Thursday, 22 November 2012

A Sea Change for the GOP?

The logjam in the GOP is starting to break up.   First Jindal, now Chambliss.  Politicians seems to be finding their balls finally, and are standing up for what they believe in, instead of cow-towing to right-wing extremists.

In the news today, a story that makes me proud to be a Georgian:


(CNN) – A top Republican U.S. senator brushed off the anti-tax pledge pushed by activist Grover Norquist and embraced widely for years by GOP lawmakers.
"I care more about my country than I do about a 20-year-old pledge," Sen. Saxby Chambliss told Georgia television station WMAZ, a CNN affiliate, on Wednesday. "If we do it his way, then we'll continue in debt and I just have a disagreement with him about that."


Congress faces a year-end deadline to reach agreement on taming the U.S. budget deficit or take other steps to avert the so-called fiscal cliff of mandatory tax increases and spending cuts that experts say would push the country back into recession.

At the heart of budget standoff is disagreement over how to raise new revenues to help reduce red ink.
President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats call for an increase in tax rates for the wealthiest Americans, while House Republicans, who control that chamber's majority, favor other approaches for brining in money, such as closing certain tax loopholes and eliminating deductions.

Norquist, who heads the conservative group Americans for Tax Reform, has been successful over the years in lobbying a strong majority of congressional Republicans to sign his pledge to not raise taxes.
Many GOP candidates who ran for office also signed the promise, but earlier this year, a small number of freshman lawmakers rejected the idea that they were bound to the document.

Chambliss, along with 38 other senators and 219 House members entering the next Congress, have signed the pledge, according to the website for Americans for Tax Reform.

But Chambliss, who has previously criticized Norquist's stronghold on anti-tax sentiments, said this week that the fiscal conservative's ideas stand in the way of finding a solution for ballooning debt.

"Norquist has no plan to pay this debt down," said Chambliss, who is up for re-election in 2014.

The anti-tax crusader has said he predicts congressional Republicans will stand firm and negotiate a deal that excludes tax hikes.

Asked if Chambliss is concerned Norquist may use his resources to combat a re-election bid, the senator said, "In all likelihood, yes."

"But I don't worry about that because I care too much about my country," he said. "I care a lot more about it than I do Grover Norquist."

The two-term senator from Georgia added he's "willing to do the right thing and let the political consequences take care of themselves."

Wow.  A politician willing to stand up for what is right, and willing to let the chips fall where they may.  I have to admire this man.

It is about time someone stood up to that bully, Grover Norquist.  And I think more and more people will do just that, and realize he is a paper tiger.

And who the hell names their kid after a Sesame Street Character?

This guy has my vote - and my poltical contributions as well.

Is Facebook Evil?

Is Facebook a work of Satan himself?  Perhaps.


Another day, another person losing their job over some stupid thing they did on Facebook.


Nothing good ever seems to come of Facebook, do you notice that?  

There are never any heartwarming stories about how it saved a life or brought people together.

Never.

All you hear about is people getting into fights, pedophiles luring little girls, people being fired after posting photos of themselves doing dumb things, or kids committing crimes and then getting caught after posting pix.

Facebook is just inherently evil.  It appeals to the narcissist in all of us.

Everything we post on Facebook seems more relevant, more important, or funnier, than it actually is.  And we get an inflated sense of our self-worth from this constant self-grooming.

I closed my Facebook account and erased all content before I did.   Facebook is the work of Satan, I'm afraid (literally or metaphorically, take your pick).

It caters to the Ego, far too much.

Externalizing, Revisited


Wake up!  Stop feeling sorry for yourself and blaming all your problems on unseen others!


When I started this blog, I was trying to figure out "where all the money went".   After all, I was making a good living and made good money in Real Estate.  And yet, it seemed, no matter how much I made, the bills were always there and it was always a struggle to make ends meet.

I had assumed that once I was "making good money" that someday I could just spend as I pleased, and there would be plenty left over at the end of the month.   Such was not to be.  Just as Boyle's law dictates that gas expands to fill a vessel, spending expands to fill a salary - unless you decide to do something about it.

And legions of Americans - at all income levels - end up in the same trap.   People tell me they are living "paycheck to paycheck" on $50,000 a year, $100,000 a year, $174,000 a year, and even $250,000 a year.

Funny thing is, though, the median income in this country is about $51,000 per household.  And people are born, grow up, live and die, on this salary and do just fine, over time.   So why the "struggle" to live on that much money - or two, three, or five times as much?

