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Rep. Steve King is the epitome of the disgusting Bircher-Randian megalomaniacs that have overtaken the Republican party. Day after day he says things that are so unseemly that I wonder if we could get a Congressional censoreship on his remarks so they can be stricken from our ears because they are hazzarise to our health. In his latest transgression, he uses babies born in trash cans to defend his positions on HCR repeal. Testifying that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional before an emergency Rules Committee meeting on the GOP’s repeal bill this morning, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) offered a very specific argument. “There’ve always been,” King said, “babies that were born, lived, and died within the jurisdictions of the individual states, who never cross a state line, access no health care, and therefore do not impact interstate commerce.” When Rep. Jared Polis (D-CO) challenged King to “find the baby that was not born at a hospital or with a midwife, who did not receive inoculations,” King upped the ante. “I hate to tell you, but they show up in garbage cans around this country, sir This man is a shameless product of the conservative mind that has been radicalizing the GOP since the rise of Goldwater. That mind is destroying the political process in our country not to mention helping create a zombie army of brainless idiots. Speaking of default mechanisms, let’s review Steve King’s record. October, 2009 : …the hate crimes bill results in a “pedophile protection act,” and is meant to create “thought crimes” and protect “sexual idiosyncrasies.” February, 2010 : “It’s sad the incident in Texas happened, but by the same token, it’s an agency that is unnecessary and when the day comes when that is over and we abolish the IRS, it’s going to be a happy day for America.” (Referencing the attack on the Austin IRS office that killed one agent) March, 2010 : King declared that a peaceful uprising, a la the successful overthrowing of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia on the streets of Prague in 1989 “would be fine with me.” May, 2010 : “Gay people should stop wearing their sexuality on their sleeve.” May, 2010 : “The ACLU, SEIU and the Muslim American Society are calling the shots at the Justice Department. The ‘draft complaint’ DOJ has prepared to challenge the Arizona law is a ‘cut & paste’ version of the class-action lawsuit the ACLU filed in United States District Court on May 17th. ” And here’s a few more. Rep . Steve King ‘empathizes’ with the Austin Texas suicide attack on the IRS Rep. Steve King says Rep. Grijalva’s district has ceded to Mexico Hey, Steve King! Exactly where SHOULD gays wear their sexuality?

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Yesterday it became clear that President Obama has picked JP Morgan banker anf Fannie Mae board member Bill Daley as his chief of staff. Daley will replace fellow Chicagoan Rahm Emanuel. The pick says quite a bit about the state of the Obama White House. Fiscal conservative Larry Kudlow immediately praised Daley , saying he would ease the White House's anti-business image. Ben Smith concurred , dubbing Daley “right of center on policy.” He is certainly right of the Obama administration, having opposed both ObamaCare and the Dodd-Frank FinReg bill. read more

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Boehner To CBO: La La La, I Can’t Hear You

enlarge New House Speaker John Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy enjoy a casual moment on the House floor. I know some of the Democrats are a little wacky, but this? These Republicans are just plain nuts . I’d forgotten what it was like to have the inmates in charge of the asylum. Their ability to communicate such deep denial seems to have paid off for them politically, at least for a while: Rescinding the federal law to overhaul the health care system, the first objective of House Republicans who ascended to power this week, would ratchet up the federal deficit by about $230 billion over the next decade and leave 32 million more Americans uninsured, according to congressional budget analysts. The rough estimate by the Congressional Budget Office also predicts that most Americans would pay more for private health insurance if the law were repealed. The 10-page forecast was delivered to House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), installed a day earlier to shepherd the new GOP majority. He immediately dismissed it. The CBO’s assessment, arriving as Republicans have mobilized to make the law’s repeal the first major House vote of the new Congress, touches on a sensitive area for the GOP. Republicans are vowing to take tough measures to reduce the deficit, although they already have exempted the health care measure from rules requiring that any spending increases be accompanied by offsetting reductions so that the net effect on the deficit is null. The CBO’s analysis provided an early glimpse of the brute force politics spreading across Capitol Hill and beyond in the new era of divided government. The broad changes to the health care system, pushed through Congress by Democrats who controlled both the House and the Senate until this week, are among President Obama’s proudest domestic accomplishments – and now a central target of the GOP. On Thursday, congressional Democrats and their allies seized the budget analysts’ prediction as ammunition. “It’s plain and simple: We can’t afford to increase the deficit by nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars, especially with the very first substantive vote of the 112th Congress,” said Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Montana). With equal speed, Boehner and other House Republicans repudiated the forecast of the non-partisan CBO, saying that its analysts had relied on flawed assumptions they had been provided by Democrats. “CBO is entitled to their opinion,” Boehner declared at his first news conference as speaker. Specifically, the CBO, in what it called a preliminary analysis, said that the law’s repeal would cost $145 billion by 2019 and $230 billion by 2021, then swell after that, because various money-saving and revenue-raising provisions would be undone. The 32 million uninsured Americans refers to the number predicted to gain coverage under the law.

