October 20, 2010

‘The 2100 Trust’ Wants to Buy the Boston Globe. Who Are They?

Filed under: Business Moves,Environment,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 9:11 pm

So “The 2100 Trust” wants to buy the Boston Globe. The Globe’s parent company, The New York Times, yanked it off the market six months ago after not getting what it considered a decent offer and supposedly “after determining that its finances had stabilized.”

Uh, I don’t think so, from the Wall Street Journal:

Revenue in the group that includes the Globe declined 6.2% to $102.8 million in the third quarter, Times Co. reported Tuesday.

The Times Company has not acknowledged contact, if any has occurred.

According to many reports, the Globe was losing $1 million per week before the Times demanded concessions that amounted to $20 million (WSJ’s figure) from the Globe’s unions. Obviously, if revenues are still falling, the math here isn’t working.

So who is Aaron Kushner, “Mission-Driven Entrepreneur” — and where is his “2100 Trust” getting the money to “to make a ‘significant long-term investment’ in the newspaper”? Possibly personal funds, but it doesn’t seem likely, or at least it wouldn’t seem to be 100% of the answer.

An Aaron Kushner, who very likely is the same person (link is to the address of his company Marian Heath Greeting Cards), is described in this very rough Google translation of a French report about U.S.-Israel relations as an Obama fan, and gave $2,300 to Obama’s 2008 campaign (after giving another $1,000 to Joe Biden when he was still running):

Aaron Kushner, a young man from Boston, rather a supporter of Barack Obama is sorry for the misunderstanding: “Nobody doubts that Obama is tied to Israel and to peace. But it is a methodological problem. This is not good to put a wedge in relations between Israel and the United States. The Arab world believes that there is a gap between the allies.’s because they do not understand what it means to have the freedom of expression. But it reinforces an impression of weakness.”

If the name of “The 2100 Trust” refers to calendar year 2100 — and I emphasize the word “if” — there may be reason to believe that it has a connection with this:

I think I recognize the guy whose narrative appears at the end, with a brief view of him. Does anyone else?

I would not bet against this guy, who just threw $1 million at Media Matters, being directly or indirectly financially involved with a Globe bid.

AP Lowers the Housing Recovery Bar By At Least 17%

LoweringTheBarIn a report so riddled with errors, inconsistencies, incompleteness and sloppiness that it’s really hard to know where to begin, Associated Press real estate writer Alan Zibel couldn’t even keep his housing recovery benchmark remotely consistent with what it was only a month ago.

The Census Bureau’s September release of information about August housing starts and building permits informed the country that those items came in at seasonally adjusted annual rates of 598,000 and 569,000, respectively (they were revised slightly upward in yesterday’s reports covering September).

On September 21, after disclosing the housing starts number, but not the one for permits, Zibel quoted Paul Dales, U.S. economist with Capital Economics, who said:

“Homebuilding activity remains at an astoundingly weak level,” Dales said, adding that construction has to be more than double current levels for the market to be considered healthy.

My math says that means that annualized starts have to reach more than 1.2 million before health returns.

Now look at what Zibel told us in his report yesterday:

Housing starts are up 28 percent from their bottom in April 2009. Still, they are down 73 percent from their peak in January 2006 and 40 percent below the 1 million annual rate that analysts say is consistent with healthy housing markets.

Really, Alan? How did the benchmark for healthy housing markets drop by 17% or more, from the “more than 1.2 million” cited in September to 1 million yesterday?

My answer: It didn’t. A quick eyeball review of the nearly 52 years of data in the Census Bureau’s housing starts report (the not seasonally adjusted one, because we’re looking at full years of data) shows that every single year since 1959 — good and bad — has had over 1 million total starts. A convenient table from the National Association of Home Builders showing annual starts from 1978 to 2009 shows us that total starts were over 1 million every single year, even during the slump years of 1981, 1982 and 1991.

