Showing posts with label Hold Congress Accountable. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hold Congress Accountable. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2010

2010 Litmus test for your Incumbent Congress Member

If your congress member does not Sponsor and Champion Legislation to Hold Wall Street Accountable they do not deserve your vote.  You can see the Legislation your congress member is Sponsoring here:
My-Representative.org

If you do not hold your very own congress member responsible, you can bet that no one else will and America's future will be placed at even greater risk.  The next Wall Street ponzi scheme will be ten times worse.


Here is an article illustrating how the Executive branch is going to bury their heads in the sand and let the corruption continue:

May 27, 2010, 6:02 pm

Will Wall Street Go Free?


Let me try to get this straight. The Justice Department announced last weekend that it has dropped its criminal investigation into wrongdoing by the former executives of American International Group Financial Products, or A.I.G.-F.P. — the group inside A.I.G. that foolishly decided to insure billions of dollars of risk in the mortgage market, and got paid millions of dollars for doing so. So the Obama administration, which has repeatedly pilloried banking executives in an effort to build support for its financial reform package, has in one step reduced exponentially the chances of actually holding people on Wall Street accountable for the financial crisis, which was an utterly preventable self-inflicted wound. This is simply incomprehensible.
Especially since the facts with which to hold people accountable are so compelling. Forthwith, then, a financial crisis reminder primer:
During the spring of 2007, two hedge funds run by Bear Stearns started to lose value after 40 consecutive months of positive returns. By June 2007, the funds’ nervous investors and short-term lenders started heading to the exits. To appease the short-term lenders, whose loans were secured by the squirrelly mortgage-related securities in the fund, Bear Stearns itself offered to take many of them out at 100 cents on the dollar, effectively becoming the sole short-term lender to the hedge funds. Bear Stearns offered the hedge-funds’ investors much less.
News that the Justice Department has dropped an investigation into the insurance giant makes one wonder if anyone will pay the price for destroying the economy.
In July, the two funds were liquidated. Investors ended up losing some $1.6 billion. As the new, principal lender to the funds, Bear Stearns foreclosed on its collateral and took billions of dollars of these mortgage-related assets on to its balance sheet, which was already stuffed to the gills with many similar securities that were also rapidly losing value in the market. In December 2007, Bear Stearns reported a pre-tax loss for its fiscal fourth-quarter of nearly $1.4 billion, primarily because of the write-downs it took on the hedge-fund collateral it had just absorbed. The loss was the firm’s first in its 85-year history. Three months later, Bear’s creditors and customers lost total confidence in the firm, causing a “run” on the bank and leaving the firm with the stark choice of either selling itself for a song to JPMorgan Chase or being liquidated. (It chose the former.)
By June 2008, a grand jury in the Eastern District of New York had indicted the two Bear hedge-fund managers, Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin, on criminal charges of conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud in conjunction with their management of the funds. Their trial, which lasted three weeks, starting in October 2009, ended with their acquittal. One juror said after the verdict that she wished she could invest her money with Cioffi and Tannin, even though those who had done so lost some $1.6 billion. No one else from Bear Stearns has been charged with any crimes in the firm’s collapse, nor have there been any reports of ongoing investigations. Could this be because JPMorgan Chase agreed to indemnify Bear’s officers and directors for six years following the completion of the merger?
Sometime shortly after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in the early morning of Sept. 15, 2008 — Lehman’s shareholders were wiped out and the best its creditors could expect to recover was pennies on the dollar — three grand juries in New York and New Jersey reportedly began investigating whether the senior executives of Lehman, including Dick Fuld, the firm’s longtime chief executive, and Erin Callan, its short-lived chief financial officer, had engaged in criminal wrongdoing leading up the firm’s demise by inaccurately portraying Lehman’s financial condition at the same time they were raising new capital for the firm.
Fuld and Callan, of course, emphatically deny having misbehaved, although thanks to the 2,200-page examiner’s report, prepared by Anton R. Valukas at a cost of $30 million to the Lehman estate, we know better. One executive after another at the firm signed off on the infamous “Repo 105” accounting trick in order to move some $50 billion of its most liquid assets off Lehman’s balance sheet at the end of quarters in 2007 and 2008, apparently to deceive creditors and investors about the size and riskiness of Lehman’s exposure to these assets. Despite Valukas’ inflammatory findings and his prosecutorial roadmap, there has not been a word from the grand juries or the corresponding United States attorneys about any pending criminal charges against these Lehman executives.
Meanwhile, a single trader at Morgan Stanley, Howard Hubler, made a gigantic, wrong-way bet on the mortgage market, costing his firm some $9 billion in 2007 — the single largest loss a trader has ever incurred on Wall Street — and almost sending Morgan Stanley to a fate similar to that of Bear Stearns and Lehman. Yet Morgan Stanley allowed Hubler to resign quietly and, according to Michael Lewis’ book “The Big Short,” to walk off with a severance package worth “tens of millions of dollars.” There has been no talk of a criminal investigation into Hubler’s trading at Morgan Stanley or why they paid him so much money to go away.
