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Mr. Slick Goes to Washington -- Wall Street Reform


Mr Change 1
Photo: Courtesy Truthdig.com
"He has blundered into a deepening quagmire in Afghanistan, has continued the Bush policy of buying off Wall Street hustlers instead of confronting them and is now on the cusp of bargaining  away the so-called public option, the reform component of his health care program."

Robert Scheer,  Obama's Presidency Isn't Too Big to Fail

The New Democrat is the Old Republican. Just as the Old Republicans devolve into some sort of deranged regional Confederate Party full of Michael Douglas' "Falling Down" character, taking the perceived demise of the white male in society as some sort of personal attack on their world.

The religious fanatics populating the Old Republicans are an angry unintelligible mass of screamers without logic. Raised by not sparing the rod, these beaten little Christers are now lashing out in the anger as the adults of abused children. The abused become the abusers in Max Blumenthal's well researched analysis of the angry white mobs of the Christian right... the New Confederate Party.

The New Democrat is really the old Rubin-McAuliffe corporate Democrat. McAuliffe whose guiding political philosophy is "Hey pal, payola for me not the other guy's party..." witnessed for the first time in 2006 Democrats receiving more campaign bribes from corporations than the Republicans by 60% to 40% advantage. Pelosi and Reid behaved like it. Not able to find the votes to stop anything or for any traditional Democrats populace position promised in the elections. From 2006 to 2008, Reid and Pelosi's marching orders came from their corporate owners whose bidding was carefully followed with excuses to the public.

So why would Wall Street and corporate power hand $600 million for a presidential campaign to an obscure first term center from Illinois with political speeches like these?

"This is a verdict on the failed policies of the last eight years that said that we should strip away consumer protections, let the market run wild, and prosperity would rain down."

"You've got to have somebody in Washington who is thinking about the middle class and not just those who can afford to hire lobbyists."

"It's not enough just to help those at the top. Prosperity is not just going to trickle down."

"The problem we have is that Washington has become a place where good ideas go to die. They  go to die because the lobbyists and special interests have a strangle-hold on the agenda in Washington."

Mr. Change, Presidential Debate, University of Texas, Austin, February 21, 2008.
"We'll make it clear to the special interests that their days of setting the agenda in Washington are over, because the American people are not the problem in this 21st century--they are the answer."
Mr. Change, Speech in Flint, MI, in "Change We Can Believe In," p.258-9 Jun 15, 2008.

Robert Scheer, the west coast Seymour Hirsch, hits the nail on the head finding the fatal flaw in the snow blower named Obama. Brand Obama is fading fast, about to be found out by the gullible American public as nothing more than the empty calories of a political slurpee in a wasteful plastic convenience store cup. Scheer is not alone in detailing the constant contradiction in the campaign rhetoric of Mr. Change versus the actions of the now elected Mr. Slick.

Regulation?

"Let's, first of all, understand that the biggest problem in this whole process was the deregulation of the financial system. Sen. McCain, as recently as March, bragged about the  fact that he is a deregulator. On the other hand, two years ago, I said that we've got a sub-prime lending crisis that has to be dealt with."
Mr. Change, Presidential Debate, Belmont University, Nashville, Tennessee, October 7, 2008.

According to Business Week's Chad Terhune and Robert Berner, the new Mr. Slick "save the economy policy" is reinflating the housing bubble using the FHA to spread new sub prime loans:

FHA-Backed Loans: The New Subprime

"Washington, meanwhile, has vastly expanded the availability of such taxpayer-backed loans as part of the emergency campaign to rescue the country's swooning economy."

"Their new strategy: taking advantage of a long-standing federal program designed to    encourage homeownership by insuring mortgages for buyers of modest means."

"You read that correctly. Some of the same people who propelled us toward the housing market calamity are now seeking to profit by exploiting billions in federally insured mortgages."

Regulation?? The Birth of Mr. Slick 
"A year ago, I went to Wall Street and said we've got to reregulate, and nothing happened."

Mr. Change, Presidential Debate, University of Texas, Austin, February 21, 2008.

Mr Saint
Photo: Courtesy Phil Stock World
"Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age."

"The state of our economy calls for action: bold and swift."