Perhaps the AP writer intended to refer to total starts including multi-family units in September and only to single-family units in October. If he tries to go there, I’m not buying it. Dale’s quote in September refers to “homebuilding,” which would ordinarily seem to refer only to single-family dwellings. If Dale is setting the single-family annual bar at 1.2 million, the benchmark for all housing starts should really be much higher than 1.2 million (I told you the reporting was pervasively sloppy).

So why did Zibel lower the bar so significantly two weeks out from the mid-term elections? And why was he so sloppy about it? For many readers here, the questions answer themselves.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Christine O’Donnell Is Right; Chris Coons Is Wrong (and Ignorant to Boot)

Y’know, the libs in the audience at the O’Donnell-Coons debate earlier this week can laugh all they want. Chris Coons “The Tax Man” and his camp can condescend all they want. The hopelessly biased establishment press can say and write that Christine O’Donnell erred all they want.

They can laugh, condescend, say, and write, all day and all night, between now and Election Day, and even thereafter.

But all of their laughter, condescension, broadcasts and punditry won’t change the fact that Christine O’Donnell is right and Chris Coons is wrong: Separation of church and state is not in the Constitution — and never will be unless and until the Constitution itself is amended.

The establishment clause of the First Amendment is not a “separation” clause. All the Supreme Court opinions and decisions in the world pretending that it somehow is won’t change that — and never will unless and until the Constitution itself is amended.

Mark Levin explains it all in two audio clips from his Tuesday night broadcast that follow (direct YouTube links here and here; original HT to RightScoop, who has the full 15 minutes in one audio):

 

All of the elitist laughter, condescension, broadcasts and punditry also won’t change the fact that when called upon, Ruling Class member Chris Coons could not correctly name even ONE of the five freedoms (assembly, speech, petition, religion, press) found in the First Amendment of the Constitution that a person who possesses a law degree is supposed to know stone-cold (HT Michelle Malkin):

Coons named the separation of church and state (Wrong!! – It’s “freedom of religion” — Ed.), but could not identify the others — the freedoms of speech, press, to assemble and petition — and asked that O’Donnell allow the moderators ask the questions.

“I guess he can’t,” O’Donnell said.

Bingo, Christine — and poor little Chrissy Coons had to go running to the moderators for cover. What a chicken-bleep. Cue the Sharron Angle quote.

_________________________________________________

UPDATE: Matt at Weapons of Mass Discussion has a great dissection of what Jefferson’s original “separation” quote was all about, and adds this —

… I don’t expect those folks who don’t get it to ever acknowledge that she (O’Donnell) is actually making a very important argument that many Americans don’t understand. Why? For the most part, our education system has robbed the citizenry of critical thinking and reading comprehension skills.

And it has deliberately warped the meaning of key sections of the Constitution to fits its leftist agenda.

Post of the Day: Iowahawk

Filed under: Economy,Health Care,Quotes, Etc. of the Day,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 11:19 am

Actually, it originally went up on Friday.

Iowahawk’s history (HT Patterico) of the Obama administration, in old-fashioned command-line, all caps format.

Excerpts:

DO YOU WANT CZARS?

>Y

ENTER CZAR NAMES SEPARATED BY COMMA. WHEN YOU ARE DONE PRESS CTL-T

>JONES, JENNINGS, HOLBROOK, CROWLEY, RATTNER, MONTGOMERY, BERSIN, HAYES, ROSS, STERN, ROSENTHAL, VOLKER, BROWNER, DUBOIS, DAVIS, FRIED, DEPARLE, KUNDRA, BLAIR, MITCHELL, FEINBERG, SUNSTEIN, HOLDREN, DEVANEY, GRATION, ALLISON, CHOPRA, BRENNAN, CARRION, CARTER, SAMORE

I’M SORRY. THAT IS AGAINST THE CONSTITUTION. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>IGNORE CONSTITUTION

++++++++++++++++++

YOU ARE IN AN OVAL OFFICE. YOU ARE BEHIND A DESK. YOUR APPROVAL HEALTH IS 55%. YOUR CONGRESS HAS 31% HEALTH. UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE FOREST IS 8.9% YOUR FRIEND AT HARVARD IS ARRESTED BY POLICEMAN.