At Merrill Lynch, between December 2006 and April 2007, executives allowed the firm’s balance sheet to balloon to some $45 billion, from $10 billion, with the similar types of risky, mortgage-related securities that sank Bear Stearns and its two hedge funds. The idea was to package and sell the securities to investors but, as the music slowed, Merrill got stuck with a growing inventory of these risky securities. “It didn’t grow much from that point, but it was too late,” Stan O’Neal, the Merrill chief executive at the time, told me recently. He said he had tried to sell Merrill that fall to both Bank of America and Wachovia, but was effectively nixed in those efforts by the Merrill board.
By the end of October 2007, Merrill’s problems were so acute that the company wrote off $7.9 billion of Merrill’s inventory of collateralized debt obligations, or C.D.O.’s, and subprime-related mortgages. That figure was 75 percent greater than what Merrill had predicted earlier in the month. One week later, O’Neal resigned under pressure and received a severance package of around $161.5 million.
In September 2008, on the brink of bankruptcy, Merrill sold itself to Bank of America in a deal valued at the time at $50 billion in Bank of America’s stock, less than half of what it had been trading for a year earlier. The deal has become a legend on Wall Street for making a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. But, still, there has been no talk of a criminal investigation into how Merrill Lynch’s executives, or its board, could have allowed Merrill to take such huge risks that nearly bankrupted the firm. (To be sure, there are plenty of civil suits still floating around all of these firms.)
Now comes the news that the Justice Department has ended its two-year criminal investigation into the behavior of A.I.G.-F.P.’s senior executives, among them Joseph Cassano and Andrew Forster. When the group’s insurance bets went against A.I.G., the federal government bailed out the company with $182 billion of the American taxpayers’ money. The paper trail Cassano left behind for the Justice Department to investigate seemed fairly damning, including his repeated insistence to shareholders and others that his bets were safe. For example, in August 2007, he wrote, “It is hard for us, and without being flippant, to even see a scenario within any kind of realm of reason that would see us losing $1 in any of those transactions.”
On Nov. 29, 2007, Timothy Ryan, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, A.I.G.’s auditor, told Martin Sullivan, A.I.G.’s chief executive, in an e-mail that in “light of A.I.G.’s plans to hold [an] investor conference on December 5,” Pricewaterhouse believed there was a growing possibility of a “material weakness” in A.I.G.-F.P.’s insurance portfolio that could result in potentially huge future losses. Such a warning needed to be disclosed to investors, according to S.E.C. rules, but the insurer did not disclose the Pricewaterhouse warning for months. On Dec. 5, during the investor conference, Cassano reiterated his August comment about the portfolio: “It is very difficult to see how there can be any losses in these portfolios.”
That Cassano could somehow escape indictment for his repeated misleading public comments is baffling. But, according to The Wall Street Journal, a “turning point came in recent months” about whether to prosecute Cassano “when prosecutors found evidence Cassano did make key disclosures” about Pricewaterhouse’s “material weakness” comment. It would be nice to see the exculpatory evidence.
And now for the part that really boggles the mind. If we all seem to be fine with the idea that no one from Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch or A.I.G. has to pay the price for what transpired at their firms, why in the world are we so anxious to take out all of our collective anger for what happened in the financial crisis on Goldman Sachs, the only firm that had the intellectual and financial wherewithal to figure out there were serious risks in the mortgage market and to do something about it — albeit for its own benefit?
In late 2006 and early 2007, Goldman perceived trouble in the mortgage market and made the decision to neutralize its exposure and then to short the market. When the mortgage market collapsed following the demise of the Bear Stearns’ hedge funds, Goldman ended up making around $4 billion in 2007 from its short bets and was profitable for the year, while most of the other firms were losing billions.
The S.E.C.’s civil lawsuit against Goldman Sachs, filed on April 16, as well as the all-day spectacle 11 days later before Senator Carl Levin’s Permanent Committee on Investigation, shaved some $20 billion off Goldman’s market value. The timing of these two public floggings of Goldman remains curious, of course, coming as they did on the eve of crucial procedural votes in the soon-to-be concluded financial reform legislation.
It’s not surprising that the S.E.C.’s inspector general has started an investigation, at the urging of Rep. Darrell Issa, Republican of California, into the timing of the S.E.C.’s lawsuit against Goldman.
Now that the politicians in Washington have used Goldman Sachs as a bogeyman to help push through new legislation to re-regulate Wall Street — which is badly in need of it — the American people should now get the justice we deserve, in the form of prosecuting the people on Wall Street who had major roles in causing the financial crisis in the first place. Unless, of course, we would prefer to pretend that no one was responsible and it was just another one of those once-in-a-lifetime tsunamis we’ve been hearing so much about lately.

Monday, March 8, 2010

The Desire for a better Internet Solution for Politics


Tea-Partys and MoveOn street protests a whole lot of well funded hype.

Begging for Solutions



Joe Trippi: Tech Predictions — What to Believe?


