Whispering Sweet Nothings to the Banksters

Your Democratic leaders in Action (while talking about the possibility of including the ability for bankruptcy judges to re-write the terms of mortgages, you know the ONLY proposal in the bailout plan that MIGHT ACTUALLY SAVE A FUCKING HOUSE)

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Obama said the provision was a priority, but one that he’d be willing to sacrifice in the interest of a bipartisan deal.

He said he told Pelosi and Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., the majority leader, that the measure “is probably something that we shouldn’t try to do in this piece of legislation.”

That’s right little people. You poor homeowners are once again fodder in the struggle for bipartisan cooperation among the privileged. Can’t let those pesky things like waves new homeless people get in the way of saving our friends, the banksters.

Of course Obama has already shelved his half assed healthcare plan. Can’t afford it now that we have to pay for Wall Street’s illness. I’m waiting for them to cancel all public school education because the stock market is broken.

What could actually persuade me to vote for the unity pony.

If he got off the campaign trail, went back to Washington and started doing his job of governing the country.

None of this I’ll show up if the vote on the bailout bill (TARP) is close but won;t make a speech crap. He needs to show up. He needs to say “I’m going to do my job to fix the country. And BTW- Fuck you Paulson and Bush for this shock doctrine attempt at blackmailing the country into handing over 700 billion bucks and retroactive immunity.”

If he did that, I could actually vote for him. But as usual, Obama comes up with a half assed attempt that doesn’t fix anything but makes him feel better about being a douchebag.

Excuse me if I can’t find my tiny violin.

For the rage of the recently rich.

I’ve had my own bad day, thank you very much.

The single tiny benefit I get from my job has been a quarterly $10 bus pass. That is it. No retirement. No health care. No discounted state employee tuition. No sick days or paid vacations. No cost of living raises. Nothing but a buss pass.

And I just found out that the price for my buss pass has gone from $10 a quarter to $120. I am so pissed right now that I can’t even do the math on what percentage of an increase that is.

But that is not all the bad news.

There is a level 3 sex offender who has or will be starting classes on my tiny campus. I am totally fine with giving everyone (even sex offenders) the chance to rehabilitate themselves. But the administration in all it’s wisdom decided that my campus can share a security guard with the campus 2 blocks away. I am often the only staff member here after 4pm. It is a very desolate spot in an otherwise urban area. My boss is worried for me. I am worried for me. I don’t even know who the student is. And who wants to bet that the administration is not going to shell out for another security guard but will instead cut my hours (and the lab hours) so that they don’t have to shell out the extra cash.

This is fucking intolerable.

Why the American Dream is such a big fucking deal

First- a tale of 2 colonizers. Namely Spain and England. (Yes- I know the problems colonization and exploitation. Just go with me on this for a minute)

A couple hundred years ago, in 1492 to be exact, Spain ended it’s long battles with Moors. The royal coffers were empty, and something needed to be done quick to replenish them. It was a relatively cheap investment to send Columbus off with a couple of ships in search of a quick route to the east. Instead, he “discovered” the Americas and Spain got access to a shitload of raw materials for relatively cheap.

England also needed money. But more than money, they needed space. Overpopulation and poverty were making the riff raff less manageable.

Spain sent people, generally single men or men who left their families at home, into the New World to suck out all the resources they possibly could as fast as they could. The men they sent generally made their fortunes after a few years and then went home.

England sent entire families into the New World. They banished people for crimes like stealing bread and had them “transported”. After so many years of working off their debts or their criminal sentences, the people were then free to climb up the social and economic ladder in a place with a lot more space and opportunity than at home. They had the first real chance of owning their own farms and property, things that were nearly impossible without nobility or noble connections at home.

Eventually, Spain’s formula for colonization collapsed and took the Spanish economy with it. England’s did not.

That is where the original American dream comes from. The idea of homeownership is central to our national identity because it was something so completely out of the realm of normal before that. Normal people didn’t own farms or land or homes. They were tenants of wealthy land owners who worked their entire lives to improve the finances of another.

And back then, just like now, the future wealth of a person was

You know what I can’t find

Anything giving me the expected numbers of foreclosures, or the recent national numbers for foreclosures.

And I am a fucking google queen. I am a pro at finding obscure numbers, like the percentage of non-custodial parents in arrears on child support payments or the percentage of income given to charity by economic class (the poor give about the same percentage of income as the rich overall, but it hurts them more to do it.)

So why can’t I get real numbers on this shit?