And inevitably, people say, "Well, it's the government's fault!" or "It's Wall Street's Fault!" or "it's the Big Bank's Fault!" or "Its the fault of those people on Welfare!"

And while there is a small (very small) nugget of truth in these statements, they do no account for the overall situation.   Yes, you would be wealthier if you paid less taxes.  Not a lot wealthier, but a little bit.  Lowering the marginal rates by 3% during the Bush era didn't make anyone a Millionaire.   And yea, there are a lot of shenanigans on Wall Street, and if you played their game, like buying IPO stocks, you could lose a lot.   And yes, the banks offer odious mortgages and credit card deals, and if you signed up for them, you could be in a lot of trouble.

But the interesting thing I found out, writing this blog, was that what the real problem was, was not these "other people" screwing up my life, but things I did to screw it up.   Simply stated, I spent more than I made, or more precisely, I didn't save as much as I should have.   Real wealth, I figured out, is in your net worth, not in your garage or your cell phone.

And it became readily apparent that what I did was far more important than those "other actors" in the equation.   In fact, it is about 99.9% of the deal.

So, while it would be nice to pass a law outlawing "funny money mortgages" - and they have taken steps in this direction - a better idea would be not to sign one.

And while the availability of "Liar's Loans" certainly put fuel in the fire of the Real Estate Meltdown of 2007, it was people like you and me who signed those loan documents, bought the overpriced mini-mansions, and deluded ourselves that we all would get rich.

But of course, no one wants to hear that.  It has to be the mean old Bank's fault, for enticing us with those loans.  Or maybe those Minorities (code for N-word) who took out all those mortgages under the Community Reinvestment Act - and then defaulted!   Yes, they brought down the price of houses!

Actually, not really.  Not really even close.    When a two-bedroom condo in Florida is selling for $850,000 and has a $3,000 a month condo fee, and all of the buyers are buying them as speculative investments, this has nothing to do with the "Community Reinvestment Act" and poor people buying $50,000 homes in the ghetto.   When housing prices went up to the point that it cost 3-5 times as much to own as it did to rent, that was pure greed and idiocy on the part of the buyers.  And yes, I said the buyers, not the sellers.   Only buyers set prices.

And a lot of people made foolish mistakes.   And I know these folks - they are my friends and acquaintances.   Some bought houses as investments hoping to "flip" them quickly, even though they were huge negative-cash-flow deals.  Others bought "look-at-me!" houses, convinced their ship had come in, and that they could afford granite counter-tops and a three-car garage because a salesman told them they could.

They suspended disbelief and signed the papers.  And each sale created a new market value for such properties, and the prices kept going up, and up, and up, until it reached a point where no one could afford to buy - and the smarter people said, "Gee, this doesn't look so swell."

It was people who drove this market, not Fannie Mae.   Would more onerous mortgage requirements have dampened the market?   Perhaps.  And we are seeing this today, and people are complaining about it - that the banks are saying, "Gee, you have to prove you can pay this back!" - as if it were a bad thing.

And that is the Catch-22 of this whole deal.   Citizens blame "others" for their woes, and then petition the government to fix things.  The government does so, and then the same citizens complain it is too much interference!  Pick one.

Yes, it would be nice if the excesses of the credit card industry were reined in.  And the new Consumer Finance Protection Bureau is doing just that.   But odious deals with credit cards still abound.  And if you get a $20,000-limit 25% interest credit card, on the premise you are getting "flyer miles" or "cash back" it can - and likely will - bite you on the ass over time.   The government can take steps to protect you, but you have to be the one to say "no" to the temptation.   Leave your pen at home!

No, what I have learned, after years of penny-pinching and scrimping, is that the real actor in all these deals is ME and only ME.  Blaming other people is just weak thinking at its worst - and emotional thinking as well.

And yet, this is a popular sport in the US of A.  Go on any news channel or news site, and you will see people blaming the Blacks, the big corporations, Wall Street, or the Banks for their personal woes as well as the woes of a nation.  Our own actions are never suspect - and not even up for discussion!   To hear most people talk, they are as innocent as newborn babies - and victims of the actions of others.

And yes, even the people who decry the victim mentality are really just using that to deflect blame from their own actions.   "I would be a Billionaire," they posit, "if it weren't for everyone else claiming to be a victim."   Irony is lost on most folks.

You do have choices in life.  All it takes to get ahead is to act rationally in an irrational world and you will succeed.  Most people, if they do succeed in life, do so because they acted somewhat rationally over time.   Those who fail, in most cases, do so because they engaged in emotional thinking and wishful thinking and blame-shifting and self-pity.

