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Oil Subsidies

Tell Buerkle Subsidize Alt Energy Not Oil Kaushik Basu favours targeted subsidies Rush Limbaugh – Caller: Why Don’t You Guys Sacrifice House GOP Votes Unanimously to Protect Big Oil Subsidies … House GOP Votes Unanimously to Protect Big Oil Subsidies . March 2nd, 2011. Share |. TUE MAR 01, 2011 AT 09:10 PM EST House GOP votes unanimously to protect big oil subsidies byJoan McCarter. So check this out. … On Transmigration: GOP Votes Unanimously to Protect Big Oil Subsidies GOP Votes Unanimously to Protect Big Oil Subsidies . Screw the taxpayers. These Republican folks know where their asses get greased their bread is buttered, and that’s all that matters. Think Progress: House Republicans voted in lockstep … An American Gothic: House Republicans Vote For Big- Oil Subsidies House Republicans Vote For Big- Oil Subsidies . Tue Mar 01, 2011. House GOP votes unanimously to protect big oil subsidies by Joan McCarter for Daily Kos. So check this out. oil/gas donations to congress … House Republicans Unanimously Vote To Preserve Oil Subsidies … House Republicans Unanimously Vote To Preserve Oil Subsidies . March 2nd, 2011. By ARDem. Sacrifice, budget cuts, tightening our belts…all that shit is for peasants. Big oil companies that don’t need any subsidies however enjoy the … Armageddon | TomKnighton.com I – who takes a great deal of pride taking shots at the wackos at ThinkProgress – actually agree with ThinkProgress about something, namely oil subsidies . Mark this on your calendar folks, because who knows when it will happen again. … MBtheZee says: RT @slackadjuster : Ron Paul from PLANET KOOK Says we cant afford to give WELFARE n then votes to continue oil subsidies CORPORATE WELFARE #P2 #HCR

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Ohio House Explodes; 2 Bodies Found Amid Debris

An Ohio home exploded into flames early Wednesday, killing a woman and her grandson in a blast that was heard miles away and leaving nothing at the site but a large crater filled with debris. (March 2)

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Tim Ryan gave a great speech on the floor of the House in support of teachers and against Ohio’s draconian SB-5, which will strip public workers of collective bargaining. Labor rallies against SB5 : MARIETTA – Thousands of union members and labor supporters covered the west lawn and broad steps of the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus Tuesday, roaring in unison phrases like “This is what democracy looks like” and “Kill the bill.” One man in a red T-shirt bearing the words, “No to SB5,” weaved through the crowd with a bullhorn, shouting, “Wake up! We need to misbehave.” The throngs came to the capital city in fleets of buses, vans and private vehicles to protest Senate Bill 5, a piece of legislation that would limit collective bargaining for state employees, as well as for teachers and municipal workers, including police and firefighters. “We strongly feel SB5 will affect our collective bargaining as our contract comes up for negotiations at the end of this year; we just don’t know how right now,” said Shane Cochran, a City of Marietta employee and members of Teamsters Local 637. “This bill is definitely a major concern for us, but I feel better seeing so much support from other unions across the state here today,” he said. Ohio is doing to its workers what Walker is trying to do in WI. Can we let that stand? Thousands Protest Outside SB5 Hearing Union members and state workers boarded five buses in Cincinnati on Tuesday morning to add their weight to the protests.”We’ve gone three or four years without a raise, a lot of us. We took 10 cost-saving days, we’re willing to sacrifice; we just don’t know where they want us to sacrifice. We’d like to know,” union worker Michael Tighe said.”Kill the bill!” chants echoed across McMicken Commons at the University of Cincinnati on Monday as students and professors stood in the rain to demonstrate against SB5. Have you noticed how perfectly crafted most of the protest signs are in these protests? Maybe it’s because teachers are making them up? And let’s not forget that Governor John Kasich was a Fox News regular. He used to sub for Bill O’Reilly all the time. It’s getting to be that most of their pundit staff is running for office or has already run. (h/t C&Ler Dan)

