Fight The Good Fight

Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz is one tough human being:

Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Democrat of Florida, kicked off a breast cancer awareness campaign today with disclosures of her own that hadn’t been widely known before now.

The congresswoman revealed over the weekend that for the last year, she had battled breast cancer and had undergone seven major surgeries, including a double mastectomy and removal of her ovaries, all without skipping most beats on Capitol Hill or public events at home during her re-election in campaign. She disclosed her battle — including her decisions to have such cancer-prone areas removed because of a genetic predisposition — to the Miami Herald on Saturday, and during an interview this morning on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Stay well Congresswoman.

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Wall Street Hearts Geithner

After the Treasury Department released the refurbished plan to buy up “legacy assets” (formerly known by the less tasteful moniker “toxic assets”) Wall Street responded with two thumbs up. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has gone from goat to hero in one day:

But the stock market’s first-day verdict went in the right direction for Mr. Geithner this time, up nearly 7 percent and 500 points, in contrast to the precipitous slide after Mr. Geithner’s first effort, when his inability to explain in any detail how the program would work left Wall Street jittery about whether the administration had a workable plan.

Mr. Geithner’s plan aims to help banks sell their “legacy/toxic assets” at prices much higher than the market is willing to pay by providing government subsidies/guarantees to entice a small investment from private investors. With most of the money and practically all of the downside risk on the shoulders of the American taxpayer this is a win-win for the selling banks and the buying investors.

Now that the federal government will buy up about $1 trillion in “legacy/toxic assets” at inflated prices, this offers a great opportunity to make some more money from this financial debacle. This is where the credit default swap (CDS) becomes a derivative trader’s best friend. The savvy Wall Street types should load up on buying CDSs on every “legacy/toxic asset” the government purchases from the banks. If these overvalued “legacy/toxic assets” default, and the sellers of the CDSs are unable to make the buyers whole, the US government can step in with another cash infusion to bailout the sellers of these CDSs. The American taxpayer can continue to be a hapless ATM machine for Wall Street’s Masters of the Universe.

Of course, the above assumes that buying “legacy/toxic assets” at inflated prices comes with substantial downside risk. However, the Obama Administration is telling us that these assets will go up in value and everyone will make money. I just wonder if Geithner and company actually believe what they are saying or just want us to believe it.

Either way, I see another payday for Wall Street financed by American taxpayers.

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Moron

December 15, 1989:

All four engines of a KLM Boeing 747 temporarily shut down yesterday when the jumbo jet flew through a cloud of ash from the erupting Redoubt Volcano in Alaska, Government officials reported.

The huge airliner descended from 25,000 feet to 12,000 feet in eight minutes before the crew was able to restart two of the engines, and all four were operating when the plane, traveling from Amsterdam to Tokyo, landed at 12:25 P.M. in Anchorage, where it had been scheduled to stop for refueling.

The Redoubt (pronounced REED-out) Volcano, 115 miles southwest of Anchorage, erupted Thursday for the first time since 1966 and twice yesterday. The eruption of the 10,197-foot volcano caused ash, which can damage aircraft engines, to be spewed miles into the air. A cloud of ash drifted toward Anchorage, then passed the city. The jetliner was about 75 miles northwest of Anchorage and about 135 miles from the volcano when it flew through the cloud yesterday. #3 Airliners Halt Operations Paul Steucke, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration office in Anchorage, said the agency had issued seven notices to all pilots in the past 36 hours advising them of the volcanic ash cloud and the direction it was moving. He said that the agency knew of three airlines – Alaska, Markair and Delta – that had halted operations into Anchorage but that it was up to individual operators to decide what to do about the alerts.

Governor Bobby Jindal delivering the Republican response to the President on February 24, 2009:

 While some of the projects in the bill make sense, their legislation is larded with wasteful spending. It includes … $140 million for something called “volcano monitoring.” Instead of monitoring volcanoes, what Congress should be monitoring is the eruption of spending in Washington, D.C.

Part of the money for “volcano monitoring” Jindal mentioned is slated for continued monitoring of active volcanoes, including Mount Redoubt in Alaska.

March 23, 2009:

Alaska’s Mt. Redoubt volcano erupted five times overnight, throwing ash as high as 60,000 feet into the air, threatening air travel and raising health risks in some sparsely populated areas.

The biggest effect was likely to be on air travel. Nineteen civilian flights have already been canceled, Waythomas said.

In addition, the Air Force said 60 planes, including jet fighters, were being sheltered at Elmendorf Air Force Base outside Anchorage.

Above image from Alaska Volcano Observatory.

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Robbing The Taxpayer

The United States government is colluding with the banks to rob the taxpayer. That, in a nutshell, is the newly shaped Tim Geithner bank rescue plan. That, in a nutshell, was the Hank Paulson bank rescue plan that has already stolen $350 billion of taxpayer funds, plus over $175 billion in funds directly to AIG, and paid off casino bets that the banks made with their depositor’s money.

We are now told that banks are holding at least $2 trillion in “toxic assets”. These are said to be mostly made up of residential and commercial mortgages that may have defaulted or are likely to default. Tim Geithner intends for the government to buy about $1 trillion of these “toxic assets” at higher than market values. Apparently the market wants to pay only 30% of the original value of these assets but the banks want to sell them at 60% of value. So, in steps the government offering to guarantee these assets if the buyers (with majority financing by the American taxpayer) will pay a higher price that the banks holding them will find palatable. This of course is voluntary on the part of the banks holding these “toxic assets”. Apparently, this same vaunted Free Market that got us into this mess will see the government giveaway and respond and get us out of this mess. And, voila!, everyone is happy. The government subsidizes the difference between the sell price and the ask price, guarantees against losses to the buying investors, and the American taxpayer ends up holding the bad assets which will miraculously rise in value and everyone will make money. The markets apparently just have a confidence problem, Geithner and team would have us believe. That, my friends, is not the kind of Hope we signed up for. Paul Krugman calls this kind of giveaway a “moral hazard”. But, coming on the heels of the $350 billion giveaway and the bankers cashing their big bonus checks for creating even bigger losses, this is nothing but theft of American taxpayer money.

