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Name: Jace
Location: Windsor, SC
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Let's Do a Little Research Shall We?

I received the following comment so I decided to check the facts.


 itSURE, leave out BIG ISSUES.....that really helped create this a mess, 
NOW!Things like......Bush's Greenspan Issues for bank regulators May 18, 2001
"Make more money easier to borrow" (paraphrased)


Bush's AMERICAN DREAM DOWNPAYMENT ACT of 2003 he RAN OVER US WITH.

http://www.hud.gov/news/release.cfm?content=pr03-140.cfm

When Bush spouted at signing......
"This legislation will authorize $200 million per year in down payment assistance to at least 40,000 low-income families."
"I set a goal to add 5.5 million new minority homeowners in America by the end of the decade." 
"It is in our national interest that more people own their own home.

See how easy it is to go partisan.DIFFERENCE?
The people I'm talking about, OF POWER, ACTUALLY RELEASED THE FLOODGATES!

Well I am a fair person so I thought I would follow the links provided as see what gives.I took the second link first as the person who made the comment say's Bush is solely to blame for this mess we now find ourselves in.  I wanted to see if that was really the case.  As we have seen in the last few weeks a bill is a very complicated affair.  Many people putting their 2 cents in so to speak. We have also noted how pork and other bills that have been introduced before that could not make it through on another bill get tacked on to a bill that has a better chance of passing.  That is how we got the wooden arrows on this Rescue/Bailout bill.

Ok let's start.

First the comment referred me to a News Release from HUD about Bush Signing the American Dream Downpayment Act on December 16, 2003.  So I started there.

http://www.hud.gov/news/release.cfm?content=pr03-140.cfm

Then I had to find this bill to see who Sponsered it.

http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s108-811

Sponsor:

Oh this is looking bad for the Republicans if you stop there.  But let's try to go back to the source remember those wooden arrows.

Looking further down the page we see that this bill also had other names at one time so let's list them and see where they lead.

 

Last Action: Dec 16, 2003: Became Public Law No: 108-186. Other Titles:

 

-- FHA Multifamily Loan Limit Adjustment Act of 2003
-- HOPE VI Program Reauthorization and Small Community Mainstreet Rejuvenation and Housing Act of 2003
-- LEGACY Act of 2003
-- Living Equitably: Grandparents Aiding Children and Youth Act of 2003
 
Let's start at the top of this list with the  FHA Multifamily Loan Limit Adjustment Act of 2003.
 
 
We will do the same thing who Sponsered this bill?
 

Sponsor:
Cosponsors [as of 2006-11-19]
Cosponsorship information sometimes is 
My goodness Some people we see are not Republicans.
 
What is this bill about?  Let's check the summary shall we?
 

10/3/2003--Introduced.
FHA Multifamily Loan Limit Adjustment Act of 2003 - Amends the National Housing Act to increase high-cost area and project-based additional mortgage loan limits for Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured mortgages for: (1) rental housing; (2) cooperative housing; (3) rehabilitation and neighborhood conservation housing; (4) moderate income and displaced family housing; (5) housing for the elderly; and (6) condominiums.
Increases: (1) "amount per space" rental housing mortgage limits; and (2) certain cooperative housing mortgage limits.
 
Moveing on we will go to Hope VI Program Reauthorization and Small Community Mainstreet Rejuvenation and Housing Act of 2003.
 
Who Sponsored this bill.  (Please note the name James Leach my goodness the Head of Republicans for Obama and he even gave a speech at the Democratic convention.  Also see my post Connect the Dots for more information about our popular Mr. Leach.)
 
 
Let's look at a summary of this bill.
 
