2009/03/25

Obama's Press Conference Stirs the Buzz

According to Yahoo Buzz:
Chip Reid asked a tough question about Obama's controversial budget. Reid asked if the budget, which will increase the debt to "$7 trillion over the next 10 years," is a case of passing problems onto the next generation. Obama responded that investments need to be made to "meet our growth targets that put us on a pathway to growth." He then pointed out that the critics of his budget have yet to bring forth an alternative.

Classic bait and switch. "We have to do what I'm proposing because noone else is coming up with a better solution."
Wrong! The better solution, which you IGNORED was to do your job, which DOES NOT INCLUDE micromanaging or "fixing" the "problems" with the economy.
We're now at least 6 months behind because the failures that should have occurred haven't happened. So the businesses that are competent haven't been able to step up and fill in the gaps where the incompetents already dropped the ball (which they're continuing to do, by the way).
Many people are really beginning to see the fruits of your micromanagement, and they're realizing that your system rewards incompetence. While this makes incompetents quite happy, it makes competent people realize that there is no benefit to sharing that competence with the rest of society.

You can not expect success while you reward failure.
What you feed, grows.

If you want success, then reward it by letting the successful see the failures fail, and quit handicapping the successful with more regulations.
If you want failure, keep rewarding it. The successful will quit, because they realize there is no point.

2009/03/18

AIG employees starting to return bonuses, CEO says

According to Yahoo Finance:

Meanwhile, President Barack Obama said Wednesday he wants legislation to give the federal government vast new powers over financial institutions like AIG to protect the public.
This is NOT a good thing. Government is not supposed to control private business. This business should have failed. Why did government step in and prevent it? THAT is NOT government's job.
Obama, speaking to reporters at the White House, said the powers would be similar to those now exercised over banks by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It would be part of the administration's broader package of new finance regulatory steps, he said.

Insurance isn't financial. Am I missing a step?

Since AIG is an insurance company and not a bank, it is not subject to the same oversight.

Well, somebody else connected those dots too. Bonus points for them.

"We've got a big mess that we're having to clean up," the president said.
YOU don't have to clean it up. It's NOT YOUR JOB. If you want to run THAT business, then become the president of THAT company and quit trying to be the president of THAT company by using your President of the US hat.

"Nobody here drafted those contracts" that resulted in the bonuses being paid out to AIG employees, he added.

No, you just bailed 'em out.

Obama also defended his administration -- and specifically Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner -- against questions about its handling of the AIG fiasco.

"Nobody here was responsible for supervising AIG and allowing themselves to put the economy at risk by some of the outrageous behavior that they were engaged in," Obama said.

Now, however, "the buck stops with me," he said. "And my goal is to make sure that we never put ourselves in this kind of position again."

One more time, that's NOT your job.


Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the Financial Services Committee, demanded that the company submit to Congress a list "of people who received the bonuses, whether they paid them back or not." If the names were not provided "without restriction," Frank warned, he would ask the committee to vote to subpoena them.

Liddy said he would "comply with the law:" but was "concerned about the safety of our people."

He said he would give the names of the bonus recipients only on the basis of confidentiality. He read aloud threats that AIG employees had received, including one that suggested that all bonus recipients should be "executed with piano wire around their necks."

Another one read: "If the government can't do this properly, we the people will take it in our own hands and see that justice is done. I'm looking for all the CEOs' names, kids, where they live, etc."

And now another guy wants to do things that aren't his job. Government's job was to leave things alone. And government failed. Big surprise.

Rep. Scott Garrett of New Jersey, the senior Republican on the subcommittee, complained that the administration still has no strategy for disentangling itself from the insurance giant.

"Part of me wants to say to some of the loudest critics, 'What did you expect and why weren't you asking more questions before?' I would argue that the real outrage now is the $170 billion of taxpayer money that's been pumped into this company and to what effect," he said.

Finally someone on Capitol Hill that actually has some sense.

The retention payments -- ranging from $1,000 to nearly $6.5 million -- were put together in early 2008, long before then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson asked Liddy to take over the company. Liddy, the retired former chief of Allstate Insurance Co., is not getting a bonus and is drawing only $1 a year in salary.

"No one knows better than I that AIG has been the recipient of generous amounts of governmental financial aid. We have been the beneficiary of the American people's forbearance and patience," he said. But he also said that "we have to continue managing our business as a business -- taking account of the cold realities of competition for customers, for revenues and for employees."