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D’oh! Maddow Guest Economist Undermines Her Gloom About GOP Spending Cuts

Don't look now, that tidal wave might be a drop in the bucket instead. On her MSNBC show Monday, Rachel Maddow cited a trio of reports warning of massive job losses if $61 billion in Republican-pushed spending cuts take effect. The Economic Policy Institute, which Maddow described as a “liberal group,” predicts the GOP budget plan “would likely result in job losses of just over 800,000. A confidential new report” from Goldman Sachs says spending cuts passed in the House “would be a drag on the economy, cutting growth by about two percent of GDP, according to Jonathan Karl at ABC News, the source cited by Maddow. The third warning along these lines came from McCain '08 campaign adviser Mark Zandi, writing at Moody's Analytics, that the Republicans' proposal “would mean some 400,000 fewer jobs created by the end of 2011 … and 700,000 fewer jobs by the end of 2012.” [Video below page break] Wow — all that by cutting a $61-billion sliver from a $3.7 trillion behemoth? Well, maybe not, according to Maddow's next guest, Cornell University economics professor Robert Frank — MADDOW: The Republicans in the House have proposed about $61 billion worth of spending cuts. As you say, the deficit is not a made-up problem. It is worth thinking about that for the long run. Would the kinds of cuts that the Republicans are proposing have a significant impact on the deficit? FRANK: No, that's the sad thing. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projects that over the next four years, we're going to add $3.8 trillion to the deficit. These $61 billion in cuts are just a drop in the bucket. This is where Maddow should have asked for clarification, given the claims of huge job losses she had previously cited, but she did not. As to be expected, Maddow was also incurious about Goldman Sachs as the source of one of these reports and the curiously timed release to its “clients”. This editorial at Investor's Business Daily criticized what it saw as “Goldman Sachs' Suspicious Call” and why the report should be viewed with skepticism — The revolving door between Goldman and government is well-known. An investigative report last year by CBS News counted “at least four dozen former employees, lobbyists or advisers at the highest reaches of power both in Washington and around the world.” They include former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who crafted the stimulus plan and Wall Street bailouts; former Democratic House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt; and former SEC head Arthur Levitt, who as of last year was a paid lobbyist for Goldman. No surprise, then, that Goldman Sachs would see even the modest cuts proposed by the GOP as a danger to the economy. With its shifting business ties to government, the cuts would certainly be a danger to them. Also noteworthy was Maddow's claim, based on Jonathan Karl's reporting at The Note, that the Goldman report states GOP spending cuts would reduce economic growth “by about two percent of GDP.” But this wasn't what the report warns, as excerpted by Karl. (And finding the report in its entirety online proved oddly elusive). Instead, the report says the GOP spending plan would result in a “drag on GDP growth” in the second and third quarters this year of “1.5pp to 2pp” — percentage points, not percent. The Goldman report, at least in the sections excerpted by Karl, did not make projections for GDP growth. But assuming a rate of 3 percent, a reduction in 1.5 pp would mean growth was cut in half, not 2 percent. Presumably Maddow is aware of this, however, since earlier in her report she mentioned GDP growth for the last quarter of 2010 being adjusted downward “half a point.”

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A New Zealand man whose home was destroyed in the Christchurch earthquake is auctioning off the 25-ton boulder responsible. Phil Johnson put “Rocky,” which bounced down a hill and crashed into his house, up for sale on an auction site as a landscape feature that will “enhance your ‘indoor outdoor’…

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Bernanke: Spending Cuts Would Slow Growth

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says a House Republicans plan to cut $61 billion in federal spending this year would reduce economic growth and cause job losses. (March 2)

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Bernanke: Spending Cuts Would Slow Growth

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says a House Republicans plan to cut $61 billion in federal spending this year would reduce economic growth and cause job losses. (March 2)

