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abortion all hail king moron and the left has the balls to call us fascists awesome awesomely awesome bad judgement barracuda! celebrity arrogance celebrity stupidity community organizing corruption creepy obama cult of obama! democrats did i mention awesome dnc dumb people economic stupidity economics economy election '08 fannie mae freddie mac gop hollywood it burns it burns john mccain legislative awesomeness liberal fascism mccain/palin '08 media arrogance media bias nutroots insanity obama! obama/biden 2008 oil please make it stop political stupidity politics politics as usual republicans sarah palin saul alinsky stealth marxism subprime crisis the clean and articulate ticket things mccain does that i like we can win this thing who even cares anymoreMonday, October 6. 2008THE CAMPAIGN STARTS NOW.
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Defined tags for this entry: awesome, awesomely awesome, democratic stupidity, democrats, did i mention awesome, economic stupidity, economics, economy, election '08, john mccain, mccain/palin '08, subprime crisis, things mccain does that i like
Friday, October 3. 2008Democrat Fingerprints
More on the close connection between the Dems and the financial meltdown from the UK Independent:
Of all the characteristics of a successful politician, none is more essential than bare-faced cheek. Never has this been more evident than in the past fortnight, as senior Democrat members of the US legislature have sought to lay all the blame for the country's financial crisis on the executive arm of Government and Wall Street.It's all true, of course, but I sort of wish he'd found a different way to describe Barney Frank. [shudder]
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Defined tags for this entry: democratic stupidity, democrats, economic stupidity, economics, economy, subprime crisis
Wednesday, October 1. 2008The Bomb: A Short History
We're in the middle of nasty financial times, and as luck (or unluck) would have it, we're also in the middle of a presidential election. As I see it, that gives us a couple of responsibilities here: first of all, fixing the problem, but then, and perhaps more importantly, figuring out exactly what happened and ensuring that the mechanisms that were put in place to bring us to this point are disabled and that the people who built those mechanisms are not allowed to do it again. As for fixing the problems, well, I'll leave that to others. I have absolutely no confidence in Congress - frankly on either side of the aisle, although I'd prefer to have the Republicans in charge, because while they're politically stupid, at least they're not BATSHIT INSANE like Pelosi, Reid and their idiot minions.
So what happened? Aah, sweet sweet Jimmy Carter. Will your legacy ever stop biting us in the ass? No. It never will. Back in 1977, Carter signed into law the Community Reinvestment Act, which required lenders to offer credit to borrowers who previously would have been considered less-than-creditworthy. It was a well-intentioned move, of course, with the goal of moving more low-income individuals into homes. But from this tiny acorn (heh) that was planted by the Carter Administration sprang the mighty poison oak that our government and financial markets are trying desperately to fell today. Here's the problem with the CRA: it forced lenders to abandon free market principles. Under normal circumstances, a lender is not going to give money to a person who is unlikely to pay it back. This is, of course, an obvious problem for many minority groups who statistically tend to be poorer and a higher credit risk. It's an issue that should be addressed, although addressing it by using the government to force lenders to ignore creditworthiness in lending decisions is questionable at best. I'd argue that finding ways to encourage private wealth creating in poorer communities would be a better and more fruitful way of expanding homeownership, but then again, I'm not in Congress. (It should also be noted that CRE seems to be instrumental in spawning awful left-wing groups like ACORN, which unfortunately get funded with our tax dollars to advocate for lousy economic policy.) Nonetheless, my impression after some poking around is that throughout the 80s and early 90s, CRA chugged along below the radar as most federal legislation does - doing a little bit of good, probably causing more problems than it was worth, but certainly not causing any sort of major crisis. As evidenced by the fact that... there was no major crisis in the mortgage or credit markets. Enter Bill Clinton. Among other changes to federal housing law, there was some serious attention paid to the operation of the CRA during the Clinton Administration, as explained by Thomas DiLorenzo, Professor of Economics at Loyola University: ...in 1995, the US Treasury Department created the multibillion-dollar "Community Development Financial Institutions" fund to "provide banks with access [i.e., taxpayers' dollars] to new opportunities to finance community economic development" as "encouraged" by the CRA, said the Fed chairman.Here's a bit more on the insanity that was going on in the early-to-mid 90's that sheds some light on where we are right now: ... the Boston Fed, clearly speaking for the entire Fed, produced a manual for mortgage lenders stating that: "discrimination may be observed when a lender's underwriting policies