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Many of you have probably read the very cool blog alicublog run by Roy Edroso. It’s been both insightful and entertaining. Anyway, he could use our help. James Wolcott explains: Roy Edroso, the tireless, intrepid detective blogger at Alicublog who dives day after day into the polluted Coney Island waters of conservative punditry (“urinous brine and scraps of old paper, orange rinds and soaked hot dog buns,” is how Saul Bellow once described a similar expedition into the shallow depths of bad prose and bad faith), has hit a rough patch. He lost his Harlem sublet, came up dry on other rental leads, and has moved into a friend’s spare room in Inwood. But that’s not what makes the patch rough : I’m sure there’s plenty else…charming about Inwood, but I have been too sick to notice. I caught a chill New Year’s Eve, spent two days I should have spent packing incapacitated by fever, and my lungs and sinuses are full of epoxy. Also, though I am very grateful to my buddy for lending me his spare room, it has seen little use and no absolutely no cleaning since the 28th Olympiad, and I’m not sure this is facilitating my recovery. A restored, recovered Roy Edroso is vital to journalism and sanity, especially now that the House has been taken over an even crazier group of Republican crazies, a confederation of Atlas Shruggers and So a PayPal donation site has been samaritanly set up by a fan and frequent commenter at Alicublog named Jay B since Edroso himself, as TBogg explains , “refuses to ask for help…the big fucking martyr.” Yes, if he were Protein Wisdom’s Jeff Goldstein he’d be blegging every month when not crybabying that he’s so persona non grata that nobody links to him anymore or invites him out to wine tastings. Here’s the link to donate to Edrosothon . If you want to send checks instead, you can use C&L’s PO BOX and I’ll make sure to pay out the amount. Just write ‘Roy” in your note section. C&L POBOX 66310 Los Angeles, CA 90066 Thanks for helping a blogger out.

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C&L Opening Bell: More on the SquidBook Deal

