Thom Hartmann When I listen to Air America they play a commercial with President Barak Obama saying he is happy to listen to Air America. So someway he has to listen to your show which is not on Air America. So hopefully a staffer is listening to your show. Perhaps so?
Every national church or religion has established itself by pretending some special mission from God communicated to certain individuals. The Jews have their Moses, the Christians their Jesus Christ, their apostles and saints, and the Turks their Mohomet, as if the way to God was not open to every man alike. Each of those churches show certain books, which they call revelation, or the Word of God. The Jews say their Word of God was given by God to Moses, face to face, the Christians that their Word of God came by divine inspiration, and the Turks say that their Word of God (the Koran) was brought by an angel from heaven. Each of those churches accuses the other of unbelief; and for my own part, I disbelieve them all.
_Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason
Not sure how this fits into any broader discussion, but it must be significant.
Last Friday, the Italians arrested a pair of men, described as Japanese, carrying $134 BILLION in U.S. Treasury bonds concealed in a false bottom of their suitcase.
john mccain has came out and say that we must speak up for the iranian people. say the election was a sham. that we need to show that america will lead in this. i just want to tell mccain we know the election was a sham and we do support the people. to me the most inportant thing i would like to say to mccain is that everything now in the 21 century must be done with wisdom. we must think before we try to make international decision. the world does not revolve around the united states. we need to talk with our allies. need to make decisions based on the international community. i am so glad you are not presdent because you are stuck in the eary 20 century.
Has anyone else noticed that there's been a "surge" of caller over the last few months who are raising "9/11 Truth"?
It's not just on Thom's show. I've heard calls like this on all the "progressive" shows I listen to. It seems like more than a coincidence, and it seems like some of the calls, like the one today are aimed more at the audience than the show's host.
You probably need to be a subscriber to access that link, so I have pasted the article below. (If you can access the article without a subscription, please make a comment on the blog --- I won't take up so much space with it.)
June 16, 2009
Credit Bailout: Issuers Slashing Card Balances By DAVID STREITFELD
The banks were bailed out last fall, the automobile companies last winter. For Edward McClelland, a writer in Chicago, deliverance finally arrived a few days ago.
Mr. McClelland’s credit card company was calling yet again, wondering when it could expect the next installment on his delinquent account. He proposed paying half of his $5,486 balance and calling the matter even.
It’s a deal, the account representative immediately said, not even bothering to check with a supervisor.
As they confront unprecedented numbers of troubled customers, credit card companies are increasingly doing something they have historically scorned: settling delinquent accounts for substantially less than the amount owed.
The practice started last fall as the economy worsened. But in recent months, with unemployment topping 9 percent and more people having trouble paying their bills, experts say this approach has risen drastically.
They say many credit card issuers have revised internal guidelines to give front-line employees the power to cut deals with consumers. The workers do not even have to wait for customers to call and ask for a break.
“Now it’s the card company calling you and saying, ‘Let’s talk turkey,’ ” said David Robertson, publisher of the credit industry journal The Nilson Report.
Only a few creditors are willing to confirm the practice. Bank of America and American Express say they decide on a case-by-case basis whether to accept less than the full balance. Other card companies refuse to discuss the subject, but their trade group, the American Bankers Association, acknowledges that settlements are becoming more common.
The shift comes as the financial services industry finds itself losing some of its legendary power. A credit card reform bill that makes it harder to raise rates on existing balances and prevents certain automatic fees flew through Congress and was signed by President Obama in late May.
Borrowers still have a crushing amount of debt to deal with, however.
Revolving credit, a close approximation of credit card debt, totaled $939.6 billion in March. The Federal Reserve reported that 6.5 percent of credit card debt was at least 30 days past due in the first quarter, the highest percentage since it began tracking the number in 1991. The amount being written off was also at peak levels.
After a balance has been delinquent for six months, regulations require the card company to reduce the value of the debt on its books to zero. If a borrower has not paid by this point, chances are he never will.
