A fresh way of looking at the world. Original content by Weird Wally and friends. If it's news, it's news to us, and we're on it. And if the answers are unknowable, we’ll make something up. Contact us: zendance@aol.com
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Shit Really Does Roll Downhill
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Maya Angelou and Branford Marsalis, "I know Why The Caged Bird Sings."
Monday, May 26, 2014
Secret Interview with a High Level Republican Operative
The Nocebo Effect???
Friday, May 23, 2014
Memorial Day Weekend
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
High Demand = High Tolerance
Monday, May 19, 2014
Vote Like Your Life Depends On It
Weird Wally (that would be me) didn’t get serious about blogging until 2007. And that was about the time he got his head out of his butt and took a look around. Something was up, but not yet obvious and Wally took to blogging to help him figure it out. Although nothing more than an online journal, he learned to question authority, and in the process, finally started paying attention. A lot of other people also started paying attention, but we could not believe what we were seeing.
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Wall Street Secrets Revealed
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Corporate Welfare Really Sucks!
Sunday, May 11, 2014
When The Chimps First Went To War
Friday, May 09, 2014
Wall Street Pissed at Pope
Wednesday, May 07, 2014
An Open Letter to President Barack Obama
FYI: Keep an eye on the housing and rental markets. Wall Street will make a mint and the rest of us will pay.
(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){
(i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o),
m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m)
})(window,document,'script','//www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga');
ga('create', 'UA-1273389-1', 'weirdwally.blogspot.com');
ga('send', 'pageview');
Tuesday, May 06, 2014
Saturday, May 03, 2014
Friday, May 02, 2014
Video Proof That Elephants Never Forget
Thursday, May 01, 2014
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Will Economic Inequality Turn Us Into A Bad Science-Fiction movie?
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Friday, April 25, 2014
Is The U.S. Supreme Court An Oligarch's Best Friend?
Take Sheldon Adleson, for instance, one of the top ten richest men in the world who, along with a few others of the top 1 percent, are currently buying up the Republican Party. And he recently hosted a diner for the top Republican candidates at his Sands Hotel in Las Vegas.
Walter Lide
The Hungry Oligarchs
According to a study scheduled for release later this year, it’s the economic elites and well-connected business people who are running the country and us average voters don’t really count for much.
Walter Lide
(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){
(i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o),
m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m)
})(window,document,'script','//www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga');
ga('create', 'UA-1273389-1', 'weirdwally.blogspot.com');
ga('send', 'pageview');
Monday, April 21, 2014
Forget the zombies, it's the Oligarchs Who'll Eat You Alive.
Scroll down to learn more about how the oligarchs are coming to get you...
In the 2012 election, Charles and David Koch spent at least $412 million to swing elections across the country, an amount greater than the ten largest unions combined. Now Bloomberg reports that the Koch brothers’ combined net worth has exceeded…
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Bill Moyers criticized both political parties on Friday for furthering the “protection racket” built to protect the mega-rich from paying their fair share of taxes while extending their influence over politics. “Sad that it’s come to this,”…
Friday, April 18, 2014
A forthcoming study found that ordinary citizens exert little influence on the political process, even when they form coalitions to compete against corporate interests. A co-author of the study, which will be published later this year, said he was particularly…
Tuesday, October 09, 2012
Although I'm just kidding, how revealing might a "First Ladies Debate" be? Michelle vs. Miss Anne? There are a A lot of historical, literary and emotional implications involved in that single and silly question. On the other hand, can you imagine what it be like to actually hear their answers
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Monday, August 08, 2011
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Sunday, July 31, 2011
I'd rather vote for Bernie then Barack!
And that is just how I am feeling
Nothing else to say!