Questions for Berneke and Paulson

I’m at work so I may actually have missed all the question asking that congress is doing, but I have a few of my own questions for the masterminds of the bankster bailout.

1) Exactly how many homes will be saved from foreclosure under this plan? 1 or 2, maybe even a dozen? Does that number include the vacation homes of the banksters who will get to keep their giant bonuses and therefor not have to worry about losing their ski chalet in Aspen?

2) What does the American public get for 700 billion dollars? Anything? For 700 billion plus 4 extra bucks we might get a Starbucks coffee. But what exactly is the benefit to the American taxpayer for spending this money. Is there any value in it for us?

3) Why is this so last minute? Why do we have to decide right now when you two have been telling us the worst was over for months?

4) This whole no oversight of the treasury department clause- it feels like the financial version of the enemy combatant thing. Aren’t you really just trying to pull a fast one on us (again) to gain more executive power?

5) So what you’re really saying is that it’s going to cost us 700 billion PLUS our constitutional rights to democratic oversight to save these companies? Is that really a cost effective use of our money and rights?

How to fix the economy

So far all the solutions the big economics brains are coming up with are really just stop gap measures that won’t actually fix the problems, but will extend them.

What we need is more old school, more populist, more Rooseveltian. We need to be able to trust in our futures. We need to be able to pay our bills, feed, house and cloth our families. We need the security of knowing that one unlucky healthcare crisis won’t lead to certain ruin.

We have to do the hard slog work of rebuilding our economy from the bottom up. And by the bottom I mean the most desperate of us first. Previous economic buoys have come from loosening credit, rather than giving people actual economic gains. We need to create more jobs and we need those jobs to actually cover the cost of living. We need to decrease the wealth gap. We need to keep people in their homes.

And so far not a single proposal from either party or either presidential candidate does those things. All they do is stave off the bottom for a little while.

This is going to be hard work. But the benefits of doing things the hard slog way are increased security for all of us, not just the temporary exhale of the baited-breath banksters.

The Curse of Living in Interesting Times

I was a very odd little girl. When I was a wee thing, I wanted to grow up to be a famous painter/ queen/ revolutionary. I could totally see myself running around a jungle in camos with a bandoleer of bullets, a portable easel, and a big sparkly crown.

As I grew up, some of those dreams shifted a bit. I’m an artist though I am far from famous. I have declared myself Queen of my own damn universe and you all know what i choose as my blogging id. But I thought that all my chances of being a revolutionary had died out with the end of the cold war and liberalization of Latin American governments (there is a reason I choose to learn Spanish instead of pretty, girly French in 7th grade- I thought I’d go start revolutions there, not here).

But I may not need my passport and malaria meds to get my inner rebel on after all.

It looks like we may just be in the middle of a coup after all.

(Giant disclaimer- I do not read HuffPo. Just like I do not read the orange Cheetoh. I am not a masochist so reading the often sexist dribble at either of those places is not my cuppa. This comes via Corrente. )

Larissa at HuffPo writes:

As I see it now, we have but two options and I have long alluded to hoping against hope that one of these options would not be the only one left to a peaceful people. The first and frankly most preferable option is for Congress to immediately begin impeachment proceedings against the members of this latest Business Plot.

No time needs to be wasted on hearings as we already now have in writing, formally as presented to Congress, the intentions of this administration to nullify Congressional powers permanently, to alter Judicial powers permanently, and to openly steal public funds using as blackmail the total collapse of the US economy if these powers are not handed over. You do see how this is blackmail, do you not? You do see how this is a manufactured crisis precisely designed to be used as blackmail, do you not?

Yep, it sounds straight up like a coup to me. We are being blackmailed in to handing over $700 billion (some people are putting the real bailout cost at closer to 1.8 trillion) and our democratic system in order to ameliorate a massive and totally foreseeable disaster caused by those with money and ignored by those with the power to check it.

This is the moment. Right now we are about to learn if when the shit hits the fan, our government works for us or against us. And if it is against us we will have no other choice than to scrap it. Yes, scrap the entire thing. Learn from our mistakes, and move on.

And on that note, a few choice quotes from my favorite revolutionary. Damn, more than 200 years old and they are still dead on relevant.

“I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations, which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country.”

— Thomas Jefferson
1812

But with respect to future debt; would it not be wise and just for that nation to declare in the constitution they are forming that neither the legislature, nor the nation itself can validly contract more debt, than they may pay within their own age, or within the term of 19 years.
Thomas Jefferson, letter to James Madison, September 6, 1789