarier if McCain gets in office in January. McCain has people on his campaign who are part of this downfall; how is it that we can want to vote a man into power who actively has chosen to embrace those who are directly hurting the American economy? He truly has no idea about the economy, but what is scary is who he has surrounded himself with to promote economic policy. He must still be trying to count the number of houses he has before he starts counting foreclosures.




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