Health Care Feedback on change.gov…

This morning I went to President Elect Obama’s website change.gov and expressed my opinion on what is necessary to provide affordable health care in America. I’m sure it’s one in two million but hey, I said my piece.

“I am one of the millions of Americans that helped President elect Obama get where he is.  That said, Senator McCain was very right about at least one thing that being the underlying source of health care issues in this country: the cost.

While lack of affordable insurance is foremost on consumers minds it must be determined why health insurance is unaffordable.  Hospital corporations continue to emphasize their increasing operational cost while reporting record earnings to shareholders and owners year after year.  28.1 billion in profits in 2007.  Do we really need to be playing a profit margin game with peoples health and lives?

While I’m all for capitalism I do not see where it is in the best interest of Americans to allow hospitals and health care conglomerates to continue increasing their costs to maintain and increase profit margins.  These cost must be brought under control and only government intervention can do this.

It will take sweeping “change” to achieve this because businesses in the health care industry can no longer be looked at as a “for profit” investment, such as HCA.  Otherwise any price controls would be met by the hospitals through a reduction of resources and services to patients in order to meet profitability.

Businesses in the health care industry can no longer be run under the same business and administrative principals as other corporate entities.  They must take on an operational structure similar to other not-for-profit organizations.  Anything less will continue the cycle of rising costs now estimated at 6-7 times the annual rate of inflation.”

Barney was on NPR

This morning Representative Barney Franks was on NPR advocating a bailout of the auto industry.  While I don’t think this is a good idea Rep. Franks had a real good point. He said…

“Well, [insurance company] AIG, which I don’t think anyone would think was as important to the American economy as the auto industry … got $40 billion just now to make it up over $100 billion. To some extent, let’s not have a white-collar/blue-collar bias in our public policy.”

Barney’s dead on with this observation.  Paulson and his cronies are quick to hand money to their friends in banking who grossly mismanaged their companies but they are quick to refuse money to the auto industry using the justification of mismanagement.   The difference in my opinion and Barney Franks is that he seems to think we should be continuing and extending bailouts.  I say end them all immediately.

No industry, automotive, financial or otherwise deserves preferential protection from the Federal government. Furthermore the invocation of public funds into these industries, with ownership stakes in the companies, is the forerunner to socialism.  Add to it that none of this does anything to restore activity in the micro economy and there is zero chance that this will actually help restore and improve the economic conditions for the majority of Americans.

This is how Socialism in America began kids.

I just read this bit of information this morning regarding more testimony to be given by Henry Paulson to Congress on Tuesday.

“Paulson, who is overseeing the bailout program for the Bush administration, said he was also working on a proposal that would allow the government to take over a wide range of financial institutions – not just banks – that are in danger of collapse.”

That sort of talk should worry you. If it doesn’t you most likely work for a bank or another failed industry on the verge of collapse eagerly waiting for the government to start providing your paycheck. When Republicans had the nerve to call Obama a Socialist during his campaign it was hipocracy in a most brilliant disguise. Yet Democrats are not without their faults in this mess. Their support of the UAW for a bailout of the auto industry is disgusting.

Let’s recap (yet again…)

  1. Banks won’t lend because people can’t pay the money back. Job losses are at an all time high. I suppose Paulson and Bernanke missed that part.
  2. Paulson pushes for more tax dollars to the banks so they’ll lend.
  3. So banks begin to lend money? Well, no. But if they did no one would want to borrow it.
  4. American car manufacturers make cars no one wants. But what if they made wonderful cars? Still, not many can afford to borrow $24k to buy one.
  5. American car makers ask for some of the love the banks are getting. After all they’re both losing money right?
  6. Paulson does not want to give car makers bailout money because the government isn’t sure GM and Ford won’t die anyway. The wild hypothesis is that people don’t want to borrow money to buy big, gas guzzling, expensive cars right now.
  7. Rinse, repeat.

Do you see the cycle here and the common denominator? Do they get it yet? Consumers are tired of mounting debt! And every economic solution put forth by industry and regulators include a recipe for more debt and renewed lending they insist we need. People are in a saving mode right now. Even people with money and credit don’t want to use it.

We have to fall down to get back up. Prolonging the inevitable does not make facts avoidable. People need time to pay for what they’ve got and debt relief. Any industry relying on people to open lines of credit right now is screwed. This includes the lenders. Using credit and going into debt is bad. Allowing the government to take part ownership of these failing industries out of desperation is even worse. The law of the jungle must be allowed to run its course. Some will not come out alive.

Key information about bank fees. How we can beat the banks.

