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    December 30

    Stop Being Stupid...AMERICA!!!

    America's New Year Resolution: Stop Being Stupid  

    America's New Year Resolution: Stop Being Stupid
    By Bob Herbert, The New York Times
    We have behaved in ways that were incredibly and embarrassingly stupid for much too long. It's time to stop the self-destruction. Read more »

    Was the 'Credit Crunch' a Myth Used to Sell a Trillion-Dollar Scam?

    Was the 'Credit Crunch' a Myth Used to Sell a Trillion-Dollar Scam?

    By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted December 29, 2008.

    Even as the media continue to repeat the claim that credit has frozen up, evidence has emerged suggesting the entire story is wrong.

    There is something approaching a consensus that the Paulson Plan -- also known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP -- was a boondoggle of an intervention that's flailed from one approach to the next, with little oversight and less effect on the financial meltdown.

    But perhaps even more troubling than the ad hoc nature of its implementation is the suspicion that has recently emerged that TARP -- hundreds of billions of dollars worth so far -- was sold to Congress and the public based on a Big Lie.

    President George W. Bush, fabulist-in-chief, articulated the rationale for the program in that trademark way of his -- as if addressing a nation of slow-witted 12-year-olds -- on Sept. 24: "Major financial institutions have teetered on the edge of collapse ... [and] began holding onto their money, and lending dried up, and the gears of the American financial system began grinding to a halt." Bush said that if Congress didn't give Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson the trillion dollars (give or take) for which he was asking, the results would be disastrous: "Even if you have good credit history, it would be more difficult for you to get the loans you need to buy a car or send your children to college. And ultimately, our country could experience a long and painful recession."

    For the most part, the press has continued to echo Bush's central assertion that there's a "credit crunch" preventing even qualified borrowers -- that's the key point -- from getting loans, and it's now part of the conventional wisdom.

    But a number of economists are questionioning the factual basis of the credit crunch narrative. Columnist David Sirota recently looked at those claims and concluded that Americans "had been punk'd" -- that "the major claims about a credit crisis that justified Congress cutting a trillion-dollar blank check to Wall Street were demonstrably false," and the threat of a systemic banking crash was used by the Bush administration to overcome popular resistance to the "bailout."

    It's a reasonable conclusion; this is an administration that used the threat of thousands of al-Qaida sleeper cells in the United States to sell Congress on the Patriot Act, the specter of mushroom clouds rising over American cities to push through the Iraq war resolution and the supposedly imminent crash of the Social Security system to push for privatizing Americans' retirement savings.

    But the question comes down to what they knew and when they knew it. The analyses that suggest the whole credit crunch narrative is false are based on data that lagged behind the numbers that policymakers had available, in real time, back in September. So the question -- probably unanswerable at this point -- comes down to whether or not they looked at the situation and in good faith believed that pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into the banking system would contain the damage and save an economy teetering on the brink of collapse.

    What Else Could Be Happening?

    Of course, no one disputes the fact that as the economy has tanked, the number of new loans being issued to American families and businesses has plummeted. But is because credit has dried up for qualified borrowers?

    Economist Dean Baker doesn't think so. He explains the situation in simple terms: The media, he argues, "are blaming the economic collapse on a 'credit crunch' instead of the more obvious problem that consumers just lost $6 trillion of housing wealth and another $8 trillion of stock wealth." It's a commonsense argument: much of the economic growth of the Bush era existed on paper only, built on the rise of a massive bubble in real estate values rather than growth in productive industries. When all that ephemeral wealth vaporized -- and with the economy shedding jobs like a dog with dermatitis -- consumers stopped buying, and businesses, anticipating a long slowdown, stopped seeking the loans that they might have otherwise tapped to expand their operations.

    SOURCE:  http://www.alternet.org/workplace/115768/was_the_%27credit_crunch%27_a_myth_used_to_sell_a_trillion-dollar_scam/

     

    December 21

    With economy in shambles, Congress gets a raise!!

    With economy in shambles, Congress gets a raise 17 Dec 2008 A crumbling economy, more than 2 million constituents who have lost their jobs this year, and congressional demands of CEOs to work for free did not convince lawmakers to freeze their own pay. Instead, they will get a $4,700 pay increase, amounting to an additional $2.5 million that taxpayers will spend on congressional salaries.
    http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/with-economy-in-shambles-congress-gets-a-raise-2008-12-17.html
    December 20

    From the Alternet News Desk

    Israel's 'Crime Against Humanity'  

    Israel's 'Crime Against Humanity'
    By Chris Hedges, Truthdig
    Israel's siege of Gaza rivals the worst crimes carried out at the height of South African apartheid. Read more »

    Beauty Secret: Your Make-Up Can Kill You  

    Beauty Secret: Your Make-Up Can Kill You
    By Jacqueline Houton, Bitch Magazine
    When it comes to cosmetics, women's health is getting the kiss-off.? Read more »

    Bernie Madoff's Shady Schemes Should Have Set off Alarms Long Ago  

    Bernie Madoff's Shady Schemes Should Have Set off Alarms Long Ago
    By Arianna Huffington, Huffington Post
    One ponzi scheme after another is exposed on Wall Street, and so far all we've heard is: "Who could have known?" Read more »

    Not to Worry -- Concerns About Pot Coffee Houses in Amsterdam Have Gone up in Smoke  

    Not to Worry -- Concerns About Pot Coffee Houses in Amsterdam Have Gone up in Smoke
    By Phillip S. Smith, Drug War Chronicle
    Despite the bluster of some of its members, the governing coalition in Holland is not going to touch cannabis policy. Read more »

    Top 5 Reasons Steven Chu is a Great Energy Pick  

    Top 5 Reasons Steven Chu is a Great Energy Pick
    By Joseph Romm, Climate Progress
    Most importantly his "views on climate change would be among the most forceful ever held by a cabinet member." Read more »

    Neocons, Thirsty for Blood, Look to Quash Iran Negotiations  

    Neocons, Thirsty for Blood, Look to Quash Iran Negotiations
    By Ali Gharib, IPS News
    Obama has spoken of meaningful engagement with Iran, but DC hawks still advocate tough sanctions or military strikes. Read more »