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A wide-eyed Megyn Kelly is wowed by sketchy Moonie Times report blaming ’08 economic crisis on (Chinese?) terrorists

Click here to view this media Probably the greatest blunder of the Obama White House over the past two years has been its abject failure to make certain the public understood that it was conservative misgovernance that was at the root of the great economic meltdown of 2008 — especially because it was that very downturn that propelled him into office. That failure has functionally given conservatives — the architects of the disaster — the ability to cover their tracks by erecting a narrative in which the blame was instead laid at the doorstep of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and minority-lending programs. And that narrative is now widely believed by over half the country. Now the Washington Times is trying to muddy the water even further, running a bizarre and thinly sourced piece claiming that perhaps terrorism — maybe even Chinese terrorists, colluding with radical Islamists, perhaps? — were actually behind the meltdown. Here’s the piece. Evidence outlined in a Pentagon contractor report suggests that financial subversion carried out by unknown parties, such as terrorists or hostile nations, contributed to the 2008 economic crash by covertly using vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system. The unclassified 2009 report “Economic Warfare: Risks and Responses” by financial analyst Kevin D. Freeman, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Times, states that “a three-phased attack was planned and is in the process against the United States economy.” But as you can see from reading the piece, Freeman presents no evidence other than the economic catastrophes themselves that these were terrorist attacks. Indeed, it’s nothing but unadulterated wild speculation from start to finish. Nonetheless, Megyn Kelly invited Freeman onto her Fox News yesterday and treated it as if it were potentially the biggest story in the whole wide world. She was duly wowed — even though, as you can see, Freeman couldn’t even tell her whether these were Chinese terrorists or Islamic radicals, or mebbe they were working in collusion! (As if!) No wonder everyone involved in analyzing the markets is pretty much laughing at Freeman and the reporters who gobbled up this nonsense so gullibly. Then, of course, Kelly capped it all off with the classic “minority lending programs did it” narrative as the safe story everyone believes: KELLY: But how could they have done it? Because, you know, I think the conventional wisdom in this country is, uh, you know, you had Fannie and Freddie giving out tons of mortgages that never should have been given out, then you had the Wall Street folks trading these so-called credit default swaps, basically doubling down on the bad investments, and ultimately things just started to implode in a way where, you know, we had to step in, the government bailed out those banks, and we all know the history that happened after there. That’s a pretty remarkably dense thicket of lies that have little or no relationship to reality whatsoever. Let’s try to unpack it a little: — Fannie and Freddie’s role in the economic crash was so minor as to be nearly farcical. As McClatchy explained at the time : As the economy worsens and Election Day approaches, a conservative campaign that blames the global financial crisis on a government push to make housing more affordable to lower-class Americans has taken off on talk radio and e-mail. Commentators say that’s what triggered the stock market meltdown and the freeze on credit. They’ve specifically targeted the mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which the federal government seized on Sept. 6, contending that lending to poor and minority Americans caused Fannie’s and Freddie’s financial problems. Federal housing data reveal that the charges aren’t true, and that the private sector, not the government or government-backed companies, was behind the soaring subprime lending at the core of the crisis. Subprime lending offered high-cost loans to the weakest borrowers during the housing boom that lasted from 2001 to 2007. Subprime lending was at its height from 2004 to 2006. Federal Reserve Board data show that: * More than 84 percent of the subprime mortgages in 2006 were issued by private lending institutions. * Private firms made nearly 83 percent of the subprime loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers that year. * Only one of the top 25 subprime lenders in 2006 was directly subject to the housing law that’s being lambasted by conservative critics. The “turmoil in financial markets clearly was triggered by a dramatic weakening of