contain arbitrary or outdated criteria that effectively disqualify many urban or lower-income minority applicants."A note here, from personal experience: I recall being utterly shocked at how unbelievably easy it was for my wife and I to be pre-qualified for a mortgage back in October of 2001, especially considering that it was immediately after 9/11, the economy was in the tank, and I was unemployed. Frankly, we're probably among the class that would have been laughed out of any decent lender's office prior to the changes in the mid-90s. The good news is that we've actually been paying our mortgage, although who knows how many others in the mortgage class of '01 still are. ![]() Someone set up us the bOmb Fannie and Freddie are government-chartered, shareholder-owned public companies. Because of their government charters and many government-provided privileges, they are known as government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs. The companies carry on their business in two ways. In a process known as a securitization, they buy mortgages from mortgage originators, place them in trusts, and issue securities from these trusts that are backed by the payments of principal and interest on the pooled mortgages. These transactions create what are called mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Fannie and Freddie only guarantee to the holders of MBS that the principal and interest on the mortgages in the trusts will be paid in full and on time. In other words, Fannie and Freddie take only the credit risk on these mortgages; the interest-rate risk--that interest rates will rise and the mortgages will become less valuable, or that interest rates will fall and the mortgages will be prepaid and disappear--is taken by the holders of the MBS. For their guarantee, Fannie and Freddie receive an annual fee as long as the pools remain in existence. In this segment of their business, Fannie and Freddie have guaranteed about $2.2 trillion in mortgages.[1]Please make sure you're paying attention to this next paragraph: To place this in some perspective, all Treasury debt held by the public totals $4.4 trillion, and all corporate bonds outstanding total $2.9 trillion. Fannie's and Freddie's liabilities--including both their MBS guarantees and their borrowings--come in right in the middle, at $3.7 trillion. Thus, only two companies--both of which are GSEs and implicitly backed by the U.S. government--account for more default risk than all other U.S. corporations combined. The risks for the taxpayers are obvious, but as many commentators have also pointed out, risk of this size, if concentrated in only two companies, poses a danger to the U.S. economic system as a whole--a danger known as systemic risk.Let's review: the Community Reinvestment Act - Carter era legislation - began the process of forcing lenders to extend credit to borrowers who would not qualify under traditional credit rules. Then in the mid 90's, the Clinton Administration Treasury Department worked hard to vastly increase the amount of credit available to low income borrowers. Freddie and Fannie jumped into this market with both feet, and built up a portfolio that held an amount of debt approaching the size of the U.S. national debt, helped along by the Fed, which was pursuing a policy of keeping interest rates low in order to keep the economy strong after the Tech bubble burst. So now we've got a housing market awash in cheap money with a whole new class of potential homebuyers spurred on by CRA inspired regulatory changes. And naturally, since so many people are looking to buy, home values start to increase. Prior to the late 90's, home values had kept pretty close to the rate of inflation, but no longer. We now had a frenzy of buying and selling and flipping going on, driving prices up for no real reason other than as a response to an artificially propped-up demand. (This was the era when you couldn't go through a commercial break without seeing an ad for Countrywide Mortgage or some other lender promising great rates on home loans or "interest only" loans or some other such mortgage or equity related product.) People with sense were already warning of problems within a few years of the genesis of this crisis. Going back to that New York Post article: This damage was quite predictable: "After the warm and fuzzy glow of 'flexible underwriting standards' has worn off, we may discover that they are nothing more than standards that lead to bad loans . . . these policies will have done a disservice to their putative beneficiaries if . . . they are dispossessed from their homes." I wrote that, with Ted Day, in a 1998 academic article."I" in this case is Stan Liebowitz, the Ashbel Smith professor of Economics in the Business School at the University of Texas at Dallas. And it wasn't just a few academics saying this; there were politicians who were warning of the impending collapse of the Fannie Mae-driven subprime market, including the much-hated George W. Bush, whose administration had tried numerous times dating back to 2001 to reform Fannie and Freddie by attempting to restrict the size of their portfolios and create a more robust regulator for them. Here's a roundup of the Bush Administration's position on this issue through the past 8 years. For example: ** 2001There's more, but I'll let you read the rest at that link, because I'd like to focus on that last item, involving the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight. Let's