 
6/19/2003--Reported to House, amended. (There is 1 other summary)
HOPE VI Program Reauthorization and Small Community Mainstreet Rejuvenation and Housing Act of 2003 -
Section 2 -
Amends the United States Housing Act of 1937 to revise criteria for HOPE VI (urban revitalization demonstration program) grants, including addition of criteria regarding tenant displacement, existing tenant occupancy priority, and timeliness of project completion.
Revises the definition of "severely distressed public housing" to include: (1) buildings or projects that include very low-income elderly or nonelderly disabled persons; and (2) areas lacking sufficient affordable housing, transportation, supportive services, economic opportunity, schools, civic and religious institutions, and public services.
Authorizes FY 2004 and 2005 appropriations. Extends program authority through September 30, 2005.
Section 3 -
Includes within the program's purposes assisting smaller communities to provide affordable low-income housing in connection with main street revitalization or redevelopment projects.
Authorizes main street grants (maximum $1 million per year) to smaller communities for affordable low-income housing in a commercial area in connection with an eligible project.
Requires that a project be focused on: (1) joint public-private revitalization or redevelopment of a historic or traditional commercial area; and (2) affordable housing rather than severely distressed public housing.
Defines "smaller community" as a local government unit that: (1) has a population of under 30,000, and is without a public housing agency; or (2) has a public housing agency that administers 100 or fewer public housing dwelling units.
Defines "affordable housing" as rental or homeownership units that are made available for initial occupancy subject to the same income and occupant contribution rules as dwelling units in public housing projects assisted with HOPE VI grants.
Obligates up to five percent of HOPE VI appropriations for smaller community grants.
My goodness now we are seeing how this bill is evolveing and just who is envolved.
 
Now we will move on to the Legacy Act of 2003
 
 
Who were the sponsors of this bill?
 
 
Once again the summary of the bill.
 
 
2/12/2003--Introduced.
Living Equitably: Grandparents Aiding Children and Youth Act of 2003 (Legacy Act of 2003) - Directs the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development to carry out: (1) a five-year pilot program in connection with the supportive housing program to provide assistance to private nonprofit organizations for expanding the supply of intergenerational dwelling units for intergenerational families (families headed by an elderly person); and (2) a five-year demonstration program for section 8 rental assistance to families headed by a grandparent or relative who is raising a child.
Makes grandparent-headed and relative-headed families eligible for: (1) family unification assistance under the United States Housing Act of 1937; (2) Home program ECHO units under the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act; and (3) fair housing initiatives education, counseling, and outreach under the Housing and Community Development Act of 1987.
Amends the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act to provide Department of Housing and Urban Development personnel with related training.
Directs the Secretary and the Director of the Bureau of the Census to conduct a joint study of such families' housing needs.
 
Looks like it might be as cut and dry as to Bush being the sole owner of the blame on this mess as the person who left the comment for me sudjests.  You be the judge.
 
As for the Greenspan link the person who commented provided.  First that is from May 18, 2001 this SNOWBALL FROM HE-L BILL was signed into law December 16, 2003.
Mr. Greenspan's words should be read and understood he give a history of what has happned in the past with bank failures.
 
Just a small sample from what Mr. Greenspan said.
 

Pro-Cyclicality of Bank Lending and Agency Supervision
A typical--one may almost say predictable--bank lending pattern is an easing of lending terms as the economy recovers from a cyclical trough and a tightening as the economy peaks and then contracts. At the same time, one can also observe what appears to be less aggressive supervisory criticism of lending policies during the economic expansion and an apparent get-tough policy at cyclical peaks and during contractions. Both of these phenomena can be explained by rising optimism followed by a pulling back and heightened caution. As such, they may be just an implicit part of the dynamics of the business cycle. But neither are demonstrably in the best interests of the economy or the bank’s shareholders. They lead to an unnecessary degree of volatility in earnings and, as such, to a reduced long-term capitalized value of the bank. This, in turn, lessens the effectiveness of financial intermediation. Fortunately, there is some evidence that desirable changes have already begun, changes that both private and public policymakers should reinforce.

