I’ll peek out from under my rock in four years…

At least that seems to be the sentiment among many conservatives at the moment. I have a message for all of you… One of the most valid reasons for not voting for Obama, no matter who you were, is that he didn’t give real specifics about his policies… as of now, you have nothing to be afraid of from him. I ask you all to join with 52% of the nation in hope, after all, that is the only message that Obama really had. Let’s hope that he can make good on his promises. Let’s hope that in trying to help the middle class he doesn’t destroy small business and force companies to filter higher taxes to the consumers. Most of all, let’s hope he can stand up to the ultra left and govern from a stature not too far from center… right now our country needs non-partisan leadership and intelligent policies that aren’t based on lobbies and affiliations. Let’s hope.

Obama will be my president and if you don’t want him to be yours then it is your right to forfeit your citizenship and depart the country. Otherwise, please stop with the “impeach now” and similarly negative messages. Give the man a chance to promote a positive change in our government and country. He’ll have plenty of time to shoot himself in the foot… and if he does… if he takes our nation in a terrible direction and does none of the things he gave his word he would do… if he leads us into destabilizing harmony with all of Europe… then we can call for impeachment. For now, support him and let him do his job.

On a more/less (depends on perspective) sour note: I was forwarded this today which does make me question, grossly, the competency of our nation. Get ready for the far right loons… they’ll be all over the news for 4 years.

Edit: It is quite unfortunate that the tags in WP are ordered alphabetically… I promise there is no hidden message there.

Archangel / November 6, 2008 / Political / 0 Comments

Last one… maybe.

Dave Ramsay, a financial analyst, put together three “plans” that many various economic, banking, and business analysts have been touting separately. The combined plan, while not perfect, is something the I could support very easily as it forces the banking institutions to fix themselves instead of reaching for handouts from the government.

The Common Sense Fix

Years of bad decisions and stupid mistakes have created an economic nightmare in this country,
but $700 billion in new debt is not the answer. As a tax-paying American citizen, I will not support
any congressperson who votes to implement such a policy. Instead, I submit the following threestep
Common Sense Plan.

I. INSURANCE

    a. Insure the subprime bonds/mortgages with an underlying FHA-type insurance.
    Government-insured and backed loans would have an instant market all over the
    world, creating immediate and needed liquidity.
    b. In order for a company to accept the government-backed insurance, they must do two
    things:

      1. Rewrite any mortgage that is more than three months delinquent to a
      6% fixed-rate mortgage.

        a. Roll all back payments with no late fees or legal costs into the
        balance. This brings homeowners current and allows them a
        chance to keep their homes.
        b. Cancel all prepayment penalties to encourage refinancing or
        the sale of the property to pay off the bad loan. In the event of
        foreclosure or short sale, the borrower will not be held liable
        for any deficit balance. FHA does this now, and that
        encourages mortgage companies to go the extra mile while
        working with the borrower—again limiting foreclosures and
        ruined lives.

      2. Cancel ALL golden parachutes of EXISTING and FUTURE CEOs and
      executive team members as long as the company holds these
      government-insured bonds/mortgages. This keeps underperforming
      executives from being paid when they don’t do their jobs.

    c. This backstop will cost less than $50 billion—a small fraction of the current proposal.

II. MARK TO MARKET

    a. Remove mark to market accounting rules for two years on only subprime Tier III
    bonds/mortgages. This keeps companies from being forced to artificially mark down
    bonds/mortgages below the value of the underlying mortgages and real estate.
    b. This move creates patience in the market and has an immediate stabilizing effect on
    failing and ailing banks—and it costs the taxpayer nothing.

III. CAPITAL GAINS TAX

    a. Remove the capital gains tax completely. Investors will flood the real estate and stock
    market in search of tax-free profits, creating tremendous—and immediate—liquidity in
    the markets. Again, this costs the taxpayer nothing.
    b. This move will be seen as a lightning rod politically because many will say it is helping
    the rich. The truth is the rich will benefit, but it will be their money that stimulates the
    economy. This will enable all Americans to have more stable jobs and retirement
    investments that go up instead of down.

This is not a time for envy, and it’s not a time for politics. It’s time for all of us, as Americans, to
stand up, speak out, and fix this mess.