Tech Predictions — What to Believe?
Everyday we hear predictions on the future of technology. Will Twitter survive? Is the iPad really a game changer?
In 1995, Clifford Stoll wrote a piece for Newsweek arguing that the internet was just a fad and that it would never replace the daily newspaper or impact the workings of our government. Obviously, Clifford Stoll has been proven wrong.
So how to do we weed out the bad tech predictions from the good?
On Tuesday, Slate featured an article on this very topic, providing some insight on “which predictions to trust and which to dismiss.”
    Good predictions are based on current trends. In his Newsweek piece, Stoll argued that e-books would never take off because reading on a screen was a chore, and—unlike a hardcover—you couldn’t take your computer to the beach. He was right, based on the computers of 1995, which were bulky and fragile. Stoll’s mistake was to believe that computers would stay the same, despite the fact that the PCs of 1995 were far more powerful than machines circa 1990.
    In the same way, visions of flying cars and jetpacks were attractive but completely divorced from reality. During the 1950s and ’60s, automotive development was clearly not heading toward flight. Sure, people had built some prototypes—but mass-produced flying cars would have had to be easy to fly, extremely safe, affordable, and somehow integrated into an urban infrastructure built for ground-based vehicles. Expecting engineers to solve all these problems in a few decades’ time was a dream, not a prediction.
    Don’t underestimate people’s capacity for change. Stoll’s belief that we needed salespeople to help us shop was firmly rooted in his time. But wasn’t it possible that we’d learn new ways to shop? After all, we’d done that before—general stores had given way to supermarkets and malls, which had themselves been usurped by strip malls and big-box stores. Nothing in commerce had ever remained fixed, so why couldn’t we abandon salespeople, too?
    People are very amenable to changing their habits, sometimes astonishingly quickly. One day not long ago, nobody you knew had a cell phone; a couple years later, everyone did. At the beginning of this millennium, few of us would have considered posting our family pictures online. Now we do it routinely. Sure, there are limits to the pace of technical change, but they usually involve price and infrastructure, not obstinate people.
    New stuff sometimes comes out of the blue. You can’t fault Stoll for thinking that the Internet would always remain a chore to navigate. How would we ever find the good nuggets amidst all the useless documents flooding the Web? Lots of search companies were investing lots of money in addressing that problem, but it wasn’t clear they could come up with anything that worked. It also wasn’t obvious that we’d find a way to create good content online. How would ever we know if some document we found provided an accurate account of the Battle of Trafalgar?
    And then a few magical things came and changed everything. The date of the Battle of Trafalgar? It took me a second and a half to find out that it took place on Oct. 21, 1805. Thank you, Google and Wikipedia.
    What Stoll missed here was the potential for collective intelligence to arise out of the online cacophony. Google’s founders saw that they could suss out good content from bad by looking at linking patterns; Wikipedia’s founders saw that by letting people edit each other’s content, they could create a reference that was both comprehensive and uncannily accurate.
    But Google and Wikipedia weren’t predictable. Before they were invented, no one would’ve believed such technologies could work so fantastically well. And that’s the thing about the prediction business. Some of the most important developments of our lifetimes couldn’t have been anticipated. Rather, they came about because a few innovators had brilliant ideas that no one else had foreseen.
    These days it’s best to err on the side of optimism. The bad predictions we remember most often are those that were too optimistic—the space-bound future of Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001 or George Jetson’s mile-high suburb. Stoll’s forecast is unusual for being too conservative; he thought the future would most likely resemble his present. Perhaps there’s a lesson in that. In the digital age, the future is approaching faster than we think. As a result, the tech that comes tomorrow will probably be far more awesome than you can imagine today.
    Recent history supports this theory. Many of the technologies that we now take for granted—online social networks, Web video, and photo libraries—weren’t invented a decade ago and were only in their infancy five years ago. (YouTube celebrated its fifth birthday this month.) In a decade from now, I predict, we’ll be using gadgets and tech tools that nobody has conjured as of 2010.
Provide your comments below and let me know you think. And to read the article in full, check out Slate.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

It's Tough to Say Good-bye to Corrupt Politicians

We must take our vigilance to new heights as we expand the Open Government & Transparency Movement and reach for Accountability.
In the past, an entrenched Veteran in Congress would be able to smooth things over with the media, and supporters within his own party.  Congratulations to Connecticut Democrats who are standing up to corruption.

Chris Dodd's Race to the Bottom


How the Senate veteran tumbled from financial reform crusader to GOP appeaser.
Thu Mar. 4, 2010 3:00 AM PST
In just six months, Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), the stately front man of the Senate's campaign to crack down on Wall Street, has transformed from financial-reform avenger, scourge of the Federal Reserve, and ally of the average consumer to a GOP pushover. Last fall, the veteran Senator and chairman of the banking committee opened financial reform talks as if shot out of a cannon: He rallied around an independent consumer-protection agency, labeled the Fed's regulatory efforts "an abysmal failure," and proposed a super regulator who would rein in banks and lenders, instead of the existing muddle of offices that let the worst financial crisis in a generation unfold under their noses. "Dodd is basically starting out by out-reforming the administration," a congressional staffer told the Washington Post.
Now, Dodd appears to have switched his focus from out-reforming the White House to out-compromising just about everyone. As the Senate banking committee prepares to release a draft of a comprehensive reform bill as early as this week, Dodd has repeatedly conceded to his Republican counterparts on key issues, almost guaranteeing that the Senate's measure will be far more lenient on the banking industry than the legislation the House passed in December. (A spokeswoman for the banking committee didn't respond to an interview request for this story.) Dodd's willingness to appease Republicans like Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), the main GOP negotiating partner, and Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), the banking committee's ranking member, has disappointed Dodd's fellow Democrats and reform advocates who urge a tougher crackdown. "Those who are arguing for real reform," says one Democratic aide involved in the issue, "are arguing, 'Why even compromise if they're going to oppose it anyway? Why are you negotiating against yourself?'"