And the latter are often called "losers" which sound kind of cruel, but is often apt.   You know the type, the sad-sack-of-shit who laments for hours about what a raw deal he got out of life and how difficult it is for him - and how unfair it all is - and how it is someone else's fault.   And usually, he is texting this crap to you from his iPhone or some other nonsense.

It is like the friend of mine, complaining how rotten they have it, and how "lucky" I am, while we are riding around in their $40,000 leased car that gets 12 miles per gallon.  "We're living paycheck to paycheck!" they cry.  Gee, I wonder why that is?  It must be someone else's fault.   Those mean old oil companies, perhaps.

Or the fellow who delivered concrete, telling us how rotten he had it, and how he was investing in Glen Beck's gold, and how the economy has tanked.   Then a fellow drives by and says, "There you are, I've been calling for a week now, leaving you messages!  I have  big job for you!"   The connection between running his business and his own personal success is just not there.   He is spending more time worrying about the price of gold than the price of concrete - and blaming the President for his woes.

Getting ahead in the world means you have to chuck all of that sort of crap - entirely - and take responsibility for your own actions.  And this may mean finding new friends, if your existing ones are the types who like to sit around and moan and groan about how rotten it all is,  or forward conspiracy-theory e-mails.   You need to reset your brain and start over, and stop letting people like that program it with "ain't it awful" and "let's feel sorry for ourselves".

(And this means, of course, unplugging from the TeeVee, which is the monster of all poor normative cues programming.)

Because, let's face it, if you are reading this, you are one of the minority on the planet who can (a) read, and (b) has access to a computer.   No one feels sorry for you.   On a planet-wide scale, you are one of those 1%'ers.   Start acting like it.


Wednesday, 21 November 2012

Did Subprime Loans to Minorities Cause the Real Estate Meltdown? (No)


According to the GOP, these folks brought down the entire U.S. Housing market.
  Talk about Black Power! 
You don't suppose the GOP would be lying about this?

One of the narratives being pushed by the far-right was that the current economic crises was not caused by eight years of George Bush's deficit spending and a decade of unsustainable housing price increases (fueled by a lot of folks who thought they could 'buy and flip' mini-mansions for a profit).

No, no, it was all Obama's fault - or Bill Clinton's (take your pick, or both) and all those Minorities defaulting on loans they never should have gotten, through the Community Reinvestment Act.

When in doubt, it seems, blaming Black people is always a good tactic, as white folks never do nuthin' wrong - or at least that is what they want to hear.

Oh, those Black folks!  We freed them from the bonds of slavery and how do they pay us back?  By becoming Welfare Queens and then screwing up the housing market!  That's how!

Yea, that is just a little bit more than racist - it is scapegoating and race-baiting in its worst form, and it is plank #1 of the GOP party platform, which is enough to make one vomit.

What was the real story?  Well, as I noted before, the housing bubble had its roots years back - in the tattered remnants of the 1989 bubble.  But it was a lot of people - mostly white folks - who built and bought the mini-mansions and luxury condos that are now sitting empty in Las Vegas and Fort Lauderdale.

If poor minorities were involved at all, they were the ones who got in late to the game and overpaid for meager housing, got the worst loan deals, and have already been foreclosed upon, as they cannot afford to use lawyers and legal tactics to stay in their homes.

Which is not to say it never happens.  I attended a law conference recently, where an attorney from Rural Georgia taught us about the fine art of lien-stripping, and he used as one example, a young couple who were able to lien-strop their house, so they ended up owing only a fraction of the original mortgage, which they paid back on a principle-only five-year repayment plan.  So yea, some folks worked the system and came out ahead.  But they are the minority, not the root cause.

And as I noted before, organized crime had a role in outright mortgage fraud - the buying and selling of houses in dummy "straw-man" transactions that netted huge profits for some criminals and got some  greedy attorneys disbarred.

But, by and large, the huge part of the problem was all of us who bought homes at these inflated prices and signed odious loan documents, convinced they were good deals, and we could "always refinance later" or "flip" the house and make a huge profit.  It was the greed of the masses, not some giveaway to minorities.

But again, complex stories don't sell to the populace.   You want a simple narrative, and one that puts the blame on the unseen "others" - and Black folks are a great whipping-boy (in the past, quite literally) for white folks to use.


