One of the big publishing stories last year was the wildly successful Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Now Quirk Books is about to release Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls, a prequel. Here is the movie trailer — yes, movie trailer — for the new book.
Monthly Archives: March 2010
Tuesday’s Evening Read
Evolutionist Eric Michael Johnson examines his beliefs in Why I Am Not A Humanist.
The Washington Post’s Fred Hiatt seems to think that “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” should be Obama’s mantra, Obama’s happiness deficit.
The Times’ Oliver Kamm looks at how A rediscovered play adds to the Bard’s shifting reputation.
Emptiest. Threat. Ever.
Apparently, Democrats in Washington are on the verge of seriously hurting the feelings of Congressional Republicans. So much so, in fact, that this is what they have threatened to do:
While a bill-signing ceremony in the Rose Garden would provide at least a short-term boost to a beleaguered president, Republicans have made clear that the legislative procedure Democrats are using to avoid another filibuster would so anger them that they would not cooperate on other major initiatives this year.
“If they jam through health care,” said Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, then Democrats will have “poisoned the well” on other issues. He was interviewed Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”
Really? He’s seriously threatening that if the Democrats pass health care reform, now Republicans will stop cooperating? I’ll second Ezra Klein’s question and ask, “If Graham doesn’t think the well is already poisoned, then I dare him to take a sip from it.” Seriously though, this might be the most ridiculous attempt at a threat I’ve ever heard. This would be like the Sixers saying. “If fans don’t start coming out to games, we’ll really start sucking.”
What Flavor Is Your Tea, Partiers?
In the words of St. Ronnie, “Here they go again.” It seems that an alliance of Tea Party groups has descended upon Washington again, in a three-week “Take the Town Halls To Washington” rally. They’re protesting a government take-over, or Bolshevik revolution, or alien invasion, or some such thing. Oh, OK. Actually they’re trying a last-ditch effort to scare the bejeezus out of lobby wavering Democrats to vote against the health care reform bill. No problem there. They have as much right as anyone to lobby on behalf of the wealthy voice their opinions.
What has caught some people’s eyes, though, is some of the paraphernalia they’re using. As The Daily Caller noted:
The Republican National Committee is paying for signs and political buttons used by Tea Party groups — despite widespread disagreement among the conservative, grassroots activists on whether the movement should work to elect candidates within the Republican Party or steer clear from it.
The items, paid for by the RNC, were on full display at a Friday press conference of Tea Party activists in Washington. At the afternoon event at the Capitol Hill Suites, activists in town for the “Take the Town Halls to Washington” project passed out the red-white-and-blue buttons and signs emblazoned with the words “Listen to Me!”
Text at the bottom of the sign reads: “Paid for by the Republican National Committee.”
Now, obviously, they have the right to accept assistance and gifts from whomever they want. The problem, I think, is that this whole Tea Party movement will never be taken seriously unless they can get much more unified. And that can’t happen until they figure out what, exactly, they are. Are they nothing more than an astroturf branch of the Republican Party? I know many commentors here would strongly disagree with that idea. Are they an independent movement, conservative in ideals, but not Republican in affiliation? I think that’s what they’d like people to think.
However, I don’t see how they can keep claiming that when they do things like this. And in case you think that this was a case of RNC stuff just “slipping by”, the article states, “An RNC official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told The Daily Caller that the signs were given to the group at its request.” So this is organized, requested, help from the Republican Party. And if you’re thinking that the organizers don’t mind the connections being made, think again. As of yesterday, they started blacking out the RNC label on their signs.
Oh, and lest you think this story is nothing but a liberal hit job, note that the story originates from The Daily Caller, Tucker Carlson’s website. And yes, it did pain me to link to it.
Tuesday Open Thread
Welcome to Tuesday. I think we must have survived the Breitbartocalypse. I don’t feel any different. It’s definitely feeling like spring around here. My crocuses have bloomed and my daffodils will bloom any day now. I find it kind of amazing how spring this year was almost like a light switch. We were in winter and then suddenly it’s spring. Let’s get this open thread started.
Health care reform is moving forward. The bill has passed the through the first committee.
A key House committee voted Monday to advance President Obama’s plan to overhaul the nation’s health-care system, clearing the way for the House to vote on the measure later this week.