Historically, as I have said, loan standards are softened during an expansion, when loan books are growing rapidly. As the economy expands, business and household financing needs increase and projections of future outcomes are optimistic. It is difficult for managers and supervisors to be critical of loan growth in such an environment, particularly one marked by intense competition. In addition, incentives for loan officers and managers traditionally have rewarded loan growth, market share, and nominal profits. In an effort to expand loans in an optimistic environment, potential returns are often not fully adjusted for risk, with the nominally high-yielding credit looking particularly attractive. Moreover, credit specialists at banks--a function often separated from the loan officers-- historically have had difficulty making their case about risk because of their inability to measure and quantify risk. At the same time, with debt service current and market risk premiums cyclically low, and with the same inability to quantify and measure risk, supervisory criticisms of standards are difficult to justify. When the economy begins to slow and the quality of some booked loans deteriorates, loan standards belatedly tighten and supervisors’ criticism of previous standards is taken more seriously, inducing an even greater tightening of credit. In part, the examiners’ observations have often provided a reality check by which some banks came to recognize a deterioration at first denied.

The last few years have had some of the traditional characteristics I have just described: the substantial easing of terms as the economy improves, the rapid expansion of the loan book, the deterioration of loan quality as the economy slows, and a cumulative tightening of loan standards. But this interval has had some interesting characteristics not observed in earlier expansions. First, in the mid-1990s, examiners began to focus on banks’ risk management systems and processes; at the same time, supervisors’ observations about softening loan standards came both unusually early in the expansion and were taken more seriously than had often been the case. The turmoil in financial markets in 1998 associated with both East Asia and the Russian default also focused bankers’ attention on loan quality during the continued expansion in this country. And there was a further induced tightening of standards last year, months before the aggregate economy weakened, in response to early indications of deteriorating loan quality.

All of this might have been the result of idiosyncratic events from which generalizations should not be made. Perhaps. But at the same time another, more profound development of critical importance had begun: the creation at the larger, more sophisticated banks of an operational loan process with a more or less formal procedure for recognizing, pricing, and managing risk. In these emerging systems, loans are classified by risk, internal profit centers are charged for equity allocations by risk category, and risk adjustments are explicitly made. In short, the formal measurement and quantification of risk has begun to occur and to be integrated into the loan-making process. This is a sea change--or at least the beginning of one. Formal risk management systems are designed to reduce the potential for the unintendedacceptance of risk and hence should reduce the pro-cyclical behavior that has characterized banking history. But, again, the process has just begun.

The federal banking agencies are trying to generalize and institutionalize this process in the current efforts to reform the Basel Capital Accord. The proposed foundation approach, intended mainly for regional banks, and the advanced internal risk-based approach, intended mainly for large, complex banking organizations, would require banks to create and use internal risk classifications for their banking book. These classifications would not only be used to establish minimum regulatory capital, but the associated risk profiles would be disclosed by the bank for the review of its creditors and shareholders. How well this process works will depend on the supervisors’ skill and, for lack of a better word, toughness in validating the conceptual and empirical basis of the risk classifications and management system. A weak or misused classification system would destroy the process.

If applied seriously, and when operational near the middle of this decade, the revised accord, Basel II, promises to promote not only better risk management over a wider group of banks but also less-intrusive supervision once the risk management system is validated. It also promises less variability in loan policies over the cycle. To be sure, banks’ risk appetites can change as they decide to increase or decrease the riskiness of their loan portfolios. In addition, minimum regulatory capital might tend to be pro-cyclical as loans migrate from less- to more-risky classifications as the economy weakens, in the process increasing minimum capital requirements. This tendency must, however, be balanced against what should be the reduction in cyclical reserving and write-offs that traditionally have come with the late recognition of excess risk taken earlier. Moreover, if, as promised, better risk-management reduces the variance of charge-offs and earnings, bank equity values, to repeat, are likely to be rewarded with higher price-earnings ratios. Put somewhat differently, better risk management and supervision may well focus bank management on its real objective: maximizing shareholder wealth.

Building on Market Practice
In setting boundaries and minimum standards for banks, we typically look at industry practices to identify what works well and what does not. In almost all cases, that’s the correct approach--to build on industry practice. Indeed, the development of the Basel II capital proposals I have just discussed has been constructed on the principles developed initially by the best-practice banks.

We should encourage all banking organizations to continually strengthen their systems and controls as their operations and market practices evolve. But we need not expect--and surely not require--significant numbers of banks to develop risk management systems that are more complex than they need. Simplicity can work well, too, and for most banks that is likely to be the best approach. For the vast majority of U.S. banks, current practices, as I noted, seem fine.

