Monday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Would you believe the Dow Jones finished up today? “Wall Street ended a temperamental session widely mixed Monday after investors grappled with JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s government-backed buyout of the stricken investment bank Bear Stearns & Co. The Dow Jones industrials recovered from an initial drop of nearly 200 points to finish up about 21 points.”

* Congrats to Gov. Paterson: “David Paterson was sworn in as New York’s governor on Monday, becoming the state’s first black chief executive and vowing to move past the prostitution scandal that has rocked the state Capitol.” Apparently, Paterson is quite a cut-up: “Paterson drew howls from the audience when he poked fun at his disability and deadpanned that he would accept an invitation to dinner with the state’s top Republican, Sen. Joseph Bruno, only if his ‘taster’ could come along.” (Bruno is next in line to be the state’s chief executive.)

* Notice the contrast: “Vice President Dick Cheney made a surprise visit to Baghdad on Monday and credited Iraqi leaders and a massive U.S. troop build-up with security improvements he described as ‘phenomenal’ after meetings with U.S. military commanders and Iraqi politicians.
But violence continued against civilians. At sunset Monday, a female suicide bomber killed at least 36 people and injured more than 40 when she blew herself up among Iranian pilgrims just outside a crowded Shiite Muslim shrine in the southern holy city of Karbala.”

* Oh my: “Bear Stearns Cos Inc Chairman Jimmy Cayne was playing cards in a tournament late last week while his company’s future appeared to be at risk, according a published report.”

* We’re getting closer to a June 3rd Michigan re-do primary.

* Post of the Day, Part I: “[T]his is the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, and the Fed, with the best will in the world, probably lacks the tools to deal with it. Broader action is necessary. But then comes the question: who ya gonna call? The Gang That Couldn’t think Straight still holds the White House; no good ideas will come from that quarter. Worse, Incurious George would probably veto any sensible plan from Congress, even if said plan could get past a filibuster. Hey, here’s an idea! Let’s create a nonpartisan expert commission, headed by Alan Gr …. oh, wait. He’s part of the problem.”

* Post of the Day, Part II: “It’s too bad we didn’t invest one-third of the Social Security system in the market.”

* One of the Bush administration’s most tragic errors in Iraq was disbanding the Iraqi military. Nearly five years later, no one wants to take responsibility for the decision. Imagine that.

* Here’s an interesting primer on the Bear Stearns fiasco.

* On a related note, you’ll really want to take a moment to read this report: “An awful lot of normal finger wagging about the hazards of bailing out those who make bad decisions from their consequences melted away in the face of Paulson’s primary concern — the health of Wall Street investment banks amid the greatest credit crisis since the Great Depression.”

* Clinton vs. Sinbad.

* This is just stunning: “Teenage girls and their parents need to read the latest government study of sexually transmitted diseases. The infections are so prevalent they are hard to avoid once a girl becomes sexually active. One in four girls ages 14 to 19 is infected with at least one of four common diseases. Among African-American girls in the study, almost half were infected.”

* For goodness sakes: “You’ll be happy to know that the Los Angeles US Attorney’s office, where the (endlessly) on-going investigation into Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-CA) is being handled, has decided to shut down its public corruption unit. That topic was getting a bit too much attention.”

* Markos has responded in more detail about the pro-Clinton boycott of DailyKos.

* No one reads newspapers anymore? Actually, newspaper readership is up — online.

* Slate’s new legal blog, Convictions, looks good. And Philip Carter is the editor, and since he’s terrific, I have high hopes for the site.

* This may prove to be interesting: “The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed the guilty verdict in the criminal insider trading case of former Qwest CEO Joe Nacchio and ordered a new trial before a different judge.”

* On Saturday, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), quite possibly the House’s nuttiest member, told a Republican audience over the weekend that the U.S. is accomplishing great things in Iraq, in part because, “God has not abandoned us.” Good to know.

Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

That Kos piece is terrific. The comments there are right — he should author an op-ed piece.

  • Okay, let me adjust this bloody bandage on my head, I’m just back from the strike line at DailyKos… Markos and his Henry Ford-era thugs are deadly serious.

    Dow Jones, Drama Queen.

    If Bush had privatized social security, Supreme Court judges would retire in time with the stock market rather than which party was in office.

    This time McCain strolled through the PX on the base rather than the Sorjoh Marketplace.