The House Budget Committee voted 21 to 16 to send the health care legislation to the House Rules Committee. That panel is expected to meet Thursday to draft new language for the reconciliation bill, compiling a package of fixes to the $875 billion measure that passed the Senate on Christmas Eve.
Both President Obama and Speaker Pelosi have expressed confidence that the bill will pass. Expect more and higher volume of Republican whining the closer we get to the historic vote.
Nutty rightwing Virginia AG Ken Cucinelli is in the news again. This time its for a newly disclosed audio tape of Cucinelli expressing his support for the birther movement:
Now, according to audio uncovered by blogger Not Larry Sabato, Cuccinelli is floating his support for yet another fringe conservative idea: the “birther” movement. In an audio clip allegedly recorded during the transition period after his election last year, Cuccinelli is asked how he could legally challenge President Obama’s citizenship. Cuccinelli lays out the legal framework, then adds that such a suit could occur because the “speculation” that Obama is from Kenya “doesn’t seem beyond the realm of possibility”:
Q: What can we do about Obama and the birth certificate thing? Because that’s–
CUCCINELLI: It will get tested in my view when someone, when he signs a law, and someone is convicted of violating it and one of their defenses will be it is not a law because someone qualified to be President didn’t sign it.
Q: Is that something you can do as Attorney General? Can you do that or something?
CUCCINELLI: Well only if there is a conflict where we are suing the federal government for a law they’ve passed. So it’s possible. […] Well, that’s a good question. Not one I’ve thought a lot about because it hasn’t been part of my campaign. Someone is going to have to come forward with nailed down testimony that he was born in place B, wherever that is. You know, the speculation is Kenya. And that doesn’t seem beyond the realm of possibility.
I can tell, this guy is going to be in the news a lot in the next four years. Hopefully he can’t do too much damage to the state of Virginia in the meantime.
Senator Kaufman Takes On Wall Street
Senator Kaufman is delivering a speech today in favor or financial reform. All I can say is wow, you go Ted!
Mr. President, last Thursday, the bankruptcy examiner for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. released a 2,200 page report about the demise of the firm which included riveting detail on the firm’s accounting practices. That report has put in sharp relief what many of us have expected all along: that fraud and potential criminal conduct were at the heart of the financial crisis. Now that we’re beginning to learn many of the facts, at least with respect to the activities at Lehman Brothers, the country has every right to be outraged. Lehman was cooking its books, hiding $50 billion in toxic assets by temporarily shifting them off its balance sheet in time to produce rosier quarter-end reports. According to the bankruptcy examiner’s report, Lehman Brothers’ financial statements were “materially misleading” and its executives had engaged in “actionable balance sheet manipulation.” Only further investigation will determine whether the individuals involved can be indicted and convicted of criminal wrongdoing.
According to the examiner’s report, Lehman used accounting tricks to hide billions in debt from its investors and the public. Starting in 2001, that firm began abusing financial transactions called repurchase agreements, or “repos.” Repos are basically short-term loans that exchange collateral for cash in trades that may be unwound as soon as the next day. While investment banks have come to over-rely upon repos to finance their operations, they are neither illegal nor questionable; assuming, of course, they are clearly accounted for.
Lehman structured its repo agreements so that the collateral was worth 105 percent of the cash it received – hence, the name “Repo 105.” As explained by the New York Times’ DealBook, “That meant that for a few days – and by the fourth quarter of 2007 that meant end-of-quarter – Lehman could shuffle off tens of billions of dollars in assets to appear more financially healthy than it really was.”
Even worse, Lehman’s management trumpeted how the firm was decreasing its leverage so that investors would not flee from the firm. But inside Lehman, according to the report, someone described the Repo 105 transactions as “window dressing,” a nice way of saying they were designed to mislead the public.
Ernst & Young, Lehman’s outside auditor, apparently became “comfortable” with, and never objected to, the Repo 105 transactions. And while Lehman never could find a U.S. law firm to provide an opinion that treating the Repo 105s as a sale for accounting purposes was legal, the British law firm Linklaters provided an opinion letter under British law that they were sales and not mere financing arrangements. And so Lehman ran the transactions through its London subsidiary and used several different foreign bank counterparties.
