Leigh M………

Entries from September 2008

Yes Please.

September 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Best plan I have heard yet on the 700 billion whozamawhachit (from my buddy Bill Palladino!):

“My solution to the current financial disaster. Take the 700 Billion dollars the Fed would use to bail out the greedy crooks that built this house of cards. Do the math with it. Divide it by the approximately 300 million American citizens and give it back to us dammit! That would be approximately 2.3 Million dollars each for every living person.
Put a restraint on it. They must invest it back in majority US owned Companies. After five years they have access to 10% of it, but after that they can’t touch it for ten years. Imagine the market movement then. And imagine if Every single American could afford to own stock. Hell! Round that number down to a clean 2 Million a piece, and give the half of the rest to charity, and with the other half buy every household in American solar panels and electric cars!

Send all the big honking V8 engine monsters to China to melt down.”

 

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Read more on the wonders of  Paul Newman here. XO.

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Paul Newman

September 27, 2008 · 2 Comments

 January 26, 1925 – September 26, 2008

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What The Hell Is Goin’ On?

September 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Ok-

I have spent the morning trying to understand the how and why of the 700 billion bailout. My initial instincts are to question the situation that has been deemed “a crisis”.

DEAR GOD!

How did this crisis develop?

Did the money wizards of the world suddenly decide to pelt the U.S economy with their black demon magic?….

From atop their dark tower of fear….  

Hmmmmm…….my hunch runs more along the edge that

these “people” have been stirring their cauldron of crrriiissssissssss for some time now. Or at least- letting it boil over.

There is something fishy about allllll of this.

Sure something needs to be done- but for whom- and why- and how did we even get here?

This article I found on Daily Kos (an online political community) confirmed my questioning mind- and helped to articulate my concerns.

What Is This Money Even For?

Fri Sep 26, 2008 at 07:00:05 AM PDT

What Devilstower said in an earlier post can’t be repeated enough. The $700 billion figure isn’t an explainable one, given the purported problem at hand of “bad mortgages”.

And that’s where we get that math problem. 1% of all mortgages — the amount now in default — comes out to $111 billion. Triple that, and you’ve got $333 billion. Let’s round that up to $350 billion. So even if we reach the point where three percent of all mortgages are in foreclosure, the total dollars to flat out buy all those mortgages would be half of what the Bush-Paulson-McCain plan calls for.

Then we need to factor in that a purchased mortgage isn’t worth zero. After all, these documents come with property attached. Even with home prices falling and some of the homes lying around unsold, it’s safe to assume that some portion of these values could be recovered. In the S&L crisis, about 70% of asset value was recovered, but let’s say we don’t do that well. Let’s say we hit 50%. Then the real outlay for taxpayers would be around $175 billion.

Which, frankly, is a number that Wall Street should be able to handle without our help. After all, the top firms on Wall Steet payed out $120 billion in bonuses alone between 2000 and 2006. If they’ve got that kind of mad money, why do they need us to step in now? And why do they need twice as much as all the mortgages that are even likely to implode?

Indeed. And despite what we’ve been told, then, we can only presume that the problem is in fact not all the bad, scary subprime mortgages. And it’s not. Yes, a lot of people are finding themselves upside-down on their houses right now, but Paulson isn’t proposing we do squat to solve that — and even the “controversial” Democratic counterproposal, that we actually do at least a little something to help those people, after they’ve already gone bankrupt, is pathetically weak.

Instead, we’re getting a Wall Street bailout not of the mortgages, but of the absurd, speculative, economy-wrecking derivatives based on those mortgages, derivatives that investors and banks ravenously sold each other at unsupportable and quite-probably-crooked prices. Those derivatives, generally speaking, are “bets” on the state of the underlying mortgages. And they didn’t just bet wrong — they bet irrationally, based on presumptions of near-zero risks to those underlying mortgages. And worse, the big banks even — bafflingly — got special permission to overleverage themselves 40 to 1, all but assuring collapse if those derivatives went south. Which they did.

Fine, then, but how is that self-induced bubble an unweatherable economic crisis for the rest of us? Yes, those banks may fail — as they should. It’d be a crime if they didn’t, given their mismanagement of their accounts. But the real problem is that those banks are, literally, too big to be allowed to fail. Their failure would present a liquidity problem for the rest of the market. They can do anything – they could even burn money on the street — and the strong preference of government would be to bail them out for it, because the alternative is financial chaos.

The subprime mortgages aren’t the problem. And the overleveraged firmsshouldn’t be a problem. The problem is keeping the rest of the economy afloat no matter what happens to the firms in trouble.
The problem is that there’s a lot of different ways to do that, and it’s not at all clear that Paulson’s way is the best. Paulson proposes to bailout the firms in question, by giving them the Mother Of All Do-Overs. We taxpayers will buy, from banks both in trouble and not in trouble, up to $700 billion dollars worth of the overpriced, now-worth-much-much-less derivatives in question. That will provide a real (inflated) price for the derivatives, and lo and behold — the firms will be saved, because we’ve now created a market for their unmarketable, worthless products. They stay afloat, because the taxpayers pay them to do it. And, importantly, since all the banks now know that if any of the other banks are hemorrhaging money through these bad derivatives, the taxpayers will bail them out at some decent price, all the banks trust each other again, and feel free to loan each other money again, and the liquidity problems are solved. In theory. If the Fed can keep up with all the bad paper being tossed at them.