go back to that CEI analysis that I referenced earlier: As part of the fallout from Enron and WorldCom, Freddie Mac decided to engage new auditors, replacing Arthur Andersen. The new auditors found discrepancies in the company's financial reports, and an independent counsel was engaged to do an investigation. The investigation showed that Freddie had manipulated its earnings in order to reduce reported volatility, and--perhaps more important--one of Freddie's senior managers seemed to have taken steps to obstruct the investigation. As a result, Freddie dismissed its three top officers, an action that apparently came as a complete surprise to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO), the company's regulator. OFHEO was embarrassed by its failure to discover on its own the facts that led to the dismissal of Freddie's top officers--or even that there was an internal investigation that might lead to their dismissal--and its ability effectively to regulate the GSEs was publicly called into question.So finally OFHEO gets as tough on Fannie and Freddie as they should have been all along and presents a report to Congressional regulators on the shenanigans going on at the GSEs. How did the Congressional regulators respond? Judge for yourself: Video via Everything I Know Is Wrong. Also at that link is a reference to a 2005 bill - the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act - which was yet another attempt to rein in Fannie and Freddie out of a concern over the systemic risk they posed to the US economy. Here's the bill summary: 1/26/2005--Introduced.One of the bill's primary backers? Senator John McCain. Here's his statement in support of the bill, back on May 25, 2006: Mr. President, this week Fannie Mae's regulator reported that the company's quarterly reports of profit growth over the past few years were "illusions deliberately and systematically created" by the company's senior management, which resulted in a $10.6 billion accounting scandal.The bill never made it out of committee. The Democrats in the Senate made it clear that they would not support the reforms, expressing attitudes similar to those of their colleagues in the House in the video above. ![]() Barney Frank: The problem isn't with the GSEs, it's with your lying eyes, you anti-poor scum! When the first wave of loan defaults started hitting in 2007, banks started getting nervous and tightened up credit. Home values started to fall. Eventually, a couple of hedge funds at Bear Stearns that dealt with a lot of subprime mortgages collapsed. And now, just as predicted by Bush, McCain, and a ton of other folks of more conservative persuasion, Fannie and Freddie have imploded, Wall Street is in a panic, and everyone's talking about the return of the Great Depression. And the Democrats say that this situation is the result of deregulation and is therefore a Republican scandal. That takes some serious balls. Heck, even a certain former President admits that the Democrats in Congress weren't exactly helpful in averting this crisis, as noted by the McCain campaign in this ad: Allahpundit is even calling Billy Jeff "America’s favorite newly minted right-leaning independent." (Notice - Clinton also doesn't buy the left's argument that this is all the result of deregulation either.) We're in the middle of a presidential campaign. Barack Obama claims that this election is about "judgement." Let's look at his judgement as relates to the people he's chosen to surround himself with as he tries to win the White House:
Obama and his Democrat colleagues had opportunities to defuse the bomb through legislation and the exercise of proper oversight over GSAs. Not only did they fail to do so, they actually attacked those who raised the alarm about Fannie and Freddie for trying to create panic in the markets. They claimed the threat did not exist. They refused to defuse the bomb. On the other hand, John McCain, George Bush and Congressional Republicans pushed for the reform and proper oversight the GSAs needed. That's the simple fact. I am by no means claiming that Republicans are always right - far from it. But on this one, they were, and for the Democrats and Obama to claim otherwise is a ridiculous lie. By my count, this is at least two major issues on which we can compare McCain and Obama's "judgement to lead" - the surge in Iraq, and the subprime mess. Both issues are of vital national importance; failure on both entails serious consequences for our country. On both issues, John McCain was absolutely right, and Barack Obama was completely, dreadfully wrong. Judgement to lead? Obama has a sterling public image and excellent PR, but a great facade does not equal good judgement. McCain has demonstrated excellent judgement on the two most important issues of our day. A postscript: Nancy Pelosi has announced that she won't be allowing any "witch hunt" over Fannie and Freddie in the next congressional term: ...according to House Oversight Committee staff, Emanuel has received assurances from Pelosi that she will not allow what he termed a "witch hunt" to take place during the next Congressional session over the role Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac played in the economic crisis.Translation: since there aren't any Republicans we can throw in jail for this, we're just going to let it slide. Voting for Obama rewards and empowers this crowd. Judgement to lead? You be the judge.