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Friday, June 24, 2011
Sen. Sanders: Koch bros. ‘want to destroy Social Security’ | Raw Replay
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
New bill ending federal ban on marijuana to be introduced in Congress | The Raw Story
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Maddow: Mich. Gov. Snyder using new ‘Emergency Financial Managers’ law to assist corporate land grab from the poor | Raw Replay
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Friday, March 11, 2011
The President's Speech
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Naomi Klein on The Rachel Maddow Show
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Monday, November 22, 2010
Has anyone seen "The Men Who Stare at Goats?" A very cool movie that finally explains the history and potential of "Remote Viewing." Much like "City Island," this movie is lots of fun and not to be taken too seriously.
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Bing could get access to anonymized Facebook data
By Emil Protalinski |
Microsoft and Facebook are in talks to further strengthen their search partnership, possibly resulting in Bing gaining access to anonymized data generated by Facebook users to better personalize its search results, according to anonymous sources cited by All Things Digital. Microsoft would be able to use the information from Facebook's Like buttons, which the social giant has managed to have plastered all over the Web.
When a user likes a webpage, their Facebook friends are notified; if this deal goes through, Microsoft would also be able to know which webpages users are appreciating, and would be able to work that into Bing's algorithms (it could be particularly useful for Bing News), instead of just relying on spiders scouring the Internet. With Facebook's 500 million users, such a deal could give it quite a boost over Google, which presumably would be excluded from the data. The sources did point out an important hurdle though: because of Facebook's many privacy issues, the possible expansion of the search relationship would only be able to encompass information which users have already agreed to make public.
The deal works very well with Microsoft's strategy for social networking: partner rather than compete. "Nobody wants another Facebook," Dharmesh Mehta, Windows Live Director of Product Management, recently told Ars. Furthermore, Microsoft's strong relationship with Facebook is a thorn in Google's side, which benefits the two companies since they are both competing more and more with the search giant.
The Microsoft-Facebook partnership has been a roller coaster ride so far which has included a $240 million investment from Microsoft, Live Search powering Facebook, Microsoft winning and then losing ad platform exclusivity for the site, and finally Bing search result integration.
All Things Digital emphasizes there's no deal yet—the talks could fall apart. Both Microsoft and Facebook declined to comment on the report.
Further reading
Exclusive: Facebook and Microsoft Deep in Talks About Deepening Search Ties (kara.allthingsd.com)
Please click on the link below for the entire story.
http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2010/09/bing-could-get-access-to-anonymized-facebook-data.ars
http://rpc.blogrolling.com/display_raw.php?r=3859a1dce383cdfa1060f4321df2de73
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Friday, August 07, 2009
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Poll: Most Americans support government-backed health plans
Share on Facebook
By Agence France-Presse
Published: June 21, 2009
Updated 8 hours ago
The overwhelming majority of Americans support substantial changes to the country’s health care system, including a government-run health insurance option, a new opinion poll found.
The survey by The New York Times and CBS News also indicated most Americans would be willing to pay higher taxes so everyone could have health insurance.
Eighty-five percent of respondents said the health care system needed to be fundamentally changed or completely rebuilt, according to the poll.
In addition, the survey found that 72 percent of those questioned supported a government-administered insurance plan — something like Medicare for those under 65 — that would compete for customers with private insurers.
Twenty percent said they were opposed.
When asked which party was more likely to improve health care, 18 percent of said the Republicans while 57 percent picked the Democrats. Even one of four Republicans said the Democrats would do better.
However, half of those who identified themselves as Republicans said they would support a public plan, along with nearly three-fourths of independents and almost nine in 10 Democrats, according to the poll.
President Barack Obama wants Congress to approve his health care reform proposals by the end of the year in order to fulfill one of his key campaign promises — providing health care to the 46 million Americans, some 15 percent of the population, who currently do not have any medical coverage.
Obama’s health care plan includes a government insurance option, which has been fiercely criticized by Republicans.
At the same time, the survey found that 77 percent of Americans were very or somewhat satisfied with the quality of their own health care, a factor that is being exploited by opponents of the president’s proposal.