>CALL POLICEMAN STUPID, PLAY RACE CARD

I’M SORRY, THAT DID NOT WORK. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>BEER SUMMIT, BLAME BUSH

++++++++++++++++++

YOU ARE IN AN OVAL OFFICE. ON THE TV ARE YOUR CZARS. YOUR CZARS ARE PRAISING COMMUNISM. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>PLAY RACE CARD, VOICE SUPPORT FOR CZARS

I’M SORRY, THIS DOES NOT WORK. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>THROW CZARS UNDER BUS

++++++++++++++++++

YOU ARE IN AN OVAL OFFICE. YOU ARE BEHIND A DESK. YOUR APPROVAL HEALTH IS 49%. HEALTH CARE BILL IS STALLED. YOUR CONGRESS HAS 16% HEALTH. UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE FOREST IS 9.5%. YOUR TEAM IS SHOPPING THEIR RESUMES. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>ADD PAGES TO HEALTH CARE BILL

HOW MANY?

>1826

DO YOU WANT TO READ NEW HEALTH CARE BILL?

>N

HEALTH CARE BILL NOW COST $1 TRILLION. HOW WILL YOU PAY?

>PRETEND IT COSTS $0

++++++++++++++++++

YOU ARE IN AN OVAL OFFICE. YOU HAVE 41% APPROVAL HEALTH. YOU HAVE NO GOLD LEFT. YOU HAVE NO CONGRESS LEFT. YOU HAVE NO MEDIA LEFT. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO DO?

>BLAME BUSH

I’M SORRY, THAT DOESN’T WORK ANYMORE.

>PLAY RACE CARD

I’M SORRY, THAT DOESN’T WORK ANYMORE.

>PLAY GOLF

GOLF COURSE IS CLOSED.

>TURN LEFT

DUDE.

>FAKE TURN RIGHT

ADVENTURER PLEASE, YOU’RE JUST EMBARRASSING YOURSELF.

Read the whole thing.

Lickety-Split Links (102010, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 9:40 am

Rioters rampage, protesters block French airports” — Because the government wants to increase the regular retirement age in the country’s retirement system from 60 to 62.

____________________________________________

From Tim Graham at NewsBusters“WaPo Ignores Rep. Jim Moran Race — Even As Moran Sneers His 24-Year Army Vet Opponent Offers No ‘Public Service’ Record.”

Here’s what Moran said:

“What [Republicans] do is that they find candidates – usually stealth candidates – that haven’t been in office, haven’t served or performed any kind of public service. My opponent is typical.”

Moran’s opponent is Patrick Murray. You have to read Murray’s full bio, which includes “tours in Iraq, Kosovo, Bosnia, Serbia and Russia,” to really appreciate how utterly outrageous and contemptible the remark by Moran really is.

Based on his bio, Moran has never served in the military.

I’m also reminded of the knee-jerk, how-dare-you reactions of Democrats when anyone questions a party member who has military experience over legitimate policy questions (e.g., Max Cleland, the late John Murtha).

As to Moran, let it not be forgotten (expletive is at link) that in June 2006, he promised constituents that: “When I become chairman [of a House appropriations subcommittee], I’m going to earmark the sh** out of it (the opportunity).” Sadly, that’s exactly what he has done.

So Moran’s definition of “public service,” based on what he has said and done, apparently involves maximizing earmarks from his privileged perch. He has earned rejection, not reelection.

From here it appears that Northern Virginia would be much better served in Congress by Murray, whose issue positions are clearly and sensibly conservative.

____________________________________________

At Bloomberg BusinessWeek“U.S. Mortgage Applications Fall by the Most in Four Months.”

At Reuters“Mortgage applications slump as rates rise from lows.” There’s no indication that apps slipped to their lowest level in four months in Reuters’ content.

The Associated Press doesn’t have a story up as of 9:10 this morning. My guess is that they’re in the lab, trying to formulate a version of lipstick to put on this really ugly pig.

The actual press release from the Mortgage Bankers Association is here.

