Nov 222010
 
If anyone else got to touch you like this when unwanted, it would count as molestation.  This?  This is for your safety.

If anyone else got to touch you like this when unwanted, it would count as molestation. This? This is for your safety.

Starting in the beginning of November of this year, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) began carrying out a new policy for screening travelers at airports nationwide.  These have included two potentially privacy-breaching screening methods: backskatter x-ray machines that can see through your clothing and provide some rather interesting, if blurred, naked pictures of you and your family, and – should you choose to skip the mostly-nude photography – “enhanced patdowns”.

The colors of the government don’t really matter much, their twisting of language is what really is awe-inspiring over time.  There was never any torture, it was enhanced interrogations.  There is no assault, sexual abuse, or other infringements on citizens’ privacy, there are enhanced patdowns.  While the former took place in dark rooms well out of the view of the American people, the latter is happening right now, very publicly, out in the open for everyone to see.  Security theater is on display.  It’s an interactive experience, and it’s going to touch you.

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Jun 142010
 
Stephen Strasburg's MLB debut: 7.0IP, 4H, 2ER, 14K's, and a topic of Senate conversation?

Stephen Strasburg's MLB debut: 7.0IP, 4H, 2ER, 14K's, and a topic of Senate conversation?

June 9th, 2010.  Major events impacting America that day were led by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill – in its 49th day by that point.  Dark clouds were looming over policy for the 2nd half of the year as more economic indicators have begun to turn negative, hinting at the chance that America could slip back into recession.  Bankstas are still roaming the highest perches of American business society, and are still making more in an hour than many make in a year.  With a full and chaotic plate served up, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) stepped up and got right on down to the business of the country.

Mr. President, as a little sidenote, because we have 5 months to campaign all over the country, including Nevada, I want to take a pause and think about some of the things going on in the country.

What was Mr. Reid about to unload upon the Senate?  What matter of importance was he about to lead off with?  Issues are happening left, right, and center – not to mention it’s a good time to look good with an election campaign looming for this year.  Now is the time to be serious, be concise, and do some good.

One of the things going on in the Nation’s Capital is tremendously interesting to me…

Things going on in the nation’s capital?  Well there’s been protests here and there – people protesting against BP, tea partiers protesting against the existence of government, the few anti-war people that still hang around in front of the White House, and so on.  Maybe he’s referring to one of those…

One of the things going on in the Nation’s Capital is tremendously interesting to me, and that is baseball.

Be warned, rolling of eyes is about to occur.
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May 142010
 
A Kyrgyz riot police vehicle burns in the capital of Bishkek on April 7th.

A Kyrgyzstan riot police vehicle burns in the capital of Bishkek on April 7th.

After a series of post-election protests in Ukraine in 2004, dubbed and romanticized as the Orange Revolution, a second round of elections caused the fall of the previous ‘winner’, a pro-Russian leading candidate, and the ultimate victory for the pro-Western candidate.  There were parties in the streets and all was well.  (There was a rather large resentment that existed among parts of the country that were pro-Russian and they would eventually recapture the government in later elections, but let’s not let that get in the way of the overreaching positive theme).

Months later there was another romantically named revolution in a country thousands of miles to the east, the Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan.  While there will probably never be another romantic sounding name for the events that have occurred this year in the landlocked central Asian nation, what is for sure is that blood runs in the streets in another place where everything old is new again.

So which method of revolution is better?

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Jan 112010
 

This story starts and finishes easy enough, with some kid from some college asking a dumb question of the President that he should have already known the answer to.  For this we reach back to a town hall discussion held by President Obama in December of 2009 in Pennsylvania, where a sophomore from Lehigh Carbon Community College asked if the President would consider legalizing prostitution, gambling, drugs, and non-violent crime in a bid to stimulate the economy.

The President’s answer was quick and to the point:

“I appreciate the boldness of your question,” Mr. Obama said during his Allentown, PA jobs town hall, “That will not be my job strategy.”

Obama would go on to sing the student’s praises for challenging conventional wisdom, which is what college kids are apparently supposed to do – and subsequently stop doing once they reach the real world.

My question is simple: Why?

