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Obama to Use Pension Funds of Ordinary Americans to Pay for Bank Mortgage “Settlement”
Obama’s latest housing market chicanery should come as no surprise. As we discuss below, he will use the State of the Union address to announce a mortgage “settlement” by Federal regulators, and at least some state attorneys general. It’s yet another gambit designed to generate a campaign talking point while making the underlying problem worse.
The president seems to labor under the misapprehension that crimes by members of the elite must be swept under the rug because prosecuting them would destabilize the system. What he misses is that we are well past the point where coverups will work, and they may even blow up before the November elections. If nothing else, his settlement pact has a non-trivial Constitutional problem which the Republicans, if they are smart, will use to undermine the deal and discredit the Administration.
To add insult to injury, Obama is apparently going to present his belated Christmas present to the banking industry as a boon to ordinary citizens. He refused to appoint a real middle class advocate, Elizabeth Warren, to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, but he’s not above stealing her talking points.
We and other commentators have discussed how the mortgage settlement negotiations nominally led by Iowa attorney general Tom Miller had descended into farce. Almost nothing the Miller camp said was believable. They were presented as “attorney general” discussions when the Administration was pulling the strings. They’ve described a deal as weeks away for over a year. They kept claiming that they had undertaken investigations when not a single subpoena was issued by the AGs still involved in the negotiations. They’ve argued from the get go that a pact will be good for homeowners when the deal reached by under-resourced Nevada attorney general Catherine Cortez Masto with a single servicer, Saxon, resulted in a payout that is 10 to 20 times what the Administration is calling a victory. And that assumes that the banks will live up to their side of the deal when past settlements of servicing abuses have shown that they don’t.
The administration has finally woken up to the fact that the housing mess is almost certain to get worse before it gets better, and Obama must therefore be armed with better propaganda. The Miller-led talks have become a bit of an embarrassment and needed to be put out of their misery. So Team Obama and Federal banking regulators have agreed on terms and as we discussed last Friday, are upping the pressure on state attorneys general to fall into line. As reported by Shahien Nasiripour of the Financial Times:
Banks and government negotiators have cleared a big hurdle in efforts to resolve allegations of widespread mortgage-related misdeeds, agreeing on terms for a settlement that are being circulated to the 50 US states for approval, state officials and a bank representative say.
The proposed pact would potentially reduce mortgage balances and monthly payments by more than $25bn for distressed US homeowners…
State prosecutors have already received a set of documents detailing new mortgage servicing standards that the banks and the government negotiators have agreed to. The states were also being sent documents detailing other main components of the deal, such as the liability release for the banks, the so-called “menu” of options describing the various forms of aid to be given to borrowers, as well as the precise language of the so-called “most favoured nation” clause, which spells out how participating states in the deal would be eligible to receive more advantageous terms should a holdout state strike a more favourable deal on its own with the five targeted banks.
The story did not outline terms, but previous leaks have indicated that the bulk of the supposed settlement would come not in actual monies paid by the banks (the cash portion has been rumored at under $5 billion) but in credits given for mortgage modifications for principal modifications. There are numerous reasons why that stinks. The biggest is that servicers will be able to count modifying first mortgages that were securitized toward the total. Since one of the cardinal rules of finance is to use other people’s money rather than your own, this provision virtually guarantees that investor-owned mortgages will be the ones to be restructured. Why is this a bad idea? The banks are NOT required to write down the second mortgages that they have on their books. This reverses the contractual hierarchy that junior lien-holders take losses before senior lenders. So this deal amounts to a transfer from pension funds and other fixed income investors to the banks, at the Administration’s instigation.
Another reason the modification provision is poorly structured is that the banks are given a dollar target to hit. That means they will focus on modifying the biggest mortgages. So help will go to a comparatively small number of grossly overhoused borrowers, no doubt reinforcing the “profligate borrower” meme.
But those criticisms assume two other things: that the program is actually implemented. The experience with past consent decrees in the mortgage space is that the servicers get a legal get out of jail free card, a release, and do not hold up their end of the deal. Similarly, we’ve seen bank executives swear in front of Congress in late 2010 that they had stopped robosigning, which turned out to be a brazen lie. So here, odds favor that servicers will pretty much do nothing except perhaps be given credit for mortgage modifications they would have made anyhow.
