What will we look back at 2009 and see when it is February 2010? What will the America be that we will have experienced by next year?

These are the questions I want considered by our leaders because it might give them perspective and help to create reasonable goals for their efforts. But, I do know they do not have the goals now and cannot hear any of us in America about any of it. I would venture a guess that it doesn’t matter much to any of our government and business leaders because their income and benefits, their retirement and perks are assured.

So, for the rest of us –

Where will America be a year from now?

What will life in the United States be like a year from now, in February 2010?

What will next Christmas be like in 2009? Who will buy gifts?

Who will be able to take vacations this year?

How many children will go to school this fall homeless with none of the comforts of their own homes, their own communities?

By the end of 2009, how many stores, how many businesses, how many factories will be out of business?

Which hospitality industries, airlines and tourist destination businesses will be gone by 2010?

How many more people will work for the US government, State governments, county, local and city governments while more and more people in their communities are out of work?

How many more people will be unemployed? How many more small businesses will have filed for bankruptcy?

How many more homes will have been foreclosed in the US and where will those people be conducting their lives after that event?

Which industries and businesses will have given raises and bonuses to their employees and / or their upper management and executives by the end of 2009? By the end of 2010?

What experiences will we each endure because of the economic recklessness of the US business and banking choices?

What will the stock market look like at the beginning of next year? What will it be in September and October this year?

When will the prices go down for the things that families must buy everyday, every week, every month?

Will there ever be a time that people can hope to own their homes and have any real security in that ownership or will they have lost that opportunity before this time next year?

What types of industries where people can work will exist by the time this year is over?

How many hedge funds will still exist by the start of 2010? How many losses will they suffer?

How many construction projects – commercial and residential will be stalled by next year?
How many charities will no longer exist by the end of 2009?

Will political action groups (PACs) and lobbying groups will continue to hold sway over Washington and the choices made for all of us by this time next year?

How many strikes, protests and suicides will have occurred because of the economic crisis in the United States and around the World as we look back from next February across 2009?

How many shipping, freight carriers and trucking companies will be bankrupt and out of business by the beginning of 2010? Will there be any left?

How many manufacturers will be left in America? Which ones will be able to withstand the loss of sales and stifled credit and which ones are in a position to make it that won’t?

What will be left of America by the end of 2009, the beginning of 2010? Where will our standing in the World be? Will we have any standing? Will any country loan money to us by 2010?

How many people in America will have been disenfranchised by the end of 2010? Will there be a middle class or will everyone be either very poor or very rich?

Will politicians and political parties have finished establishing a police state where the United States used to be?

Will there be new black markets created to have access to affordable things that people need?

Will people scream in anger and anguish or will they have sat back and allowed the changes to roll over them?

How many people will profit from the economic mayhem and what types of businesses will have thrived through this crisis including investment funds and investors?

How many bankruptcies will be filed this year by the time we look back from February of 2010? Will there have been more commercial and business bankruptcies or personal bankruptcies?

When holidays come throughout this year, will people spend money, celebrate, host parties and buy special foods and decorations or will they do something else? As we look back from next year, will there be any holiday spending that was expected or not?

Will businesses end this year and start next year with huge unsold inventories? Will they discount goods to consumers or will they have continued to hold prices at the same place?

Will most Americans have bought a new car this year and will the prices for those vehicles still be tens of thousands of dollars? Will we have an automotive industry by the time 2010 starts?

- cricketdiane, 01-31-09

Thoughts and Solutions for the US and Global Economic crisis – continued –

While one drop of water added to an ocean does not seem to change the overall system, it inherently does in some respects, much as any small draft of air changes the atmosphere of a place and influences the system in some way. Macro-economic systems are most like dimensional fluid system models given to be influenced by flow rates, thermodynamics, fluctuations of pressure and degrees of change within event horizons of elapsed time, constraints of environment, among other things. So too, are macro-economic systems inclined to be influenced, to maintain a non-ordinary type of equilibrium and to vary from mean (absolute) stability by extraordinary amounts within the tolerance of internal (good, healthy) balance. They are really quite remarkable.

So, to the questions -

* What would create stability in the world economies as efficiently and effectively as possible, in the most natural, and non-obstructive, non-obtrusive manner?

1. Tell everybody in America to take $10 and using basic skills of business (as an applied science) – make it into $20 in less than a week without spending $500 to do it. That’s first because if they can figure out how to do that they can probably get their own financial house in order in some measure.

2. Second, is to put in place the proper and appropriate legislation to correct and regulate the financial sectors including re-creating any and all mortgage instruments (in place) that exist as an ARM or any similar type thereof. And, make it illegal to create such mortgages as ARM and “Interest Only” in the future.

3. Next, or simultaneously, pay the money directly to the foreign investors that are behind the scenes hounding us for it at ½ of 1% face value as an intermediate stopgap measure and explain it for “what is actually being done and why,” in an honest manner.

4. Re-regulate as should have been done or should have been left in place all along to force prudent lending / borrowing practices regardless of the industry. This would go farther to create stability and restore “trust” than any one other thing.

5. Drop hindrances in the marketplace as mentioned from startup filings and fees to visa and passport and patent fees / licensing fees. Add capital flows to regional, community and local banks specified to help grow businesses in the communities. And, fix this mess that some call, government inaction, ineptitude and dismal performance “business-as-usual.”

6. Well, sixth would be a couple of things and they go hand-in-hand. Since government bailouts are the order of the day, use some of those trillions to buy lined paper and pencils to give (free of charge and not by mail) to each and every American individual. This includes a set for every member of every family. And, a simple one-page synopsis to inspire its appropriate use such that they can help themselves and show their children how to do the same.

7. Get off the dime – because the same old song and dance isn’t going to get it anymore. Excluding some in the name of whatever the benefit to a few, isn’t based in the principles and foundations of democracy and equal opportunity for all.

Either, a.) facilitate it, or b.) get out of the way.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 09-27-08, USA

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane |

** My note added today -

* The system needs risk assessments / ratings for banks and financial industries based on fundamentals with real-time accuracy. Traditional valuation metrics and models do not apply any longer and new accurate models need to be created which accommodate fluctuations in current real-time values more closely aligned with when those fluctuations occur.

* Projections forecast from previous years, previous recessions or even, previous months are not predictive in the current situation. Using these to forecast anything in the economy or in a business or industry is certain to be inaccurate to a widely unpredictable and varying degree.

- cricketdiane, 01-30-09

***

Inventing Solutions For America – Ways to Stop the Free Fall of the Economy while protecting our Republic and free market systems -

Are there any ways to maintain our free market systems integrity and stop the free fall of our economy while preserving our representative republic and principles of democracy?

* we need to get some options on the table first of all. With many, many great and innovative ideas along with known methods and their consequences, it would seem we have plenty that could work in some combination. But, these are not on the table as viable options and they must be to even be considered.

* money and money-making enterprise do not happen in an isolated system – meaning that economics in a broad sense is flowing, fluid and dynamic rather than closed-loop stasis or “static”. Some, in fact many, options that may work well in a closed-loop or static system don’t work in the same manner on macro-economies of scale.

At the point in which a macro-economy becomes static and ceases to be a moving target to be fixed, it is normally too late to mask its demise. Certainly, its “fixable” but not only do many corrections and stimulations need to be done simultaneously, but also the anticipated results and predictable outcome aspects are harder to adjust.

However, that being said, the greatest one solution that I can see is to awaken a new and extraordinary set of business models that serve the needs of our country and a global consumer base. That’s my opinion.

A set of new and more adequate technology groups, applications of current advances into business as products and services, applications of advances into transportation and supply services sectors, along with a greater use of effective, lower overhead delivery and marketing systems could make genuine positive change in the system.

It is not always about creating something nor in stimulating the manufacture of products (as has been made obvious in the intangibles being sold in financial markets.) However, at its core, without creating something, manufacturing something, selling some things that are tangible and concrete, without providing for real needs in the lives of people who as consumers, purchase them – there isn’t a marketplace nor macro economy construct, nor one to be fixed from disrepair and demise.

It is an absolute fact that money can serve no end but in trading for a commodity of some kind, by definition. It can’t provide nourishment by eating it, doesn’t warm nor clothe, and in the throes of our Great Society still won’t give its owner the basic provision of needs unless traded in acquisition of them.

Consequently, as a model of efficiency and first thrust while maintaining a form of government and market driven economy to which we’ve agreed, a number of influences can be rightly made.

Change the level of regulations downward and to a far less stringent and costly basis for start-ups of small and medium-sized businesses to stimulate immediate growth.

Enhance manufacturing incentives for companies in existence and starting up to apply new advances and technologies while helping to lower costs and train to use them and to apply them effectively.

Make it easier to sell wherever there are markets available for it without fourteen tons of paperwork, regulations and customs documents to do business anywhere around the world.

Encourage development of existing consumer-based possibilities by adding capital across the board into small and regional banks / community banks precisely for startups, for expansion, refurbishment, new technology and new employee hires to be made in the community.

Help make paperwork and systems supporting employees more user-friendly, based in reality and efficient.

Provide education to a higher level for all through direct subsidy of colleges to train any and all who would choose to participate of any age group. Provide innovation capital in a different way than currently exists whereby anyone can have some reasonable amount by application and good excuse to create what is theirs to create, barring none from access to this opportunity either by its difficulty, its screening process, its qualifiers for application, its costs or by virtue of no one knowing about it.

Stop micro-managing the twit out of everything as a government entity with four miles of paperwork, reports and time-consuming, man-hour consuming processes which are not providing oversight, coordination nor better service delivery. It would be helpful if the degree of coordination within the government among its members and agencies and programs were enhanced. But without an interface of coordinated and flowing interaction with the communities its serves, the government serves no useful purpose. Great strides in these areas have been made but some old ways are still stuck on stupid and remain to this day and to our great detriment.