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Jan 062010
 
These thin bits of plastic got us into a lot of trouble

These thin bits of plastic got us into a lot of trouble

In 2009, the Obama Administration got new regulations passed on the banking and credit card sectors that bring to an end business practices that were mainly set up to fleece as much money as possible out of consumers.  As a consumer, you’ve come to know these practices with late payments on credit cards sending that advertised 7 – 9% interest rate to one of 30+% overnight.  The Wall Street Journal had a good summary on what is to come:

For plastic, the new rules go into effect in February as part of the Credit Card Act of 2009. The rules will limit some interest-rate increases, require more disclosure to customers and prohibit banks from raising interest rates on current balances unless a customer is at least 60 days behind in a payment.

The amount of money that banks and credit card issuers made on these sorts of schemes of fine print lay somewhere between impressive and sickening:

Credit-card issuers collected $22.9 billion in penalty fees—such as those assessed for late payments—in 2009, up from $19 billion in 2008, said Robert Hammer, who runs a credit-card consulting firm in Thousand Oaks, Calif.

That is a year-over-year increase of 20.5%.  Not much of anything business and/or profit related has risen by 20.5% in the last year.  Impressive how one of the few things that actually does has a direct impact on the struggling consumer, thereby prolonging the recession and delaying the recovery even more.

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Oct 262009
 

I would like to preface the entirety of what I am about to say with the following video, since it is what is what set me off in the first place:

Some are tempted to call this Orwellian, I was in particular reminded of some of the advertisements against illegal immigrants/terrorists (who were one in the same by this point in time) from Children of Men, but insert your own dystopian metaphor to sum it up for yourself, this is real, here, and now.

That innocent person you see walking down the street could have a nuclear bomb in his pocket! Be sure to call the cops if he’s glowing.

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Oct 092009
 
The system must survive!

The system must survive!

Somewhere between the great work done by incredibly intelligent people in the field of medicine and the fruits of that labor filtering down to the common person, something goes terribly wrong.  The main middle men in this transaction is the health insurance industry – and these people do not care about you.  The Hippocratic Oath stops well before their doors – something that is put on display for the world to see by CIGNA in this story:

Surrounded by supporters, Hilda Sarkisyan marched into Cigna Corp.’s Philadelphia headquarters on a chilly fall day, 10 months after the company refused to pay for a liver transplant for her daughter.

“You guys killed my daughter,” the diminutive San Fernando Valley real estate agent declared at the lobby security desk. “I want an apology.”

What she got was something quite different.

Cigna employees, looking down into the atrium lobby from a balcony above, began heckling her, she said, with one of them giving her “the finger.”

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Sep 292009
 
the great asset bubble

The Great Asset Bubble

Managing to not learn a single thing from the ancient history of last year’s economic meltdown (and just in time for the first anniversary, how quaint), reports are still surfacing that the banking industry as a whole continues to engage in, and profit from, the ultra-risky bet taking in the world of derivatives – the shadow market that nearly brought western capitalism to its knees last year. On lessons not being learned:

U.S. commercial banks earned $5.2 billion trading derivatives in the second quarter of 2009, a 225 percent increase from the same period last year, according to the Treasury Department.

More than 1,100 banks now trade in derivatives, a 14 percent increase from last year. Four banks control the market: JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Citibank account for 94 percent of the total derivatives reported to be held by U.S. commercial banks, according to national bank regulator the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

The graph on the right is a nice example of the pool of money that is out there today.

- The red 1.9TRN represents the amount of USD that has been pledged in bailout money.
- The 0.845TRN represents all of the gold reserves in all of the central banks around the world
- The 3.9TRN represents the amount of paper money in existence
- The 39TRN represents all traditional financial reserves in the world
- The 62TRN represents “shadow banking assets” – this is where we find the chunk of money that may or may not exist in the real world that banks leverage on, which gets us into messes like the one currently being dealt with in this worldwide recession.
- The remaining 290TRN represents “other assets” in existence – this combined with the 62TRN of “shadow banking assets” represent a middle ground estimate in an enormously large, unregulated marketplace.

After playing with loaded dice and having it blow up in their collective faces a year ago, the same institutions – mostly headed by the same people – continue to gamble in the same ways, now gambling even more than before.