“The creditors would rather have a piece of something now instead of absolutely nothing down the road,” said Adam K. Levin, the founder of the consumer education Web site Credit.com.
Banks and credit card companies are discussing new programs that would, for the first time, allow credit counselors to invoke reductions of principal as a routine part of their strategy, said Jeffrey S. Tenenbaum, a lawyer for many counseling agencies. In the past, counselors could persuade card issuers to adjust interest rates and modify late fees, but the balance was untouchable.
An example of how quickly the card companies are shifting their approach is in the behavior of HSBC, a major issuer, toward Mr. McClelland.
He was paying fitfully on his card, which was canceled for delinquency. In April, HSBC offered him full settlement at 20 percent off. He declined. A few weeks later, it agreed to let him pay half.
Traditionally, the creditors could play tough with any accounts that became delinquent because the cardholders had assets. The creditors could sue or place a lien on a cardholder’s house.
As the recession grinds on, though, many cardholders have less to lose. Mr. McClelland, 42, is a renter. Since he is self-employed, he has no wages to garnish. But he did not want to feel like a deadbeat.
“Having this over and done with was appealing,” he said. He raised the agreed-upon $2,743 and sent it off electronically last week. He has spared himself the prospect of years of collection calls.
HSBC said it did not comment on individual cardholders and would not discuss its policy toward settlements. “Every customer situation is unique,” said a spokeswoman, Cindy Savio.
The card companies, perhaps understandably, do not want to promote the idea that settlements have become merely a matter of asking nicely. The creditors also point out that a delinquency, like a foreclosure, destroys a credit record.
And there can be a Catch-22: those with the fewest assets are the likeliest to receive a settlement offer, but they are also the least able to come up with the cash for that final negotiated payment. Some creditors, though, are helpfully letting people stretch this out over months.
Still, a line has been crossed, credit experts say.
“Even in the early stages of delinquency, settlements can be dramatic,” said Carmine Dorio, a longtime industry executive who ran collection departments for Citibank, Bank of America and Washington Mutual.
During the boom, nonpayers were treated more harshly because, paradoxically, their debt was more valuable. Collection agencies were eager to buy bundles of old debt from the card companies for as much as 15 cents on the dollar. In a healthy economy, even the hopelessly indebted can pay something.
In this recession, where collection agencies have little hope of collecting from the unemployed, that business model is suffering. Experts say 5 cents on the dollar is now the most a card company can hope to get for its past-due accounts.
Another factor undermining the card companies is the rise of debt settlement firms. These are profit-making companies that charge fees, nearly always in advance, to bargain with creditors on a consumer’s behalf.
Settlement companies are under fire from regulators, who say they promise much and deliver little. But their ubiquitous ads, which make a settlement seem not only easy but also a moral victory over shamelessly gouging card companies, have done much to spread the idea.
Although there are few independent statistics on the settlement industry, there is no doubt that some generous deals are being done.
Consider Bedros Alikcioglu, a gas station owner in Newport Beach, Calif. He owed $112,000 on four cards and was paying $3,000 a month in interest and late fees. “It was so hard to earn that money, and paying it to nowhere didn’t make sense anymore,” said Mr. Alikcioglu, 75.
He signed up with a debt settlement company named Hope Financial, which negotiated deals with his creditors to settle for about 35 percent of his balance. Hope Financial is charging Mr. Alikcioglu about 12 percent of his original debt.
“I did not want to leave the legacy of bankruptcy,” Mr. Alikcioglu said. “I am now at peace.”
Perhaps Thom could ask his guest why we should settle for an incredibly lazy god-of-creation... seeing as all mammals (including humans) share nearly-identical architecture?
Great whales have pelvises and rudimentary hind legs concealed within their bodies; bats wings are adapted from the same 5-digit hands that we humans share with many other creatures; the same bones. muscles & ligaments which make up the human foot can be seen in the hind legs of dogs, cats, rabbits, kangaroos, etc. & etc. (check Higgins' footie-paws).