The poll of 895 adults was conducted from June 12 to 16 and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
CBS: Convicted rapists allowed to enlist in military
This is what happens when we are fighting too damn many wars for no reason.
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Olbermann: Blame for economic crisis goes beyond Washington
What happened to your money?
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Sunday, February 01, 2009
Weird Wally Sez: Supply-Side Economics is like the man who took giant steps in order to save his ten dollar shoes, he ended up splitting his twenty dollar pants.
End of Story.
Friday, January 30, 2009
Rachel Maddow Show: Michael Isikoff on Rove's Claim of Executive Privilege
Weird Wally (WW) is having a hard time believing what he is actually seeing.
Where will Karl Rove be on the day that he is supposed to testify before Congress?
He will either be there or he won’t.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
The answer is simple. They screwed up so bad that the only people who currently support them is their mentally-ill base...the wing-nuts of the right.
Thus, should the GOP show any signs of acting with good sense and of good faith, they will loose their crazy base and have no-one and nothing. Better the GOP acts a little crazy for their base when all they otherwise, have is their dismal track record. After all, real people with good sense and of good faith can smell the shit before we actually step in it.
And that is a real big problem for Republicans in Washington।
After all, how many times we gotta vote before they finally realize that we got a damn good a sense of smell?
Saturday, January 17, 2009
The Top Ten Alternative Theories Which May Explain the K-T Extinction...
Why did all the dinosaurs go?
10 - Heat Strokes and pulmonary complications caused by greenhouse gases: Absent appropriate environmental protection regulations and zoning restrictions, ornithopods and hadrosaurs stripped most CO2 absorbing leaves and deposited huge piles of methane dung
9 - Rejection of “share the wealth” cooperative plan for food resources: As mammal populations grew, they made increased demands for food resources on the theropod “establishment” which provoked even more unrest by its “tooth and claw” response.
8 - Over-reliance on the Welfare State and loss of individual initiative: As large carnivores such as T-Rex became increasingly dependent on carrion, they gradually lost their hunting skills and starved, once the subsidized handout ended.
7 - Forced relocation to less desirable neighborhoods due to declining value: Lower property values caused by overgrazing and frequent theropod attacks prompted many herbivores to move to volcano hillsides and tsunami prone beach-front locations.
6 - Top Management’s (T-Rex’s) inexperience in responding to a global crisis: When meteorite “Katrina” struck the earth, it became apparent that no T-Rex emergency evacuation plans had ever been developed.
5 - A greed motivated “Ponzi” scheme designed to benefit only T-Rex: A small group of T-Rexs may have swindled their fellow carnivores by promising an unsustainable supply of herbivore carcasses. However, the scheme collapsed when the supply of hadrosaurs was exhausted and prey-predator ratios became unbalanced.
4 - Unwillingness to accept and accommodate non-dinosaur values and culture. Although smaller, the primitive tribes of mammal militants operating from caves and burrows gradually wore down the “super powers,” weakening the dino’s survival instinct.
3 - Mother Nature’s refusal to grant “bail-out” assistance for the “Big Three”: Although the Big Three (Tyronnosaurs Rex, Triceratops and Gorgosaurus) were said to be “too big to fail,” they all went bellyup after the massive food deficit.
2 - The societal impact of job losses caused by the demise of the “Big Three”: Collapse at the top of the food chain rippled throughout the ecosystem and resulted in mass unemployment among carcass scavengers and decomposers.
1 - Replacement birthrates insufficient to sustain dino population: As evidenced by their gaily colored feathered attire, gender distinctions became blurred as more same sex relationships developed, lowering the number of births.
Note: Although yet unproven, these theories may provide research possibilities to paleontologists
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Sunday, December 28, 2008
1. A different kind of Economics according to Paul Krugman
2. A different kind of Politics according to David Axelrod
3. The Bush Presidency was not a Failure according to Laura Bush
And so on and so on, according to Weird Wally...