There are two clever features of the deal, but neither look intended to benefit ordinary citizens. One is that the deal throws some funding at chronically cash stressed mortgage counselors. They are thus certain to voice approval of the pact. The other is (per the FT story) the deal’s “most favored nations clause” is designed to reduce the bargaining leverage of any AGs that go their own way. It means that any servicer will have the incentive to fight hard against giving any state a better deal because it will automagically trigger improved terms across the states that signed on to the Federal deal. But this may have interesting perverse effects, since banks that refuse to settle with breakaway AGs will ultimately have damages awarded by a court. That means longer and most costly fights by the states, but in most cases, ultimately bigger awards (frankly, the fact set is so bad that all the state AGs need to do is focus on fairly conservative legal theories to have good odds of scoring big wins).
Dave Dayen seemed to think that the AG rebellion was likely to stay firm, given how few of the Democrats were going to Chicago on Monday for an arm-twisting meeting with HUD head Shaun Donovan and an unnamed emissary from the Department of Justice. I would not be so certain. With states so budget starved, I don’t see how anyone can justify sending a live body to Chicago when a phone briefing would work just as well. More important, the most favored nation clause is nasty, and may nudge some fence-sitters over the line.
And I have also been told that Donovan was on the Hill late last week pressuring Congressmen to support the deal. Since this is a regulatory measure that does not require Congressional approval, this move is meant to deprive dissenting state AGs from any support in local media from sympathetic Congressmen. For instance, 31 California representatives wrote the Justice Department, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency calling on them to “investigate possible violations of law or regulations by financial institutions in their handling of delinquent mortgages, mortgage modifications and foreclosures.” Clearly they could be expected to support California attorney general Kamala Harris’ withdrawal of the deal. Donovon is trying to get them and like minded solons speaking from the Obama script.
But the Administration’s scheme may not be playing out according to script. Senator Sherrod Brown sent a letter last week to associate attorney general Thomas Perelli, Donovan, the CFPB’s Richard Cordray and Tom Miller criticizing the settlement pact. It could have been written by Naked Capitalism readers. Key section:
Now while Republicans may relish the specter of Democrats infighting, the fact is no one is going to want to be seen to be undermining the leader of the party in an election year. So that will put a damper on how aggressive the opponents will be. And media outlets have been amplifying Obama’s efforts to take credit for gravity. For instance, the Administration is touting the fall in foreclosures as an indicator of success when their policies have ranged from do nothing to disasters like HAMP. The fall in foreclosures is actually a sign of failure, as banks are attenuating the process more and more, in some cases due to their inability to come up with necessary documentation, in others out of a desire to wring even more fees out of investors (when a borrower can’t pay, the bank’s fees come first out of the eventual sale of the house).
Either a Gingrich nomination or Romney getting too dented during Republican primary fights increase the odds of what heretofore seemed impossible: an Obama win in November. So if the Republicans were smart, they’d take advantage of a serious weakness in this deal: that it violates the 5th Amendment takings clause. I am told by Bill Frey of Greenwich Financial that a servicer safe harbor provision in HAMP, which was supposed to shield servicers from investor lawsuits over mortgage modifications, was passed by both the House and Senate but was removed in reconciliation because that provision would have run afoul of the 5th Amendment. This settlement is intended to have servicers engage in even more aggressive mortgage modifications and would thus seem to have precisely the same Constitutional problem.
As I urged last week, please call your state attorney general and tell them you think taking from your pension to enrich banks for abusing homeowners is a lousy idea and they should therefore refuse to sign on to the settlement. You can find their phone numbers here. Please call today if you haven’t already. Thanks!
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91 Comments so far
Show Allanother bang on article - cd is on a roll today folks
dr paul craig roberts said it at least a year ago - the government would take private pensions to cover the banks
they have squandered all their own cash and they have sold all the trash to the world that they possibly could and now they have become carnivores, eating their own as it were
"A government that runs a deficit too large to finance by borrowing will print money as long as it can. When the printing press begins to push up inflation and push down the exchange value of the dollar, the government will be tempted to reduce its debt by reneging on entitlements or by confiscating private assets such as pension funds. When it has confiscated private assets and reneged on public obligations, nothing is left but the printing press.
