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Month: November 2009

Important Social Purpose

by digby


Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein gave a long interview to the London Sunday Times and explained to the public why he and others like him are so talented and important. And he not so subtly indicated that unless we behave as proper serfs they might just need to punish us some more.

Throughout the interview he can barely contain his outrage about how unfair it all is that he and his fellow banksters are being criticized:

He understands that “people are pissed off, mad, and bent out of shape” at bankers’ actions. Goldman played its part in the meltdown that almost destroyed the global financial system. It, like most other banks, lent too much money, made its first quarterly loss for more than a decade last year and ended up taking bail-out cash from Washington. “I know I could slit my wrists and people would cheer,” he says. But then, he slowly begins to argue the case for modern banking. “We’re very important,” he says, abandoning self-flagellation. “We help companies to grow by helping them to raise capital. Companies that grow create wealth. This, in turn, allows people to have jobs that create more growth and more wealth. It’s a virtuous cycle.” To drive home his point, he makes a remarkably bold claim. “We have a social purpose.”

He says he doing God’s work. Seriously. That’s after he claims that he’s just a blue collar guy.

Read the whole article. Aside from his embarrassing, Randian fantasy that he’s a religious leader rather than a standard greedy plutocrat, his assertion that Goldman didn’t benefit from the government action and that their recent profits are the result of their superior strategy and stronger work ethic is delusional:

At the time of the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Goldman was forced to raise $10 billion of fresh capital by selling a 15 percent stake in itself to Warren Buffett and other investors. (At $123 per share, the sale was completed around 30 percent cheaper than today’s market price of $170 per share.)

Just days before the share sales — which directly allowed Goldman to stay afloat — the firm received around $12 billion in government aid. What is more, Blankfein was the only U.S. chief executive present at a September 2008 Federal Reserve meeting to discuss AIG’s (AIG) $44.6 billion loan.

Presumably, if Goldman Sachs had been able to privately raise the initial $12 billion provided to it by the U.S. government, it would have done so. What seems much more likely is that the investors — including Buffett — who later agreed to commit an additional $10 billion only did so on the basis that the firm was reasonably supported by government aid. That way, they could be assured that their money was not merely serving as a stopgap to bankruptcy.

This point is all the more prescient in light of the recent bankruptcy filing of CIT Group (CIT), a small business lender. The whole reason share sales were not a viable capital raising option for CIT was because the government denied the firm’s application for government aid earlier in the year.

No one wants to be left holding common stock when a company is headed for Chapter 11. While Goldman’s near-bankruptcy experience was shorter-lived than for most financial firms, it cannot be denied that it did indeed once face the very real possibility of having to drag itself through the courts. Lloyd Blankfein ought to be honest about that, if only to show that he is aware of the real possibilities of systematic risk.

I’m sure he’s aware of the real possibilities of systemic risk — he just doesn’t give a damn. Why should he? It certainly didn’t hurt him in the recent crisis. All he’s had to endure is some name-calling from Michael Moore — and he obviously feels even that is far worse than he deserves.

Vampire squid indeed.

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QOTD

by digby

Ben Smith at Politico:

It’s remarkable how deeply wound health care has gotten around an issue that, during the presidential campaign, felt like an issue that had seen its day.

He’s talking about abortion rights.

Remarkable.

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Broken Rearview Mirror

by digby

Nancy Keenan needs to find another job. Her appearance on Andrea Mitchell this morning was an embarrassment to the pro-choice community. Jesus H Christ:

Mitchell: Did you guys get blindsided? Did the speaker let you down? Everyone knew that abortion were burning issues, that they were potential obstacles. And here is happens in the middle of the night. It was a Friday night vote and then a final Saturday vote.

Keenan: You know, I think that the point here is that the votes are challenging? That the Stupak ban that came to the floor, again, is outrageous. Uhm, but we’ve got to take this fight to the Senate. I’m not going to look back. I’m going to say, “how do we stop this on the Senate side and how are we going to hold everybody accountable over there?”

NARAL needs to hold Nancy Keenan accountable for being completely ineffectual over and over again, both rhetorically as she was in that interview and strategically as she was in the house health care debate. No wonder she doesn’t want to look back. The pro-choice groups all inexplicably put all their chips on the the mealy mouthed Capps Amendment which would have kept the Hyde Amendment status quo. Just as the party as a whole did with the public option, they came into the negotiations already having capitulated to their final position. They seem to have agreed in advance with the administration that abortion was a “distraction” that needed to be off the table.