You Decide
Thursday, November 20, 2008
2/2 Naomi Klein: Bailout is 'multi-trillion-dollar crime scene'
Weird Wally wants you to know about Wall Street Extortion.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Stand By Me - Beautiful International Version
Weird Wally is full of hope.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Saturday, October 25, 2008
McCain's Spiritual Guide
This is what John McCain would like the rest of the world not to see!
Rev. Jeremiah Wright hate
This is what Barack Obama would like the USA to forget (1 of 2)
Friday, October 24, 2008
Yes, WW realizes that we are in a major mess. The shit has hit the fan and instead of “ trickle down,” most of us are experiencing the “splatter.”
According to WW, it’s bad enough to experience “trickle down (being pissed on),” but it’s a whole different matter to experience the “splatter (being shat on).”
And for that, according to WW, we have Greenspan to thank. The way WW says he understands it, Greenspan was for deregulation because, he figured that the private sector would police themselves.
But “deregulation” is the same as saying that everything is legal and anything goes. The second that a government says that word, all the sociopaths in the world, will respond with a bogus plan to use deregulation, so that they can get the money.
So, the problem with Mr. Greenspan was one of innocence.
He just didn’t understand the nature of greed and how no matter how much you have, it is not nearly enough.
On the other hand, were the act of burglary “deregulated” and made legal, where would you park your pickup-truck and your extra-large visual display screen?
Meanwhile, WW, reformed second story-man and CIA Operative, says: “don’t leave home without them!”
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Breaking News from the Anchorge Daily News
Board's Troopergate probe casts wider net
ETHICS: Investigator hasn't said who else may be under scrutiny.
By TOM KIZZIA
tkizzia@adn.com
Published: October 13th, 2008 11:08 PM
Last Modified: October 13th, 2008 10:58 AM
The state Personnel Board investigation of Gov. Sarah Palin's firing of Walt Monegan has broadened to include other ethics complaints against the governor and examination of actions by other state employees, according to the independent counsel handling the case.
The investigator, Tim Petumenos, did not say who else is under scrutiny. But in two recent letters describing his inquiry, he cited the consolidation of complaints and the involvement of other officials as a reason for not going along with Palin's request to make the examination of her activities more public.
Two other ethics complaints involving Palin are known. One, by activist Andree McLeod, alleges that state hiring practices were circumvented for a Palin supporter. The case is not related to Monegan's firing. The other, by the Public Safety Employees Association, alleges that trooper Mike Wooten's personnel file was illegally breached by state officials.
John Cyr, the PSEA executive director, said Monday the union plans to amend its complaint to be sure the board investigates "harassment" of Wooten as well.
Petumenos has not spoken to the press, in keeping with the secrecy of the state process. But he gave a rough description of the investigation's course in two letters to an Anchorage attorney threatening a lawsuit over Palin's effort to waive confidentiality.
Attention is turning this week to the Personnel Board -- the state's official avenue for investigating ethics complaints -- after release of the Legislature's Troopergate investigation last Friday. The Legislature's investigator concluded that Palin was within her rights to fire Monegan as public safety commissioner, but abused her power and broke the ethics law in joining her husband to push for the firing of Wooten, who was once married to the governor's sister.
Palin reversed an earlier pledge and refused to cooperate with the Legislature's investigation, calling it politically biased. In an unusual twist, she filed the ethics complaint against herself before the board, saying she hoped to "clear the air" by an inquiry through proper channels. She asked the board to decide if she broke ethics laws or acted improperly in dismissing Monegan or in dealing with Wooten -- basically the same ground Branchflower covered.
Petumenos has requested a copy of Friday's legislative report, including confidential backup material, said Sen. Kim Elton, D-Juneau, chairman of the Legislative Council. Elton said the council will meet Thursday to vote on whether to give Petumenos all the material gathered by its investigator, Steve Branchflower.