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“Bank of America posts $7.7B loss on special charge”Nice, vague headline from the Associated Press. The “special charge” is $10.4 billion for “credit and debit card reform legislation passed over the summer” because it “limits fees banks can collect when merchants accept debit cards.”

____________________________________________

About 20 seconds into the first clip at this Right Scoop link, Sarah Palin tells an audience at a Reno rally that, “We can’t party like it’s 1773, not yet.”

Hilarity ensued (HT Michelle Malkin), as “smarties” on the left, including Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos, Gwen Ifill of PBS, and several other celebrated what they thought was a major Palin gaffe.

Uh, folks, the Boston Tea Party was in 1773.

Wow. Palin is so in the Left’s collective head that she “pwns” them even when she isn’t trying to.

Positivity: Bishop underscores importance of family during Mass with rescued miners

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 8:06 am

From Santiago, Chile:

Oct 19, 2010 / 05:09 pm

At a Mass of Thanksgiving with 20 rescued miners outside the San Jose Mine in Chile, Bishop Gonzalo Duarte underscored the vital importance of the family within society.

Bishop Duarte, vice-president of the Chilean Bishops’ Conference, thanked the miners and their families for their example of strength, solidarity, unity and drive to live. “The family is the best place to be born, to grow up, to grow old and to die,” he said, praising the miners’ loved ones for remaining outside the mine during the entire ordeal.

The bishop also offered special thanks to mothers and grandmothers, whom he called “the backbone” of the country. …

Go here for the rest of the story.

October 19, 2010

Why Early Voting Is a Travesty, Reason 12

Filed under: Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 6:10 pm

I had 11 reasons when I last wrote on this subject two years ago:

Make that 12 — “Activist” teachers (i.e., Democratic operatives) will take voting-age (we hope) kids to the polls during school hours:

Three van loads of Hughes High students were taken last week – during school hours – to vote and given sample ballots only for Democratic candidates and then taken for ice cream, a Monday lawsuit alleges.

The complaint was made by Thomas Brinkman Jr., a Republican candidate for Hamilton County auditor, and the Coalition Opposed to Additional Spending & Taxes against Cincinnati Public Schools.

“They plan to bring four more high schools (to vote) this week,” Christopher Finney, COAST attorney, said Monday after filing the suit.

… CPS spokeswoman Janet Walsh said taking students on school time to vote has been done before. “It has to be scrupulously nonpartisan,” Walsh said.

Stepaniak said church vans were volunteered to drive students to vote.

The suit alleges three van loads of Hughes High students arrived at the Downtown Board of Elections offices at 1 p.m. Wednesday, supervised by a school employee. School lets out at 3:15 p.m.

When they got out of the vans, the students, the suit alleges, also were accompanied by adults who appeared to be campaign workers or supporters for U.S. Rep. Steve Driehaus, D-West Price Hill, the congressman being challenged this fall by Steve Chabot. When the students got out of the vans, the suit alleges they were given sample ballots containing only Democratic candidates.

… The suit alleges those actions violated a 2002 agreement between CPS and COAST where the school agreed it wouldn’t allow school property or employees to be used for “advocating the election or defeat of candidates for public office.”

Information as to whether the kids could actually read what was on the ballots was apparently unavailable.

Whopper of the Day, Housing Division

From Associated Press Real Estate Writer Alan Zibel, writing on today’s housing starts and new building permit reports from the Census Bureau:

The housing market suffered its worst summer in more than 10 years, despite the lowest mortgage rates in five decades.

No Alan. Even before adjustments for population differences, the housing market suffered its worst summer on record.

Readers are welcome to peruse the two reports cited above for smaller June through August or June through September results than we experienced in 2010:

– Housing starts: July through September, 2010 – 161,000; June through September, 2010 – 214,800
– Building permits: July through September, 2010 – 150,300; June through September, 2010 – 209,200

I’m almost certain that there aren’t any. The majority of previous June-September and July-September periods show over 100,000 during each month involved.

Sales figures for September aren’t out yet, but I don’t seem them changing the reality.