"But this crisis has reminded us that without a watchful eye, the market can spin out of control. The nation cannot prosper long when it favors only the prosperous."

"To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history..."

Transcript: Barack Obama's Inaugural Address, January 20, 2009.

Allow me to retort, Mr. President.

8 months ago you were sworn in with the high rhetoric of change and reigning in Wall Street's greed that had brought down the economy. Yet your solution was to send the compromised regulator Tim Geithner to Wall Street to bring back a plan. Take the Federal Reserve whose shareholders, Chase, Citi, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs are the very players who caused the destruction through fraud and criminality, have the Fed as the new super regulator. The problem is the Fed had the power to stem the fraud and corruption and completely failed to do so. After all, look at who owns the Fed...

In response to Obama's speech on Wall Street, September 15, 2009. Professor of Economics, Columbia University, Joseph Stiglitz in the UK Guardian:

For all Obama's talk of overhaul, the US has failed to wind in Wall Street

"Last night Barack Obama defended his administration's response to the financial crisis, but the reality is that a year on from Lehmans' collapse, it has failed to take adequate steps to restrict institutions' size, their risk-taking, and their interconnectedness. Indeed, it has allowed the big banks to become even bigger - just as it has failed to stem the flow of profligate executive bonuses. Obama's call on Wall Street yesterday to support "the most ambitious overhaul of the financial system since the Great Depression" is welcome - but the devil, as ever, will be in the detail."

"But the Obama administration has created a new concept: institutions too big to be resolved, too big for capital markets to provide the necessary discipline. The perverse incentives for excessive risk-taking at taxpayers' expense are even worse with the too-big-to-be-resolved banks than they are at the too-big-to-fail institutions. We have signed a blank cheque on the public purse. We have not circumscribed their gambling - indeed, they have access to funds from the Fed at close to zero interest rates, and it appears that "trading profits" have (besides "accounting" changes) become the major source of returns."

"I fear that our collective response has been mistaken and inadequate - that we may just have made matters worse. The financial sector would like us to believe that if only the Federal Reserve and the Treasury had leapt to the rescue of Lehman all would have been fine. Sheer   nonsense. Lehmans was not a cause but a consequence: a consequence of flawed lending practices, and of inadequate oversight by regulators.

Professor William Black, Associate Professor, Economics and Law, University of Missouri, Kansas City was a deputy director at the former Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. during the Reagan deregulation fueled savings and loan crises of the 1980s.

Professor Black HAS credibility because he is the man with THE record in the last banking scandal. In spite of repeated resistance and interference from the Reagan and Bush Sr. administrations, Black help round up Keating, corrupt Senators and brought criminal charges and 1,000 felony convictions for S&L insiders with about 700 doing  jail time.

From Bill Moyers April 2009 interview with Professor Black, Bill Moyers Journal, PBS

Moyers' Introduction:

"William K. Black, author of THE BEST WAY TO ROB A BANK IS TO OWN ONE, teaches economics and law at the University of Missouri -- Kansas City (UMKC). He was the Executive Director of the Institute for Fraud Prevention from 2005-2007. He has taught previously at the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and at Santa Clara University, where he was also the distinguished scholar in residence for insurance law..."

"Black was litigation director of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, deputy director of the FSLIC...and senior deputy chief counsel, Office of Thrift Supervision. He was deputy director of the National Commission on  Financial Institution Reform, Recovery and Enforcement."

"Black developed the concept of "control fraud" -- frauds in which the CEO or head of state uses the entity as a "weapon." Control frauds cause greater financial losses than all other forms of property crime combined...and served as an expert for OFHEO in its enforcement action against Fannie Mae's former senior management."

The Interview:

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Geithner is charging, is covering up. Just like Paulson did before him. Geithner is publicly saying that it's going to take $2 trillion -- a trillion is a thousand billion -- $2 trillion taxpayer dollars to deal with this problem. But they're allowing all the banks to report that they're not only solvent, but fully capitalized. Both statements can't be true. It can't be that they need $2 trillion, because they have masses losses, and that they're fine.


WILLIAM K. BLACK: These are all people who have failed. Paulson failed, Geithner failed. They were all promoted because they failed, not because...