Petumenos was hired by the Personnel Board to handle the case because the state attorney general's office, which normally investigates ethics charges, would have a conflict investigating the governor.
Under the state's inscrutable system for investigating official ethics complaints, there's no way to tell how long Petumenos' investigation might take. The Personnel Board, made up of three gubernatorial appointees, has meetings scheduled for Oct. 20 and Nov. 3. Agendas for those meetings mention confidential ethics matters to be handled in executive session.
Nor is there any certainty, if the complaints are settled or dismissed, that the results of the investigation will ever be made public. A review of recent Personnel Board cases, however, suggests it's likely most information will eventually be released.
Palin has been involved in Personnel Board investigations before -- though not as a subject of complaint -- and at the time complained about their secrecy.
In high-profile cases that established her statewide reputation as an ethics reformer, Palin helped with a 2003 investigation of Republican Party chairman Randy Ruedrich, who was working on a state oil regulatory panel, and she co-filed a complaint in 2004 against then-attorney general Gregg Renkes.
Both men were found by investigators to have crossed ethical lines. Details of the investigations were released in the end, as part of a settlement that stopped short of the full public hearing before an administrative law judge that the law requires in serious cases.
In the Ruedrich case, Palin resigned her state job in protest while the investigation was still secret, saying she felt implicated in a cover-up because of the shroud.
"I'd like to find a hero in the Legislature who can take on and change that law and make it more sensible," Palin said at the time she resigned. As governor, she has supported changes to ethics laws, but the secrecy of board investigations has not been changed.
Palin fired Monegan in July and the legislative inquiry began later that month.
Four days after her Aug. 29 selection as John McCain's Republican vice presidential candidate, Palin's lawyer filed an official ethics complaint over the Monegan affair with the Personnel Board, urging the Legislature to give way. The Legislature refused, creating parallel investigations.
Judging from Petumenos' letters on the case, he feels able to range as broadly as Branchflower into subjects related to the original ethics complaints.
One element will distinguish the Personnel Board inquiry: It will have Palin's cooperation.
Sarah and Todd Palin have agreed to be interviewed by Petumenos at the end of next week, said Meg Stapleton, a spokeswoman for the McCain-Palin campaign. She said Monday she has no other details of the arrangement.
There's another distinction: While the Legislature's inquiry ended last Friday with vague talk of further action, the official investigation can bring legal consequences under the state ethics law.
The three current members of the Personnel Board were appointed by Gov. Frank Murkowski. Palin reappointed one, Debra English of Anchorage, last January.
The three unsalaried appointees usually handle less momentous matters at quarterly lunch meetings, said Dianne Kiesel, deputy director of the Alaska Division of Personnel and Labor Relations in the state Department of Administration. The board approves changes to state work rules such as promotion, pay and leave regulations.
Meanwhile, many ethics complaints filed against state employees -- accusing someone of driving a state vehicle after hours, say, or of providing rude service -- get handled by ethics supervisors inside the different state departments. The Personnel Board gets a summary report but is not involved.
It's the unusual case that becomes a big job requiring extra board meetings.
"Most all of these things get resolved before or at the accusation stage," said assistant attorney general Judy Bockmon. "Very few matters have actually gone to hearing."
Palin explicitly waived her right to confidentiality in her complaint to the Personnel Board. But days later, the McCain-Palin campaign said the investigation would remain secret at the request of Petumenos.
"The governor will respect that request, but will explore the means by which confidentiality may be waived once the investigation is complete," said Stapleton.
In two recent letters to Anchorage lawyer Meg Simonian, who was threatening a lawsuit to force more public scrutiny, Petumenos said the investigation had spread to other officials and other complaints.
"The Governor does not have the right, under such circumstances, to waive the right of confidentiality for others," Petumenos wrote. But he tried to reassure Simonian about the eventual release of the investigation.
"The Board is ... mindful of the public interest and the interest in the credibility to its processes that public disclosure would provide," Petumenos said.