Stop using our department of labor as a clearinghouse for jobs, screening and for potential employers to use as a temporary employment services agency and as a personnel / human resources department. That is not a facility of government nor of a democratic government, in particular, nor of a free market economy. It puts others in that business, out of business and out of employment. Free training was funded to be offered through DOL which has also become a hybrid of the antithesis of what was intended.

To many service workers and case managers in these human resources government agencies, programs that exist are unknown and at the local and state levels, the funds intended for the use of these programs have been diverted to other things. Often these funds are benefitting government employees, being used for training seminars and workshops to be covered for government employees in expense-laden convention and hotel facilities, giving bonuses and other opportunities to agency staff, administrators or local business “friends” and being diverted to cover pet projects and programs to the exclusion of others rather than where the funds were intended to help. These practices need to be stopped or modified.

Change passport, visa and international movement regulations, requirements and fees to something approaching good and common sense. It makes the opportunities to interact globally into a strange proposition of chance and undue expense. This includes movement of more than key executives wanting to vacation in Switzerland. The movement of business startups into the global arenas can be facilitated as well, but many small businesses could expand if their products and services could simply be offered in cities and regions across America where right now it is prohibitive.

Once fees, permits, licenses, registrations, patent fees, copyright fees, trademark fees, state filing fees and on and on, have been paid, applications made and not one sale has moved forward, why would anyone want to go through the process on the “iffy” chance it might work?

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 09-27-08, USA

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***

The US economy is vibrant and dynamic. It is multi-dimensional. Financial institutions do not rest on a lateral one-dimensional level within the system. The stock market, as absurd a place as it is, does not constitute real value nor does it hold an inherent capacity to destroy the US and International economies. It was unnaturally given this power through a scheme to defraud with intent, perpetuated by those qualified and educated to know better.

This is impacting values by being allowed to underwrite debt as a tangible security with no actual validity or substance. Without real collateral to insure, they served as insurance illegally tendered and traded across massive arenas. Without tangible assets to back them up, counterfeit currency types and currency surrogates in the form of complex financial products were sold in trade for tangible assets of value.

The speculations of value were unregulated and corrupt. The arm of Congress determining legislation that would by statute, allow the counterfeit and fraud to be stopped were corrupt and the banking industry self-policing watchdogs were greed-driven and corrupt. Given the education level and expertise of all in these positions, they had every reason to know what it would cause ultimately.

What happens when one person gets taken in an insurance scam which either refuses a policy paid in good faith or is incapable of paying a return for premiums given? That can result in losses of several million dollars in actual fact, because of the insolvency it creates, missed opportunities to have sought secured insurance elsewhere and long-term impacts with no ability for restorations and immediate recovery.

Magnitude and multiply that out over the entire system of financial instruments in the US and International economies.

What happens when someone passes a counterfeit $20 bill? Whoever took it in trade for real products is out the twenty dollars and its use to purchase something of value.

What happens when that is in trillions of dollars? This is what has happened in a macroeconomic sense. It is not enough to throw some money at it to make up the difference in damage scenarios when it is this sizable and extraordinary.

When de-regulation made it possible to create complex and faulty financial products, it essentially counterfeited secure and healthy currency forms, counterfeited unsecured insurance products and substituted tangible assets for toxic, illiquid ones. Consequently, just as huge amounts of counterfeit dollars will tear apart the foundation of the macroeconomic structure, so have these introduced systemic structural fissures across the macro-economic systems of the US and around the world.

It is as if the market has been flooded with currency of no value which, unknown to the customer was traded for assets that had real value, such as real money, physical properties, and tangible assets, including stocks and facilities of actual companies.

The same damage has happened in both cases which involves systemic risk to the structural integrity of the system and its underlying fundamentals. As everyone has traded in these counterfeit currencies of unsecured and unwarranted value, the elements of our economy founded on relative international valuations of our real currency, the US dollar, and profit-driven dynamics of tangible assets have been undermined.

September 24, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

In a macroeconomic sense – a nation and its underlying economic fundamentals are not like the structure of any business organization. It is because in an economy of scale, its components are nonlinear, progressive and intertwined whereas one shift in any part affects all other parts.

Such as when an increase in the cost or availability of gasoline, petroleum-based products and diesel fuel influenced all other elements in the system, barring none. Tangible shifts, however minute, expand across wide and varied elements within the structure and ultimately affect the whole as a self-driven, sustaining mechanism.

***
This is what we call a properly functioning market. When difficulties of this magnitude arise, fear and anger fuel the real world, long-term, far-reaching innovations that have made our world a better place and will inspire the applications of solutions to take our place in history as an improvement, rather than detriment.

The process of innovation is actually born in fear, not averted fear nor in diminished fear but in the real treacheries of fear.

September 25, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***

Is there any way that loans to these troubled industries would work? – I don’t see it -

What would be the natural consequences of making sizable loans or inter-industry trusts available to these industries?

1. they would want more, all the time it ends up being more, been there, done that.

2. they would by nature leave out some, possibly many deserving businesses which would fail.

3. they would be difficult to assess for collateral at real value and cumbersome to manage given the current off-balance sheet entities in place.

4. inter-industry trusts show more promise and in some respects represent facility because of their intimate knowledge of their counterparts. However, the government can’t fund them without sever consequence and abuse of these funds by the industries involved. The industries would have to pool resources and fund them, no wait – they’ve already done that and they’re the ones wanting the bailout from US coffers now.

5. See, the problem with taking assets (as the US government) is that the US government can’t be in the business of owning such assets nor of managing them and still have a free market economy. It fails to protect, enhance, progress nor strengthen capitalism but rather it becomes something else both as a system of government and as an economic model. It won’t do both capitalism and that at the same time.

6. Since there exists an immediate situation of concern and the American people have not agreed to another government and / or economic system – the loans having already been made, not having secured the situation as it stands – I would say that solution of ( the question of loans) doesn’t work.

7. These industries weren’t willing to take the necessary steps knowing them nor to adequately police themselves and their activities having a proclivity to abuses already. How can they be given a loan on bad debt that will simply be converted into another loan of 10x’s that “asset value” as a continuation of the same processes? Isn’t that the problem now as it is?

8. It seems neither grants, loans, bailouts, financial rescue packages or permits to steal are actually having any long-term positive effects given the nearly $1.1 trillion dollars +/- already used this year alone.

9. so – is there any way it could work? the basic problem is one of quality. So long as banking practices are to borrow 10:1 against assets while loaning 1:4 or 1:5 against assets then keeping the difference and not reinvesting into the safety and security of their businesses – how can any amount of money help in this? This manner of “prudence” is not prudent, not financially sound and while profitable, is not a good macro economic model for growth and prosperity. It will always yield the problem we are having now – that is what it does when done this way.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 092508, USA1

September 25, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

* One definite plus is that going down at least there is movement. Apathy is bad at any place in the spectrum since it belies the essence of a stagnant and therefore, deteriorating economy, (even when it appears positive.)

Unfortunately, it would be easy to misinterpret apathy as stability which it is not. A stagnant economy promises bliss but delivers dangers of eroding and often overlooked, critically deteriorating foundations and structures. That is due in no small part, to the fact that healthy economies of scale are interactive, multi-dimensional and are fluid, oscillating structures, as a whole. It would be as if the entire ocean dried up or ceased all movement. The system would be stable in a sense but would certainly not thrived nor provide its measure.

* The other option that still has merit is an absolute and complete destruction of the questionable, unsecured and unregulated components at the heart of the mess. Then, let’s get some accountants in there and see what its all really worth from the valid profit / loss ratios and real assets. It would take an act of Congress that would, by necessity need to state unequivocally that no bankruptcies could be filed until all assets had been subjected to full accounting standards and disclosure with a revaluation entered on the Security and Exchange Commission’s books.

The shock of all the market players having to level the playing field by doing this at once would put all in the same boat with the equipment to repair it before it sinks. That is tangible enough for them to understand, anything else isn’t.

* There is one other thing I can think this moment would re-stimulate the credit/lending portion of the market. It is a principle of basic macroeconomics – make those financial and banking executives live for six months in the communities where the houses exist that they foreclosed. From there, they will see the potentials and possibilities to make money there with simply some influx of capital. And, believe me, they will not stand still long without making money.

* Of course, we could just put all of them in jail for the criminal nature of what they’ve done and for the destruction its caused. Under those laws of ill-gotten gain, even their underwear would revert to our ownership due to the laws in place since Reagan and subsequent Congressional legislation.

* The basic macro-economic principles upon which this is founded are “you can’t fix, what you don’t know exists,” and “when one thing is changed, all other things change in some measure.” It is the first and the most basic principles.

* If we want the bankers and decision-makers in the marketplace to work out something on the credit situation, we’re gonna have to get the traders, hedge fund managers and Wall Street brokers out of the way. The intense rumor-mongering and gossiping there has made the ladies at church socials look like amateurs.

* And, as much as I certainly don’t keep my opinions to myself, obviously, these folks have made more things intolerably worse that were already a very bad thing. The presumption of expertise for many involved in the market arena is easily more powerful by proximity. Within short order it could be averted by closing the markets for two days, locking the bankers in a room and tell them we’re not restarting the exchange until they’ve sorted out the credit squeeze and toxic assets (in a manner acceptable to our economy and all of us, including our government experts.) Let our taxpayers buy the coffee and they can rent the hotel.

* We could use solutions that we have that we already know don’t work – that’s always first on my list, so I’ll know where it is and what that was.

* We could close (shut down) the markets for two days so our traders and our investors would get hungry to do some more wild trading. Without that rush for two days, they might have to “get a life”, look around and see where they stand in the real world.

It might help if they had to tour our America for a few days to see all the closed up shops and have to talk to people but I suppose we can’t make them do that. But, it is a thought.

* Democracy was written into our foundation partly as a tenet of freedom but also as a way to measure parity. If opportunities exist only for some, then a Republic will not stand and will, sooner or later, fail to its own devices as it melts into Aristocracy, monarchy or some dissolute type of system.

