willfully under-regulated

Streamlining Accomplished.

The government willfully under-regulated both Toyota and Goldman for the sake of the race to the bottom — the never-ending quest for more profits — regardless of the dangers posed to taxpayers whether those hazards be derivatives or cars that accelerate for no apparent reason.

Hijacked

“The root cause of their problems is that the company was hijacked, some years ago, by anti-(Toyoda) family, financially oriented pirates,” said Jim Press, Toyota’s former U.S. chief and only American to hold a seat on the company’s board.

let’s start a coffee party

It is not Us against the Govt. It is democracy vs corporatocracy . . . I just can’t believe that the Tea Party speaks for all patriotic Americans.

Dan Zak at the Washington Post:

You’re dealing with a nation that’s jaded, paranoid, distrustful, broke, angry — it’s like they just woke up from an eight-year binge. We’ve become so polarized. Once we say our political affiliations, everyone goes to their corner and then comes out swinging. . . . A lot of people have the same goals and desires.

feet for services

“If we don’t do it, you know this whole city is going to go down. I’m hopeful people will understand that,” Detroit Mayor Bing said. “If we can incentivize some of those folks that are in those desolate areas, they can get a better situation. If they stay where they are I absolutely cannot give them all the services they require.”

to use our sovereign powers

The key components of the American School directly confront, deny and refute the economic imperialism championed then by England and imposed by means mostly foul upon Europe over the years.

Economics Populist:

Most Americans aren’t aware that America once had a national economic plan, and it existed from the days of President Lincoln to President Nixon in one form or another.

During that 112 year period America grew from an agrarian frontier nation to the most mighty economic power the world had ever seen.

Obviously there had to be something good in that economic plan.

The roots of the American School of Economics go back to Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich List, and Henry Clay of the Whig Party. The American School of Economics was far different from the dominant economic thought of today.

Through this economic philosophy America set the standard in manufacturing, higher education, scientific research and development, finance, and general standard of living.

So what happened?

to favor theft

From the Economist:

What has disturbed me is the resistance of some within the financial sector to innovations which would improve the ability of the financial sector to perform its core functions.

For instance, modern technology allows the creation of an efficient electronics payments mechanism, where the transfer of funds, say, from a customer’s account to the retailer’s would cost at most pennies. Yet in most countries, the fees can be orders of magnitude greater.

As a member of President Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers, I saw the resistance to the introduction of inflation-indexed bonds that protect individuals’ savings for their retirement from the uncertainties of inflation decades later. The financial sector’s complaint was that individuals just bought and held these securities; for the retirees, who wanted to minimize transactions costs, that was good; for the financial sector, that wanted to maximize transactions costs, it was not.

There are mortgage products (such as those prevalent in Denmark) which would have helped ordinary families manage the risk associated with their most important asset, their home. But in few countries have they been introduced; in many countries, the financial sector has resisted their introduction.

and who do’d it?

Feb. 23 (Bloomberg)

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the financial crisis was “by far” the worst in history and called the recovery from the global recession “extremely unbalanced.”

Greenspan said economy in worse shape than Great Depression“…by far the greatest financial crisis globally ever…”

The economy in far worse shape than the Great Depression… caused by “fundamental misjudgment in the marketplace”… more harmful than the 1930s… “extremely unbalanced recovery” and only for high-income consumers and large businesses benefiting from a recovery in stock prices…

Meanwhile, bonuses on Wall Street rose 17% while 24% of homes are upside down.

for this, raise prices

Hospital Finance News.

Hospital-acquired infections kill up to 99,000 people each year, plus cost an extra $33,000 to treat per person, reports the largest national study to date – 69 million discharge records from hospitals in 40 states. Fatal car accidents kill 39,000, much fewer than hospital acquired sepsis and pneumonia.

Public option? Free market?

Where’s our Ralph Nader of greed and sloppy?

merely the highlights

The first thing we must acknowledge is that we have just witnessed one of the most massive transfers of wealth, from the poor to the rich, in mankind’s history.

This enormous theft now threatens the very existence of the middle class in America.

Economic Populist:

Economics today is not merely a science without a purpose. Economics, as the professions now exists, is to science what Fox News is to the news media. Just like the purpose of Fox News is to misinform the public, the purpose of economics today is a PR con to justify inefficient and immoral policies that defend the status quo and keep mankind from advancing.

move your money

big banks charge moreFree market or fee market? Big banks charged more for almost every fee imaginable.