Or is this smart-aleck time at AP, wherein Zibel would respond: “Well, 50 years is ‘more than 10 years’”?

_________________________________________________

UPDATE: My statement that “the housing market suffered its worst summer on record” is so obviously correct that there’s no room for debate. Looking through the above reports, the second-worst, third-worst, and fourth-worst years on record are as follows:

  • Starts, June-September –
    2009 – 222,400 (about 4% higher than 2010)
    2008 – 352,500
    1981 – 376,100
    1991 – 388,200.
  • Permits, June-September –
    2009 – 224,300 (about 7% higher than 2010)
    1966 – 319,600
    1981 – 339,700
    2008 – 343,700.

Every other year available (1959 – 2007) has over 400,000 starts during July through September. Every, single, one.

And Alan Zibel has the nerve to write that this year was only the worst in 10 years?

AP Continues Strange Infatuation With Steven Slater’s ‘Fame’

Filed under: Business Moves,MSM Biz/Other Bias,MSM Biz/Other Ignorance — TBlumer @ 2:22 pm

Here’s the headline at the Associated Press’s 12:49 p.m. report today on Steven Slater’s plea bargain: “Attendant who slid on chute to fame pleads guilty.” Earlier headlines had used the word “famous” (example here: “JetBlue attendant in famous meltdown pleads guilty”).

For those who still care about what words mean, the primary meaning of “famous” is “having a widespread reputation, usually of a favorable nature; renowned; celebrated.” Steven Slater is not “famous”; he is, or at least should be, “infamous” (“having an extremely bad reputation”).

So continues “The Essential Global News Network’s” strange fascination bordering on approbation of the flight attendant who, back in August, “went on the public-address system, swore at a passenger who he claimed treated him rudely, grabbed a beer and slid onto the tarmac” using an emergency slide.

Days after the Slater’s stunt, the headline on an item by AP’s Samantha Gross (covered at NewsBusters; at BizzyBlog) was “Flight attendant’s grand exit is a dream for some.”

A few weeks later, an unbylined AP story (covered at NewsBusters; at BizzyBlog) said that Slater “captured the nation’s imagination.”

Today’s story by Colleen Long continues the trend (bolds are mine):

The JetBlue flight attendant whose job-quitting meltdown landed him in court avoided jail time in a plea deal Tuesday that requires him to undergo counseling and treatment for a least a year.

Steven Slater spoke politely and calmly as he entered a guilty plea to a charge of second-degree attempted criminal mischief, a felony, and a lesser charge of fourth-degree attempted criminal mischief.

“At the end of the day, I’m a grown-up and I must take responsibility for my actions,” Slater said outside court. He thanked his attorney, prosecutors, his mother and his partner, and said the public interest in his case had surprised him.

Under the terms of the deal, Slater must undergo at least a year of counseling and substance-abuse treatment. If he completes the program to the judge’s satisfaction, the top charge will dismissed, the misdemeanor will remain and he will be sentenced to a year of probation.

He must check in with the court periodically and could also have to pay restitution to JetBlue. If he does not fulfill the requirements, he will get one to three years in jail.

Slater’s dramatic and unusual departure made him a cult hero to some. He was a topic on TV shows, on the front pages of newspapers and many cheered him for standing up to the inhospitable world of airline travel and for quitting his job so spectacularly.

… JetBlue told employees in a memo that press coverage was not taking into account how much harm can be caused by emergency slides, which are deployed with a potentially deadly amount of force.

District Attorney Richard Brown scolded Slater – and the public – for not taking his actions more seriously, noting it cost $25,000 to fix the slide and that the plane had to be taken out of service afterward, causing flight delays.

Slater’s childish actions had adult consequences. That should be the message coming out of the Slater incident. Instead we have a subculture, for which AP writers seem strangely sympathetic, that seems to think the whole escapade was cute and made some sort of “statement” — never mind its effects. The subculture is significant enough that Long notes the debut of “disgruntled airline employee or the angry steward” Halloween costumes.

Steven Hoffer at AOL.com brings up a more relevant and real-world matter: “The main question for Slater at this point may be whether he can land another job.