If an engineer at Northrup tried to submit the same basic plans for a submarine, an airplane and a land vehicle, they would be fired for gross incompetence...yet we're supposed to worship a deity who shows the same laziness in reusing- and adapting a basic design for creatures of the sea, air and land?
Evolution is a much better solution - and it doesn't require us to be saddled with a stupid, lazy god.
Pat Buchanan, however, is a Roman Catholic (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Buchanan). How can Buchanan associate himself with this race/group hatred while still a practicing Catholic? (http://www.realchange.org/buchanan.htm). This last URL has fascinating insights into Buchanan's background and thinking. Apparently Buchanan comes from a sheltered upbringing in a fairly affluent family headed by a father who was a government bureacrat. Buchanan lacks the insight into others' lives that would allow him to overcome the racist "blinders."
Re: Yesterday's U.S. Chamber of Commerce comment
Thom,
I am a small business owner who canceled our membership with our local Chamber of Commerce because they would not support the local business (unless we could match the prices of the Mega Stores).
I hear you. Molly Ivins was informed, insightful and funny as hell.
I don't know if that sense of humor is specifically Texan or more generally Southern, but some of funniest and most charming comments from the left have come from Texans like Molly Ivins, Ann Richards and Jim Hightower.
In May of last year the U.S. money supply stood at roughly $834 billion. Now, a year later, the Federal Reserve has created an additional $941 billion out of thin air. Pay close attention to those numbers...
* The amount of new money the Fed has created is roughly $107 billion more than all the money that was in circulation just a year ago
* In other words, the U.S. money supply has more than doubled
Think about what this does to the value of your dollars, to your savings, to your paycheck, to your retirement income? A doubling of the money supply means your money is worth half what it was.
Of course, your money's loss of value won't manifest itself overnight. It will take time for the Fed's counterfeiting to drive up prices. But those who get the new money first will be able to spend it while prices are still low, increasing their wealth at your expense.
The Federal Reserve, as you might expect, promises that prices won't rise. They claim they'll withdraw their counterfeit money before that happens. Do you feel comforted? Should we really believe that...
* The Fed can really undo so much counterfeiting
* The attempt to withdraw the counterfeit dollars won't cause economic disruptions of its own
And if they did sop up their funny money, wouldn't that mean another "contraction?" ...more unemployment? ...other sectors in trouble and screaming for a taxpayer-funded bailout?
Our position is simple. If it's wrong for individuals to counterfeit, it's also wrong for the government to do it. What we need is money that no one can counterfeit, like gold and silver. Some people want to make this happen by abolishing the Fed. We agree. That needs to happen. But it's a big step. We think there's an easier way...
Congress should start by ending the Fed's monopoly control of money. Congress should permit you to use whatever form of money you prefer. This would...
* Empower the creation of an alternative money system
* Reduce the Fed's ability to counterfeit by forcing Federal Reserve Notes (FRNs) to compete with honest money
* Make it easier to abolish the Fed once a new money system is fully operational
Mark - I found it absolutely fascinating that this past weekend, when "ISSUE ONE" on "The McLaughlin Group" was the shooting at the Holocaust Museum, Mort Zuckerman sat in Pat Buchannan's usual seat, and the "guest seat", (often Mort's spot) was occupied by a guy from Mother Jones. Even Buchannan's "friends" don't wanna hear what he has to say on THAT subject! :)
Regarding yesterday's posting of the Turthdig article and the 1st-hour subject today, on the end of America's financial empire -
WHEW! - scary stuff indeed! The scenarios stated in that article are, indeed quite possible - however, they are not the only possible scenarios. Here's another, which I consider more likely.
Yes, the Russians, the Chinese, and others are tired of the shaky dollar. Yes, they are meeting now, with no American presence, to decide upon a new standard currency for international exchange. So, what positions are the big dogs likely to take?
Well, the Russions would probably like to see the Ruble as the global exchange standard. The Chinese, on the other hand, would likely support the Yuan. Is either side likely to give in and support the other nation's currency as a global standard? I sure don't think so! How about the Euro? Again, I doubt it.