BILL MOYERS: What do you mean?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, Geithner has, was one of our nation's top regulators, during the entire subprime scandal, that I just described. He took absolutely no effective action. He gave no warning. He did nothing in response to the FBI warning that there was an epidemic of fraud. All this pig in the poke stuff happened under him. So, in his phrase about legacy assets. Well he's a failed legacy regulator.

BILL MOYERS: But he denies that he was a regulator. Let me show you some of his testimony before Congress. Take a look at this.

TIMOTHY GEITHNER: I've never been a regulator, for better or worse. And I think you're right to say that we have to be very skeptical that regulation can solve all of these problems. We have parts of our system that are overwhelmed by regulation.

Overwhelmed by regulation! It wasn't the absence of regulation that was the problem, it was despite the presence of regulation you've got huge risks that build up.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, he may be right that he never regulated, but his job was to    regulate. That was his mission statement.

 ...WILLIAM K. BLACK: I think, first, the policies are substantively bad. Second, I think they completely lack integrity. Third, they violate the rule of law. This is being done just like Secretary Paulson did it. In violation of the law. We adopted a law after the Savings and Loan crisis, called the Prompt Corrective Action Law. And it requires them to close these institutions. And they're refusing to obey the law.

BILL MOYERS: In other words, they could have closed these banks without nationalizing them?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Well, you do a receivership. No one -- Ronald Reagan did receiverships.Nobody called it nationalization.

BILL MOYERS: And that's a law?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: That's the law.

BILL MOYERS: So, Paulson could have done this? Geithner could do this?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Not could. Was mandated--

BILL MOYERS: By the law.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: By the law.

BILL MOYERS: This law, you're talking about.

WILLIAM K. BLACK: Yes.

BILL MOYERS: What the reason they give for not doing it?

WILLIAM K. BLACK: They ignore it. And nobody calls them on it. 

As Barron's astutely points out in an April 2009 interview, The Lessons of the S&L Crisis:

"We have failed bankers giving advice to failed regulators on how to deal with failed assets. How can it result in anything but failure?"

"If they are going to get any truthful investigation, the Democrats picked the wrong financial team. Tim Geithner, the current Secretary of the Treasury, and Larry Summers, chairman of the National Economic Council, were important architects of the problems. Geithner especially represents a failed regulator, having presided over the bailouts of major New York banks."

"Geithner has appropriated the language of his critics and of the forthright to support dishonesty. That is what's so appalling -- numbering himself among those who convey tough medicine when he is really pandering to the interests of a select group of banks who are on a first-name basis with Washington politicians."

As astute financial blogger Jesse from Jesses Café American notes:

Stock Market Rally: Shenanigans Abound

"Obama and his team have NO credibility for reform on Wall Street after their handling of  Goldman Sachs and the AIG payouts."

"Inflation is good for financial assets, and we think another bubble is in the cards, at least for now given Obama's unwillingness to reform, unless some exogenous event or actor intervenes."

Is Jesse alone? Analyst Larry Doyle from "Sense on Cents" Whatever Happened to Financial Reform

"Today President Obama will make a campaign stop on Wall Street to promote his calls for financial regulatory reform. We will receive the standard platitudes. Obama will likely recruit a few high profile Wall Street executives to support his initiatives or lack thereof. The fact is, Wall Street has been working diligently to make sure that ultimately "business as usual" carries the day." 

Kevin Depew at Minnyanville, Five Things: The Myths of the Crisis

"Think about it this way. The word credit comes from the Latin "credere," which means, literally, "to believe, or to trust." That is really all you need to know about the modern financial system. When the credere is gone, the whole thing unravels, and it works both ways, from lender to borrower, and from borrower to lender. This is why monetary and fiscal policies aren't working."

"Well, unfortunately, we're rapidly moving right back to the same place we were before the real issues facing us in The Crisis became apparent. In other words, all that has happened is that the doctor (the government) has been successful in treating the symptoms of the disease (failed institutions and widespread insolvency), but in doing so the disease itself (too much debt) has actually worsened."

Wall Street Reform- Mr. Slick gets an "F"

Straightening Out Wall Street Cartoon: By Mike Keefe, The Denver Post
"We are at a defining moment in our history, going through the worst financial crisis since the  great depression..."
Mr. Change, Presidential Debate, University of Mississippi, September 26, 2008.