Archangel / October 1, 2008 / Political / 1 Comment

Crisis mode.

I’m growing very weary of politics, so I apologize for posting so much about it lately, but this election has become (probably) the most important in history… and my life is so boring at the moment I don’t have much else to talk about (I will soon since Theresa is coming to visit!).

Some things to consider:

  • McCain wants to tax company subsidized health benefits and only provide a $2500 individual/$5000 family credit. This is a travesty against health care and enough to give pause when voting for him (if you want to).
  • Obama will indeed lower income and generalized taxes for about 82% of Americans (not the 95% they say, but whats ~40 million people?), however, anyone who likes this idea very much needs to look into the rest of Obama’s tax policies. I could care less if he raises taxes on people making more than $250k, but it is very important to note that he intends to raise taxes on business (including windfall taxes on industries he doesn’t like) and on capital gains. Consider the effects to small and medium businesses as well as investment firms. If they can’t make the money they need do, no one will invest and FAR less jobs will be created, if any given our current economic problems. Also, consider for a moment what a company normally does when anything cuts into its profit margin (assuming one still exists). The costs of everything are likely to go up which will, in the end, create an effective tax increase (albeit not direct).
  • Obama has said he intends to move forward with his tax and health care plans despite our immanent economic collapse. He did concede that “some” programs may have to be delayed in the debate, but would not get anywhere near specific despite repeated prodding.
  • For a rant on energy click here
  • A couple interesting links: Fox News Report on financial warnings [youtube.com] ; Dems on Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac [youtube.com]

I think its obvious that I lean towards the conservative side and therefore McCain, but I do consider everything and will go with whichever candidate happens to have the best policies. I know McCain is old and “he voted with Bush 90% of the time” (the real number is actually in the 80’s but so is a lot of the democrats when you consider entire voting records); I know he wants to drill for oil which many think means he’ll ignore alternative energies; I know many argue he is a Bush-like war monger… I’ve looked at the records of the candidates on these issues and made my decision on their truthfulness. If any Obama supporters out there have an intelligent reason for voting for him, please make the argument to me… I truly want to know.

Ignoring all of the above, I want to talk about the economy for a moment, which was the original purpose for me posting. I know there isn’t many people out there who understand exactly what is going on, so I’ll try to explain.

The first question is (obviously): what the hell happened? No shock here… the government put its nose where it didn’t belong. Under President Clinton, Congress passed a fair housing law that created a new type of loan so that people who made little money could get a long and buy a house. The argument here was that every American deserved the opportunity to own their own home… unfortunately they didn’t care whether or not they could pay for it. I don’t know all the rules, but the new loans, called sub-prime loans, were issued to people of lower income (usually families with a cumulative less than $40-45k per year) and had two features: the had subsidized lower interest rates and weren’t judged based on ability to pay. Many people were ok with this because the housing market at the time allowed people to sell these houses off in just a couple years for a profit and pay off the loans and buy something bigger (likely with a similar sub-prime loan). Because of the likelihood of these loans being paid back was extremely low, banks issuing the mortgages didn’t want to keep them. Here is where we meet the federally backed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Banks, knowing the risk of the loans and wanting to recoup as much money as possible, sold these loans off for (sometimes significantly) lower than principal to Freddie/Fannie or similar. In the 90’s this still wasn’t a problem because they made (huge) profits with all of the buying and selling of houses. Well, when the cost of energy increase to a point that it hugely effected the budgets of everyone and people could no longer afford their full mortgage payments, the banks had to start foreclosing. Unfortunately, most of the sub-prime loans in default couldn’t be recouped from the signer (they were way in over their heads) and now there weren’t many people who could buy up the houses. This problem continued and progressed throughout the last couple years to the current point of crisis.

So what is the crisis? Since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and others are currently left holding the bag on so many bad loans, the amount of liquidity in the market has all but dried up. This means that banks are increasingly less open to giving loans, both public and private. This means that even qualified home buyers are being rejected. More importantly, this means that banks and corporations are unlikely to get loans which is very common in these industries to meet general business needs. Without credit in the public world (yes it sucks that I can’t buy a house, but there are bigger fish in the sea) companies are starting to hit ceilings on operation costs which is causing them to fail.

