Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Newt Gingrich, also "All-American Muslims"

Newt on the poverty solution (i.e. fixing lazy black people):
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-december-13-2011/newt-gingrich-s-poverty-code

Newt's tax plan: Bush on steroids (zero cap. gains that helps the rich, but deficit will probably balloon)
http://www.npr.org/2011/12/13/143656946/analysis-gingrichs-tax-plan-would-benefit-the-rich

Newt's career highlights (Main St. GOP likes him because he is boldly attacking Obama, but no conservatives in DC are celebrating as they remember his shaky record as Speaker)
http://www.npr.org/2011/12/08/143281791/gingrichs-path-from-flameout-to-d-c-entrepreneur

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Also from tonight's Daily Show, you can't make this stuff up. A douchebag Florida conservative group is protesting the "All-American Muslims" show on TLC (a reality TV show following "regular US Muslims" in Michigan). The FL group is basically offended that the show is not portraying the radical fringe of Islam, and showing Muslims acting too normally. This conflicts with the "belief structure" that they hold about Muslims, so they don't like it. They want to hate and fear ALL Muslims, but it's harder to do that when you see them going to work just like us, loving their families just as we do, and doing all the other American things. This was probably one of the show producer's goals, but I guess some Americans prefer to cling to their black-white, good-evil stereotypes rather than consider another viewpoint supported by evidence. It's not like the show is claiming that all Muslims are normal and peaceful (though clearly many of them are), but the protesters probably feel that the show is just propaganda to get us to lower our guard on the "sharia threat." Yes, that treacherous TLC is clearly bent on America's destruction. You can FFWD to 1:30 on the video to skip past some fluff. 

http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-december-13-2011/kabulvision

Maybe we can dismiss these protests as just ignorant xenophobia, but apparently corporate advertisers are acting on the complaints. For example, Lowes decided to pull its ads from the show (they claim they don't want to be associated with a "lightning rod" program). So they are OK to advertise during Jersey Shore and other crap, but a show with real Muslims acting too normally - that's a no-no. Just shameful.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/11/showbiz/all-american-muslim-lowes/index.html

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Congess' outrageous insider trading

Corporate executives, members of the executive branch and all federal judges are subject to strict conflict of interest rules. But not the people who write the laws.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-57323527/congress-trading-stock-on-inside-information
http://money.cnn.com/2011/12/07/news/congress_insider_trading/index.htm?section=money_topstories

"60 Minutes" had a recent report exposing the egregious insider trading conducted by members of Congress that is technically not illegal for them, but would put normal people in the slammer. Sensing that the gig is up and anticipating public outcry, the Senate is now resuscitating 2004's STOCK Act: a failed bill to explicitly ban insider trading by Congress, and require more frequent public disclosure of lawmakers' trading activities. In order to look ethical leading up to an election year, the bill has currently attracted 171 co-signers (possibly a record), whereas it couldn't get an ounce of support during its original drafting. Some critics say that the bill is unnecessary because regular trading laws already apply to Congress, and they are not "insider" employees of the companies whose securities they trade. But of course neither was Martha Stewart.

As an example, take September 2008. Lehman was about to go under, and the whole system was on the edge. Paulson and Bernanke called a select group of lawmakers for ultra-secret meetings to break the bad news and plan responses. Maybe it was just a coincidence, but one of the attendees, the ranking GOP on the House Fin. Svcs. Cmte., AL's Spencer Bachus, suddenly bought a massive amount of options that would pay out if the market tanked. Bachus was one of our elected officials who was supposed to avert the crisis, yet he had a clear financial incentive to let the market plummet. WTF?

Maybe another coincidence, but current House Speaker Boehner was trading in health insurance stocks during the health reform debate. Shortly before Washington decided to kill the public option proposal, Boehner bought shares of private insurance companies when everyone else was bearish on them. And of course with the news of the public option's demise, insurer's stock prices rose and he made money.

We already know that most legislators leave DC much richer than when they arrived (and it's not because of their generous salaries). They make decisions with millions or billions at stake, so of course private interests attempt to sway their opinions with bribes. It's not as bad as Nigeria or Iraq, but it happens here plenty. On top of that they need to play the markets too? Aren't they too busy running the country and serving their constituents to trade on the side? Most of us don't even have 5 min a day to watch the tickers, but trading is much easier when you are way ahead of the information curve. It's ridiculous, they are beyond shame.

Take this other example involving IPOs:

If you were a senator... and I gave you $10,000 cash, one or both of us is probably gonna go to jail. But if I'm a corporate executive and you're a senator, and I give you IPO shares in stock and over the course of one day that stock nets you $100,000, that's completely legal.

Look at Pelosi's reaction to questions about her profiting from the 2008 Visa IPO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0LMAP0L5G4

She claims to fight the big banks and help ordinary Americans, yet she accepted shares in Visa while helping to kill CC reform legislation back then that could have saved Americans billions during this horrible recession. The specific reform was eventually signed into law in 2010, but banks got 2 precious years to restructure their revenue models in anticipation of this change. So clearly it's not just a GOP problem.

I would go further than the STOCK Act: Congressmen can't trade in any equity, real estate, or international securities while in office, AND one year thereafter. Maybe bar their immediate families too. They get the pension anyway, why the need for more cap. gains? They can park their money in a 1% CD or money market account like the rest of us saps. They are public servants after all, and servants sacrifice, they don't get rich. How bad would it look if a US soldier in Iraq was in charge of protecting a BP facility, but one night insurgents blow it up? Then later his superiors find out that he was shorting BP stock a week before the incident. As far as I know, FDA employees aren't allowed to trade in stocks of the companies they're auditing, and I think employees at the Fed and Treasury have to sell all their financial stock before taking the job too. It's common sense, so why is Congress somehow exempt? Are they saints? I would also copy China and EXECUTE public officials convicted of corruption, fraud, etc. I'm against capital punishment except for this. I know China's policy hasn't fully stopped the problem, but at least it sends a message that people can't just profit with impunity and make a mockery of the law/public office. But this is America, the country that pardoned Tricky Dick. So tired of this crap.  

From "60 Minutes":
But what baffles Baird even more is that the situation has gotten worse. In the past few years a whole new totally unregulated, $100 million dollar industry has grown up in Washington called political intelligence. It employs former congressmen and former staffers to scour the halls of the Capitol gathering valuable non-public information then selling it to hedge funds and traders on Wall Street who can trade on it.

Baird says its taken what would be a criminal enterprise anyplace else in the country and turned it into a profitable business model.
Baird: The town is all about people saying-- what do you know that I don't know. This is the currency of Washington, D.C. And it's that kind of informational currency that translates into real currency. Maybe it's over drinks maybe somebody picks up a phone. And says you know just to let you know it's in the bill. Trades happen. Can't trace 'em. If you can trace 'em, it's not illegal. It's a pretty great system. You feel like an idiot to not take advantage of it.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

The future of digital privacy and Constitutional rights

Doesn't look good: http://www.npr.org/2011/11/30/142714568/interpreting-the-constitution-in-the-digital-era

And clearly this professor isn't a paranoid and alarmist Chicken Little, when major mobile companies are not only monitoring your location 24/7, but recording ALL YOUR KEYSTROKES ALL THE TIME:

http://news.yahoo.com/smartphone-spying-204933867.html

When an external party tries to do this to us on our PCs, they call it malware (possibly illegal). When our mobile providers do it without our knowledge, they call it "enhancing the user experience."  I'm tired of these big data firms just telling us to "trust them" that they'll use all this info responsibly. And of course we can't expect the gov't to look after our interests on this issue, because they are way behind the tech curve, and the courts tend to side with the corporations and free speech argument. With data mining methods and tech tools only getting smarter and more ubiquitous, where are we headed?

Thursday, November 10, 2011

The agencies getting Chinese students into US colleges (often by cheating)

http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/11/09/pm-chinese-students-too-qualified-to-be-true

With the one-child policy "little emperors" in China growing up into adulthood, their doting parents want to do everything they can to get their kids accepted into the best Western schools, even at the cost of $7K to top "placement" agencies. These agencies have a lot of money and reputation on the line, so they do what needs to be done to please customers. Whistleblowers claim that they wrote entire college apps for about 75% of clients. When a Wisconsin school was informed of an investigation concerning their recruiting partner in China, Shanghai Shenyuan, they immediately terminated their relationship.

