Wolfie’s Baaccckkkkkkk!

Yep,

he’s back
… Heading an arms control committee at State. At
the last two things Wolfie headed, the results were so bad many of
those he headed IN BOTH PLACES want to punch him. So we need to add a
third place?

Why does loyalty need to extend beyond his think tank spot? Does Bush
see non-management jobs as not being real jobs? I mean, being a
manager, among other things, he should get that some people are bad at
managing. Mr. Wolfowitz’ record suggests to me and plenty of other
people that he falls in that category.

Another Economic Boogeyman

Bad enough for us all that the economy isn’t going so great, and that scary stories fan the flames of our worries, which make us spend less, which makes the economy go less great which leads to more scary stories which…

That’s bad enough. So imagine my further dismay to read an extensive article suggesting that there are portions of our inter-related global economy so complex and arcane that we’re at their utter mercy. From The Black Box Economy, here’s the main thesis as stated:

The drumbeat of bad news over the past year, they say, is only a symptom of something new and unsettling – a deeper change in the financial system that may leave regulators, and even Congress, powerless when they try to wield their usual tools.

That something is the immense shadow economy of novel and poorly understood financial instruments created by hedge funds and investment banks over the past decade – a web of extraordinarily complex securities and wagers that has made the world’s financial system so opaque and entangled that even many experts confess that they no longer understand how it works.

Pretty scary, huh? Ready to crap your pants yet? I was buying in, even though I was wondering what the author, an assistant history professor, knew about economics. Then I got to this bit:

…when the mortgage crisis broke last summer, it opened a window on something else: The existence of a huge wilderness of investments in the financial sector that are nearly impossible to track or measure, and which operate out of the view of both investors and regulators. It emerged that investment banks, hedge funds, and other financial players had issued, bought, and sold hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of esoteric securities backed in part by other securities, which in turn were backed by payments on high-risk mortgages.

When borrowers began defaulting on their loans, two things happened. One, banks, pension funds, and other institutional investors began revealing that they owned huge quantities of these unusual new securities, called collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs. The banks began writing them off, causing the massive losses that have buffeted the country’s best-known financial companies. And two, without a market for these securities, brokers stopped wanting to issue risky mortgages to new home buyers. Home values began their plunge.

In other words, a staggeringly complex financial instrument that most Americans had never heard of, and which many financial writers still don’t fully understand, became in a matter of months the most important influence on home values in America. That’s not how the economy is supposed to work – or at least that’s not what they teach students in Economics 101.

Well, I’m no economist, but I know a bit, and this sounds like age-old garden-variety greed and speculation to me. Sure, lots of folks got killed on bad loans. But a big part of the story there, despite what some have heard, is that the folks who got killed borrowing were credit idiots who didn’t deserve their loans in the first place, many of whom were foolishly using their home equity as an ATM. My sympathy for these folks is somewhat constrained. But I’ll join those of us unhappy that the economy is now ailing due in large part to rampant real-estate speculation which led to the eager granting of tons of loans to people who couldn’t afford them.

Let’s think about those eager granters, because now we’re talking about the folks near or inside this alleged black box. Are we REALLY supposed to believe that high-powered worldwide investors were unaware of what was driving high investment returns? I don’t buy it. You don ‘t have to be a financial savant to know that the high return on investment bone is ALWAYS connected to the high risk bone.

IOW, I got your black box “right here,” as they say. The vast majority of people managing or controlling large sums of money had to have made these investments with their eyes wide open. The returns have to come from somewhere, and anyone with minimal smarts knows enough to ask the basic questions. if it’s high return, it’s high risk, and there’s usually a pretty simple explanation that goes like If A happens, we make a killing, and if B happens. we get slaughtered.

And sure, I suppose it’s possible that some investors really didn’t ask or didn’t understand the dynamics. Cry me a river for them. Bottom line, I’m just some guy, but I knew back a year or more ago when I heard about people taking loans where they were only paying back interest and not principal, and loans where the payments quickly escalated, that it was going to all end badly. Black Box? Doubt it. My guess is that it just seems like one when a bunch of folks get blinded by greed and all the tide riders go along for the trip without asking too many questions.

McCain’s Gadfly

We all know that there’s a core of GOP folks who think they ARE the base, and who think that John McCain is a sad excuse for a true republican. No surprise there. These critics seem to have been tuned out to some extent, as McCain is collecting endorsements and acting like the campaign has become a victory tour.