Oh really? You could not tell by the Obama lack of action, the sin of omission.

So how does an eloquent speech delivering academically accomplished graduate from Harvard Law mislead those who voted for him on the true intent of his policies?

Like Reid and Pelois who have been in control of Congress since 2006 but yet just can't seem to find the votes on any of those supposed positions of the Democratic Party...

Mr. Change simply fails at all those promises of Wall Street reform, ending imperial wars for profit at tax payer expense and now the most stark failure to put forward any measure of health care reform. The New Democrats know who their corporate masters are and now do the bidding of Wall Street and corporate power by selling out the American public at every turn.

Mr. Change ran a campaign of implication. He IMPLIED to progressive voters that he was all about "fairness" and Wall Street reform. He campaigned repeatedly on the excess of greed and reform to help main street. He parsed his words, made vague implications.

Once elected he claimed we all just did not hear what he said...

Mr. Change ran a campaign calling for the end to unjust wars that the American public was lied into by the installed Junta regime of Bush the Dunce. Mr. Change campaigned long and loud about how he had voted against Congressional approval for the Iraq war, while his opponent from Clinton time had been a war monger.

Once elected he claimed we all just did not hear what he said...

Mr. Change campaigned on Health care for all. Mr. Change campaigned on reform of the current rip off system that enriches health insurance corporations while denying treatment to those with insurance and dumping any one with an anything as pre existing condition from the roles after taking their premiums year after year in a criminal cabal of rip off. Mr. Change even campaigned for universal single payer.

Once elected he claimed we all just did not hear what he said...

Now progressives may start to be getting the picture. Mr. Change is in fact Mr. Corporate, Mr. Tool of Wall Street.

Mr. Change is careful. He is a word parser and clever dealer in logic and implication when speaking. He continually tells those who voted for him that it is their fault they implied what was not there. The biggest and most useful weapon of Mr. Change for his Wall Street and Corporate masters against the American people is his sin of omission.

It is more important what Mr. Change DOES not do rather than continuing to buy the kool-aid and listen to those eloquent speeches of high rhetoric. He talks major reform but some how never acts or accomplishes. This is the pattern. Talk the big game but never do anything.

This has been the Pelosi/Reid MO since being given a majority in 2006. Mr. Change has embraced this style of inaction as cover for the looting of the American public by Wall Street, continuing foreign wars for corporate profit that bleed the American tax payer and kill the sons and daughters of the less advantaged.

Now what may be the final straw to the American public... Health Care Reform that wasn't. It won't kick in until 2013 once Mr. Change is safely reelected. Then the big screw turns. Simply look at the Willard "the Rat" Romney Massachusetts plan of forced public purchase of private policies with no reform of the corrupt health insurance industry. Premiums are going up at 10% a year including a 9% increase this year.

Even with the careful timing of the "big health care screw," progressives and independents must be starting to catch on. Mr. Change is in fact Mr. Slick, a flim flam man, a con artist a bull shitter. Of the big three campaign themes of Mr. Slick, the economy, Wall Street reform, ending unjust wars and health care "reform," the first big failure of Mr. Slick is lack of Wall Street reform.

Mr. Slick allowed his minions to use Fed monetary policy to flood the investment banks with capital. Being the greedy worms they are, Wall Street banks leveraged the cash like crazy and went on an equity market pumping binge. Summers et al do know one thing... higher stock prices mean higher consumer confidence. As Summers and the boys love to trot out these two pointless statistics along with a host of BLS manipulated economic statisitics unemployment (way too low), GDP (way too high), CPI (way too low)...

Is there a pattern here? Can you believe any statistic or green shoot report out of this government or corporate owned news media?

The Great Transformation: Mr. Change to Mr. Slick

The Flim Flam Man

Photo: Courtesy Jesse's Cafe Americain

"The Obama Economics and Regulatory Team, in conjunction with the Federal Reserve, have accomplished no serious reform of the fiancial system. They have enabled the type of market inefficiency, soft fraud and price manipulation that is undermining global confidence in the integrity of US markets and financial products. And they have advanced a proposal to consolidate a huge amount of regulatory power under the Federal Reserve, a private banking agency that was at the root of our unfolding financial crisis.