I know that those with means are entitled to press their advantages in order to beat the competition, and a little tutoring or coaching is fine. But outright fraud, so they take admission spots away from honest, hard-working students who gave full effort (American, Chinese, or otherwise), is just outrageous. But these are the times we live in. And I guess some colleges aren't as rigorous as they should be to check on foreign students' credentials, because they get full tuition from a Chinese student instead of the discounted in-state rate. And yes, I know American students cheat plenty too (NY SAT scandal: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/10/nyregion/sat-cheating-inquiry-on-long-island-expands-to-include-act.html), but it's not as blatant as this:

A report by consulting firm Zinch China seems to confirm [this fraud]. Zinch advises American colleges and universities on recruiting Chinese students. The firm interviewed agents and admissions consultants, as well as more than 200 Beijing students headed to U.S. schools. Zinch estimates 90 percent of these students submitted false recommendation letters; 70 percent had other people write their personal essays, and half of them submitted forged high school transcripts. Two former employees of a college placement agency told Marketplace they routinely falsified application materials. We did not use their names, because they feared they would lose their current jobs... There are numerous colleges that are having difficulty assuring the integrity of the essays, transcripts and credentials, coming from other countries, and in particular in Asia.

-Marketplace

Currently 1/5 of all foreign students in the US are from China, totaling over 130,000. You can check marketplace.org today for the 2nd part of this story - what is going down on the US side of the issue. As I am starting an MBA program, I know that it's pretty bad for b-schools too (what do you expect from the future execs and who will lie and cheat their way to the top?) :). Despite clear warnings that it is a violation of school honor code, I estimate that many applicants ghost-write or team up with their managers to draft letters of rec. Bosses are busy, and it reflects well on them to get their reports into top schools, so I guess they are OK with it. I recently heard complaints from peers that the writing abilities of some of our classmates are like middle-school level (the parties in question happen to be Chinese-born, but not making any generalizations). Clearly that level of writing on an admission essay won't cut it for top schools, so they either got help or magically forgot their English in a year. And then there's the GMAT. I had to give a thumb-print, e-sign, and show my driver's license to use the bathroom during test breaks. Is the GMAC test firm just paranoid? Apparently not: http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/dec2009/bs2009123_558900.htm (again, China is implicated here).

But the whole system is just out of control. College is a major determinant for future prosperity and happiness. Demand vastly exceeds supply for top education, and even more so for good employment. Any leg up a young person can get may help. But the ludicrous costs associated with college acceptance/tuition make wealth, not student merit/potential, the major driver of admission - and that's not how a meritocracy is supposed to work. But some cash-strapped schools are thinking about future alumni giving, so would they rather hook up a trust fund baby, or take their chances on a bright kid out of the inner city who wants to major in ethnic studies? I guess we have to get real regarding what college is about. Forget their idealistic mission statements and credos. It's not about inspiring the brightest young minds to make the big contributions that better humanity. It's about giving already privileged people the skills and connections necessary to do even better after graduation, which will augment the school's marketing, reputation, and endowment. Yes I know I'm being harsh, but this successful cheating industry would not exist if schools were serious about academic integrity, so I blame them more than the Chinese or whoever. Well, university trustees, professors, and coaches lie, steal, and cheat too, so I shouldn't be surprised if students just follow their authority figure role models. Cheaters may be in the minority overall, but like we discussed about Greek tax evasion - when the honest people see that the corrupt can do as they please with impunity, what's in it for them to remain honest?

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

How the Greek elites contributed to the crisis

More on Greek socioeconomic problems: http://www.theworld.org/2011/11/the-oligarchs-of-greece/

Sadly, it's a familiar story. The most powerful 30 or so families in Greece have drastically augmented their wealth in the last couple decades. Due to deregulation and whatnot, they bought up most of the nation's mass media in order to influence the mainstream population into supporting their agenda. In addition, they of course bought politicians, especially from Papandreou's opposition: the more conservative New Democracy party. Papandreou's PASOK socialist party is also infiltrated with pro-rich stooges, who along with the conservatives have fought Papandreou's tax reform efforts to curtail evasion by the rich (twisting the issue as Papandreou wanting to put the squeeze on all Greeks). And as Papandreou is now trying to do right for the country and not just serving the oligarchs or EU powers, he will soon be out of a job and probably replaced by a company man. 

As with the US deficit debate, a Greek solution has to include some cuts and some new revenues. In both nations, the rich are waging a propaganda war to block tax reform, claiming the usual nonsense that it will "kill jobs and hurt the hard-working small business owner," when really they're just looking after their own finances at the expense of the 99%. But if the rich in Greece paid their fair share, LITERALLY they would not have a fiscal crisis in the long term. Though as we've discussed, it's a structural problem and they've dug such a hole for themselves now that it's probably too late to avoid default, even if evasion was magically eradicated.

Bottom line, the riots aren't the problem, and "bloated public sector pay & services" isn't either. They are red herrings of the underlying breakdown in the social contract between citizens and government. Some say you can't blame the rich for all our problems, but in Greece's case it's fairly accurate. If the rich believed in good government, they have to power to put the people in place to make it happen. But they prosper from dysfunction, injustice, and lack of accountability, so that's what the people get. The Greek case should be a major warning to Americans, but unfortunately many Americans can't locate Greece on a map (I admit that I've been following only recently). We keep hearing from US leaders and pundits that "we're not Greece," implying that we exhibit some of their problems but we're inherently better able to solve them, because we're Americans. I'm not so sure anymore. It most certainly is class warfare there and here, except it's the rich who have declared war on the rest, and they're winning and pressing their advantage. Knowing this, who's crazier: the folks rioting in the streets, or those who stay home and just accept it?

Monday, November 7, 2011

Whom to blame for the Greek crisis: lazy Greeks or greedy Goldman?

http://www.gregpalast.com/lazy-ouzo-swilling-olive-pit-spitting-greeksor-how-goldman-sacked-greece/

It is very ignorant and bigoted for people to knee-jerk blame the Greek crisis on the Greek people. If Greeks were somehow predisposed to be lazy, foolish, and profligate, then this crisis would have happened much earlier, and more often, to them. I don't know Greek economic history, but I doubt that is the case (and probably the boom-bust cycle has been worse on the average American since 1900). On the other hand, Argentina had a recent debt crisis, and now they are prospering (amazingly, mostly due to soybean exports to China). Industrial titans like Japan and Korea did too (and Japan still hasn't come out of its funk) - do we think of them as lazy? Despite our assumptions, even the US has defaulted in the past. Check out the below list of sovereign defaults over history - in fact the Greeks are far from being the worst culprits. It's ironic that France-Germany (who now tsk-tsk Greece as they hold the EU purse-strings) have had more defaults than Greece, probably due to their higher propensities to wage war.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereign_default

The common denominators in recent sovereign debt crises were deregulation (as a part of overall lax gov't oversight and risky growth) plus greedy-as-hell foreign investment banks. The average honest people had nothing to do with it, just like the US subprime crisis. Sure they were complicit in it and didn't have the foresight to stop it, but neither did most PhD economists, gov't ministers, and big-time investors, until it was too late. Blaming the common people is a shameful cop-out, like blaming the victims of Katrina. The ordinary Greeks will suffer unfairly and terribly from the proposed austerity measures, paying for the sins of their leaders and offering their pound of flesh to satisfy the foreign banks' bottom lines. And as we well know by now, austerity is just about the worst thing you can impose on a fragile, recessionary economy - unless you just want to restructure (read: blow up the system) and start anew with a leaner model.

Markets are getting saturated, and it's harder for these big banks to exploit inefficiencies and reap easy profits from "traditional investing", since it's become more transparent, computerized, and global. So they had to "innovate" and get into new markets like pay-day loans, student, and sovereign debt. Now aggregate student debt in the US is even larger than credit card debt! Sharks like Goldman don't ignore such untapped opportunities. For sovereign debt, the Greek crisis is only news because the risk got spread to so many key players (via CDS's) that it is threatening the EU and global economy. But "vulture funds" (and even USAID) have been raping the Third World for years, and some still are with impunity. It's really sick, and the short-sellers are making it even harder to rescue distressed nations.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confessions_of_an_Economic_Hit_Man
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulture_funds

Also, here is an interview of Michael Lewis' new book about the Greek crisis and the "new Third World" emerging:

http://www.npr.org/2011/10/04/140948138/how-the-financial-crisis-created-a-new-third-world

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Definitely not to defend Goldman Sachs in this case (they are pretty much guilty as charged), but Greece has spent about 50% of the time since 1800 in a state of default (i.e. not repaying its debts in full). That number puts it about in banana republic territory: http://blogs.reuters.com/the-deep-end/2011/05/12/why-a-greek-default-wouldnt-be-news/

I think what this global crisis has taught us is that financial "innovation" and deregulation has allowed previously self-contained types of problems (locally overvalued housing markets, sovereign defaults of small states) to spread like wildfire as banks that would have previously had no exposure to these events are now hopelessly intertwined (and are often the same as!) with over-leveraged players making all-in bets on the outcomes of these seemingly minor economic events.

