Excerpt:
A month later the New York Times broke the well-known story linking Spitzer to a prostitution ring that ended his political career. According to investigative reporter Greg Palast and many others, that was not a coincidence.
Excerpt:
Of course, anyone who has followed Beck’s career knows that just about everything this self-confessed ‘rodeo clown’ does in public is a fraud, but here’s proof, thanks to Adele Stan at AlterNet and YouTube, that when Glenn is ‘crying for his country’ his tears are a product of Vick’s VapoRub under his eyes rather than any sincere emotion.
See the video ‘Glenn Beck EXPOSED Crying on Cue’ here.
Excerpt:
As the debris from the explosion of the sub prime mortgage bubble is still settling, the same Wall Street wizards that brought us that disaster are concocting a new exotic financial scheme to recoup their losses. This one involves life insurance policies and now the bailed-out banks are using American’s tax dollars to pull it off.
Wall Street banks intend to take over the broker side of the business by setting up an extensive network of heavily advertised “life settlement” agencies across the country. The settlements will then be “securitized” and packaged into bonds that are sold to super-rich speculators around the globe.
The New York Times reported that “Goldman Sachs has developed a tradable index of life settlements, enabling investors to bet on whether people will live longer than expected or die sooner than planned. The index is similar to tradable stock market indices that allow investors to bet on the overall direction of the market without buying stocks [and] Credit Suisse…is in effect building a financial assembly line to buy large numbers of life insurance policies, package and resell them — just as Wall Street firms did with sub prime securities.”
This may sound like a good way to recover losses from the sub prime debacle, but once again, it is the people on “Main Street” that will pay.
Read more here:
http://www.examiner.com/x-23316-Madison-Independent-Examiner~y2009m10d2-Wall-streets-next-scam
Thanks for posting the Grayson quote and link, Bart! It gave me an idea for an article. We need more Dems like Grayson! I say Grayson for Senate 2012, strip Baucus of all his committee duties and replace him with Grayson.
In a speech on the House floor on Tuesday, Rep. Alan Grayson (D-FL) stated that the Republican alternative health care proposals would force sick Americans to “die quickly”:
It’s my duty and pride to be able to announce exactly what the Republicans plan to do for health care in America… It’s a very simple plan. Here it is. The Republican health care plan for America: don’t get sick. If you have insurance don’t get sick, if you don’t have insurance, don’t get sick; if you’re sick, don’t get sick. Just don’t get sick. …If you do get sick America, the Republican health care plan is this: die quickly.
Read more here:
View the video clip here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-usmvYOPfco
Apparently that statement created a ruckus in House, because several House Republicans such as Marsha Blackburn (TN), Patrick McHenry (NC) and Tom Price (GA) demanded an apology. It is no coincidence that these three are among some of the most extremist partisans in the obstructionist caucus seeking to derail health care reform.
Alan Grayson did apologize, but not to the House Republicans. He apologized to the dead:
According to [a Harvard] study,…44,789 Americans die every year because they have no health insurance….That is more than ten times the number of Americans who have died in the war in Iraq [and] who died in 9/11. But that was just once. This is every single year. That’s right. Every single year! Take a look at this and read it and weep….Let’s remember that we should care about people even after they are born…. Now I think we should do something about that and the democratic health care plan…makes health care affordable for those who can’t afford insurance and it saves these peoples lives. …So I call upon the Democratic members of the House, I call upon the Republican members of the House, I call upon all of us to do our jobs for the sake of America and for the sake of those dying people and their families. I apologize to the dead and their families that we haven’t voted sooner to end this holocaust in America.
View it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoITVLWpKB8.
This is truly shocking! Not because House Republicans were insulted, but because there is a Democrat that actually shows some courage and tells it like it is. Thanks to Rep. Grayson for standing up for the vast majority of Americans who want to see a public option included in any health care reform bill.
