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President Barack Obama

If North Waziristan is a Lawless Frontier, Then Go Get bin Laden!

Re: Associated Press: US: Osama bin Laden Slips Into Afghanistan Still – News – Air America, By Robert Burns

Osama bin Laden

WASHINGTON (AP) — Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden may periodically slip back into Afghanistan from his remote hideout in neighboring Pakistan, a senior White House official says, adding a new twist to the mystery of the elusive terrorist’s whereabouts.

President Barack Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones, said bin Laden, believed hiding mainly in a rugged area of western Pakistan, may be spending some time in Afghanistan, where he was based while plotting the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.

But Obama’s Pentagon chief, Robert Gates, said the U.S. has lacked good intelligence on bin Laden for a long time — “I think it has been years” — and did not confirm that he’d slipped into Afghanistan.

First of all, it is welcome news that those in the highest levels are talking about the whereabouts of bin Laden, the most notorious criminal of our times. I think that the reason they have had, in Gate’s opinion, no good intelligence on OBL is because Bush didn’t want to capture him in the first place. The Bush business connections* to the bin Laden family (who disowned OBL back in the 1990’s) and to the royal Saudi family would have been permanently damaged if OBL had been captured when our troops had a chance. Now? Bush’s wealth and influence, and their past business dealings with foreign enemies is fading into the pages of history.

The Bush’s are irrelevant to the hunt for OBL now and cannot influence state business. Burns also spoke with President Barack Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones.

Jones, a retired Marine general, stressed the urgency of targeting bin Laden and spoke of a renewed campaign to capture or kill him.

Asked on CNN’s “State of the Union” whether the administration has reliable intelligence on bin Laden’s whereabouts, Jones replied, “The best estimate is that he is somewhere in North Waziristan, sometimes on the Pakistani side of the border, sometimes on the Afghan side of the border.”

(snippet) Gates told ABC’s “This Week” that “we don’t know for a fact where Osama bin Laden is,” although he agreed that his likely location is North Waziristan.

That’s part of the loosely governed Federally Administered Tribal Areas of northwest Pakistan where the border with Afghanistan is largely unrecognized and unmarked. There is little Pakistani government or military control in this remote region, and militants affiliated with al-Qaida can move freely across the frontier into Afghanistan.

(snippet) Gates said he does not blame a lack of Pakistani cooperation for the absence of intelligence on bin Laden.

“No, I think it’s because if, as we suspect, he is in North Waziristan, it is an area that the Pakistani government has not had a presence in, in quite some time,” Gates said, adding that although the Pakistani government has its own priorities, any pressure it brings on the Taliban is helpful because it is in league with al-Qaida.

Since the Pakistani government has no control, and no obvious interest in controlling North Waziristan, then what is keeping us from moving in and out of that area of Pakistan in similar fashion?

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*I don’t like using Wikipedia as a credible source because the right-wing nut-jobs comb through controversial topics and then re-write the articles to slant them politically to protect their agenda. In this case they have managed to claim that the business connections between the bin Laden family and the Bush family are “alleged”. But, Wikipedia here has a concise account of the connections. Please ignore the implications that those connections are somehow not substantiated. Do your own research.

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A Second Look | Who Says Banks Aren’t Lending?

(NEW! YOU CAN NOW POST COMMENTS WITHOUT REGISTERING AND WITHOUT AWATING MODERATION)

via They Call This Season ‘Fall’ for a Reason | The Public Record
By Dave Lindorff , The Public Record, Sep 28th, 2009

So now it turns out that the whole Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) was a flop or more likely a scam. Remember Bush Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson telling us last September that credit markets had locked up, and then, after half of the $750 billion that he extorted out of Congress was handed out to Wall Street firms, new President Barack Obama justifying the spending of the second half of the money because we needed to “get the banks lending again”?

Well, now Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for TARP, is telling us that all that money, and more than $2 trillion in loans, accomplished nothing.  In an interview with Lagan Sebert, published in Huffington Post, Barofsky says, “We were told by Treasury that the purpose of the TARP fund was to increase lending. But we haven’t increased lending.”

Well yeah, that’s true. Just ask any ordinary working stiff. My little bank, the Harleysville National Bank here in eastern Pennsylvania, far from expanding lending, has been shutting down customer credit lines. As a bank manager told me, they were “reviewing all our equity lines” in light of declining property values (actually, property values in our area north of Philadelphia have remained pretty stable).

In general, banks across the country have been canceling credit lines, closing credit card accounts on customers deemed risky—including small businesses—and making it very hard to get a new mortgage. (They’ve also been raising all kinds of fees, ripping customers off in other ways, but that’s another story.)

Read on

Here’s my two cent’s worth on the lending situation.

Getting a home loan was no problem. This past May, I called and made an appointment with the guy who handles home loans with my little home town credit union and asked for a home mortgage. We, my wife and I, went to the appointment after we got all the papers together. I was pleasantly shocked when he revealed to us that all the manila folders on his desk, and the ones on a table behind his desk, several stacks, were new loan applications and they were in the chute to close; it was just a matter of the borrowers waiting for the lowest rate possible. We went through the process of applying for a loan, were pre-approved, and we went house hunting. It was just that easy.