Simonian, a registered Democrat who said she is pursuing the matter out of personal interest, said Monday she wants Petumenos to tease out the parts of his report involving Palin, so that those parts of the upcoming Personnel Board meetings can be public -- if, indeed, the board is discussing that topic.
"I'm in this bind where nobody knows what the board is doing," Simonian said.
Find Tom Kizzia online at adn.com/contact/tkizzia or call him at 1-907-235-4244.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Weird Wally has always believed that, “what goes around, comes around.”
ALASKA
Troopergate: Not Over Yet
By Michael Isikoff | NEWSWEEK
Published Oct 11, 2008
From the magazine issue dated Oct 20, 2008
A new Alaska legislative report finding that Gov. Sarah Palin abused her power and violated state ethics laws spells new trouble for the McCain campaign. Special counsel Steve Branchflower's report could lead to fines or legislative action to censure Palin. It also directly challenges the vice presidential candidate's credibility on key points related to the "Troopergate" controversy. Palin has said she fired Walt Monegan, Alaska's public-safety commissioner, last summer solely because of budget disputes and "insubordination" by Monegan. But Branchflower found that a likely "contributing" factor was Palin's desire to fire state trooper Mike Wooten, her ex-brother-in-law. While Palin had the right to fire Monegan, Branchflower found that she allowed her husband and top aides to put "impermissible pressure" on subordinates to "advance a personal agenda." The report also questioned Palin's public contention that her family "feared" Wooten, noting that shortly after she took office she ordered a sizable reduction in her personal protection detail.
McCain campaign spokeswoman Meg Stapleton dismissed the report as the product of "a partisan-led inquiry run by Obama supporters." But there could be more land mines ahead. Some weeks ago, the McCain team devised a plan to have Palin file an ethics complaint against herself with the State Personnel Board, arguing that it alone was capable of conducting a fair, nonpartisan inquiry into whether she fired Monegan because he refused to fire Wooten, who had been involved in a messy custody battle with her sister. Some Democrats ridiculed the move, noting that the personnel board answered to Palin. But the board ended up hiring an aggressive Anchorage trial lawyer, Timothy Petumenos, as an independent counsel. McCain aides were chagrined to discover that Petumenos was a Democrat who had contributed to Palin's 2006 opponent for governor, Tony Knowles. Palin is now scheduled to be questioned next week, and the counsel's report could be released soon after. "We took a gamble when we went to the personnel board," said a McCain aide who asked not to be identified discussing strategy. While the McCain camp still insists Palin "has nothing to hide," it acknowledges a critical finding by Petumenos would be even harder to dismiss.
© 2008 by Newsweek
Should the McCain/Palin ticket actually get elected, what follows is a likely conversation between Sarah Palin and Henry Paulson.
To be sung to the tune of, “There’s a Hole in the Bucket.”
“There’s a hole in the bailout, dear Henry, dear Henry. There’s a hole in the bailout, dear Henry, a hole.”
“What about it, dear Sarah, dear Sarah. What about it dear Sarah, who cares and so what?”
“So fix it dear Henry, dear Henry. Just fix it!”
“With what shall I fix it, dear Sarah, dear Sarah. With what shall I fix it, dear Sarah with what?”
With the dollar, dear Henry, dear Henry. With the dollar.”
“But the dollar’s too small, dear Sarah, dear Sarah. The dollar’s too small, dear Sarah too small.”
“Well prime it dear Henry, dear Henry. Prime it dear Henry and prime it right now!”
“With what shall I prime it dear Sarah, dear Sarah? With what shall I prime it dear Sarah, with what?”
“With the bailout, dear Henry, dear Henry. With the bailout, dear Henry and that should be that!”
“But there’s a hole in the bailout, dear Sarah, dear Sarah। There’s a hole in the bailout, dear Sarah. A hole.”
copyright 10-12-2008 by weirdwally.org
Friday, October 10, 2008
It was so obvious that Weird Wally almost blew it off...