underwriting standards for U.S. subprime mortgages, beginning in late 2004 and extending into 2007,” the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets reported Friday. Conservative critics claim that the Clinton administration pushed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to make home ownership more available to riskier borrowers with little concern for their ability to pay the mortgages. “I don’t remember a clarion call that said Fannie and Freddie are a disaster. Loaning to minorities and risky folks is a disaster,” said Neil Cavuto of Fox News. Fannie, the Federal National Mortgage Association, and Freddie, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., don’t lend money, to minorities or anyone else, however. They purchase loans from the private lenders who actually underwrite the loans. It’s a process called securitization, and by passing on the loans, banks have more capital on hand so they can lend even more. This much is true. In an effort to promote affordable home ownership for minorities and rural whites, the Department of Housing and Urban Development set targets for Fannie and Freddie in 1992 to purchase low-income loans for sale into the secondary market that eventually reached this number: 52 percent of loans given to low-to moderate-income families. To be sure, encouraging lower-income Americans to become homeowners gave unsophisticated borrowers and unscrupulous lenders and mortgage brokers more chances to turn dreams of homeownership in nightmares. But these loans, and those to low- and moderate-income families represent a small portion of overall lending. And at the height of the housing boom in 2005 and 2006, Republicans and their party’s standard bearer, President Bush, didn’t criticize any sort of lending, frequently boasting that they were presiding over the highest-ever rates of U.S. homeownership. The “Fannie and Freddie did it” narrative has been ridiculed from a number of market and economic experts. As Barry Riholtz put it: Some people (especially the political hacks) are focusing their energies in the wrong places. According to a recent investigation by Barron’s, Fannie’s biggest problem was not the subprime mortgages they bought — it was the better quality Alt A mortgages that caused their demise … The folks who want to place the entire crisis at FNM/FRE ‘s doorstep miss the point — and let me hasten to add that I was never a fan of the company, and we were short FNM from over a year ago, at $42+ — these people seem to miss all of the big picture issues, and are focsing on minor factor and outright irrelevancies. … While I understand that reducing the complexities of economic history into bumper sticker phrases is politically expedient, it does not help us understand the root cause of the problems. And, it gets in the way of helping us fashion a solution for the future. Hence, why I hold the weasels who are attempting to obscure reality and rewrite history in such disdain. For the non-partisan, non hacks amongst you, for the policy makers and academics and economists who are truly interested in how this came to pass, and what we can do to fix it, the bottom line remains: The CRA was irrelevant to the current crisis, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were mere cogs in a very complex financial machine, with many moving parts. But the primary cause of the mess? Not even close . . . Ritholtz — like hundreds of other economists and market experts who understand what happened — says the primary cause, in fact, were “a nonfeasant Fed, that ignored lending standards, and ultra-low rates.” This nonfeasance under Greenspan allowed banks, thrifts, and mortgage originators to engage in all manner of lending standard abrogations. We have detailed many times the I/O, 2/28, Piggy back, and Ninja type loans here. These never should have been permitted to proliferate the way they did. The fact that they did proliferate as they did, in fact, can be laid directly at the doorstep of conservative ideologues, whose mania for deregulation — particularly in the financial-services sector — is what led directly to the policies creating, condoning and even encouraging such dubious financial instruments. Though one might argue, in fact, that this kind of depredation committed by the oligarchical class, with working-class people taking the hit, and with little if any consequence whatsoever to the wealthy, is a kind of terrorism — economic terrorism against working Americans. But don’t expect the experts and anchors at Fox News to ever let you hear that. — Oh, and about those bailouts: Not only were they a success, they also wound up being a lot cheaper than everyone expected. That seems to be a bit of the “history” that never makes it onto Fox News, either.

