Mind-Body: Making Fish Into Dragons

” At the three-tiered Dragon Gate, where the waves are high,

fish become dragons,

Yet fools still go on scooping out the evening pond water.

Commentary from Zen Mountain Monastery:

There is a Chinese legend about a great dragon gate though which the mighty Yellow River flows, where the waves at the gate are high and the three tiers of the gate are treacherous. On the third day of the third month when the peach blossoms bloom and heaven and earth are ready, if there’s a fish that can get through the dragon gate then horns sprout on its head, it raises its bristling tail, catches hold of a cloud, and flies away becoming a dragon.

But you see, the conditions have to be right. How are the conditions made ready for us to pass through the gate? No one can predict. Yet they don’t become correct by creation, by will, or intent. When the wind of our mind ceases to blow, when the god of fire truly comes looking for fire, then “the sky can’t cover it; the earth can’t support it.”

Yet fools still go on scooping out the evening pond water.

Somebody watches as a fish leaps free of the dragon gate, is zapped by a lightning bolt, and is transformed into a dragon. Then they hurriedly run down to scoop out some of the water to drink, thinking that will make them into a dragon. It must come from deep within. We can’t live another’s life, practice another’s barriers, realize another’s true nature.

Where do you find yourself? What do you need to do before you can live and die completely, unreservedly? Who is asking? How much does it matter? What are you willing to let go of? These are the conditions. They are real and they come to life when we bring them to life. What is Buddha? Please, find out for yourself…”

Banker Bail-Out: JPMorgan Take Down of Lehman?

“Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co., the main lender and clearing agent for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., caused the liquidity crisis that led to Lehman’s collapse, creditors said.

JPMorgan had more than $17 billion of Lehman’s cash and securities three days before the investment bank filed the biggest bankruptcy in history on Sept. 15, the creditors committee said in a filing late yesterday in bankruptcy court in Manhattan. Denying Lehman access to the assets on Sept. 12, the bank “froze” Lehman’s account, the creditors claimed.

JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by deposits, financed Lehman’s brokerage operations with daily advances, while money market funds and other short-term lenders provided overnight loans, according to bankruptcy court documents. When JPMorgan shut Lehman off from funds, Lehman “suffered an immediate liquidity crisis that could have been averted by any number of events, none of which transpired,” according to the filing….”

More at Bloomberg.

Vote Third Party

“The main thing holding together the establishment of the Democratic Party is the phoniness and hypocrisies of the Republican establishment. And the main thing holding together the establishment of the Republican Party is the phoniness and hypocrisies of the Democratic establishment.

Voters meanwhile, who are calling Congress at up to 99-to-1 against a bailout favored by both establishments, are on a course to cancel each other out. They seem set to divide themselves behind each establishment candidate: McCain — marketed as a “maverick” — is in fact a front man for Phil Graham who (as Banking Committee chair) oversaw bank deregulation; and Obama — marketed as a “change agent” — is in effect a front man for Robert Rubin who (as Treasury Secretary) oversaw the same bank deregulation.

The voters — as I propose on VotePact.org — should instead join together. Instead of canceling out each other — one voting for Obama and one for McCain — they should join together in pairs: Brothers and sisters, husbands and wives, coworkers and neighbors and debating partners, union officials and small business owners should pair up and both vote for the third parties of their choice. If they both begin supporting different third parties, that will send a strong message. If they both start backing the same candidate, that could — given the unprecedented series of events — mean the re-alignment of American politics.

The obvious candidate to do this is Ralph Nader…..”

That’s Ramzy Baroud in The Palestine Chronicle.

Hmmm…where’s Paul in that? Why not Paul/Nader (we’ll work out the regulatory part later)? All these are utopian ideas, unfortunately. More viable is to forget politics and try other ways of changing things: pull out of the system as much as possible.

Sandra Goes Beyond the Palin…

Comedienne Sandra Bernhadt has this to say about Sarah Palin:

“Now you got Uncle Women, like Sarah Palin, who jumps on the sh*t and points her fingers at other women. Turncoat bitch! Don’t you f*ckin’ reference Old Testament, b*tch! You stay with your new Goyish crappy shiksa funky bullsh*t! Don’t you touch my Old Testament, you b*tch! Because we have left it open for interpre-ta-tion! It is no longer taken literally! You whore in your f*ckin’ cheap New Vision cheap-ass plastic glasses and your [sneering voice] hair up. A Tina Fey-Megan Mullally broke down bullshit moment.” (rest of the comment censored)

Protecting minorities does not mean insulting and hurting majorities. I am not in favor of hate speech laws at all. But this is utterly misogynistic, anti-Christian (especially fundamentalist), racist and very unfunny. Imagine a moment a white Christian male fundamentalist had said this about some one of another religion….say Muslim, or Hindu, or Jewish. Imagine the furore. This is what PC eventually does. It doesn’t clean up public discourse. It switches the role of victim and tormentor to different groups.