Mr. President, the SEC and Justice Department should pursue a thorough investigation, both civil and criminal, to identify every last person who had knowledge that Lehman was misleading the public about its troubled balance sheet – and that means everyone from the Lehman executives, to its board of directors, to its accounting firm, Ernst & Young. Moreover, if the foreign bank counterparties who purchased the now infamous “Repo 105s” were complicit in the scheme, they should be held accountable as well.
Returning the Rule of Law to Wall Street
Mr. President, it is high time that we return the rule of law to Wall Street, which has been seriously eroded by the deregulatory mindset that captured our regulatory agencies over the past 30 years, a process I described at length in my speech on the floor last Thursday. We became enamored of the view that self-regulation was adequate, that “rational” self-interest would motivate counterparties to undertake stronger and better forms of due diligence than any regulator could perform, and that market fundamentalism would lead to the best outcomes for the most people. Transparency and vigorous oversight by outside accountants were supposed to keep our financial system credible and sound.
The allure of deregulation, instead, led to the biggest financial crisis since 1929. And now we’re learning, not surprisingly, that fraud and lawlessness were key ingredients in the collapse as well. Since the fall of 2008, Congress, the Federal Reserve and the American taxpayer have had to step into the breach – at a direct cost of more than $2.5 trillion – because, as so many experts have said: “We had to save the system.”
But what exactly did we save?
First, a system of overwhelming and concentrated financial power that has become dangerous. It caused the crisis of 2008-2009 and threatens to cause another major crisis if we do not enact fundamental reforms. Only six U.S. banks control assets equal to 63 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, while oversight is splintered among various regulators who are often overmatched in assessing weaknesses at these firms.
Second, a system in which the rule of law has broken yet again. Big banks can get away with extraordinarily bad behavior – conduct that would not be tolerated in the rest of society, such as the blatant gimmicks used by Lehman, despite the massive cost to the rest of us.
The Lessons of Lehman Brothers and Other Examples
Mr. President, what lessons should we take from the bankruptcy examiner’s report on Lehman, and from other recent examples of misleading conduct on Wall Street? I see three.
First, we must undo the damage done by decades of deregulation. That damage includes financial institutions that are “too big to manage and too big to regulate” (as former FDIC Chairman Bill Isaac has called them), a “wild west” attitude on Wall Street, and colossal failures by accountants and lawyers who misunderstand or disregard their role as gatekeepers. The rule of law depends in part on manageably-sized institutions, participants interested in following the law, and gatekeepers motivated by more than a paycheck from their clients.
Second, we must concentrate law enforcement and regulatory resources on restoring the rule of law to Wall Street. We must treat financial crimes with the same gravity as other crimes, because the price of inaction and a failure to deter future misconduct is enormous.
Third, we must help regulators and other gatekeepers not only by demanding transparency but also by providing clear, enforceable “rules of the road” wherever possible. That includes studying conduct that may not be illegal now, but that we should nonetheless consider banning or curtailing because it provides too ready a cover for financial wrongdoing.
The bottom line is that we need financial regulatory reform that is tough, far-reaching, and untainted by discredited claims about the efficacy of self-regulation.
The Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act
When Senators Leahy, Grassley and I introduced the Fraud Enforcement and Recovery Act (FERA) last year, our central objective was restoring the rule of law to Wall Street. We wanted to make certain that the Department of Justice and other law enforcement authorities had the resources necessary to investigate and prosecute precisely the sort of fraudulent behavior allegedly engaged in by Lehman Brothers.
We all understood that to restore the public’s faith in our financial markets and the rule of law, we must identify, prosecute, and send to prison the participants in those markets who broke the law. Their fraudulent conduct has severely damaged our economy, caused devastating and sustained harm to countless hard-working Americans, and contributed to the widespread view that Wall Street does not play by the same rules as Main Street.
FERA, signed into law in May, ensures that additional tools and resources will be provided to those charged with enforcement of our nation’s laws against financial fraud. Since its passage, progress has been made, including the President’s creation of an interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, but much more needs to be done.
Many have said we should not seek to “punish” anyone, as all of Wall Street was in a delirium of profit-making and almost no one foresaw the sub-prime crisis caused by the dramatic decline in housing values. But this is not about retribution. This is about addressing the continuum of behavior that took place – some of it fraudulent and illegal — and in the process addressing what Wall Street and the legal and regulatory system underlying its behavior have become.