For more info:
http://thinkprogress.org/2009/09/30/grayson-gop-plan/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/howie-klein/alan-graysons-candor-hone_b_304742.html
http://rawstory.com/blog/2009/09/study-45000-americans-die-each-year-for-lack-of-insurance/
http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/patients/articles/?storyId=27994
Senate Panel Rejects Gov’t-Run Insurance Option
– David Espo, AP, Sept. 29, 2009.
Bad News for Public Option?
– Nate Silver, FiveThirtyEight.com, Sept. 29, 2009.
Prospects for Public Option Dim in Senate
– Shailagh Murray & Lori Montgomery, Washington Post, Sept. 30, 2009.
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Bankers’ Code of Ethics
Several years back, there was a news story about an old guy who would buy a new car quite frequently. When it was discovered that he was senile and that a salesperson at the car dealership was taking advantage of the poor old fellow, some consumer protection laws were passed and it was established that sharpies had to be forbidden by law from exploiting vulnerable older citizens.
It used to be that at the bank this columnist uses, they had a service called “overdraft protection” and money in the savings account would automatically be transferred to the checking account to cover any shortage of funds if the balance in the checking account couldn’t cover a check and the money in the savings account could make up for the shortfall.
Now, following a round of banking industry bonuses for their ineptness during the recent financial industry collapse, the banks are charging $10 for each instance of overdraft protection.
What type of customer would be the most likely to make a math mistake and need overdraft protection? Do you think that there would be an inordinately high number of AARP members getting dinged by these charges? If so, why don’t the laws inspired by the serial new car buyer with Alzheimer’s disease apply? Did the law have a specific exemption for greedy bankers?
If there seems to be an inconsistency in the fact that automobile dealers can’t (by law) take advantage of older customers with diminished metal acuity, then should the same standards of business ethics be applied to the poor distraught bankers who came perilously close to failure recently and now need every small amount of profit they can squeeze out of the citizens in a strapped for cash period of history?
If what the bankers are doing qualified as an example of immoral business ethics wouldn’t some of the nation’s highest ranking clergymen be pointing out those transgressions to their congregations and denouncing such a move as a variation on the stealing principle? Don’t bankers go to church every Sunday (and sit in the front row)?
If the bankers were doing something reprehensible, wouldn’t the clergy revive the spirit of chasing the money changers from the temple and speak up?
If what the bankers are doing is not within the guidelines of moral responsibility wouldn’t some crusading journalist with a national audience (if only Tim Russert were still alive, eh?) be pointing out any such financial malfeasance?
Isn’t not owning a company with your own personal accounting department God’s way of implying that old folks didn’t work enough during their period of employment? Don’t clergy and bankers concur that the old <I>caveat emptor</I> still applies?
If the only one to point out that the transition from free “overdraft protection” to the automatic deduction of $10 per incident seemed, especially after the tax payers subsidized all those bonuses, a bit like a variation of price gouging aimed at the weak and infirmed, was just a minor web pundit, wouldn’t that indicate that it was more likely a case of illusions of grandeur run amok rather than a journalistic variation of the boy who pointed out that the emperor’s new clothes were nonexistent?
Obviously, Rush Limbaugh, Bill O’Reilly, Sean Hannity, et al would be standing by with some major Republican talking points, ready to come to the defense of the (maligned?) bankers if there were any possibility that consumers would take any such allegations seriously. Would bankers whose methodology and morality is being questioned by “the World’s Laziest Journalist” really be able to sneak by the rest of America’s journalism community unnoticed? Shouldn’t the professionals’ paychecks be a tip-off as to who is (extreme) right and who is wrong?
Rather than editorialize and urge folks to remedy this (misperceived?) injustice, this columnist will ask the audience to render a verdict. Should copies of this column be forwarded to the reader’s representative in Congress accompanied by a request for a legislative remedy or should the columnist just take a chill pill and do an update on the work being done to bring the nation closer to the day when the George W. Bush Predidential Library is dedicated?
(Can a drawing of Snidely Whiplash be used as an illustration for this column?)
In the film “Wall Street,” Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) coined an American business maxim by saying: “Greed is good.”
Now, the disk jockey will again play “Take the Money and Run” and we will try to scram. Have a “get out of jail free card” type week.