It is, of course, our belief that, for the larger banks, improving the measurement and management of risk will provide bank supervisors with more reliable and efficient ways to evaluate a bank’s financial health. That thought underlies the concept of risk-based supervision and our increased focus on internal processes and controls. If we can gain greater confidence in a bank’s operating procedures and in its own evaluation of risk, we should be able to reduce our oversight role--certainly when compared with what would otherwise be required.

Innovative Banking System
The management principles adopted by U.S. banks, our capital market system, and our oversight regime have worked well, I believe, in providing this country with a healthy and responsive banking system and probably the most efficient allocation of financial resources in the world. Much of that success relies on the effective measurement of risk, on high levels of competition, and on arm’s length transactions. Indeed, these elements support one another: competition requires institutions to correct mistakes quickly and assess risks as accurately as they can, while independent decision-making helps ensure that pricing reflects risk. Sound pricing, in turn, produces good returns to investors and spurs further competition.

Despite more than a decade of consolidation, the U.S. banking system remains highly competitive on virtually every front. With enhanced technology and deregulation we now have global and national markets for a growing number of banking products, while low barriers to entry encourage competition in more sectors than ever before. The pace of bank creation has actually increased in recent years, despite the contraction in the overall number of insured commercial banks. Interstate banking has also brought new competitors into previously settled markets, and Gramm-Leach-Bliley has the prospect of adding more competition, as nonbank firms seek entry into the banking business. Even when these events simply change the ownership of existing banks, one could still argue that, in most cases, they introduce stronger, more aggressive competitors into a market.

The role of bank regulators is, of course, to ensure that all of these activities do not reduce the safety and soundness of banks. In recent years, state bank regulators have worked well together and with their federal counterparts in accommodating interstate banking and minimizing oversight costs to both the supervisors and to state-chartered institutions. Now, Gramm-Leach-Bliley has introduced nonbank activities and functional regulators into the mix. In moving forward into new areas, the Federal Reserve will strive to build on the long tradition of coordination and cooperation with state bank supervisors in ensuring that the broader activities of financial holding companies remain adequately supervised and regulated.

On numerous occasions last year, Federal Reserve staff met with staff members of the Securities and Exchange Commission, various state insurance commissions, and other state and federal bank supervisors in a mutual effort to learn more about each other’s interests and how our role as umbrella supervisor can mesh best with their activities. It is important that we maintain this cooperative process and work to make supervision as efficient as it can be.

Conclusion
In recent years, we have incorporated innovative ideas and accommodated significant change in banking and supervision. Institutions have more ways than ever to compete in providing financial services. Financial innovation has improved the measurement and management of risk and holds substantial promise for much greater gains ahead.

It seems clear that, building on bank practice, we are in the process of developing an improvement in both lending and supervisory policies that will not only foster better risk management but could also reduce the pro-cyclical pattern of easing and tightening of bank lending, and accordingly increase bank shareholder values. It is not an easy road, but it seems that we are well along it.

 

I want to thank the person who left the comment for me.  I am sure my research did not turn out to prove the point he was trying to make.  Infact it has only pointed back to some Democrats and Republicans.

I enjoyed this research as I hope all who read this post will.  Please feel free to link back to it or to copy and use as you desire. 


 
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It is Back the Video and More

I have noted this morning the Burning down the house video is once again on you tube after it was

pulled last week.    It is now at this web address.

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=1RZVw3no2­A4­&feature=re­lated­

 

Another very good one to put on the web would be the following

http://www­.youtube.c­om/watch?v­=AiEWCnpNn­BQ­&feature=re­lated­

Please post or send to people on your e-mail list.