From a recent MSNBC story:

Former Governor Romney, in every debate so far, [has] said something like, "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were a big part of why we have the housing crisis." But studies have shown that Fannie and Freddie were late to invest in subprime mortgages, following the lead of Wall Street firms that [he] never mentions. (Fact-check from The New York Times here and here.) The unspoken narrative in [his] comments, and those of the other candidates, panders inaccurately to those who want to believe that loans to unworthy minorities, driven by the Community Reinvestment Act, caused the financial crisis. In fact, most subprime loans were made by lenders who were not covered by the CRA, but who were driven by the need for profits to satisfy their Wall Street investors. [Is Romney]  trying to deflect blame from Wall Street?

Well, yea, duh.  Because it is a lot easier to deflect the blame than to accept it.  It wasn't the default credit swaps or the bundling of specious mortgages into investment blocks that caused trouble.  No, it was those darn Blacks - and government programs!  If only the government had stayed out of it!  We would all be better off!

This is not to say government is innocent, only that it is not the sole source of the blame.

And who likes this argument?  Well, folks who bought mini-mansions and lost their shirt - white folks - like to regale me with tales of the CRA and Bill Clinton, and "a young Senator named Barry Obama" who did all these misdeeds that caused the Real Estate meltdown.

It is a prime example of what I point out in this blog - externalizing.   People want to blame others for their troubles, rather than look inwardly at their own actions.  And when someone comes along and says, "Hey, it's not your fault!  It was the fault of others!" then people will buy into this, big-time.

"You'll never go broke telling people what they want to hear" - that is the real trademarked mantra of Fox News (not "fair and balanced").

Scapegoating minorities never works out well - for the minority in question, but also for the scapegoater.  Ask anyone in Germany how that worked out.

And funny thing - when economic times are tough, everyone wants to look for a scapegoat.  It seems that today, Blacks are in the cross-hairs, what with their CRA loans, Obamaphones, and Food Stamps, they are causing all the problems in the world.   And of course, they are "taking over" turning us into a nation of minorities (except of course, for the 78% white part).

Problem is, it isn't true.  If you bother to investigate these things, the claims fall apart rather quickly.  And you have to ask yourself why folks would lie about these things.   What exactly is it they are selling you?  And why are they distracting you with lies?

The answer is, of course, is that the folks selling these lies have one hand on your wallet. 

Prescription Drugs and the New Drug Wars

Prescription Drugs are the latest thing to abuse.
  And the drug companies don't seem to mind!

Prescription drug abuse is on the rise in the US, and it is not hard to see why.  Such drugs are easily obtainable from a friendly doctor (and there is no shortage of friendly doctors, just ask Michael Jackson's family) and from there, they can enter the illegal marketplace very easily.

As I recounted in an earlier posting, Mark went to a "pain specialist" for a compressed disc in his back.  By the way, if you do not have a ruptured or compressed disc in your back or neck, it only means you haven't lived long enough.  Back and neck problems seem to be very common, what I call the 50-something growing pains.  These sort of things manifest themselves in the late 40's or early 50's, and if you are not careful, you'll end up like Rush Limbaugh or any number of folks who take prescription pain killers and end up addicted to them.

Anyway, we went to this doctor, and before the examining room door is closed, he has out his prescription pad, writing a 'script for pain killers.  "What's your pleasure?  Oxycontin?  Oxycodine?  Percoset?"

We were, to say the least, a little appalled.  And while I was in the waiting room, I noticed that a lot of the patients were quite young and chipper to be on major pain meds.  But that is the nature of the beast.  If you complain about pain, no one can contradict your complaint.  So a Doctor can legitimately write prescriptions for major narcotic pain relievers, without fear of prosecution.

The doctor gets paid by the insurance company.  He also gets to go on a paid-for junket, courtesy of the pharmaceutical industry.  And the patient goes and gets the pain meds from the pharmacy, which in turn bills the insurance company.  And our insurance costs skyrocket.

Now some folks, addicted to these meds, take them and become addicts.  And this is, of course, a dangerous and unhealthy thing.  And oftentimes, it ends up killing them, like that Hockey Dude recently.

Others use this as a business.   The street price for oxycontin can range from $10 to $50 a pill, depending on the size of the pill.  That is a pretty lucrative mark-up for the seller, particularly if they paid a $10 co-pay to get the pills, through their insurance plan.  A bottle of 30 pills could be worth $1500, easily.  A nice supplement to your income!  That is, if you are trailer trash and think $1500 is "a lot of money."

