Posts tagged ‘Occupy Wall Street’

January 31, 2012

Who Do You Want Answering the Red Phone in the Middle of the Night?

by Steve Dana

The primary in Florida is now in the books and Romney appears to be on his way; a big win for Mitt, but at what cost?  I guess Romney proved he can get down into the mud and sling it with Newt but he spent four or five times as much money as Gingrich to achieve it.  So was it the mud slinging by itself or was it the sheer volume of it? 

I suspect that with apparently unlimited funds Romney can steamroll the field doing negative campaigning.  I am not comforted by this win.  If the old adage “the one who pays the fiddler gets to call the tune” is true, then who now owns Mitt Romney?  I seriously doubt it’s regular folks like us.

At this point in the campaign I have to admit that I’m a Newt fan.  In spite of his baggage I think he is a leader where I have my doubts about Romney.  For folks of my persuasion I think Newt’s more likely to fight for the Constitution than Romney.  Strangely, I think of him as being more predictable than Romney.  Maybe not in the sense that he will go along with mainline Republicans, but that he will be his own man.  Some of us are not comfortable with mainline Republicans currently in positions of leadership in the Congress.  Their priorities are not consistent with my own.  As a matter of fact, their priorities are strangely similar to many of the mainstream Democrats.  Get re-elected and let the Goldman Sachs bureaucrats call all the shots.

One of my big problems with Romney is his lack of consistency on important issues.  Another maybe more important problem is his roots deep within the ranks of the Goldman Sachs/Wall Street insider crowd.  In my view, some of those guys were clearly criminals and many others were borderline but I doubt that Romney’s Justice Department would be any more likely to pursue them than Obama’s has.

If there is a basis for the Occupy Wall Street movement it’s the failure of the government to prosecute anyone for the Fannie/Freddie debacle or the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch.  If there were no criminal acts perpetrated during that whole time by any of the companies that either failed or were bailed out I would be astounded.  And if those guys were allowed to conduct their businesses in such a way that so many of us were exposed to unimaginable risks, the government regulators should be prosecuted.  Or if the law of the land is written such that everything was legal then our Congress should be impeached and sent to prison.  Somebody besides everyday Americans has to be held responsible.

The government spends considerable funds pursuing blue collar criminals but sadly the white collar criminals responsible for collapsing the housing and mortgage industries are walking free with millions of dollars at the expense of the rest of us.  What message is the government sending with no prosecution for any of the culprits responsible for a multi-trillion dollar scandal?

If those mucky mucks at Fannie and Freddie were justifiably rewarded with hundreds of millions in bonuses then the folks who authorized those contracts should be in prison.

I don’t know that Mitt Romney is owned by the Wall Street crowd, but I fear he is beholding to them enough that justice will never be served if we are counting on President Romney to pursue them.  Mitt Romney’s record exposes a guy who is not a fighter.  Romney goes along to get along and that is not the kind of guy I want in the White House.

When the Red Phone rings in the middle of the night I think I would prefer that Newt or even Rick Santorum answered rather than Mitt Milquetoast Romney.

Chris Christie, John McCain and a slug of other Republicans assure us that Mitt’s the man for the job.  I guess only time will tell.  I hope that there is substance in their support rather than a fear of Newt Gingrich driving their efforts to get Romney elected. 

I know our country cannot take another four years of Obama so if Mitt’s “our” guy and we all work to get him elected then we will find out if he’s the good guy John and Chris say he is.  I pray for our country that they are right.

November 14, 2011

Write the Rules, Take the Credit?

by Steve Dana

There’s been no shortage of media coverage for the expanding “Occupy Wall Street” protest movement across the country.  When it started in New York, you could tell that folks were angry, but interviews showed that many were gathered, but not to protest a common grudge.  Everyone seemed to have a beef, but more often than not, it was different from the next person.  That should have been a tip.

In an effort to justify protesting, the media tried to compare the O W Streeters to  TEA Party protesters but if you ever attended a TEA Party event, you never saw a spectacle like what has devolved in cities like New York, Denver and Oakland.  Certainly both sides have bad apples, but I can’t recall a significant TEA Party event where anyone got hurt, let alone be murdered.  TEA Partiers police their own events so the focus is only on the protest.  In spite of the fact that the TEA Party is not centrally organized; every chapter champions generally common goals; smaller government faithful to the Constitution, providing for the common defense, protecting personal liberties.

Not surprisingly, most of the media still insists the two movements are the same; in spite of the violence on the left.  I can’t help but wonder how they can spin that fiction even when confronted with the facts.

Some of the protesters given a chance to voice their reason for protesting, point to “fat cats” on Wall Street for their lack of jobs on the one hand but maybe the lack of opportunity to be “fat cats” themselves on the other.  Most of the interviewees complain about how they graduated from college with huge college loan debt expecting to be hired by some big company only to find they are unable to secure a job.  Few gave much thought to who might be their prospective employers as they were signing those loan papers but all have concluded it was a Wall Street conspiracy.  Unless they were planning on a public service career in which case they are angry for a different reason.

Occupy Wall Street protesters allege that robber barons with Wall Street addresses engineered the system that allowed them to get filthy rich(er).  Few of them really understand how the system works.  If they only knew. 

When I was a Snohomish city council member in the 1990’s I encountered a land developer who made the point so clear to me when he told me he had preferences but he really didn’t care what regulations we passed, he would analyze what the regulations allowed him to do, what they wouldn’t allow him to do and decide whether it made financial sense for him to invest in a project.  If it made financial sense to him, he would invest.