This morning I decided to take a look at some bills that have been repeatedly introduced in Congress that have not gotten support primarily because of the continuing Bush/Neocon economic agenda. One of these is House Resolution 946, The Consumer Overdraft Fair Practices Act, introduced a couple of times by Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York. It’s essentially stalled for now, referred to the subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, a subcommittee far more tainted by the evils of the bank lobby than any in government history. I’m not holding my breath for anything fast.

While researching this bills status I noticed many posts on the Internet that indicate most Americans are not aware of the breadth of this problem. Most topics and discussions around excessive overdraft fees go something like this “I hate Bank of America” or “Screw Wachovia”. Followed by rantings of account holders about how their bank processes transactions from highest to lowest and creates excessive fees of $33 to $35 per transaction for the lowest cost transactions, usually a “cup of coffee”. Why it’s always a cup of coffee in these posts I do not understand.

Anyway, my point is that it needs to be recognized that these are industry standard practices, not bank specific. Many people make comments like “I’m firing them and switching banks”. Well that won’t do you much good. All banks follow the same practice of imposing fees as soon as they learn another banks lawyers have found them a loophole to create said fee. They also standardize on close to the same amount for these fees once the amount is established as acceptable by the industry. The common overdraft fee seems to be $35.00 today.

Most complaints are that this overdraft fee amount is excessive. That’s not really the problem I’m hoping legislators address in H.R. 946. While getting charged $35 for a $2.50 overdraft is in fact excessive and needs to be lowered, the real problem is that by willingly allowing customers to overdraft their accounts in the first place, through approving the transaction and then charging these excessive fees, the banks are, as a point of fact, loaning the money to cover the transactions and then charging the fees for the loan.  For now this is skirting existing lending laws, barely.

Add to this that banks do not have an opt out policy on “overdraft protection” and you have a forced lending scenario. Once it is agreed that this is a lending practice, not consumer “protection”, we can start looking at the other immoral practices the banks instituted such as ordering transactions from highest to lowest (to maximize the number of overdraft fees). Most banks cap the number of overdrawn transactions the fees can be applied to at five or seven per day. That could mean as much as $245 for overdrafts totaling as low as $10 to $15 dollars. That’s a lot of interest for this loan to cover the account holders unfunded expenditures for less than 2 weeks.

Just how do banks insure they are going to collect this money? By requiring direct deposit on the account to avoid checking account fees. You see, the banks are going to get theirs or they are going to get theirs. It’s a systematically formulated revenue scam against banking customers.

I blog on this exact issue and legislative bill frequently. By now most probably think its because I bounce transactions left and right. That’s not true and it matters to me that people know that. Not because I’m worried readers think I can’t manage my personal finances but because I feel the reason this issue doesn’t get more traction is because people who have well padded checking accounts don’t see the problem for what it is: essentially an industry tax levied on the working poor. It’s an attack by an industry on those who can least afford it.  Historically this is not where banks obtained the bulk of their revenue.  It was through investment dollars and commercial loans which have dried up.

Who thinks banks make money by loaning to the rich these days? Of course not. Those with substantial cash flow can afford to pay their bills on time, at low interest rates, generating very little revenue for banks. So the banks have to go after those who can’t afford to their products. Higher interest rates on credit cards, mortgage loans, check casing fees and overdraft “protection” fees are just some of the utilities they’ve formulated to achieve this. It is a hard truth that no one can afford to be poor in America. Those who are will pay a higher premium for everything.

This is why Paulson is fighting to eliminate the “credit freeze” that has the financial industry in turmoil. I’ve never doubted it’s existence but I firmly believe it is a well earned “freeze” and the banks should spend some time suffering losses through a lack of lending capability. What Paulson is trying to do is get banks to begin lending to higher risk borrowers again, like the middle class and working poor. That way they can resume increasing their revenue through higher interest rates and credit fees. Simply translated: The Federal government wants to pad the banks so that they can accept losses once they resume their attacks on those who can least afford to borrow.

Don’t doubt for a second that banks are still lending. If a company has the highest of D&B ratings or a consumer has a FICO above 740 they’ll lend. They simply don’t want to accept losses on defaulted loans anymore. They want to run the gamble of lending to high risk while avoiding any actual risk. If the loans succeed they win and if they fail they win.  I say let them burn.