Given AP’s odd and consistent sympathy for Slater, I’d suggest the that former JetBlue flight attendant start here.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

The Foreclosure Document Mess: Cloward, Piven, and Their President Are Surely Pleased

Filed under: Business Moves,Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 8:55 am

foreclosure-dr9The system is nearly overwhelmed. It’s not an accident.

________________________

Note: This column went up at Pajamas Media and was teased here at BizzyBlog on Sunday.

________________________

The foreclosure document mess is a red-flag indication that a long-term leftist strategy to take down the nation as we know it is as close to “success” as it has ever been.

The latest as of when this column was drafted was this:

Officials in 50 states and the District of Columbia have launched a joint investigation into allegations that mortgage companies mishandled documents and broke laws in foreclosing on hundreds of thousands of homeowners.

Many banks, including Bank of America, have halted all sales of foreclosed properties. The State of Connecticut slapped a 60-day moratorium on all foreclosure sales earlier this month. Title insurers are backing away. A brazen gambit to get banks off the hook for many of their documentation errors, the “Interstate Recognition of Notarizations Act of 2010,” zoomed through Congress and reached President Obama’s desk last week. The president pocket-vetoed it.

“Mishandled documents”? “Documentation errors”? What’s this all about?

The goal of the unsuccessful legislation was to force state courts “to give equal treatment to notarized documents … that were notarized out of state.” Apparently, many overwhelmed mortgage servicers frequently failed to have their foreclosure documents properly notarized in the states where their delinquent borrowers live; in some cases, they weren’t notarized at all. In the courts, non-notarized or improperly notarized documents relating to real property usually aren’t enforceable. There appears to be little dispute, to paraphrase Jerry Lee Lewis, there has been a whole lot of wrong-state notarization and outright non-notarization going on.

The key word in the previous paragraph is “overwhelmed.” In full context, mortgage servicers’ inability to keep their foreclosure documents in order is best seen as a symptom of a system thrown into crisis by decades-long employment of a deliberately disruptive “progressive” tactic applied to housing and home lending. Its roots go back to 1960s radicals Richard Andrew Cloward and Frances Fox Piven.

The pair, in a 1966 Nation Magazine column, announced a goal, as described here, to “persuade millions of Americans to get on the relief rolls — to bankrupt the welfare agencies … (in order to) provoke a financial crisis that would force Congress to enact a guaranteed annual income for all Americans.” At the time, of the roughly 8 million Americans who were receiving public assistance, about 4.5 million were on “welfare,” then known as Aid to Families with Dependent Children. Cloward and Piven believed that adding another 8 million to the public assistance rolls would bring about the desired crisis.

The growth in dependency did occur; it just took a while. By 1991, a quarter-century later, the welfare rolls alone had increased by 8.5 million to almost 13 million. The caseload peaked at 14.2 million in 1994. Meanwhile, the Food Stamp program, starting from virtually unnoticeable levels in the late 1960s, grew into a $20 billion behemoth with 25 million recipients.

Yet the system didn’t buckle, partially because the increases didn’t occur quickly enough, but primarily because the left’s worst enemy, the USA’s still largely capitalist economy, expanded during most of that period at a rate that enabled it to absorb these mostly unnecessary costs. The systemic threat ended when the 1996 welfare reform law took effect, after which welfare rolls shrank significantly. Darn.

But what the left attempted with welfare is not the only potential application of what has become known as the “Cloward-Piven Strategy.” Succinctly stated by David Horowitz, it is all about:

… forcing political change through orchestrated crisis. … (It) seeks to hasten the fall of capitalism by overloading the government bureaucracy with a flood of impossible demands, thus pushing society into crisis and economic collapse.