But while that’s unquestionably the best possible plan Wall Street could themselves possibly come up with — it doesn’t just save their bacon, it makes large parts of their debts simply vanish – it’s an obscenely expensive thing, and is rife with problems. The temptation for profiteering on the part of the corporations is going to be huge, and quite doable. The underlying mortgages are still defaulting, and more importantly the bursting of the housing bubble has put millions of people into an insupportable amount of debt, and those are notgoing to be happy consumers, so the economy is still going to go very south, very quickly.

And it smacks, strongly, of the very same dynamic that has governed the last few decades of American history. We’re transferring yet another giant chunk of money from the general public to the most wealthy. In this case, a trillion dollars or so worth.

All the while, we’re being told that we can’t be punitive about this, and punish the firms in question. We can’t set new regulations. We can’t take equity in the firms we’re giving so much money too. We can’t do squat except buy their bad paper, and hope to hell that they survive, while the rest of us wallow in the steep recession almost certain to come as a result of the housing bubble collapse.
Is that the best approach? I’m not convinced, and I’m more than a little angry at the Democrats for, once again, accepting what they are given and trying to tweak it rather than coming up with true counterproposals. Propping the housing market up from the bottom may be much cheaper than trying to prop up the entire derivatives market from the top, and would seemingly have the same stabilizing market effects. Taking equity in firms in exchange for taking their crappy, non-marketable products would, yes, seem the absolute least we could do — there must be an upside for the taxpayer in providing this trillion-dollar investment at the expense of ballooning our national debt and crippling public sector works for a decade or more. But that’s still weak tea, all things considered.

Not being talked about as much, though, is that we must allow overextended companies to fail. It is an essential part of our economy that economy-threatening recklessness on the part of speculators not be rewarded, andespecially not be rewarded by the government. Any actions to stabilize the economy should indeed inject liquidity — but it’s not clear that injecting liquiditythrough the very companies most in trouble is sustainable or even rational.

More than that, I think Americans can and should be quite furious at the way this extraordinarily business-friendly proposal has been steamrolled through under premise of imminent crisis, with no serious debate of any more balanced alternatives. It is another black mark in the legacy of the Bush years — for both parties. If the Congress really passes the Paulson plan with, as it looks now, absolutely no substantive debate of alternative plans, it has once again shirked its most basic duties, and is an embarrassment to the nation it supposedly represents.

One thing is for certain, though. No matter how bad a deal looks, doctrinaire Republicans can always be counted on to come up with an “alternative” that would be ten times worse. Their “alternative” plan, the one they’re holding out for? Cut corporate taxes — again — and remove even more regulations on those companies — again. Because that’ll release the magic money fairies and the problem will be solved. And no, I’m not kidding. Except about the fairies. Maybe.

There’s been nothing about the Washington reaction to this that has inspired confidence. And now that the fight has turned explicitly political — with no regard whatsoever for the underlying economics — I can only imagine it getting less substantive from here.

 

HA!-

Watch This….**************************

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A Bunch of Cryin’ Babies!

September 18, 2008 · 1 Comment

 

The earth is very, very old.

 

The existence of humans, in relation to the existence of the Earth, is kind of a new thing.

We’re just a bunch of weee lil’ babies.

 

Check it out-

On thegeological clock, the age of the earth is represented by the 12 hours on the face of the clock.  The sweep of the minute hand around the dial twelve times from 12 to 12 marks the passage of time from the beginning of the earth to today………

 

The Pleistocene Epoch started at about 11:59 plus 51 seconds, just 9 seconds ago. There was no evidence of Man in North America this early, however most of the animals found in Missouri today were here, including horses. All of the horses disappeared from North America before the first men arrived, but fortunately the history of this group is written in the rocks of the continent.

 

 Man appeared in North America at about 11:59  plus 59 6/7 seconds, just 1/7 second ago! The climate, plants, and animals were then much the same as they are today. It is likely that some mastodons and possibly elephants, sloths, and peccaries were still to be seen.  In Europe, Man had appeared earlier.

                            (i luv geology). 

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Man on Wire

September 16, 2008 · 1 Comment

Aaron and I 

saw a lovely movie.

Man on Wire is a sweet documentary about Philippe Petit- a high-wire walker.

He is known for his fantastical feats of daring and the creation of some seriously surreal sights……         

The movie was largely focused on the planning and execution of walking a wire strung between the World Trade Center towers.

The movie was beautiful.