There are always many ways to do anything where only a few are benefitted. The tenets of democracy remind me that what is required is to create solutions that benefit all, not just to do for a few at the expense of many.

* The way to create something that works is to use these innovations now when it matters most – not later after you’ve raped, pillaged and plundered the US Treasury and the authorities of the offices of President, Treasury, Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission, Office of Thrift Supervision and on and on and on – up to and including certain chairs in our Congress.

* And, I’ve already learned what it is like to live in the America they have created, that they have refused to protect, and that they have allowed and encouraged to be raped, pillaged and plundered by Wall Street and unmitigated, unrestricted trade in illegally created, unreliable credit products. The banking industry isn’t loaning money when they have manufactured the problems that exist for a faulty base of enterprise.

For some reason, sitting on the banking committee, our Congressmen and Senators thought that meant to do whatever the bankers believe will make them happy. And to what end?

Have they protected the value of our money? No, apparently not.

Have they seen to it that our homes were secure, that our jobs were available, that prosperity is available to each of us when pursued appropriately? Not just no, but hell no.

Have they insured that our economy is robust and vibrant and thriving? Obviously not.

Have they been making certain that our Democratic system and free market economy would survive their tenure and authority? Well – let’s see . . .

* That is, all of us are experiencing this disaster except the bankers and Congressional members who aren’t affected by their own criminal, negligent and corrupt business practices.

None of the Congress members passed necessary regulations to prevent this, but they knew to do it because Secretary Paulson brought them information from the international fiscal community that explained why it had to be done and the risks of not doing it.

They didn’t do anything to have protected our interests long before now and today, as usual, they are serving the bankers again.

* Leadership, in and of itself is not the answer to our plight. There is not now, nor will there ever be a preeminence in our leadership that extends beyond our own common sense as human beings and citizens alive in our time. For that would be a dictatorship in which we would have no part or decision to make.

* “Leadership” has refused to pass legislation making these faulty unsecured credit products that banks have been trading in and lending on back and forth into an illegal instrument. It has counterfeited the true value securities and contributed, not in part, but wholly to the crisis which we are all experiencing.

* Because they have served these banking industry and speculative traders and investment banking wants over what was best for us, they chose not to do anything about it to serve the interests of the same industry fraught with disregard that they are serving today.

* They’ve had the money and didn’t create jobs or keep jobs available because they weren’t willing to temper their profits and dividend payouts and borrowing against questionable assets and continuing to play the game and use their companies as a gambling fix. And, that is the only thing they are doing now at the expense of the American people and our futures one more time. It doesn’t matter to them that they destroy everything we hold dear to do it either. That’s obvious.

* Everyone knows as a matter of public record that laws have been twisted, manipulated and broken by these companies which have resulted in real losses for millions of people around the world along with destruction of markets here and abroad.

The individuals that have been involved can exert as much influence as they can bring to bear on this free credit card for their dangerous gambling behaviors but it won’t matter.

When the markets both in Wall Street and throughout the streets of the United States were impacted by their behaviors, very real and tangible results were caused in the lives, fortunes, opportunities and basic necessities of real people.

This affected real people’s lives in tangible and decimating ways around the world. It destroyed the livelihoods and communities to such an incredible extent that it is hard to imagine a Democrat or Republican ever sponsoring a bailout for the culprits.

* Another reason that the government bailout of banks, investment banks and finance companies isn’t going to work is because any business that participates in taking that money or selling worthless high-priced assets into it, will be known for the fraudulent, negligent and risky business it is. It will be known for engaging in shoddy, possibly criminal business practices for even needing to touch one cent of that money.

* It could not be that difficult to create a manageable system of regulations that can be reasonably followed by any business. But, as far as I know, when I go to borrow money the terms aren’t $40 for every $1 of collateral I offer.

And, from where I sit, the regulations about starting and maintaining a business and suiting the regulations that exist for any business I might have, are extraordinarily oppressive and little resemblance to possibility and practicality are in them.

Apparently that is not the case for these huge businesses with their staffs of people and experts and lawyers and typists and money coming out their ears.

And, with the accountants they have? How could they have not gotten this right?

* I say this because the takeover of AIG and others in the manner they were done was and still should be illegal for very sound and practical reasons. Aside from that, I would never build a company in a nation that would simply come in and take it over as it suits them and unfortunately, the country where I find myself is just such a country. Whether large or small enterprise, our nation has become a place where any business can be taken over by our government as it suits them to do so for a variety of reasons. I would say that fact has gone farther in drying up capital than any thing else. Why do business here when it isn’t user-friendly and after building the thing, our government can take it?

* It is an inordinate amount of power to make bad choices, that rests in the hands of our government today, when a choice is not a choice at all, nor a call for real solutions that work, nor a useful measure of anything except the opportunity to make law to get away with what should be illegal and to fail to make laws that should made.

* For every dollar that these companies take out of our US Treasury, they will face a factor many times over of lost trust, failure of public confidence and maybe even face legal difficulties from it later, however long it takes to catch up with necessary legislation and legal enforcement.

** It won’t be very long before it becomes obvious. Either these politicians are covering their own assets, which is possible, or they are covering the assets for a business interest or industry exerting enormous and persuasive pressure on them.

* It is an indication of something other than a capitalist economy but one rather of manipulation of law and derision. It is not built on strengths and ever growing to innovate, flex and respond. It is based on degradation of opportunities for all but a few. At a point, there would exist too few in the “game” to sustain itself and that could be what we have now in a sense. It is a highly destructive form and yields extremely unstable, vulnerable and eventually useless business environments. The businesses it produces must inherently be so too.

* When you’ve prohibited competition and free trade at many levels of our economy by excessive, restrictive and oppressive regulations and allowed no regulations at all in the sectors at the highest levels, it became a system unqualified to be considered a free market economy.

* Wall Street does not own Main Street – they just think they do. They’ve done this for a time to rob the profits and opportunities of Main Street to line their pockets, create their “golden parachutes” and to support their style of living to which no one should become accustomed considering how its been unnaturally and illegally manufactured.

They have been the most anti-social, psychotic and manic deputies of finance in the history of the human race – its little wonder that these financiers have served no sum gain but their own and done so without conscience nor remorse.

* Its getting a little inbred up there in Washington plans and processes never change – can’t be faulted for consistency. That’s wrong no matter how you look at it. Redefines “intellectual inbreeding” to a whole new level.

September 26, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

** From Fast Money Show on cnbc tonight,

it was explained that the investment bankers were allowed to borrow $40 for every $1 (that’s one dollar) – they had in “assets” and who knows what those actually were. How does that work? If I have something from the dollar store, you will loan me $40 with that as collateral?

Whose idea was that? Why would anyone have failed to stop that practice and regulate it in an appropriate manner? Were the Congressional committees responsible for legislation on these matters, dead in their chairs or what? That defies the sense that anyone might have for sound business practices. And, I think the show indicated that banks put up a $1.00 as collateral assets to get $12 which, although somewhat better – what kind of financing mentality is that?

September 26, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

* what would happen if we “hit the bottom” and had to start again? how soon would that happen? are there any ways to maintain free market systems integrity and stop the free fall of our economy while preserving our representative republic and principles of democracy?

* what would stimulate economic growth? as quickly as possible?

* what would create stability in the markets quickly, effectively and in the most natural, non-invasive and non-obstructive, non-obtrusive manner possible?

Creating workable solutions to the economic and credit crisis in the US and Intnl communities – First Step – Get the right questions -
September 25, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

what would happen if we “hit the bottom” and had to start again? How soon would that happen? Are there any ways to maintain free market systems integrity and stop the free fall of our economy while preserving our representative republic and principles of democracy?

* we would bounce, probably scrubble about on the bottom for awhile and then we would get real solutions in place and restart. However, I’m not looking at a chart or analysis projection in front of me, so making do with the analysis in my head, I would almost bet we hit bottom last Thursday, so we’re already there. Or, rather its already come up to meet us depending on how its considered.

* if it is not considered the bottom and we have a further and more dramatic shift downward, what would that be? No matter what we do now by throwing money at the problem, jobs will continue to be lost by the rate of 60,000+ each month continuing well into next year. The figures for each month over the course of this year have been in the 80,000 +/- neighborhood except for April, I think it was, when the US government arbitrarily added 34,000 government jobs that artificially optimized the numbers. I think it would have been the month that entered as a determinant in economists’ view of “Recession” calls or not – anyway to make it look okay they added a whole bunch of government jobs and I never found confirmation for warm bodies being employed in any appreciable number of them.

* since the housing markets have been so severely and artificially inflated, for quite some time and due to the levels of mortgages that as ARMs will be resetting over the next year, that situation is only going to continue to grow. This will happen regardless unless a change in the mortgage structures is made.

* apparently the difficulties of this have gone about the same in consistently deteriorating conditions month to month since last year, easily observed in data. There were indications apparent to the international community economic commissions long before that because efforts were being made to demand the US make necessary corrections immediately since pre-2005.

* real unemployment is likely around 15% or higher and the Department of Labor is using numbers that are “filtered” to appear better than they are. The historical figures to which they are being compared were not based on number of new applicants for unemployment benefits. The actual numbers being espoused by the Dept. of Labor are not representative nor an accurate portrayal of reality because they only relate the number of first time requests for assistance through the unemployment benefit program.

From the time that employee benefits stop through unemployment insurance, they are no longer counted in the total even though they are very likely still unemployed. The small business owners whose businesses have been decimated already are not represented in these figures as unemployed either, because they aren’t allowed to apply for benefits. The elderly that have been being employed part or full time and been let go are not being counted. Those who were fired, quit or harassed into quitting are also not included. The other significant populations who were already 85% unemployed regardless of their employability are the disabled individuals and disenfranchised populations generally. These are most certainly not included in the figures either.