As part of that effort, we must ensure that the legal system tackles financial crimes with the same gravity as other crimes. When crimes happened in the past (as in the case of Enron, when aided and abetted by, among others, Merrill Lynch, and not prevented by the supposed gatekeepers at Arthur Andersen), there were criminal convictions. If individuals and entities broke the law in the lead up to the 2008 financial crisis (such as at Lehman Brothers, which allegedly deceived everyone, including the New York Fed and the SEC), there should be civil and criminal cases that hold them accountable.
If we uncover bad behavior that was nonetheless lawful, or that we cannot prove to be unlawful (as may be exemplified by the recent reports of actions by Goldman Sachs with respect to the debt of Greece), then we should review our legal rules in the US and perhaps change them so that certain misleading behavior cannot go unpunished again. This will not be easy. As the Wall Street Journal’s “Heard on the Street” noted last week, “Give Wall Street a rule and it will find a loophole.”
Systemic issues in Uncovering and Prosecuting Fraud
This confirms what I heard On December 9 of last year, when I convened an oversight hearing on FERA. As that hearing made clear, unraveling sophisticated financial fraud is an enormously complicated and resource-intensive undertaking, because of the nature of both the conduct and the perpetrators.
Rob Khuzami, head of the SEC’s enforcement division, put it this way during the hearing:
“White-collar area cases, I think, are distinguishable from terrorism or drug crimes, for the primary reason that, often, people are plotting their defense at the same time they’re committing their crime. They are smart people who understand that they are crossing the line, and so they are papering the record or having veiled or coded conversations that make it difficult to establish a wrongdoing.”
In other words, Wall Street criminals not only possess enormous resources but also are sophisticated enough to cover their tracks as they go along, often with the help, perhaps unwitting, of their lawyers and accountants.
Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer and Khuzami, along with Assistant FBI Director Kevin Perkins, all emphasized at the hearing the difficulty of proving these cases from the historical record alone. The strongest cases come with the help of insiders, those who have first-hand knowledge of not only conduct but also motive and intent. That’s why I’ve applauded the efforts of the SEC and DOJ to use both carrots and sticks to encourage those with knowledge to come forward.
At the conclusion of that hearing in December, I was confident that our law enforcement agencies were intensely focused on bringing to justice those wrongdoers who brought our economy to the brink of collapse.
Going forward, we need to make sure that those agencies have the resources and tools they need to complete the job. But we are fooling ourselves if we believe that our law enforcement efforts, no matter how vigorous or well funded, are enough by themselves to prevent the types of destructive behavior perpetrated by today’s too-big, too-powerful financial institutions on Wall Street.
Is Lehman Brothers an Isolated Example?
Mr. President, I’m concerned that the revelations about Lehman Brothers are just the tip of the iceberg. We have no reason to believe that the conduct detailed last week is somehow isolated or unique. Indeed, this sort of behavior is hardly novel. Enron engaged in similar deceit with some of its assets. And while we don’t have the benefit of an examiner’s report for other firms with a business model like Lehman’s, law enforcement authorities should be well on their way in conducting investigations of whether others used similar “accounting gimmicks” to hide dangerous risk from investors and the public.
The Case of Greece
At the same time, there are reports that raise questions about whether Goldman Sachs and other firms may have failed to disclose material information about swaps with Greece that allowed the country to effectively mask the full extent of its debt just as it was joining the European Monetary Union (EMU). We simply do not know whether fraud was involved, but these actions have kicked off a continent-wide controversy, with ramifications for U.S. investors as well.
In Greece, the main transactions in question were called cross-currency swaps that exchange cash flows denominated in one currency for cash flows denominated in another. In Greece’s case, these swaps were priced “off-market,” meaning that they didn’t use prevailing market exchange rates. Instead, these highly unorthodox transactions provided Greece with a large upfront payment (and an apparent reduction in debt), which they then paid off through periodic interest payments and finally a large “balloon” payment at the contract’s maturity. In other words, Goldman Sachs allegedly provided Greece with a loan by another name.
The story, however, does not end there. Following these transactions, Goldman Sachs and other investment banks underwrote billions of Euros in bonds for Greece. The questions being raised include whether some of these bond offering documents disclosed the true nature of these swaps to investors, and, if not, whether the failure to do so was material.