To watch the 1974 footage of Petit gracefully and defiantly orchestrate this scene is so strange and quiet and comforting (at least for me it was).  

The film makers never once mention the events of September 11, 2001. The choice to do so creates a potent experience. As I/we inevitably associate scenes of planes diving into buildings

and fire

and bodies falling

and all of the other devastating impossibilities-  with the sight of the towers. And well, as a viewer, you almost prepare yourself to be devastated- (the association is so strong, the psychic wounds so deep).

And here you are watching the initial construction of the towers and the scenes are whole and people aren’t broken………but yet you wait- bracing yourself for those moments when you will have to relive the sadness.

You wait-

but the crumbling towers aren’t a part of this story. 

It is instead a story of creation and absurdity and a different set of impossibilities………

There was something healing about the experience- something comforting.

A sigh of relief came when it was just- a sweet, absurd story 

with Gymnopedie No. 1

and awe

and wonder.

Thank You.

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ummm- yeah……..

September 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

ummm- ….I don’t feel so good.

more about "ummm- yeah.", posted with vodpod

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Creeped Out.

September 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I just finished The Road by Cormac Mccarthy. This story is a post apocalyptic (maybe) nightmare and I loved every second of it. Bleak.

Scary.

It was creeeeeeepy.

 

You know what else is creepy?

John McCain and Sarah Palin.

Every time I hear her speak my mind beings to drift toward an almost subconscious association- a quick thought, a flash- and then a shudder as I recall scenes from a book written by Margret Attwood-

The HandMaid’s Tale.

For you that aren’t familiar with this story, a quick synopsis: 

“The novel explores themes of women in subjugation, and the various means by which they gain agency, against the backdrop of a totalitarian evangelical-Christian theocracy which has overthrown the United States government in the near future.”

Now,

Maybe my mind has a tendency to sway toward catastrophe.

Then again the fear tactics and horror film future John McCain and Co. like to conjure up for the viewing populous kind-of inspire the freak show future in my own mind- but in my version the monsters aren’t Islamic terrorists.

No- this dream is not a good one. 

It is unfortunate (for John McCain) that John McCain in his efforts to gain the white house has chosen to grovel at the feet of the religious right in choosing Sarah Palin as his running mate. 

She makes me very nervous, her fervor for a socially conservative state is dangerous.

THE WORLD HAS NO ROOM FOR SOCIAL CONSERVATISM!

The sooner people quit talking about how to rally against personal freedom- the sooner our energy will be allowed to focus on taking care of each other.

Come ON!

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Considering A Tomato.

September 8, 2008 · 2 Comments


Cultivar : an assemblage of plants that has been selected for a particular attribute or combination of attributes, and that is clearly distinct, uniform and stable in its characteristics and that, when propagated by appropriate means, retains those characteristics.

Walking through the produce section of Safeway this lovely afternoon my eye drifted toward the swirls and colors of the heirloom tomato perch.

I picked a few of these beauties up, smelled them, giving them a slight squeeze. I was completely in awe of just how interesting each of these tomatoes looked.

From what I gather interesting characteristics in the plants lead farmers or gardeners to cultivate these particulars and pass the seeds down from generation to generation hence the name heirloom…..Tomatoes aren’t the only heirloom vegetables.Big agriculture tends to make these different strains kind of obsolete and this is why the majority of humans know of few types of corn or tomatoes or cucumber-( you get the point). 

There are many people who feel quite passionately about the preservation of these deeply vibrant and unique genetic strains. If people don’t continue to preserve and grow the seeds, genetic material might be lost and never replaced. 

My heirloom tomato event today calls to mind the slow food movement.

The slow food movement was founded to counteract  ”fast food/fast life and the disappearance of local food traditions and people’s dwindling interest in the food they eat, where it comes from, how it tastes and how our food choices affect the rest of the world”.

It is all about consideration people.

Considering a tomato might help slow down our afflicted lives!

buy directly from the source! or become the source! 

(i am reminding myself here)

hmmmm…….well,

My carefully considered tomato/brie baguette was very lovingly prepared and very tasty. 

And I already feel a bit better.

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Ewan is 9!

September 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

My baby is nine. 

His last single digit year.

It goes fast. 

************************************************ xo.

Ewan w/ Will (his cousin):

Ewan w/Gary:

Ewan w/ sushi:

Ewan in action:

Highlights of the dayS:

1. Letterboxing (please check this out- now).

2. Bowling.

3. Cupcakes

4. Eating pizza (14 times).

5. Hangin’ with my beast (and he is- Aaron has proof).

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Birth-DAYS…….

September 3, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Ewan is almost 9. To commemorate the 29 hours of labor it took to push my little creature out into the world we’ve set aside a few days of fun……..

Today:

Cupcake madness 

*

*Cupcake w/ styrofoam tower (All above creations courtesy of Ewan J. Martin- almost age 9). mmmmmmmmmmmm

*Mine.

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