So, I suspect that after much bluster and posturing, this meeting will accomplish the same results that most meetings do - NONE! The parties will eventually leave the table to "study the matter further", and go home, with the US Dollar still the global exchange standard.
After Buchanan gave his “culture war speech” at the 1992 Republican Convention, liberal journalist Molly Ivins said “it probably sounded better in the original German.”
My daughter and I are gluten intolerant. She took the plunge first, and because she felt so much better, I tried it too, and feel a lot better. I use a coffee grinder to grind up all of the different grains which makes the flour fresher and I can make my own crackers in a toaster oven on a pizza stone but it takes a bit of time.
I was glad to learn that buckwheat is okay.
Millet often refuses to cook and one trick my daughter taught me was to soak the millet in water overnight first. It also works to cook millet in a small crockpot overnight for breakfast cereal the next morning. I think I'll try adding some buckwheat and polenta, too, and see how that tastes all together.
Is there any chance you could do a gluten-free segment? Perhaps you have and i missed it, but I would love to hear you talk more about this.
Thom Hartmann When I listen to Air America they play a commercial with President Barak Obama saying he is happy to listen to Air America. So someway he has to listen to your show which is not on Air America. So hopefully a staffer is listening to your show. Perhaps so?
B Roll,
Re:
Has anyone else noticed that there’s been a “surge” of caller over the last few months who are raising “9/11 Truth”?
Yes, I have noticed them, too.
When George Bush came into office...
The Devil made him do it.
Every national church or religion has established itself by pretending some special mission from God communicated to certain individuals. The Jews have their Moses, the Christians their Jesus Christ, their apostles and saints, and the Turks their Mohomet, as if the way to God was not open to every man alike. Each of those churches show certain books, which they call revelation, or the Word of God. The Jews say their Word of God was given by God to Moses, face to face, the Christians that their Word of God came by divine inspiration, and the Turks say that their Word of God (the Koran) was brought by an angel from heaven. Each of those churches accuses the other of unbelief; and for my own part, I disbelieve them all.
_Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason
Not sure how this fits into any broader discussion, but it must be significant.
Last Friday, the Italians arrested a pair of men, described as Japanese, carrying $134 BILLION in U.S. Treasury bonds concealed in a false bottom of their suitcase.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090612a2.html
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6507161.ece
Surprisingly this has not been covered by domestic news outlets.
john mccain has came out and say that we must speak up for the iranian people. say the election was a sham. that we need to show that america will lead in this. i just want to tell mccain we know the election was a sham and we do support the people. to me the most inportant thing i would like to say to mccain is that everything now in the 21 century must be done with wisdom. we must think before we try to make international decision. the world does not revolve around the united states. we need to talk with our allies. need to make decisions based on the international community. i am so glad you are not presdent because you are stuck in the eary 20 century.
Has anyone else noticed that there's been a "surge" of caller over the last few months who are raising "9/11 Truth"?
It's not just on Thom's show. I've heard calls like this on all the "progressive" shows I listen to. It seems like more than a coincidence, and it seems like some of the calls, like the one today are aimed more at the audience than the show's host.
Re: Credit Card Companies
Soaring Credit Card Transaction Fees Squeeze Independent Businesses
http://www.newrules.org/retail/news/soaring-credit-card-transaction-fees...
Interesting article on today's NYTimes front page:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/your-money/credit-and-debit-cards/16cr...
You probably need to be a subscriber to access that link, so I have pasted the article below. (If you can access the article without a subscription, please make a comment on the blog --- I won't take up so much space with it.)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
June 16, 2009
Credit Bailout: Issuers Slashing Card Balances By DAVID STREITFELD
The banks were bailed out last fall, the automobile companies last winter. For Edward McClelland, a writer in Chicago, deliverance finally arrived a few days ago.
Mr. McClelland’s credit card company was calling yet again, wondering when it could expect the next installment on his delinquent account. He proposed paying half of his $5,486 balance and calling the matter even.
It’s a deal, the account representative immediately said, not even bothering to check with a supervisor.