These bonds were issued under Greek law, and there is nothing necessarily illegal about not disclosing this information to bond investors in Europe. At least some of these bonds, however, were likely sold to American investors, so they may therefore still be subject to applicable U.S. securities law. While “qualified institutional buyers” (QIBs) in the U.S. are able to purchase bonds (like the ones issued by Greece) and other securities not registered with the SEC under Securities Act of 1933, the sale of these bonds would still be governed by other requirements of U.S. law. Specifically, they presumably would be subject to the prohibition against the sale of securities to U.S. investors while deliberately withholding material adverse information.
The point may be not so much what happened in Greece, but yet again the broader point that financial transactions must be transparent to the investing public and verified as such by outside auditors. AIG fell in large part due to its credit default swap exposure, but no one knew until it was too late how much risk AIG had taken upon itself. Why do some on Wall Street resist transparency so? Lehman shows the answer: everyone will flee a listing ship, so the less investors know, the better off are the firms which find themselves in a downward spiral. At least until the final reckoning.
Who’s Responsible? The Role of Congress, Regulators, Accountants and Lawyers
Who’s to blame for this state of affairs, where major Wall Street firms conclude that hiding the truth is okay? Well, there’s plenty of blame to go around. As I said previously, both Congress and the regulators came to believe that self-interest was regulation enough. In the now-immortal words of Alan Greenspan, “Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder’s equity — myself especially — are in a state of shocked disbelief.” The time has come to get over the shock and get on with the work.
What about the professions? Accountants and lawyers are supposed to help insure that their clients obey the law. Indeed, they often claim that simply by giving good advice to their clients, they’re responsible for far more compliance with the law than are government investigators. That claim rings hollow, however, when these professionals now seem too often focused on helping their clients get around the law.
Experts like Professor Peter Henning of Wayne State University Law School, looking at the Lehman examiner’s report on the Repo 105 transactions, are stunned that the accountant Ernst & Young never seemed to be troubled in the least about it. Of course, the fact that a Lehman executive was blowing a whistle on the practice in May 2008 did not change anything, other than to cause some discomfort in the ranks. While saying he was confident he could clear up the whistleblower’s concerns, the lead partner for Lehman at Ernst & Young wrote that the letter and off-balance sheet accounting issues were “adding stress to everyone.”
As Professor Henning notes, one of the supposed major effects of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act was to empower the accountants to challenge management and ensure that transactions were accounted for properly. Indeed, it was my predecessor, then-Senator Biden, who was the lead author of the provision requiring the CEO and CFO to attest to the accuracy of financial statements, under penalty of criminal sanction if they knowingly or willfully certified materially false statements. I don’t believe this is a failure of Sarbanes-Oxley. A law is not a failure simply because some people subsequently violate it.
I am deeply disturbed at the apparent failure of some in the accounting profession to change their ways and truly undertake the profession’s role as the first line of defense (the gatekeeper) against accounting fraud. In just a few years time since the Enron-related death of the accounting firm Arthur Andersen, one might have hoped that “technically correct” was no longer a defensible standard if the cumulative impression left by the action is grossly misleading. But apparently that standard as a singular defense is creeping back into the profession.
The accountants and lawyers weren’t the only gatekeepers. If Lehman was hiding balance sheet risks from investors, it was also hiding them from rating agencies and regulators, thereby allowing it to delay possible ratings downgrades that would increase its capital requirements. The Repo 105 transactions allowed Lehman to lower its reported net leverage ratio from 17.3 to 15.4 for the first quarter of 2008, according to the examiner’s report. It was bad enough that the SEC focused on a misguided metric like net leverage when Lehman’s gross leverage ratio was much higher and more indicative of its risks. The SEC’s failure to uncover such aggressive and possibly fraudulent accounting, as was employed on the Repo 105 transactions, provides a clear indication of the lack of rigor of its supervision of Lehman and other investment banks.
The SEC in years past allowed the investment banks to increase their leverage ratios by permitting them to determine their own risk level. When that approach was taken, it should have been coupled with absolute transparency on the level of risk. What the Lehman example shows is that increased leverage without the accountants and regulators and credit rating agencies insisting on transparency is yet another recipe for disaster.