Why is this bad?  Look to the distant 2008:

Simon Johnson, a professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, said that the seeds of another collapse had already sprouted. If major banks are allowed to keep making bets that are ultimately backed by taxpayer guarantees, they will return to the practices that led them to underwrite trillions of dollars in bad loans, Professor Johnson said.

“They will run up big risks, they will fail again, they will hit us for a big check,” he predicted.

This is what keeps the banking system going at present

This is what keeps the banking system going at present

So far, one year into the crisis hitting the fan, major new regulations have not been leveraged against the financial industry – though the currents seem to be pointing in that direction.  There is only one thing that can really put a stop to this, and that is a reinstating of the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act.  The 1933 law created the FDIC as we know it, and more importantly prevented a bank holding company from owning other financial companies.  The separation of financial institutions allowed for companies to grow, but never become “too big to fail” – where the failure of a single company could potentially threaten to ruin the entire financial landscape.  The Glass-Steagall Act was undone by the Gramm-Leach-Bailey Act of 1999 – which, for all intents and purposes, laid the ultimate groundwork for the asset bubble – and crash – of the last decade.

A re-institution of Glass-Steagall is nowhere on the horizon.

To prevent a replay of last year’s crisis, investors in financial institutions, especially bondholders, must believe that they will lose money if banks fail, said Sheila C. Bair, the chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. “You need to send that very strong, clear signal to restore market discipline,” Ms. Bair said.

But legislation that would allow regulators to close giant institutions in an orderly fashion has been stalled for months. So too have efforts to create a systemic regulator that would focus on the broader risk that might occur from the ripple effects caused by the failure of one major bank.

Another proposed change would require banks to list and trade derivatives through a central clearinghouse, just as stocks and options are traded through exchanges, but it has yet to go anywhere.

Until this changes, the risk for a repeat performance at some point in the future, or the risk for a deepening of the crisis to true depressionary status remain most assuredly on the table.

Aug 102009
 
Keeping charts like this rising are more important than your health care

Keeping charts like this rising are more important than your health care

There’s a truism about investing – you should only do it when you are confident that you will profit from the outcome. If I pour $1,000 of my own money into Company X, I am confident enough that when I need that money back, I’ll get my $1,000 – and probably more. It’s why I would invest – the risk/reward looks good. Such a thought process works well beyond wall street, and in far more complex things than just the stock market.  Give me enough money and I can do damned near anything I want, in the name of me, my company, or my industry.

Enter the health care industry, and their billions that they’ve earned off of denying people the services they signed up for.  Enter a hopeful campaign that dared to dream that such a system might actually be attacked head on, and perhaps even defeated – for the good of the rest of us.

That dream slipped away.

Enter the next best thing: We will have a public option.  The public will get to choose if they want to stay in their current insurance or join a new government-backed one, one given the same bargaining power as Medicare.  The increased competition will cause premium rates to fall across the board, and we’ll all still benefit.

That dream slipped away.

Moving down the list: We will have a public option just as previously released, but it will not have the same bargaining power as Medicare – it will have to fend for itself in the free market world.  Some out there have to be wondering what the point even is at this point, but maybe just getting a bill passed with some sort of shot taken at the health care industry will be enough to get the ball rolling for some more serious change down the line.

That dream slipped away.  This whole dream is dying. Continue reading »

Jul 202009
 

(admin note:this is a guest post lifted from the board by elspaniard. also contains a bit of profanity, but that’s okay.)

Unless you’re living under a rock, you’ve seen the shitstorm that is health care reform brewing in Washington as of late.

This is not a post about the proposals.  This is a post about being absolutely sick to the point of puking blood and shit about the misleading statements and outright lies the right wing noise machine is trying to use to scare the shit out of Joe Public about the supreme Boogeyman, government-run health care.  I know I’m probably preaching to the choir for the most part here, but I’m hoping others will find this and join the discussion.

Ok, so the main point conservatives and neo-cons (yes, there’s a difference) are making about government-run health care is you will lose the “right” to choose your doctor and make your own decisions regarding your health and treatment.  At best, this is an outright lie.  Anyone who’s ever had insurance knows this is bullshit.  Why?  Because already, as we speak, you do not have this right.  But who does, you ask?  Your insurance company.
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