October 7, 2008

Does McCain Have a Problem with, Shall We Say, Dark Horses?

I so need one for my next party . . .

Sorry, everyone; Reuters replaced the video that used to be here with another about something much less important, like the 678-point drop in the Dow today (10-9-08), and I can't find the original video on their site. It featured a monkey working as a waiter in an asian restaurant.

"'Yat-chan first learned by just watching me working in the restaurant. It all started when one day I gave him a hot towel out of curiosity and he brought the towel to the customer,' [said] the 63-year-old owner of the tavern, Kaoru Otsuka . . . .

"'It's amazing how it seems to understand human words,' said 71-year-old retiree Miho Takikawa . . . ."

(Thanks, Ben!)

In Case You Didn't Notice, Congress Also Passed a $619 Billion Defense Bill

October 6, 2008

On a Lighter Note . . .

McCain as The Penguin:

Must See Re- the Current Economic Crisis

Naomi Wolf sums it up as of ca. Oct. 4.

Rep. Brad Sherman re- threats of martial law as of ca. Oct. 2.

Naomi Klein ("Mr. Risk Goes to Washington") as of ca. Sept. 24.

Naomi Klein as of ca. Sept 22.

(Dates above are the dates the videos were posted on YouTube, but I believe they are within a few dates of when the videos were recorded.)

While Lehman Pled for Federal Rescue,

. . . its execs were simultaneously securing their golden parachutes.

Lehman's CEO Richard Fuld, who testified before Congress today, has already taken home close to $480 million since 2000. Said Fuld, "I feel horrible about what's happened" -- but he didn't offer to return any of the money.

Another great post from HuffPo; thanks to Kadie for the pic!

UPDATE: Per Bloomberg, Lehman's "'key' money managers will get retention bonuses valued at $400 million when their investment-management business is bought by Bain Capital LLC and Hellman & Friedman LLC.

"Bain and Hellman on Sept. 29 agreed to buy most of the asset-management unit from bankrupt Lehman in a deal that values business at $2.15 billion, about half the buyout firms' initial bids. The purchasers will deduct the employee awards from the amount they pay the investment bank for the assets, Lehman's lawyers said today in a court filing.

"Under the proposed arrangement, which a U.S. bankruptcy judge must approve, Lehman employees and portfolio managers will get 16.8 percent of the equity in the purchased assets. The awards are valued using the 'gross purchase price' of $2.15 billion, which includes assumption of liabilities, according to the filing."

October 5, 2008

I have to blog this for personal reasons.



(I do wish they hadn't cut the recording when they did; and thanks, Ben!)

Even 60 Minutes Gets It Better than Congress

It was NOT the bad mortgages, really. The much larger problem was the unregulated, uncapitalized bets placed on top of them. As the last interviewee says, "it's a crime." For which individual heads need to roll, imho -- WITH seizure of all ill-gotten gains, pls; and we'd better start finding them because you can bet they're mostly off-shore already.


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