* percentages of foreclosures, while varying by area, are very likely well past 12%. Existing home sales numbers have been so (faulty) because of combining distressed property sales figures with full-price sales numbers, that these can’t be used for analysis. Home values have already taken a portion of the pricing adjustment, but not all. I had found a mortgage overview online that shows each state with a rollover and index of how many outstanding mortgages exist of different types, the number of mortgages in overdue status and similar elements. It shows a huge number of mortgages all over the country that are either already distressed or will soon be reset to their higher “ARM” adjustment rates. Since nothing is addressing this other than sparse state by state efforts, it is likely to increase the number of total foreclosures for the year and follow into next year.

* The bailout would devalue the currency by some critical degree however, having thought about whether that would be offset by other factors or mitigated in some specific manner – I’d say now that, no. The devaluation of our currency and current rate of inflation will not be offset for the 96% of the population and +/-97% of the economy where it would matter most.

* The number of jobs added each month to grow the economy in the United States is estimated to be (an additional) 150,000 per month. This had been a standard gauge of growth before the recent 18+ months of job losses that will not and have not been replaced in the economy. These losses of around 80,000 jobs each month will not be regained immediately. The 93% of jobs added since 2003 have been added, not by big business but apparently by small to medium-sized businesses, according to the foxbusiness news reports tonight. (Better look that one up, I was only half listening.) It is roughly accurate however, and the actual numbers and percentages can be located through the National Association of Small Business Owners or through the Chamber of Commerce, Federal Reserve, Department of Commerce and CIA databook / factbook data pages, (by city, region, state, national and by dates.)

* For new building permits and other new projects – my guess is that those will happen in some manner because the government at the state, local and federal levels stimulates these directly. The commercial projects in my area have restarted already with refurbishing of malls, strip shopping center developments being started or continuing, stores being refurbished, etc.

Written by Cricket Diane C Sparky Phillips, 09-26-08, USA

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

Dimensional systems cannot be fully stabilized in the same sense as one boat or ship can be, that rests only on the surface or submerged within it. In macro economic and other dimensional systems there is a point of dynamic harmony that can be reached – an imperfect equilibrium that can be (not kept or maintained), but rather allowed to move and develop in place. It will reach its own oscillating zenith and nadir points along a dimensional axis, which means more or less, its own (Mandlebrott style grouping) but in a multi-dimensional array. That seems clearer in my mind than to say it but what it shows is a propensity to and always toward chaos (as seen in chaos theory) and away from linear stability in any one given direction. This is by nature as it should be, (and part of why flat, linear graphs fail to convey the system properly.)

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***

At the point in which a macro-economy becomes static and ceases to be a moving target to be fixed, it is normally too late to mask its demise. Certainly, its “fixable” but not only do many corrections and stimulations need to be done simultaneously, but also the anticipated results and predictable outcome aspects are harder to adjust.

***
Purchasing the mortgage instruments from banks, investors, and companies to bail out banks for the purposes and functions of liquidity does not do one significant thing to insure that the unfair and untenable mortgage products subjecting homeowners to financial and property loss are properly corrected.

And so – back to the questions for “Inventing Solutions for America”

* what would create stability in the markets quickly, effectively and in the most natural, non-invasive and non-obstructive, non-obtrusive manner possible?

* what would stimulate economic growth? As quickly as possible?

Strangely enough, I had to put these questions together to answer them because in some ways they are the same thing. And, in other ways to do the one prohibits the other, either way.

* now, before I get accused of insensitivity – which may be the case, regardless, – the best way for me to know what the hands available to me are capable of doing in order to help myself, is to get paper and pencil to the task. It reminds me of the only assurance I have of available help that can be trusted in any real measure.

* As much as we gather hand-in-hand to a task or to the accomplishment of a set of tasks and goals, will they rest in our hearts and minds as we walk in our dreams and own imaginings of the possibilities, innovate solutions and create what can work to make things better?

* I might be insensitive suggesting that everyone in America be given paper and pencil to work it out – but there you go – it does work – there is a sense that is inspired beyond reason and creative, innovative and inventive, as well as powerful. The best place I know to start for any great accomplishment of fact is in a pencil and paper.

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

It is an absolute fact that money can serve no end but in trading for a commodity of some kind, by definition. It can’t provide nourishment by eating it, doesn’t warm nor clothe, and in the throes of our Great Society still won’t give its owner the basic provision of needs unless traded in acquisition of them.

Consequently, as a model of efficiency and first thrust while maintaining a form of government and market driven economy to which we’ve agreed, a number of influences can be rightly made. Change the level of regulations downward and to a far less stringent and costly basis for start-ups of small and medium-sized businesses to stimulate immediate growth. Enhance manufacturing incentives for companies in existence and starting up to apply new advances and technologies while helping to lower costs and train to use them and to apply them effectively. Encourage development of existing consumer-based possibilities by adding capital across the board into small and regional banks / community banks precisely for startups, for expansion, refurbishment, new technology and new employee hires to be made in the community. Help make paperwork and systems supporting employees more user-friendly, based in reality and efficient.

September 27, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***

Our economy has very real systemic problems with the integrity of its fundamental structures. Maybe they ought to fix the holes in the bucket before putting more water in it.

***
I am convinced that there is a rarefied (thin) air around places like Wall Street and Washington, D.C. – its as if because everyone agrees that a thing is so and is a certain way, then it therefore is. And, since no other viewpoint or perspective is given credence – any other valuable insight and its resulting good judgment is lost. Things that would not make any good sense in light of the facts and factual reality anywhere else, make the rounds in Wall Street and Washington as if they are perfectly reasonable when they are not. Anything that differs from the way they want to believe it is and the way they all mostly agree it is – simply gets discredited, mocked and ignored.
September 20, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

It is evident that we have been watching the decimation of the American system of government, economic model and balance of power. There are possibilities of fixing the specifics and making appropriate corrections without tearing the foundations into an unrecognizable interpretation. – cricketdiane

September 21, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

So, I thought about this and it occurs to me that if a person were looking at me and the house behind them was raging with fire, would I really be concerned with convincing them of what they couldn’t see was endangering them and whether there is a fire or a matter of my opinion about a fire or why I think there is a fire? Or would I just shove them out of harm’s way and go put out the fire? Some things genuinely aren’t a matter of rhetoric.

Saying this is to say – we have people making decisions both in Wall Street and in Washington that have never bought their own groceries or had to make a choice between their car insurance and having the electricity bill paid. The rain never touches their heads, the pavement never touches their feet and ideas of what is what are constrained by the limited, rarefied environment where they exist. It makes Disneyland look real in comparison and more in touch with reality.

September 20, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

create standard mortgage form, practice and allowable percentages using Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – not for purchase but for conversion process.

**

make all credit default swaps and all other non-regulated credit derivatives of a similar nature null and void. This spreads out the absorption ratios across the board and has the least amount of systemic risk.

**

re-collateralize all debt and liability obligations to a government standard across the board and rate by same standard of measure.

**

allow defaults and bond defaults to be born by those companies currently in the business of holding them having profited from them already.

**

make ARM, interest-only and negative amortization practices for loans illegal and force reset of all currently held ARM products – to reset at current market rates in their own company’s expense to conform to new Fed guidelines.

**

using already proposed guidelines for international standard – force sound principles of accounting and make off-balance sheet accounting illegal.

**

set up commission of regulatory standards insulated from lobbyists and answering to Fed Treasury and Congressional leadership.

**

end speculative short selling as an acceptable practice, make appropriate regulatory changes to commodities speculation as quickly and evenly-handed as possible. Speculation cannot be allowed to drive real value and prices in the marketplace.

**

and – don’t bail out what can’t be fixed by throwing money at it. That will devalue our currency while arbitrarily causing prices to increase and consequently for the cost of living and even the most basic necessities to skyrocket while not actually repairing the systemic fragility that exists.

**

Just give everybody a million dollars and we’ll pay our own damn mortgages – Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips

For $700 billion dollars, each and every man, woman and child in the United States, legal and otherwise, could be given $1 million dollars each and pay off their own damn mortgages. Then the rest of the money could be used to bail out these corporations from their criminally negligent behaviors.

The credit default swaps, derivative instruments and exotic financial products backed up by air can be nullified and made illegal where the losses would be spread across those foolish enough to have bought them, traded in them and used them as an asset class. The defaulted mortgages already foreclosed are covered by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as by the “housing bill” already passed and the US Treasury could go back to doing the more sane things they are qualified to do.

The time to fear a market collapse has passed. The confidence game is over. This opportunity for change will not wait for the new president to pick out the drapes to be resolved sometime next year. But, since the government believes it is well within their sense of normalcy to spend another trillion plus dollars – they may as well give everyone whose feet are standing in this country, a million dollars each to solve the problem where they stand. At least something would get done.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 09-21-08, USA

September 22, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

When you’ve had the position as a decision-maker in all this – how is it you figured that doing whatever Wall street friends thought was best would work out? Didn’t it occur to you that anything which requires “confidence” to keep its value is a con game intended to profit for no real return? It was a con game. We were had. They got away with it. There is nothing but air backing it up. Countries around the world are realizing they got “had” too. What did you think would happen? It was a con.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 09-22-08, USA

It doesn’t matter if everyone on the Hill, and on the Street are in on the game – its still a con built on lies.

Around the world, there is disgust and dismay for the corruption of the economic system and the current behavior of our government concerning it. The financial industries and US government financial branches were warned ahead of time to correct the accounting abnormalities, resolve the unsecured debt instruments being packaged and resold, fix the unregulated “insurance” business of derivatives and their complex bond default swaps, and told that to not do so threatened the stability of the global markets and monetary systems.

This isn’t about a feeling of confidence, mood or emotion. The lies upon which our current markets rest are depleting the valued resources which once represented something. Now they don’t offer jobs or job growth, nor secured tangible assets nor in fact, do they stand on or offer anything to the American people.

September 22, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***
In fact, until the reality could no longer be avoided as a negative evident to everyone, there were still “experts” saying it was all alright and simply a “bubble”. With a dollar worth little more than ten cents in 1976 money based on its actual ability to buy something, the “experts” continued to say that there was not a problem. And the US government insisted it would all be okay.