Conclusion
Mr. President, last week’s revelations about Lehman Brothers reinforce what I’ve been saying for some time. The folly of radical deregulation has given us financial institutions that are too big to fail, too big to manage, and too big to regulate. If we have any hope of returning the rule of law to Wall Street, we need regulatory reform that addresses this central reality.
As I said more than a year ago: “At the end of the day, this is a test of whether we have one justice system in this country or two. If we don’t treat a Wall Street firm that defrauded investors of millions of dollars the same way we treat someone who stole 500 dollars from a cash register, then how can we expect our citizens to have faith in the rule of law? For our economy to work for all Americans, investors must have confidence in the honest and open functioning of our financial markets. Our markets can only flourish when Americans again trust that they are fair, transparent, and accountable to the laws.”
The American people deserve no less.
If video becomes available, I’ll add it.
Cap and Trade is Not a Tax; or Why Delmarva Dealings Failed His Economics Class
Because in spite of this attempt to invoke this appeal to the authority of a basic economics class (which this person Cato has clearly never had), just claiming that TAXES ARE BAD is just not an argument when dealing with cap and trade. Because cap and trade is not a taxation system, it is an emissions trading system for emissions allowances.
Those allowances price in to the cost of energy production and delivery the cost of pollution by greenhouse gasses. But they also represent a total cap of emissions too. Back in the 90’s a cap and trade system for emissions causing acid rain was implemented and has been more successful — and cheaper — than expected. The reason that this is not a tax is because the power plant owns something of value when they buy an allowance. And because an emissions trading system typically builds in some scarcity (the cap — the number of allowances is finite and that number typically decreases after time), those allowances can become fairly valuable. But also fairly expensive for a plant that is pretty dirty. A some point, a plant will discover that it is in its business interests to just invest in cleaning up rather than to continue to pay for allowances. Plants that are cleaner or who get cleaner (if they time it right) can have a valuable asset to sell to those plants who are still dirty and still in need of many allowances. These allowances start to really devalue once the demand for them slows — after lots of plants clean up.
There aren’t any taxes that act that way. But apparently they only way he can possibly object to this scheme is to misname it. But this is a conservative and one of their core tenets is hat taxpayers should always foot the bill to cleanup after corporate polluters. And yet for SO2, pollution reduction attainment was faster than expected, compliance costs by power plants was lower than predicted, and energy prices did not get out of control.
But go take a look at what an emissions market — cap and trade — did for SO2 emissions since 1989. (I can’t embed that map, but do click the arrow in the lower left hand of the map to start the animations.)
I don’t normally answer back blogs calling out my work, but this one is important. Cap and trade has a real and hugely successful history here, in the US (in fact, Tom Carper is working on new SO2 and NOx criteria in a revised version of the CAA that will include, I think Mercury) and the biggest reason it has been successful is that it used the power of markets to drive different behavior, let each plant decide for itself how it could most efficiently reduce its emissions AND its timetable for doing so and reduce the environmental costs for all of us. But mostly I trust that the liberals and progressives who read here will actually get how these markets work — unlike the conservatives among us who (in spite of their claims otherwise) really don’t get how markets should work and just resort to their usual clowning to make a point.
Delaware General Assembly Pre-Game Show: Tuesday, March 16, 2010
They’re ba-a-a-a-ck. For three weeks…before they break for Easter. The ‘honorables’ (shout out to Ralph Moyed) return to Dover with expansion of casino gambling apparently at the top of the ‘to-do, or not to-do’ list.
I support expansion beyond the current race-track sites, not b/c I was a strong advocate for casino gambling in the first place, but because the ‘fig leaf’ of using casino gambling to save the horse racing industry always was, and remains a joke. Either you have casino gambling or you don’t. We do, so it only makes sense to open it up to more than a highly-dubious and unworthy monopoly. I ‘get’ the arguments against casino gambling, and I am not unsympathetic, but those arguments were already rejected when the racetracks got gambling. The only debate now is whether casino gambling should be arbitrarily restricted to the racetracks. I see no reason why that should continue to be the case.
But I digress. And that’s because there’s little of interest on today’s agenda.
Once again, the Senate appears to have been completely taken by surprise by the reconvening of session, and its agenda is no agenda.