And as happens so often that you can no longer simply call it an accident, the opponents had no problems creating a distraction and they put it on the table anyway. It’s very hard for me to believe that somewhere there wasn’t a discussion in which Keenan said that she could live with Stupak. Either that or she’s just too lame to be running an advocacy organization. (But I’m sure the Obama administration gave her big, big props for being “pragmatic” regardless. The invitations are surely rolling in.)

(And, by the way, we might not have Joe Lieberman holding a gun to everyone’s head on the public option either. As you’ll recall, Keenen brilliantly endorsed him over Lamont.)

Update: If you want to read some awesomely silly commentary, check this out by Amy Sullivan. Apparently, the problem was that the Democratic leadership wasn’t properly respectful of the forced pregnancy faction and if they had just capitulated earlier, Stupak wouldn’t have come in in the final hour demanding even more. She still believes that these “pro-life” zealots are operating in good faith, just trying to find some common ground. It’s so cute.

Update II: Just in case anyone doesn’t understand or believe me when I said this is all a matter of making sure the liberals pay for pushing through a public option, David Shuster spells it out:

… the thing that Harry Reid has to say to his caucus, he may have to say “look, we may have to follow the House in order to get the centrists on board. We may have to allow this provision that strips federal funding from abortion.” That may be the bitter pill that Democrats have to take in order to get the overall bill through. It’s part of the whole horse trading that Harry Reid is doing with the centrists.

He is saying, ok look, we know that you don’t like the public option, but if we give you, for example, new restrictions on abortions, will you then, at least, follow what the House did and allow a straight up or down vote?”

So restricting women’s fundamental rights is a horse trade.But why should it be that instead of something else? Are all of these “centrists” anti-choice? (I don’t think so.) They could, after all, give them an airport or an aircraft carrier instead. Maybe offer up a little deregulation on some special interest in their district. Why would an issue like this assuage them en masse?

Unless what you really want to do is show everyone that liberals are not in charge and that they have to feel (even more) pain, real pain, before they get their way. There is no reason other than political domination to demand this particular issue as the bargaining chip: it is an object lesson to liberals, particularly women, for getting too uppity.

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All Roads Lead To Ronnie

by digby

Last night I pointed everyone to Seymour Hersh’s new article about the Pakistan nuclear danger, but Jonathan Schwartz found a little historical nugget in it that’s very interesting. A retired Pakistani officer is quoted saying,”The only good thing the United States did for us was to look the other way about an atomic bomb when it suited the United States to do so.” That was during the Reagan administration of course. Jonathan excerpts a fascinating article from The Consortium about this which includes the observation:

[T]his history remains a taboo topic for many within the Washington Establishment, especially those who look back favorably on the Reagan presidency.

Yeah, no kidding. As Jonathan pithily remarks:

The Reagan administration and its foreign policy is truly the gift that keeps on giving to America.

Read the whole thing. It’s short but fascinating.

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Role Models

by digby

Politico has a big story this morning on the GOPs “women problem”:

Conservatives say they pushed Dede Scozzafava out of the House race in New York’s 23rd District a week ago because of her left-of-Republican social views — and not because she is a woman.

But the growing schism between the Republican Party’s ascendant right wing and its shrinking moderate core has clear gender undertones — and Scozzafava’s departure raises fresh questions about the GOP’s ability to recruit, elect and even tolerate the sort of moderate women who used to be part of its ruling mainstream.

[…]

Democrats have long maintained that the Republican Party is hostile to all but the most conservative women, and they cited last week’s rough-and-tumble House health care debate as proof that things are getting worse.

On Saturday, Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) repeatedly cited parliamentary rules in an attempt to shout down Rep. Lois Capps (D-Calif.), who was trying to deliver a speech defending abortion rights.

A day earlier, Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas) suggested that women who complained that their gender was designated a “pre-existing condition” by some insurers were on a par with smokers because both groups incur higher treatment costs.

“Why should a smoker pay more?” asked Sessions, who runs the National Republican Congressional Committee — which is tasked with recruiting new female candidates.

It’s pretty clear that these pigs actually believe that having a uterus is a personal choice. How any self-respecting woman can be a Republican is beyond me.But how do we explain the Democrats?