Overdraft fees were 41 percent higher at big banks compared to small; 43 percent more for bounced checks, 57 percent more for stop-payment orders, and 18 percent more for ATM withdrawals.

At the urging of then Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, Congress ordered the Federal Reserve to stop publishing its annual report on bank fees. . . .

More details from Stacy Mitchell of the New Rules Project.

wreck the country

Paul Krugman:

At this point, then, Republicans insist that the deficit must be eliminated, but they’re not willing either to raise taxes or to support cuts in any major government programs.

And they’re not willing to participate in serious bipartisan discussions, either, because that might force them to explain their plan — and there isn’t any plan, except to regain power.

But there is a kind of logic to the current Republican position: in effect, the party is doubling down on starve-the-beast.

Depriving the government of revenue, it turns out, wasn’t enough to push politicians into dismantling the welfare state. So now the de facto strategy is to oppose any responsible action until we are in the midst of a fiscal catastrophe.

You read it here first.

call them the new poor

The New York Times notices America is creating poverty.

Robert Oak:

Wow. Just noticing something that has been going on for 30 years?

get real

Will they endlessly argue about the market and the state?

The question facing world leaders today is not what to do. It is whether to do it.

There are two goals to meet: full employment and sustainable energy. That’s technically complex. But the complexities are complexities of engineering, organization and politics. They are not complexities of economics or finance.

Mark Thoma asserts, “Congress ought to have the same urgency in dealing with unemployment as it had when banks were in trouble.”

said when dead

Alexander HaigAlexander Haig:
“Those who get to the top are usually prepared to go to extraordinary lengths to get there.”

Reagan was a cipher.”

James Baker, Edwin Meese, Michael Deaver. “These men were running the government.”

their aid years

“nocturnal scavengers descend into latrines

Hundreds of agencies, billions in charity,
but Haiti, a nation of 10 million,
does not have a single sewage treatment plant.
[NYTimes]

do oh do waste money

Gene L. Dodaro, GAO Comptroller General:

While the DOD represents a big share of the federal budget, it cannot accurately account for its spending or assets … cannot pass the test of an independent audit … a system in which key processes and incentives are better at saying ‘yes’ than ‘no’ to programs that fail to measure up.

For more than a decade, DOD has dominated GAO’s list of federal programs and operations at high-risk and vulnerable to fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement.

In fact, all the DOD programs on GAO’s High-Risk List relate to business operations, including systems and processes related to management of contracts, finances, the supply chain, and support infrastructure, in addition to weapon systems acquisition. inefficiencies and other long-standing weaknesses in these areas lead to challenges in supporting the warfighter, billions of dollars being wasted annually, and missed opportunities to free up resources for higher priority needs.

another daily beast

Five pages with background on Glen Beck. The Good Beck, The Bad Beck, a window into his personal life:

Beck was channeling the decade of excess, doing cocaine, driving a DeLorean, and cultivating a collection of thin ties.

Beck’s mood swings were alienating colleagues; one remembered him as “a sadist, the kind of guy who rips the wings off flies.”

“Every day I prayed for the strength to be able to drive my car at 70 mph into that bridge abutment.”

He isn’t even a Republican but an independent conservative—a former Top-40 radio DJ, self-described “borderline schizophrenic” and recovering drug addict turned Mormon convert with a taste for confrontation and confession. He presents a manic mix of politics and religion, loftily billed as “the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.”

One thing is certain: The man is crazy like a fox. The best way to get a sense of where Beck might steer the conservative debate in 2010 is to study his past—it’s a story of ambition and addiction, mixing politics and religion. He recycles old fears with apocalyptic urgency, polarizing for profit, making himself the Pied Piper for a new generation of angry, anxiety-ridden, and alienated Americans.

you might be right

Mark Morford’s colorful rant:

There was a poll, a fairly significant one but also fairly plain, saying things you already suspected but perhaps hoped were getting better, even though you suspect they are not.

Part of what this poll revealed is that a mere eight percent of Americans want the current members of Congress to be re-elected. Which appears to be another way of saying a whopping 92 percent of the country wants Congress gone.

All of them, each and every one. Because, as noted, nearly all of them are ruthless schizoid madhouse freaks. And not in the good way.