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 To add to that the link that shows the US and many other western nations defaulting was based from a paper on domestic debt.  The unique thing here is the interconnectedness of Greece's, and really, the worlds debt.  No first world nation has defaulted on its debt since about WW1 and they reduced their domestic debt.

additionally...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Greece#Eurozone_entry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Greece#Taxation_and_tax_evasion

from the tax evasion link...in 2005 it was estimated that evasion was at 49%.  2012 tax revenue is expected to be 52.7 billion.  Their predicted debt in 2012 will be ~ 350 billion.  So...if there evasion is in the range of 40-50% we are talking about their annually losing the ability to pay off 10% or more of their TOTAL debt.  This is based ONLY on tax evasion.  They are certainly not lazy but they are apparently unwilling to personally pay for the government benefits they are rioting in the streets to keep. 

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 More from here: http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/11/the-only-leader-who-understood-greeces-real-problem-is-resigning/248018/

I think M (and the article above) are basically right, that there is a broken social compact between the people and the state. I think the reasons are more complex than the article states - Greece has been beset by a long history of conflict between the extreme left and the extreme right (and foreign intervention on top of it), so there is probably less unity-we are all in this together and more of we don't trust the government/other side than in most other European countries.

However, Greece and other countries have been down this road before (see T's account of the history of sovereign defaults) - getting Greece back to sustainable debt levels requires writing off about the same amount of debt the US had to write off for the S&L scandal 20 years ago (some $100 billion dollars) - not chump change in the slightest but it should be digestible to the world financial system.

 The problem is that this time, the banks that hold the debt are so undercapitalized that writing off the debt might mean that they fail, and if BNP Paribas or some other major Euro bank were to fail, that might be the start of Lehman: Euro Edition. It's a typical story in this financial crises - banks getting bigger that their failure would be a systemic risk, yet at the same time they got bigger, they grew more heavily leveraged and *less* capitalized.

So now the question is who pays. Greece, as amply noted, can't pay it's current debt load even if it implemented the Euro Central Bank's dream austerity package. The Euro banks that hold most of the Greek notes can't afford to pay by writing off the debts. The French and German taxpayers, probably the only ones that can really afford to put up the money to cover Greek debt, definitely don't want to pay. No one can force any of the other parties to actually pay, so you have this continual kicking of the can down the road as each party slowly accepts bits of responsibility for taking the hit.

The blame here, as with the case of most of the financial crisis, is largely diffuse. Of course the Greeks shouldn't have been so profligate in their spending, but who's the bigger sucker - the irresponsible spender or the fool that lent him the money? The banks shoulder a lot of the blame, as they should be secure enough to suffer the (relatively) modest kind of hit that this default brings on. On the other hand, it's tough for a bank to be capitalized enough to survive a major world financial crisis and then a major developed European economy lying for years about its credit worthiness (i.e. Greece was lying about its debt levels for years).

Mostly, though, I think this is an indictment of the political failings of the EU as an institution. The S&L crisis forced the US taxpayer to intervene and eat a lot of bad debts, but the US did it and the financial system survived. The buck has to stop somewhere and now that the disaster has occurred you need resolute leadership that can save the system first and sort out who to prosecute/blame later. The EU lacks this, and hence why you have a major run on the other PIIGS, as investors are getting nervous that if the EU can't deal with the relatively small case of Greece, if Italy or Spain were to get in trouble you really would get a major financial meltdown in Europe.

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Thanks, Gents. I agree that Greece isn't a model of fiscal responsibility, but the mistake was the EC's lack of due diligence before granting them EU membership. The guy who bets on the Clippers to win the championship doesn't get to blame the Clippers when they predictably fall short. Not that I'm accusing you of this, but blanket blame of "the Greek people" is ridiculous (and much more negative media coverage of Greek rioters vs. their stupid creditors is a form of implicit blame I think). Sure the Greeks don't have the reputation of being efficiency freaks like the Germans or workaholics like Americans/Koreans, but they are not a bunch of freeloaders on welfare either. And even if they were, that shouldn't be enough to compromise the entire EU and send global markets reeling at the mention of a referendum vote. 

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/tax-cheats-cost-uncle-sam-3-trillion-cost-173224779.html

Yes, tax evasion is a problem - and it is a problem in many stronger economies besides Greece. Tax evasion in the US (mostly by businesses and the rich of course) costs us about $3T/year. And that is on top of the very generous and misplaced tax deductions and other perks that are 100% legal. US federal tax revenue in recent history is about 20% GDP, so if US GDP was $14.7T in 2010, that means we collected about $2.94T in taxes. So America's evasion % is similar to that of Greece! Bottom line, people will pay less if they can get away with it. Poorly structured tax laws and incentive programs have led to the behavior we're witnessing, either in the US or Greece. And like here, the majority of the Greek evasions is from the upper class parking their earnings in Swiss banks and whatnot. The people rioting in the streets are not the big culprits. So for sure, Greece is getting assaulted from outside creditors now, but their own elites have been screwing them for decades, with their dysfunctional gov't complicit most of the time. But no one held a gun to Soc Gen's head to make them loan Greece money (just like Countrywide approving a $400K mortgage to a part-time janitor). They should have known better, but the incentives and controls were all out of whack.

"[Greeks] are apparently unwilling to personally pay for the government benefits they are rioting in the streets to keep." Maybe true, but they are definitely not the only ones. Again, if the rich paid "their fair share", a lot of these problems wouldn't be as severe. But the elites and big financial institutions pushed gov't around and ultimately got their way at the expense of "the 99%". Like the Colonial Era, I find it so maddening that the big powers (used to be empires, now are financial institutions) are engaged in this global rivalry, where they don't care how many nations and peoples they destroy just to win the game. An honest Greek won't be able to retire in security, or a disabled American won't be able to get a caretaker, just because some asshole banker met his insane quarterly returns target and expects his big bonus.

Here's a Stanford study ranking nations for sov. fiscal responsibility:

http://www.scribd.com/doc/52927424/Sovereign-Fiscal-Responsibility-Index-2011

Greece is #34 of the 34 OECD+BRIC nations analyzed, while the US is #28 (if we fully implement the Fiscal Commission's debt reduction plans, we'll jump to #8 according to them). The best nations are AUS, NZ, EST, SWE, CHINA, and LUX. But those nations are not like fundamentally more budget-savvy or anything. Some of it was lucky timing. AUS, NZ, and EST all had fiscal issues a decade or two ago during a worldwide growth economy, so they restructured during generally fat years (when we didn't have a shortage of credit, capitalized banks, and economic confidence) and are now better positioned to weather the current storm. CHINA is a singular case protected by surplus from their exports. LUX is just a small, rich country filled with rich people, so they don't need much gov't spending. SWE has very high tax rates and is one of the most high-functioning societies in history. Turn back the clock and give Greece some of these favorable conditions, and maybe we'd have a much different result. And in a couple decades, this list is probably going to look very different.

But like A said, if tiny Greece is causing this much disruption to the EU, I wonder how they will handle the rest of PIIGS and their almost certain default issues in the near future. Or maybe if we're glass-half-full types, the lessons the EU learned from the Greece crisis (assuming a positive outcome) will allow them to better handle the future ones? But I worry that after the US S&L crisis, the financial players and their gov't minions took notice, and then set about to do everything they could to avoid a repeat. Their behavior only grew riskier, but now they have structurally insulated themselves from punishment (either legal or financial), in general.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

"The Great Tech War of 2012"

http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/160/tech-wars-2012-amazon-apple-google-facebook

I liked this article about the rivalries between Facebook-Apple-Google-Amazon in the "post-PC world", since these giants are invading each other's traditional territories to capture more customers and revenue. All 4 firms seem to really be leaning on their IT and data mining resources in order to personalize their offerings, understand/predict preferences, and reach more consumers. They are using data to increase usage/consumption, which leads to more customer data being generated, which leads to more insight on how to boost future consumption, and on it goes.