Here’s how consumers can fight back against the banks and bring them to a realization that they must change their business model to offer products and services people want to buy or become reduced to an industry which the government cannot even help:

  1. Never overdraw your checking account. As hard as this may be for some find the discipline to keep a separate register from the web banking sites, use cash, whatever it takes but don’t give them the satisfaction of the overdraft fees.
  2. Don’t use consumer credit or consumer credit cards. Need a new washer and dryer? Find a way to pay cash, fix your old one, anything but that consumer line of credit at Lowes or Home Depot. At Christmas don’t spend above the cash you have on hand. Set aside some of your paychecks over the year and pay cash in December, not interest later. Find a way to become a cash and carry consumer. And the new 42″ flat panel can wait until you save the cash too. It’s really not that important.
  3. Avoid bling. All that crap you think you need to put on a credit card so that you’ll look wonderful, guess what? Nobody gives a damn. Got a new iPhone you paid for on a Discover card? So what. You’re pretend rich.

Ever wonder how different the world would look if everyone wore cloths, drove cars, carried cell phones and lived in houses that displayed their actual income instead of their credit score? This is where we need to get for the US economy to survive. The banks hate this idea and they will use every lobby they can afford in Washington to stop it.

This is clearly an uphill battle because Americans judge one another based upon perceived material wealth and possessions. Any method Americans can use to fake their material wealth will be used to try to portray affluence where there is none. I hope that at least some will join me in the fight to put banks back in their place and stop their attacks on the working poor. The only way we will achieve this is far each of us to begin living within the means of our paychecks.  Not off the banks line of credit.

AIG stole our money with the help of Congress and Henry Paulson.

AIG sold credit default swaps they did not have the money to repay to all of those who purchased them.  A credit default swap is basically investment insurance that can be bought by any savvy investor who does not even need to own the underlying security or credit instrument it is insuring.  So for the buyer it’s betting that a certain loan instrument or security will default and the owner of the CDS will get a payout.  AIG sold them to almost any investor as they backed speculative hedge funds.  For AIG it’s gambling that mortgage backed securities would not fail and they would reap the rewards of credit default swap payments for years to come.

Then the foreclosure crisis emerged.   Bearers of credit default swaps came to AIG to collect their insurance (or spread) on the defaulted loan instruments.  Most of these collectors did not even have a stake or vested interest in the failed instrument they were collecting on because they were buying through specualtive hedge funds.  AIG went bust.  They can’t pay out on all of the default swaps.  Hell, they couldn’t even pay out the spread on securities deamed least likely to default.  Whoever will save failed AIG from their stupid mistake spurred by greed?

Enter Henry Paulson.  “Don’t worry”, he says “We’ll use the tax payers money”.  And summarily hands AIG over $130 billion dollars.  Ah the luxury of being a financial institution in America.  You can get so big through moral and financial negligence that when it comes time to pay up you can put a political crony in your pocket and use tax payer dollars for decades to come to keep your employees happy.

What a damned scam.  And the real problem is most Americans don’t understand one bit of this even as it’s spelled out in this post.  All they hear is their “trusted” politicians telling them they are working to make everything alright.  As far as I’m concerned Henry Paulson is the most corrupt human to ever walk the face of the earth.  He professes his concern for the economy while his only real objective is saving banks through hard times and wealthy investors.  The rest of us be damned.

Henry Paulson will be one of the greatest skid marks in the Bush administration legacy.  Possibly even greater than Iraq.  He is a man who cares nothing about creating jobs (oh yes Henry, please tell us more about how giving billions to banks helps create jobs) and feels the road to our economic salvation is for banks to start lending?  Is that really what we need Mr. Asshat?  More consumer debt?  I thought that’s exactly what got us hear in the first place.

WE DON”T NEED MORE CONSUMER DEBT.  We need an increase in wages and job creation, through realistic means, so that people can pay the debts they already have.  Until this fundamental fact is addressed this economy will struggle until death.  This is not a rainy day we’re heading into.  Through his continued misuse of tax payer dollars and the manipulation of Congress, Henry Paulson and his political cronies are driving us into a class 5 fire tornado full of dead cats and razor blades.  We’re all going down.  How well do you bounce?

Americas conversations with Henry Paulson

paulson.jpgLet’s recap on Americas recent conversations with Henry Paulson regarding the $700+ billion dollars we’ve given him.

(Transcript started September 22, 2008…)

America: Good morning Henry.

Paulson: The sky is falling.  Give me $700 billion dollars immediately or we won’t have an economy tomorrow.

America: Wait, what?

Paulson:  Yes, the end is near and unless you give me this money no questions asked it’s over for all of us.

America: This sounds serious.  What are you going to do with the money?

Paulson: Buy toxic debts from the banks to help stabilize the banks and keep people in their homes.

