why don't you bunk it first with a little more than a sentence declaring it to be so.
4/1/2009 3:20:21 PM
iPod
4/1/2009 5:34:22 PM
iCare
4/1/2009 5:41:38 PM
iThinkitsridiculous
4/1/2009 6:34:20 PM
i made u a mixtapeit came from my hearti guess you wanted that best buy gift card instead
4/1/2009 7:22:28 PM
^^whatever happened to we're america, we don't give a FUCK[Edited on April 1, 2009 at 7:33 PM. Reason : .]
4/1/2009 7:32:56 PM
while it means very little in the ultimate financial grand scheme, I think this is a great and appropriate gesture by the President (one he HAD to make, but made nonetheless).Obamas to turn down White House redecorating allowance and pay for any changes out of pockethttp://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2009/03/30/2009-03-30_obamas_to_renovate_white_house_with_own_-1.html
4/1/2009 8:39:31 PM
^that should go in the "What has Obama done right" thread.Also, that was hilarious at the end of page 18. sarijoul got OWNED. If you didn't see it, heres a shortcut -> message_topic.aspx?topic=556098&page=18#12780845
4/1/2009 9:28:29 PM
Really, a shortcut to page 18? The page right before this one? The one that if a user were to jump to the top or bottom of this page they could get to in one click? We really needed a shortcut for that?
4/1/2009 9:59:21 PM
Sure, why not? Clicking a link is easier than doing what you said.
4/1/2009 10:13:45 PM
why not? well, mainly because no one cares
4/1/2009 10:14:33 PM
4/2/2009 8:36:27 AM
Who is that between Medvedev and Obama?
4/2/2009 8:55:00 AM
maurice chevalier
4/2/2009 8:57:36 AM
4/2/2009 9:41:19 AM
4/2/2009 9:54:39 AM
I suppose I didn't do enough research on Koh, I'll have to dig a little more. Nicely done though.
4/2/2009 1:51:24 PM
SHOCKING
4/2/2009 5:40:55 PM
oh STFU I post sources/citations for most of my points you ass.
4/2/2009 6:18:52 PM
4/2/2009 11:04:13 PM
he called out euros' "insidious anti-americanism" to their faces today. that was cool
4/3/2009 11:15:41 AM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123879462053487927.htmlToo many conflict of interests in this administration. You should by now no longer be surprised that the policies being enacted by this administration are designed to do everything possible in the short term to save the jobs and lifestyles of those on Wall Street that made bets and lost, even if it means running the rest of the country into the shitty on the long term.I don't necessarily put this all on Obama, I don't expect him to be able to know who to pick as economic advisers other than seeing what their track record was. Maybe a proper vetting would have shown Summers to be in the pockets of Wall Street and he would have looked elsewhere...and maybe if that would have happened, Geithner (also a Wall Street friend) wouldn't have been suggested and we'd be in a different place. But these are the guys we have. So don't be surprised at the proper fucking they are going to give us to help their friends in Wall Street out. Think about it from Geithners perspective. He spends 4 years (maybe less) saving those guys asses, and they'll take care of him generously with a consulting job or a position high up in their firms.
4/4/2009 9:28:41 AM
Jesus, right after I post that I read thishttp://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/04/administration-seeking-to-circumvent.htmlIs Obama doing this? Complicit? Or is this all Geithner? This is unreal.
4/4/2009 9:34:00 AM
unbelievable.
4/4/2009 5:16:04 PM
4/4/2009 7:25:18 PM
^^^ Honestly I'd say a little of both. Obama wanted these sorts of policies, but he's being led by the nose in the same way Bush was. I honestly think Obama truly believes what he's doing is right, but his inexperience in these matters is leading him to put his trust in other people and he's not taking a hard look at what they're doing or enacting. Similarly, Bush's trust in people he had known for a long time allowed them to walk all over him and dictate policy in ways that went far beyond what he intended. Obama could improve all of this vastly if he would a) slow things down and b) stick to what his (proclaimed) beliefs are.I may not like many of Obama's ideas, and I hope many of them fail to get past the podium but that doesn't mean I want him, or our country, steamrolled by the "Democratic Mandate"™. The cure for 8 years of Bush is not 8 years of Bizaro Bush.[Edited on April 4, 2009 at 7:26 PM. Reason : faldjk]
4/4/2009 7:25:31 PM
^ the conflicts of interest listed in those articles have nothing to do with a "democratic mandate". If anything, they are a big-business Republican's dream - Summers and Geithner are apparently about as business-friendly as they come. They are obviously going completely out of their way to make sure their buddies on Wall Street get paid at any cost, including the tax payers.
4/4/2009 8:02:15 PM
^ When I mentioned Democratic Mandate I was mostly referring to Pelosi et al writing the previous stimulus bills.Christ, I try to say something decent about the guy in defense of some things that have happened, something I also said about Bush many years ago, and you're still looking for nit picky things to jump on. I know you are very sensitive to anything that might question Him and His Change™, but contrary to popular belief, not everyone who didn't vote for Obama, nor buys into his Hope and Change message, is an uneducated redneck trying to keep the darkies down.