We owe the end-time situation that we face to open-ended wars and to an unregulated financial system concentrated in a few hands that produces financial crises by leveraging debt to irresponsible levels. "
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=23612
"The fallback target will be private pensions, assuming any survive plunder by the Wall Street investment banks. Pension funds could be required to invest in Treasury debt or they could face a levy. In the Clinton administration, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Alicia Munnell proposed confiscating 15% of all pension assets on the grounds that they had accumulated tax free. Certainly Washington will steal Americans' pensions, just as Washington has stolen Americans' civil liberties, in order to continue the empire's wars of hegemony."
http://www.rense.com/general92/spins.htm
the sheeple can't seem to catch on at all
and that's just the way they planned
shout out to the rockefeller education system - producing generation after generation of illiterate children who can't think
"I don't want a nation of thinkers. I want a nation of workers." John D. Rockefeller - The Rockefeller's founded the National Education Association.
"In 1954, a special Congressional Committee investigated the interlocking web of tax-exempt foundations to see what impact their grants were having on the American psyche. The Committee stumbled onto the fact that some of these groups had embarked upon a gigantic project to rewrite American history and incorporate it into new school text books.
Norman Dodd, the committee's research director found, in the archives of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace the following remarkable statement of purpose:
The only way to maintain control of the population was to obtain control of education in the U.S. They realized this was a prodigious task so they approached the Rockefeller Foundation with the suggestion that they go in tandem and that portion of education which could be considered as domestically oriented be taken over by the Rockefeller Foundation and that portion which was oriented to International matters be taken over by the Carnegie Endowment.
The Rockefeller Foundation agreed to take on the domestic portion of the task. The purpose of all this interest in history, was of course to rewrite it. Dodd explained:
They decided that the success of this program lay in the manner in which American history was to be presented. They then approached four of the then most-prominent historians -- such as Mary and Charles Beard -- with the suggestion that they alter the manner in which they were accustomed to presenting the subject. They [were] turned down flat, so...they decided they [had] to build a coterie of historians of their own selection."
http://www.theforbiddenknowledge.com/hardtruth/rewriting_history.htm
control the media, put flouride in the water, saccharine in the food, sell the public the toxic gmo's and top all that off with those good old vaccines
what do you get: a bloated and illiterate populace who can't strategize a tic tac toe game
Obama isn't under a "misapprehension" that restoring control of the banking system "would destabilize the system".
Obama fully understands that his failure to continue transferring wealth from the 99% to the 1% will diminish the bankster "contributions" he needs to become the first politician to amass a corporate funded billion dollar campaign war chest.
bingo ray - you are on a roll these days as well - good job bro
Obama's first actions during his second term will be to fund ongoing corporate bailouts by raiding money that working class Americans have put into Social Security and Medicare.
Exactly right!
I also don't believe it's a "misapprehension." I believe he is doing exactly what he is told to do. All those bankers who are supposedly working for him in his administration, well, he's working for them. He could do nothing different; they wouldn't let him.
medmedude, your quote from Paul Craig Roberts makes him look pretty stupid so far with his fears of inflation and loss of dollar value. Perhaps his thinking will be vindicated in a few decades.
greg: i don't know what planet your beaming from but the dollar has lost about 40% of value in the last three years - look at the price of gold
inflation in the real world is at least 12%
that's why a coffee now costs 6 bucks
just in case you hadn't noticed
btw. howz the weather in the crab nebula
Oh, c'mon, you must know better than to cherry-pick a few items to make your case. The value of the dollar has zero to do with the price of gold. Some think gold is of special value when times get tough, so they buy a bunch of it and it goes up in value. When times get better it loses value. The price of coffee and other commodities jump up and down all the time. Anyone who tries to make economic policy by the vagaries of commodity prices has no sense.
Been to the grocery store lately? Oh. Wait. The price of food is not considered in the inflation index. Sorry. My bad. And besides, we're talking commodities, and of course we shouldn't really figure them into the inflation index either now should we?
GregR, you may want to stick to your zone 4 gardening. Hopefully you know more about that than you do economics.
"The U.S. Dollar's Relationship to Gold by Stan Klein: In the current run up in the price of gold, it is time to reassess how gold really relates to the dollar. One has to remember that gold almost never changes in value. It is the dollar that revalues in relationship to gold.
"There is endless discussion regarding officially re-linking the dollar to gold in some manner, but in fact, gold is de facto tied to the dollar, and has been since the birth of the nation. Each time that gold is purchased, the price is different, and reflects the current perceived change in the relationship between gold and the dollar."
http://www.coinsite.com/content/faq/dollarvsgold.asp
"Anyone who follows the gold and currency markets closely will realize that the US$ gold price and the Dollar Index generally trend in opposite directions...