The time has passed when Obama could have pointed to the past mistakes of his predecessors as the fault for our problems. Thanks to Tim Geithner, Barney Frank, and Larry Summers he now owns the financial crisis, and the coverups, policy errors, scandals, conflicts of interest and bailouts that have occurred since he has taken office. His reappointment of Ben Bernanke as Federal Reserve chairman most surely tied a bow on his ownership package for the crisis, which is in danger of becoming his 'financial New Orleans.'

Wall Street insiders and their enablers pig out on public money while the nation suffers. This is not change, this is business as usual."

Jesse: August 9, 2009, US Equity Markets Look Dangerously Wobbly As Insiders Sell In Record Numbers

Mr. Slick owes somebody something. The somebody is the masters of Wall Street. The something is the $600 million to run a Madison Avenue slick campaign to sell the people on the latest brand illusion.

Once upon a time Reagan and the conservative Republicans looked Madison Avenue slick thanks to the backing of Wall Street worm and CIA criminal Bill Casey and Alfred Bloomingdale. Reagan and his cronies looked smart, competent, man with the plan. In contrast, Mondale, Tip O'Neil and Michael Dukakis could not come up with a plan to tie their own shoes on time.

So what has changed? Now it is Democrats who appear Madison Avenue slick, smart, competent, men and women with the plan. By contrast Boehner (pronounced Bone-er) and Cantor can't even stand in front of the press with a budget plan that has any numbers inside... just a cartoon cover, a National Chairman so policy dumb and contradiction challenged that he makes less sense than the guests on Jerry Springer...

These are the same Republicans that looked so smart just two decades ago and Democrats that looked so dumb. It is the same people...people. So what changed? Nothing. Just the big money propaganda switched sides to buy the other brand and sell it to you as something new Madison Avenue style. It is working as the new brand of Kool-Aid, the super popular brand even in the face of over whelming evidence that the new Kool-Aid is just some cheap powder in a bag that is not to our benefit, just the benefit of elite wealth who own this government and the country.

It is in fact the same old soak the working class and screw us until we melt policy.

Mr. Slick says that is change you and I can believe in. 

Here is change I can believe in:


felons and roach 70Photo:  "We the Jury" Courtesy of Portfolio.com

If you got this far, thanks for reading.

Care to comment? Refute my facts with facts. Save invalid argument, fallacy of logic and shrill dogma for the Daily Kos where such fundamentalism is celebrated...

11 Comments

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Okay, I'm busted! I didn't read all of it, I skimmed some on accoutta gettin acid-y stomach.
Mike Keefe's cartoon was juuuuust right. I listened to Obama's Wall Street speech; I thought he was begging The Street to be good. The stock market, predictably, yawned.
Free-market (anti-regulation) capitalist money is trying, and may succeed, in dooming the Consumer Protection Agency before it is even off the ground. In interviews, Elizabeth Warren is trying to act hopeful that the agency will have teeth, but even if it odes, it ain't enough.
Many try to make a case against re-regulating banks and other non-bank lenders: you can never really legislate against greed, and even if regs exist, they won't be enforced, and people can always find away around the regs. Well, that's not quite a good enough reason, is it?
Jump, you fuckers.

p.s. This is not all down to the President, as you say. The Congress could do plenty more, but how do you take corporate money and banking money and regulate against them?
I wonder what Paul's Investigate the Fed" will come to? Where is our Pecora Commission?

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Yeah sorry it was so long. I could have broken this up into one or two posts and been more focused.

It is really simple. Glass-Steagall now. Investment banks can do what ever they want... over there. Deposit banks over here and well regulated. Insurance companies in corner #3 and never shall they meet.

All derivatives conform to standardization and are traded on an exchange.

William Black at FDIC. Brooksley Born at SEC. Well, fire Timmie.

Thanks for reading.

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The best, and most concise, observation about where we are as a country as I have seen in a long time.

There are no more liberal and conservative parties, just corporate left and corporate right...and supporters of the corporate right more and more seem to be Corporate Persons, a la the "Corporate Personhood" variety, and angry paranoid white people who don't have a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of and think everybody should be happy being just like them.

