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Bailout Protest videos on Google
Posted by smeddum on October 1, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout protest, bailout protest videos, No cash for trash | Leave a Comment »
Senate Move to Vote on Bailout is Unconstitutional
Posted by smeddum on October 1, 2008
Senate Move to Vote on Bailout is Unconstitutional Forward Liberally
Various media outlets are reporting that Majority Leader Harry Reid plans to call a vote on the Wall Street Bailout Plan tomorrow night. This would be a clear violation of the United States Constitution. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout protest, stop the bailout | 5 Comments »
October 1 – Alert! Politicians switch bailout to Senate to avoid will of the people. What we can do.
Posted by seumasach on October 1, 2008
The politicians in Washington and their slimy Wall Street friends have switched the Wall Street Welfare bill to the Senate where only a third can be voted out in November. The corrupt filth in DC thumb their nose at the people again. Okay, here’s some things we can do. IT’S IMPORTANT WE DO THIS NOW! This is not a conservative thing or a liberal thing its a WE THE PEOPLE THING!
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout protest, stop the bailout | 1 Comment »
IMF adds to pressure on Congress to approve bail-out
Posted by seumasach on October 1, 2008
“We’re right at the moment where action is needed,” warned Strauss-Kahn. “A non-perfect plan is better than no plan at all,” he added, in an interview with Reuters in Washington.
And a perfect plan for “the sake of global finance” is even better still.
“With politicians worldwide demanding action” – this is hardly objective from the Guardian: you could go as far as to say “with certain politicians…….”
“the US Senate is due to buck convention and vote on an amended version of the rescue plan this evening – before the lower house has given its approval.” “bucking convention” is presumably a Guardian euphemism for unconstitutional action.
“it now includes a clause to raise the government’s guarantee on savings from $100,000 to $250,000.” The Guardian could have pointed out that the funds are not available to meet such a comittment.
Andrew Clark and Graeme Wearden
1st October, 2008
The International Monetary Fund has added to the growing pressure on the US Congress to approve the Wall Street bail-out, as stockmarkets rose on optimism that a deal will be hammered out this week.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the IMF, warned last night that the US must take urgent steps to protect its economy from the ongoing financial crisis.
“We’re right at the moment where action is needed,” warned Strauss-Kahn. “A non-perfect plan is better than no plan at all,” he added, in an interview with Reuters in Washington.
The prospect of a deal this week sent shares up in London this morning, where the FTSE 100 continued yesterday’s bounce-back. After leaping by 92 points in early trading it slipped slightly by 11am, when it was up 48.1 at 4950.5, a gain of 1%. Asia was also more buoyant, where Japan’s Nikkei recovered some of yesterday’s heavy losses to close almost 1% higher. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index gained 0.75%.
The House of Representatives sent shockwaves around the world on Monday when it voted down the $700bn (£390bn) rescue plan, under which the US government would cleanse the banking sector’s balance sheets.
With politicians worldwide demanding action, the US Senate is due to buck convention and vote on an amended version of the rescue plan this evening – before the lower house has given its approval. In an effort to win Congress’s backing, it now includes a clause to raise the government’s guarantee on savings from $100,000 to $250,000.
But in a sign of the problems facing the financial industry, JP Morgan warned that Europe’s banks will take fresh asset writedowns totalling €28.4bn (£22.5bn) before the end of this year
The research note predicted the following writedowns:
• Lloyds TSB (including HBOS): £4.5bn
• Deutsche Bank: £3.6bn
• UBS : £2.1bn
• Barclays: £2.9bn
• Société Générale: £2.1bn
Strauss-Kahn demanded that Europe draw up contingency plans in case its own banking system needs to be rescued. Unlike in America, there is no single regulator overseeing the system.
“Developing a contingency plan does not mean it’s announcing a lot of trouble coming. But they’re not totally immune … and so they need to organize,” he added.
But the president of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, has rejected the idea that Europe should organise its own bail-out.
“We are not a fully fledged federation with a federal budget,” Trichet pointed out. “Each country has to mobilize its own efforts.”
He also echoed calls for rapid action on the bail-out.
“It has to go, for the sake of the US and for the sake of global finance,” Trichet said.
Both presidential candidates have also called for a new push to get the rescue plan through.
On the campaign trail yesterday, Barack Obama warned of “catastrophic” consequences unless a deal is reached soon.
“We cannot risk another week or another month where American businesses are afraid to extend credit and lend money,” he said.
There was also renewed optimism on Wall Street that the treasury would eventually be able to hoover up “toxic” mortgage-related assets.
“Cooler heads are prevailing – we’d had a little bit of panic at the close yesterday,” said Anthony Conroy, head trader at BNY ConvergEx in New York. “There’s anticipation that some sort of deal will be passed by Congress in the next day or two.”
