Monthly Archives: March 2008

Sick

I wasn't going to post anything on this sad milestone of 4,000 US military fatalities in Iraq. The number is at once numbing, infuriating, obscene, and vastly under-stated, as it leaves out the non-military US fatalities, many many US military casualties whose injuries will plague them and their families for the next sixty or more years, the physically raped US civilian workers with no recourse, the metaphorically raped US taxpayers, the many tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed, who knows how many Iraqi civilians injured, the millions of Iraqis displaced or forced into exile, and on and on.

And then I saw this: Crooks and Liars » Cheney on 4000 American Dead: “They Volunteered”

And so I posted something after all.

Posted in Iraq | Comments Off on Sick

The McCain Plan Really is More Wars

Anatol Lieven writes in the Financial Times, Why We Should Fear a McCain Presidency.

(via The Washington Note, McCain's Rogue State Rollback Sounds Like John Foster Dulles & Curtis LeMay)

I thought “Less jobs. More wars.” was a parody of McCain's platform. I didn't realize it was the platform…

Posted in Politics: McCain | Comments Off on The McCain Plan Really is More Wars

Open Season on Wasserman Schultz

Blogs from all across the land are piling on to Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz today.

As a result, she's staged a very small retreat, nicely summarized by Flablog, as

Wasserman Schultz clarifies: She's only going to passively-aggressively oppose Democrats running for Congress.

The fact is, she earned this abuse fair and square. But given that DWS is one of the more reasonable congresspersons in the state, and would probably be a better Senator than Bill Nelson — he voted for torture, she wouldn't — I can't say I that the current feeding frenzy fills me with joy. But she earned it.

It's important for state Democrats to stop taking the party for granted.

Posted in Politics: FL-18 | 1 Comment

McCain Confronts Modernity

There is a really funny moment, about a third of the way into this video Mac or PC?, in which John McCain explains how he uses computers.

Posted in Politics: McCain | 1 Comment

JP Morgan/Bear Stearns — The Legal (Malpractice?) Angle

This is seriously weird:

JPMorgan in Negotiations to Raise Bear Stearns Bid – New York Times

No, not that they're upping the price of the deal — it looked like a possible steal for JPM, and the market had already anticipated a tripling of the offer price, albeit not the quintupling that the NYT thinks is on the table.

The weird part is this:

JPMorgan and Bear were prompted to renegotiate after shareholders began threatening to block the deal and it emerged that several “mistakes” were included in the original, hastily written contract, according to people involved in the talks.

One sentence was “inadvertently included,” according to a person briefed on the talks, which requires JPMorgan to guarantee Bear’s trades even if shareholders voted down the deal. That provision could allow Bear’s shareholders to seek a higher bid while still forcing JPMorgan to honor its guarantee, these people said.

When the error was discovered, James Dimon, JPMorgan’s chief executive, who was described by one participant as “apoplectic,” began calling his lawyers at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to seek a way to have the sentence modified, these people said. Finger pointing over the mistakes in the contracts began as bankers blamed the lawyers and vice versa.

Is it possible that management didn't know about this at the time? I remember reading about it online, where it was described as something the Fed demanded as a condition of its guaranteeing such a large share of the most toxic securities.

I'd like to hear a lot more about this.

Posted in Econ & Money: Mortgage Mess | Comments Off on JP Morgan/Bear Stearns — The Legal (Malpractice?) Angle

Crocodile TV

Looks like I missed all the excitement. This all happened about three blocks from my house, but seeing this posted at Habla Mierda was the first I heard of it:

Even though it happened a month ago.

Posted in U.Miami | 2 Comments