The strategy’s filthy fingerprints are all over housing and mortgage lending, in at least these forms:

  • The Community Reinvestment Act and its amendments, which enabled “community organizations” to force banks to make imprudent loans as a condition of getting regulatory approval of mergers, acquisitions, and other corporate actions.
  • The explosive growth of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (Fan and Fred), and the quiet de facto government takeover of the mortgage loan approval process that accompanied it.
  • Once they had commandeered the approval process, the deliberate loosening of lending standards at Fan and Fred, which enabled throngs of undeserving applicants to buy houses they couldn’t afford.
  • As detailed by Peter Wallison and based on work by Edward Pinto, Fan and Fred’s 15-year campaign of fraudulently overstating the quality of loans in the mortgage-backed securities they issued. In December 2009, Wallison wrote: “… because of Fannie and Freddie’s mislabeling, there were millions more high-risk loans outstanding. That meant default rates as well as the actual losses after foreclosure were going to be outside all prior experience.”

If the system isn’t already overwhelmed, it’s awfully close. This Cloward-Piven attempt is working. Here’s a sign of how much “progress” has been made:

Potential paperwork errors on some of the $1.34 trillion of securitized home mortgages may give investors an opening to challenge the legality of deals, threatening to unnerve financial markets …. questions about the ownership of the loans … may allow investors to force lenders to buy back the securities.

Guess who issued a huge percentage of these mortgage-backed securities, and has hundreds of billions more in underwater mortgages sitting on their books? That’s right, Fan and Fred, who “just so happen” to have a promise of relief without limits from the Obama Treasury Department.

Unlike their twentieth century failure with welfare, this time the left’s goal of “pushing society into crisis and economic collapse” appears to be within their grasp — and the person who James Simpson described as “the Cloward-Piven candidate” in his brilliant September 2008 American Thinker column (“Barack Obama and the Strategy of Manufactured Crisis”) is now President of the United States. This is a man, as Stanley Kurtz recently noted at National Review, whose now-demonstrated socialist belief system “is still very much alive in the governing philosophy and long-term political strategy” of his administration. What basis is there for believing that Obama would not welcome a collapse while pretending otherwise?

The foreclosure mess is so pervasive that I don’t see how anyone can be comfortable making a prediction as to where it’s heading. From their outposts in the afterlife (a fiery one, I suspect) and New York, respectively, Mr. Cloward and Ms. Piven are probably quite pleased with developments thus far. Whether they ultimately get their way heavily depends on November’s election results, aggressive post-election action to restore constitutional governance, and lots of prayer for those who must deal with this.

Lickety-Split Links (101910, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 8:37 am

Dems are attempting bribery to get senior’s votes, and even the Associated Press can’t handle the fibbing:

Democrats are making a pre-election pitch to give Social Security recipients a one-time payment of $250, part of a larger effort to convince senior voters that their party, and not Republicans, will best look out for the 58 million people who get the government retirement and disability benefits.

… (Harry) Reid (said), “The only thing standing in the way of America’s seniors receiving this critical support are Senate Republicans.”

Actually, 12 Democrats and one independent who aligns himself with Democrats joined 37 Republicans in blocking the $250 bonus when Senate voted on the issue last March.

____________________________________________

Gallup doubles down on its contention about the direction of unemployment:

Unemployment, as measured by Gallup without seasonal adjustment, is at 10.0% in mid-October — essentially the same as the 10.1% at the end of September but up sharply from 9.4% in mid-September and 9.3% at the end of August. This mid-month measurement confirms the late September surge in joblessness that should be reflected in the government’s Nov. 5 unemployment report.

____________________________________________

This guy’s only mission in life, with maximum media cooperation and exploitation, is to diminish the influence of the mother of the mother of the baby he fathered in any way he conceivably can.

It’s despicable, but Saul Alinsky would be proud.

____________________________________________

Clueless: “MSNBC contributors can’t figure out why so many women are part of the Tea Party.”

What about $3 trillion in additional debt since Inauguration Day (can be replicated here) don’t you understand?

NationalDebt012009to101510

What about Mama Grizzlies don’t you people understand?

Positivity: The Meaning of Friendship (Jaxson Hinkens)

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:57 am

From Madison, Wisconsin:

Wisconsin QB Scott Tolzien learns the meaning of true perseverance and optimism from Jaxson Hinkens

Just watch.

Warning: Multiple-hankie alert.