But I think TV is the final frontier that these firms still haven't been able to crack. It's such a big market with entrenched players, different rules, and so many viewers/dollars at stake. We'll see which of them (if any) can best integrate their products with the new web-enabled TV future that they claim is supposed to come soon. And there will also be competition and interference from banks, cable, and telcos, whose infrastructure enables all this online activity and consumption, and who are probably tired of seeing the riches and glory go to Silicon Valley. It will also be interesting to see what disruptive upstarts can put these former startups on the defensive.

I didn't realize that Google bought Android, and didn't develop it in-house. What posers! :)

Who knew that bankers, statisticians, and programmers would eventually rule the world? If you told that to Rockefeller and Carnegie back in the day, they would have choked on their Cuban cigars. And the day is not far off when the Si Valley giants are going to get into defense (probably software, but possibly hardware too!).

Friday, October 14, 2011

BofA debit card fees

http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201110140900

Like with the Netflix-Qwikster debacle, depositors are starting to fight back against the fee-happy megabanks by divesting in favor of more honest institutions and credit unions. At least Netflix got humble (after seeing their stock get owned) and is trying to make it up to customers, but banks don't give a crap. Problem is, deregulation has created financial behemoths whose revenue streams don't really depend on small-potatoes depositors and consumer loans anymore. They're investment banks and brokerage houses now, and don't really need our money to make money (assuming they survive the toxic assets mess and DoJ probes). Actually grandma depositor is a nightmare customer for banks. Her account has a paltry $5K, she doesn't trade stocks, and she eats up customer service resources by calling and visiting each week. If they can't bleed her with shady card, overdraft, and other account fees, then what's her use to them?

This could also possibly explain why banks are so recalcitrant to modify mortgages or issue new loans, despite collectively sitting on $1T of cash. As M's link showed, banks can make more money (with less headache) by loaning gov't $ back to them, which to me looks a lot like arbitrage at the expense of the US taxpayer. For home loans, banks are getting investigated and fined for not following foreclosure protocol and kicking people out too fast. Obama urged banks to restructure loans, but no incentives were in place so the banks mostly did nothing. Because US housing is suffering from an over-supply of vacant homes, banks are preferring to demolish them (even paying out their $ to subcontractors to do it).

http://www.inquisitr.com/150096/u-s-banks-go-on-bulldozer-frenzy-destroy-thousands-of-foreclosed-homes/

I find this strange because they're taking a loss on homes when they could still be earning modest interest by keeping the customer in it. Banks aren't realtors, and I guess they don't want to deal with the paperwork and pains of maintaining/fixing up properties. So why not keep a family under the roof? Unless they're broke and jobless, something could be worked out. But instead they chose the foreclosure path, which is terribly traumatic on the mortgage holder and community, and costly to banks. But I guess they don't care since home loans are not a big chunk of profits anymore. Some Bay Area community and religious groups are appalled at this (they have spent countless hours trying to negotiate with banks on behalf of distressed homeowners), so now they're protesting with their wallets and closing their million-dollar BofA/WF accounts in favor of local CUs. But unfortunately that is a drop in the bucket to them. Though if more of us do it, it will start to make a difference.

The BofA debit card fees issue is interesting. I think Dick Durbin sponsored a bill to cap debit card transaction fees on retailers to 21 cents, down from the previous 44 cents. Retailers were complaining about lagging sales, as they pass these fees onto consumers in the form of higher prices. Depending on how you define and amortize costs, a debit card transaction costs BofA 5-26 cents. So assuming the truth is at the median of 16 cents, their profit margin was almost 300% pre-legislation, and is now still a healthy 31%. So all their pissing and moaning about losing $2B in revenues due to this law is probably bogus. Say it was true; is the $5 debit card monthly fee justified? If many of BofA's 57M consumer/small-biz accounts use debit cards and incur the fee, that would net them ~$2.5B! So they're not only recouping the dubious $2B in "losses", but coming out ahead! Like I said, for every shady revenue stream we close, another one springs up, and may be worse. It will never end, and we're always playing catch up. But I wonder if we'll see lower prices from retailers now that they're saving about half on debit card fees. I have my doubts, but it is a volume-sales industry with super-thin margins. They need us to buy more. 

We are partly to blame for all of this. Shareholders are putting so much pressure on public firms to show growth and good returns that the execs almost have no choice but to go all-out on short term profit taking. It's partly their greed, but also partly job security and competition. Of course institutional investors like pensions and hedge funds are the biggest influences. I don't think me with my 200 shares of BofA (what a crappy decision on my part in 2005) are going to change corporate behavior. But if we want firms to be less greedy, we have to start being less greedy ourselves by accepting lower rates of return.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Occupy Wall Street

http://wearethe99percent.tumblr.com/

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/occupy-wall-street-isn-t-wall-street-191808167.html

What do you think about the recent protests? Biden likened the OWS movement to the liberal version of the Tea Party. I don't think that's really accurate, since the TP is well organized, corporate-funded, and represented by numerous politicians/interest groups. But I guess the TP believes that spendthrift, meddling gov't is stifling the economy and causing our problems, and OWS believes that Wall St. and its political agents are hoarding wealth and making life harder for the other 99%.

I haven't been following the MSM coverage of the protests, but I would surmise that it hasn't been as flattering as that of the TP. The TP are portrayed as "real Americans" and patriots trying to wrest the country back from an ever expanding, profligate gov't. But OWS may be seen as lazy, whining redistributionists who are jealous of the success of the rich. Predictably, the GOP hopefuls (who are all quite rich) said as much at the recent debate.

Congress has a TP caucus and their agenda has pretty much hijacked a lot of US fiscal and economic policy. I don't hear any leaders on the left rallying to the OWS's message and calling for change. Sure, they pay them token lip service now that the protests have survived a month, but I think the Dems see them more as a liability than an ally, or even a political opportunity. I know OWS is younger and less widespread/organized than the TP, so it's not fair to directly compare their exploits. But they claim that their aim is not to get changes through, but just to make more Americans aware of what parties are making life more unfair for them, in their opinions. That being said, even if they are really successful in spreading awareness, where do they go from there?

The TP wants to take the WH, Congress, and make major changes to US laws and society. For better or worse, it's a grand vision that inspires interest and donations (plus they have the religion lever at their disposal). What about OWS? Will there be enough middle-class outrage to oust the corporate stooges in Washington, get the Dems to start acting like Dems, and/or elect fresh faces who will actually fight for regular Americans? I'm skeptical. After all we went through in 2008 (and where was OWS then?), we just won't/can't address the 2 Americas issues, so it's more or less business-as-usual again. If the Great Recession wasn't enough to get us to wake up, what hope is there? Yes I understand that it took FDR almost a decade to enact financial reforms and jump-start the economy (mostly thanks to WWII), but in today's information age, change should be quicker. Heck, just a month after 9/11 we started to wage a world war on terror.

OWS are definitely not like the 1960's movements, and are a lot more pragmatic and bourgeois actually (not necessarily a bad thing): they have beef with soaring costs, no jobs, deregulation, and executive compensation, but they probably don't want to blow up the system. But those are Band-Aid fixes. Even if our leaders could cooperate and effectively address half of those issues, it would be a great accomplishment but gross inequalities would persist. I know we'll probably never return to the 1940s-60s when firms were less influential and the middle class controlled the highest % of US wealth in our history (global conditions are just way different now). But as long as the unfair structure persists, for every wrong we right, the elites will just find new and creative ways to keep pecking at the rest. If it's not tuition or real estate, it will be something else. It's a rigged game. So maybe blowing up the system is the only way, since clearly corporate America and its politicians aren't going to sober up on their own. Too much loot and ego are at stake. I am sure the Cubans, French, Russians, etc. didn't want to have to rise up violently, but things got so bad they didn't have a choice. Unfortunately we still have a choice in 2011, or at least we think we do.

So I commend OWS for their personal sacrifices and making a public statement for what they believe is right, even if most of their peers are too uncaring and cowardly to do the same (myself included). They have changed history, but so far just slightly. Now clever and benevolent progressive strategists must figure out how to harness their energy and turn it into some concrete good for America. Nothing wins over cynics and doubters like results that benefit them, and failing to deliver will only further undermine their credibility. At least they're honest and didn't oversell themselves like Obama (or the TP for that matter), but unless they have something to show at the end of the day, they'll soon be forgotten - and that is what the establishment is expecting. Does anyone still talk about the huge immigration marches and anti-war demonstrations during the Bush years? No, because they didn't catalyze any measurable change (or the change was for the worse). I know they meant well and gave their all, but it's a tough crowd out there. Like Plato's cave allegory, the philosopher had a hell of a time trying to educate and emancipate the prisoners.