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Spin Spin Spin

Come on guy's McCain went back to Washington to help the Republicans in the house get a seat at the table. Because he showed up Acorn funding and several other items were removed from the bill. Have you ever seen a bill posted on the web before it was even voted for before? I do remember McCain speaking for several weeks about posting the nations balance sheet on the web should he be elected. I remember ya'll reporting that McCain could do nothing with the members of the House he was wasting his time hiding in Washington while they were writing this bill. Now all of a sudden because the bill went down he accused of not whipping up enough votes from the Republicans to get it past. Don't you find it odd that for a bill that is so URGENT 1. Pelosi, could not and would not get her majority in the House to pass it. 2. Had the bill passed the Democratic controlled Senate was not going to even bother voting on it till next week. 3. Now that the bill has gone down in flames it will be most likely Thursday of this week before the House even starts to work on it again. 4. Obama looks so presidential phoning in every day give me a break. He looks like an idoit. Picture this. A platoon is being held down with incoming fire and low on ammunition taking losses and radio's in for an air strike, Obama takes the call and says let me finish my cup of coffee an I'll get back to you. One heck of a performance for a man who wants to lead this country. But then looking Presidential is more important after all we would not want him to dirty his hands. We might notice with all the finger pointing Obama and the Democrats are doing that the corruption that caused this mess is squarely in the camp of the ones who tried unsuccessfully to slip a 20% kick back to Acorn groups into the bill to begin with. And another point when Pelosi says there will be an investigation into how the country got into this mess with hearing conducted by Frank, Reid and Pelosi, come on you do not put the thief in charge of the investigation. By the way Michael Moore on his blog is blaming this on lack of universal health care. Follow this reasoning: People are in foreclosure because of the high medical expenses they have incurred and are therefore unable to keep up their house payments. Just think if we had had universal health care we never would have had this problem. The man is obviously off his med's. Go figure.
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Gas Shortage

I live in South Carolina, not a city just a moderate size town and we have had many 
of our stations out of gas recently.
This whole thing reminds me of the gas embargo during Carters administration.

When articles about this started appearing on the web I checked them out to see 
what people were saying.  The people in the south who were experiencing the problem 
were posting to others not to panic and to cut back on consumption.  People were 
cautioning others not to fill up gas cans and make matters worse for all.

People who were posting from parts of the country not having this problem in a large 
majority said it was a dumb Redneck problem and we should quit being upset about it.

For me it is a snapshot of things to come.

The night before the hurricane hit Texas people started filling up there tanks and gas cans.  
Prices here in town went to almost $5.00 per gallon.  My daughter was coming home from 
school that night and called me .  In her words on her 25 mile trip home she watched the 
price rise and stations crowded with cars.  For her it was unreal.

The next morning I got a call from her on her way to work the prices had gone 
from $3.75 to $4.99 per gallon .  Because we live in  a costal state that can be 
hit by a hurricane we have a price gouging law.  It applies to Hotels and gas stations 
and was written after Hugo hit our state.  People who were evacuating from the 
coast had been hit with high gas prices or no gas at all and that created a problem 
for them trying to flee the storm.  Once they got to shelters some were full or 
the people decided on there own to stay in a hotel.  Once again they were taken 
advantage of.  You see it is not just the gas companies who take advantage 
of people other industries do also.

When my daughter called me in the morning I contacted our Governor by e-mail
told him what was happening and requested the gouging law be enacted.
His response was swift.  Any gas station was to be reported, investigators will
look at the station's last gas delivery cost and if the price they were charging does
not reflect a reasonable price they will be fined.

Now let me tell you first hand who was gouging.  It was the mom and pop stations.
BP held the price at $3.99 per gallon and limited gas to 10 gallons,
Exxon held the price at $4.35 per gallon and limited gas to $40.00 per fill up.

What did many people do.  They ran to there garage and grabbed as many gas cans 
as they could and went from gas station to gas station filling them and every car they 
owned up.  

The next day I got a call from the Governors office what a shock.  The aid who called 
asked me for any thoughts I had on what was happening.

Usually a storm hitting in another state has little effect on our prices but this one was big
and where it hit was going to cause gas problems because of the refineries in the area.

My thoughts on how to handle it next time were as follows.
All of the Governors meet and agree that should something that looks like it has the potential 
of causing a disruption occur the states nationwide should have price gauging laws.  They 
should also mandate that gas stations limit gas to 10 gallons except in the area where the 
people would need to fill gas cans to keep generators running.
All emergency, law enforcement, trucking industry, and relief personal would not be 
under the 10 gallon limit.  