Of course, selling such drugs is a major felony, and some young folks are shocked to discover that they are facing pretty stiff mandatory minimum sentences, for selling just a few pills.  It is a really bad idea, so just don't do it.

Now granted, there are people who need severe pain medications like this.  A friend of mine, for example, dying of cancer, used Oxycontin.  Well, she tried to, anyway, until her son figured out what the pills were worth and stole them from her deathbed leaving his Mother to die in agonizing pain.  Nice kid. If I see him crossing the street, you can bet I'll be stepping on the gas.  Probably not worth denting a fender over, though.  Worthless sack of excrement!

But that is the nature of the beast - these pills are so addictive and so valuable that people will do odious things to get them - or to sell them.  And a lot of people who are using them are not dying of cancer, but are in mild pain.  And, unfortunately, Doctors - or at least certain doctors - are willing to write prescriptions for them at the drop of a hat.

And what are these pills?  Opiates, basically.   Yea, the same drug war that we have been fighting since the 1800's, when legions of Americans became addicted to "laudnum" and went to the "sanitarium" for the cure.   Today it is called "re-hab" but the actors and the actions are the same.   Not much has changed in over 100 years, has it?

And sales of the drugs - legitimately or illegitimately - are sales.  So the pharmaceutical companies that sell these drugs aren't too concerned about them appearing on the "secondary market" - that is, until maybe some lawyer sues them.  But on what grounds?  They would point to some half-hearted public service announcements they've made to "just say no" to prescription drug use, and also to the security techniques used in the industry to make sure the drugs are not stolen off trucks or from pharmacies.

So where does that leave us?  Well, demand for drugs would not exist if people didn't take them.  And while we might want to pass harsher laws and try for harder enforcement (both techniques which have limited effects and sometimes bad side-effects) the real answer is on the demand side.

Prescription pain medication is some pretty serious shit, and yet I know of people who take it very lightly, looking at drug use as a recreational activity.  They figure that since they can handle a cocktail now and then, and maybe a little weed, why not try some of this Oxycontin stuff they've heard about?  Or maybe some Methamphetamine?  And a little coke?

The problem is, not all drugs are equivalent in terms of strength, their effects on your body, and their propensity to addition.  And perhaps the illegality of marijuana has lead some folks to think, "Hey, they told me Marijuana was bad for me, but I can handle it!  Maybe they are lying about other drugs as well!"

Don't get me wrong, I am not advocating marijuana use - or any drug for that matter.   From a financial standpoint, marijuana is a dead-end drug.  Every person I have ever met who used the drug, ended up sliding down the economic scale, as I have written about before.   And yes, often they ended up "moving up" to harder drugs, with tragic consequences.

So in a way, I am curious to see how legalization or quasi-legalization works out in Colorado and Washington State.    Will it end up being a good thing, or just causing more trouble down the road?  And if the latter, well, what was legalized can be unlegalized in a hurry.

But the thing with pot is, at least when you smoke it, you know you are doing a drug.   With pills, people kid themselves that it is "medicine" as it was a "prescription" from a Doctor, and thus cannot be harmful - when actually the opposite is the case.   Prescriptions are available only from a doctor precisely because they can be very harmful to you, if taken inappropriately.

The problem, politically, is that the pharmaceutical manufacturers are a "legitimate" business, even if a huge percentage of their product ends up being used illegitimately.   As a legitimate business, they can lobby congress and make huge political donations to political campaigns.  The marijuana industry, in contrast, can barely get a few people to sign a petition for NORML.

So I doubt a lot is going to change very soon, with regard to prescription drug abuse.   So what does that leave?   Like so much else in our modern world, it leaves you, as an individual, to look out for yourself.  You have to make the choice not to go down this road.  End of story.

Sunday, 18 November 2012

ObamaPhones or ReaganPhones?


Can you really get free phones and free airtime under the "Obamaphone" program?  Yes, No, and Maybe.  It is not an Obama program, and you have to be pretty poor to get the phone.

Some readers have written about the "Obamaphone" program, and it was the subject of a popular YouTube video, where a young woman extolls the virtues of the "Obamaphone" and says that is why we should all vote for Obama.  But there is some misinformation about the program and what it encompasses.

Snopes has a pretty good summary of the so-called Obamaphone program.   Forbes also has an article on the subject.  This is a program started under Reagan, to give landlines to the poor for free or at a subsidized price.  As phones have transitioned from landlines to cell phones, so has the program.

However, the program is not funded by  "taxpayer dollars" but rather by that ubiquitious "universal service access fee" that is part of your landline or cell phone bill.   So yes, the rest of us pay for the program, with our phone bills.