Bankster Bail-Out: What Does Paulson Own and When Will He Own Up to It?

The New China Lobby

Financial blogger, Mish Shedlock, points out that Treasury Secretary Paulson’s plan actually extends to foreign investors. Yes, you read that right. Not to foreign banks headquartered in the US, but to foreign investors. Bad debt (sorry, troubled assets) can move from the foreign branch of a bank to its US branch. Bingo – what’s Mandarin for bingo? – you, the American tax-payer, are on the hook.

None of this should really be surprising. During his time at Goldman Sachs, Paulson made millions of dollars for his firm in China, with commensurate rewards for himself.

In 2006, Goldman Sachs bought into China’s largest bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, for $2.58, one of a number of such deals cut with Chinese state entities, as neoconservative hawks were quick to note. According to knowledgeable people, its profit of $3.9 billion was the biggest ever for the firm since its founding in 1869.

Goldman also bought a stake in Tokyo’s Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, the third largest financial group in Japan in 2003 ($1.26 billion), in return for which Sumitomo Mitsui loaned billions to Goldman Sachs for its investment-grade clients. Both that and the ICBC deal were financed with Goldman’s own money and with investments by its partners, institutions and wealthy clients.

What’s more, Goldman earned more fees than any other of its global competitors in China, being the only foreign securities firm allowed to both trade stocks for brokerage clients and arrange share sales for companies.

[Wonder why Paulson acts so high-handedly? Goldman is notorious for such conflicts].

Knowing that Goldman is the source of a bunch of the credit default swaps now clogging up global finances, we can safely surmise that its Asian clients are now suffering the same toxic shock afflicting its American and European clients. Some European banks just got a wake-up call this week how bad their own situation was, according to the Daily Telegraph.

A Wall Street legend for paranoia and secrecy, “The Firm” didn’t let on for a while how badly it too had been hit. That front fell apart this fall when its stock price swooned, along with those of other financial firms. Recently, the New York Times reported exactly how much Goldman stood to lose from contracts with insurance giant, AIG. If AIG had gone under, Goldman would have lost $20 billion.

The Times also reported, apparently as revelation, that Lloyd Blankfein, current CEO of Goldman, attended weekend meetings with AIG, Paulson, and others, before the AIG rescue was put through.


[Amazing. Powerful corrupt financiers cut backroom deals with each other and twist arms in powerful corrupt DC. Who would have thought? Of course, in the alternative press we were aware of Goldman’s less than Boy Scout past much before the Times lost its innocence, but better late than never….]

Now we can guess why it was necessary to convert Goldman so quickly into a commercial bank. With access to customer deposits, the bank would be able to replenish its capital in short order.

Does Paulson profit personally? Reportedly, he sold his own shares in Goldman before being sworn in as Treasury Secretary in June 2006. Still, the meetings between Blankfein, AIG, Treasury, and the Federal Reserve sound like the worst kind of cronyism, given AIG’s subsequent rescue.

And they’re not the only problem.

1) The amendment of reserve requirements (in Section 128, in both the original and amended versions of the Paulson plan) is another: “Section 203 of the Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 (12 USC 461 note) is amended by striking ‘October 1, 2011’ and inserting ‘October 1, 2008.'”

As Pam Martens points out, this amendment would allow banks to hold zero reserves for transactions, a very enticing prospect for an investment bank in such dire need of capital it had to reinvent itself as a deposit-taking retail bank. And this would go through before the election, before the political scene was altered drastically.

2) The bailout of the financial sector, especially Goldman Sachs, is now a matter of keen interest to a large number of wealthy and influential foreigners – both individuals and private and state-run banks. Paulson’s long-standing ties with these foreign entities, as well as with leading financial entities all over the world, in and of itself constitutes a powerful conflict-of-interest and opens up the question of foreign influence on one of the most powerful offices in our government.