The company started doing what companies do when it's time for them to die. Trying to reanimate them, zombie style, by injecting them with misappropriated taxpayer dollars IS NOT A SOLUTION.

The clamor over compensation overshadowed AIG's weekend disclosure that it had paid out more than $90 billion of the federal aid to foreign and domestic banks, including some that had multibillion-dollar U.S. government bailouts of their own.

Well, one thing this administration has shown in the first 3 months. They're extremely efficient at wasting our taxpayer dollars... and getting NOTHING in value in return for it.

Great job there Mr. President Guy.


In case anyone can't tell, I'm pretty pissed. Though how you could miss that, I'll never know.

2009/03/16

Obama berates AIG and vows to try to block bonuses

According to Yahoo News:
Joining a wave of public anger, President Barack Obama blistered insurance giant AIG for "recklessness and greed" Monday and pledged to try to block it from handing its executives $165 million in bonuses after taking billions in federal bailout money.
Well, gee. Why are you so surprised. If they had been operating properly, they wouldn't have needed a bailout in the first place, would they?
"How do they justify this outrage to the taxpayers who are keeping the company afloat?" Obama asked. "This isn't just a matter of dollars and cents. It's about our fundamental values."
And you, by pushing the bailout in the first place are helping to show that the fundamental values of this country are cracked. Quit acting shocked. And quit trying to "help".
The bonuses could contribute to a backlash against Washington that would make it tougher for Obama to ask Congress for more bailout help — and jeopardize other parts of the recovery agenda that is dominating the start of his presidency.
Good. This is a sign that some americans are starting to wake up and see that the bailout wasn't a good idea.
Thus, the president and his top aides were working hard to distance themselves from the insurer's conduct, to contain possible political damage and to try to bolster public confidence in his administration's handling of the broader economic rescue effort.

Too late. You've already paid the piper. Now you have to listen to the tune.
"This is a corporation that finds itself in financial distress due to recklessness and greed," Obama declared.

If you didn't know this already, then I feel sorry for us all.
One reason that the AIG bonus giveaway is such a compelling story — and a politically troubling one for Obama if not neutralized — is that it offers a simple story line that appears to sum up ways in which the federal bailouts have gone awry.

"Never should have been", you mean.
Bailout steps for AIG totaling over $170 billion since September have effectively left the federal government with an 80 percent stake in the faltering insurance giant

Congratulations. You bought a load of crap. Learn from your mistake. STOP!
Still, those surveyed generally gave the president favorable marks for doing as much as he can to try to fix the economy, and few blame him for making the economy worse.

Ok, maybe not enough of us are learning yet. Too bad really.
However, Obama officials made the rounds of Sunday talk shows to denounce the insurer. And even Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke weighed in, saying on CBS' "60 Minutes" that the AIG bailout angered him the most and that he "slammed the phone more than a few times on discussing AIG." Still, he said a collapse of AIG would have wreaked havoc on the global economy.

That's how most governments explain their doing of stupid things. "If we don't do anything things will be far worse." Get over yourself. You don't even know how to run a government, what makes you think you can run an insurance company too?
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell called the bonuses "appalling" and said he hoped "the administration gets the message from the taxpayers on this issue."

We can hope. But I'm not holding my breath for any sanity out of this administration.

How to Blow Your Credit Limit -- Without Spending

Well, according to Yahoo Finance:
If you haven't had the credit limit cut on your credit card recently, count yourself lucky. Risk-averse card issuers are getting slash happy. And while many cardholders gripe that such cuts slice razor-close to their balance amounts, for an unfortunate few the cuts go far deeper: below what they currently owe.
Which sounds like a dishonorable tactic to me. But I guess it stands to reason that a dishonorable industry that is intent on tricking people into getting into debt and then making them comfortable with the situation so that they stay there permanently, would resort to undercutting the people's outstanding balance to cause "over limit" fees (when the people have enough trouble making the base payment already).

It's too bad that with all the "learning" going on in america recently, with so many people cutting back on spending across the board, that most still haven't learned that credit is a bad thing, and not a good thing.

And this is why the bailout was such a bad idea to begin with. The solution to the system is not to fix the credit system, inserting more money for people to borrow, so they can spend more.
The solution is for the credit system to become unworkable. For the entire credit house of cards to collapse under it's own weight (as it is doing if the brain-dead government would get out of it's way).