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But I just wonder how that will convince the "silent majority" of Americans in the middle to support the people movement and oppose big banks? They probably already do to a certain extent, but they need to see something tangible before they pull their deposits out of WF. Because that is the only way to hurt a giant like WF: incite a huge run or stock dump, which may or may not be legal. Though to be honest, WF behaved rather responsibly during the housing bubble compared to their peers back east. BofA on the other hand...

The West boycotted South Africa because of Apartheid, and that eventually brought the regime down. Banks need a reason to treat us better. If OWS somehow can organize boycotts or sell-offs, then maybe Wall St. and DC will pay more attention. But a sit-in or picket line may not be that effective. It's a start, but unfortunately the public needs more. The Cal students have been bravely doing that for years, and still the Regents don't give a crap and keep raising fees.

In addition to bank boycotts, we should try to discourage people from entering banking, speculation, and finance. We have enough of those assholes already, and not enough good teachers, nurses, engineers, etc. As Krugman said, when he was in grad school, only the "losers" went into banking because it was boring and not innovative. But now banking has of course become really exciting and innovative, because of the relaxed laws. Many of America's top talent want to enter private equity and finance, partly because the compensation, sexiness, and power are so great.

We need to reverse this trend, either by changing school curricula to only teach more responsible, ethical finance, enacting laws to cap Wall St. pay (or tax their income & cap. gains more), and/or compartmentalizing the financial system the way it was supposed to be under Glass-Steagall. Let the SEC be the SEC (though I doubt that will happen). Too Big To Fail is a bigger problem now vs. 2007, and all the top economists and progressive politicians see it. Heck the conservatives at AEI and Heritage probably do too, but won't speak up. The Great Recession was just a selection process, with the survivors emerging stronger than ever (apart from BofA and Morgan Stanley recently), like abusing antibiotics and creating disease-resistant microbes. Risk-taking bankers and their firms should be socially ostracized, like pimps and ambulance-chasing lawyers. Once it's not as comfortable to work on Wall St., we may see a sea change. As usual, humans respond best to carrots and sticks.

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http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/10/12/pm-oped-stop-wall-street-recruitment-on-college-campuses/

2 Stanford students just wrote a great piece in the school's paper about what we've been discussing (I swear I didn't rip off their idea in my last email). They're tired of big banks recruiting top students into their fold. For all the major problems facing humanity now, do we really want bright kids with the most privileged educations joining the financial ranks to "make rich people richer"? Harvard sends 20% of students to "socially useless" fin. services (and MIT/Stf another 15% each). These rates are 3X higher than previous generations. I know that sector is probably the biggest US "growth industry", but I think most of us would agree that FS are too bloated and too large a chunk of our economy for comfort. And it got that way partly at the expense of other fields that actually earn an honest wage and make useful stuff. Maybe we have to import so many foreign scientists and engineers because FS are diverting our good ones from "real engineering" fields to design exotic securities and scams instead (and paying them 5X more in some cases).

Maybe we need to cap the # of students enrolling in business/finance each year from top schools. I know this won't happen, but we see it in other fields. For some competitive majors (computer science, vet med, etc.), schools may require separate applications and grade attrition, so only the most worthy students get a degree in the subject. Another quality control step to make sure we're not just pumping in more Madoffs and Skillings into the system. I know a lot of the evils of finance are taught on the job, so we can't do anything about that. But maybe making it harder to graduate in these fields will weed out the pack so only the most well-trained and promising (or possibly the most fanatical, connected assholes) will make it through.

It is structurally so hard to become a doctor or lawyer in America, even if you're smart and rich. Why the hell is it so easy to make six-figs as a real-estate agent, trader, or banker? A firm still has to hire you of course, but the education path to those jobs is a lot shorter than that of medicine/law. And docs/lawyers have to swear ethical oaths - what about something like that for FS?

Some campuses block military and CIA recruitment of students. Therefore schools should have the right to refuse WS recruiters too. And maybe the boards should think twice about the message they're sending by accepting WS money to build the Goldman Sachs Center, provide scholarships, or to gain access to research resources and curricula. But in these times of cash-strapped schools (partly due to WS recklessness), it seems unlikely that they would turn down private money (in fact they're sending droves of people out to solicit more donations, quid pro quo of course). Plus the top privates are so flush with WS cash already that they're already a lost cause.

...[U]niversity administrations are also responsible. At best, they have passively allowed the largest banks to dominate student recruitment; at worst, they have enthusiastically promoted these companies and encouraged students to enter finance. To this day, career development offices accept donations from the wealthiest banks in exchange for special recruitment access. For example, until recently, Stanford’s Career Development Center featured Goldman Sachs as a “Gold Partner,” despite the company being under federal investigation for criminal trading practices.... an academic community that actively supports the same financial institutions whose rampant greed caused untold national hardship is a community on the brink of moral bankruptcy. - T Norris, E Pollak
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First off, if you believe in the cause, I absolutely encourage you
guys to go down to your local "occupy" location (if even as a
spectator) to show your support. I was there on the Wednesday as a
part of the larger march, and I came away pretty impressed at the
broad appeal of the movement. Their work through social media has been
nothing short of impressive.

Success is hard to define for something like this movement. I tend to
be pretty pessimistic as to the ability to change the actions of
politicians. I was talking to one of our professors who has been in
the newspaper quite a bit in regards to these protests, and he
suggested that these protests should be seen less in the light of the
tea party, anti-war protests, or the 60s, and more like the (now
forgotten) protests in the Great Depression. Those protests helped
bring about the New Deal, and a long-term goal here would be some sort
of overarching shift in economic policy goals like the New Deal.
However, in order for that to happen, the movement will eventually
have to coalesce behind a specific set of issues (I think the breadth
of the movement is an advantage right now) and we will probably need a
sustained economic recession/depression.

I DO believe, however, that the average American has changed. I think
the recent experiences have shown the average American that the
maintenance of a "free market" requires as much government
intervention as the maintenance of a welfare state. This is something
academics have know for a long time (after all, what are all those top
flight economists doing in central banks around the world?), but
something new to the American voter. The language of "99%" references
this idea. If the government is going to intervene anyway, why
shouldn't it do so for the vast majority of Americans? The Tea Party
was frustration with the fact that the government was intervening, and
OWS is frustration with how the government is intervening. In this
way, both movements have the same root cause, although with radically
different aims and support bases. For this reason, I have argued to
colleagues that, taken together, the support and opposition of
establishment practices regarding financial markets represent an
ephemeral second dimension in American politics (in addition to the
standard left-right economic dimension).

I don't think we'll be seeing the average American marching anytime
soon, but I'm OK with that as long as the American public stays
broadly supportive, or non-committal, regarding the protesters. After
all, social change is often fought on many fronts, and we can't expect
everyone to take the activist route.

Finally, I'd like to end with an argument, perhaps optimistic, about
why OWS might have more staying power than we might all think. I
remember a trip to Niagara Falls during the dot-com boom. In order to
get there, one usually goes through Buffalo. As we stopped in Buffalo,
I was shocked at the awful state of the town, by any parameter. I
started asking people what was going on (Buffalo had the highest exit
rate of any metro area for a long time, I believe). Well, Buffalo,
like so many other cities/towns in America, was an industry town where
industry dried out. It had been that way since the late 80s/early 90s.
 It wasn't just Flint, Michigan, industry towns all over the country
have suffered the same fate over the last 25 years.

We were all told that these towns were dead anyway; they had ceased to
be competitive in the global economy. But, we were OK with it, as
things were booming in the Bay Area and New York. The cold hard fact
is that politicians, Democrats and Republicans alike, chose to
explicitly disinvest in and failed to protect the average American in
these towns; instead, politicians systematically diverted funds from
people who needed them in order to invest in "the economy," and many
of us grew up as a beneficiary of this policy. I believe this kind of
protest failed to start earlier due to geographic segregation. We
never really saw the suffering, except in the occasional Michael
Moore-type film. Well, the lack of protection is starting to affect
New York and SF now too. People are angry, and they have been angry
for a long time. How does an economy grow stronger when all the people
grow weaker? What the hell is a jobless recovery? How is it that any
of that ever made any sense?