Now, the big question. What is being done? A little over a week ago, the president, on the advice of the SEC chairman and the Secretary of the Treasury, offered up a 3 page plan suggesting that the office of the Treasury should be given $700 billion dollars to buy up these bad assets (at a discount) from the holders. There were some other provisions and and idea or two to make money from the debts, but this was the basic idea. This was a bad idea. Never mind the socialist premise, but this only helped investors while doing nothing to stabilize private citizens. So Congress argued for a week and came up with a 100+ page plan that included a few things: 1) A LOT of government regulation, 2) A phased approach with discretion split between the President and Congress, 3) limits on executive pay, bonuses, and severance at companies receiving funds, 4) required a plan of investment to recoup losses, 5) required presidential plan in 5 years to force investors to buy back debt. It failed. Why? Republicans think it benefits financial institutions too much and puts too much risk on the shoulders of tax payers. [For the record, I agree and am happy the plan failed.]

The simple fact here is that we did this to ourselves. I don’t me we the people, but I do mean as a nation. We aren’t likely to buy our way out of this by adding nearly $1 trillion to our national debt (yes, we would be borrowing all of this money from other countries) and if the plan were to fail (which it is very likely to do) all we have done is made the situation worse for our future. With this debt looming over us, the American dollar will turn into confetti and inflation will go up much faster here than globally. The government can’t protect this bill from failure and therefore can’t protect us from ill effects. I hope we aren’t destined for a depression (which we are on the very dangerous edge of), but if we are, lets not make it worse. We have to do something, but not this… find another way.

Archangel / September 29, 2008 / Political / 2 Comments

I’m still here

Making a post has been hard as of late. Not because I have nothing to say, because it is hard to come to terms with some things.

Living in NC last summer gave me some insights into how hard living away from everything I know might be, but I think the knowledge that I’d be going back home colored the experience and certainly made it easier to cope. Now, NC is my home. It isn’t like I have no hope of ever getting back to Ohio, but I also know I’m not going for an extended stay any time soon. I probably said this last summer too, but it is hard to deal with having absolutely no one around. I have nothing to do when I get home from work, I try to make my errands take as long as possible on the weekends and just in general surround myself with people even if I don’t know them. I’ve tried to (subtly) get some of the guys from the choice program to go out after work or similar but three of them are married and the other is from Raleigh and none seem to interested. I’m sure I’ll eventually meet some people to be friends with, at least I hope I do, but in the mean time things a pretty depressing. Most of all I miss Theresa. I’m sure that isn’t exactly a shock to anyone, but given that this is also more than a year later… It is quite different than it was last summer.

Through the summer, Theresa said I was starting to pay an almost unhealthy amount of attention to the (sensationalist) news… obviously with all the extra time I have that hasn’t exactly changed and I’m becoming as disenfranchised as she is. Power is everything to politicians. Keeping that power seems to be paramount to everything else. Congress has sat on our energy crisis for months. This week the house finally passed a bipartisan bill to allow drilling and provide funding for alternative sources of energy, but all of the pundits say it will be stalled in the Senate until after November 4th for fear that any success on any major issue will give credence to the current administration. Apparently forcing an ultra-liberal government onto the people is more important than solving or at least helping with their problems. Now, Congress as a whole is putting together a $700+ billion package to buy out bad mortgages. Democrats are now beating their drum to both sides of this bill saying it must include money for the millions of Americans who took the loans. On the surface, that sounds like a great idea, except with a multi-hundred billion dollar deficit already couple with several large bank bail-outs, who the hell is going to pay for it? On top of that… Obama thinks that even with this package in place he can still wedge an [effective] tax increase and publicly controlled health care on the American people. I’m veering off point now… but I’m quite sick of this. I know our economy is on bad times and that there are far too many people who don’t have proper coverage… but where do the hand-outs end? More importantly, when do politicians set aside the grabs for power for the greater good?

Archangel / September 21, 2008 / Personal, Political / 3 Comments

Funny… isn’t it?

I know I have yet to comment on QuakeCon… I will soon, but this is more important.

I hate chain-mail. I refuse to send it for anyone for any purpose. My mother sends them to me constantly and more often then not my filters mark it as spam, but I think the message in this is very important… no matter what you believe… or don’t believe.

(more…)

Archangel / August 8, 2008 / Personal, Political / 4 Comments