The US public has blamed the shambolic handling of the bail-out plan on both Congress – whose approval rating has fallen to 10% – and president George Bush, who is accused of caring about “fat cats” rather than ordinary people.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: stop the bailout | Leave a Comment »
No democracy, please. We’re British!
Posted by seumasach on October 1, 2008
Cailean Bochanan
1st October, 2008
The congressional vote on Monday rejecting the bailout scheme was a triumph for democracy. It has sent waves of dismay through the elite unaccustomed as they are to seeing their best laid plans dismissed in this way. For the British branch of Anglo-American it seems to have been particularly devastating: Brown put everything into backing it, “whatever the details”, and stands to lose further credilibilty with its defeat. Yesterday was a day of mourning, a day for deep reflection on the blows which destiny, or democracy, can deliver to embattled oligarchs and their entourage. But it was also a day of sharp manouvering by Monday’s losers: the markets rallied with Bush’s statement, sending a clear message to dissidents that the markets would collapse if disappointed by a further rejection. And there were promises of universal insurance on all deposits, a promise that costs nothing and which we already know cannot be met. A bailout for the bankers is now being presented as a bail out for everyone: we’re all going to bail out each other!
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: stop the bailout | 1 Comment »
Description of bailout plans by senators
Posted by smeddum on October 1, 2008
Descriptions of bailout plan
By The Associated Press – Sep 23, 2008
Some Senate Banking Committee members’ descriptions of the Bush administration’s $700 billion proposal to bail out the financial industry. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout, Senate | 4 Comments »
CNN Lou Dobbs: Bailout bypasses congress to senate Wed.
Posted by smeddum on October 1, 2008
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout protest, bailout swindle, Financial crisis, Lou Dobbs, no bailout, no to bailout | Leave a Comment »
USA: The Bailout Rejected – Who were the Patriots and Traitors?
Posted by alfied on October 1, 2008
Click here to see who voted for the bailout and who voted against.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout traitors/swindlers, bailout yes voters named | Leave a Comment »
The Congressman’s Dilemma
Posted by smeddum on September 30, 2008
The Congressman’s Dilemma
by Christopher Hayes The Nation
So in light of the news of House Republicans loudly and suddenly bailing out on the bailout, a few things to keep in mind to make sense of the political terrain. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout blackmail, bailout protest, no bailout, Wall Street Bailout Blackmail | Leave a Comment »
The Very Real Danger of Wall Street Blackmailing Us Back Into a Bad Bill
Posted by smeddum on September 30, 2008
The Danger of Wall Street Blackmailing Us Back Into a Bad Bill
By Ian Welsh Khabrein
The Western media are upping up the volume and markets are rallying (and disregarding market fundamentals) to blackmail congress into voting for the bailout. A battle has been won but the war is not over. There is a danger that we have been lulled into a false sense of security. Protests should continue
What was causing the panicked “must pass bill now” gasps from Senators and the Treasury was not the various bank failures. They have been pretty orderly and no one who failed wasn’t expected to fail. Instead the problem was that banks aren’t lending to each other. This isn’t because they fear that other banks won’t repay if they fail, in every case when a bank has failed, the Fed has made sure that banks with outstanding interbank loans got their money back. So this isn’t a question of systemic risk causing fear. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bailout, bailout blackmail, bailout protest, economy, no bailout, No cash for trash, Paulson, politics, Wall Street Bailout Blackmail | 1 Comment »
Bush’s Concerns Over Voter Fraud Led To Iglesias’s Firing
Posted by smeddum on September 30, 2008
Bush’s Concerns Over Voter Fraud Led To Iglesias’s Firing
By Jason Leopold
The Public Record
Monday, September 29, 2008 ThePublicRecord
President George W. Bush, Karl Rove, the former White House political adviser, both appear to have helped orchestrate the firing of former New Mexico U.S. Attorney David Iglesias after receiving numerous complaints from Republican activists that Iglesias did not prosecute individuals for voter fraud before the 2006 midterm elections, according to a report on the U.S. Attorney purge released Monday by the Department of Justice’s internal watchdog.
The 356-page report is the culmination of an 18-month joint investigation by DOJ Inspector General Glenn Fine and the head of the agency’s Office of Professional Responsibility H. Marshall Jarrett. Their report concluded that Iglesias’s firing was the most “controversial” and that his dismissal was “engineered” by New Mexico GOP lawmakers Sen. Pete Domenici, Congresswoman Heather Wilson and former White House political adviser Karl Rove over complaints about Iglesias’s refusal to secure indictments in voter fraud cases and in a public corruption case.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bush, Voter fraud | Leave a Comment »