Thursday, February 24, 2011

Number 2

If you look on the sidebar here where I basically (try and) kick these criminals in the nuts, just check out #2. I wrote that at least a year ago, and it's not that I'm a savant, I just want to prove to my friends and family that for all of my psycho ranting, I think I have EM08 right. 

The new marauders don't use guns
Main Street Movement Erupts as Thousands Across Country Protest War on the Middle Class

Thursday 24 February 2011

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Cuts for Cooky: Jimi, Villanova Junction


Seldom recognized amongst most rock aficionados, Villanova Junction is a great kickback song for a lazy afternoon. As with Third Stone from the Sun he here echoes the influence of Wes, and creates a mood of introspection that I bet would surprise those only superficially familiar with his music. Jimi headlined Woodstock, and by the time he came on much of the crowd had left; like Jim Gray leaving, I wish I could make a short film with those who walked out on history and see what they think of their decision now. Nonplussed and as usual rising to the occasion, Jimi's Woodstock version is the best take.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Send in the Clowns, Don't Bother, They're Here: Client 9

Most corrupt gargoyle on most corrupt capitol building?
I've put off watching Client 9 for several reasons, but chief among them was that I didn't need to have my head explode again. You know, life is short, we've only got so much time on earth, blah blah blah. But much like Spitzer not being able to resist his temptations, I caved. Now I can say that I've reached yet another bottom to the abyss that is EM08, however, I'm now multi-tasking, if that's what you call throwing up while your head's also exploding. Knowledge is messy.

Greenberg's initials prove he knew
There's a moment among a roster full where the central theme of Alex Gibney's is thrown with such in your face gusto it becomes hallucinatory, because it involves no less than mister AIG himself, Hank Greenberg, concocting fraud. Greenberg -- widely regarded then as the most powerful corporate king -- had even initialed (more than once) a handwritten deal memo for the $500 million con. In the end, the Gen Re officers that Greenberg had roped into the scheme were found or copped pleas. Greenberg's fate, however, is perhaps best summed up in a snippet from an interview he gave to Charlie Rose in the aftermath of EM08 when Rose asked him about the value of his stock. Greenberg says that it's worthless, Rose presses for a figure, and Greenberg with a straight face and a shrug says, "a hundred million."

And what is "Gen Re"? Why, it's a re-insurance company, which is just a smoke and mirrors way of calling a casino a legit business, in the same way that insurance is in reality gambling. All reinsurance casinos do is invest in some of the bets that another insurance company made. Just as a CDS (credit default swap) is to a CDO (collateralized debt obligation). And who owns Gen Re? Warren Buffett via Berkshire Hathaway.

I've said it before; Two years plus after the largest heist in history, with forces very much still in play (foreclosuregate, pension fund crises, fed, state & muni debt loads, millions in  unemployment, over 43 million on food stamps, record number of bank closings...) with implications for the future that are unprecedented (just on debt loads alone) and  despite massive evidence of fraud, conflicts of interest, payola... there hasn't been talk of one prosecution for those who were the architects and overseers.

But evidently there's time, money and manpower to go after a governor getting laid.


Monday, February 14, 2011

Cuts for Cooky: Esperanza Spalding

Every once in a while I come across a young artist that really brings it. Just today I was checking out Olly Moss' graphic art and plan on hittin' it with a piece, he's that good, as in a Saul Bass heir. This piece, however, is about a musician.


Esperanza is so self-possessed it's a marvel. Jesus I've been in college and wondered how in the hell those kids even got in. Home-schooled, vibrant, articulate, smart as a whip, she's a triple + threat; bass, voice and pen. And at age 28 or so, along with Christian Scott, is one of the youngins devoting herself to jazz! For all of the ragging I do on kids these days, Esperanza -- as befits her name -- gives us old farts hope.


There's tons of her performance stuff out, but I'm posting these interviews because I think it's important for Renee to hear Esperanza talk about her life.