Once upon a time, in this country, there was little to no credit, and the country was prosperous.
People bought what they NEEDED, and they did so with cash. Though even more often, they constructed, grew, or traded for what they needed.
It wasn't until the advent of easy credit that too many people started using illusionary money (credit) to buy crap that they wanted (didn't need, thought they needed, but really didn't) that things really started to go wrong.
Your credit score is NOT an asset. It's a value of how reliable you are at paying back "money" that someone else says you owe.

They (the creditors) knew that they weren't providing you a legitimate service. They knew that they were making a gamble that you would fall for their illusion and provide them a permanent free lunch, or dinner, or car, or house, etc.

I say that the time has come for the free lunches to end. The house of cards needs to collapse.

2009/03/05

Citigroup shares tumble below $1

According to Yahoo Finance:
Citigroup, a Dow component, fell more than 13 percent to an intraday low of $0.98, hammered by continued fears over the bank's health and ability to avert nationalization.
Bad choices hurt. Can't say that I'm surprised by this.

If I thought there was any chance of them preventing nationalization, and/or then pulling themselves out of the toilet by themself, I might say that now is a good time to invest. But I know better.

The investors know that an ill wind blows (mostly out of Washington D.C.) and they're doing the smart thing... running away as fast as they can.

2009/03/04

Why Skilled Immigrants Are Leaving the U.S.

According to Yahoo News:
The U.S. is no longer the only land of opportunity. If we don't want the immigrants who have fueled our innovation and economic growth, they now have options elsewhere. Immigrants are returning home in greater numbers. And new research shows they are returning to enjoy a better quality of life, better career prospects, and the comfort of being close to family and friends.
It's not surprising that immigrants (the legal kind) are deciding to leave. And I can't blame them. Where I would wish almost nothing but failure and deportment on the illegal immigrants, I wish nothing but the best for the legal immigrants that are deciding to return home.

To the legal immigrants, I say, I can't blame you for leaving. America doesn't deserve your skills. If those skills can benefit your home country, then my blessings on you.

And to anyone that would say that blessing them to go home is bad for America, I call hypocrisy. People keep complaining that there aren't enough jobs. What better way to give Americans jobs than to have openings created in skilled positions?

Oh, that's right. You can't teach Americans new skills easily. Something about old dogs and new tricks...

2009/03/02

Dow falls to lowest level in 11 years

According to Yahoo News:
Investors' despair about financial companies and the recession have brought the Dow Jones industrial average to another unwanted milestone: its first drop below 7,000 in more than 11 years.
(everyone with me now) Well, DUH!
Of course the investors are looking at what the government is doing and saying to themselves "Screw you guys. I'm taking my toys and going somewhere else."
The investors continue to see nothing new coming out of Washington, so why should they think that anything is going to get any better, causing them to have reason to stay?
Isn't the definition of insanity "doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result" (paraphrased).
If the investors keep seeing the same tax and spend concept coming out of Washington, and the investors, being some of the largest "income earners" in the country, a group continually referred to as "the rich", who "can afford more taxes", continue to be threatened with more taxes, more government spending, what sane reason would any of these investors want to keep their money invested in the corrupt system?
"Tax the rich" really means "tax the investors", which is a great way to convince the investors that your country is a great place to NOT invest.

If you want to destroy the economy further, keep threatening to "raise the taxes only on the rich".
If you want to destroy jobs, instead of create them, keep talking about how the rich aren't paying their share.

If you want to destroy the country, keep punishing the rich with harsher and harsher taxes and more regulations on business. They'll stop investing. They'll close or reduce their businesses because they're tired of your pedantic rules. They'll continue to move their factories to countries that either don't bend them over and rape them so hard, or don't rape them at all (what a concept). They'll continue to shuffle their hard-earned money out of this country, instead of reinvesting in america (lack of caps intentional). The rich know how to "pass the buck". The harder you try to rape them, the worse things get for the working people.,

If you want to help the working man, quit punishing his employers. Quit punishing the people that invest in the company he works for. QUIT PUNISHING THE RICH.

Until america learns this lesson, it's doom is sealed.


On a totally unrelated note, I just noticed that it's called the "Dow Jones industrial average". I didn't know that america still had any industry left.

Authors Guild smacks blind people in the face

According to Yahoo Tech News:
Amazon has added "a feature" to the new Kindle2 that will disable the unit's ability to do text-to-speech conversions unless the publisher OK's the unit to do text-to-speech.