    It must be tough for Hillary to want campaign dirty but with no issues at which anyone thinks she’s better.

  • Excellent stuff in that link from Markos:

    But I could deal with all of that, really, if Clinton was headed toward victory. I see this as a long-term movement, and I’ve always expected setbacks along the way. Clinton isn’t the most horrible person in the world. She’s actually quite nice, despite all her flaws, and would make a fine enough president.

    If she was winning.

    But she’s not, and that’s the rub.

    First of all, the only path to victory for Clinton is via coup by super delegate.

    She knows this. That’s why there’s all the talk about poaching pledged delegates and spinning uncertainty around Michigan and Florida, and laying the case for super delegates to discard the popular will and stage a coup.

    Yet a coup by super delegate would sunder the party in civil war.

    Clinton knows this, it’s her only path to victory, and she doesn’t care. She is willing — nay, eager to split the party apart in her mad pursuit of power.

    If the situations were reversed, and Obama was lagging in the delegates, popular vote, states won, money raised, and every other reasonable measure, then I’d feel the same way about Obama. (I pulled the plug early on Dean in 2004.) But that’s not the case.

    That passage eloquently and concisely captures how I feel.

  • Hey CB Josh Marshall finally got the memo that John McCain hasn’t released his taxes either. He should read Carpetbagger Report more.

  • Of course the Dow finished up. Wall Street can screw up as much as it wants and the fed will always come to the rescues with a bail-out. Wheh! For a moment there it looked like a firm would have to suffer the consequences of it’s own stupidity. Thanks Fed!

    Nero fiddled while Rome burned. The Bear Stearns CEO played golf and contract bridge while his company tanked. Nice “work” if you can get it.

  • Hillary has finally said when she’ll cough up the names of the people who have donated millions to the Clinton library. She’ll do it right after she’s elected president.

    Yep, that would be a big ol’ FU, voters.

  • Check this out:

    Commerce, Treasury funds helped boost GOP campaigns

    WASHINGTON — Top Commerce and Treasury Departments officials appeared with Republican candidates and doled out millions in federal money in battleground congressional districts and states after receiving White House political briefings detailing GOP election strategy.

    Political appointees in the Treasury Department received at least 10 political briefings from July 2001 to August 2006, officials familiar with the meetings said. Their counterparts at the Commerce Department received at least four briefings — all in the election years of 2002, 2004 and 2006.

    The House Oversight Committee is investigating whether the White House’s political briefings to at least 15 agencies, including to the Justice Department, the General Services Administration and the State Department, violated a ban on the use of government resources for campaign activities…

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/19034.html

  • A link for the point made in #6

    Clinton, responding to an open-government questionnaire in connection with the American Society of Newspaper Editors’ Sunshine Week initiative, vowed Sunday to disclose the names of the Clinton library and foundation donors if she’s elected president.

    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/244/story/30678.html

    Yeah, why would anyone want to know who gave the Clintons $500 million?

    Arianna put it well:

    In short, it’s well past time for Hillary Clinton to be as “vetted” as she claims to already be — and to have this vetting done now by Democratic voters rather than later by GOP hit squads. She needs to live up to the standard she laid out for Rick Lazio, the opponent in her 2000 Senate race. At that time, she said it was “frankly disturbing” that Lazio was holding back on releasing his tax returns.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arianna-huffington/on-clintons-tax-returns_b_91882.html

  • Timing, as they say, is everything. By that measure, John McCain is having a very bad day. First, just one day after his own visit to Baghdad, Vice President Dick Cheney showed up in Iraq to remind Americans that McCain is inextricably linked to President Bush. Then just as the Federal Reserve rushed into to bail out faltering Wall Street investment banks and avert a financial panic, its former chairman Alan Greenspan disavowed any responsibility for it. Sadly, as he revealed in December, everything John McCain knows about the economy, he learned from Alan Greenspan:

    “The issue of economics is not something I’ve understood as well as I should. I’ve got Greenspan’s book.”

    For the details, see:
    “McCain: Everything I Know About the Economy, I Learned from Alan Greenspan.”

  • The state party in Florida has decided once and for all that there will be no re-vote in Florida.

    If Hillary had limited her attention to states where the primaries and caucuses actually counted rather than going back on her pledge to the people of Iowa and New Hampshire and focusing on states that had been disqualified, she might not be behind right now.