By contrast, the House has some fairly interesting bills on its agenda. Two of which would fall under the purview of the Insurance Commissioner’s office, aka the purview of the hopelessly inept, if not corrupt, Karen Weldin Stewart:
HB 314 (Rep B. Short) would enable certain types of captive insurance companies to be incorporated in Delaware. While the intent of increasing economic development through fully implementing Delaware’s captive insurance laws is admirable, something about linking ‘Karen Weldin Stewart’ with ‘captive insurance companies’ sets my Spidey Sense to tingling. I hope that this legislation is literally ‘fool-proof’, because we’re dealing with a fool as IC and some unsavory characters actually running the show.
HB 137 (Rep. D. Short) requires the IC to arrange for random audits for small business insurance carriers. Excellent legislation, but be aware that some agencies have histories of ‘ignoring’ mandates like this. It will be up to the General Assembly to make sure that the IC, especially THIS IC, carries out this mandate.
Also on the agenda is Sen. DeLuca’s ill-advised constitutional amendment, SB 60, which would enable the General Assembly to impinge upon the judiciary in determining what offenses bail should not be permitted for. Unfazed by their disastrous excursions into minimum mandatory sentencing, the Socratic Solons, led by Tom Sharp’s spiritual successor DeLuca, want to prove they’re ‘tough on crime’ by using ‘bail conditions’ for campaign fodder. The House should put this piece of crapola out of its misery with dispatch.
Which puts an end to this dispatch with dispatch. Tune in tomorrow for my wrap-up and preview.
QOD: Celibacy
Given the latest Catholic Church scandal… is it time to rethink the vow of celibacy?
Senior Church figures in Germany meanwhile called for priestly celibacy to be reviewed, a tradition Benedict defended on Friday as a “the sign of full devotion” and of an “entire commitment to the Lord”.
The Church “should reflect on whether there are . . . conditions that favour abuse,” the Sueddeutsche Zeitung daily cited ZdK head Alois Glueck as saying, citing loosening celibacy regulations as “one way”.
I agree with both statements. Celibacy should be reviewed and there are conditions that favor abuse. First, the vow of celibacy immediately rules out a lot of people for priesthood by demanding the repression of one the strongest natural drives. And given the fact that only men can be priests it also strikes me as an insult to women – as if marrying or having sex with women was somehow unholy and unworthy.
As far as the “conditions that favor abuse” point I completely agree because when a priest breaks the vow of celibacy he cannot openly break it. Immediately, it becomes an act of secrecy. And control, because silence is necessary. Add to that an institution that has moved heaven and earth to cover up the sins of their priests and you achieve favorable conditions, even a safe haven for predators.
Now, I am not trying to paint all priests with the same brush (that’s not fair), but there’s no denying that the Catholic Church has a big problem – a problem that their leaders have gone out of their way to cover up rather than address. It’s pretty bad when the words “pedophile priest” go together with the same ease of “pit-bull attack.” Perhaps removing the celibacy requirement would be a good first step. And while I don’t believe celibacy leads to pedophilia I do believe the rule is so broad that it forces all infractions underground and into the shadows… where not only can’t they be discussed, but they must be covered up.
I struggled with this post mainly because the vow of celibacy cover all sexual acts – which I believe is one of the main problems. The vow of celibacy is as expansive as it is restrictive.
Note: I am not bashing anyone’s religion, nor am I promoting celibacy as the cure-all. I don’t have all the answers on this question. I only know something is not working.
Demon Sheep Part Deux
Back in February, we introduced you to Carly Fiorina’s Demon Sheep ad. Today, we give you the her Hot Air ad.
The Senate Releases Its Financial Reform Plan
The Senate’s financial reform plan was released yesterday by Sen. Chris Dodd:
The plan would create a nine-member council, led by the Treasury secretary, to watch for systemic risks, and direct the Federal Reserve to supervise the nation’s largest and most interconnected financial institutions, not just banks.
But the bill, which would amount to the most sweeping change in financial rules since the Depression, would preserve much of the existing regulatory architecture, which has been criticized for being too fragmented. And it would rely on a new mechanism for seizing and liquidating a huge financial company on the verge of failure, one that would diminish, but not eliminate, the likelihood of future bailouts.