"The reason that gold and the dollar generally trend in opposite directions is that in one respect gold is just another currency. It is no longer money in the true meaning of the word, but it tends to trade as if it were. As a result, when the dollar weakens on the foreign exchange market over an extended period then the US$ gold price will generally rise during the same period; and when the dollar strengthens over many months the US$ gold price will usually fall."
http://news.goldseek.com/SpeculativeInvestor/1171382460.php
"There is no fundamental reason for the long-term relationship between the U.S. dollar and gold, but a relationship certainly does exists."
http://seekingalpha.com/article/98011-the-amazing-dollar-gold-correlation
Stan Klein's reasoning is quite a stretch. The dollar falls 25% in a decade, while gold appreciates in value nearly six-fold. So, saying that "gold almost never changes in value. It is the dollar that revalues in relationship to gold" doesn't seem to make any sense. Better luck next time.
Greg, if you paid to take a university Econ course, ask for a refund.
"The value of the dollar has zero to do with the price of gold."
But clearly it does.
What is also clear is that you live in a perpetual state of denial, not willing to even entertain the possibility of a major shock to the system when history is replete with them. I'm inclined not to bet on your outlook, although, many are.
"Better luck next time."
Luck has nothing to do with this. Look to history.
Naked Capitalism is a terrific site - if you want to know what is really going on in the murky world of financial shenanigans and its inter action with politics. Yves Smith has been calling the shots on this stuff for some time ....
Certainly we need to wait for the details, but I would hope that ALL involved will pay somewhat of a penalty. Since the involvement is so widespread this is unlikely, but at least banks and yes, investors (pension funds, etc.) should pay for this stupidity that has cost taxpayers quite a lot and the unemployed, many of whom have suffered a great deal. Everyone in this greedy, sordid mess should pay, but, at any rate, the more the pain is spread around, the more 'learning' that will take place. Most of the serial con artists at the top of the heap (Goldman, etc.) will not pay, but at least others can learn that these bastards only think of themselves and hope to fleece everyone else.
Sorry, Greg, disagree - pension funds who were duped into buying MBS under the misapprehension that they were AAA securities, as assured by the charming ratings agencies, should not be made to take the hit before the banks that sold these things when they (the banks) knew the mortgages that backed the securities were crap - and sold them BECAUSE they knew they were crap, so they wouldn't be stuck with them when the shit hit the fan, and knew they were crap because they crafted them in the first place. Haven't you been paying attention to Bill Black?
The banks should have to do all the principle write downs on stuff that is on their books first AND there should be prosecution of these guys for accounting control fraud - this deal, in essence, holds them blameless by giving them immunity from prosecution in return for this slap on the wrist, and adding insult to injury we are the ones to get slapped .....
So why should pensioners and not GS pay? Why is it OK for Obama to be pushing such a deal?
Obama voted for immunity for telecoms for spying on us, gave Bush et. al immunity for lying to us, and now wants to gave bankers immunity for stealing from us ....
Exactly Aquifer. Great comment. Thanks.
Not only did they knowingly sell bogus AAA securities knowing they were bullshit, they bet against them and made billions!
They did exactly that!
We can only look forward to more of the same.
Vote 3rd Party:
Jill Stein, Green Party
www.jillstein.org
Rocky Anderson, Justice Party
www.justicepartyusa.net
Kay, and everybody else,
you might want to check out
http://www.livestream.com/greenpartyus
9 PM Tues Jan 24th Green Party comments on Obama's State of the Union
http://www.jillstein.org
8:30 PM Wed 25th Green Party's own State of the Union
Exactly! Yes and Yes!
An if the Greens don't have someone on the ticket I suggest people vote against the incumbent candidate so they don't stick around for more than one term.
The banks knew the securities were crap because they bet against them. It's like a betting against your own lame horse!
Good comment, Aquifer, always a deep source of wisdom. Greg's comment amounts to saying "we're all guilty, so no one should be singled out." Basta! It's time for the greedy bastards to pay.
Personally, I would love to see the "greediest" pay the most. But the point is that this will not happen. We can wish and bs all we want, but it's just hot air. There WAS at least some greed involved in all aspects of this mess. If everyone takes a haircut, then everyone has the best chance to learn a lesson, and there is then a better chance that this kind of Ponzi scheme will not happen again in the near future. If we could at least get by for another generation (there's a sucker born every minute) that would be a relief. I wish we could prosecute all the fraud involved in this damn mess, but it would likely tie up the courts for the rest of most of our lives.
