Just ask the President.


A very cool website has just opend up shop that is gathering questions for pres. Obama to answer, although to date, none have been. You don’t even have to join or leave your email address to participate. Just write out your question and hit the submit button and watch while other viewers from around the country, and a few outside of the country, give your question a thumbs up or a thumbs down vote.

For those interested in the application of effective deliverative groupware, this site is a “must see”.

Oh, and by the way, type my name: davidfarrar, into the Search box and go to my five questions, which is presently the limit, and vote. I need some conservative support.

Click here to go the the website.

 

ex animo

davidfarrar

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Who is responsible?


I know this is a very long article, but I think it worth the read. For a very long time now I have been listening to our Congressional leaders blame each other for the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacles. I think a thorough investigation into this matter will help us try an insure this type of grand Congressional misfeasance doesn’t happen again.

Below, is Barnie Frank’s version of events I found in a Press Release of the House Committee On Financail Services, and present them here as his case in chief.

I intend to post the Republican version of events just as soon as I can find one. If you know where it can be found, please advise me. In the meantime, lets get out our magnifying glasses and start the hunt for loopholes in Mr. Frank’s version of history, for the record.

Thank you.

 

      Frank Seeks Antidote to Republican Amnesia

 

REP. FRANK

                        According to the Republican version of the history of the financial crisis, as presented on the House floor on Wednesday by Representative Todd Akin (R-MO), Congressman Frank is responsible for the fact that no legislation passed the Congress to regulate until 2007, and no bill trying to restrict subprime lending passed the House between 1994 and 2007.  The problem with their argument is that the Republicans were in power from 1995 through 2006 in the House, and they had complete control over what legislation did or did not pass.

                         Being accused of having blocked legislation to prohibit irresponsible lending to low-income people from 1995 to 2006 is flattering in a bizarre way.   Apparently those Republicans parroting these right-wing talking points believe that I had some heretofore undisclosed power over first Newt Gingrich and then Tom DeLay, which allowed me to keep them from passing legislation they wanted to pass.  If that had been true, I would have used that power to block the impeachment of Bill Clinton in the House, the war in Iraq, large tax cuts for the very wealthy, the intrusion into the sad case of Terri Schiavo, and appropriations bills that badly underfunded important social priorities. 
 
                         I did not try to stop them from passing legislation to control subprime lending or to regulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because in the first case they were never willing to do so, and in the second case, I worked together with Republican Chairman Mike Oxley on the only bill that the Republicans considered during that period to restrict Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the bill was defeated because, in the words of Mr. Oxley, the Bush administration gave his efforts ‘the one-finger salute.’
 
                        In another oddity,  the Republican history on this subject appears to end in 2003.  I understand why they find later events unpleasant, since those events document the gathering series of policy mistakes that the Republicans made which ended in their being repudiated in 2006, and re-repudiated in 2008.  In their view of the world, the last relevant thing that happened was a statement I made in 2003 in which I said that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were not in crisis.  I did say that. And I would have said it as well – and may have – about Wachovia Bank, Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, the Royal Bank of Scotland, and dozens of other financial institutions in America and elsewhere which were not in fact in crisis in 2003.
 
                        What happened subsequently in the years the Republicans wish to ignore because they cannot defend what happened – is that the Bush administration pushed for even more subprime lending, Alan Greenspan refused to use congressional authority he’d been given in 1994 to regulate it, and the House Republicans blocked any efforts to legislate against it.  In fact, as quoted in a story in the Bloomberg News, when the Bush administration ordered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to increase significantly the number of loans they bought for people below median income, I objected saying that this would be good neither for the borrowers who could not repay the loans nor for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
 
                        In his book, Financial Shock, Mark Zandi, who has advised political leaders of both parties and gained a great deal of respect for his views on the financial crisis, stated that “President Bush readily took up the homeownership baton at the start of his administration in 2001… To reinforce this effort, the Bush administration put substantial pressure on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to increase their funding of mortgage loans to lower-income groups…. By the time the subprime financial crisis both had become sizable buyers of the Baa tranches of these securities.
 
                        My response, along with other Democrats, was at that point to try to take regulatory action in two respects.  First, we sought directly to regulate subprime lending.  Secondly, I agreed to join Congressman Oxley in trying to regulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
 
                        According to Mr. Zandi, “Democrats in Congress were worried about increasing evidence of predatory lending…”  The Democrats wanted a federal equivalent (to North Carolina’s anti-predatory law) that would cover all lenders nationwide.  The Bush administration and most Republicans in Congress were opposed, believing legislation would overly restrict lending and thus slow the march of homeownership.
 
                        As to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, I joined with other Democrats in helping Mike Oxley bring out of our Committee a bill that would regulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  I voted against it on the House floor after the Republican leadership dictated a change – over Mike Oxley’s objections – to the affordable rental housing piece, but it did pass the House anyway and I did not urge other Democrats to join me in voting no.  So the argument that I blocked Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac legislation makes zero factual sense since the House, when I was in the minority, did pass the bill.  It died because of Senate opposition, spurred by President Bush.
 
                       In 2007, when the Democrats assumed control of both Houses of Congress and I became Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, I moved quickly to pass a bill to regulate the GSEs.  He introduced the Federal Housing Reform Act of 2007 (H.R. 1427), on March 9th and it was approved by the Committee on March 29th.
 