I say, not a single dime more of American taxpayer money for these banks until we have some basic answers. The first answer must be an accounting of where every cent of the first $350 billion went. If the government cannot account for that, not a single dime more.

We learned last week that AIG had spent a large portion of the $175 billion it received from the tax payer to pay off credit default swaps it had sold to counterparties such as Goldman Sachs. Many of these counterparties also took a large chunk of the $350 billion from the American taxpayer and presumably used the money to pay off credit default swaps they had also sold to other counterparties. I say presumably because no one will tell us and the government’s man in charge of managing TARP, Neel Kashkari, tells us he doesn’t know. All this money was handed out to the banks without any thought of where it might go and how it may resolve the banking crisis. It was apparently presumed that if you throw money at the banks the banking crisis would go away.

Now, if we assume (and I think it is a pretty good assumption), that most, if not all (some obviously went to fat bonuses), of the money we gave to the banks went to pay off credit default swaps after the “insured” collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) went south, what does it all mean? First, it helps to understand what a credit default swap (CDS) really is. We are told it is an exotic financial instrument that shifts risks to a third-party. Because it does that, banks that hold CDOs love it because by buying a CDS they can shift the risk of default to the seller (the “insurer”). The CDS market is very complex and apparently that is why AIG has to pay “retention bonuses” to keep the smart kids employed so they can manage these complex transactions.

But the above explanation of CDS really misses the point. The most important thing to know about a CDS is that the party buying a CDS does not have to own the protected CDO. In plain English, a CDS is a side bet. The party buying a CDS is betting that a CDO (which the buyer may not own) will default. The party selling a CDS is betting that the CDO will not default. The buyer/better pays a premium at regular intervals for the life of the CDS (usually 5 years) to the seller/casino. If the CDO does not default, the seller/casino wins by collecting the premiums. If the CDO defaults, the buyer/better wins and the seller/casino has to pay the face value of the CDO.

The best part, from the Free Marketer point of view, is that the CDS market is unregulated. So, if you actually own a CDO, you can shift your risk of default to an unregulated market by buying these CDS. The seller of CDS is not regulated so he actually does not have to have enough capital reserve to cover all the CDSs he is selling in the event of default. And, if you don’t own any CDOs, you can place side bets to your heart’s content on CDOs other investors may own. Since CDSs also trade, you can sell the bets (CDSs) to other betters if you like. As long as the mortgage market kept going up, up, up everyone made money. The seller made money on the premiums and CDS traders made money by buying and selling these instruments. It is no wonder that the CDS market had grown to over over $62 trillion dollars last year. By comparison, the underlying mortgage market was $7.1 trillion and the stock market was at $22 trillion before its fall last year. Most of the CDS market were side bets on a much smaller pool of underlying debt obligations. There were more side bets than actual insurance on the underlying debts. There simply was not enough money to cover all the side bets in the event of a major collapse of the mortgage market. And that is exactly what happened.

So, when the government gave money to AIG to help it pay off the billions of dollars of CDSs that it had sold, was the government paying off side bets or was it paying off CDS that were sold to banks that owned the underlying CDOs? Given that until last week the government did not know who AIG’s counterparties were, it is probably very likely that the government has used taxpayer money to pay off side bets at the CDS casino. It is also very likely that the much of the $350 billion of the TARP funds that the government has given to the banks with no accountability has also been used to pay off side bets. The government, it appears, has given away our money to pay billions of dollars in side bets because those who sold those bets never intended to cover them. Moral hazard is an understatement.

So, the government owes us an accounting. Show us that Treasury Department has not been settling side bets with our tax dollars. Tell us that the initial pool of hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars was not wasted on paying side bets of greedy bankers. If we settled side bets, how do we get our money back? Tell us how big the problem is. Who owns the CDS that protect actual “toxic assets”? We are not interested in paying off further side bets. Who are the counterparties that own actual “toxic assets”? How solvent are they?

Once that accounting has been done, the Treasury Department needs to explain to us why another giveaway to these banks is in our best interest. Specifically, it needs to explain to us why it is cheaper for the American taxpayer to throw more money at banks without having any control of these banks. Why should American taxpayers pay off these gamblers and casinos yet one more time? Why should we not consider this latest scheme another theft of taxpayer money?

We are going to need some answers before another dime is spent.

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Bangladesh Genocide Archives – Video: Attack On Dhaka

NBC News (3/29/1971): Attack On Dhaka

NBC News report from 3/29/1971 shows video taken from the Intercontinental Hotel in Dhaka on 3/26/1971 by a French video crew before they were expelled from Bangladesh by the Pakistan army. This is rare smuggled video of the Pakistan army crackdown that launched 9 months of genocide in Bangladesh.

All foreign reporters were confined to the Intercontinental Hotel when the Pakistan army started its crackdown on the night of 3/25/1971. The reporters were expelled from the country two days later. Their notes and video footage was confiscated. However, a French news crew managed to smuggle out video they had taken through the windows of their hotel room. In the video Dhaka is seen burning and tanks are seen on the streets near the hotel.

[Click for high resolution video]

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