Democrats disappointed with Dodd are particularly upset with his concessions on an agency to protect consumers from risky financial practices like predatory lending or unscrupulous credit card rules. Dodd insisted in October that there "needs to be an independent agency that looks out for people." But his support for an autonomous agency has been eroding quickly.
Last week, for instance, a two-page draft (PDF) from Dodd's office was leaked to the press laying out a watered-down proposal for a Bureau of Financial Protection that would be housed within the Treasury Department, rather than established as a standalone agency. Democrats and consumer advocates immediately panned the plan. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, tells Mother Jones the proposal was "weaker than I was hoping." He openly questions why Dodd is setting the bar so low if the GOP plans to block reform anyway. "We can't anticipate what they're going to try to pull," Frank says, referring to the Republicans. "At very least, let [Republicans] try to kill the whole bill rather than [accepting] something that was watered down."
Then, on Monday, another proposal for a consumer agency surfaced from Dodd that was even more perplexing. This time, the senator suggested housing a consumer agency within the Federal Reserve—the opaque, deeply unpopular institution that Dodd himself has previously lambasted for its failure to monitor banks and safeguard consumers from dangerous or unscrupulous practices. Yet Dodd now wants to put consumers' well-being in the Fed's hands—apparently to build goodwill with his GOP co-negotiator, Corker, and drum up bipartisan support for his bill.
But it's questionable whether a Fed-based consumer agency will even attract much Republican support beyond Corker. Shelby, who was Dodd's main GOP negotiator until mid-February, is a fervent critic of the Fed, pointing to its "history of failure in supervision and regulation." In June, Shelby said, "I do not believe that we can reasonably expect the Fed or any other agency to effectively play so many roles." (Shelby, for his part, has proposed placing a consumer agency within the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.)
Other Republicans on the banking committee, including Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), have also blasted the Fed's oversight record. It's unlikely GOPers will support handing more consumer-protection powers to an institution that's been the target of attacks by their colleagues and conservative activists. Not to mention that consumer advocates also hate the idea. "The Fed did not just botch it; they really contributed to the mess by not doing anything at all when they could have," says John Taylor, president and CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition.
Another key element of financial regulation in question is derivatives regulation. Derivatives are financial instruments that derive their value from the price of commodities like oil and corn. Right now, they're largely traded "over the counter," meaning in the dark without public information on trading prices or the number of trades going on. A goal of derivatives reformers is to move that opaque trading process into more transparent, standardized clearinghouses, a stipulation that Dodd included in his November draft of financial reform. But a Senate aide with knowledge of the negotiations says Dodd is backing down on this crucial element of financial reform as well.
This aide says the banking committee bill could include a so-called end-user loophole in its derivatives regulation—an exemption from regulation for airline, utility, or other companies who use derivatives for their own businesses to hedge risk and compensate for fluctuations in, say, oil and other commodity prices. But if the Senate allows this exception, it will effectively exempt almost two-thirds of the $800 trillion global "over-the-counter" derivatives transactions that lawmakers are trying to shed light on, according to data from the Congressional Research Service. Moreover, a majority of derivative players exempted would be companies that aren't necessarily using derivatives for risk management but for outright betting on the financial markets.
Dodd seems to be doing what he believes is necessary to win over Senate Republicans who are resistant to comprehensive financial reform. When the Connecticut senator announced in January that he plans to retire at the end of the term, some wondered whether freeing himself from the burden of re-election might allow Dodd to pursue a bill he thought would best fix our financial markets, not one that was merely politically palatable. The question, then, facing Democrats and consumer advocates who want tougher reform is: How low will Chris Dodd go?
Andy Kroll is a reporter at Mother Jones. For more of his stories, click here. Email him at akroll (at) motherjones (dot) com.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Transparency & Open Government Requires some Minimun Standards

The Open Government Movement is gaining momentum.  Transparency is a common buzz word in many Campaigns.  A few seated Congress Members are beginning to use the catch phrases, or should I say MIS-USE the phrases. see the example below.

So perhaps, it's time for the Movement to create some Minimum Standards for Open Government & Transparency for all to use. 
Our first suggestion is:

  • If you are publishing a communication about Legislation - Include the Bill Number!
This is a great start, and much needed if we hope to get to Accountability.

Example Press Release:
http://hoekstra.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=173799
Republicans Oppose Democrats' Do-Over Intelligence Bill


Washington, Feb 26 - U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Mich., the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, joined with fellow Republicans to oppose the flawed, extraordinarily delayed Fiscal Year 2010 Intelligence Authorization Bill that was not updated to address the two terrorist attacks on the homeland that occurred since it was passed by the committee eight months ago.