[For instance, since June 2006, more than 100 ICBC executives have attended courses at Goldman’s New York training center, where tutors include Gerald Corrigan, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, who teaches a course on risk management (of all things). ICBC’s board includes Christopher Cole, Goldman’s chairman of investment banking. One of its directors is former Goldman President John Thornton].

When the American state has interests it declares at odds with those of the Chinese state in a number of areas, for example in Africa (where Goldman has a 20% stake in Africa’s largest bank, Standard Bank); when servicemen and women are fighting and dying, ostensibly to protect those interests; when we are threatening other countries with bombing in defense of those interests; shouldn’t the appearance of foreign entities influencing the Treasury Secretary and Federal Reserve policy be treated seriously and transparently?

3) If Goldman went down, ICBC would be severely hit. And so would ICBC’s clients and other investors in ICBC. But it looks like Mr. Paulson would take a big loss too. According to press reports, Mr. Paulson netted a stake reported to be $25 million in the ICBC deal, a stake he and Goldman, as well as investors in Goldman’s private equity funds, are prohibited from selling for three years. A hit to Goldman would hit ICBC (and who knows what else). And a hit to ICBC would hit Paulson’s pocket.

Did Mr. Paulson sell this ICBC stake before he took office or didn’t he? It would be in the national interest to require him to make a public disclosure before this bill is passed.

And then he should resign.

Three- Card Capitalists – The Financial Disappearing Act of 2008

Read my latest piece at Lew Rockwell.com.

Update:

This piece, at first linked on several sites, has suffered censorship, both in the search engines and on reddit (see this link:

http://www.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/74pgc/threecard_capitalists_the_financial_disappearing/?sort=old)

If you think it’s information worth spreading, please take the time and link and post widely, making sure nothing is altered. People need to know what is happening.

“Treasury Secretary Paulson’s Financial Disappearing Act of 2008 is a charade. Lawmakers who dug in and blocked this act of economic treason deserve applause.

The Orwellian name of the legislation itself should have frozen every American citizen in his tracks.
The economy is not about to implode and if it were, it’s doubtful if government would do it anything but harm.

The financial markets are in a crisis of confidence because the US government is debasing its currency and stiffing its creditors. Uncle Sam is a deadbeat and the world knows it. The world is worrying what to do about the useless paper it’s holding. That’s what the panic is about.

It’s a strange day when Barry Goldwater and the Chinese Communists are in agreement ….

And they are both right….”

Trying to get this out before the vote tonight, I missed spotting this  juicy bit: The Hankster was going to use tax money to bail out foreign investors, as well. No, you heard that right. Not banks HQ’d in the US. But foreign investors who can move their assets from the foreign branch to the US branch. Read more at Mish Shedlock.

Off-the Record: Treasury Caught In Private Conference Call with Analysts…

Here’s something to boggle the mind – Treasury giving financial analysts a private preview of the Paulson deal before the rest of us rubes. What did they do, give them a sell recommendation on the US? That’s what’s wrong in these circles. Everything is done off the record or off-book. Re off-book, check out this post on how Lehman stashed its bad assets off-book in entities it spun off, so they could look good for analysts….

Conference Call (Sept. 28) :

8:54: Okay, someone please please dial in because the hold music sounds so damn familiar but I can’t figure out what it is and it is killing me.

9:00: I’m still on hold

9:02: Yes, Stairway to Heaven! And still holding

9:04 Michael Peace (?) takes the mic “this is very positive…we’ve worked hard with congress…it’ll be good…Neil from the treasury will go over how the warrants works and exec comp”

9:05 Broad discretion for the treasury

9:06 Neil takes the mic
You might’ve heard the headline number: seeking 700 bn. for residential and commercial assets. (yes, we’re aware). “we sought broad authority and flexibility”

– They might use the authority for “other instruments”

– Let us be clear: “targeted at financial system NOT failing institutions, though there are some institutions in that system that are, you know, failing.”
9:08: Any institution that has a “meaningful presence in the US” should be allowed to participate. Congress said they wanted: oversight, tax payer protection. OUR highest priority: “making sure it works”…it needs to attract companies to participate…warrants, exec comp were highly negotiated…we think we have enough flexibility to have a system that works.

Read the rest (and weep) at Naked Capitalism.

House Defeats Bail-Out Bill (updated Sept.30)

“WASHINGTON – The House on Monday defeated a $700 billion emergency rescue for the nation’s financial system, ignoring urgent warnings from President Bush and congressional leaders of both parties that the economy could nosedive into recession without it.