But there’s another critic out there. Matt Welch is something of a self-styled small-L libertarian and internationalist who seems committed to gadflying from a different angle, in How Johnny Got His Groove Back

If John McCain bounces from his victory in Florida this week to a nomination-clinching Super-Duper Tuesday in California and the 23 Dwarves, there are three main categories of humans he’ll have to thank for the biggest worst-to-first primary performance since George McGovern’s in 1972. They are: his pratfalling competitors, his gullible independent supporters and his always-willing enablers in the media.

Here’s the funny thing about independent voters: They still love John McCain, think he’s a straight talker. No matter how many times he claims to run a positive-only campaign on the same day he releases an attack ad; no matter how many ways he violates the spirit of his own campaign-finance legislation (do yourself a favor and Google “The Reform Institute”); no matter how unconvincingly he stammers his way through wanting to make permanent the same tax cuts he eviscerated in 2001 and 2003; no matter how inaccurately he slimes Romney and others for insufficient support of “our troops”; no matter how many immigration bills bearing his name he now opposes; and no matter how many times he confesses to manipulative, ambition-driven lies in his own damned books, independents still come out for their maverick — 42 percent of them in open-primary South Carolina, and 39 percent in New Hampshire.

As a direct result of his long media honeymoon, much of what we think we know about McCain is wrong. Exit-poll numbers out of the early states showed that McCain was doing especially well among primary voters who were antiwar. The numbers say something disturbing about our capacity to believe that independent antiwar voters are seriously considering a man who championed pre-emptive war three years before it ever occurred to George W. Bush, who personally told me that the U.S. share of defense spending — more than one-half of the world’s total — was much too small, and who has demonstrated repeatedly these past weeks that he doesn’t understand why any American would question the deployment of U.S. troops in Iraq 100 years from now. After more than seven years of increasingly unpopular war, Americans look poised to nominate the most explicitly pro-interventionist presidential candidate since Teddy Roosevelt. Don’t say you weren’t warned.

Welch is so convinced and irritated that McCain is not what he sells himself as that he has gone to the trouble to write a book on it: McCain: The Myth of a Maverick, And as editor of Reason, he wrote An Open Letter to Editorial Page Editors suggesting they all need to review his record more closely for the gap between fact and well-honed myth:

I bring you all here on this Michigan primary day to make one last plea on behalf of the dwindling number of us who read or care about newspaper editorials. Before passing on your McEnthusiasms to the Copy Desk, please remember your canonical journalistic responsibility not to make shit up or pass along easily debunkable falsehoods. Particularly when the subject of your affection has provided copious evidence to the contrary of your claims.

Considering that McCain in New Hampshire this month railed against “negative ads” while running them, and then bragged in his victory speech that he “always told you the truth,” it seems timelier than ever to double-check, rather than rubber-stamp, the new front-runner’s honesty. Particularly since his voluminous writings are filled with warnings like: “the worst decisions I have made, not just in politics but over the course of my entire life, have been those I made to seek an advantage primarily or solely for myself.”

And so on. Anyway, we’ve heard the conservative McCain critics ad nauseum. Welch’s criticism is different, that maybe McCain is not so much the maverick and straight-shooter he sells himself as. Check it out.

Clinton, Obama debate in Calif.

Feb. 1: Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton tone down their attacks in the final debate before the Super Tuesday primaries. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports. (Today Show)Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton sought common ground in Thursday’s debate  on basic Democratic policies but grew testy in trying to distinguish themselves.


Senate Democrats Short of Votes for Stimulus Bill

Democrats said they would have no choice but to adopt a less expensive stimulus package approved by the House.

Rent-A-Center 4th Quarter 2007 Financials Live Web Conference

Rent-A-Center, Inc. RCII will broadcast its quarterly earnings conference call on Tuesday, February 5, 2008 at 10:45 AM ET over the Internet. This call will be held to discuss the earnings release that will be issued after the close of the market on Monday, February 4, 2008. Audio of the call will be broadcast live and will be available on the Investor Relations section of Rent-A-Center, Inc.’s website, located at http://investor.rentacenter.com

Super Tuesday may face voting woes

** FILE ** Voters line up at a polling station to vote in Florida's presidential primary in this Jan. 29, 2008 file photo in Coral Gables, Fla. A record 24 states hold primaries and caucuses Tuesday, the result of a stampede by states to gain prestige and wield clout in extremely tight races to become the Democratic and Republican nominees for the White House. These all-out charges toward Tuesday provide ample opportunities for confusion and stalled tallies, voting advocates say. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)Long lines, a shortage of poll workers and unprecedented numbers of mail-in ballots could delay vote counts in the biggest-ever Super Tuesday in American politics.