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A wide-eyed Megyn Kelly is wowed by sketchy Moonie Times report blaming ’08 economic crisis on (Chinese?) terrorists

Click here to view this media Probably the greatest blunder of the Obama White House over the past two years has been its abject failure to make certain the public understood that it was conservative misgovernance that was at the root of the great economic meltdown of 2008 — especially because it was that very downturn that propelled him into office. That failure has functionally given conservatives — the architects of the disaster — the ability to cover their tracks by erecting a narrative in which the blame was instead laid at the doorstep of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and minority-lending programs. And that narrative is now widely believed by over half the country. Now the Washington Times is trying to muddy the water even further, running a bizarre and thinly sourced piece claiming that perhaps terrorism — maybe even Chinese terrorists, colluding with radical Islamists, perhaps? — were actually behind the meltdown. Here’s the piece. Evidence outlined in a Pentagon contractor report suggests that financial subversion carried out by unknown parties, such as terrorists or hostile nations, contributed to the 2008 economic crash by covertly using vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system. The unclassified 2009 report “Economic Warfare: Risks and Responses” by financial analyst Kevin D. Freeman, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Times, states that “a three-phased attack was planned and is in the process against the United States economy.” But as you can see from reading the piece, Freeman presents no evidence other than the economic catastrophes themselves that these were terrorist attacks. Indeed, it’s nothing but unadulterated wild speculation from start to finish. Nonetheless, Megyn Kelly invited Freeman onto her Fox News yesterday and treated it as if it were potentially the biggest story in the whole wide world. She was duly wowed — even though, as you can see, Freeman couldn’t even tell her whether these were Chinese terrorists or Islamic radicals, or mebbe they were working in collusion! (As if!) No wonder everyone involved in analyzing the markets is pretty much laughing at Freeman and the reporters who gobbled up this nonsense so gullibly. Then, of course, Kelly capped it all off with the classic “minority lending programs did it” narrative as the safe story everyone believes: KELLY: But how could they have done it? Because, you know, I think the conventional wisdom in this country is, uh, you know, you had Fannie and Freddie giving out tons of mortgages that never should have been given out, then you had the Wall Street folks trading these so-called credit default swaps, basically doubling down on the bad investments, and ultimately things just started to implode in a way where, you know, we had to step in, the government bailed out those banks, and we all know the history that happened after there. That’s a pretty remarkably dense thicket of lies that have little or no relationship to reality whatsoever. Let’s try to unpack it a little: — Fannie and Freddie’s role in the economic crash was so minor as to be nearly farcical. As McClatchy explained at the time : As the economy worsens and Election Day approaches, a conservative campaign that blames the global financial crisis on a government push to make housing more affordable to lower-class Americans has taken off on talk radio and e-mail. Commentators say that’s what triggered the stock market meltdown and the freeze on credit. They’ve specifically targeted the mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which the federal government seized on Sept. 6, contending that lending to poor and minority Americans caused Fannie’s and Freddie’s financial problems. Federal housing data reveal that the charges aren’t true, and that the private sector, not the government or government-backed companies, was behind the soaring subprime lending at the core of the crisis. Subprime lending offered high-cost loans to the weakest borrowers during the housing boom that lasted from 2001 to 2007. Subprime lending was at its height from 2004 to 2006. Federal Reserve Board data show that: * More than 84 percent of the subprime mortgages in 2006 were issued by private lending institutions. * Private firms made nearly 83 percent of the subprime loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers that year. * Only one of the top 25 subprime lenders in 2006 was directly subject to the housing law that’s being lambasted by conservative critics. The “turmoil in financial markets clearly was triggered by a dramatic weakening of underwriting standards for U.S. subprime mortgages, beginning in late 2004 and extending into 2007,” the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets reported Friday. Conservative critics claim that the Clinton administration pushed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to make home ownership more available to riskier borrowers with little concern for their ability to pay the mortgages. “I don’t remember a clarion call that said Fannie and Freddie are a disaster. Loaning to minorities and risky folks is a disaster,” said Neil