enlarge So it looks as though Facebook plans to go public sometime next year, thus rendering irrelevant any questions about whether it can have Goldman sell its shares to other investors and still remain a private entity. On the other hand, as William Cohan notes in his New York Times column, Goldman’s investment in Facebook certainly seems to be a violation of the ” Volcker Rule ,” which you may remember as the (murky, loophole-ridden) part of the financial reform bill that bars banks with access to the Fed’s discount window from proprietary trading. The goal of the rule was to basically force banks to make a choice: They could either have access to free money from the Fed during times of crisis or they could run a gambling casino, but they couldn’t do both. Cohan comments: Despite the high price of its investment, Goldman sees in Facebook a business bonanza, a nearly perfect nugget of investment-banking opportunities. First, Goldman’s cost of capital is close to zero — as a bank holding company, it can borrow from the Federal Reserve at negligible interest rates — so any capital gain it makes on its venture in Facebook will be sheer profit. Second, Goldman has almost certainly locked up the role of lead manager of the inevitable Facebook initial public offering. Fees for underwriting public offerings are generally about 7 percent of the value of the stock sold. Facebook could easily sell $2 billion of stock or more, generating fees to Goldman and the other underwriters of at least $140 million. The other benefit for Goldman in leading the public offering — aside from major bragging rights — is that it can use its marketing, sales and distribution muscle to make sure the value of Facebook at the time of the offering exceeds the $50 billion valuation at which Goldman invested. Goldman has also won from Facebook the right to offer an additional $1.5 billion of the company’s stock to its private-wealth clients. According to The Times, Goldman will be creating a “special purpose vehicle” to sell the stock to its wealthy clients and then will charge them a 4 percent initial fee plus 5 percent of any profits. As anyone who knows the history of the Internets knows, betting on hot websites to stay hugely successful over more than a few years — Geocities! MySpace! Friendster! — is a dubious venture. But as Cohan notes, there’s not much risk and a lot of reward for Goldman for investing in Facebook since it can borrow money from the Fed at extremely low rates. So if Facebook does indeed go the way of Pets.com, it’s no big deal since Goldman can run to Daddy Fed for more free money. Anyone else see a wee bit of moral hazard in this scenario? Felix Salmon also explores this issue a bit. And for some amusement, check out the Wall Street Journal’s comparison of Goldman’s Facebook investment pitch with a similar pitch from the deposed ruler of Nigeria. Onto some daily news! Jobless claims for the past month are at the lowest they’ve been in nearly two-and-a-half years. If you want to make a case that the real economy (versus just the stock market) is improving, this is some pretty good evidence. But even if tomorrow’s jobs figure comes in around the +297,000 figure the ADP reported this week, we’ve still got a long way to go. Since so many people have been out of work for so long, it’s going to be very difficult for many of them to find jobs. It would be nice if our government decided to simply hire people to build critical infrastructure like it did in the 1930s, but apparently we have to rely on the benevolence of our corporate masters instead of doing things to directly fix problems. Welcome to modern America. Paul Blumenthal of the Sunlight Foundation is criticizing President Obama’s decision to hire Bill Daley as his new chief of staff. He persuasively argues that Daley will make Obama’s policy toward Wall Street suck even greater quantities of ass: The President once told a meeting of bankers that he was “the only thing standing between you and the pitchforks.” That apparently wasn’t good enough. Picking Daley would send the message that the pitchforks–normal people–matter less than the continued flow of campaign donations from the uber-wealthy. Barack Obama raised $39 million from the finance, insurance and real estate sector in his 2008 bid for President, the most raised from this sector by anyone in one cycle seeking political office in the United States ever. Even more problematic than the need to corral donors for 2012 is that Daley’s presence would allow him to control the time of the President. Daley could choose who the President sees and what information gets to the President. Based on the praise the financial sector has for the Daley selection, it is clear who those people are and what that information would be. In essence, Daley would act as a stovepipe for the interests of Wall Street, as if bankers didn’t have enough influence already. At this point progressives need to stop being “disappointed” in Obama and see him for what he really is: A standard Clintonite neoliberal who won’t look out for the interests of working people. Sure, we’ll get some token appointments of people like Elizabeth Warren but the people who will really be calling the shots are the Tim Geithners, Bill Daleys and Larry Summerses (is that a word?). Expecting anything but the worst in terms of economic policy from this point forward would be foolhardy. And finally, we have some interesting news on the foreclosure fraud front: Sweeping evidence of the case the state attorney general’s office has built in its pursuit of foreclosure justice for Florida homeowners is outlined in a 98-page presentation complete with copies of allegedly forged signatures, false notarizations, bogus witnesses and improper mortgage assignments. The presentation, titled “Unfair, Deceptive and Unconscionable Acts in Foreclosure Cases,” was given during an early December conference of the Florida Association of Court Clerks and Comptrollers by the attorney general’s economic crimes division. It is one of the first examples of what the state has compiled in its exploration of foreclosure malpractice, condemning banks, mortgage servicers and law firms for contributing to the crisis by cutting corners. In page after page of copied records, the presentation meticulously documents cases of questionable signatures, notarizations that could not have occurred when they are said to have because of when the notary stamp expires, and foreclosures filed by entities that might not have had legal ability to foreclose. It also focuses largely on assignments of mortgage, documents that transfer ownership of mortgages from one bank to another. Mortgage assignments became an issue after the real estate boom, when mortgages were sold and resold, packaged into securitized trusts and otherwise transferred in a labyrinthine fashion that made tracking difficult. As foreclosures mounted, the banks appointed people to create assignments, “thousands and thousands and thousands” of which were signed weekly by people who may not have known what they were signing. In one example, a signature by someone named Linda Green is said to appear on hundreds of thousands of mortgage documents from dozens of banks and mortgage companies, but in varying styles. In another example, the signature of Scott Anderson, an employee of West Palm Beach-based Ocwen Financial Corp., appears in four styles on mortgage assignments. I know I’m becoming a broken record on this, but can our government pleasepleasepleaseplease PLEEEEEEEAAAASE start throwing some people in jail over this crap? Fraud that is this blatant and destructive is not something that can be solved by a bit of “oopsie!” cash. And for God’s sake, if you do throw people in jail, make sure they’re fairly high up on the food chain, OK? I don’t want to see you throw the book at Billy Bob the Robo-Signer and then tell me that justice has been served. Happy Friday, everyone!

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10 Reasons Why the Slurs Should Stay in ‘Huck Finn’

If you find this book offensive, don’t buy it or read it. There are plenty of books that none of us have an interest in reading for one reason or another. We don’t rewrite them. We simply choose not to read them. Related Entries December 30, 2010 New Year’s Call for a Border Reboot December 24, 2010 Happy Holidays

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On MSNBC, Rolling Stone’s Taibbi Accuses Boehner & Tea Party of Racist ‘Coded Language’
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By Eugene Robinson Race still matters in America and justice is not completely blind. Anyone who believes otherwise should examine the case of Cornelius Dupree Jr., who was ruled innocent Tuesday after spending 30 years in prison. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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By David Sirota In a Washington circus that features as many morons as oxymorons, we have self-described deficit hawks who promote tax cuts, alleged war opponents who back war escalations, and supposed anti-government conservatives who press to expand the National Security State. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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By Joe Conason In their ideological zeal, the new Republicans on Capitol Hill seem eager to gamble everything—even the chance of a worldwide depression—on a showdown over the national debt ceiling. Related Entries January 6, 2011 How America Exiles Unwanted Teenagers January 5, 2011 The House of Professors

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