Valentino Haute Couture in Paris

For his very last collection, Mr. Valentino has sent the essence of his art on the runway at Paris Haute Couture Week, starting with delicate whites, his palette has explored, exit after exit, the most prominent shades which the Italian couturier has used it throughout his career with so much refinement, ending with a splendid finale, in which all the models were wearing one of his emblematic red evening dresses.

Helpful Software – Blockers

If there is a list of great software products somewhere, it definately has to include a popup blocker.

Top Al Qaeda Operative Killed

He was identified as Abu Laith al-Libi, 41, who was on the military’s most wanted list.

Amy in Rehab

Rehab is the best place for someone like her though.
She seems a little beset by her demons, don’t you think?
Interestingly, her record sales have jumped:

Amy Winehouse’s record label Universal has admitted that the constant media attention around the singer and her problems has helped with record sales.
The singer, who is currently in rehab battling [...]

Markets Surging in US

Recent fluctuations in the markets, especially in real estate and banking, in the US have caused jitters around the world. These have led to massive losses in money terms of stocks. But recently those same fluctuations have led to great surges upwards in US (and world) stock markets.
As CNN Money writes:

Wall Street rallied Thursday, ending [...]

Bush proposed budget to be tight

President Bush’s 2009 budget will virtually freeze most domestic programs and seek nearly $200 billion in savings from federal health care programs, a senior administration official said Thursday.

U.S. Accused of Overlooking Rights Violations

In a scathing report, Human Rights Watch blamed the U.S. and Europe for undermining human rights around the world by allowing autocrats to pretend they are democratic simply by holding rigged elections.

Internet Failure on Two Continents

High-technology services across large tracts of Asia, the Middle East and North Africa were crippled Thursday following a widespread Internet failure which brought many businesses to a standstill and left others struggling to cope.

Obama raises record $32 million

Barack Obama raised $32 million in January, a whopping figure that has permitted the campaign to boost staff and extend advertising, aides said Thursday.

Romney, McCain to run Super Tuesday ads

Republican presidential hopeful former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney chats with California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger discuss a question during a Republican presidential debate in Simi Valley, Calif., Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2008. The GOP candidate’s decision to air a “significant” level of television ads in California and other states signals a willingness to aggressively try to derail frontrunner John McCain.


Newsweek: Cracks in Romney’s facade

The long, expensive slog is starting to take its toll on the former Massachusetts governor.

Report: Mil. Not Ready for Catastrophic Attack on U.S.

The U.S. military isn’t ready for a catastrophic attack on the country, and National Guard forces don’t have the equipment or training they need for the job, according to a report.

Report Reveals 121 Likely Suicides Among Soldiers in ’07

As many as 121 Army soldiers committed suicide in 2007, a jump of some 20 percent over the year before, officials said Thursday.

Senate Changes Stimulus Bill, But Not All Are Happy

Senate Democrats are meeting Thursday morning on what to do about a stimulus package that’s being brought to a vote but may be difficult to pass.

Schwarzenegger endorses McCain

U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., left, appears with California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger during a news conference concerning California's efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and dependence on fossil fuels in the San Pedro section of Los Angeles, Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2007. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Thursday endorsed John McCain, giving a boost to the Republican presidential front-runner six days before California’s high-prize primary.


A curse? No higher office for NYC mayors

Is there a curse on City Hall? Rudy Giuliani this week became the latest victim of a political urban legend — that New York City mayors who aim for higher office will always miss.

Newsweek: Do voters want character or conservatism?

Here’s what I took away from tonight’s face-off between the four remaining Republican candidates at the Ronald Reagan Library.

Bush still raising money for GOP

President Bush pressured Congress to jump-start the economy and pass free trade deals with U.S. allies on Wednesday while tackling one other piece of unfinished business: making millions for the Republican Party before he leaves office.

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