Now – who is living in a deluded fantasy land? Is it me or the people who’ve lost the equity in their own homes and can’t sell them for the money owed on them? Or the people trying to get gasoline for cars they can no longer afford now that their credit cards are maxed out? Or the people that are applying for jobs where 78,000 other applicants are vying for the same job that think there will be a job for them “right around the corner”?

***

Look around the world, they are mocking us as our diplomats and state department officials seek to push our policies of free market economy and representative democratic government on others, while we are using socialist, communist and dictatorial policies and practices in this and other eminent situations. The rest of the world is dropping their level of willingness to put up with America and the arrogance of demands for others to conform to a model the US isn’t honoring.

As you’ve reduced our world respect and standing to a complete joke of arrogance and contempt for everything we stood for, you and your Wall Street buddies turn to blame everyone but yourselves. You can discredit what I may say about it all – how is that going to make any difference?

Our industries are a poor shadow of what is innovative in the world. Our stock market is a loose cannon imploding on its own corruption and greed. Our politicians warm unearned seats by their own self-serving complacency and willingness to sell every principle of America down the river to protect their own riches and positions of power.

Our voices aren’t heard, our interests aren’t protected and our representation in our government is extraordinarily lacking. The current planned bailouts and already consummated bailouts are evidence of a government serving the interests only of themselves and their rich friends. They want to force it to be done in a short period of time without any recourse through the courts if it turns out to be unconstitutional to have done it, such that no new administration elected by our choices could possibly ever interfere with protecting their friends’ interests.

September 22, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

I’m not the one that sunk hard-earned money into a 401K that is worth half its value now. I’m not the one who sold “securities” that were constructed on air with nothing to back them up. I’m not the one that borrowed money leveraged against them nor the one that sold them around the world.

I’m not the one who created a counterfeit form of US currency in the form of credit default swaps and complicated derivative products designed to get assets in return for nothing. I’m not the one who built businesses upon this nor that was in the enforcement business that should’ve stopped it. I’m not the one who ignored the international monetary commissions about correcting all this.

I’m not the one who acted like it would all be okay so long as everyone believes it is and keeps buying the worthless paper for more than the last person did. I’m not the one that said it won’t hurt anybody or made the choice to refuse regulating or legislating appropriately for it.

So, the banking, finance and investment industry has taken advantage of our ignorance and made fools out of all of us. The politicians laughed in their sleeves and mocked us for not catching on, all the while in full knowledge of what was going on. And, you think I’m crazy?

The Danger – the Economy in the US is based on a con game – Cricket Diane C Sparky Phillips
September 22, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

As homeowners across the United States have lost their jobs and homes, where do we find the stories of their “new lives” in tent cities, campgrounds, parking lots and streets across America? Is it in our press with our precious freedom of the press and rights to freedom of speech? No, – it’s only made public in other countries where there is a willingness to show the New Great Depression in America with their contempt about our complete refusal to address it at all.

When the stock market and US economy was actually in grave danger earlier this year, did the US press cover the reality of the situation where solutions could be given and created? Of course not, out of deference to the superstition that to tell the truth of the situation would somehow make a bad market occur, create a recession and cause stocks to value lower.

***

“Over the past few years, CDSs helped transform bond trading into a highly leveraged, high-velocity business. Banks and hedge funds found that it was much easier and quicker to just buy and sell CDS contracts rather than buy and sell actual bonds. As of the end of 2007, they had grown to roughly $60 trillion in global business.”

“Credit default swaps written by AIG cover more than $440 billion in bonds.”

Quotes from:

http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUSMAR85972720080918?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0

How AIG fell apart
Thu Sep 18, 2008 1:55pm EDT
By Adam Davidson
(Explanation of the credit default swaps in a clear manner -)

***

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=auCzaUuqODfc

Democratic Senators Christopher Dodd and Charles Schumer have said the Federal Reserve, which is getting $200 billion in special funding from the Treasury this month, has the authority to take on a broader role.The Fed’s role expanded further when the central bank agreed on Sept. 14 to accept a broader range of collateral, including equity, in exchange for loans to investment banks. The central bank today said loans to securities firms soared to a record $59.8 billion yesterday.

At the Fed’s request, the Treasury yesterday instituted a supplemental funding program for the central bank allowing it to expand its balance sheet. The Treasury has announced a total of $200 billion of bill auctions so far under the program.

***

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2008/09/15/business/20080916-treemap-graphic.html?WT.mc_id=glob_mrktg_lnk3&WT.mc_ev=click

September 15, 2008
A Year of Heavy Losses

A year ago, financial companies were flying high. But as problems in the mortgage and credit markets have grown, the stocks of many Wall Street firms have been hard hit. Some of the biggest companies have been bought out, taken over by the government or gone bankrupt.

*** Wonderful interactive chart describing the losses in blocks by company and comparison from Oct 07 – Sept 12, 08

***

http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/corruption/index.html

“Corruption hurts the poor disproportionatelyby diverting funds intended for development, undermining a government’s ability to provide basic services, feeding inequality and injustice, and discouraging foreign investment and aid”.

Kofi Annan, United Nations Secretary-General
in his statement on the adoption by the General Assembly of the United Nations Convention against Corruption
The Global Programme against Corruption

Corruption undermines democratic institutions, retards economic development and contributes to government instability. Corruption attacks the foundation of democratic institutions by distorting electoral processes, perverting the rule of law, and creating bureaucratic quagmires whose only reason for existence is the soliciting of bribes. Economic development is stunted because outside direct investment is discouraged and small businesses within the country often find it impossible to overcome the “start-up costs” required because of corruption.

***
When properly underwritten, alternative mortgage products, including those with payment options that can result in negative amortization, confer benefits to both financial institutions and homebuyers. The American consumer could suffer greatly from any guidance that imposes unduly restrictive standards on the use of these mortgage products.
Proposed Guidance – Nontraditional Mortgage Products March 27, 2006 Page 5 of 10
The Agencies’ concerns about tighter underwriting standards for Interest Only and Option ARMs may be unwarranted. Our members report that borrowers with Interest Only and Option ARMs tend to have higher incomes and higher FICO scores than borrowers with traditional mortgages. The Proposed Guidance also cautions lenders to assume that borrowers make only minimum payments during the deferral period when calculating the amount that the loan balance can increase. There is no evidence to support this assumption. While no aggregate database exists for alternative mortgages at this time, our members have reported that such alternative mortgage loans are amortizing more quickly than traditional mortgages. This would suggest that these alternative mortgage borrowers are making much more than minimum payments. When assessing an institution’s exposure on mortgages with simultaneous second-lien loans, the Agencies should consider all mitigating factors, including whether the institution has retained all the risk or sold or insured a portion of it.

Re: Proposed Guidance- Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Products 70 FR 77249 (December 29, 2005)

from post -
September 23, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane
***

** MY NOTE -
now there is obviously a lot wrong with this one – from the point at which is says “our members report that . . . borrowers with Interest Only and Option ARMS tend to have higher incomes and higher FICO scores than borrowers with traditional mortgages.” According to everything we now know about this – what was being presented was a lie, no matter how it is viewed.

***

“And in those deals, they sold protection as often as they bought it — although they rarely set aside the reserves they would need if the obligation ever had to be paid.

In one notorious case, a small hedge fund agreed to insure UBS AG (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the Swiss banking giant, from losses related to defaults on $1.3 billion of subprime mortgages for an annual premium of about $2 million.

The trouble was, the hedge fund set up a subsidiary to stand behind the guarantee — and capitalized it with just $4.6 million. As long as the loans performed, the fund made a killing, raking in an annualized return of nearly 44 percent.”

Excerpt from :

http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN1837154020080918?pageNumber=3&virtualBrandChannel=0&sp=true

Buffett’s “time bomb” goes off on Wall Street
Thu Sep 18, 2008 1:42pm EDT
By James B. Kelleher – Analysis

***

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Tent-Cities-Spring-Up-In-The-US-Credit-Crunch-Making-People-Homeless/Article/200809315103250?lpos=World_News_News_Your_Way_Region_9&lid=ARTICLE_15103250_Tent_Cities_Spring_Up_In_The_US%3A_Credit_Crunch_Making_People_Homeless

‘Tent Cities’ Spring Up In The US

3:10pm UK, Friday September 19, 2008
Communities of homeless people living in tents are cropping up across the US as the effects of rising unemployment, repossessions and the credit crunch bite. (with photos.)

***
Bankers didn’t want regulations messing up their negative amortization loans and profits in high risk ARMS

http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/2005/05comguide.html

reference courtesy of Michael  Blomquist at GretaWire on FoxNews at 2.03 a.m.

- On this webpage above that he suggested in his post, I found the statement on my previous post that was made by the trade association ACB – America’s Community Bankers which outlines their disagreements with, and positions concerning the Federal government’s financial agencies proposed regulations. This document came from December 29, 2005 and was apparently one of many instrumental in deflecting the proposals from being enacted. – (my comments)

http://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/2005/05c22guide.pdf

Why was there ever a loan to cover “interest only”? How could that have ever made sense in light of sanity?

***
Does anyone in the financial industry know what a “moral hazard” actually is? Well, there’s a line you’ve all already crossed like it wasn’t even there. Barney Frank is apparently working for the banking industry – not for us. And so are some others in Washington under the guise of protecting our interests.

There comes a point at which shoes simply must get the shoestrings tied whether the kid wants it that way or not. I don’t see how it is any different with finance industry regulations, whether that suits them or doesn’t or whether they want to keep doing things in the same way that will surely mean the downfall of all of us.