This is an extraordinarily unpredictable movement. I have no idea
what's going to happen; it could all end tomorrow. But if people want
change, it's the best we've got.
-----------
Unfortunately, I think it was much easier for Guilded Age or Depression-era Americans to protests against the sins of corporate America than for us today (even if those populist movements have been swept under the rug of history). More than ever before, modern Americans work for corporations, invest in them (directly with 401ks, indirectly with pensions, etc.), and owe them (college, mortgage, CC debts). So to rise up against Wall St. means possibly compromising one's financial well-being and prospects for "the American dream" too. We all subconsciously hope (or are explicitly taught) that if we are team players, work hard, and go along, we'll become rich some day. I guess the middle class folks in OWS would really like to continue to believe that, but their personal struggles and the trajectory of America are forcing them to reconsider, and eventually protest.

Despite WS being a bigger part of our lives, our overall financial literacy is horrible. An average American trying to navigate modern finance and economics is like a toddler taking driving lessons. Heck most of us are college grads, but rely on others to do our taxes and manage our retirement. Yes the system is ridiculously complex (probably deliberate), but we should be doing better. This may partially explain the apathy and ignorance out there that some in WS and DC exploit. A fool and his money are soon parted. I guess it starts early with our poor record of math/finance/econ/ethics education, and our almost cultish obsession with material wealth and free market ideals. I guess this indoctrinates us to become very enterprising and entrepreneurial, but clueless on money management and prudent decision making.

Though I wonder how Western Europe and East Asia fare. They obviously score higher on math exams, but do they get exposed to practical finance/economics in secondary school? Of course some EU banks messed up worse than the US banks, but the Asian banks were more cautious (they learned after their boom-and-busts in the 1990's) and most Asian states did not need bailouts, did not see a spike in unemployment, and barely experienced a recession (what pains they felt were mostly due to fewer export orders by the West). As example, Samsung (which accounts for a whopping 13% of S Korean exports) actually posted its best performance during our recession. I guess culturally, Euros and East Asians tend to save more, borrow less, and take fewer risks than Yanks? I find that almost paradoxical because based on moral hazard, those living with strong safety nets like the French and Japanese should tend to take more financial risks than Americans living with generally inadequate labor protections, health coverage, and SocSec. But it's actually inverse, so it must be due to structural differences in the US economy/workforce/culture that change our consumer preferences and values. I dunno, what do you think? 
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So goddam depressing. I guess the GOP are wrong, it's not really class warfare. That implies the peasants have a fighting chance. I really want to see how the GOP candidates (and most Dems for that matter) would respond to those data and how their views/policies are perpetuating (if not worsening) the trends. No matter how your slice it, those data are not indications of a healthy democratic society.

But at least some thinking people on the right don't approve either, albeit from a more pragmatic perspective. On APM's "Marketplace" radio show, they have a regular left-right debate between Robert Reich (former labor sec.) and David Frum (former Bush speech writer on the economy). But Frum has recently resigned, ostensibly because he no longer wants the burden of having to "speak for the right", as he disagrees with the dominant GOP stances on gov't and fiscal austerity (he'll continue to speak for himself on his blog though). Anyone with basic econ knowledge knows that harsh austerity during a recession/weak recovery is bad. Even staunch capitalists realize that it's not good for business if people are broke (or heavily in debt), desperate, and chronically unemployed. Safety nets are not just about socialist "nanny gov't"; they promote consumer confidence, productivity, and purchasing power. Again, it's about return on investment. In the next 12 months, will you get more social benefit from giving people EDD checks/food stamps, or slashing public jobs/programs just to barely reduce our deficit? Reasonable conservatives believe in small gov't and controlling spending, for the long term and in good economic times. All the extremist fiscal crap that the GOP candidates are spewing now will just exacerbate the wealth gap, weaken America, and make them look like a party of rich assholes (even more than they already are). 

Under the pressure of the current crisis -- intoxicated by anti-Obama feelings and incited by talk radio and Fox -- Republicans have staked out an extreme position on the role of government... For three years, my political party has veered in a direction I cannot follow. And if the GOP insists on framing the 2012 election as a ballot question on fiscal and monetary austerity, or if they nominate somebody manifestly incompetent to do the job of president, they’re going to lose me – and a lot more people beside me. - D Frum

http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/10/12/pm-frum-goodbye-interview/

What sucks is... if those inequality stats applied to one's spouse or manager (sometime not so different!), a person would probably get a divorce/new job. But the US lower-middle classes are just taking it and taking it like a battered spouse. If we can't wrest our nation back from the bankers, maybe we all should just "boycott America" and move to Canada as refugees (joking of course, otherwise Canada would need at least 10 more pro hockey clubs). Then we'll see if the feudal lords can survive without their serfs to kick around. Maybe those free market libertarians would just import more Latinos to fill our void? But at least it would send a message that we are sick of this mistreatment. Why should we hang around playing their rigged game? I know we don't have it as bad as Somalia or something, but do conditions have to deteriorate that much for us to act? We have one life to live, we just want to be happy, and frankly I don't want to waste my time on earth slaving away at a pointless job, saddled by debt/worry, and looking forward to an uncertain future.

There are greener pastures out there somewhere. Maybe not in Greece or Ireland, but somewhere. Like with a bank run, a "brain drain" may be the only way to get American leaders to realize that they need to make the country a nice and fair place to live, in order to retain good people and maintain global standing. Unfortunately, we don't have that much leverage because billions of poorer, desperate people would sacrifice their first-born to take our place, even if conditions are so unjust here (because it's still better than their homelands). So is that what the US elites really want, a third world America? The middle class is fed up and has left (maybe a lucky few get promoted to the upper class), and droves of expendable immigrants have taken their place. Then they might as well dispense with the American nationalism, ideals, and such, as we would overtly be a plutocracy and corporation state.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/third-world-america-why-i_b_706673.html

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Turley: Obama "devastating" for civil liberties

Civil libertarians have long had a dysfunctional relationship with the Democratic Party, which treats them as a captive voting bloc with nowhere else to turn in elections. - J Turley

http://articles.latimes.com/2011/sep/29/opinion/la-oe-turley-civil-liberties-20110929

http://www.npr.org/2011/10/10/141213273/op-ed-obama-devastating-for-civil-liberties

I know we discussed this in the past about Obama's campaign pledges to promote civil rights and gov. transparency, but as president he has actually increased secrecy and expanded the powers of the US terrorism-industrial-complex (even over Bush levels), sometimes at the expense of the rules of war, civil liberties, and other laws/values. I guess the calculation was simple for Obama: it was more important to get the support of the military-intel community than the civil libertarians, so he made decisions to favor the former. Especially with the economy/jobs front-and-center, I guess his people felt that civil rights won't be a critical issue in 2012, especially when his yet-unnamed GOP rival would probably endorse and harsher stance on executive privilege and the security-vs-rights debate.

So that's where we stand: the GOP isn't mad at Obama because terror plots are being thwarted and Al Qaeda leaders are getting whacked. Though I'm sure they'd prefer to get the credit, and probably feel that Obama is just the lucky executor of the good Bush-neocon policies that are now bearing fruit. Any consolidation of executive power and trimming of Congressional/legal/regulatory red tape is probably good for them. They know they'll recapture the White House at some point, and then it's pedal to the metal.

But from the left, Turley likens it to Stockholm Syndrome. We've fallen in love with our captor, just because he's the first black president, a young, handsome, charismatic chap, the game-changer, the chosen one, whatever other superlative. We aren't happy with what he's doing, but we just can't allow ourselves to oppose him and admit that we were wrong. So like a kid without discipline, he keeps taking and pulling, and taking and pulling, because we do nothing. The Dems bet big on this guy, and now we're stuck with him. It's very hard for a parent to admit that their kid is a bad seed because they still love him.

Yes it's true that campaigning is different than leading, so maybe Obama is under more constraints now and exposed to different information, which has changed his views. But any leader under crisis has experienced that, and some still decided to stand up for their beliefs despite the political consequences, while others folded like cowards and played it safe. Some things he has done are just flat wrong, and it's not like lives were imminently at stake. Yes it's possible that a GOP president may be worse. But if we were voting between Hitler and Napoleon, would we be content supporting Napoleon because he was just slightly better? And let's remember that Obama has in fact exceeded Bush on many secrecy and rights violations issues. We've dug ourselves into quite a hole with this one.