Sounds harsh does it not?  Well let's take just one industry shall we.
The power is out in Texas.  Some of the parts that are need to restore power are made
by the company my husband works for.  We need to get the power on in Texas for the
people and the refineries. 
Remember I am in South Carolina, the parts need to move from here to Texas.  Power
crews from other states will be going to Texas to restore the power.  Should the Power
crews or the trucks with the needed parts be unable to get gas on there way to Texas
they will be dead on the side of the road.  Electric power will not be restored very fast.

Now let's explore another problem that no one talks about because most do not realize 
it exist.  Back when Hugo hit and Andrew years ago my husband's plant had a stock 
of parts on the shelf.  Anything they did not have they would pull from a customers existing
order.  Parts were supplied rather rapidly.
Today that is not the case.  Because of the tax laws that were enacted under Clinton companies
are charged taxes for the parts as they sit on the shelf not when they are sold.
So my husbands company does a one part in one part out the same is done with the 
materials that make the part.  So at work my husband pulled from every existing order
and used materials meant to make another customers order, to send to Texas.
Now shorting a customers order is always done in an emergency that is not a
problem.  The problem comes in if there are not enough materials to make enough
parts for Texas after all have been used.   You guessed it the lights will not come up
any faster if you need more material to make the parts needed and you have to wait 
for the material to be shipped and the time to make the part.
Tax laws are such a catch 22 are they not?

Well now we have a bailout bill and no Energy Bill although Bush has requested one
so many times.  And some out there still harbor the illusion that we can convert the whole
country to electric cars and run our electric plants on wind with in 10 years. Everyone
could use an education on our power grid system how they work and the laws that govern 
them that would be a real eye opener.  But I will not go there on this posting. 

And so many want to hate the oil companies and demanding that companies pay higher
taxes.  It is easy to hate the other guy right?

Well get use to the gas shortages.  Because hate will move you no further down the road
then an empty gas tank.

You want Obama, enjoy your empty gas tank.  I lived through this under Carter I guess
I can do it again. 


  
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$25 Billion Loan Guarantees to Auto Makers

Here is a post I just made at Breit Bart.com

I have been watching this evolution of a $25 billion bail out since I first caught wind of it on Sept. 25 when it was reported by the San Francisco Chronicle.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/09/22/national/w131939D34.DTL&type=politics

Please go read it as it could have been worse and yes it is designed to get Obama votes.

Here is a small portion of it. Please read the entire article:

Also in line with a Senate vote expected Saturday is a $630 billion-plus spending bill funding the Pentagon, providing $25 billion in federal loans to automakers and $23 billion in help for victims of floods in the Midwest and Gulf Coast hurricanes.

The Reid-Byrd stimulus plan has been in the works for weeks as Democrats have kept promising an eventual vote on an economic stimulus bill to follow on the tax rebates sent out to most taxpayers earlier this year.

The next time I caught mention of the bill it was slimmed down some.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/83bfe68c-8a8f-11dd-a76a-0000779fd18c.html

Here is the truly interesting part that I bet the Voters it is designed to buy are not aware of. (once again read the whole article)

Shelly Lombard, analyst at Gimme Credit, a corporate bond research company, told clients this week that “blue collar workers are more sympathetic victims than ‘rich’ investment bankers. So it’s easier to defend loans designed to save close to 100,000 jobs in the shrinking US manufacturing industry.”

The go-ahead for the car industry loans has been written into a stop-gap spending bill, known as a continuing resolution, which must be passed to keep the federal government running beyond the end of the fiscal year on September 30. Congress and the White House have yet to agree on details of the fiscal 2009 budget.

The loans were originally authorised in an energy bill passed last December to finance the retooling of plants for more fuel-efficient vehicles, especially hybrid and electric cars. But they have become a crucial prop for Detroit carmakers.

The continuing resolution provides funding for $7.5bn, which is the estimated subsidy on the loans – in other words, the cost to the government of providing them at well below market rates.

The loans will not take effect until the energy department has written detailed regulations dealing with, among other issues, which investments will qualify and conditions for repayment. Congress has directed the department to begin writing the regulations quickly and will provide any extra staff required to do so. One lobbyist said he hoped the regulations would be completed by early 2009.