About New York
The Crisis, as Seen by the Have-Nots
By JIM DWYER
Published: September 30, 2008
This article first appeared in the New York Times a few days ago.
On a chair outside Johnson’s Barbecue on Tinton Avenue in the Bronx, Keith McLean had thoroughly considered the $700 billion bailout of Wall Street.
“That’s for C.E.O.’s,” said Mr. McLean. “And I am a P-O-O-R.”
Mr. McLean, who helps out in the barbecue stand, lives in one of the poorest Congressional districts in the country, a half-hour subway ride to Wall Street. On Monday, José E. Serrano, the Democrat who represents the district, voted against the bailout package. He was the only member of Congress from the city to do so.
In a walk through parts of the district, it was easy to find people who, while indifferent to the outcome of the vote, were intensely interested in the machinations leading to the drama of closed banks and astronomical bailouts. For many, the financial package was another in a series of manufactured crises.
James Jacobs, who cuts hair at Six Corners Barbershop, said he felt that an atmosphere of paranoia had been deliberately cultivated, leading to the war in Iraq and now to the financial alarm.
“They scare people with bomb threats,” Mr. Jacobs said.
Edwin Mitchell, who works in a car dealership, was sitting alongside him. “We got stuck up,” he said.
“It’s corporate America doing what corporate America does,” Mr. Jacobs said.
“Organized crime,” Mr. McLean said.
“It’s the new organized crime,” Mr. Jacobs said.
“Ain’t nothing new about it,” Mr. McLean said.
“We’re not going to see none of that,” Mr. Jacobs said. “Not one red cent. Whichever way it goes. We ain’t going to see it, we ain’t going to feel it. If we do it feel it, its going to be negatively, and a few of us might lose a few jobs.”
Mr. McLean had tracked the news carefully. “Washington Mutual, he was on the job three weeks, he got $11 million,” he said.
Actually, it was more. Three weeks before Washington Mutual failed, it hired Alan H. Fishman as its chief executive officer, and paid him a signing bonus of $7.5 million. He is also eligible for $11.6 million in cash severance.
For the men in front of Johnson’s, there was plain symmetry between the Iraq war and the financial crisis: Young people shipped out to a trillion-dollar bloodbath in the Middle East, in pursuit of nonexistent weapons of mass destruction; and banks collapsing on top of mortgages handed out to people without enough money for a bag of groceries. And how, Mr. Mitchell wondered, could it be that Osama bin Laden had not been captured? “You can look down from outer space and see a dime on a city street, and you can’t find him?” he said.
From personal experience, he said, he knew that credit cards were another species of mirage.
“How does a person get credit that never had a regular job, no bank account, no sign of being a respectable person, and he winds up with three or four credit cards?” Mr. Mitchell asked. “I was out of work there for a couple of years, and I ended up with three credit cards. American Express. Visa. I forget the other one. And the banks give all these loans to people knowing they can’t pay, but they get a commission. Let them pay their commissions.”
If disgust, or horror, at the bailout was universal, there was not unanimity on what had to be done. The owner of the barbecue stand, Dwayne Johnson, 50, said he was outraged that many members of the Congressional black caucus had voted against the bailout.
“They voted no, they don’t have that right,” Mr. Johnson said. “The only way you can help the community is get it passed. If you’re the president and you can’t get 10 votes to pass it, then that’s bad. If you’re Obama, you can’t get 10 votes, that’s bad.”
Midaglia Rodriguez, 60, said that she worried that a new Depression was just over the horizon, and that she believed the bailout was necessary. “It should go through, to fix the situation,” she said.
Regardless of the outcome of votes in Congress, Mr. Mitchell said, he would still face the daily struggle to make a living and keep a roof over his head.
“I love this country, the best country on the planet. I love this city, best city in the world,” he said. “I don’t see a change that is going to affect me. I’m going to do what I always did. Survive. The best way I could.”