The point is, I think that the situation of the lack of lending by banks is both local and varies individually from one applicant to the next. For this reason everyone must take extra care with their credit rating. Don’t borrow unless you can comfortably make the payments. During the past decade or so, people borrowed knowing that they would have to scrape to make payments and put themselves in a high wire balancing act.

We all know that the second part of this debacle is the commission of predatory lending practices. There are some very good methods to protect yourself from predatory lending at this HUD website. Here are a couple of things you can do to prevent becoming a victim:

Do NOT let anyone persuade you to make a false statement on your loan application, such as overstating your income, the source of your downpayment, failing to disclose the nature and amount of your debts, or even how long you have been employed…

Do NOT let anyone convince you to borrow more money than you know you can afford to repay…

There is also a list of characteristics of predatory lending at the HUD website.

But what caused all this? What pushed the big banks over the edge so as to need a bailout in the first place? We’ve all heard that they bundled sub-prime mortgages to falsify their worth, but weren’t there supposed to be bank regulators watching this? 

The answer is simple. Deregulation caused this. Here is the heart of the matter – the exact piece of legislation that caused all this trouble:

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), also known as the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, repealed the part of the Glass-Stegall Act of 1933 that prohibited banks, investment banks, and insurance companies from acting as a combination of any of those three. This is from Wikipedia:

Contrary to Phil Gramm’s claim that “GLB didn’t deregulate anything” (see Defense), the GLB Act that he co-authored explicitly exempted security-based swap agreements (a derivative financial product based on another security’s value or performance) from regulation by the SEC Commission by amending the Securities Act of 1933, Section 2A, and similarly the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Section 3A, to read, in part:[27] [28]

1. The definition of “security” in section 2(a)(1) does not include any security-based swap agreement (as defined in section 206B of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act [15 USCS § 78c note]).

2. The Commission is prohibited from registering, or requiring, recommending, or suggesting, the registration under this title of any security-based swap agreement[.] …

3. The Commission is prohibited from … promulgating, interpreting, or enforcing rules; or … issuing orders of general applicability; … as prophylactic measures against fraud, manipulation, or insider trading with respect to any security-based swap agreement[.]

Bundling mortgage derivatives based on sub-prime (shaky) loans, then trading them as securities led to the housing bubble collapse once the loans began to default. A few of these derivatives going bad would not have been much of a problem, but the number of these derivatives traded were vast.

GLBA has to be reversed back to Glass-Stegall standards. Stronger regulation is the answer. You can’t fix the damage done by deregulation with more deregulation.

 

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A Second Look | Factless Claims From The Mindless Opposition

via Graham: Obama Speech A “Disaster,” Public Option Dead (VIDEO)

WASHINGTON — A Republican lawmaker says it’s clear to him that the White House is ready to abandon a government-run public health insurance option.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina says that President Barack Obama’s address to Congress this past week was a “disaster,” combative and showed little sign of compromise.

Graham says Obama was on the defensive – especially on a public health insurance option that Graham says is off the table and has been for a while. Not only does Graham think it “is dead,” but it has “probably been dead a long time.” “We just throw it in the garbage can,” he added.

The senator was interviewed on “Fox News Sunday.”

Obama’s address to Congress was far from a “disaster”. The President defended the public option often throughout the speech saying that “consumers do better when there is choice and competition”, and that he has “no interest in putting insurance companies out of business…I just want to hold them accountable”. From the President’s address to Congress:

Now, I have no interest in putting insurance companies out of business. They provide a legitimate service, and employ a lot of our friends and neighbors. I just want to hold them accountable. The insurance reforms that I’ve already mentioned would do just that. But an additional step we can take to keep insurance companies honest is by making a not-for-profit public option available in the insurance exchange. Let me be clear – it would only be an option for those who don’t have insurance. No one would be forced to choose it, and it would not impact those of you who already have insurance. In fact, based on Congressional Budget Office estimates, we believe that less than 5% of Americans would sign up.

Despite all this, the insurance companies and their allies don’t like this idea. They argue that these private companies can’t fairly compete with the government. And they’d be right if taxpayers were subsidizing this public insurance option. But they won’t be. I have insisted that like any private insurance company, the public insurance option would have to be self-sufficient and rely on the premiums it collects. But by avoiding some of the overhead that gets eaten up at private companies by profits, excessive administrative costs and executive salaries, it could provide a good deal for consumers. It would also keep pressure on private insurers to keep their policies affordable and treat their customers better, the same way public colleges and universities provide additional choice and competition to students without in any way inhibiting a vibrant system of private colleges and universities.

…But I will not back down on the basic principle that if Americans can’t find affordable coverage, we will provide you with a choice.

Nothing mentioned here sounds like the White House is ready to abandon the public option.

The Republicans have never let facts get in the way of good press. Graham said that the public option was “off the table and has been off for a while”. This statement is not true.

The truth is that out of the five committees having jurisdiction over the health care bill, four of them have already passed their versions of reform. Now get this – all four bills passed contain provisions to establish the public option.

Here are the four committees who have already passed the public option, three in the House and one in the Senate:

House:

Energy and Commerce Committee

Ways and Means

Education and Labor

Senate:

Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP)

Senate Committee yet to pass a bill:

Senate Finance Committee

 

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