Yes, conservatives are almost as oppressed as white Christian men in America.
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Brian Ross: Big Brothers Are Watching You
2 hours ago
Housing construction posted a surprisingly large increase in February, bolstered by strength in all parts of the country except the West.Read More......
The Commerce Department reported Tuesday that construction of new homes and apartments jumped 22.2 percent in February compared with January, pushing total activity to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 583,000 units.
Meanwhile, the Labor Department reported that wholesale prices edged up a slight 0.1 percent in February as a big drop in food costs offset a second monthly increase in energy prices.
"It's difficult for me to think of the code as a political weapon," said Rangel, who spoke to a handful of reporters outside his office.First off, a political weapon? I have no idea what the politics are of the folks at AIG. I do know that I just lent them $85bn of my money and I just caught them wasting it. So, what Rangel is saying is that it's wrong to stop bailed out companies, now and in the future, from giving exorbitant bonuses. It's "political." It's not moral, it's not ethical, it's not the right thing to do, it's simply "political." That's a new one.
"Is this an indictment or a bill?" asked Rangel. "Are they naming people? I mean, are they naming the taxpayers?"
Rangel said he sympathizes with the effort, but not the means it takes. "There's no way that good thinking Americans should reward people when they've been complicit in wrong doing," he said. "But as a former federal prosecutor, as I recall, it was the criminal code that you dealt with, not internal revenue."
Gov. Sarah Palin's spokesman said Monday that congressional Republicans were mistaken in announcing the governor would headline one of the biggest Republican gatherings of the year, the Senate-House dinner in Washington, D.C. The governor's office said Palin has not even confirmed she would be attending the event. "I communicated with the governor directly and she did not know anything about it," said Bill McAllister, the governor's spokesman.You remember SarahPac, which is "Dedicated to building America's future, supporting fresh ideas and candidates who share our vision for reform and innovation." But, it seems that SarahPac doesn't talk to or speak for Sarah. Or something like that. These Republicans are a mess. Read More......
The chairmen of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Texas Sen. John Cornyn, and the National Republican Congressional Committee, Texas Rep. Pete Sessions, sent out a press release Monday announcing Palin as keynote speaker for the June 8 event.
It's the annual fundraiser for the Republican Party's congressional re-election efforts.
The NRSC and NRCC announcement of Palin's leading role in the event made national news. The Associated Press distributed the story and it appeared on the Web sites of the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Dallas Morning News and USA Today, among many others.
McAllister said Palin asked him why The Associated Press was reporting that she was going to do this. "I pointed out the (National Republican Senatorial Committee) press release and she was like, no," he said.
NRSC spokesman Brian Walsh said Monday night that the staff of the governor's national political action committee, SarahPAC, had confirmed Palin would indeed speak at the Senate-House dinner.
As recounted below, there's not so much that the executive branch can do -- and should do -- to prevent AIG from handing out loopy bonuses. But why can't Congress pass a law requiring that bonuses granted by a company that has taken bailout money from the Federal Reserve or TARP be taxed at a very high rate? Obviously, Congress would have to find some way to distinguish between legitimate performance pay and illegitimate bonuses, but a one-year tax hike on all such bonuses might not be unpalatable. It's a much saner alternative than to give the Treasury the instruction to root through contracts to find ways of breaking them.Why didn't Congress do this? Possibly out of fear that the bill wouldn't pass with these provisions in, and possibly out of fear that the bailed out companies' employees would leave without the bonuses, thus bringing the must-survive companies down with them. Of course, we've debunked that last little chestnut before.
"There is no prospect" that Iraq will return to producing weapons of mass destruction or supporting terrorists, Cheney asserted, "as long as it's a democratically governed country, as long as they have got the security forces they do now and a relationship with the United States."Well, yes, there is no prospect because there was no prospect before the invasion either. Iraq wasn't building WMD, and Saddam wasn't supporting Al Qaeda. Why did King let Cheney get away with this? Why did AP? It's not like it was some curveball that Cheney's never used before. He always lies about Saddam's supposed WMD and supposed ties to Al Qaeda (Prague anyone?) Why wasn't King prepared to challenge Cheney on this, and why didn't AP put anything in their story pointing out that this quote was untrue? Read More......
Has the White House tweaked their defense against the "biting off too much" attack again? It appears so. Check this out from President Obama this morning at his event with the two Congressional Budget committee chairs, Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) and Rep. John Spratt (D-S.C.):Maybe the president is actually relating to the lives of the American people, something the elite in DC can't do. Elitists disdain populism. Imagine the little people having a point of view."I know that there are some on Wall Street and in Washington who've said that we should only focus on the banking crisis and one problem at a time. Well, we're spending a lot of time focusing on this banking crisis, and we will continue to do so because until we get liquidity flowing again, we will not fully recover. But the American people don't have the luxury of just focusing on Wall Street. They don't have the luxury of choosing to pay either their mortgage or their medical bills. They don't get to pick between paying for their kids' college tuition and saving enough money for retirement. They have to do all these things. They have to confront all these problems. And as a consequence, so do we."It's the president attempting to connect himself to the rest of America, trying to turn the criticism into a badge of honor. This is very, shall we say, populist of the president.