  • Chris @10 is right. I watched a video over the weekend where Hillary was telling the press in Pennsylvania, yet again, that she “won” Florida.

    This statement alone, which she repeats over and over, is justification for voting against her.

  • The retrial of Nacchio of Qwest is likely a much bigger item than noted.

    Qwest was the one & only major telecomm who refused to break the law for Bush.

    With the history of political misuse and abuse by the Deptment of Justice, it is highly likely that the prosecution of Nacchio was to send a strong message to the telecomms to do whatever the Bush admin wanted without regard to legality.

    Is this in the category of Sigelmann in Alabama? I think yes. Was Spitzer a stupid fool? I think yes. Was Spitzer targeted and caught up in borderline or illegal wiretaping? I think probably yes.

    It would be nice if our Senators and Congressmen would remember the oath that they took to “protect and defend the Constitution and to uphold the laws of the country”.

  • Just heard a clip of new NY Governor David Patterson’s speech to the New York Legislature on the Randi Rhodes radio show: he is very funny and very smart. He might make a great VP running mate for Obama.They both have a great sense of humor and speak very well on their feet. They would chew up McCain and spit him out in two minutes.

    Onto the more depressing news of the day:

    Ah, the corporate ruling class busy bailing out the greedy, short-sighted financial institutions on Wall Street that packaged up subprime mortgage paper into new abstractions which were then sold off to other investors. This pyramid scheme worked fine as long as housing prices kept rapidly rising, but when the real estate market finally leveled off, and then started sagging, all bloody hell broke loose.

    Many of the new home “owners” who managed to “buy” a house with zero money as a downpayment, just started walking away as their intro low mortgage rates started rising and their home value and supposed “equity” dropped into the negative realm.

    If the Bush regime really wanted to help Mr. and Mrs. Average American, they could simply order that banks cut their credit card rates on unpaid balances in half (50% off). That would probably do more to help the average American than these stupid one-time handouts/tax rebates coming in the mail in May…

    Of course, the real problem is our continuing to pour three billion dollars each week down the Bush occupation ratholes of Afghanistan and Iraq. Stupidity and greed never end with the Bush gangster regime and their corporate allies…

  • The question is, today a sign that the bottom has been reached and things will get better from here, or just a short term bump upwards for the market, i’m betting on the latter

  • * Congrats to Gov. Paterson:

    This is the second time, in less than a week, that Paterson has cracked a self-deprecating joke (the first one was about his contact with prostitutes; “only lobbyists” he responded). If he’s not careful, Founier will be calling him arrogant, like he did Obama…

  • I live out in Riverside County, California where the shit has hit the fan. Home values have decreased over 50% in some cases in less than a two years. Here’s an example.

    Unbelievable isn’t it?

    Needless to say, it’s pretty freaking scary.

  • …a female suicide bomber killed at least 36 people…

    With a vest? Or a vehicle? ‘Cause 36 is a lot. If the fact that it was a crowded shrine is the explanation, then I gotta wonder why anyone in Iraq stands within 20 feet of any stranger.

    * We’re getting closer to a June 3rd Michigan re-do primary.

    Leaving Florida out in the cold yet again. As it was in 1876 and 2000. Anybody want to buy a slightly used peninsula?

  • Watching Dan Abrams’ new show on MSNBC — oddly called “Verdict” — and so far, pretty damn good. Just had a nice bit demolishing Hillary Clinton’s claim that because she won the big blue states, that’s somehow a sign Obama wouldn’t win them in the fall.

    Wish they’d give Rachel Maddow her own show, but at least she’s making regular appearances here.

  • I still don’t get what these Florida and Michigan “do-overs” are supposed to accomplish. They’re not going to lead to Hillary catching Obama – only something totally bizarre could do that – so who cares? (Disclaimer: I live in Michigan).

  • An interesting side-note about the Qwest case: The original judge (Nottingham) was recently tied to (can ya guess?) a prostitution ring. Nice to know the Republicans aren’t letting the Dems threaten their Sex Scandal Supremacy.

    Teenage girls and their parents need to read the latest government study of sexually transmitted diseases.

    Too bad the unnamed writer of the editorial couldn’t provide a link to the CDC report (which isn’t the most recent on STDs ) and decided instead to skip straight to “OMG, we have to give girls an expensive shot that may or may not have an impact on their health at a later date!”