I am offering my plan – not because the experts can’t handle it but because they aren’t and they haven’t – my opinion is at least as sensible as theirs, in some ways certainly more so. Perhaps it will inspire something other than what they are planning to do that will work better.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 092308, USA

September 23, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***
My list of what is lacking in the US government $700 billion dollar bail out plan -
Statistics and probability involved in using $700 billion and altering the free market dynamics therewith

macroeconomic policy in the public domain for extant systems

integrity – justification – structural deficiencies resulting from this action

socio-economic probabilities

policy constraints

econometric analysis of outcomes

and parameters for resultant conflicts

divergence theory and collusion (of effects and outcomes)

deficit spending macroeconomic results (known)

growth dynamics (probabilities)

outcome scenarios – event horizon and logistics

**
political doctrine constraining application

foreign policy dynamic component for international cooperation and continued progress

September 24, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

***
The Treasury plan, which follows a new federal guarantee for money market fund holdings, would push Washington’s potential bailout tab to $1.8 trillion.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/26808715

**

Apparently nearly two trillion dollars isn’t going to be enough either because our economy has very real systemic problems with the integrity of its fundamental structures. Maybe they ought to fix the holes in the bucket before putting more water in it.

Oh yeah, and its bring your own fuel, if you want to run around the US anywhere in a vehicle that doesn’t have two wheels and some pedals.

September 24, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

** My note today -
Apparently the Republican Party didn’t mind spending over $10 Trillion dollars during their administration while cutting services and every social program in the country and every safety net available to the American people. And, they didn’t mind spending another $2 Trillion dollars in the last few months of their lease on power. But, oh how they have decided spending is not a good thing now as evidenced by their stonewalling passage of the current stimulus bill introduced by Democrats to help Americans directly, help families, feed people destitute from the economic blight, help communities and create jobs.

But that doesn’t matter, because the Republican party is serving the desires of those who line their campaign coffers – not the people of the United States, nor their futures. It is so not fair because I have believed in the Republicans and the Democrats in Washington to get the job done for us. Can’t they just do that?

- cricketdiane, 01-30-09

Don’t buy credit default and derivative instruments out of the game – undermine their premise and destroy the legal use of these credit default instruments. They are unregulated, unauthorized, unqualified and unsecured.

This isn’t going to be a class war. That is not going to describe what it is that will happen as a result of all this. For every dollar that the US government puts in to “solve” these problems by bailing out these greedy short-sighted, profiteering companies, investment houses, insurance businesses and others, that dollar meant a sacrifice of something a family did without, an hour worked, a vacation not taken, a house going into foreclosure, a car payment not made so that those taxes could be paid. It wasn’t free money then and it damn sure isn’t free money now.

But our government gives hundreds of billions of dollars to these companies that gambled, played games with investor’s moneys, made poor and in some cases criminal choices, created confidence schemes for profit at the expense of everyone else, extended themselves without any reasonable level of resources to back up their “plays” and generally, have run our country, our economy and our government slap into the ground along with their companies’ profitability. What kind of USA is it that has allowed this to happen, has encouraged it, has failed to regulate it, has essentially allowed a counterfeit currency to be developed and spread throughout our financial system?

Alright, there are that articles explain it very clearly. The financial members of Wall Street were allowed to sell pieces of paper built on air, fantasy and lies for premiums of $2,000,000,000+ a year. They were regulated by people engaged in the same folly who chose not to regulate it at all because they were participating in it.

And now, the US government is going to take all these worthless pieces of paper that have no value but complete liability and pay these companies to get them. There is currently something over $60 trillion dollars of these in the market and much of it is due for payout on defaulted bonds, mortgages, commercial loans and others. So, now we are going to pay them and we going to buy these derivatives with our government moneys. And then what will they do? – Hold these liabilities and do nothing?

***

What sum gain that is worthwhile is being offered by these investment houses, banks and financial institutions besides being bigger and better at lies and stealing than the rest of us?

And, besides undermining the value of every retiree’s earned retirement funding, stealing their promised health care benefits through their companies, and closing plants, these same companies laid off people, refused to make wages commensurate with the real costs of living and the real value of talent and time, withheld raises, dropped benefits and made employees produce to cover four people’s manhours of work or more.

These jackasses were doing unusual things and using unsound practices for profiting on these derivatives, credit default swaps, unfunded debt instruments. They also were paying millions in premiums to have these corrupt financial “insurance” products available and reselling them to one another, knowing they were very likely worthless and are now going to rob the people of the United States and the international community to cover their liabilities and poor choices.

So, this means that while unsecured paper was being sold for millions and millions of dollars, the small business administration wouldn’t loan for a start up unless three banks had turned the applicant down and they had enough collateral and good credit to essentially not need the loan at all. But at the same time, real value – real money – was being given for literally no back up, no assets underwriting it and no possibility of ever paying out what it was securing.

September 20, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

Money held in a Mason jar for two years won’t be worth its value when placed there. Money in the stock markets are simply feeding brokers a living.

Money put into companies that are allowed to make up their value by imagination rather than intelligent review of resources to liabilities will yield nothing or less than nothing.

Money placed into world currencies will be devalued over time as the dollar yield is the basis of their relative backstop valuing. And, the value of real properties are not based in reality which therefore will rob the owner rather than yield for the investment and time.

What this leaves is not worth considering. Second of all, there are people making these economic decisions from sources in the US that are more inclined to political and personal gain than in the overall impacts of their actions.

When they existed within the framework of private enterprise, these impacts were limited by the range of influence. Then, in the positions of power within the US government economic agencies, their ranges of influence became far-reaching but even less properly understood.

It is not possible to offset the reality that is occurring, no matter how it is “framed”, no matter what propaganda and spin is given to it, no matter how differing views are discredited. These won’t make any difference because it is not perception of reality that counts but rather that reality is what matters.

As people see that US dollars simply have no value, they will know it. Just as people discovered that the equity in their homes became a negative value rather than a positive one despite the years of paying payments honorably, they will also know as their money isn’t a usable way to take care of bills, food, gasoline, insurance, house payments and other needs.

As people realize that the interest on their credit cards are no longer a few percentage points, but rather a 22% – 26% rate, regardless of their timely payments on them, they will know that is real dollars unavailable to them for other things.

As the cost of getting to work and making errands becomes a choice between other needs or gasoline to put in the tank for continued employment, they will “get it” that the devaluation of the dollar makes a difference to them personally.

September 18, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

US Economic Crisis – credit default swaps and derivative products – an opinion of solutions – Cricket Diane C Sparky Phillips

A valid opinion about the credit default swap products, credit default instruments and derivatives in the market collapse crisis – US and World Markets -

Don’t buy credit default and derivative instruments out of the game – undermine their premise and destroy the legal use of these credit default instruments. They are unregulated, unauthorized, unqualified and unsecured. Let everyone across the board lose on the “pretended” value of those and make it illegal to ever create them or trade in them again. They are not valid products in the marketplace because they weren’t secured in the first place.

Businesses cannot sell, create, nor trade an “insurance” product that is non-collateralized, unsecured and without any real asset value, no matter what premium is being paid for it. That is untenable. Make them all illegal across the board – not the bonds they insure, but the credit default instruments that have been created back-room, over-the-counter, hand to hand.

That one action would insure the solvency of around 90% of the companies and funds that have been dealing in them. The other 10% of these entities can be made solvent by other more traditional means.

Install industry-wide accounting standards and remove (illegalize) all asset classes which are not secured and backed by real, tangible assets. There should no longer be anything that is considered “off balance sheet” accounting practices. That it was considered standard operating policy is a lesson for the future that it may never be tolerated again because of its destructive components.

Have all ratings agencies rate on the same basis of factual evidence and remove the magnitude of power held by these agencies. The ability of ratings agencies to call the shots and manipulate the markets is too great. That much power to force re-collateralization and depletion of resources as companies shift assets to do so has no business sitting in the hands of these ratings agencies.

Force the re-capitalization of those companies and financial institutions that are under capitalized within a specific set of parameters and definitions with a limited time period, even if that is two years out. Define the acceptable legal ways and asset types that are the only ones to be tolerated. And, demand this be done immediately to insure solvency across the markets. The impacts of this one element would go farther to stabilize world economic growth and US economic stability as a whole than any one other thing.

Written by Cricket Diane C Phillips, 09-19-08, USA

September 19, 2008 Posted by cricketdiane

Credit default swaps and unfunded debt the US government wants to buy – Glossary of Terms -

Unfunded Liability – that means there is nothing but air and bullshit backing it up.

Credit Default Swap – I’ll cover a bond that will never go into default in trade for a premium of several million dollars a year just in case it does, but there are no assets to back it up if it defaults.

Illiquid Debts – pieces of paper known as “instruments” in the financial industry that aren’t worth the paper they are printed on, representing a promise to pay out billions of dollars if a bond defaults or some other financial “instrument” defaults but has no physical assets underwriting it.

Off Balance Sheet – means that anything detracting from the bottom line is kept on a separate record unless asked for in total available liquid assets in which case these items are added in the total to make it look better.

Distressed Debt – assets built on air, promised in value by delusional fantasy, collateralized by lies and very creative loose interpretations of reality that nobody wants to buy for any price but everyone is using as an asset class (for leverage) to get credit.

Leverage – opaque ways to hide the risk and get moneys available to you anyways as a business. In common usage, this means having $5.00 to buy $5,000,000,000 worth of stock, options, and/or properties, companies, bonds, physical assets. And borrowing the $5.00 used in the first place.

Government Regulators – a group of friends that you hire to work in the government run office that covers your industry that agree with your way of doing things and are normally appointed by the people whose campaigns and campaign shindigs you funded.

Government Regulations – something in the way of making the profits you think you deserve and serving no other useful purpose.

Derivatives – market products that are “made up” by the imaginations and machinations of those working with them – completely unregulated, high-risk, and profitable with no requirements on the part of those who create them.

Tax-base / US Treasury / Federal Reserve – private bank to cover any potential losses that might occur if and when things don’t do as planned.

Liability – something that financial institutions incur when their favored political party isn’t in power. Sometimes, it also means a column on the off balance sheet accounts that doesn’t count against any other financial influx. But, surprisingly enough can undermine the value of any and all real assets in the company.

Poker – a low risk game similar to golf with less margin of error than financing.