As they confront unprecedented numbers of troubled customers, credit card companies are increasingly doing something they have historically scorned: settling delinquent accounts for substantially less than the amount owed.
The practice started last fall as the economy worsened. But in recent months, with unemployment topping 9 percent and more people having trouble paying their bills, experts say this approach has risen drastically.
They say many credit card issuers have revised internal guidelines to give front-line employees the power to cut deals with consumers. The workers do not even have to wait for customers to call and ask for a break.
“Now it’s the card company calling you and saying, ‘Let’s talk turkey,’ ” said David Robertson, publisher of the credit industry journal The Nilson Report.
Only a few creditors are willing to confirm the practice. Bank of America and American Express say they decide on a case-by-case basis whether to accept less than the full balance. Other card companies refuse to discuss the subject, but their trade group, the American Bankers Association, acknowledges that settlements are becoming more common.
The shift comes as the financial services industry finds itself losing some of its legendary power. A credit card reform bill that makes it harder to raise rates on existing balances and prevents certain automatic fees flew through Congress and was signed by President Obama in late May.
Borrowers still have a crushing amount of debt to deal with, however.
Revolving credit, a close approximation of credit card debt, totaled $939.6 billion in March. The Federal Reserve reported that 6.5 percent of credit card debt was at least 30 days past due in the first quarter, the highest percentage since it began tracking the number in 1991. The amount being written off was also at peak levels.
After a balance has been delinquent for six months, regulations require the card company to reduce the value of the debt on its books to zero. If a borrower has not paid by this point, chances are he never will.
“The creditors would rather have a piece of something now instead of absolutely nothing down the road,” said Adam K. Levin, the founder of the consumer education Web site Credit.com.
Banks and credit card companies are discussing new programs that would, for the first time, allow credit counselors to invoke reductions of principal as a routine part of their strategy, said Jeffrey S. Tenenbaum, a lawyer for many counseling agencies. In the past, counselors could persuade card issuers to adjust interest rates and modify late fees, but the balance was untouchable.
An example of how quickly the card companies are shifting their approach is in the behavior of HSBC, a major issuer, toward Mr. McClelland.
He was paying fitfully on his card, which was canceled for delinquency. In April, HSBC offered him full settlement at 20 percent off. He declined. A few weeks later, it agreed to let him pay half.
Traditionally, the creditors could play tough with any accounts that became delinquent because the cardholders had assets. The creditors could sue or place a lien on a cardholder’s house.
As the recession grinds on, though, many cardholders have less to lose. Mr. McClelland, 42, is a renter. Since he is self-employed, he has no wages to garnish. But he did not want to feel like a deadbeat.
“Having this over and done with was appealing,” he said. He raised the agreed-upon $2,743 and sent it off electronically last week. He has spared himself the prospect of years of collection calls.
HSBC said it did not comment on individual cardholders and would not discuss its policy toward settlements. “Every customer situation is unique,” said a spokeswoman, Cindy Savio.
The card companies, perhaps understandably, do not want to promote the idea that settlements have become merely a matter of asking nicely. The creditors also point out that a delinquency, like a foreclosure, destroys a credit record.
And there can be a Catch-22: those with the fewest assets are the likeliest to receive a settlement offer, but they are also the least able to come up with the cash for that final negotiated payment. Some creditors, though, are helpfully letting people stretch this out over months.
Still, a line has been crossed, credit experts say.
“Even in the early stages of delinquency, settlements can be dramatic,” said Carmine Dorio, a longtime industry executive who ran collection departments for Citibank, Bank of America and Washington Mutual.
During the boom, nonpayers were treated more harshly because, paradoxically, their debt was more valuable. Collection agencies were eager to buy bundles of old debt from the card companies for as much as 15 cents on the dollar. In a healthy economy, even the hopelessly indebted can pay something.
In this recession, where collection agencies have little hope of collecting from the unemployed, that business model is suffering. Experts say 5 cents on the dollar is now the most a card company can hope to get for its past-due accounts.