The proposal, which was put forward by Christopher J. Dodd, the chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, included significant concessions to Republicans, compared with an initial draft Mr. Dodd released in November. It also contained provisions urged by President Obama to restrict banks’ ability to engage in certain forms of speculative trading.
This part sounds familiar: The proposal […] included significant concessions to Republicans. I’ll bet exactly 0 of them will vote for it anyway but we’ll have to beg Landrieu, Lincoln, Nelson and Lieberman to vote for it anyway.
The new consumer bureau would write rules banning abusive and unfair terms for mortgages and other financial products. Its director, appointed by the president for a five-year term, would set its budget, and the Fed would pay for it.
In a concession to Republicans, a consumer rule could be set aside if the council decided, by a two-thirds vote, that it put the banking system’s safety and stability at risk.
The bill would also create a $50 billion fund, paid for by the largest financial companies, for the orderly liquidation of a company that is collapsing and whose failure would have “serious adverse effects on financial stability in the United States.”
The provision for orderly liquidation would be invoked only as a last resort, if a company’s financial ties were too complex to be resolved through normal bankruptcy proceedings.
It sounds like there’s a lot of nuance here and I think it will depend on how the regulations are enforced. For example: if a company’s financial ties were too complex to be resolved through normal bankruptcy proceedings, that sounds like an out to me. Who decides this? But having authority to takeover and break up a company like Lehman or AIG would have been useful during this last financial crisis.
Elizabeth Warren has expressed tepid optimism about the plan:
Elizabeth Warren, the lead advocate for the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency, seems to like—or, at least, not dislike—the financial reform package (finally) released on Monday by Sen. Chris Dodd, the Democratic chairman of the Senate banking committee. In the summary of the legislation, Dodd notes that his bill would create the CFPA as an independent bureau within the Federal Reserve—which could pose problems—but that it will have the power to write and enforce rules governing the sale of various financial products, including credit cards and mortgages. Yet its enforcement powers would not extend to banks with less than $10 billion in assets. In a statement, Warren notes:
Since bringing our economy to the brink of collapse, Wall Street has spent more than a year and hundreds of millions of dollars in an all-out effort to block financial reform. Despite the banks’ ferocious lobbying for business as usual, Chairman Dodd took an important step today by advancing new laws to prevent the next crisis. We’re now heading toward a series of votes in which the choice will be clear: families or banks.
Reform is desperately needed. As we all suspected, the bank bailouts were done without punishing anyone and they are merrily doing what they did before – jacking up fees and giving the profits to themselves. I think the CFPA is perhaps the most important part of this reform package which is why it is the most controversial provision. We’ll see if Democrats have learned lessons from the health care reform fight – that big business is not necessarily the side of the fight to be on – because the pressure to kill reforms will be enormous.
FCC Rolls Out Its National Broadband Plan Today
As noted on Sunday (did you send in a question to the FCC Chair?), FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski will deliver the National Broadband Plan to Congress today and then I imagine he’ll be everywhere talking about this plan. They released an Executive Summary today (pdf), which looks more like a To Do List than an Executive Summary. But if you plan on watching any of this on CSPAN (I imagine it will be on CSPAN, right?), this serves as a nice program to the festivities. What this seems to point to is an ambitious plan that counts extensive, fast and affordable broadband access as a key economic engine for the future. And it is a nice touch to roll this out during the week of the 25th anniversary of the Dot Com.
One of the major pieces here is the reclaiming of a fair bit of spectrum from TV stations and auctioning that off for mobile wireless use. This also includes increasing broadband access across the country, increasing broadband competition and upping the service level to 100 megabits/second 100 million customers in 10 years, more user privacy protections and an initiative to educate the currently computer illiterate. What isn’t here is the fervently wished for nationwide buildout by the government of a fiber network.
There’s lots of reporting (including the NYT article I linked to Sunday) noting that there will be a pitched battle over this plan from cable, telecoms and tech companies. But according to this blogpost from Comcast, they definitely dispute the idea that there will be a pitched battle over this plan — largely because they’ve been kept in the development loop here. (Thanks for this tip to Simon Owens, who has a fantastic blog called Bloggasm.) And the CEOs of a number of tech companies (no telecoms or cable companies here) sent a letter to the FCC Chairman broadly encouraging of this policy work.