All posts by James O'Keefe

I crossed a line …

I crossed a line today.  Till now I have confined my "friends" on sites like facebook to people with whom I have interacted.  I crossed that line today by "friending" Naomi Klein, author of one of my favorite books on globalized corporations, No Logo.  This seems to be the actual person and not a fan page.  Facebook is now a little less personal, I guess.  Hopefully, I'll keep this status to facebook and not the other sites on which I am .

Bailout passes House, and a bit more on who caused this mess

The BBC and the Boston Globe are reporting that the House approved the $700 billion wall street bailout bill.  We'll see how well that does with settling the financial markets.  Certainly it seems the economy continues its meltdown with spiking un/underemployment reaching mid-1994 levels (see the U6 measure reported by krugman), rapidly falling motor vehicle sales, and decreased factory utilization.

I have mentioned to some friends about the SEC's decision to allow the five big investment banks to take on way more leverage (11x before to 30-40x pre-crash) then they were previously allowed.  I first read about it on The Big Picture, who now reports that the NY Times just covered it as well.  As Barry Ritholtz cites and says:

The five investment banks led the charge, including Goldman Sachs, which was headed by Henry M. Paulson Jr. Two years later, he left to become Treasury secretary.

(emphasis added)

No wonder the bailout package is so poorly crafted: The
same genius, Hank Paulson, that helped us to get into this, and has
utterly failed to see this coming until it was all but on top of is, is
trying to get us out. He is uniquely  unqualified for this task. How this guy hasn't honorably fallen on his own sword yet is beyond me.

Gotta agree with him there.

The other debt problem

Just wanted to remind folks about the other debt problem we are dealing with: GHG/CO2 emissions and global warming. 

Apparently emissions are increasing at a rate faster than anticipated, more from the US, China and India,  while the various carbon sinks that have taken some of the CO2 we have pumped out (forests, oceans, etc.) are not taking in as much as they did.  See: Greenhouse gas emissions shock scientists.  Plus, we have started freeing methane (30 times more powerful than CO2 as a global warming gas) that has been locked away.

This debt problem is going to be a whole lot harder to deal with if we don't do anything about it soon. 

Thankfully, all our electricity usage is from wind power now.

What is to be done?

Tennis Lilly asked me:

ok Jamie…you’re the money guy…i didn’t want the bailout but they have to do something…don’t they?

I am not an adherent of the “market is always right and will self-organize itself into a better place” philosophy.  Bailouts can be necessary.  Maybe this time.  Certainly the credit squeeze seems well on its way to becoming a serious credit crunch.  The rate at which the banks will lend to each other (the LIBOR) has reached some scary heights, and banks seem to have seriously reduced lending to each other and have fled to treasury bills/bonds.   Doug Henwood, Paul Krugman and some other people I believe are knowledgeable about economics and finance think a bailout is needed to keep the banks working and not cause the economy to tank.

That said, as I pointed out this plan provides little benefit when this crisis is over, will be run by Bush and his cronies, likely won’t solve the problem and will leave our government $700+ billion dollars further in debt.

However, there are other
alternatives including:

For me, the solution looks something like:

  • Swedish style takeover of troubled banks,
  • ending foreclosures while loans get reworked so people can pay them,
  • investing more money in fixing needed infrastructure,
  • putting money into energy conservation and alternative energy for the poor and middle class
  • and expanding health care for all.

However, such an approach flies too much in the face of Republican free market dogma to pass.  You would think that some of these Republican congress people would remember the Savings and Loan crisis and how the federal government had to take over failing savings and loans during Reagan and Bush the Elder’s terms.  Apparently not.

Twitter or Jaiku or something else?

A year ago, I signed up for Jaiku and Twitter.  I was really enamored of Jaiku.  Nice look.  Merged all your feeds in one place and had a nice group feature that allowed group members to post to the common group area.  I was really looking forward to the later feature since I think it would be a great way to get multiple Green-Rainbow Party micro bloggers together in one virtual place.

A former co-worker of mine asked me which I prefered.  I told her Jaiku for the reasons I mentioned above – no doubts.

Since then, truth be told, I really don't use Jaiku any longer, but instead rely on Twitter.  The google acquisition of Jaiku seemed to halt them in their tracks, as it seems to have with blogger.  I was really looking forward to being able to control who could be in a group, but Jaiku doesn't seem to have added that feature.  Being able to limit membership of a group is really key for an organization, especially with recent issues the GRP has had with abusive ex-members, not to mention the yahoos who might post to it to get their message out to our supporters.  I don't want to create group-think, but being able to keep the messages civil is key.

Plus, Twitter's integration with Facebook is great.  I just update in Twitter and it just appears in Facebook and Plaxo.  The Jaiku facebook app only seems to say that there is something new, not what it is.

I had thought of using Jaiku to aggregate all of my RSS feeds into one place, but I am less inclined to do that since, I doubt anyone is interested in viewing my del.icio.us/flickr/youtube/etc. feeds in one go, and since I really have no need to create a Feed-o-Jamie of my postings on different blogs.

If Jaiku updates their software and Facebook plugin, I'll take a fresh look at it, but for now I will be twittering.