While Blount is probably sleeping better, consumer rights advocates are considerably dismayed. The always-astute Lawrence Lessig offers an important history lesson on the subject, noting that in 2001, the very same issue arose over Adobe and its new e-reader -- which got downright silly when a copy of the public-domain, non-copyrightable Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was marked by its publisher is "cannot be read aloud." Is it a matter of time before this happens again?
Here, Blount is the head wiener at the Author's Guild and loudest (most annoying) voice against the text-to-speech functionality, "because it will take away from audiobook sales".
You can't take away what isn't there in the first place (because noone's bothered to read it), jackass.

So, instead of the Kindle2 being a great tool for helping cause more people to take an interest in more books, the blind being a group that would love to hear more books, instead Amazon caved and is now letting the author's guild (lack of caps intentional due to lack of respect) dictate even further what the blind can and can't "read" instead of letting the technology JUST WORK.

2009/03/01

Top 10 List for 2008

Warning: 2008 was a really horrible year for movies.
What advertising I was exposed to didn't make me excited for any of the movies of 2008.
I did see a few movies from 2008 though, and in spite of the lack of competition for numbered slots, even those aren't numberworthy, so I'll skip the numbers entirely and skip straight to the honorable mentions.

Honorable Mention:
Hancock
The Dark Knight

Dishonorable Mention:
Can't really think of any. Which is probably because my exposure to crap was so low. So probably a good thing.

Top 10 list for 2007

  1. Shooter
  2. Resident Evil: Extinction
  3. Live Free or Die Hard
  4. Ocean's Thirteen
  5. 1408
  6. I Am Legend
  7. The Simpsons Movie
  8. Hitman
  9. 30 Days of Night
  10. Shoot 'em Up

Honorable Mention:
Grindhouse
28 Weeks Later

Dishonorable Mention:
Knocked Up - Making the concept of careless sex leading to accidental pregnancy an "OK" thing is not an honorable message, regardless how much "funny" you might try to pack with it.

2009/02/28

Top 10 list for 2006

  1. V for Vendetta
  2. Lucky Number Slevin
  3. Inside Man
  4. The Departed
  5. Crank
  6. She's The Man
  7. Final Destination 3
  8. Grandma's Boy
  9. Stranger Than Fiction
  10. The Lake House

Honorable Mention:
Last Holiday
Ultraviolet
Thank You for Smoking
Slither
Click
The Devil Wears Parada
Accepted
Snakes on a Plane


Dishonorable Mention
The Da Vinci Code

2009/02/27

Citigroup reaches aid deal with government

Sure, Government doesn't want to nationalize the banking system. (That was sarcasm, in case you didn't catch it.)

According to Yahoo news
The U.S. government will exchange up to $25 billion in emergency bailout money it provided Citigroup Inc. for as much as a 36 percent equity stake in the struggling bank, greatly increasing the risks to taxpayers as voter unhappiness about the broader bailout program rises.
Investors appeared disappointed in the deal and expected dilution of their stake, sending shares plummeting 94 cents, or 38.2 percent, to $1.52 in afternoon trading. Stocks tumbled early but pulled off their lows as the Dow Jones industrial average came within 34 points of breaching the 7,000 mark for the first time in more than 11 years.
No big surprise here, the investors don't want anything to do with it.
The conversion will make the government the largest shareholder in Citigroup, but company officials said they still expect to call the shots.
Good luck with that.

Investors have punished the shares of Citigroup and other banks in recent weeks out of concern the government could nationalize troubled banks, which would involve replacing management and wiping out shareholders.

Treasury officials and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke have said there are no plans to take such steps.

Of course these things are never "planned". They just happen. And it doesn't surprise me that the investors want to get out of the cave before the Indiana Jones giant marble runs them over.

Dean Baker, co-director for the Center for Economic Policy and Research, a liberal think tank, said the government's efforts to avoid a takeover amount to "a further handout to Citigroup."

"We really should own it outright," he said, given that taxpayers have provided the company $45 billion in assistance, several times its market value.

Sounds like government thinking to me.

I'd definitely say, if you have any investements there, get them out. Because when the government nationalizes it, you probably won't have anything left. I could be wrong, but I doubt it.

Violence between repo men, car owners on the rise

According to Yahoo news.

Well, DUH! Especially when the repo men do something extraordinarily stupid (as mentioned in the story) like going out in the middle of the night to do a repossession. If you act like a thief in the night, expect to be treated like a thief in the night, and EXPECT to be shot at. My question is what moron hired this moron in the first place?
And with the country/planet economies where they are, you'd have to he foolhardy or ... no, just foolhardy, to be trying to repossess vehicles right now.