"After an eight month delay voting on this intelligence bill, Democrats have refused to update it to reflect the flaws exposed by the Obama administration’s mishandling of the Detroit and Fort Hood terrorist attacks," Hoekstra said. "Instead Democrats tried to update it to target the CIA and intelligence community before beating a hasty retreat in the face of Republican and public opposition. Now on their latest attempt to pass the bill, the same Democrats who pursued the CIA over enhanced interrogations are refusing to hold Congress accountable for its bipartisan role in approving those techniques.

"This is a transparency and accountability moment for Congress, but now that the lights are on, Democrats are nowhere to be found. They are willing to investigate everyone but themselves. Congressional Republicans are willing to be held accountable and stand where we stood — with the intelligence community to help protect America."

Hoekstra and Republicans offered a motion to the bill that asked the CIA Inspector General to conduct an independent review of whether any member of Congress objected to the use of enhanced interrogation techniques, to review the steps that were taken, and to require release of interrogation briefing memos. The Republican motion also would clarify that the Director of National Intelligence should be in charge of coordinating the interrogation of terrorists and ensure that all actionable intelligence has been collected before a terrorist is Mirandized.

"Our first priority has to be the collection of intelligence when we capture terrorists and enemy combatants," Hoekstra said. "Offering a terrorist the right to remain silent and get a lawyer would seem like the last thing we would want to do. Intelligence is a perishable asset, and while a captured terrorist lawyers up, our forces on the front lines, our allies and our nation will be put at greater risk."

Hoekstra and Republicans have raised a number of substantive questions and issues with the Obama administration’s confused and conflicted handling of the attacks, including the flawed decision to Mirandize Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. The decision delayed for several weeks the collection of vital intelligence on the al-Qaeda threat emanating from Yemen, and resulted in the Obama administration being forced to cut a deal with a terrorist who attempted to kill more than 300 innocent civilians in order to get information.

Hoekstra went on to say that taken as a whole, the bill has a number of deficiencies and shortcomings that precluded him from supporting it. He highlighted the fact that Republicans, as shown by their public record of support and support for classified resources, have always fought and will continue to fight to give the men and women of America’s intelligence community the tools, authorities, and resources they need in order to detect, disrupt and prevent the next attack.

"America’s intelligence professionals are risking it all on the frontlines to protect our nation, and they shouldn’t have to face unwarranted criminal prosecution to do it," Hoekstra said. "This bill fails to address a number of major national security issues that have emerged since it was first drafted months ago. For this reason, I and a number of my colleagues could not support this bill. As always, Republicans stand ready to work with Democrats and the president to pass a meaningful intelligence authorization bill that fully supports those we ask to serve at the tip of the spear."

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Ending USA dependence on Oil requires specific solutions, not rhetoric

Dear Al Gore,
Please help us find Good Legislation to wean us off of Imported Oil from OPEC!

We truly need our Celebrity Leaders to  be Legislative Bill specific when calling for solutions!

The Waxman-Markey bill stinks and you can see lots of detail why here:
http://www.my-representative.org/arguments.php?surveyid=14368

Here is a great Bill that gets far too little recognition.
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-224
  • The Bill uses less tax payer dollars!
  • The Bill is Loans which the Government earns interest on and gets paid back!

For more information, look at the many many Energy Bill in Congress. http://www.my-representative.org/organization.php?GroupID=47



Most bills are junk and would be harmfull to America, although good for one or two corporations.

We are counting on you Mr. Vice President to end the Rhetoric and focus on Proposed Solutions that are in Congress.

-DP

Letter in response to:
A very general memo by our former Vice President
http://blog.algore.com/2010/02/we_cant_wish_away_climate_chan.html





 Former Vice President Al Gore in his home office in Nashville, TN. (Time magazine)
Former Vice President Al Gore in his home office in Nashville, TN. (Time magazine)


Link to Energy Independent America
http://www.my-representative.org/organization.php?GroupID=47

Link to Comments on Waxman-Markey
http://www.my-representative.org/arguments.php?surveyid=14368

Thursday, February 25, 2010

When is it OK to "Lie to the People"

I'm going to publish a draft of this Article with a single refernce, that I just came across.


former Vice President Dick Cheney told Armey that Saddam Hussein's family had direct ties to Al-Qaeda and that Saddam was developing miniature nuclear weapons. Armey then voted for the Iraq War, but after it became clear this was not true, stated that he "deserves better than to be bullshitted by the Vice President."[11]
From Wikipedia:

Monday, February 22, 2010

Here is what Joe Biden needs to FIX what's Broken in Washington

VP Joe Biden could use this tool-set to clear to the Grid-lock in D.C.
My-Representative.org

When the Voters Review their Congress Members work, the Bad ones get tossed out.

Two MOC's have Fallen since the application went live.

I can't imagine why a congressional challenger would not use this tool to give voters a great reason to vote against the incumbent.




Biden: Washington is "Broken"


(CBS)
Vice President Joe Biden doesn't seem to miss his days as a senator.

In an interview with CBS "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith, Biden was blunt about the nation's political system. "Washington, right now, is broken."

Having served in the Senate for more than 30 years, Biden has seen a fair share of gridlock in Congress, but the current version is the worst ever, he said.

"I don't ever recall a time in my career where to get anything done, you needed a supermajority, 60 out of 100 senators. You can block anything with 60 (votes).