Safelink, a division of Tracphone, has pretty aggressively marketed this program.  It is not hard to "qualify" for this program, as it relies only on your qualification for an existing federal program (welfare, food stamps, etc.) or your income limit.   Assets are not counted, so you can be a millionaire and get a phone, so long as your income makes you qualify.

However, qualification varies from State to State.  Here in Georgia, they just wanted to know if I was already on a federal program, or what my income was:

Select your Household Income Level


Total Person in HouseholdMaximum Annual IncomeMaximum Monthly Income



That's it - just check off the box and you're in.  Of course, you aren't supposed to LIE on the application, but they don't seem to go out of their way to check.   And, you are supposed to continually re-certify that you are eligible for the phone, over time.  And you do have to AGREE to the following terms (does anyone read the fine print?):

250 Minute Plan

We strongly recommend you use all remaining minutes on your phone as it does not include carryover of unused minutes. Each month, your phone will reset to 250 minutes regardless of any unused minutes that may have remained on your phone. Carryover of unused airtime minutes are available for up to 3 consecutive months if you purchase and add to your phone any TracFone Airtime Card such as the 60, 120, 200 or 450 Airtime Minutes Cards. You can select a different plan in the next step.

Penalty of Perjury

Under title 18 U.S.C. § 1621, whoever willfully states as true any material matter which he does not believe to be true in a statement under penalty of perjury, is guilty of perjury and shall, except as otherwise expressly provided by law, be fined or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
I acknowledge that providing fraudulent documentation/information in order to receive assistance is punishable by law.

I certify under penalty of perjury that:



But of course, this is a program ripe for fraud.  People can just lie about income.  And students and the like, who have low incomes, can qualify for free phones.   Folks on Social Security can get them as well.  And people who work "under the table" and have little or no reported income, can get one, too.

Is this really necessary?   Consider that a basic pay-as-you-go plan, such as I use, can cost $100 a year for 1000 minutes, why do the poor get 250 minutes a month for free?

Like with foodstamps, it would not be hard to qualify for this program, if you structure your income to meet the limits.  And in fact, since qualification for foodstamps gets you "in", getting even $10 a month in Foodstamps is worthwhile, if it gets you the free phone.   Maybe this explains why the average foodstamps benefit is less than $150 - it is a gateway to other free swag.

But, you say, 250 minutes a month is chump change!   Of course, you can buy more minutes on these plans, if you use them a lot, so the 250 minutes is just a gateway for Safelink to make more sales of per-minute cards.  In fact, your 250 minutes don't roll over unless you buy additional minutes.  That is a pretty sweet inducement, right off the bat, to buy at least a 60-minute card.

Is this a major travesty?  Come sumptin' be done about it?

Well, first, let's stop lying about it.  The phones are not from President Obama, but are part of a program that traces its roots back to Ronald Reagan.  The wireless part of the program was signed into law by President Bush.   But no one calls them "BushPhones" do they? 

Second, eligability is determined at the State level - and my State, which is firmly "Red" has very lax eligibility requirements - as it does for food stamps.

So, this program could be cut back at the State level, simply by making it harder to apply for and by tightening qualification requirements.   Don't all fall all over yourselves trying to do it, now!

Perhaps the local pols want to keep this as a festering issue, as it allows them to use it as a cudgel to whack the President.   They can do something locally, but choose not to, as it is easier to blame the Prez.

New laws have been passed to try to rein in the program.  Others have proposed cancelling it altogether.  The point is, Obama ain't handing out phones - lawmakers are.  And lawmakers, even on a State level, in a Red State, don't seem too bothered to do much about it, other than complain that the "other guy" is giving away the store.

And of course, it goes without saying that Tracphone no doubt lobbies to continue this program, as it is a big money-maker for them.  Like with military spending, once there is a business that is making money from the deal, they will no doubt make sure the deal keeps going on.   And I suspect, if you follow the money, the tracphone people have paid a lot to lobbists and to political campaigns over the years.

Act shocked.


The Twinkie Defense - Classic Baiting Article



Twinkies will disappear forever!  Oh my!

This week in the "news" both MSNBC and CNN competed for the number of stories they could do about the Hostess bankruptcy.  Hostess, maker of the worst bakery products known to mankind, has been in bankruptcy court for some time now, the second time in four years.   They were supposedly trying to work out a deal where they could emerge from bankruptcy and keep operating.