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Thanks. I really thought no one would read it because it was so long... or I would get hate mail. If I put this on Kos my post would be on fire by now.

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Good blog. Looks like Dodd is relatively serious about banking reform. As long as Obama doesn't actively sabotage efforts like in the HCR bill, maybe something good will come out of the process.

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This Times article yesterday suggested that Dodd is working counter to the administration plan and even used the comparison of Baucus and HCR:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/20/business/economy/20regulate.html

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Yes, not much detail in there apart from the regulatory consolidation measure. But having Shelby, Warner and Schumer on board for serious reform is a good sign. One just hopes Geithner is sufficiently weakened politically to pose less of an obstacle.

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Thanks for the compliment.

Dodd is up for reelection. If I played three mortgage monte with Tangelo Mozilio on my three Connecticut homes at special special "Friends of Tangelo" rates... I would be talking tough too.

But Dodd is all talk and take a banking bribe, no action.

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Just a couple of thoughts.

Re: The religious fanatics populating the Old Republicans are an angry unintelligible mass of screamers without logic. Raised by not sparing the rod, these beaten little Christers are now lashing out in the anger as the adults of abused children. The abused become the abusers in Max Blumenthal's well researched analysis of the angry white mobs of the Christian right... the New Confederate Party

I betcha many of them might be as open to lynching Wall Streeters as you are--just sayin'--you could form a coalition or something.

Mr. Change campaigned on Health care for all. Mr. Change campaigned on reform of the current rip off system that enriches health insurance corporations while denying treatment to those with insurance and dumping any one with an anything as pre existing condition from the roles after taking their premiums year after year in a criminal cabal of rip off. Mr. Change even campaigned for universal single payer.

Once elected he claimed we all just did not hear what he said...

Um, no, you're just plain wrong here, and it's not a matter of opinion. He never campaigned on single payer. He didn't even campaign on universal coveraage, since his proposal was not to have mandates. So his change to being amenable to mandates after his election is actually a change more towards universal coverage than what he promised during his campaign. Let me guess, you never read his campaign health care plan, and weren't listening to him on topic during the debates?

So how does an eloquent speech delivering academically accomplished graduate from Harvard Law mislead those who voted for him on the true intent of his policies?

I think David Seaton predicted your post in his blog screeds here decrying Obama during the primaries. He's a lefty who read up on Obama's campaign proposals, and he didn't like those eloquent speeches and the rallies, he thought they might cause a lot of progressives not paying attention to Obama's actual stated policies to imagine the wrong things about him, he even thought Obama might be doing that on purpose.

On war, I don't believe you were paying attention to his words either. He said Iraq was an unjust war but that Afghanistan was not, and that he wanted to ramp up the Afghanistan effort.

Did you read Obama's books or any of his campaign white papers? If you had, you would have realized he is a moderate with a strong preference for capitalist systems. All your main points in this post scream that you didn't do your homework as a voter.

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I did not vote for him. I don't vote for corporate worms of either "party."

I saw the Wall Street money pouring in by July 2008... A Wall Street lawyer is a lobbyist. There was plenty of lobbyist money pouring into "No Lobby Obama."

I notice you don't refute the fact Obama has flat out lied about Wall Street reform...

This is the first of three. For my critique on Obama the "Peace Candidate" that is going up today.

Thanks for the intellectual challenge though... you and your president are wrong on so many issues.

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Here you go artappraiser.

You are wrong pal:

"Um, no, you're just plain wrong here, and it's not a matter of opinion. He never campaigned on single payer. He didn't even campaign on universal coveraage,..."

Obama speaking to the Illinois AFL-CIO, June 30, 2003:

“I happen to be a proponent of a single payer universal health care program.” (applause) “I see no reason why the United States of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, spending 14 percent of its Gross National Product on health care cannot provide basic health insurance to everybody. And that’s what Jim is talking about when he says everybody in, nobody out. A single payer health care plan, a universal health care plan. And that’s what I’d like to see. But as all of you know, we may not get there immediately. Because first we have to take back the White House, we have to take back the Senate, and we have to take back the House.”

Youtube's a bitch:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpAyan1fXCE

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