"I've never seen it this dysfunctional," he said.

In light of the surprise Republican victory by Scott Brown in the race to replace the late Sen. Ted Kennedy's senate seat in Massachusetts, Biden said the win was not solely a warning shot to Democrats.

"I think it was to everybody in public life, and it was, 'Hey, guys, get your act together. Get something going.'"

According to a recent CBS News/New York Times poll, most Americans are dissatisfied or angry about the way things are going in Washington these days. Eight in 10 say Congress is more interested in serving the needs of special interest groups rather than the people they represent.

But only a third of people feel the same way about President Obama. Nearly 60 percent think he is more interested in serving the American people.

Arnold Schwarzenegger criticizes fellow Republicans - latimes.com

What Does Arnold know?
Well he's experienced quite a love hate relationship with the Republican Party over the years.

Who's Fooling Who?

Arnold Schwarzenegger criticizes fellow Republicans

The California governor says members of his party are hypocrites for opposing President Obama's economic stimulus efforts.

Schwarzenegger
Gov. Schwarzenegger speaks during an appearance on ABC's "This Week" in Washington. (Fred Watkins, Associated Press / February 21, 2010)
  • Related




California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger criticized fellow Republicans on Sunday as being hypocritical when they trash the federal stimulus program, and he dismissed the "tea party" movement as "just an expression of anger and dissatisfaction."

Schwarzenegger spoke on ABC's "This Week," on which he appeared with Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell, a Democrat.

Host Terry Moran played a clip of former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who sought the GOP presidential nomination in 2008, attacking President Obama and saying the stimulus hadn't created any private-sector jobs.

"I find it interesting that you have a lot of the Republicans running around and pushing back on the stimulus money and saying this doesn't create any new jobs," said Schwarzenegger, who has frequently criticized national Republicans, often on Sunday talk shows. "And then they go out and they do the photo ops and they are posing with the big check and they say, 'Isn't this great? Look what kind of money I provide here for the state.' . . . It doesn't match up."

Obama made similar comments about the GOP last week.

Schwarzenegger, in Washington for the National Governors Assn. conference, has a private meeting scheduled with Obama on Monday, in which he is expected to seek more federal aid for California.

He urged his party to work with the Democratic president.

"I don't want to beat up on my Republican colleagues, but I think it's kind of politics rather than thinking about only one thing, and this is, how do we support the president?" he said. "How do we support him and do everything we can in order to stimulate the economy?"

When Moran asked if the GOP was "the party of no," Schwarzenegger said Republican opposition to Obama was driven by the party's desire to win elections.

"They have to do everything they can in order to win in November, so they are going to say no to everything," Schwarzenegger said. "They are going to say it is not good what Obama is doing. It is natural."

At the same time, he said, Republicans are tapping into voter anger, which is embodied by tea party groups that oppose taxes, illegal immigration and a host of other issues. But Schwarzenegger suggested the movement is unproductive.

"The tea party is not going to go anywhere. I think the tea party is all about just an expression of anger and dissatisfaction," he said.
      See related article:   

Who's Fooling Who?


"And I see it in California when people come up to me and say, 'You know I am angry that you guys don't get along in Sacramento, I am angry that they are not getting along in Washington, I am angry that nothing gets done, I am angry that I am unemployed, I am angry that people are losing homes, I am angry that businesses are losing their businesses and all of those kind of things and the economy is down.' "

michael.rothfeld@ latimes.com


Arnold Schwarzenegger criticizes fellow Republicans - latimes.com

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Who's Fooling Who?

Beware organizations that ask you to chant on the street corner. This is not a necessary step in the Legislative Process. Such Organizations sap the energy of the people and prevents them from participating in Legislative Progress. Citizen participation in Federal Legislation is easier than a street protest.

When you finally get someone to read the Legislation, you find that the Details are so much different than the claims made in the media.
For Example:
MyFreePress : Article : A retired Constitutional lawyer has read the entire proposed health care bill. Read his conclusions and pass this on as you wish. This is stunning

I enjoyed the surprise on Petitioners faces this passed year when I asked them for a copy of the Bill, a Summary of the Bill, they had nothing to share. They had not read the Bill them selves and did not know how to get a copy.

We don't need more people to Vote. We just need the people who do vote to "Review the Work that their Legislators do" Read the Bills folks, and approve or disapprove them, it's easy.
http://www.My-Representative.org

How can Grassroots citizens stand-up to the Power of Lobbyist?

How can Grassroots citizens stand-up to the Power of Lobbyist?

The answer is: "One Congress Member at a time".

When you read an article about the amazing power and success of Lobbyist, you just feel over-whelmed. The following article from the Sunlight Foundation is just one such article.
Post-Citizens United, Lobbying Firm Helps Explain How To Avoid Disclosure Rules — Making Government Transparent and Accountable - SF

As the article states "80% of Americans are opposed to the Citizen United ruling" which allows corporations to donate unlimited amounts to both Senate and House Elections beginning in 2010.
However, you will find that very few congress members will sponsor/co-sponsor and champion Legislation to over turn the Citizens United(Congressional Representation Fire-Sale to Corporations) ruling by the Supreme Court. Of course they want to receive those corporate campaign contributions too.