The background to the story is as familiar as it is unreported.   The news media never reports the real machinations going on behind the scenes, but rather the surface story - and expects you to bite on the eye-candy, or in this case, the Twinkie.

Like Mitt Romney's Bain Capital, the management of Hostess loaded up the company with debt, likely with the express idea of running it into bankruptcy.   In bankruptcy court, remember, the shareholders get wiped out, and the debtors now own the company ("debtor-in-possession") so sometimes it is better to be a bondholder than a shareholder, as I discussed before.   By the way, I don't just put those hyperlinks in there for funsies.  Read the articles linked, as they explain the scam in more detail.

In summary, it works like this:
1.  Take control of company - you can do this by buying as little as 5% of the stock.

2.  Load the company up with debt that you hold a majority of.  Pay yourself a bonus out of that debt.

3.  Pay yourself onerous interest payments on that debt.  By now you have been paid back at least twice.

4.  Drive the company bankrupt due to all that debt.

5.  In bankruptcy court you:
(a) strip off the unfunded pension liabilities to the government,
(b) give the retirees 40 cents on the dollar on their pensions,
(c) cut health care entirely for retirees,
(d) wipe out the shareholders entirely,
(e) rewrite all contracts, including but not limited to, union agreements, patent licensing agreements, leases, etc.,
(f) stiff all your suppliers or give them pennies on the dollar or new stock,
(g) emerge from bankruptcy as majority shareholder in the new, stripped down company, and
(f) do an IPO and sell stock to other folks, completely cashing out before it goes bust, yet again.
Yes, this is not as swell as narrative as "I created jobs in the private sector!"   It requires you to think coherent thoughts for more than 15 seconds at a time.  And the above will not fit on a t-shirt or bumper sticker.    But this is what  Bain did.   This is what Friendly's ice cream did.  This is what Sears is apparently trying to do, and J.C. Penny seems poised to do.  And it appears that it is what Hostess was trying to do - or is going to do.

This is not "wealth creation" or "job creation" but rather the inverse.  Little people - you and I - get screwed in a number of ways:
1.  We lose our investments in the stock.

2.  We lose our pensions if we worked there.

3.  We lose our income - often wages are cut in half.

4.  We lose the money we are owed, if we were creditors.
These schemes do represent risk, to some extent, for the vulture investors, just as knee-capping someone involves risk for a mafia hit man.  He might break a nail or something - or get caught.  Neither are likely, however.

And there are some interesting variations on this theme, of course.

For example, the GM bankruptcy wiped out shareholders (including me) and also a lot of suppliers didn't get paid all they were due.    And wages for the auto workers were slashed, and a lot of work rules, such as the one stipulating that GM never lay anyone off, ever, were abolished.

But the big difference with the GM bankruptcy was that instead of handing over the company to the bondholders and screwing the UAW pension plan, the pensions were preserved, and the bondholders screwed.  And this was what pissed off Mitt Romney.    After all, that is not how the game of "vulture capitalism" is played!  No fair actually helping the little guy at the expense of billionaires!

The Mohegan Sun situation was also unusual.  They did not go bankrupt, likely because they couldn't.  As only "Native Americans" could hold stock, bankruptcy would not allow bondholders to become debtors-in-possession.   Instead, a deal was reached with bondholders to give them new bonds.   In retrospect, a pretty sweet deal, too!  I wished I had wagered a little on that casino!

But that is just the background.  And if you don't understand how the Vulture Capitalism game is played, and you get your information from 15-second sound bites on Fox News, well, you might think Mitt Romney created jobs and your precious Twinkies are going away forever.

But neither is true.   Hostess tried to negotiate a deal in bankruptcy court where all the union workers would take a hit.  And even my former union, the Teamsters, went along with this.   But the Baker's Union, perhaps realizing that being a patsy in these sorts of deals, over and over again, was short-sighted, said "enough".

And so management dropped the L-bomb.  Liquidaion.   Rather than reorganize in bankruptcy, they would dissolve the company, sell off the assets and let the company fly to the wind.

Of course, it ain't happened yet.   The company cannot just decide to liquidate in bankruptcy.  The bankruptcy court Judge has to agree to this.   And he may say "No", particularly if the liquidation threat is just that - a tactical maneuver designed to get the bakers to the bargaining table.

But that didn't stop CNN and MSNBC from shouting "Twinkies are gone forever!" and for CNN to even suggest, in one headline that you start hoarding Hostess baked goods.    This is irresponsible journalism at its worst.