Thursday, February 10, 2011

Wireless Welfare: Add AT&T and Verizon to Deadbeat Welfarists

The more I thought about America the welfare state, other examples of course popped up like Wack-a-Moles. Education was the most obvious one. Art was another, such as the NEA. But where I step off the bus of the hardliners, I'm all for the NEA as long as puke industries like banking and healthcare are welfare industries.


Anyway, here's the WaPo's Cecelia Kang riffing on yet more welfarists. Cell companies! AT&T are total shitheads, but I would have to come across this at a time when I was just about to pull the trigger on an iPhone with Verizon.



AT&T, Verizon get most federal aid for phone service

AT&T and Verizon Communications were the biggest recipients of federal support from an $8 billion phone subsidy program, according todata released Thursday by the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Over the past three years, AT&T received $1.3 billion in funds to deploy phone lines to rural areas. Verizon got $1.27 billion in the same 2007-09 period.
Lawmakers and public interest groups are questioning the use of those federal funds, much of which appears to go to wireless services areas where telecom companies would be even without support. And they say the fund needs to be overhauled to focus on expanding broadband connections.
“Subscribers now pay close to 14 percent of their long-distance phone bills to subsidize scores of telephone providers in each geographic market, while other providers are serving the same markets without a penny of support,” Rep. Joe Barton (R-Tex.) said in a statement.
The committee's ranking member said the Federal Communications Commission, which oversees the fund and supplied the committee with the data, should be focused on reforming the fund instead of pushing to assert more authority over broadband by redefining Internet access as a telecommunications service.
“It is inexcusable that the FCC chairman is trying to reclassify broadband service under the pretext that the commission lacks authority to implement aspects of the national broadband plan, when he should instead be focusing on bipartisan aspects of the plan that he clearly has authority to move on, such as reducing antiquated voice service subsidies,” Barton said.
Last year, Verizon tapped the most money from the Universal Service high cost fund, mostly because of its acquisition of Alltel.
CenturyTel received $931 million, Alltel received $747 million, andTelephone and Data Systems received $661 million from 2007 through 2009.
Derek Turner, director of policy at the public interest group Free Press, noted that many of those company – including AT&T and Verizon – appeared to use the money for wireless networks. Those companies would have served areas where they received federal subsidies even without the government support, he said.
“The USF process at the FCC doesn’t ask if money is actually needed to ensure access to those areas,” Turner said. “Some areas have as many as19 carriers serving it with USF funds. That is scarce money that could be used for broadband.”
And some projects appear too expensive for the number of people served. Westgate Communications in Washington state, for example, runs 17 separate phone lines at a cost averaging $17,000 per line.
By Cecilia Kang  |  July 8, 2010; 5:31 PM ET

Welfare Gone Wild

Language is important, but because of its utilitarian usage has a "dulling effect" and makes people sitting ducks for all sorts of monkey biz. The father of public relations, Edward Bernays, understood this and capped a very successful career working with some of the largest corporations. Beyond Karl Rove is Frank Luntz who whipped the Republicans into marketing shape; thus, "estate taxes" became "death taxes." And in one of the most famous verbal hits ever, George Bush I fired "the dreaded 'L word'" at liberals and buried it next to Hoffa's bones.

So, language, words, are very important, and here's where I'm going; the largest heist in history was not a "bailout," much less "TARP," it was WELFARE. The most criminal and vile kind of welfare; staring down a double barrel sky is falling harangue from the right, left and most in-between. And that time-worn tactic, fear, was the sword of Damocles.

But in spite of the right's classic demonization of brown people crossing our borders in order to have kids and prey on us via welfare, not one on the left calls this fiasco, this absurdity of absurdities for what it is; Welfare Gone Wild.

And talk about some BIG assed welfare mothers; look at Israel, which has been on the dole for half a century. Cash, guns, ammo, tanks, bombs, intelligence... like clockwork, year after year going to foreigners, even in the face of Americans left holding the bag as with Katrina and now EM08.