America: So you’re doing this for us, not your friends on Wall Street and bankers in Charlotte right?  You want to help all Americans?

Paulson: Yes.  No more questions.  Write the check.

America:  Alright Henry.  Do right with our money.

(Jump to 11/13/08…)

Paulson: You remember those toxic assets I was going to buy to help you and the banks?

America: Yes.

Paulson: Forget it.  I’m giving it all to the banks.

America: What?  Why?

Paulson: Because the situation has changed.

America: In what way?

Paulson: Quit asking questions.  The situation changed and I’m adapting.  That’s it.  And I’m not apologizing.

America: By changed you mean the toxic mortgages were bundled into securities too complex to sort out for government acquisition, as you were warned?

Paulson: No.  The situations changed.  What did I tell you about the questions?

America: So exactly what are you going to do with our money?

Paulson: Ah, another question.  I see you’re paying attention.  Like I said, I’m giving it to the banks.

America: Sorry but this is $700 billion we’re talking about.  We’re asking questions.  Why are you giving it to the banks?

Paulson: So they’ll start lending again.

America: But few of us have any money.  We Americans can’t afford to pay the debts we have.  Why would we want to borrow more money?

Paulson: Because it creates jobs.

America: So consumers borrowing money they can’t afford to repay creates jobs?

Paulson: Yes.  You and you’re incessant questions…

America: Well maybe bank jobs and collections jobs but what about other struggling industries?  Like auto?

Paulson: No.  Nothing for them.  They were mismanaged and need to regroup on their own or fail.

America: By mismanaged you mean like the bank officers who loaned money to people who couldn’t pay it back?  Or companies who over sold credit default swaps and could not meet obligations on even the lowest spreads?

Paulson: No.  Nothing like that.  Enough with your questions.  The Federal government is buying shares in these banks and that’s the end of it.  We don’t have to answer to you.  Haven’t I explained that?

America: Well, isn’t this like starting socialism?

Paulson: No, it’s supporting the free market.  Now go away, you’re starting to annoy me.

America: The land of the free, owned by the banks and their political cronies who are ruining the world in the name of wealthy shareholders everywhere.

Here we go again. “Too big to fail”.

This Bloomberg article uses the headline phrase a couple of times to detail the economic woes of General Motors. Here’s the deal: If they manufacture unattractive, over priced cars no one wants to buy then the company will fail regardless of another government bailout. The big question is: How is bailing out GM, using tax payer dollars, going to make people want to buy their unfordable autos in a time people are struggling and can’t assume a new car payment even if they qualify for an elusive loan? Simple, it won’t.

Enough with the bailouts. STOP THE MADNESS. No company is “too big to fail”.

On another note related to this article: Obama I like. Pelosi can burn. Don’t be surprised if they do not get along.

Obama wins NC by 13,693 votes.

obama.jpgIt’s unofficial at this time but it looks like Obama has won NC by the narrowest margin of any Presidential candidate in history.  And thankfully there is no disputing he won nationally, in a landslide.

This morning Connor got up and Amy told him Barack Obama won.  I didn’t think he knew who Obama was.  His response to her was “I told you John McCain didn’t win”.  Amy then informed me they had a mock election in Kindergarten and Connor voted for Obama, who apparently also won the popular vote of the East Wake Academy five year-olds.  Now it’s official.

Only in America can a country experience one of the greatest attacks on any nation by a man named Saddam Hussein and seven years later select our first minority named Barack Hussein Obama to the highest office in the world.  As a nation we have been deceived, misguided and thrown into economic chaos by a President and administration farther out of touch with their constituency than any in US history.  Is still have little sympathy for those who chose by ballot to have it happen for a second Bush term in 2004.  I may never get over that.  Hopefully this sends a clear message that we have chosen to redeem ourselves by doing what is right for our nation, our children and the world.

I saw one supporter with a sign in Chicago last night that I really thought summed it up.  It read:

“Hang on. – Help is on the way. – Obama 01/20/2009”

I even saw a little admiration for Obama from Carl Rove on Fox News last night.  At the beginning of Bushes first term he claimed Bush to be “A Uniter, not a Divider”.  Remember that?  Well we finally have the real deal.  43% of white voters cast their ballot for Obama.  That’s the highest percentage for any Democrat in US history.  That 43% of white voters comprised 64% of the total votes for Obama.  This was not a minority elected President.  He is a minority who was elected President.  And he was clearly chosen by the majority of us.

It’s like we finally have our adult supervision back at a time when we desperately need it.  It’s been a long time since any of us could say we have a true leader in the free world.  More importantly we now have a leader we can proudly send among many others throughout the world.  That’s how important this election was.  We may have finally gotten it right America.