Another factor undermining the card companies is the rise of debt settlement firms. These are profit-making companies that charge fees, nearly always in advance, to bargain with creditors on a consumer’s behalf.
Settlement companies are under fire from regulators, who say they promise much and deliver little. But their ubiquitous ads, which make a settlement seem not only easy but also a moral victory over shamelessly gouging card companies, have done much to spread the idea.
Although there are few independent statistics on the settlement industry, there is no doubt that some generous deals are being done.
Consider Bedros Alikcioglu, a gas station owner in Newport Beach, Calif. He owed $112,000 on four cards and was paying $3,000 a month in interest and late fees. “It was so hard to earn that money, and paying it to nowhere didn’t make sense anymore,” said Mr. Alikcioglu, 75.
He signed up with a debt settlement company named Hope Financial, which negotiated deals with his creditors to settle for about 35 percent of his balance. Hope Financial is charging Mr. Alikcioglu about 12 percent of his original debt.
“I did not want to leave the legacy of bankruptcy,” Mr. Alikcioglu said. “I am now at peace.”
Most doctors do not support the AMA's position.
Neil Clark,
Interesting insight.
Re; Faith & Evolution -
Perhaps Thom could ask his guest why we should settle for an incredibly lazy god-of-creation... seeing as all mammals (including humans) share nearly-identical architecture?
Great whales have pelvises and rudimentary hind legs concealed within their bodies; bats wings are adapted from the same 5-digit hands that we humans share with many other creatures; the same bones. muscles & ligaments which make up the human foot can be seen in the hind legs of dogs, cats, rabbits, kangaroos, etc. & etc. (check Higgins' footie-paws).
If an engineer at Northrup tried to submit the same basic plans for a submarine, an airplane and a land vehicle, they would be fired for gross incompetence...yet we're supposed to worship a deity who shows the same laziness in reusing- and adapting a basic design for creatures of the sea, air and land?
Evolution is a much better solution - and it doesn't require us to be saddled with a stupid, lazy god.
s.b. "bureaucrat"
Mark and B Roll,
Just to show how irrational all this racism is, consider the following:
Many "Republic" congresspeople and political figures have been members of white-supremacist-related groups like the CCC (http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=487.) Pat Buchanan fits into this mold (http://www.bloggersforchange.com/?p=16339.)
The KKK and similar hate groupstarget their attacks against the black communities; Jews and Catholics. (http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Why_do_the_KKK_hate_black_people)
Pat Buchanan, however, is a Roman Catholic (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Buchanan). How can Buchanan associate himself with this race/group hatred while still a practicing Catholic? (http://www.realchange.org/buchanan.htm). This last URL has fascinating insights into Buchanan's background and thinking. Apparently Buchanan comes from a sheltered upbringing in a fairly affluent family headed by a father who was a government bureacrat. Buchanan lacks the insight into others' lives that would allow him to overcome the racist "blinders."
Re: Faith & Evolution
Joseph Campbell said that myth was someone else's religion, and that religion was when you took the myth to be literal.
Re: Yesterday's U.S. Chamber of Commerce comment
Thom,
I am a small business owner who canceled our membership with our local Chamber of Commerce because they would not support the local business (unless we could match the prices of the Mega Stores).
mstaggerlee,
I hear you. Molly Ivins was informed, insightful and funny as hell.
I don't know if that sense of humor is specifically Texan or more generally Southern, but some of funniest and most charming comments from the left have come from Texans like Molly Ivins, Ann Richards and Jim Hightower.
Subject: Counterfeiting Update
In May of last year the U.S. money supply stood at roughly $834 billion. Now, a year later, the Federal Reserve has created an additional $941 billion out of thin air. Pay close attention to those numbers...
* The amount of new money the Fed has created is roughly $107 billion more than all the money that was in circulation just a year ago
* In other words, the U.S. money supply has more than doubled
Think about what this does to the value of your dollars, to your savings, to your paycheck, to your retirement income? A doubling of the money supply means your money is worth half what it was.