Want more? Here's a list of the biggest and baddest welfare deadbeats in history; Let's call these the "Welfies", The Welfare Awards for the biggest deadbeats and beggars in history whose white collars make brown mothers on assistance seem like Pop Warner to the NFL:

  1. Too Big to Fail banksters, headed by BoA, JPMC, Citi, Wells, Morgan Stanley, and the ever-present when there's a con going down, Goldman. Need I go on?
  2. Insurance: AIG was one of the single largest recipients of direct welfare money payouts, some $70 billion of your money that barely left Tim Geithner's quivering, hush hush urgings and found its home lining the pockets of, yep, you got it right, Goldman, making them whole on their bets (Credit Default Swaps).
  3. While we're talking about insurance, we might as well talk about the way healthcare is welfare. Think about it, what is Medicare but welfare, like clockwork, siphoning taxpayer money to corporations? It's but one reason why healthcare in this country will never be socialized; it's controlled by not one or two industries, but three; big pharma, hmos and insurance. Any one of which has ultra-deep pockets and is so far up the ass of congress via their lobbyists everyday people have zero chance in this fight. Put three huge industrials together with common interests and it's bon voyage to hope for everyday people, hello to grabbing your ankles and the grimace of reality, whether you know this or not, because eventually, by odds, everyone gets sick.
  4. Agri-biz. Like clockwork, year after year, huge welfare payouts go out to pukes like Archer Daniels Midland and Con Agra for things like corn that they then flood the market with. Notice, childhood obesity and diabetes have been steadily increasing over the past 20-30 years and of course American adults are hogs without governors on their mouths. Agri-biz is perhaps the most pernicious and ironic form of welfare; pernicious because of the health ramifications, ironic because with the in-our-faces approach to cheap carbs in this country -- cereals to soda -- you'd think we'd wise up. Unfortunately, not even Dick Cheney having sausage links in his veins will wake us up.
  5. Big auto. Not much more to say here save for Chrysler is one of the worst welfare mothers, with the recent welfare it received being the second time it has come begging for money. The first was under the revered Lee Iacocca.
  6. Defense - If there's an overall Welfie winner, it's defense. By far the largest portion of our budget, it's 100% welfare, and one of the oldest, battle-tested methods of welfare transference from everyday people to the elite (pun intended). The corporations with defense contracts -- the Lockheeds, Boeings, Martin Marriettas of this privileged world -- are just the most obvious first line of welfare deadbeats, because the money is re-distributed via the equities market. Thus, the econ elite with the wherewithal (large capital investments + inside info + inside connections) enrich themselves as a result of the welfare state. Dis-Honorable mention and a special Welfie goes to Dick Cheney's Halliburton whose no-bid contracts as a result of the Iraq invasion set a new high in low for welfare leeching cronyism.
  7. Government employees. Take the heads of the three branches of government, and they all receive welfare healthcare - for life. Which raises the question; if a socialist healthcare system is so evil, then why don't our politicians who receive it deny it? Why don't they work to rescind it? why don't they do as Nancy asked inner city kids, and just say no...?  Enlarge the iris a bit and every government employee's pension -- including their healthcare -- is welfare.
A fundamental problem in America is that we lie to ourselves. Columbus was not a great explorer and people of equal talent to Einstein had to have toiled anonymously in cotton fields and sweat shops (hat tip to the late great Stephen Jay Gould). The truth of the matter is that America has no such thing as the "free market" and is not a capitalist system of economics, it is at best a perversion of ... of what I don't know, but in the same way and taking a cue from Wolfgang Schivelbusch, that under Stalin there was no such thing as Communism but tyranny flying under the guise.


The raw truth; America has been a welfare state for quite some time. In fact, the more I think about that and until I wrote the above list, I never realized just how deeply rooted in welfare we are. We're junkie status.

Now if we can just be honest with ourselves about it.