                      The bill was passed by the full House on May 22nd, with all 223 Democrats and 90 Republicans voting in favor of the bill, and 104 Republicans voting against it.  Among those voting against regulation of the GSEs was Congressman Todd Akin (R-MO), who led the Special Orders on Wednesday.
 
                       In 2007, I, along with Representatives Brad Miller and Mel Watt, introduced the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act (H.R. 3915) which would regulate predatory subprime mortgages.  The bill passed the full House on November 15th, with all 227 Democrats and 64 Republicans voting yes, and 127 Republicans voting no.  Representative Akin voted against the bill.
 
                       Republican talking points omit the many factors which set the stage for the present financial crisis — the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 (I opposed), which removed the wall between commercial and investment banks, the failure of the Federal Reserve to use oversight authority which it had been given by Congress, and the Security and Exchange Commission’s decision to allow large financial institutions to “self-regulate” and dramatically increase their risk exposure.
 
                      The Republican message also fails to mention the role of unregulated entities which aggressively marketed subprime loans, major financial institutions which packaged risky mortgages as Collateralized Debt Obligations and sold them as virtually risk-free investments, rating agencies which gave stellar grades to toxic assets while being paid by the companies who stood to benefit from their actions, and the massive growth in the use of Credit Default Swaps, ushered in by Senator Gramm’s 2000 legislation (I also opposed).
 
                      The Republicans would have you forget all this. They want to distract people from understanding the real causes of the crisis so they can further block real reform.  This is cynical, partisan politics which will weaken our ability to prevent another meltdown in the future.  These attacks may seem innocuous, but in the long run they will hurt ordinary Americans who are already suffering.

 

ex animo

davidfarrar

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It’s time for an audit of the Federal Reserve


With our Federal Reserve pumping trillions of dollars in fiat currency into a system already overloaded by massive amount of dollars committed to the economic bailouts in recent months, it is time the American people requested from their Congress a forensic audit of their Federal Reserve System. With the enormous amount of worthless IOU being printed, placing future generations of Americans’ financial future at risk for years to come, it is only fitting and proper that we do this now for them, before it is too late. 

Today, $9.7 TRILLION in taxpayer dollars in bailouts and loans have been agreed to by Congress, the Bush and Obama Treasury Departments, and the Federal Reserve over the objection of many Americans.  As I am sure you are aware, the Federal Reserve’s inner-workings are shrouded in secrecy, and their meetings are off-limits to the public.  Just recently, the Federal Reserve told Congress “NO WAY” when our elected representatives asked them to account for TWO TRILLION DOLLARS in taxpayer-backed loans!  It’s time for an accounting to the American people. It is time for an audit of the Federal Reserve.

There will be many battles grassroot, fiscally conservative Republicans must fight over the coming months to take back our country. But this one is set before Congress in just a few short weeks with the recent filing of Ron Paul’s  HR 1207 (Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009), with 21 co-sponsors.

Please help this effort by contacting your representatives today and ask them to support HR 1207 (Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009) for the good of the county now and for future generations.

Can I get a Photobucket from ya?

ex animo

davidfarrar

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Limbaugh’s stimulus plan will fail.


It will fail for the same reason Obama’s stimulus plan will fail. Both plans rely on borrowed money to finance their stimulus plans.

Now if Limbaugh had simply suggested that corporate and individual taxes should be lowered on April 15, 2009, to the tune of $456 billion, government cuts in spending would naturally occur.

You can’t stimulate the economy by robbing Peter to pay Paul, resulting in a zero net gain to the economy. The economy can only be stimulated by allowing the producers and consumers to keep more of their own money with which to stimulate the economy.


Gov. Sarah Palin for RNC Chair


Okay, I haven’t a clue if Gov. Palin would even consider the post of RNC Chair if it was offered to her, but in my humble opinion, it should be at least offered. Let’s face it, we got beat in this last election. When you get beat, the strategic thing to do is to withdraw, reform your base, map out your political stance, and allow your opponent’s political fallout to restrengthen your next election effort. Because the key to this strategy is reforming your base, I can think of no other person best suited to accomplish this task than Gov. Sarah Palin.

Let me say this again: unless we reform our base, we will not be politically successful in the 2010 elections. The one person who has clearly demonstrated an amazing ability to do just that is Gov. Sara Palin. If you don’t believe me, just as Sen. Saxby Chambliss

ex animo
davidfarrar

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All right, THENEXTRIGHT is back.


But we still should agree to rendezvous, just in case

!jaws of politics

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Something still happening to THENEXTRIGHT.


Will it happen to REDSTATE as well?

Try accessing THENEXTRIGHT. Yes, if you press the “Refresh” button enough times, you may get one, but chances are if you do that now, you will simply get the 403 access forbidden message.

All we were doing was discussing the possibility of Governess Sarah Palin becoming the next RNC Chairwoman. I don’t see why anyone would be upset with this issue.

We had better chose a rendezvous site for this site just in case it gets hit as well.

ex animo
davidfarrar

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Where is “THENEXTRIGHT”?


Is it me, or is TheNextRight" off the net?

GREAT SCOTT:

I can’t open the website “TheNextRight”. I was wondering if anybody here has has that problem today. This has happened on a number of occasions and so I was wondering perhaps it would be a good idea, just in case, bloggers here might want to designate a rendezvous website to go too if someone should succeed in closing down this site too.

If and when “TheNextRight” does reopen, as I am sure it will, I will propose they designate this site as their rendezvous site. It’s just the prudent thing to do.

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