Debbie Wasserman Shultz was quoted in the article saying that the Republicans repulse women. And I just saw her on on MSNBC talking about how terrible the Republicans are as well, saying that they give women “the back of their hand.” This was just after she said it was very painful for her to vote for a bill that, as Rachel Maddow said on MTP, was the greatest restriction on coverage for reproductive services since the Hyde amendment thirty three years ago. That was pretty repulsive to me.

So, who’s representing the majority of women in this country?

Wise man Chuck Todd said that Nancy Pelosi was pretty much a genius for allowing the abortion restrictions so she could get the bill passed. That seems to be the consensus. There just wasn’t any choice. And anyway, health care is a “woman issue” in the first place, so they really need to stop their bitching unless they want to lose health care altogether.

Both parties are cavalier about women voters. Of course, women only make up over half the electorate so it’s not like it’s important. And needless to say, within the Democratic coalition, which is a large majority pro-choice female and voted 56% for Obama, they are even less important. They know their function is to sacrifice their needs for the greater good of the Democratic family. Isn’t that how it works?

Update: Dr Nancy Snyderman just went ballistic on the Stupak Amendment. I don’t think I’ve seen anyone make this kind of emotional, impassioned argument for women’s rights on TV in years:

Snyderman: Kelly, you know what I find so infuriating about this? I mean, absolutely infuriating? And this isn’t about being pro-choice or pro-abortion or any of the hot button lingo. We know women pay more for insurance than men. We know women are restricted in the states. And now it’s basically, if you’re a 50 year old woman and you’re in a monogamous relationship you suddenly find yourself pregnant, you better have an abortion rider to access health care that you thought you had? It is one more pressure on women. I’m surprised that frankly there isn’t more outrage over the fact that …this isn’t fair!

Kelly O’Donnell: What you’re voicing is what woman after woman on the Democrat side, the progressive side of the party, said on the House floor. They came out one after another, speaking in very strong terms against this amendment the amendment did pass despite their objections. The amendment puts, as you describe, pressure on women to anticipate a need for something that is a very difficult personal experience with a lot more implications. It’s not an easy situation for any woman and to now ask them to plan ahead for the potential and buy an extra policy, those who oppose this amendment say that is simply too much.

Snyderman: A white man deciding a woman’s (deep breath)… deciding a woman’s responsibility in her own procreation. I mean I … I find it infuriating. I really think it doesn’t matter what side of the abortion issue you’re on, the fact that they are making health care harder and harder for women to navigate the system. I think it’s outrageous. Just outrageous. Kelly O’Donnell, thank you.

And folks it’s not about abortion. It really is about one more burden for women navigating the health care system. Before I blow my top, time to turn to Monica Novotny at the news desk. Monica, get me out of here …

Word.

Update II: With female, pro-choice Senators like this who needs wingnuts?

I am dying to play poker with the Democratic caucus. I could really use the money.

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As A Matter Of Conscience

by digby

I know this will shock you, so hold on to yo0ur hats. Joe Lieberman is going to filibuster for your own good:

LIEBERMAN: A public option plan is unnecessary. It has been put forward, I’m convinced, by people who really want the government to take over all of health insurance. They’ve got a right to do that; I think that would be wrong.

But worse than that, we have a problem even greater than the health insurance problems, and that is a debt — $12 trillion today, projected to be $21 trillion in 10 years.

WALLACE: So at this point, I take it, you’re a “no” vote in the Senate?

LIEBERMAN: If the public option plan is in there, as a matter of conscience, I will not allow this bill to come to a final vote because I believe debt can break America and send us into a recession that’s worse than the one we’re fighting our way out of today. I don’t want to do that to our children and grandchildren.

It’s vintage Holy Joe sanctimony — his “conscience” won’t even let it even come to a vote Too bad he has no conscience about killing people here and abroad, but I guess that’s between him and his God.

Meanwhile, to ensure that he’s not going to lose his chairmanship, he’s opening a Senate investigation into a terrorist fifth column in the military. They won’t dare strip him of it now, will they? You’re either with him or you’re with the terrorists. Perhaps it’s time to start calling him Tailgunner Joe after his role model.

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Nightmare

by digby

If you need to get a good night’s sleep tonight, don’t read Seymour Hersh’s latest because it will give you nightmares.

Pakistan has been a nuclear power for two decades, and has an estimated eighty to a hundred warheads, scattered in facilities around the country. The success of the latest attacks raised an obvious question: Are the bombs safe? Asked this question the day after the Rawalpindi raid, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, “We have confidence in the Pakistani government and the military’s control over nuclear weapons.” Clinton—whose own visit to Pakistan, two weeks later, would be disrupted by more terrorist bombs—added that, despite the attacks by the Taliban, “we see no evidence that they are going to take over the state.”