This glossary (above) written by Cricket Diane C Phillips, 09-19-08, USA

A few more significant solutions for the economic crisis – and a thought about “confidence” versus Trust and Integrity

What would stimulate the economy? as quickly as possible? (increase liquidity) -

* Shutting down the government for one full day would probably save enough money to pay for the bailout twice over. Just a thought.

* Placing a moratorium on Congress and the Executive branch to stop any and all further spending for one year beyond what is already in place, would probably be more than enough to fix just about everything and have some leftover to send every one of us to Disneyland at least once, next year.

* Stop bailing out and paying for the same things three times over, as someone pointed out on tele news last night, by the time lawyers have billed by the hour to manage these non-performing assets and everything that goes with it, the $700 Billion will be that much many times over. Aside from that, our government has already bailed out these mortgages and mortgage-backed securities twice over as of where we stand today. To what end are we covering the same costs a third time? And how many sources of funds have they hit up for this already? Its a lot more than is being reported. (I say this because I have found many pieces about parts of it, here there and yonder in diverse places of public reporting from international sources to buried reports in US news outlets.)

* Eight elements of broken trust must be repaired, not only in business to public but also in restoration of government to public trust. Without repair of these elements, it will be very close to impossible to accomplish anything of merit.

* Any politician, business executive, decision-maker, legislator and leader who does not know what these eight basic elements of trust are, that have been broken with the public – doesn’t need to hold the position of authority they have. – (and that’s because they also wouldn’t understand why these elements of trust are important and dear to uphold, either.)

* When America upheld this trust, the foundations of prosperity and freedom were strong. As these have been allowed to be broken and abused, the possibilities of both have rested on shallow, infertile ground subject to the whims on one hand and the disdain on the other.

This is not an academic debate, but rather a practical, valid one. For business, prosperity and government are not “games of confidence.” By continued support of those they serve, do they continue to exist and prosper. Therefore, it is truly a matter of genuine trust that is at stake. Without that trust being upheld and given honor – we get the very results we have now.

The eight tenets of trust are:

* Respect

* Mutual Honor

* Integrity

* Willingness to Temper (or Suspend) Personal Gain for Higher Principles

* Fairness and Decency

* Service / (Citizenship)

* Fair and Reasonable Use of Discretion and (Choice), Free Will

* Honesty of a Genuine Nature

(my list – I hope yours is not varied by far from these because these are sound and well-placed. Leadership in any real sense demands these be upheld and kept by honor. They don’t happen automagically.)

Restore these and our economy will grow – without them we will accomplish nothing and our decimation will be our own doing.

Written by Cricket Diane C “Sparky” Phillips, 09-27-08, USA

An estimated $60 Trillion dollars of credit derivatives, credit default swaps and exotic financial derivatives to be purchased by US government “bad bank” plan

The conservative estimate of $60 Trillion dollars in credit default swaps, credit derivatives and similar exotic financial products are currently in the US marketplace. So, how will the US government plan (the bankers’ dream plan) of a “bad bank” to purchase these toxic credit derivatives decide whose business will be given the advantage of purchasing their losses?

How will our government, the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve remain solvent entities if they do purchase these unsecured toxic assets? Will it then cost us a $1,000,000 US dollars to buy a loaf of bread as has happened in many third world countries whose fiscal policies bankrupted them?

Will some banks and previously known investment banks, hedge funds and others be left without opportunities for their losses to be purchased while some favorites are given a clean slate of US government sponsored profitability? Will all the gamblers of toxic risk products be saved or who will pick and choose those worthy from among them?

Does there ever come a point at which the needs of the American people are considered above the needs of a few with access to Washington’s ear? These businesses and banks enjoyed profits when they were available. They were the ones who mismanaged those profits and assets of the businesses they were paid to oversee. They are the ones who leveraged those assets by over 40 times their value. And, they are the ones who expect to enjoy future profits free and clear of the consequences from their actions and active mismanagement of their firms.

Why do we need banks, finance companies, investment industry companies and any other that has been conducting business in ways that have yielded the complete corruption and failure of our financial system and our economy?

- cricketdiane, 01-29-09

Possible solutions for the US and Global economic crisis -

The wealthy may have the income of eight individual people but they are not paying the taxes that those eight people would pay. For each person would have paid a third of their income in Federal and State taxes, paid into the social security system, paid property taxes, ad valorem taxes, sales taxes and fuel taxes, luxury taxes, drivers’ license and tag fees, insurance taxes, utility taxes, and others. That tax base is removed when one individual makes the income of eight people. So, the attitude and idea that the rich elite in America hold that they are paying a share greater than others is using a mixed-up logic not based in reality.

Notice that now, the few at the top who hold the lion’s share of money, assets, property and opportunities are actually given more leveraging power – which is not taxed, more write-offs, write-downs and deductions, more loopholes and more tax shelter options than the rest of the population. Therefore, not only are the tax revenues lost which would be paid if that money were distributed across more individuals, but the few holding those tax revenues have a multitude of methods to avoid paying even what is required of them.

- cricketdiane, 01-28-09

** This is the basic reason that structural deficiencies are fracturing across a broad spectrum of the economy.

What is more an issue of national security in a capitalistic nation than an
economic foundation that is crumbling daily before us?

Exerting these powers in measured thoughtful response to this crisis is
appropriate use of them and they encompass a broad spectrum.

The what to do may be in some question but the ability to do it, is not. We have
paid many years of billions of dollars for the research already completed in a
number of key areas, especially in alternatives for fuel and energy. These sit
idling on shelves and fail to be brought into the play of our “free market”
economy.

Why not bring them into play now, if indeed competition is an integral and relevant part of our economic system? We did give aid, incentives and subsidies
to our oil companies that they could thrive. Why would we not do the same for
these others from pond scum farming for ethanol to coal into gas / liquid fuels
to the use of kudzu and chaparral oils for conversion into fuels?

Some of the options available to exercise remedy in the current marketplace, US
and Global economies are:

1. Market closure
2. Price caps
3. Specific price freezes
4. Profit caps of critical commodities
5. Suspended trading on commodities and futures
6. Re-establish subsidies to market oil’s competitors in energy / fuel
distribution
7. Enforce accounting practices standards
8. Enforce regulations on NYMEX and SEC standards of practice
9. Stop allowing leveraged buys in stocks, futures, commodities and
speculations
10. Re-establish manufacturing grants and subsidies
11. Create stop-gap measure for trucks, shippers, air freight and fishing
industries
12. Enforce fair trade regulations in profit margins of reasonable versus gouging and
unreasonable
13. Have embargo on export of any and all national crude assets / gas and
byproducts, and especially diesel fuel
14. Make low cost loans and grants to truckers, airlines, shippers, rail
lines, and other industries affected dramatically by the high fuel costs
currently impacting them
15. Stop talking about ANWR and use our Alaskan oil being sent out elsewhere
to stay here in the US – we paid for it
16. Stop playing politics with our economy – the real lives it destroys will
never support a government that caused or allowed it
17. Enforce sanity of accounting and true balance on our financial sector and
all other corporate entities
18. Stop bailing out your friends that sit in the top one percent of the
economic echelon – they are loose cannons that will serve no one but themselves
in the long run and can afford to live in any other country they choose any time
and for any reason.
19. Establish “easy start up” programs for businesses. Drop fees required, drop the difficulties required
and reward those who will employ and profit immediately to rebuild our economic
infrastructure.
20. Create a return beyond inflation to those using their funds to back these
business ventures that are immediately attractive in real money rates.
21. Stop allowing countries to heavily tariff and tax our goods and services
there, including the UK and the European Union.
22. Give us an office that can facilitate international sales, requirements
and other necessary options that is predictably easy and straight forward to use
- no more complicated than a first grader could use.
23. Force down our natural gas and electricity prices, whatever it takes (fed
ceiling on or subsidies with regulated price caps). Not only did our taxpayer
dollars build their facilities, power lines and maintenance of them, we need the
prices brought down before Americans die as a result of the prices.
24. Do the hydrogen bull later and immediately sponsor funding for all – electric / battery power cars – let’s get them on
the road – make it affordable by grant or subsidy or tax savings to own it, to
buy it and get us some batteries (lithium ion, etc.) into our market, make them
affordable and sponsor car companies willing to do it with incentives –> they
probably have product designs on the shelf.
25. Find a low cost air travel fuel alternative to use in our planes, a
cheaper alternative particularly coal to gas process or pond scum ethanol for
all government vehicles / military vehicles, ships, trains, etc.
26. Make it legal to use electric cushman vehicles, off-road vehicles, golf
carts and similar vehicles for trips on the sidewalk to the grocery and other
less than five mile radius jaunts.
27. Make connectedness possible to cooperate within specific industries – not
for monopoly but to create new structures of cross-over alternatives and their
access to distribution channels
28. Get our farmers out of the “till Under” method of getting subsidies – we need the growth capacity of all of it to meet needs. Things
are different now than they were forty years ago.
29. Make it impossible to add a rider to any bill that doesn’t directly
pertain to it – that is costing effectiveness of our House and Senate / all
governing bodies in all levels.
30. Make possible the use of emissions cutting technology to be applied in the
refineries and in new refineries so we can build some new facilities up to par
and clearly non-polluting.
31. Force moratorium of use of foreclosure as a process of acceptable loss
against taxes required from companies and they will start working with
homeowners to get their money rather than pursuing foreclosure as a method of
lowering their tax liabilities.
32. The natural resources (including oil, natural gas, electricity generated
by public projects and others) belong to our nation and to her people –> not to
profit driven companies – ultimately that will be the deciding factor and it
will become a new landscape regardless – the resources never belonged to these corporations in the first
place. Not oil, minerals, water, electricity created by publicly paid projects,
not any of those and others that are national resources, ever could actually be
leased to anyone for profit at the expense of the American people, no matter
what has been done with it up until now.
33. There are some interesting alternatives for fuel sources including carbon
dioxide in solution taken from the ambient air, using the toxic components
present nearly everywhere as a conversion into a fuel source, cogon grass and
its oils, chaparral and its oils, kudzu and other out of hand fast growing and
heavily oxygenated plant materials, early steam engine propulsion dynamics and
early electric motor-driven vehicle options. There are also suggestions that at
one time the Japanese had developed a water-driven engine which used water as
the fuel source – quite possibly a similar design exists within the r & d of
many Detroit automakers and others. Incentives could bring these and other designs out of the closets and into operations
within six – nine months.
34. Establish a preliminary safety procedure that would be very inexpensive
for protecting a design prior to patent application and lower patent application
fees as well.
35. There can be incentives, encouragement and payments made to anyone that
retrofits their existing vehicle to run on vegetable oil, or be retrofitted into
a total electric configuration. Some states are using penalties, imposing fines
and discouraging these changes when the exact opposite should be occurring given
the current and continuing circumstances in the energy sectors.