The Cycle of Deception
Even though the majority of Congress Members will torpedo the Legislation, they will still be re-elected by their constituents. Yes, That's "We the People" at work.

So What's the antidote:
Publishing the Legislative Report Card at Election time!! And it only takes a few citizens, and maybe a challenging candidate to raise the 'Lack of Representation' as the key election issue.

Here is a link to a Member of Congress run out of office by her very poor Legislative work in Congress. On the street she was very popular, well loved by the average voter from her party. But if any of them ever took a look at the work she was doing in congress, their were outraged.

The important step is to get your Favorite Legislation added to your Incumbents Report Card.
All you need to do is get a handful of citizens in your district to support/oppose a Bill so that the Legislation shows up on your Incumbents Report Card.
That's all there is to it.

You can make an impact in the next Election 2010!  Start today!

Friday, February 12, 2010

Morning Joe: Sen. Boxer on tough re-election fight

Morning Joe: Sen. Boxer on tough re-election fight

Boxer says: "We have focus on jobs, that's why I asked the President about.... " {Great, you asked the President, what about your job?}
... I think if we do the right thing for the people" Boxer has helped to screw the people!

The fact is Sen. Boxer has failed to sponsor and champion any Legislation for Jobs or the Environment(her committee). Boxer supported the failed policies of the last decade, she is a Bushicrat.
We have to toss Boxer out to get someone better else!
No matter how bad the challenger is we have to vote for them, otherwise Boxer will maintain as many of the failed policies as she can from the last ten years.  For Example the Iraq War Contracts Gag-Rule and Cover-up.

The first question of congressional candidate is so cliche it is responsible for the horrible effects of entrenched incumbents.
Congressional challengers are asked, "What's your experience that makes you qualified for this job and earn my vote?"
Challenging Candidates need repeat a common answer until Voters and the media can expect it. "I am more qualified because I am not responsible for the Crap (Outrageous) Policies cramed downon AMericans over the last decade. Boxer profits form the war. Boxer Profits from the Bank bailouts. Boxer profits from Californian's loosing their homes. Boxer gave herself a raise.

President Obama: You say you support human rights, yet our tax dollars Oppress Palestinians with over $4 Billion to Israel for weapons?

RealClearPolitics - Video - Woman Grills Obama On Israel/Palestine At Town Hall

President Obama: How can you say you support human rights throughout the world, yet our tax dollars support the oppression of Palestinians with over 4 Billion dollars per year to Israel for weapons?


Obama missed a key opportunity to truly answer the question with new insight applying old lessons of civic leaders he tells us he admires.

He should say directly, "condemn Israel & Egypt's human right violations would not be accurate, and therefore not fair.
Israel is our strongest ally in the mid-east (interrupted by applauds) and for those of you cheering please stand up.
Now please sit down... if you don't want your tax dollars to oppress the Palestinians. (All should sit down.) You see American's do not want their tax dollars spent on oppression.

Yet, the oppression still occurs.

We have done much to support the defense of Israel for 50 years.
But, we have done little to support Peace on the ground with Economic development and social justice for the people of Palestine.

So we want to continue to support the defense of Israel, and we need to begin to support the Peace on the ground.
We need to move beyond that "70's show" Democrats love to point their finger at and pretend they themselves have done something that deserves your vote! (Camp David accord)

We must do more than export Democracy. We must export the conflict resolution tools used here in America by historical civic leaders to promote Justice and stand strong against Tyranny.

We can recover the money that has been embezzled from the American Tax Payers

You can't get this news in the United States. You have to go to the BBC.




We can recover the money that has been embezzled from the American Tax Payers.
Step One: Elect New Representatives to Congress, that promise to sponsor Legislation to do Step two:
Step Two: Create Legislation requiring the Full disclosure of all Iraq War spending to the public, remove the Gag-Order.
Step Three: Allow the full prosecution of all persons and companies committing fraud and embezzlement in government contracts.

The most important thing for the American Voters to understand is that the Current Congressional Leaders are directly responsible for this.
Bush/ Cheney/ Rumsfeld are gone, you can blame them, but they are no longer in office preventing justice and holding the Gag-Order.
America needs Transparency to all Government contracts
The only way for Justice to prevail is to toss Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid out of office.
Rep. Henry Waxman despite what he says, FAILED to do anything to prevent fraud in Government Contracts.

Rep. Waxman in 2007 - All Showmanship on C-Span
What have you done for us lately?

Here is the C-Span video of Rep. Cummings asking Brennan about not hiring a real audit firm, instead just a friend of the Bush campaign to take 1.4 Million in cash and sign a contract to provide CPA/Auditors, of which they have none.

What does SIGIR have to say for themselves.  A whole lot of nothing!
Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction : January 2010 Report
The first metric should be $ recovered, Year-to-Date, by Year, Grand Total.
Next, Fraudulent Contractors or federal employees Convicted.
Finally, List of Gog-orders and other Government methods of cover-ups which continue to plague the first two metrics.

Once again, you can't get this news in the United States. see UK's Independent:
A 'fraud' bigger than Madoff - Americas, World - The Independent

Not One of Our 535 Representatives has sponsored Legislation to  end the Iraq War contract Gag-Order!