It’s time to redeem the United States – Go vote!

obamalogo.jpgOne of my friends Daryl, a registered Republican, called me this morning and said “I just voted for a black man for President”.  Well done.  A white Republican from the south voted for an African-American President and walked away from the polls alive and well enough to speak of it.  It’s a historic day regardless of the outcome.  And since he voted for Bush twice I can almost forgive the error of his ways.  Almost…  Many, many fellow North Carolinian’s I’ve spoken to voted for Obama.  Often these were not people I would have picked as Obama supporters, including my mother-in-law, for example.  I think the polls are wrong.  They’re saying McCain still has a chance.  I’m starting to think landslide for Obama.

My predictions for this evening are that Obama takes North Carolina, a state not even the Obama camp considers a strong possibility but they’re making a run at it.  And he will also take Virginia, Florida, Colorado and Pennsylvania.  If this comes true then those who were complacent in the last two elections will be partially redeemed.  There is no redemption for those who voted for George W. Dumbass twice and cast a vote for McCain today.  This core ideology of hate and moral based legislation is stale and outdated.  The old school “conservative” ideology will be washed away today and with any luck won’t return.  The Republican party has proven itself to be a bad brand.  It has been proven that no political party holds the patent on patriotism.  In this spirit with any luck Kay Hagan will be NC’s next Senator and a Republican, Pat McCrory will be our next Governor.  I say this because voting is not about party lines or partisan ideology.  It’s about picking the best person on the ballot for the job.

High voter turnout generally favors Democrats.  If this holds true then we could see the Democrats take a super majority of Congress tonight.  I’m not convinced this is a good thing.  I believe there’s value in varying opinions and positions on issues.  It creates necessary debate.  What we do need to overcome is partisan paralysis so it will be beneficial for Democrats to control both Congress and the White House.  Laws will get passed.  Some may get repealed if we’re lucky (think Patriot Act).

And my last prediction before I watch the vote count: There’s going to be a hell of a big party in Chicago tonight.  Several people I know are planning victory parties locally.  None are Republicans.

The wealthy are taking a vacation from reality.

David Kelly, chief market strategist for JPMorgan Funds is proof positive that the guys in the best paying chairs at investment banks are out of touch. He was quoted this morning as saying “The market is in a manic phase…It’s like a kid throwing a tantrum. At some point you have to let them cry themselves out because there’s no reasoning with them. Eventually, the market will respond more to fundamentals.”

Uh, David, the market is responding to fundamentals. Low and stagnant wages, growing unemployment, the rising costs of goods and services. Does any of this sound familiar? David must be talking about the same “strong fundamentals” McCain was preaching about as late as September. His statement personifies the main problem our country faces finding a consensus agreement on fixing this economy. The rich want to fix the problems effecting their precious portfolios but fail to realize it won’t happen until the micro economy is repaired first. But creating jobs and wages is a more complicated problem than analyzing stock values so the mighty trust and hedge fund managers don’t want to go there. Furthermore, God forbid, it might cost money.

Wall Street pundits haven’t hit the point of not being able to afford Doctor’s visits or put gas in their $50K SUV’s. They are so far insulated from the financial crisis on Main Street that they turn their heads as if to keep from watching a bloated African kid eat dirt and swat flies. They stay in denial using Wedgwood china to create a happy place. Retail sales are going to be real bad around the holiday’s this year. People could start losing their very ability to take care of their families day to day. Meanwhile a segment of trust fund honchos will continue to sit around debating whether or not we’re in a recession. John McCain should be flat out embarrassed that he endorses this Save the Yacht Club through his campaign.

Understand this Senator McCain: Main Street is not concerned about making sure you and your rich friends continue to prosper. Your prosperity is not helping the MAJORITY of Americans who do not share in your wealth. Many struggle day to day and week to week. And this word “struggle” is not just feel good campaign jargon. For you to argue that it’s “wrong” to “spread the wealth” because so many wealthy Americans “worked hard” for all they’ve accumulated is bullshit sir. To this end I will challenge you to provide provide me one example of truly “hard work” your wife performed that is deserving of her wealth during her tenure on this planet. I will counter with an offering of a day labor job that would probably kill her. That’s right, I brought your Beer Heiress wife into it.

Nobody’s asking for a handout John. People are demanding fair pay for a fair days work. The “take it or leave it” offer of low wages for serious labor is no good for the working men and women of America. Like so many other wealthy Americans the trust funds your children will inherit are the benefit of your wife’s good fortune – not her hard work.