- cricketdiane, 2008
Blog – http://cricketdiane.wordpress.com/

** my note from Davos webcast last night – 4 a.m. ET – Energy Outlook 2009 panel had a question about alternative energy incentives being supported by the oil-producing countries to the panel member speaking for them. I heard the panelist say that they didn’t want to be the “backup plan.”

This is very important I think, because essentially in his answer he said they have everything on the table and acknowledge the real problem with gasoline and crude oil based energies are the global warming / pollution part of them.

If there were a way to make solutions for that element of the gasoline based uses then we would likely have the oil-producers support for it. Otherwise they are no more than a backup plan for questionable alternative energy options in which case, they are understandably not interested in creating their own competition.

It is worthy of consideration that very basic problems have always existed with petroleum based energy solutions that while reliable as an energy source, carry a huge long-term pricetag to the immediate environment where they are used, to the people of the world and to the global warming /overall health of the planet, the atmosphere and our future.

This day, there are many solutions shelved over the years, which now might be brought forward, re-analyzed and possibly considered along with new innovations that might be inspired by them. It is a good time to do that now.

- cricketdiane, 01-29-09, USA

IMF projects deeper downturn than originally forecast – You think?

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world_business/view/405449/1/.html

IMF says global economic growth will slow to 0.5% in 2009
Posted: 28 January 2009 2245 hrs

The IMF cautioned that “the uncertainty surrounding the outlook is unusually large.”

“Downside risks continue to dominate, as the scale and scope of the current financial crisis have taken the global economy into uncharted waters,” it said.

The IMF said the advanced economies were now seen contracting by 2.0 percent, a sharp downward revision from the negative 0.3 percent estimate two months ago.

“Despite wide-ranging policy actions, financial strains remain acute, pulling down the real economy,” the 185-nation institution said, warning the outlook was highly uncertain.

The United States, the epicentre of the financial crisis, would endure a 1.6 percent contraction, the IMF said, slashing its prior estimate of 0.9 percent.

The wealthy may have the income of eight individual people but they are not paying the taxes that those eight people would pay

** my note -

The wealthy may have the income of eight individual people but they are not paying the taxes that those eight people would pay. For each person would have paid a third of their income in Federal and State taxes, paid into the social security system, paid property taxes, ad valorem taxes, sales taxes and fuel taxes, luxury taxes, drivers’ license and tag fees, insurance taxes, utility taxes, and others. That tax base is removed when one individual makes the income of eight people. So, the attitude and idea that the rich elite in America hold that they are paying a share greater than others is using a mixed-up logic not based in reality.

Notice that now, the few at the top who hold the lion’s share of money, assets, property and opportunities are actually given more leveraging power – which is not taxed, more write-offs, write-downs and deductions, more loopholes and more tax shelter options than the rest of the population. Therefore, not only are the tax revenues lost which would be paid if that money were distributed across more individuals, but the few holding those tax revenues have a multitude of methods to avoid paying even what is required of them.

- cricketdiane, 01-28-09

** This is the basic reason that structural deficiencies are fracturing across a broad spectrum of the economy.

When I was growing up in California, the air hung like thick brown goo across the city of Los Angeles. On many days, we were told not to go outside, not to walk, not to engage in sports and to basically, not breath the air as if that were at all possible. (and Davos Live link, growing poverty with Republican economics, etc.)

http://streamstudio.world-television.com/CCUIv3/frameset.aspx?ticket=441-772-7049&target=en-default-&status=live&browser=ns-1-0-7-9-0&stream=wm-video-200

Davos Live – World Economic Forum LiveStream Video – Reuters

***

National Heritage Foundation Files for Bankruptcy in Virginia

National Heritage Foundation Files for Bankruptcy in Virginia
January 27, 2009  No Comments

National Heritage Foundation, Inc., which describes itself as “the nation’s leading independent donor-advised fund,” has filed a voluntary chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.  In its audited financial statements, the company reported assets of approximately $232 million and liabilities of approximately $23.6 million as of December 31, 2007 (the most recent financial statements available).  The company is represented by Patton Boggs LLP.

http://netdockets.wordpress.com/2009/01/27/national-heritage-foundation-files-for-bankruptcy-in-virginia/

***

kudlow@cnbc.com

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15838446
For many years Mr. Kudlow served as chief economist for a number of Wall Street firms. He was a member of the Bush-Cheney Transition Advisory Committee. During President Reagan’s first term, Mr. Kudlow was the associate director for economics and planning, Office of Management and Budget, Executive Office of the President, where he was engaged in the development of the administration’s economic and budget policy.

He is a trusted advisor to many of our nation’s top decision-makers in Washington and has testified as an expert witness on economic matters before several congressional committees. He has also presented testimony at several Republican Governors Conferences.

“Instead of nationalizing the banking system, or making our big financial institutions wards of the state, or interfering with real estate markets through foreclosure bailouts, or expanding any other aspects of Bailout Nation, let’s have some pro-growth tax policies.” – from Kudlow website – his position (same old cut taxes to the rich and the corporations song.)

***

** my note -

Whenever Republicans open their bag of solutions, there is nothing but calls for their favored businesses and industries, many of which we have subsidized, to have reduced taxes, reduced taxes, tax cuts, tax cuts and reduced taxes for their fellow elite on capital gains. Same old song, same old desire to put huge risk portfolios on separate accounting ledgers, and not count them as the debt and obligations they represent. Off-balance sheet accounting, what a joke. And we’re supposed to let them make up values.

I almost forgot the other part of the same old tired Republican / big business song which is to not require them to make time for employees to eat lunch or dinner, not require businesses to make rest breaks for employees, not require them to pay overtime when they work employees past any level of sanity and to not be required to provide safe work environments, nor non-polluted environments where employees must work.

Aren’t these the same kinds of business people that gave world civilizations the sweat shops with women and children working 18 hours a day in dangerous factories that caught fire and burned them all alive? That is not what we need again in the United States, they’ve done enough damage to last many lifetimes doing things that way already.

Then, of course there is the one other part of that same tired chorus that defends business and industry from the legal and ethical demands of not polluting every natural resource around them and not releasing polluted sources into the surrounding environment where people must live and work, breath, drink the water and survive. Republicans don’t want businesses to adhere to any standards and want no regulations for anything except the small and startup businesses created by the regular citizenry.

Why are businesses unconscionable – aren’t they made up of people that care about the world in which they live?

- cricketdiane, 01-28-09

***

Also noticed this -

http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2009/01/27/Mercury_found_in_some_corn_syrup/UPI-94991233114309/

MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 27 (UPI) — U.S. researchers say they’ve found mercury in samples of high fructose corn syrup and more than a dozen products containing the sweetener.

A study published in the journal Environmental Health found mercury in nearly 50 percent of tested samples of high fructose corn syrup. A separate study by the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy found mercury in nearly one-third of 55 popular food and beverage products where the sweetener is the first- or second-highest labeled ingredient, the institute said in a news release Monday.

[ ...]

Researchers said the corn syrup was likely contaminated with mercury through a caustic soda often used to separate corn starch from the corn kernel. “The use of mercury cells to produce caustic soda can contaminate caustic soda, and ultimately (the corn syrup), with mercury,” the report said.

****

** my note -

When I was growing up in California, the air hung like thick brown goo across the city of Los Angeles. On many days, we were told not to go outside, not to walk, not to engage in sports and to basically, not breath the air as if that were at all possible. In the years from the late 1960′s until now, instead of solving the problems of polluting industries, they’ve simply moved them to less regulated states and countries or found ways to put off adhering to the regulations on the books.

The automakers, as well as other industries continue to insist on doing as they damn well please despite the fact that when they destroy the natural resource quality around them, it is permanently and pervasively destructive. For every car, truck, gasoline engine driven vehicle in America, there is a continuing depletion of air quality and production of exotic and toxic chemical combinations being induced into the air, rain, soil and run-off into the surrounding landscape.

Whenever pressed to do something about it – the carmakers and other industries say it will be another ten years before they can do that. It is always ten more years away from doing whatever will make it better. And, now having wasted the last thirty years without doing what needed to be done about any of it, these industries, their lobbies and their politicians are still saying it will be ten years before getting really underway with it.

I read the same stories about water quality concerns and renewed put off dates about it in the Rome, GA newspapers three years ago that had been in the papers and had been fought over, thirty years ago and still today it is probably the same or nearly as bad as ever. At every turn, businesses would rather be allowed to do as they see fit without any willingness to make that fit with what benefits everyone and keeps everyone safe from the activities of the business or industry required by their doing business.

Now, on any July day and many days throughout the year, the same brown goo hanging thick in the air can be found across Carrollton, GA. and on many days in Atlanta the air quality is so dangerous from vehicle and industry emissions that people are told to restrict their activities. California hasn’t changed for the better, they simply added more places across America with industrial and vehicle pollutants in the high concentrations known to be serious risk to the population enduring it.

And – as if that isn’t enough, in recent years it has been common to hear it described as, “California – the land of poverty.” Apparently allowing businesses to do any damn thing they wanted as they saw fit didn’t serve to provide prosperity and opportunity, either.

- cricketdiane, 01-28-09, USA