The last mention I have found is the following:

http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=news-000002960170&cpage=2

Please note this in the article.

Senate Republicans meanwhile celebrated their offshore-drilling victory.

This is the bate to get the drill baby drill people to vote Democrat. What the Democrats are hoping is Obama gets to the White House to put the ban back on.

It is a shell game.

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Obama Freddie & Fannie

This is to good not to post.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGT_cSi7Rs


Obama supporters still insist only McCain took funds from Fannie and Freddie let's see how that claim holds water shall we?

Obama $126,349

McCain  $21,550

for the full list  go to  http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/09/update-fannie-mae-and-freddie.html
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Video Obama Supporters Don't Want You to See

My goodness it seams we have upset some of the Obama supporters with this video so let's do some more sharing. Shall we?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H5tZc8oH--o

And just so they will have another shock. The following video is from Missouri.
Such a nice title: Obama campaign cracks down on misleading TV Ads

http://www.kmov.com/video/index.html?nvid=285793&shu=1

Of course the Gov. of Missouri was not to happy so he issued this statement.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Contact: Jessica Robinson, 573-751-0290


Gov. Blunt Statement on Obama Campaign’s Abusive Use of Missouri Law Enforcement

JEFFERSON CITY - Gov. Matt Blunt today issued the following statement on news reports that have exposed plans by U.S. Senator Barack Obama to use Missouri law enforcement to threaten and intimidate his critics.

“St. Louis County Circuit Attorney Bob McCulloch, St. Louis City Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce, Jefferson County Sheriff Glenn Boyer, and Obama and the leader of his Missouri campaign Senator Claire McCaskill have attached the stench of police state tactics to the Obama-Biden campaign.

“What Senator Obama and his helpers are doing is scandalous beyond words, the party that claims to be the party of Thomas Jefferson is abusing the justice system and offices of public trust to silence political criticism with threats of prosecution and criminal punishment.

“This abuse of the law for intimidation insults the most sacred principles and ideals of Jefferson . I can think of nothing more offensive to Jefferson ’s thinking than using the power of the state to deprive Americans of their civil rights. The only conceivable purpose of Messrs. McCulloch, Obama and the others is to frighten people away from expressing themselves, to chill free and open debate, to suppress support and donations to conservative organizations targeted by this anti-civil rights, to strangle criticism of Mr. Obama, to suppress ads about his support of higher taxes, and to choke out criticism on television, radio, the Internet, blogs, e-mail and daily conversation about the election.

“Barack Obama needs to grow up. Leftist blogs and others in the press constantly say false things about me and my family. Usually, we ignore false and scurrilous accusations because the purveyors have no credibility. When necessary, we refute them. Enlisting Missouri law enforcement to intimidate people and kill free debate is reminiscent of the Sedition Acts - not a free society.”


The web page for the above is: http://governor.mo.gov/cgi-bin/coranto/viewnews.cgi?id=EkkkVFulkpOzXqGMaj&style=Default+News+Style&tmpl=newsitem

Feel free to pass on the information or direct others to this blog.
Thank you
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Just what the Heck is going on here? Obama and Buffett

The Washington Post had an article on Sept 23, 2008 titled Buffett to Invest $5 Billion in Goldman

It Stated:  Billionaire investor Warrne E. Buffett will pump at least $5 billion into Goldman Sachs, restructured this 
week as a bank-holding company, as the firm tries to quell concern about its access to financing, 
Goldman Sachs announced Tuesday.

I had been wondering why most of the articles in the Washington Post 
were pro Obama and very negative towards John McCain.

Here is my response to the above cited article.

Now is this not interesting Mr. Buffett has 10% of the Washington Post.
And in the Washington Post today two articles: 
Economic Fears give Obama Clear Lead over McCain in Poll and Democrats on Hill Speak as One.

Not a major surprise as the Washington Post and ABC report about Obama the same way and then 
you poll your readers and listeners.  Kind of like stacking the deck would you not say?

Guess we should see just exactly what they have been doing seeing as they speak as one.