Yes Greg, this will not happen as long as folks like you sigh and say "oh well, just chalk it up to experience and let's move on." This kind of Ponzi scheme will happen again until there is credible deterrence - that means jail and loss of income big time for the perpetrators. If it takes kicking these bums out of office to get some better prosecutors, so be it. Saying all must pay is like telling the rape victim she should have to put up with her STD, or worse, because she didn't stay home instead of going out or she insisted on going out in a skirt instead of pants, or she didn't get to her pepper spray in time ....
So let's not prosecute cause it's too much trouble - would that be your answer for someone who mugged you or a member of your family?
Get by for another generation? Who the heck are you kidding - we won't "get by" for the next few years ...
I don't need your silly bs about rape. If you knew anything about the mess we've been living through, you would understand the requirement for greed to infiltrate and involve ALL aspects. You don't seem to have a fundamental understanding of the insidious and all encompassing aspect of the Greenspan-Ayn Rand era of non-regulation and the tacit agreement that evolved among the media, politicians, regulators, etc., etc. There were not nearly enough like Warren Buffet and Brooksley Born to make a dent in the free-for-all of unfettered capitalism. Bankers and investors threw caution to the wind in their search for ever greater rewards. I wish every fucking one of them could pay up with interest. But the more wealthy and connected one is, the less likely of suffering consequences. It's tough god damn shit. We can all stew on it or we can try to get a little smarter in the future.
And you don't seem to have a fundamental understanding of when to label a crime a crime and treat it accordingly. Fraud was committed and should be punished - to fail to do so is to condone it. The "insidiousness" you speak of was not visited on us from on high but was perpetrated step by step - and the existence of Brooksley Born and the way she was dealt with are rather "tell tale" signs of that.
The "investors" you seem willing to cook are those who had pensions through their employers - with no control over where the money went. The "greedy" investors you refer to are those who ran the banks for ruthless profits ....
"But the more wealthy and connected one is, the less likely of suffering consequences. It's tough god damn shit. We can all stew on it or we can try to get a little smarter in the future."
I repeat - would you advocate not going after a mugger because he was wealthy?
Get a little smarter - yeah i could go for that - kick out the bums who refuse to go after muggers because they are wealthy ....
Just what does "justice" mean to you - is the heavy hand of the law to be laid only on the poor?
But i do agree, there is a lesson we need to learn - F the stock market ....
"I repeat - would you advocate not going after a mugger because he was wealthy?"
Nope, GregR's opinion is the muggee deserved to be mugged for being in a muggable place at a muggable time with muggable money in his muggable pocket.
I've learned my lesson. I'll never trust them bond-rating companies again. I'll learn to use my own intuition and rate them bonds myself.
Imagine wanting my retirement investments to increase in value as fast as possible. How GREEDY of me!
Yes, how greedy of you! Do you truly see? The bigger the potential reward, the greater the risk. For me, farming was plenty of risk in my life. I always put any extra cash in the absolute safest investment possible: fully fdic insured savings. My rewards were small, but I've NEVER trusted Wall Street. You play with the big financial dogs, sometimes you win, sometimes you get fucked.
Greg,
The people that are going to lose are the pensioners whose pension money was invested by the pension funds over which they had no control - You, as your own employer, had a choice, they didn't ...
"farming was plenty of risk in my life."
It's like calling yourself not so materialistic but then go to expensive dinners and fly all over the world. A true farmer would never say what you say. Screw the phonies.
Once again, you dishonestly and deceptively couch your desires, the program you actually support and are advancing, as mere benign neutral observations - "the point is that this will not happen."
You are being hypocritical and disingenuous to an extreme degree here. You claim to fear that it would "tie up the courts for the rest of most of our lives" to prosecute fraud. Either you think crimes were committed, or you do not. But you, as always, try to have it both ways and disguise your agenda. If crimes were committed, if you were telling the truth when you say "I wish we could prosecute all the fraud" there is no possible way you could then argue against doing that because it would "tie up the courts."
Blaming the poor and powerless people in the country for the actions of the wealthy and powerful few is another common theme of yours. How come prosecuting the poor and powerless is not seen by you as something that would "tie up the courts for most of our lives?" That is what is happening now, and will for the rest of our lives if we don't fight back.
I know, I know, you would agree with us about fighting back, it is just that you think it is not possible so therefore you will argue against it - argue against the very thing that you just assured all of us you supported. That is deceptive and dishonest.