Clinton’s words sounded reassuring, and several current and former officials also said in interviews that the Pakistan Army was in full control of the nuclear arsenal. But the Taliban overrunning Islamabad is not the only, or even the greatest, concern. The principal fear is mutiny—that extremists inside the Pakistani military might stage a coup, take control of some nuclear assets, or even divert a warhead.

Just read it.

I would love to know how our being in Afghanistan and killing civilans with predator drones is making that scenario less likely.

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Fungo Stick

by digby

Aravosis makes an excellent observation:

The House passed the anti-choice Stupak amendment last night. Basically, the amendment stops any government money from funding insurance plans that cover abortions. The twisted logic being that any money connected to any insurance company covering abortions is “abortion money,” i.e., profits earned from “killing babies.” We can’t have the government touching that.

So I sure hope that no pro-life members of Congress are accepting political donations from any insurance companies that cover abortions. Because if they are accepting such donations, they’re accepting profits that came from “killing little babies.”

By their own logic, if the jackasses of both parties who voted for Stupak have ever taken one single penny from insurance companies that offer coverage for abortions — and that’s all of them — they are complicit in baby killing. So, by the way, is anyone who invests in insurance companies or accepts money from them in advertising. Fungible means fungible.

Insurance companies want to provide coverage for birth control and abortion because it saves them money. Pregnancy is expensive and far more risky. It would seem that childbirth is the one risk these people want to require the insurance companies to take.

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Torture Porn

by digby

I just happened upon a few minutes of the international “Praise-a-thon” on cable and noticed that each song is accompanied by these videos of a bloodied, nearly naked Jesus on the cross (with a very prominent package) strenuously writhing in horrible pain. I realize that the crucifixion is the central image of Christian theology, but this “movie” strikes me a gratuitously violent and sexual, even by Mel Gibson’s standards. The people in the audience were overwrought and clearly ecstatic — but who knows where the line between spiritual and sexual ecstasy begins and ends with images like that?

There is some deeply creepy, psychosexual stuff happening in fundamentalist religion. The Christian moralists in our culture seem to be addicted to torture.

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Not Enough Women

by digby

Yesterday, one of my female friends said to me, “isn’t there some way of making it so that men don’t get to vote on a women’s right to choose?” Normally, I would have said that progressive, male feminists are among our staunchest allies, which is true, and that there are far too many women who vote anti-choice to make that work, even if it were possible, which it obviously isn’t. But I have to say that after looking at these numbers, I can see her point:

There are only 76 women in the House out of 435 — 17%. 59 of them are Democrats and 17 are Republicans. Three of the Democrats are non-voting members (DC, Virgin Islands and Guam.)

Out of the 56 women in the Democratic caucus, only two voted for Stupak. All 17 Republican women voted for it.

What this adds up to is that 97% of the Democrats who voted for the Stupak amendment were male. 90% of the Republicans were male.

I would have to guess that if more than 17% of the congress were women, there would be a little bit less likelihood that women’s rights would be so often used as a handy tool to placate neanderthals. That’s just a guess. Habits are hard to break.

I have been very critical of the Obama administration’s willingness to entertain this “common ground” strategy on abortion rights and the president himself, like many of his elite male cohort, often gives the impression that women’s rights are just another annoying special interest that has to stand in line with the sugar producers and the medical supply manufacturers to get “favors.” And when you see them willing to blithely bargain away access to abortion over and over again, from the rare late term procedures to this new “fungible” argument for eliminating insurance coverage if subsidies are involved, they reinforce the impression that this is an issue they wish would just go away. They certainly don’t seem in any way animated by the principles involved — it’s just something they are dragged into against their will to placate a whiny constituency that refuses to stop nagging them.

Apparently Obama called congressional Reps personally and told them to “work it out” on abortion but he never weighed in on his own preferences, thereby letting everyone know that he really didn’t give shit.(Of course after his comments that the Hyde Amendment is an American “tradition” we shouldn’t be surprised.) If anyone is expecting him to go into the conference and side with those who want to strip the Stupak Amendment from the final bill, I think they are going to be disappointed. It’s pretty clear by now that women’s and gay issues are being sacrificed to keep the conservative status quo on life support until it can fully recover.

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