Even if the bankruptcy court approves liquidation, what happens then?   No, Twinkies don't go away then, either.   The assets of the company are sold off and the creditors paid.  Who are the creditors?  Largely the bondholders - plus some unpaid suppliers.    What happens in then?  Two possible scenarios.

First, like with a foreclosure, the "buyer" for all these assets ends up being the bondholders - likely management or people closely linked to existing management.   They buy the best assets (and allow the plants they wanted to close to be sold to someone else, or if they have to buy as a package, they spin these off quickly) and start a new company.   And these assets include the Trademarks and the underlying goodwill - the "Intellectual Property" so to speak.    So the bondholders get all the equipment, plants, and rights to make Twinkies.    And they hire non-union labor to run these factories.   This is even a better deal for them than rewriting union contracts - NO UNION CONTRACTS WHATSOEVER!

Like I said, Vulture Capitalism can be a fun game to play.

A second outcome is possible, although less likely.   The assets might be sold to other folks - competitors in the marketplace, who may want the factories and more importantly, the rights to the Trademarks and the products.   Since there is a market for this crappy food, likely someone will snap this up.   The bondholders will get paid out of the money made from selling these assets - but they likely will not get as much.

And that is why I say it is a less likely scenario.  If you are a bank and hold a note for $200,000 on a foreclosed house, you are not letting it be sold on the courthouse steps for $50,000.   You buy it for up to the amount you are owed - essentially buying it back from yourself, and hope to sell it for more.

Similarly, the Hostess bondholders will likely end up the highest bidders for the Hostess assets - if the bankruptcy judge allows liquidation, which is a big "If".   You see, he likely sees through this whole charade, and will say to management, "Request denied, and by the way, you are all fired" as the management is not acting in the best interests of the company.

Either way, though, your precious Twinkies are safe.

But what about the "18,000 jobs" that will be "lost" as a result of this liquidation?   Again, you are being baited and in the worst sort of way.   First of all, it is not a done deal.  The company may still re-emerge as a reorganized company, and as a result, most of these jobs will be salvaged - albeit at lower wages.   Second, even if the company liquidates, it is likely that the new buyers will continue to operate the plants, re-hiring the workers, albeit again, at lower, possibly non-union rates.  Even if the plants are closed and production consolidated to other, competing companies, these companies will likely hire more people to make these nasty snack treats.   No matter how you slice it, the folks working at Hostess will end up working for a reorganized Hostess, a new company built from the assets of the old company, or for a competitor's company.

The idea that people will stop eating Twinkies and jobs will be "lost forever" is just nonsense.  Although it wouldn't hurt if people ate less Twinkies, if you think about it.   And of course, some people will lose their jobs over this - likely when reorganized under a new union contract (or no union contract) management will pare the number of people working.   But the idea that simply everyone will lose their job  is just idiotic.   Unfortunately, the jobs that are sure to stay in place are that of existing management, as they likely will continue to run the company under the direction of the new owners - the existing bondholders.   That is how the game is played.

Now, the point of this post is not about Twinkies or Hostess or Mitt Romney.  The point is, if you read or watch  CNN, MSNBC, or Fox News, likely none of the above was mentioned, or if it was, in passing only.  It is not exciting as a video clip of some fat chick loading up her shopping cart with Ho-Hos, while the smiling anchors exchange witty quips about Twinkies and their waistlines.

No, instead, we are encouraged by CNN to start hoarding.  And all the networks report the demise of the Twinkie as a done deal - at least initially.    CNN started to walk-back the story, noting that the Twinkie would be around post-liquidation.   But then they followed that with the headline encouraging hoarding.

This is not journalism - it is just eyeball-catching click-through revenue generation.

The point of this posting is, why would you believe stories in the pop media (Fox, NBC, CNN, etc.) when they are reported so poorly and in terms of short sound-bites?   Yes, it takes more time to read the "long format" stories in the press, to really understand what is going on.   But it is a better investment of your time.

Watching television does not make you more informed, but actually less so.   And to act rationally in an irrational world, you need to have rational data.   You ain't getting that from the TeeVee!

UPDATE:  As I outlined above, the deal with these things is for the insiders to cash out, and I was not surprised to read on Snopes that this is exactly what is happening.  The Bain way!   The top executives raised their salaries by 2-3 times, while at the same time trying to slash those of the hourly workers.   The President of this failing company is pulling in over two million dollars a year.

Oh, right.  He's "creating jobs" using the free-enterprise system.   We should all be worshiping him as a God.

Go sell crazy somewhere else.