The Democrat majority in the U.S. Congress, led by Sen. Dodd and Rep. Barney Frank, 
has completely failed in their oversight, responsibliities and in their responsibilities to the American Taxpayer.  
They blocked GSE reform for years and it is clear now that the most recent Dodd-Frank housing bill 
simply made matters worse.

The web address I copied the above from at Scott Trade is no longer there.

Last weekend, empowered by the Dodd Frank bill, the Dept of Treasury moved to place 
the quasi-private mortgage lending giants, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mack into federal "conservatorship."  
the treasury plain contains no structural reform and actually expands Freddie and Fannie lending and 
underwriting activity through 2009.  Taxpayers will eventually be directly responsible for GSE losses.

The web address I copied once again from Scott Trade is no longer there.

For years, while Fannie and Freddie and other financial institutions were buying favor and cover 
on the hill through campaign contributions, and making multimillionaires out of politicians 
and their friends, few people cared, because they didn't see how it could affect them.  
Now they know.  Now the american public should demand that politicians like Cris Dodd, 
Barney Frank and Chuck Schumer explain, under penalty of perjury, 
why they protected these "house-of-cards."

The web address I copied once again from Scott Trade is no longer there.

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett himself had a soft spot for the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, 
or Freddie Mac, to the degree that he recommended it as Americas Safest and most profitable company. 

The web address I copied once again from Scott Trade is no longer there.

Mr. Buffett is a friend of Obama's from Obama's 2005 Senate Web page is the following:

http://obama.senate.gov/news/051121-obamas_national/

Obama Supporter Buffett just today is reported to have stepped up to the plate 
to help out Goldman Sach.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pld=20601087&sld=aH9olSJHVEvl&refer=home

And the article here in the Washington Post I am now replying to tell us that Buffett owns 
10% of the Washington Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/23/AR2008092302487_Comments.html

Just so you are aware Goldman Sach is the biggest financial bank contributor Obama has.

http://opensecerets.org/news/2008/09/bundlers-for-mccain-obama-are.html

You might note in the above link is a statement on how Obama is not very forthcoming 
in reveling who the people are that are contributing to his campaign.  
And further investigation and comparison of funds from each candidate will revel that Obama has
been receiving the Lions share of contributions from financial institutions.
Obama supporters just a note when you post contributions to McCains campaign on blogs 
remember to compare them to what Obama has received from the same people 
the honesty would be refreshing.

It may come as some comfort to us the taxpayer that the FBI is investigating the companies 
at the heart of the meltdown.
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20080924/D93CP7MG0.html

The unfortunate part of this is that an investigation by the FBI will not be fully known until after the election.  
Should Obama be elected I worry that Obama and his administration would shut it down.

So I now ask the Washington Post and ABC news are you by your bias reporting trying to aid 
the Obama campaign in getting elected so the American taxpayer can continue to be fleeced?

Any taxpayer who is tired of having only one side of events reported should let others know 
the other side of the coin.
Obviously connecting the dots and doing research is beyond 
some of the newspapers and media in this country.
Here ends my post to the Washington Post.

In an effort to check that all of the web pages I posted when I wrote the above blog post were accurate 
and still there I went to my bookmarks and also retyped in the addresses from my post that I had cited.  
Being new to blogging I was surprised that the information was no longer there.
I do not wish to imply that Scott Trade has removed it.  
I just find it Odd as other links I have bookmarked are still working.
My use of web links is to show the accuracy of the information I am quoteing.











 




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How Fannie and You bought a Hapless House

The title for this is from a Washington Post article today.http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/09/27/AR2008092702587_Comments.html
Here is my response:
jace1 wrote:
Let's see as we the taxpayers are now co-owners can we now get a lawyer and sue a few people?
I know a few I would like to have answers from.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/06/the_acorn_obama_knows.html
And for some more of the crowd
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2086379/posts
And let's not forget the ones in Congress right now trying to sneak in more funding for Acorn.
Pelosi, Reid and Frank to name a few.
The truth of how we got here really needs to be put out for public display before this election is decided.
9/28/2008 8:04:33 AM


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