STOP WRITING TO YOUR CONGRESS MEMBER

Don't write to your Congress Member.  Don't write to your Representative. You will just be ignored!  Ok, sure they will send you some form letter, but that's it.  Your voice will be buried and no one else will ever hear of it again.

A far better idea is to Post an Open Letter to your Congress Member on a Blog.  Post to your own blog or another blog that relates to the topic you are writing about.
If you do that , then at least someone can read about your idea, your opinion, your voice and learn from you, perhaps take your idea forward and share with others.  Even if someone disputes you, at least you have been heard.

This is a far better solution than writing to your Representative or Congress Member!

Another idea is to Post your Open Letter to your Congress Member to a web site that consolidates your wish's along with others who feel the same as you do.
One great web site that does this is http://www.My-Representative.org    At this site, the letters to Congress Members are grouped around specific Bills already in Congress, so every idea is immediately Actionable in congress to support your wishes.  The site consolidates everyone's wish's and you see a running total of support and opposition to every Bill.  More importantly, you see if the Congress Member fulfills the will of the people or is working for a secret special interest that you'd need a Freedom of Information Act request to find out who that is.

Wouldn't it be nice if every Member of Congress Sponsored and championed Legislation that was for the good of the constituents and for the good of the nation.  Here is a Report showing how the work Each Representative accomplishes for his district.  You would think Citizens would toss out the Representatives at the bottom of the list who do Nothing the whole time they are in Washington D.C.  Ok, well they do collect their paycheck, that's something.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

How should we evaluate a congress members work

Unfortunately, the time we often review a congress members work is only after their death or a scandal breaks.

Ideally, evaluating a congress members work would be part of the election process.  Someday maybe.

Here is my first encounter with a review of Hon. Jack Murtha's  work shortly after his death.
from the dialog below you can see that many of Murth's strongest supporters are lining to the myth created for them in his campaign speaches.  few know anything of his actual legislative efforts, the Bill his sponsored and championed




David Swanson Headlines remember Murtha as a "war critic". I suppose a "food critic" buys a lot of food.

15 hours ago · ·
Cliff Webb
Cliff Webb
Murtha took a lot of heat for standing up to the neocons, and still is in death it seems...
15 hours ago
Michelle Wilder
Michelle Wilder
He's responsible for the immediate withdrawal proposal. It was a ballsy move on his part, and I will always respect him for that. RIP
14 hours ago
David Swanson
David Swanson
talk is cheap, so is life
10 hours ago
Summer Sereno
Summer Sereno
Maybe you consider your life cheap David, but my son's life was priceless...So, I beg to diifer with you on this statement, I find t very offensive.
9 hours ago
Mike Clark
Mike Clark
Summer the people putting this war on think life is cheap. In their eyes they stand to loose much more then a few lives. $$$. Money doesn't offend you? Oil? That is what he gave his life for.
9 hours ago
Gary Kleppe
Gary Kleppe
I can't speak for David, but I think he was characterizing the attitudes of the people who fund and enable wars, not his own.
8 hours ago
Shepherd Johnson
Shepherd Johnson
Summer, priceless and worthless mean the same thing.
8 hours ago
Kathy Daly Hass
Kathy Daly Hass
Murtha tried
5 hours ago
Maryellen Hayden
Maryellen Hayden
Murtha was a conservative Democrat and a good Marine who stood for our country. He chose to call for withdrawal because the people (and the soldiers) were lied to about the reason for the war, and the war was wrong. I am proud to have known him. He stood up for what he thought was right, always, no matter what the cost.
4 hours ago
Linda Krausen
Linda Krausen
What ever his point of view, he was a man of integrity, not like those whores of today. When he became convinced the Iraq Agression was wrong- he said so and moved to action. I disagree with efforts to smear him as a war monger.
4 hours ago
Julie Turner
Julie Turner
It's not nice, and ill-advised, to talk about the dead.
3 hours ago
Bowen Roberts
Bowen Roberts
thats 'to talk ill of the dead', julie, but candidly is another matter.
3 hours ago
Maryellen Hayden
Maryellen Hayden
Lay off Murtha. We need to figure out what to do about the special election. Murtha belonged to Western PA. Let us bury our dead in peace.
3 hours ago
Linda Foley
Linda Foley
I've seen reports that he had an inestine nicked in the surgery, developed an infection, and died from that. Maybe he was sent home too soon, was not being observed by nurses......but I wonder what his family will do about that avoidable "complication" that led to his death?
2 hours ago
David Peterson
David Peterson
Murtha's Bil to Bring the troops home was an appeasement bill to satisfy the Peaceniks in his district and secure their votes. In Fact, Murtha voted for the War! and he Voted for the extended continued occupation after the war! Our tax dollars at work, our soldiers lives sacrificed. The campaign contributions could not extend his life. http://www.my-representative.org/report.php?csn=110&RegionCode=PA-12
see his Legislative record and what his constituents thought of his work.
 
 
SO WHAT'S NEXT HOW CAN WE ILLUSTRATE MORE EXAMPLES OF CONSTITUENTS FAILING TO REVIEW THE WORK OF THEIR CONGRESS MEMBERS.

OK