Is Palin Qualified?

September 30, 2008 · Posted in Election 2008 · Comments 

The results on this one are more accurate than others I’ve seen. Click here to vote.

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Challenge to Republicans and Progressive Democrats

September 29, 2008 · Posted in Congress, Domestic Policy · Comments 

You defeated the compromise.

Now fix it. Come up with a solution to this problem other than watching most of us in the middle class lose everything we’ve worked for.

Go ahead, I’m waiting.

You have 72 hours, starting now.

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UPDATED: Bailout Bill: The good, the bad, the necessary

September 29, 2008 · Posted in Domestic Policy · Comments 

UPDATE: The Bill just failed in the House. This is not good news, no matter how much you hear Republicans and Progressive Democrats say it is. Hold onto your hats, the ride is going to get rockier from here on out.

There are some disturbing provisions in this bailout bill, alongside some that are for the benefit of those in precarious mortgage situations, facing foreclosure. First, the concerns:

  1. Expansion of definition of rescued assets - Section 9 seems to expand the scope of the bailout to assets that are not backed by mortgages:

    (9) TROUBLED ASSETS.—The term ‘‘troubled
    assets’’ means—
    A) residential or commercial mortgages and any securities, obligations, or other instruments that are based on or related to such mortgages, that in each case was originated or issued on or before March 14, 2008, the purchase of which the Secretary determines promotes financial market stability; and
    (B) any other financial instrument that the Secretary, after consultation with the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, determines the purchase of which is necessary to promote financial market stability, but only upon transmittal of such determination, in writing, to the appropriate committees of Congress.

    I ran part B by several people who are familiar with language like this and they agree — this language essentially opens the definition to any security traded on the markets. Think money market funds as an example. Or sector funds. Or currency-backed funds. It is possible that all of these could fall into definition B without public disclosure and behind the doors of Congressional oversight.

  2. Mortgage Guarantee Insurance Fund – The bill establishes a fund which banks will have to make contributions toward the guarantee of these assets. Having had many years of experience with the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation and its precarious financial condition, I am not confident that establishing a fund makes much of a difference, nor that it cures more than it poisons.
  3. Waiver of requirements for contractors – This provision has me bothered more than any other, because it possibly hands control of the taxpayers’ money back to the same people who caused the problem in the first place.

What I like:

  1. Specific provisions to mitigate foreclosures by requiring banks to renegotiate loans with qualified homeowners.
  2. Requirement that transactions be published made public within 2 days.
  3. Incremental release of funds with oversight as to when and why additional funds are approved for release.
  4. Timely and rapid reporting and disclosure of the use of funds
  5. Limits on executive compensation for those leading failed institutions.

What concerns me in general is that this does not really shore up the overall credit markets. I’m concerned that home loans are really the small tip of the iceberg, and some real problems will arise as mortgages recover but people default on their credit cards issued with ridiculously outrageous interest rates and high balances. The same with student loans. All of these are at risk, too. It’s just that mortgages are the canaries in the coal mine.

I have seen some commenting about concern about where the money will come from for this bailout. It’s a fair concern. I think it’s worth noting that the transactions at stake here are an exchange of cash for an asset — a piece of real estate that will have value again.

While I’d like to have the luxury of seeing the speculators and robbers penalized and punished, at this point I will settle for stability here and worldwide with the hope that we can work together to shape a policy and set of laws that protects homeowners, 401k investors, and limits the greed and excesses of those who drove us to this precipice.

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The New Bailout Plan

September 29, 2008 · Posted in Domestic Policy · Comments 

I’m reading it now. It certainly seems to have been fleshed out — you can read it here.

More after I’ve read through the whole thing. The devil is definitely in the details.

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Cafferty on Palin: Pathetic

September 26, 2008 · Posted in Election 2008 · Comments Off 

Watch Jack Cafferty call out Sarah Palin as “pathetic” after playing one of the “most pathetic pieces of tape [he's] ever seen for someone aspiring to one of the highest offices in the country…” from the Palin/Couric interview:

When Wolf Blitzer tries to make an excuse for her, Cafferty comes back with “Don’t make excuses for her. That’s pathetic.”

Preach it, Jack.

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Dodd Refines Bailout Rules

September 22, 2008 · Posted in Congress, Domestic Policy · Comments 

Senator Dodd has done a pretty good job of fixing what was wrong with Paulson’s proposal. Here’s the PDF summary, and here’s the PDF text.

High points:

Transparency:

  1. Establishment of an oversight board
  2. Required transparency – specifically, that the program’s details be laid out with policies and procedures
  3. Improved Reporting – Monthly reporting, and detailed financial statements describing specific transactions
  4. GAO Audit
  5. Warrants in exchange for companies selling bad assets
  6. Requirements for rules surrounding potential conflicts of interest (by fund managers involved such as PIMCO)
  7. Establishes parity between banks and money markets for FDIC insured deposits
  8. Requires standards limiting executive compensation for bailed out companies

Homeowner Assistance

  1. Court-Supervised Loan Modifications
  2. FDIC Management of Mortgage Assets
  3. Affordable Housing Funds
  4. Expansion of HOPE to allow more people to qualify

This is definitely more encouraging. I haven’t read the actual text, though, so can’t say whether the key issue of no accountability, etc has been addressed.

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