If that simple lesson doesn’t explain how business decisions are made and who/what is responsible for the debacle our country has endured over the past few years, then I guess I won’t get through to you.

Another thing, chiseling isn’t reserved just for capitalists.  If it were just capitalists gaming the system, they would have been driven away long ago, but then, who would have provided the jobs and the products and the tax revenue that pays for everything else?   Think about how you learn the rules in your world and interpret them to your own advantage.  Taking advantage of loopholes or stretching the truth or as a former accountant used to say, “venturing into the gray zone” is a behavior practiced by a good many of us.  Using poorly written laws and regulations to your advantage is not a crime, it isn’t even unethical.  In many circumstances, it’s thought of as being clever and ingenious.  That is of course unless it doesn’t benefit you. 

Being able to capitalize on a scale that might make you wealthy may be an advantage for folks who already have money, but it doesn’t deprive you or me from enjoying the same opportunity if we have a good idea and are willing to work really hard.

It’s clear to me that the burden for our dilemma lays clearly on the shoulders of those who pass the laws and write the regulations; City Councils, Legislatures and our Congress but don’t forget the regulation writing bureaucrats that work for them all.  Where would we be without our friends the bureaucrats?

If you are unhappy because General Electric exploited the tax code and ultimately paid no federal corporate income tax, look to the government that created the loopholes.  I have no great affection for General Electric but they didn’t write the rules, did they?

While I am singling out GE, can we really blame them for moving their jobs to foreign countries when our government eliminates incentives to keep jobs in America while at the same time telling them how important it is to develop a world economy by raising the standard of living in foreign countries.  Even if succeeding at that goal comes at the expense of jobs at home?  Ask yourself who promotes the “world economy” thing the most and if they are supporting a world economy are they doing so at the expense of our American economy.  Every manufacturing job that goes overseas in the name of world economy chips away at the middle class in America.

If you really want to blame someone because there are no new jobs in many industries still doing business in America, just look at the regulatory burden heaped upon those businesses and go back to the lesson I described above.  If it doesn’t pencil out to hire because of uncertainty or tax burden, blame the government not the business owners.  As much as you may not like it, share holders do look at profitability and the bottom line and sometimes make the choice to not invest in America.

Go ask your elected officials how they failed to propose, negotiate and pass legislation that either prevented middle class family wage jobs from heading overseas or created jobs in America by reducing risk and uncertainty  to a business thinking about locating in your town.

The answers the protesters are looking for will not be found in New York, Denver or Oakland but in Washington DC and every state capital in the land.

October 30, 2011

Occupy Pennsylvania Avenue!

by Steve Dana

After watching the Occupy Wall Street protests for a couple weeks I really hoped the protester would do their thing for a while and then go home.  Not so surprisingly the protesters are still at it.

Since I’ve confessed before to listening to Glenn Beck, I look for George Soros under every rock.  And since Beck warned us many months ago this type of protest was coming, driven by left wing organizations funded by Soros it’s only disappointing that Beck was right. Craig’s List ads recruiting folks to be paid protesters is a good indicator they’re not there on principle; paid bail and legal aid for protesters who are arrested, who are encouraged to do illegal acts so they will be arrested and food brought in to feed the protesters paid for by someone else are a few examples.

As I watch it happening, listening to the television interviews of some of the protesters it’s clear many of them are there just for the experience; not because of anything specific but because they want to be a part of it.  Who can blame young folks for following a pied piper who promises a good time if they will just join the crowd?

At the same time I’m also hearing folks complaining to Wall Street about the lack of jobs; or that Capitalism is the root of all evil.  On the one hand they blame business for not creating a job for them then they demonize the system that can create jobs.  It’s clear that Economics 101 was not one of the classes they took in college.

And since a goodly number of the protesters are unemployed recent college graduates angry and afraid because life is not fair they are looking for someone to blame.  It’s unfortunate that American History and Government weren’t classes they took either since then they might understand the role of government in our economic system.

I’m disappointed that college educated young people, out of ignorance, are focusing their anger on the system that could be their salvation.  I’m disappointed that these kids are paying for an education but getting a meaningless diploma; and pay they will even if there are no jobs.

Which brings me to…

Many of the protesters didn’t pay for their educations yet, they borrowed the money to go to college and now that they are out, their lenders are expecting to be repaid.

The economy has been in the tank for three or four years now so these recent graduates should’ve had an inkling that the competition for jobs would be fierce yet they still went heavily into debt to get an education with little likelihood of getting a job when they graduated.  And now, they are angry?  Help me understand, what job you are hoping to land when you get your degree in Women’s Studies or Art History?  Shouldn’t a job or career be a consideration for students if their “education” requires they take on so much debt?

Nobody forced them to borrow the money and maybe prudence might have suggested that in a recession they might choose a more conservative strategy but like some of their career choices poor judgment was wide spread and now they want to blame someone else.

It’s time for these kids to understand that the crappy economy has been crappy for all of us. You don’t have to be unemployed to understand the plight of Americans today, young and old. Many of us have learned the brutal lesson that when we make bad choices there is a reckoning; but we step up, we take our medicine and we move on.

If the protesters are serious about changing things so they will have jobs in the future they need to ask the companies they hoped would hire them why they don’t have jobs for them and listen carefully to their answers.  More likely than not, the culprit will be too much government.  Then the protesters can decide whether they are protesting in the right places.  If you can’t figure out which companies to ask, you probably got your degree in the wrong field!

American businesses would like nothing better than to have jobs for every young person graduating from college today because that would signal that our government has gotten off their backs and the economy is moving productively again.  If only we could convince the government to get with the program.