    Here, if you’re interested in facts rather than profits before women’s health hysteria, is the latest data on STDs (including the “feared ones”) across all age groups, genders and ethnic groups. It includes the data Unnamed Writer mentions, along with the data he/she/they didn’t:

    The overall HPV prevalence of high- and low-risk types was 26.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 23.3%-30.9%) among U.S. females aged 14 to 59 years (n = 1,921). HPV prevalence was 24.5% (95% CI, 19.6%-30.5%) among females aged 14 to 19 years, 44.8% (95% CI, 36.3%-55.3%) among women aged 20 to 24 years, 27.4% (95% CI, 21.9%-34.2%) among women aged 25 to 29 years, 27.5% (95% CI, 20.8%-36.4%) among women aged 30 to 39 years, 25.2% (95% CI, 19.7%-32.2%) among women aged 40 to 49 years, and 19.6% (95% CI, 14.3%-26.8%) among women aged 50 to 59 years.

    So the only women with a lower prevalence are the 50 – 59 year olds. But that doesn’t allow UW to scream WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN?

    Even among girls who said they had had only a single sexual partner, 20 percent were infected.

    Sounds like someone needs to vaccinate the boys. Funny how that idea doesn’t get much traction.

  • Anybody besides me notice that Barack Obama’s campaign is starting to rev up the chainsaw on the Clinton campaign?

    I am not reading tea leaves here, but rather many telltales…

    His campaign suddenly seems to have a sharper edge. And it looks like they are starting to wield the axe that comes from being a frontrunner. No more Mr. Nice Lumberjack. They are starting to pry and force and chop at this thing. I get the feeling his campaign in entering a new phase. The numbers indicate the tree must eventually yield. And they seem to be getting into the swing of being hewers… almost with glee.

    No, it is not quite yet: Timber!
    But she is starting to list…
    And I hear cracks and twists and groans…

  • Welcome, Gov. Paterson. At least he’s being smart in disclosing his sexual misdeeds preemptively, before someone else can turn it into a scandal.

    I was so happy when Eliot Spitzer was elected; we’ve suffered for twelve years under a Republican governor who knew he could get away with never debating his opponents. The mere mention of George Pataki made me nostalgic for Mario Cuomo. We need to strengthen tenant protections and establish commercial rent control. What a bummer to know that Joseph Bruno, the landlords’ friend, is a heartbeat away from the governorship.

    But I’m sure that however much Spitzer is to blame, his downfall was payback for going after corruption in high places.

  • I stopped going to dailyKos because the anti-Clinton rhetoric reminded me of the far right.
    I may never go back.
    I thought the progressives were different. Tolerant and open minded.
    But no, they’re no better than Michael Savage when it’s their cause they’re pushing.
    So sad.

  • Qwest may have done the right thing re the domestic spying, but lets not get carried away defending Nacchio. Nacchio gamed the system for massive personal profit. He is Bernie Ebbers-lite. And Qwest is still an evil never-got-over-being-a-monopolist.

  • The small fact that seems to be overlooked in the re-vote issue is that redoing those primaries will also change the total number of delegates needed to clinch the nomination. So assuming that they split them similiar to how they’ve split other states, it will only keep the situation the same, with bigger numbers.

    In other words…it’s fucking pointless. And in MI, will they attempt to stop all the people who voted in the Republican Primary from voting in the re-vote? Talk about upsetting/disenfranchising voters…”Don’t bother, it doesn’t count. Actually, we’re going to do it again so that it counts…but you can’t vote, sorry.”

    The thing about cutting down a tree is good planning. First you need to determine where/how it will fall. I mean, you don’t want it to fall on your house, your truck, your buddy’s head, etc. Second, you need to take the time to wedge out the fall side properly…wouldn’t want the old chainsaw to get pinched when the tree settles. If you do the prep work well, the last step is easy…gravity does most of the work for you.

    I’m with you, Dale, i’ll be having some wiki fun tomorrow afternoon.

  • A withering mini-report, CB. No refuge for the weary or the rationally-inclined, but with any luck, a new day with the sunrise,

  • Orange, that whole HPV shot thing creeps me out. Especially when TX was trying to legislate that girls HAD to get it.

    I want to see long term efficacy and studies as to what the side effects are.

    We do NOT need another Thalidomide type of situation.

  • Cool Lex @28. Looks like Kristol is going to screw up once every column he writes.