4/4/2009 9:20:34 PM
Stuart Varney from the 4/4 Wall Street Journal Op-Ed page....
4/5/2009 12:03:18 AM
it doesn't sound sinister - it sounds like he wants to try to exhibit some control over the companies which we are giving 100's of billions of dollars..... doesn't sounds like an unreasonable expectation
4/5/2009 12:14:56 AM
4/5/2009 12:40:44 AM
my understanding was that not allowing them to pay it back right now was so other banks, who still need the money, won't be pressured into paying back as wellthough i guess it is probably a sinister plot by obama and the treasury to rule over the banking industry. that makes more sense.[Edited on April 5, 2009 at 1:08 AM. Reason : .]
4/5/2009 1:07:01 AM
4/5/2009 8:50:42 AM
4/5/2009 10:17:21 AM
4/5/2009 10:44:42 PM
Are you kidding? By most measures, the top 5-10 (some say 20) are insolvent under GAAP and M2M accounting rules. These are the banks that are deemed too big to fail. Look at the TARP money that they were given - well over $1 billion. You have to go down the TARP list to around the 23 financial institution - excluding the automakers, American Express and 1 or 2 others - to find a TARP payout less than 1 billion like mentioned in that opine. I am very suspicious that a regional player was forced into taking TARP under any nefarious guise as mentioned in this piece. I can see a scenario where there was a preliminary audit or suspicion that the regional player was stressed and had the money forced on them, but a prominent and profitable one? gtfo
4/6/2009 7:50:42 AM
4/6/2009 2:22:00 PM
Please just present evidence of that fact because nothing you are stating, or that was stated in that opinion fluff piece from Fox news really adds up. Most of the TARP receivers, despite all their pomp about not needing it and not wanting it are bankrupt. Their grand standing stems from the fact that they know they are too big to fail and would rather find another means to fuck the taxpayer while keeping their bonuses in tact. The battle between Wall Street and DC has grown to nearly epic proportions with the bankstersfraudsters essentially winning at every turn. Just like they won with TARP initially then decided they didn't like the loopholes for congress to exert authority on them. Don't like government telling you what to do, get your stooge Geithner to come up with a better plan than his predecessor to get the toxic junk off your books on the taxpayers dime without that pesky congress looking over your shoulder. Done.
4/6/2009 7:57:38 PM
Well, part of the shenanigans here is that the federal gubment is allegedly threatening to audit the hell out of this company for the next five years if they come forward.so yeah, it's a bit of a conspiracy theory, I agree, but it doesn't seem implausible. It has, however, been pushed on numerous blogs, so take it for what it's worth, I guess.The one reference I can find to it in a reputable news source is here:http://www.charlotteobserver.com/business/story/622532.html]
4/6/2009 8:09:42 PM
Supposedly the President of Wells Fargo tried to leave the table when they were pushing TARP but was told he could not leave until they had his signature borrowing billions of dollars. The argument at the time was that the stigma of being a borrower could ruin a bank and therefore sound banks should be forced to borrow. That said, even Citibank turned a profit last quarter. All these banks are profitable. There is nothing about being profitable that erases your insolvency.
4/6/2009 8:24:53 PM
1) you're still just spouting anecdotal evidence. "supposedly"?2) "That said, even Citibank turned a profit last quarter. All these banks are profitable." hhhhhahahahahhhhaaaaaaaaaahhhhaaaaahahahahaahahhhhhhaaaaaaaaaahahahahhhaaaaaaa
4/6/2009 8:34:04 PM
Which blogs? Is this one of those things that Drudge or Bortz posted and then everyone echo chambered it and suddenly its a viral thing?Thanks for that link btw, it basically confirms the points I am making, I'll highlight them
4/6/2009 8:34:56 PM
4/6/2009 8:38:01 PM
I'm talking about the institutions that are well capitalized and just plain didn't need it. Show me 1 bank that had the TARP funds forced on it under this scenario, just 1.
4/6/2009 8:40:20 PM
Thank you agentlion, instead of just calling me names you took the time to tell me what I said that you found unlikely. So, evidence:"One after another, big-bank CEOs like Vikram Pandit of Citi, Ken Lewis of BofA, and Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan are telling investors they will turn a handsome profit in the first quarter, their best money gain since 2007."http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MWMxM2I2OTEzNmE4ZDg3Yzk4YjRmZDAzYmU3ZTc2ZjA=
4/6/2009 8:55:08 PM
^ That would make great sense...IF THEY ACTUALLY WANTED TO CONTINUE TO KEEP THE FAVOR INSTEAD OF GIVING THE FUNDS BACK.
4/6/2009 9:14:31 PM
Don't be silly. The president asked them to take the money; he didn't tell them to keep it forever. Even then, the assertion was as long as the favor had no real downside that was fine, now that the favor has real teeth attached to it, refusing becomes your only choice.
4/6/2009 9:29:10 PM
4/6/2009 9:40:16 PM
4/6/2009 9:55:00 PM
4/6/2009 10:14:34 PM