Top 10 list for 2005

Unfortunately, 2005 was a really sucky year for movies when really horrible crap managed to get itself and it's actors/actresses not only nominated but awarded.

I guess I'll start with the dishonorable mention list because to skip it would by like ignoring the pink elephant in the livingroom.

  1. Brokeback Mountain - No redeeming qualities.  I don't know how it even made it to theaters.
  2. Syriana - Depicts real terrorists as some sort of people with a noble purpose that don't have any choice but to do bad things.
  3. Get Rich or Die Tryin' - Great, 50 cent gets a movie deal.  I can't recall anything redeeming about it.

On to the real list.

  1. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Read the book after being blown away by the greatness of the movie, and even with the differences between the movie and the books, the movie is absolutely awesome to watch.  Phenominal replay value.
  2. Serenity - Had only seen small parts of the Firefly series before seeing the movie, and with or without the series, this movie is great.  I don't think that anyone else has successfully gotten the space western concept down quite so perfectly before.  If you like Sci-Fi, you'll love it.  If you like Westerns, you'll probably love it.
  3. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe - Never read the books, so I don't know where (if at all) it deviates.  Definitely a great story.  Well executed.
  4. Lord of War - Amazing seeing the war on arms trade from the arms dealer point of view.  And so many little truths.  Strongly recommended even if you only see it once.
  5. Æon Flux - Pretty good.  Didn't follow any of the cartoon storyline that I've seen.  The whole "we've been cloned this whole time" thing came way out of left field, but taken without the context of the cartoon, an entertaining movie.
  6. Batman Begins
  7. The Ice Harvest - Dark comedy.  Not for everybody, but I enjoyed it.
  8. Just Like Heaven - Good mix of comedy, drama, and a dash of fantasy.
  9. Waiting...
  10. Wedding Crashers

Honorable Mention:

  • The 40-Year-Old Virgin
  • Zathura
  • Walk the Line
  • The Man - silly and entertaining
  • Flightplan
  • Fantastic Four
  • The Family Stone

2009/02/26

My top 10 list for 2004

  1. The Chronicles of Riddick
  2. Shaun of the Dead
  3. Dawn of the Dead
  4. Kill Bill Vol. 2
  5. The Incredibles
  6. Man on Fire
  7. Resident Evil: Apocalypse
  8. D.E.B.S.
  9. EuroTrip
  10. The Butterfly Effect

Honorable Mention
The Village

Short list of useful Linux distributions

For Desktops:
  Ubuntu (and siblings) - Good hardware detection and configuration.  As a decendent of Debian, has a LOT of packages available.  Also offers the proprietary packages that Debian won't touch.  One weakness I've noticed, is that Ubuntu's Samba is not compatible with Geexbox (see below), not sure why.

For Servers:
  Debian - Excellent for a large number of tasks.
  Ubuntu Server - Almost as good as Debian, and as a decendent of Debian gains almost all of it's strengths, but has the same Samba weakness as Desktop Ubuntu when sharing to Geexbox.
  Gentoo - Phenominal for getting the absolute best out of a machine... if you're willing to put the time in to get the system running, which arguably can be a headache.

For Routers:
  Smoothwall - Great for user friendly setup and maintenance.
  IPCop - Slightly less userfriendly than Smoothwall, but includes more advanced features, which can confuse even me at times.

For Media Players:
  Geexbox - Usable as a customizable live CD.  Can read Samba and NFS file shares, though has difficulty seeing/dealing with Ubuntu based shares (not sure why).
  XBMC Live - Xbox Media Center.  Great of features, but unfortunately requires advanced 3d hardware more advanced than the GeForce2MX that's in my media player box.

For File Serving/Storage:
  FreeNAS - absolutely beautiful, a little detailed to set up, but easy to administer.  Big giant gaping weakness, because it's BSD based, it likes UFS filesystems which don't handle power failures gracefully at all.  Damaged filesystems, machine boots, then goes zombified with trying to make heads or tails of the filesystems.  So to repair the system, you have to boot a different live BSD distro, fix the filesystems, then reboot back into Freenas.  Great for administration... if you never EVER EVER have an unanticipated power failure.

Everything else:
  KNOPPIX - One of the best Live CD's ever.  Without KNOPPIX, I'd probably still be fighting Windows every day to get anything done.  Excellent for learning and getting comfortable with Linux before taking the big step of doing a full install.  Also great for bringing a system up for doing repairs or just to copy information from the hard drives to somewhere else on the network.