We can't allow Obama to get away with making a blanket promise to not prosecute any Bush-era people or CIA employees/affiliates for torture or other abuses, and squash any private investigations. I know closing Gitmo didn't work out for him (he was naive to think it would be easy), and these terror issues are a legal nightmare. Yes, justice is hard work, but that's what separates us from cave men. Would we rather condone abuses power, shadow governments, and selective application of the law like the enemy regimes we routinely denounce? People must be held accountable for their crimes, or there's no deterrent for future criminality. Poking around at the CIA and Pentagon is going to cause some problems for a president, but sometimes avoiding conflict and failing to do the right thing is worse. Same thing with the Wall St. investigations, no one goes to jail or gets punished, so what incentive do they have to shape up? Our democracy and republic exist and survive because of checks-and-balances on power. If the president shirks that responsibility, and even blocks Congress from intervening, what is to stop the security establishment from running amok, like they have always done in similar loose situations throughout history?

US soldiers are standing trial for abusing or killing civilians during our wars. They are on the front lines fighting for their country, paid slave wages, and still have to answer for crimes if they err. Why should CIA sociopaths, reckless Blackwater mercenaries, and neocon paper-pushers be exempt? I have particular contempt for the fat suits drafting policies in DC. These chickenhawks mostly never sacrificed an ounce of sweat for America, yet they are making decisions that are destroying innocent families and creating all sorts of unanticipated blowback for us, in between their tee times and K St. power lunches. Such patriots. The hubris. And now Obama, the Peace Prize Laureate, has thrown his hat in with them.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Mitt Romney the "job creator"

"Private equity combines both the best and the worst of capitalism," [Howard Anderson, former VC & MIT Sloan prof.] says. "When things go well, there's wonderful stories to tell about growth. When things went bad, it is not a pretty system — especially since [Romney's former firm] Bain Capital may have personally done well themselves, where both their investors and the employees did not do well."

Here's a guy [Romney] that just took somebody else's money and used it to make more money. The guy has never produced a thing in his life. - Former GST steel worker

http://www.npr.org/2011/10/06/141115638/2-portraits-emerge-of-mitt-romney-the-businessman

NPR is doing a series on formative jobs that the GOP front-runners previously held. For Romney, I knew he came from an investment background and is quite rich, but the extent surprised me. He was the co-founder and first CEO of Bain Capital, an elite private equity firm, and is personally worth 100's of millions. But in 2012, does America really need another HBS-trained Wall Street stooge? With the economy sputtering (partly due to Wall St. and the banks), America and Congress are desperate and may be more susceptible to the allure of "the Wall St. solution for recovery." Under the wrong president (and I'm not saying that Obama is the "right" one), we may foolishly accept all sorts of deregulation and concessions in the hope of future prosperity. Mitt can't relate to the average working person at all, and personifies the 2 Americas. We know who/what he serves. Remember his "corporations are people" quote that was legally accurate but foolish to say while campaigning in Iowa?

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0811/61111.html

Romney was amazingly successful while at Bain (by Wall St. standards), which is another red flag. The firm had a 15-year stretch of unheard-of 100% rate of return. Clients usually pay priv. equity firms 20% of their profits as fees, but Bain could get away with charging 30% because they were that good. But good at what? Bain was credited with launching or boosting household names like Staples, Domino's, Brookstone, and Sports Authority. So yeah, I guess Mitt does know how to create wealth (for himself and certain pals) and jobs (but just the financial or minimum-wage retail kinds).

You never bat 1000 in this business, so how about the failures? In some cases, Romney's clients paid handsomely for Bain's advice, yet still filed Ch. 11 and were diced up and sold for parts (KB Toys, Ampad-Mead, Dade Int'l, GST Steel). In other cases, Bain encouraged firms to scale back US operations and outsource. Maybe those were the "right" business decisions, but they wiped out millions of investor wealth, cost US manufacturing jobs, and maybe only replaced them with a few financial jobs and exec bonuses. Of course as CEO, it's not like Romney was personally signing the pink slips, but this is what Bain did under his leadership.

And of course, running America is not the same as running a firm. Past success (however amazing) is no guarantee of future performance. California didn't think that former CEOs Whitman and Fiorina had what it took to help the state, and business tycoons Perot and Forbes did not fare well in their political runs. I guess Mitt convinced the people of Mass. that he was the right guy for the gov. job, but POTUS is a different beast. Romney has learned and improved a lot since his failed 2008 presidential bid, and has a huge war chest. Considering the state of the country now, he is a compelling candidate for many people. But unlike the unrealistic hopes we had for Obama, at least we know what Romney stands for, and to his credit he's not really trying to present himself as something else.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The outrageously corrupt NCAA football bowls

http://www.hbo.com/real-sports-with-bryant-gumbel#/real-sports-with-bryant-gumbel/episodes/0/174-episode/video/cashin-in-clip.html/eNrjcmbOUM-PSXHMS8ypLMlMDkhMT-VLzE1lLtQsy0xJzYeJO+fnlaRWlDDnszGySSeWluQX5CRW2pYUlaayMXIyMgIAacUXOA==

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/sports/2016261023_apfbcsugarbowltaxviolation.html

We already know that major college sports are corrupt, exploitative, and dysfunctional, but the actual numbers are shocking (thanks to an HBO Real Sports investigation and others). First, it's inconceivable that the org's running each bowls are classified as non-profit charities, despite earning over $250M combined each year. There used to be about 10 bowls, but now the number is up to 35. Even the most successful charities on the planet don't grow that fast, only scams and bubbles do.

The bowl org's claim they are charities because they purport to give 75% of revenues to the participating schools - institutions that benefit society in many ways. Yes, the perennial bowl participant football factories like OSU, Nebraska, and Miami have really used the money to provide top education and discoveries for America (often head coaches are paid much higher salaries than the most famous and productive professors). But in actuality, the avg. school payment is about 55% for the dozen or so bowls whose financial records were made available. The poorly-named Humanitarian Bowl only gave 27% to the schools. When confronted with these facts, bowl reps say they are saving the rest for posterity to pay out to schools "at a future date." Well schools are laying off employees, raising fees, and letting buildings crumble NOW.

The problem here is similar to the race to host the next Olympics or over-bidding to win an auction. Schools and communities are so obsessed with getting to a bowl (and the perceived value it entails) that they fail to consider whether it's really cost-effective. Part of the contract between the bowl and schools often involves paying for their own travel, and a guarantee to sell a block of tickets to fans, or the school will have to eat the cost of empty seats. But it's hard for small schools to get alumni and fans to travel across the country during winter holiday time (and eat the big costs of tickets, hotel. etc.), so some schools predictably end up on the short end.

The bowl gets paid no matter what, and then short-changes the schools with smaller contributions. Some bowls even forced the school bands to buy tickets even though they were providing free entertainment during halftime. So knowing all this, why do some cash-strapped schools still fall into the trap? They fall in love with the "prestige" of participating, and many coaches/athletic directors are paid bonuses for reaching a bowl. The bowl org's claim that despite these concerns, schools come out ahead in the end because the publicity will increase alumni donations and fan/student interest for the future. Of course it's very hard to quantify and verify this benefit, so we just have to trust them. And apparently schools do.

So maybe the bowls short-change schools, but they give back to the community, right? Bowls claimed that they've given "tens of millions of dollars" to communities and charities each year. But according to tax documents, the grand total last year was about $4M, or <2% of revenues. But that giving is still generous, right? Well not if you consider the tax incentives and other perks that cities and politicians offer to the bowls, sometimes totaling in the millions. Again, bowl reps repeat the Olympics argument that the event "pays for itself" with all the extra tourism and commerce. Sure, tell that to Greece. Remember that cities also have to eat the clean-up, security, traffic congestion, and other costs. The show examined the example of the elite Sugar Bowl and the financially depressed host New Orleans. The Sugar Bowl gave $1M to Louisianans, but took $6M from their state leaders. Former LA governor Blanco took thousands of dollars from the Sugar Bowl in campaign contributions, which is technically illegal due to the bowl's tax status. And in return, Blanco has helped to maintain this profitable arrangement, even to the detriment of her Katrina-ravaged, cash-hungry state.