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Defined tags for this entry: corruption, democratic stupidity, democrats, economic stupidity, election '08, fannie mae, freddie mac, john mccain, mccain/palin '08, obama!, obama/biden 2008, republicans, things mccain does that i like
Wednesday, September 24. 2008Just who is responsible for the mortgage meltdown?
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23:55
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Defined tags for this entry: democratic stupidity, democrats, economic stupidity, election '08, fannie mae, freddie mac, obama!, obama/biden 2008
Monday, September 22. 2008Hollywood Lesbian FAIL
Andrew Brietbart:
Not since Rosie O'Donnell & Co. manhandled Elizabeth Hasselbeck weekdays on "The View" have liberals been so gleeful to watch a bitter lesbian tear down a confident and beautiful conservative Republican woman. Unresolved high school lust and angst at well-adjusted cheerleaders and popular prom queens should be left for medical professionals, not for midmorning television gabfests.
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Defined tags for this entry: barracuda!, celebrity arrogance, celebrity stupidity, democratic stupidity, democrats, election '08, hollywood, mccain/palin '08, obama/biden 2008, sarah palin
Tuesday, September 16. 2008Obama = Fannie & Freddie
Oh, and he's a serial resumé puffer too:
It's about time somebody started tying this hump directly to the crisis he and his party helped to create and - oh by the way - did nothing to avoid. Vid via HotAir
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Biden and the Financial Crisis
A major part of the problem that we face in mortgage and credit markets today stems from Clinton-era changes in financial oversight that allowed the expansion of credit to individuals who otherwise would have been too much of a risk to qualify. Out of that springs the subprime crisis, Fannie and Freddie, and the major tightening of credit markets that we're seeing now. How does Joe Biden propose to solve the problem that he had a hand in creating?
For a crisis essentially created out of government interference, Biden offers nothing more than a “hair of the dog” solution. He wants bankruptcy laws changed to force lenders to offer lower terms to people with higher risk, which is exactly what created this crisis in the first place. He claims to side with the man in the street against the shareholders, but his solution would create more crises like we face now, not less.Hope and change, indeed. Let's double down on that bad bet! That's the ticket. Pay no attention to the folks advising the campaign on economics. Nothing to see there...
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Wednesday, September 10. 2008The Alinsky Connection
Feeling pretty lousy tonight, so not much blogging shall transpire. But this article is worth a read, especially if you're unfamiliar with "community organizing":
In her game-changing convention speech, Sarah Palin took a swipe at Obama for having been nothing more in his life than a ‘community organiser’.
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Defined tags for this entry: bad judgement, community organizing, democratic stupidity, democrats, economic stupidity, obama!, obama/biden 2008, saul alinsky, stealth marxism
Thursday, September 4. 2008Yeah, you don't really want to go there either.
Idiot Kos Diarist: Write your own damn speech!
Joe Biden: Are you trying to make us lose? Oh, and there's this little gem of a tidbit too: Her TelePrompTer was on the fritz.
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Tuesday, September 2. 2008"Slush Limbaugh"
This is why Ace is indispensable.
According to a commenter (and why should I check?), Kos is claiming the smear didn't originate with him, but with "Alaska Republicans on the radio."Amazing.
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Defined tags for this entry: all hail king moron, democratic stupidity, democrats, election '08, media arrogance, media bias, nutroots insanity, sarah palin
Friday, August 29. 2008Bumped: Tim Kaine is speaking in EXPLICITLY RELIGIOUS TERMS about Barack Obama
We all know it's a cult, but they're actually now openly pirating Christian terms to advance their candidate. I gotta find a transcript.