Stocks plummeted on Wall Street even before the 228-205 vote to reject the bill was announced on the House floor.”

More on this at MSN.

And here’s what happened in the stock market – biggest one day drop in the Dow since 9/11

With the prospect of more to come.

 

NOW HANK PAULSON SHOULD STEP DOWN

Comment:

Comment: (Sept. 30)

Regulation to ban short-selling or to expand home ownership have high moral reasons attached to them. But invariably, when you dig under the rhetoric, you find the economic or political self-interest pushing it: financial sectors want special protection from market forces….or banks want to sell mortgage loans.

It’s a conundrum called “Baptists and Bootleggers.”
Baptist preachers want liquor banned for moral reasons, but a ban only pushes liquor underground. Bootleggers begin to operate. The bootleggers are only too happy to support the preachers….. for altogether selfish, commercial reasons – the wider a ban on selling liquor, the less competition for them. Eventually, you end up with a monopoly. That’s why in the corporate-state we have more and more consolidation in every area – media conglomerates, publishing giants, giant agribusinesses – that have driven smaller operators out of the field. The big players are inevitably the supporters of “more regulation” and “more government” – because they know they can strengthen their hold on the marketplace even more. Confused voters blame big business (correctly) and politicians (correctly), identify the problem as the free market (wrongly), and demand more regulation (wrongly –  actually, let me modify that. I am all for anti-trust and strong criminal prosecutions of financial crimes; but that’s to keep the ground-rules fair. Regulation to achieve substantive ends I think is generally counterproductive or causes unintended harm that usually outweighs the intended good).

The Hussman Solution to Wall Street’s Crisis

September 22, 2008 An Open Letter to the U.S. Congress Regarding the Current Financial Crisis

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
This article may be reprinted and distributed without further permission

Summary Of Principles

1) Public funds must function to increase the capital of distressed financial companies, not simply to take bad assets off of the balance sheet at market value……

2) In return for these funds, the government should NOT take equity (which is a subordinate claim and also creates potential conflicts of interest), but instead should take a SENIOR claim that precedes not only the stockholders but also the senior bondholders in the event the company defaults anyway…….

3) Ideally, the rate of interest on such funds should be relatively high (which will encourage these firms to substitute private financing as soon as possible), but actual payment should be made once the firms are again profitable so that the payment burden does not weaken them during the present recession.

4) The bill should allow for expedited bankruptcy resolution for these institutions, so that in the event of failure, the “good” bank (all assets and customer liabilities, but excluding debt to bondholders) can be cut away and liquidated to an acquirer as a “whole bank” sale.

5) To assist homeowners, the bill should allow for a reduction of mortgage principal during foreclosure, but the mortgage lender should also receive a Property Appreciation Right (PAR) that gives the original lender a claim on future property appreciation up to that original mortgage amount.…..

More here.

JPMorgan Chase Gives Lehman Mouth-to-Mouth

This could be kosher but a correspondent who sent this to me suggests otherwise:

JPMorgan Gave Lehman $138 Billion After Bankruptcy (Update3)
By Tiffany Kary and Chris Scinta

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) — JPMorgan Chase & Co. gave $138 billion this week in Federal Reserve-backed advances to the broker dealer unit of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. to settle Lehman trades and keep financial markets stable amid the biggest bankruptcy in history, according to a court filing.

One advance of $87 billion was made on Sept. 15 after the pre-dawn bankruptcy filing, and another of $51 billion was made today, Lehman said in court documents. Both advances were made to settle securities transactions with customers of Lehman and its clearance parties, according to the filing.

The advances were necessary “to avoid a disruption of the financial markets,” Lehman said in the filing.

The first advance was repaid by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on the night of Sept. 15, Lehman said. JPMorgan said in a statement that the $51 billion advance was also repaid and the process will zero out the advances at the end of each day.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge James Peck in Manhattan approved an order confirming that advances JPMorgan is providing are covered by existing collateral agreements with Lehman and its affiliates. JPMorgan holds about $17 billion in collateral to secure the money it advances to clear the trades, Lehman attorney Richard Krasnow said.

`Comfort Order’

“I believe the comfort order for the benefit of JPMorgan Chase under these clearance agreements, while unusual in my experience, is entirely appropriate,” Peck said. There were no objections to the request.”

More here.