Bowls are also lobbying politicians to fight any changes to the system that would hurt them financially, such as a move to a nationwide playoffs postseason format. They've used the profits that didn't go to schools/communities to sponsor lavish trips and "retreats" to discuss strategy and woo VIPs. The org's defend these actions as legitimate efforts to maintain and improve the quality of the bowls. How about executive compensation? The heads of MSF, Amnesty Int'l, and the Salvation Army all make less than $300K/year. The heads of some bowls take in $500-700K, despite managing a much smaller org than the true charities. In some cases, "honorary execs" are paid hundreds of thousands for a few hours of seasonal work per week. Despite their ludicrous pay, a former Fiesta Bowl exec (J Junker) was found to use bowl funds on golf and strip clubs. They give the usual Wall Street excuse - the market sets the going rate to recruit and retain the talent necessary for the job. So I guess "the market" just values a guy who sets up a single football game more than a guy who is in charge of helping millions of Americans day in, day out.

Again, imagine the opportunity costs of bowl profits that could have gone to the causes that they're supposed to go to. Nonprofits are not taxed because they serve a public need, but it seems that the bowls are making off with millions while actually undermining some critical public services.

Battle of the billionaires

http://news.yahoo.com/warren-buffett-defends-proposal-tax-super-rich-191916203.html

It's cool when the rich go to war against each other, though of course I'm rooting for the smart one who doesn't hack cell phones of victims' families. The Economist agreed with Buffett that the US tax code needs to be fundamentally reformed by ending most deductions (that mostly benefit the rich) and taxing cap. gains heavier than wages. That way real labor and productivity won't be penalized, but speculation and excessive trading will (that benefits few and may put the entire economy at risk). Can anyone give me a cogent argument why hedge fund managers' compensation (not their own investments, but pay from their firm) deserves to be considered cap. gains? Bush-enomics. It's probably true that taxing the rich won't help our deficit situation much, but it signals a strong message to the market so the dysfunctional incentives structure still widespread in Wall St. and upper America may change.

It's interesting how quickly the rich mobilize their media and political minions the minute anyone of import barely raises the issue of tax hikes. That reveals their defensiveness/awareness of the preferential treatment they're getting, and how they know it's a scam that can't last, no matter how gullible they think we are.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2011/09/budget-politics

Friday, September 30, 2011

Drone strike appears to have killed al-Awlaki

http://news.yahoo.com/us-officials-us-attack-yemen-kills-al-awlaki-130835684.html

I guess it's good for US national security that this man is dead, but what is to stop another similarly dangerous individual from taking his place and even doing a better job?

It is disconcerting that the US gov't can sanction the assassination of a US citizen living legally in another nation where we have no official military jurisdiction. All the "evidence" against this person is classified (actually he has not even been officially charged with any crime!), so we just have to go on the hate sermons he has released online and his alleged ties to the underpants bomber and Ft. Hood shooter. No due process, no explicit attempt to apprehend him, and it wasn't an interdiction to stop him from imminently harming others. Just shoot to kill, and the order came from a C-in-C who used to be a ConLaw professor.

Plenty of US citizens have committed treasonous behavior over the years (and yet our nation still stands), but Washington did not issue kill orders for them. In fact some of them today live comfortably and have radio/TV programs. I guess this shows Americans that under some set of conditions, our gov't can unilaterally and spontaneously murder us. But probably not being an extremist Muslim reduces our chances.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Interesting story of the Conficker worm

http://www.npr.org/2011/09/27/140704494/the-worm-that-could-bring-down-the-internet

The author of "Black Hawk Down" recently published a book about internet security and the Conficker worm, the most successful malware program known to date. I am not an IT guy, but from the interview, it seems that Conficker was written by expert hackers in Ukraine (who still remain anonymous) to tunnel into millions of Windows PCs and subtly control some of their processing resources, and then answer to a mother computer. Their aim seems to be the creation of a massive "botnet" of 10-12M slave computers worldwide that basically aggregate their processors to become the most powerful supercomputer in the world (even better than our best, expensive NSA comps). It's like those movies with the little nano-machines piling up to become a huge scary monster.

With this asset, the masters of Conficker may be able to brute-force crack computer encryption, presumably to guess passwords to steal money and/or secrets. 128-bit encryption technology can maybe produce gazillions of possible passwords (>10^38), which would take too long for even modern supercomputers to plow through. But the Conficker botnet can do this much quicker, and it's masters are now "leasing" the botnet resources to other criminals seeking to steal something. In theory, the penetration of Conficker is so great that its masters would be able to shut down the global internet if they wanted, but they seem more inclined to use it to steal, so it's left unharmed.

How the heck does Conficker infect PCs? Good ol' Microsoft did not make Windows XP very secure, and their engineers eventually discovered a vulnerability for remote access. So they issued a typical software update/patch to close the hole, and anyone who regularly updates their Windows OS should be safe. But the problem is that most PCs running Windows worldwide are using pirated versions that are not eligible for updating (another consequence of OS piracy: exposing the whole internet and trillions of wealth to crime; thanks a lot, China). So those users are totally exposed unless they download antivirus software or a free anti-Conficker program written pro bono by the "Conficker working group" near Stanford (calling themselves "the cabal," a team of volunteer cyber-security experts who recognized the danger of Conficker and are trying to stop it on their own time and own dime, because gov'ts are way behind the curve and doing nothing).

The irony is that Conficker started infecting PCs after this Windows patch. It's possible that the hackers analyzed the patch to reverse-engineer and discover what the Windows vulnerability was, so MS gave the bad guys a free how-to guide to hack Windows! By trying to fix their product, MS brought about the Conficker infection (in addition to many other similar malwares that have been since identified, and lord knows what we haven't found yet). Another consequence of monopoly: concentrated risk. And even though Conficker doesn't affect Mac or Linux, that's not to say that those OS's are any more secure. The Conficker masters just see less value in infecting the much smaller global population of Macs and Linuxes, which would create a much wimpier botnet. So take that, Apple snobs (and FYI, iOS has been hacked repeatedly so far).

Why can't we identify and shut down Conficker? Infected PCs show virtually no symptoms of infection, and are blocked from receiving any new updates, so it is a very clever parasite (and as I said, most of the infected PCs are not in the West). It just uses the processor selectively without slowing down your normal apps. But all the slave comps must answer to the mother comp for instructions, right? Why not just use that communication to locate the criminals and shut it down? Well, Conficker is elusive and doesn't just route all slave communications to one IP address. Then it would be easy to track, like a phone trace. But each day Conficker commandeers 250 IP domains, so it requires more effort to track down, and recent Conficker strains now use 2,500 domains and even 5 "high level" domains that are very secure. The hackers know that the poorly-funded cabal is the only group trying to stop them, so they just needed to make Conficker communications too costly to trace and block.

So where the hell is the gov't in all this? Isn't our security and economy at risk? Conficker seems a lot more of a concern than a couple of Taliban fighters with AKs. Obama just started a US Cyber Command within the NSA, a whole year after Conficker was discovered, but I surmise that they are grossly unprepared for the challenges ahead. Russia crashed Georgia's e-infrastructure with a worm/virus prior to its military invasion. McAfee pretty much implicated China in hacking some major US websites too, so the writing is on the wall. Hasn't anyone seen "Live Free or Die Hard?" We need McClane to rescue us.

The cabal approached the Pentagon and NSA to ask for help to fight Conficker, and maybe even sequester their computing resources. But they were summarily turned down, possibly over territorial or state secrets issues. I am sure that the NSA has a couple interns working on this (what else could be a higher priority for them, Mugabe's cell calls?), but clearly they are not winning (like Charlie Sheen). Here's another hilarious side-story. Remember how the US and Israel crashed Iran's computers controlling their uranium enrichment program? It set them back like a year. It's quite possible that our spooks hired the Conficker botnet to do that, or at least created our own similar worm inspired by Conficker.

Corporate and gov't cyber security is not up to task, but in this climate of austerity, it may be a hard sell to demand more investment in this area. No one cares to protect themselves until after the first disaster strikes (even though a few have already struck, but we just didn't care). I am sure the Ukrainian gang is a super-talented bunch of hackers, but they should be nothing compared to the resources that China or Facebook (no connection suggested) can devote to cyber-security, or cyber-warfare. Modern states already know that the best way to bring each other down (besides nukes) is to crash our e-infrastructure that we so depend on and take for granted. And even so, a cyber attack could disable our nukes and military. The internet was developed by idealistic engineers who wanted a free flow of information, so unfortunately it's structure is inherently vulnerable. We take the good with the bad, but ignoring the problem to this degree is just unacceptable. Fortunately, the likelihood of worms directly stealing our passwords and meager e-weath is still quite low. But what's the value of our little savings account if our national financial system gets wiped out?