    If the superdelegates would declare themselves now then there would be no need for an expensive do-over for MI Fla. We could just invite them to the convention and include them into one big happy family.

  • Waah, waah, waah.

    Kos can’t choose a strong candidate, and can’t take, I dunno, convictions. So he attacks corporate sponsorship of the DNC by… Choosing the other DNC backed candidate.

    His long screed would ring more true if he spent more time making sure there were more voices in the party instead of less.

  • PS – Saying you want more studies for the HPV vaccine? How many more? Which ones are missing? What does Thalomide have to do with vaccines?

  • Kos can’t choose a strong candidate, and can’t take, I dunno, convictions. So he attacks corporate sponsorship of the DNC by… Choosing the other DNC backed candidate.

    It’s impressive that you were able to pack so much that’s wrong into so few words there, Crissa. It’s like a haiku of ignorance.

    First of all, as the linked article makes crystal clear, it’s the DLC he can’t stand, not the DNC. The Democratic Leadership Council, the triangulating centrist group of “neoliberal” Lieberman Democrats that spent the ’90s working against the liberals in Congress and the progressive groups at the base. The group that Bill Clinton led in the ’80s and ’90s, and that Hillary Clinton now leads today. The group that tried to co-opt Barack Obama as a member on three occasions now, only to be rebuffed every time.

    DLC, not DNC. There’s a colossal difference between the two, especially these days, as the DNC is actually trying to run a 50-state strategy on a progressive basis, while the DLC is up to the same old self-serving bullshit that will get its own members elected and let the rest of the party rot. Clinton is aligned with the DLC, Obama is more akin to Dean’s DNC.

    And despite what you say, Kos has chosen a strong candidate with convictions. His name is Barack Obama. He’s doing better than Clinton in terms of delegates, popular vote, states won, primaries won, caucuses won, money raised, etc. etc. Sounds strong to me. And convictions? One of these candidates has been rock solid on the issues like the war from the get-go, and it’s certainly not Clinton.

  • CB: Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

    noticeably absent from the bush administration (and frankly just about EVERY media outlet) is the current resistance to chinese rule in tibet. seems we invaders bond together. of interesting note is that the dalai lama is threatening to resign from political position (not spiritual position) if the violence continues.

    imagine that — someone with the integrity to tell his constituiency that he’ll resign if violence continues, vs. politicians who would in essence resign if violence were to stop.

  • PS – Saying you want more studies for the HPV vaccine? How many more? Which ones are missing? What does Thalomide have to do with vaccines?

    Missing studies? How about the ones on the effects on adolescents and pre-adolescents. If you don’t like thalidomide as an example of a medical product that was rushed onto the market with incomplete information and disastrous results (and it never hit the US) how about some more recent examples. Like the use of anti-depressants in children and adolescents. How did that turn out? Vioxx? Anyone remember Vioxx? Oops, we weren’t completely up-front about our study results and now people are dead. Sooreee. And then there’s oxycontin. Perdue knew their magic pills were way more addictive than opiods but that didn’t stop them from lying like dogs and pushing docs to use their product. And then there are the fine people at Serono who created an elaborate scheme for their anti-HIV product that resulted in doctors prescribing it for almost everyone who walked through their doors, while some patients who really needed it went without. And reaching back in the history book we have the infamous IUD. If you want to get creeped out, read about the things that bad boy did to a lot of women.

    Ask yourself this: If the theo-cons had never made a peep about the vaccine, would you be so willing to have this used on school kids? Or just ask yourself if you really trust the pharmaceutical companies?

    And don’t you ever wonder why even the pharm. company isn’t suggesting boys should get the shot?

  • Orange, exactly. Not to turn this into a thread about the FDA but when you are talking about giving a young girl a vaccine that involves her reproductives, I would like to see long term effects on those girls ability to have children, how healthy those children are, whether there are any effects on either mother or child, etc.

    To say that it prevents HPV without studying long term effects strikes me as cutting off your foot to ensure you never have toe jam.

    Without studies you may wind up having girls who cannot have children, especially if they wait until later in life. Those are all studies that should be done before creating a drug with such long reaching possibilities for mass destruction for the human race. (Dramatic, you bet. But when you talk about the ability to reproduce, that is at the heart of humanity going forward.)

    I do not trust the pharmas to do what’s right, and right now, I don’t trust the FDA to protect us, either.

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