Here is a dynamite segment that appeared on Dylan Ratigan's program this evening. It is a must see. It really explains a lot.
Here it is: Look for the clip on the left titled "Americans growing dissatisfied with the economy.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37560195/
>> ... they (the banks) knew the mortgages that backed the securities were crap - and sold them BECAUSE they knew they were crap, so they wouldn't be stuck with them when the shit hit the fan, and knew they were crap because they crafted them in the first place.<<
And, THEN, purchased insurance policies on those "AAA securities" they sold called CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS from the likes of AIG which also thought it was insuring AAA rated securities. Note that also many "financial institutions" were purchasing swaps on securities they had not ever owned or sold. In this unregulated market an entity is allowed to purchase such insurance in such a fashion. But companies like Goldman Sachs profited doubly by selling shit for securities and then insuring that same shit knowing they would collect when the shit went down the toilet. It would be like me selling you a car with no brakes after telling you I had just had the brakes repaired while at the same time purchasing an insurance policy on your life.
And, geez, I'm sorry for mentioning these too hard for the common man to understand DERIVATIVES called credit default swaps. "No point in explaining these things to people. Sorry. But they are just too complex for you to understand."
is he a war criminal? yes...is he bought-and-paid for? yes... is he a liar?..yes!.... he is oourprez!...u.s.a.! u.s.a.!
So folks- Obama is not trustworthy. NO VOTE for BO.
Leave our damn pensions alone. Unconscionable and devious terms to hurt the hardworking people in our country. No damn deal. Thanks for the daylight and we shall all voice our disapproval to AGs. Schuette? Are you listening to these awful terms? MSPERS? Are you listening in MIchigan to your retirees? Wake up and complain.
"... transforms a democratic state into a feudal system of corporate masters and serfs."...chris hedges
I heard Dr Michael Hudson (economist) use the term Neo-Feudalism a few years ago. Even before this interview. http://richardbrenneman.wordpress.com/2010/06/27/michael-hudson-the-economics-of-neofeudalism/
I wonder if Hedges got the term from Hudson? No matter, I have high regard for both.
Stacy Herbert (financial journalist on Keiser Report) quoted Hedges on latest episode and ran video clip of him. good stuff http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4d6jMmKseI
Chris Hedges for Pres. and Drs. Michael Hudson; WK Black and Paul Craig Roberts as chief economic advisors, Sec. Treas. and Fed Reserve Chair. Not necessarily in that order, are my choices.
This is extremely important information. This is AGAIN about the Rule of Law, and justice for some and not for others. Call your AG!
"The proposed pact would potentially reduce mortgage balances and monthly payments by more than $25bn for distressed US homeowners…"
And settling for $25bn for an entire country of screwed citizens would put how much more money in the pockets of a few bansters responsible for this disaster that will continue as long as the economy continues to tank?
25 billion for homeowners and 15 trillion for the banksters.....
Well under 1% for the 99%....
And well over 99% for the 1%....
Funny how it always works out that way.....
No Oily Bomber Bankster ! No Vote. Get in the Streets in 2012. Hope to see you soon !
We have not seen anything yet, The looting will continue, until the people stop it, or until there is nothing left. A banking holiday and gold confiscation are still to come. When they end rent support and food stamps, you won't want to be in a large city, they will burn.
I have no unbiased comment. I am a secret admirer of of her and a huge fan of her website. She'll rock your world daily.
(voice of Austin Powers) Oh Behave!
But seriously, I fully agree.
Whew! For a minute there, I thought Obama was going to privatize Social Security.
Be patient, wait til after the "election"
I don't buy the 'Armageddon' thing. But I do buy that we are headed down a very dangerous, treacherous, anti American-original path. I believe that Orwell, Caldwell, Huxley, and maybe Gene Roddenberry, had it right. We are just blind to the potential of the severest betrayal Americans could experience, the demolition of this precious belief system. To be betrayed by your friend is devastating. We have all felt that. To be betrayed by a family member just wreaks havoc, and most have had that. But to experience a collective group consciousness betrayal by a man who promised change and compassion and retribution and healing, just flows through my veins as a silver tongued poisin that stops at each cell and laughs outrageously. It scars my soul. I am going to drink port and smoke and speak. I am just getting started. Today I express whatever Aquarian voice I may have.
He is not trying to privatize it, he is trying to destroy it. He has already decreased the payroll tax by 33%, which will hasten its bankruptcy/demise.