Now, there are those who say the plans in this budget are too ambitious to enact; to say that -- they say that in the face of challenges that we face, we should be trying to do less, than more. What I say is that the challenges we face are too large to ignore. The cost of our health care is too high to ignore. The dependence on oil is too dangerous to ignore. Our education deficit is growing too wide to ignore. To kick these problems down the road for another four years or another eight years would be to continue the same irresponsibility that led us to this point. That's not why I ran for this office. I didn't come here to pass on our problems to the next President or the next generation -- I came here to solve them.The last President, with the help of the traditional media passed on the myriad of problems that Obama has to solve. We're in a crisis, although that seems almost academic to the D.C. pundits, but they don't live like the rest of us do.
"Just say no" is the right advice to give your teenagers about drugs. It is not an acceptable response to whatever economic policy is proposed by the other party.That's going to be viewed by the D.C. press elites as being mean to the Republicans, who are proudly doing nothing and just saying no. Read More......
An even bigger problem, they added, was that financial products employees who are denied payments could quit and that AIG's losses -- the insurer took the deepest bath in red ink in American history last quarter, losing $61.7 billion -- could spiral enormously if the only people who understand the company's convoluted dealings are not around to "unwind" the damage they have caused.Really? If we don't give them their big fat bonuses, the staff at AIG, who literally are responsible for causing its bankruptcy, might flee to AIG's competitors. Oh to be a fly on the wall of that job interview:
INTERVIEWER: Previous employer?Read More......
JOB APPLICANT: AIG.
INTERVIEWER: What did you do there?
JOB APPLICANT: Pushed them into bankruptcy.
Anticipating restrictions on bonuses, officials at Citigroup Inc and Morgan Stanley are exploring ways to sidestep tough new federal caps on compensation, the Wall Street Journal said.Seriously, these people are tone deaf. They do not realize how hated they are in America right now. And, they aren't doing anything to ameliorate the situation. Instead, they're making it worse.
Executives at these banks and other financial institutions that received government aid are discussing increasing base salaries for some executives and other top-producing employees, the paper said, citing people familiar with the situation.
The discussions are at an early stage, partly because the government has not yet issued specific rules on the bonus payments that will be allowed at companies that received aid under the government's Troubled Asset Relief Program, the paper said.
The $10.82 million in total compensation for 2008 consisted of $7.73 million in sign-on and retention awards, a $958,333 salary, $9.84 million of stock and option awards and $16,193 of other compensation.Given everything else we've learned about the ineptitude of our top bankers, it's possible Pandit doesn't know the difference between one million and almost eleven million. Possible, but not likely. Read More......
Citigroup awarded Chief Executive Vikram Pandit $10.82 million of compensation in 2008, a year in which the bank required two government rescues totaling more than $45 billion.Gosh. How does he get by with such a terrible pay plan? The country feels his pain. Read More......
Citigroup also said it had nominated four new independent directors to help it recover following the government bailouts.
About $7.73 million of Pandit's total compensation was a sign-on bonus awarded in January 2008, a month after he became CEO, succeeding Charles Prince.
Wall Street compensation has come under intense scrutiny, especially at banks that have received taxpayer money from the government's Troubled Asset Relief Program. Citigroup has received $45 billion of TARP money.
Pandit did not receive a bonus for 2008 and has said he will accept no incentive pay and will accept base annual pay of $1 until Citigroup returns to profitability. The New York-based bank has not made money since the third quarter of 2007.
In 2008 Pandit was awarded a $958,333 salary, $9.84 million of stock and option awards including the sign-on bonus, and $16,193 of other compensation, according to a Citigroup proxy filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday.
With few legal options available, the White House may be forced to add millions of dollars in bonus payments to the outstanding debt owed by American International Group.Read More......
Earlier Monday, President Barack Obama expressed his outrage over AIG's payment of $165 million in bonuses, and ordered Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner to take all legal measures to block them.
However, sources tell CNBC, that there are few legal options available to the White House.
A U.S. Treasury official said that the Treasury will modify a planned $30 billion capital infusion for AIG to try to recoup hundreds of millions of dollars in controversial bonuses paid by the insurer.
The Treasury is finalizing the terms of its latest rescue package for AIG, announced on March 2, and will attach new provisions to it, the official said. The company was due to pay $165 billion in employee retention bonuses by Sunday to employees of AIG Financial Products, the unit that made bad bets on toxic mortgages and credit default swaps.
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