Cavuto of Fox News. Fannie, the Federal National Mortgage Association, and Freddie, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., don’t lend money, to minorities or anyone else, however. They purchase loans from the private lenders who actually underwrite the loans. It’s a process called securitization, and by passing on the loans, banks have more capital on hand so they can lend even more. This much is true. In an effort to promote affordable home ownership for minorities and rural whites, the Department of Housing and Urban Development set targets for Fannie and Freddie in 1992 to purchase low-income loans for sale into the secondary market that eventually reached this number: 52 percent of loans given to low-to moderate-income families. To be sure, encouraging lower-income Americans to become homeowners gave unsophisticated borrowers and unscrupulous lenders and mortgage brokers more chances to turn dreams of homeownership in nightmares. But these loans, and those to low- and moderate-income families represent a small portion of overall lending. And at the height of the housing boom in 2005 and 2006, Republicans and their party’s standard bearer, President Bush, didn’t criticize any sort of lending, frequently boasting that they were presiding over the highest-ever rates of U.S. homeownership. The “Fannie and Freddie did it” narrative has been ridiculed from a number of market and economic experts. As Barry Riholtz put it: Some people (especially the political hacks) are focusing their energies in the wrong places. According to a recent investigation by Barron’s, Fannie’s biggest problem was not the subprime mortgages they bought — it was the better quality Alt A mortgages that caused their demise … The folks who want to place the entire crisis at FNM/FRE ‘s doorstep miss the point — and let me hasten to add that I was never a fan of the company, and we were short FNM from over a year ago, at $42+ — these people seem to miss all of the big picture issues, and are focsing on minor factor and outright irrelevancies. … While I understand that reducing the complexities of economic history into bumper sticker phrases is politically expedient, it does not help us understand the root cause of the problems. And, it gets in the way of helping us fashion a solution for the future. Hence, why I hold the weasels who are attempting to obscure reality and rewrite history in such disdain. For the non-partisan, non hacks amongst you, for the policy makers and academics and economists who are truly interested in how this came to pass, and what we can do to fix it, the bottom line remains: The CRA was irrelevant to the current crisis, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were mere cogs in a very complex financial machine, with many moving parts. But the primary cause of the mess? Not even close . . . Ritholtz — like hundreds of other economists and market experts who understand what happened — says the primary cause, in fact, were “a nonfeasant Fed, that ignored lending standards, and ultra-low rates.” This nonfeasance under Greenspan allowed banks, thrifts, and mortgage originators to engage in all manner of lending standard abrogations. We have detailed many times the I/O, 2/28, Piggy back, and Ninja type loans here. These never should have been permitted to proliferate the way they did. The fact that they did proliferate as they did, in fact, can be laid directly at the doorstep of conservative ideologues, whose mania for deregulation — particularly in the financial-services sector — is what led directly to the policies creating, condoning and even encouraging such dubious financial instruments. Though one might argue, in fact, that this kind of depredation committed by the oligarchical class, with working-class people taking the hit, and with little if any consequence whatsoever to the wealthy, is a kind of terrorism — economic terrorism against working Americans. But don’t expect the experts and anchors at Fox News to ever let you hear that. — Oh, and about those bailouts: Not only were they a success, they also wound up being a lot cheaper than everyone expected. That seems to be a bit of the “history” that never makes it onto Fox News, either.

Continue reading …
100 million books downloaded from iBooks, Random House titles added

Apple’s kicking off the iPad 2 event with some iBooks announcements. The first thing you need to know is that 100 million books have been downloaded to date from the company’s bookstore. That’s a lot of digital tomes, and there are more coming. Yep, that brings us to the second big piece of news — Random House is bringing its entire US catalog, which includes 17,000 titles, to the store. We had an idea that was going to happen since the publisher just changed up its e-book pricing model , but the store now officially includes bestsellers by John Grisham, Dan Brown, and others. According to PCMag , some of those titles started to pop up in Apple’s store yesterday, so get going and start reading. Continue reading 100 million books downloaded from iBooks, Random House titles added 100 million books downloaded from iBooks, Random House titles added originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 12:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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