Of course, your money's loss of value won't manifest itself overnight. It will take time for the Fed's counterfeiting to drive up prices. But those who get the new money first will be able to spend it while prices are still low, increasing their wealth at your expense.
The Federal Reserve, as you might expect, promises that prices won't rise. They claim they'll withdraw their counterfeit money before that happens. Do you feel comforted? Should we really believe that...
* The Fed can really undo so much counterfeiting
* The attempt to withdraw the counterfeit dollars won't cause economic disruptions of its own
And if they did sop up their funny money, wouldn't that mean another "contraction?" ...more unemployment? ...other sectors in trouble and screaming for a taxpayer-funded bailout?
Our position is simple. If it's wrong for individuals to counterfeit, it's also wrong for the government to do it. What we need is money that no one can counterfeit, like gold and silver. Some people want to make this happen by abolishing the Fed. We agree. That needs to happen. But it's a big step. We think there's an easier way...
Congress should start by ending the Fed's monopoly control of money. Congress should permit you to use whatever form of money you prefer. This would...
* Empower the creation of an alternative money system
* Reduce the Fed's ability to counterfeit by forcing Federal Reserve Notes (FRNs) to compete with honest money
* Make it easier to abolish the Fed once a new money system is fully operational
From downsizedc.org
Mark - I found it absolutely fascinating that this past weekend, when "ISSUE ONE" on "The McLaughlin Group" was the shooting at the Holocaust Museum, Mort Zuckerman sat in Pat Buchannan's usual seat, and the "guest seat", (often Mort's spot) was occupied by a guy from Mother Jones. Even Buchannan's "friends" don't wanna hear what he has to say on THAT subject! :)
*****Fed Planning 15-Fold Increase In US Monetary Base*****
This from a MARCH 20, 2009 article
http://www.marketskeptics.com/2009/03/fed-is-planning-15-fold-increase-i...
B Roll - Damn I miss Molly! :(
Regarding yesterday's posting of the Turthdig article and the 1st-hour subject today, on the end of America's financial empire -
WHEW! - scary stuff indeed! The scenarios stated in that article are, indeed quite possible - however, they are not the only possible scenarios. Here's another, which I consider more likely.
Yes, the Russians, the Chinese, and others are tired of the shaky dollar. Yes, they are meeting now, with no American presence, to decide upon a new standard currency for international exchange. So, what positions are the big dogs likely to take?
Well, the Russions would probably like to see the Ruble as the global exchange standard. The Chinese, on the other hand, would likely support the Yuan. Is either side likely to give in and support the other nation's currency as a global standard? I sure don't think so! How about the Euro? Again, I doubt it.
So, I suspect that after much bluster and posturing, this meeting will accomplish the same results that most meetings do - NONE! The parties will eventually leave the table to "study the matter further", and go home, with the US Dollar still the global exchange standard.
Mark,
After Buchanan gave his “culture war speech” at the 1992 Republican Convention, liberal journalist Molly Ivins said “it probably sounded better in the original German.”
Hi Thom,
This is off topic, but you frequently mention having celiac disease and eating a gluten free diet. Here is a good article on a new flour blend.
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Publications/Food-Beverage-Nutrition...
My daughter and I are gluten intolerant. She took the plunge first, and because she felt so much better, I tried it too, and feel a lot better. I use a coffee grinder to grind up all of the different grains which makes the flour fresher and I can make my own crackers in a toaster oven on a pizza stone but it takes a bit of time.
I was glad to learn that buckwheat is okay.
Millet often refuses to cook and one trick my daughter taught me was to soak the millet in water overnight first. It also works to cook millet in a small crockpot overnight for breakfast cereal the next morning. I think I'll try adding some buckwheat and polenta, too, and see how that tastes all together.
Is there any chance you could do a gluten-free segment? Perhaps you have and i missed it, but I would love to hear you talk more about this.
Thank you,
Loretta
www.portlandia.etsy.com
Go Thom!
Got their panties in a bunch for a second there with that PT Barnum talk.
All hail boss Limbaugh.