Here's what I heard: Commence the deliberate mixing of religious and civic language... For Barack Obama, for Joe Biden, for me, for all of us, the principles of faith call us to service.It would seem to me that a Washington that had faith in us as citizens would be willing to allow us to live our lives as unencumbered by the government as possible, as truly free individuals with rights and responsibilities to care for ourselves. More expansive government is referred to as a "nanny state," Tim. That's what you're arguing for, right? A nanny isn't there to trust her wards; she's there to watch over them, to limit them, to make sure that they don't do anything that might harm themselves. That's not what our founders intended. We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will put middle-class Americans first again and reward companies who create jobs in America instead of shipping them overseas.Hmm. What about foreign companies that build factories here? Do we shut them down because they're not American owned? Or does this policy only work in one direction? We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will end our dangerous dependence on foreign oil and invest in green-collar, clean- energy jobs right here at home.Obama will be a president who can - by the sheer force of his will, it seems - call into existence the technology that will allow us to end our dependence on oil and switch over entirely to an economy powered by... good feelings? What exactly? BTW, one fine way to reduce our dependence on foreign sources of oil would be to drill domestically. Just a tip. We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will invest in our students, teachers and schools, and make college affordable once again for every American family.Oh good lord. As if education budgets won't grow every year by remarkable amounts under either McCain or Obama. FAIL. We need to put our faith into action -- to elect a president who will responsibly end the war in Iraq, give our veterans and their families the support they need, and reinvigorate our military to face the challenges ahead.John McCain is the only person running that I know of who has always advocated responsibly ending the war in Iraq. He's always wanted to win it. The jack-ass you're talking about was forced to acknowledge the success of the surge that he opposed and then stated that even if he knew then what he knows now, he'd still have voted against it. Now, let's really just lay into the religious language, shall we? If we put our faith into action, we can move mountains.Wow. Just... Wow. Witness the founding of Obamianity, the newest political religion. Jonah Goldberg was right.
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Defined tags for this entry: and the left has the balls to call us fascists, creepy obama, cult of obama!, democratic stupidity, election '08, liberal fascism, obama!, obama/biden 2008
Wednesday, August 27. 2008And lo, he did appear in all his glory
Krauthammer on Obama's acceptance speech:
The Berlin folly -- in English.Title of Krauthammer's post? "Has he lost his mind?"
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Saturday, August 23. 2008LOL II
From the Moderate Voice
I really thought all of the previous chatter about Biden was a head-fake, designed to throw the press off the scent of the real pick. At this point, Obama is fast-becoming the only convincing argument I’ve seen in favor of gun control. He shoots himself in the foot so often that I’m shocked the man has any toes left.
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Defined tags for this entry: democratic stupidity, democrats, election '08, it burns it burns, obama!, obama/biden 2008, please make it stop, politics, politics as usual, the clean and articulate ticket
Thursday, August 21. 2008More Economic Stupidity
While we're on the subject of stupid Democrat campaign nonsense, how about this little coda from Jonah Goldberg:
If owning so many houses (or being married to an heiress) is a problem, I do hope someone asks Barack why he was so enthusiastic about John Kerry in 2004.Score! And how about a little critique of the utterly stupid populist economic claptrap that Obama! is spewing at the moment: Democrats seem unaware that “big corporations” — including oil companies, pharmaceutical companies, and insurance companies — are people. And that these corporations are also indispensable to our free, thriving society.Look, I understand the attraction of voting Democrat. I understand how easy it is to demonize the rich, to pretend that your problems are all the fault of big-whatever, to refuse to have any moral backbone on issues like abortion so as not to "offend" anyone or "impose your values," God forbid. I get it. It's just easier to be liberal, because it requires virtually nothing of you. Just like childhood, right? Oh, I hope there are still enough grown-ups out there to derail Obama. It seems like there might be, but who knows...
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Defined tags for this entry: abortion, democratic stupidity, democrats, dumb people, obama!, political stupidity, politics, who even cares anymore
Friday, August 1. 2008Hell Yeah!!!
Awesome:
House Dems Turn Out The Lights But GOP Keeps TalkingScrew Pelosi. It's nice to see the GOP refusing to play nice with the dunces who rule the House chamber. Awesomely Awesome: Democratic aides were furious at the GOP stunt, and reporters were kicked out of the Speaker's Lobby, the space next to the House floor where they normally interview lawmakers.Screw you, you little tyrant. God forbid the press cover some actual interesting news from DC... This just keeps getting better: Update 3 - Democrats just turned out the lights again. Republicans cheered.
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15:04
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Defined tags for this entry: democratic stupidity, gop, legislative awesomeness, oil, politics, republicans
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