Friday, April 9, 2010

Did you see Rubin testifying to congress?

Did you see Rubin testifying to congress?  He blames the people under him.  One of them reports that he told Rubin.

The entire mindset is interesting.  It would be like inviting the person that robbed your house to dinner and honoring him and then asking, "You being an expert, can you tell me how to avoid being robbed in the future?"  Of course, this does not happen, but with Rubin and Paulson it happens every few years.  Amazing.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

open letter to michelle obama food organic and advertising


Hi Michelle Obama,

I listen to your let's move campaign.  I agree.  I've created http://move.brooklynmarathon.com long ago to enable better running and exercise support for people.

I recommend that in your talks about healthy foods that you TALK ABOUT ORGANIC FOODS and STOP saying SUGAR so much.  You know that if you tell me NOT to do something they WILL do it.

So instead of talking about ADVERTISING healthy foods, what we should do is tell people SIMPLY DO NOT BUY FOODS THAT YOU SEE ADVERTISED.  I do this and the results are amazing.  ALSO DON'T BUY FOOD THAT IS PACKAGED OR PROCESSED.  It's that simple.

And as for why healthy food cost more than unhealthy foods,  IS IT VERY SIMPLE, the US GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIZES CORN and SOY and WHEAT.  The cows eat this.  remove the subsidies and let cows eat grass as evolution intended.  and meat will diminish and vegetables will rise.

We are programmed to crave salt, sugar and fat.  But these are rare in nature as they should be.

If you are going to speak about this, speak the truth.

This is amazing and Rubin says he's sorry and that's it. Imagine you embezzling funds from a bank and when you are caught you say "oh i'm sorry" and walk out. It would never happen. You would be crucified. We need to investigate, subpoena and indict

This is amazing and Rubin says he's sorry and that's it.  Imagine you embezzling funds from a bank and when you are caught you say "oh i'm sorry" and walk out.  It would never happen.  You would be crucified.  We need to investigate, subpoena and indict Rubin and the rest.

But Prince and Rubin did not take direct responsibility for leading the company into a financial morass. They said they were not aware until the fall of 2007 of the high risks of the mortgage-backed assets the company was holding and largely blamed the company's problems on a confluence of outside market forces.


Regrets of ex-Citigroup execs don't satisfy federal panel

By Jim Puzzanghera
Updated: 10:59 AM 4/9/2010
Reporting from Washington-- Two former top executives of Citigroup Inc. on Thursday publicly apologized for the financial crisis and the near collapse of the giant firm that required a taxpayer bailout of $45 billion, but took heat from a federal panel investigating the crisis for not accepting blame for the company's dramatic fall.

"Let me start by saying I'm sorry. I'm sorry the financial crisis has had such a devastating impact on our country," former chief executive Chuck Prince told the federal commission investigating the causes of the financial crisis. "I'm sorry that our management team, starting with me, like so many others, did not see the unprecedented market collapse that lay before us."

Prince's mea culpa came on the second of three days of hearings by the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission into the subprime mortgage meltdown. He was followed by former Citi board chairman, Robert Rubin, who expressed regret for the failure of himself and others to see the approaching financial turmoil.

"Almost all of us in the financial system, including financial firms, regulators, rating agencies, analysts and commentators, missed the powerful combination of forces at work and the serious possibility of a massive crisis," said Rubin, who served as Treasury secretary under President Clinton. "We all bear responsibility for not recognizing this, and I deeply regret that."

But Prince and Rubin did not take direct responsibility for leading the company into a financial morass. They said they were not aware until the fall of 2007 of the high risks of the mortgage-backed assets the company was holding and largely blamed the company's problems on a confluence of outside market forces.

Democrats and Republicans on the panel ripped the two executives for diverting blame.

"At the end of the day, the two of you in charge of the organization did not seem to have a grip on what was happening," said commission Chairman Phil Angelides, a Democratic appointee.

"I'm not so sure apologies are as important as assessment of responsibility. . . . Instead of asking what did you know and when did you know it, I should be asking what didn't you know and why didn't you know it," he said.

The panel's vice chairman, Bill Thomas, a Republican appointee, slammed Prince and Rubin for not returning any of the tens of millions of dollars in compensation they received before Citigroup's fall. He said a "simple apology" isn't enough "no matter how often you feel really really sad."

Citigroup has been the most contrite of the firms that received a major bailout, and because of the large amount of assistance it received, has been a major focus of lawmakers and the panel investigating the crisis.

Last month, Citi's current chief executive, Vikram Pandit, publicly thanked taxpayers for the $45 billion in federal money that helped save the company in late 2008. The bailout also included a government guarantee of $102 billion for a large portion of Citi's assets. That guarantee has since been removed. Citi in December repaid $20 billion of the bailout. The remaining money was converted into a $27-billion government ownership stake

The Treasury Department said last week it intends to cash in those shares, which could result in an $8-billion profit for the government.

Prince said risk assessments by Citigroup on about $40 billion of highly rated securities based on subprime mortgages turned out to be "dramatically wrong." But he said he could not fault company employees for acquiring those assets because of their AAA-plus credit ratings.

"Having $40 billion of AAA-plus-rated paper on the balance sheet of a $2-trillion company would typically not raise a concern," Prince said. But the value of those assets began deteriorating amid the collapse of the housing market. Prince resigned in Nov. 4, 2007, after Citigroup announced $8 billion to $11 billion in write-downs for those investments, which ultimately cost the company $30 billion.

Although Prince and Rubin said they were not alone among financial executives to miss signs of the coming crisis, commission member Byron Georgiou, a Democratic appointee, said they and others were "hallucinatory" given the risks being taken with subprime mortgages.

"When you look at the fundamentals, it belies logic," to say the crisis was impossible to foresee, he said.

The financial crisis inquiry panel is focusing much of their three days of hearings on Citi's problems. On Wednesday, Richard Bowen, the former senior vice president and business chief underwriter of CitiMortgage Inc., testified that he began warning company officials in 2006 about the risks being taken with securities backed by subprime mortgages. He finally sent an e-mail on Nov. 3, 2007, to Rubin and other top officials "resulting in significant but possibly unrecognized financial losses existing" within Citigroup.

Rubin said Thursday he referred the e-mail to the appropriate company officials and "I do know factually that was acted on promptly." Angelides asked Rubin to submit details on who acted on it and how.

jim.puzzanghera@latimes.com

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

open letter to obama war

Hi Barack Obama,

Be honest with yourself and rest, the entire war industry is part of your support and therefore your personal opinion does not matter.

The wikileaks video of americans killing as if life is a video game shows that you are really powerless against the military and money powers that really run this part of the economy.

War is not inevitable. But it is inevitable if you sit back and do nothing and let the ones who financially depend on war rule you.

It is very sad.

All you have to say is "americans, make me stop the constant wars" and set up a focal point (website, phone number) for people to list their concerns. and vote. Let's set up a real democracy and have a referendum on the war and see who votes for war and who votes for peace.

Thanks,
Ralph Yozzo

Friday, January 22, 2010

A plan for Mayor "King" Bloomberg to become President

Statistics on the 2009 New York City Mayor's Race.


$108,371,685 (paid by bloomberg) / 557,059  (votes for bloomberg)

$194.54  / vote

That's approximately $200 per vote bloomberg paid.



So, if there are 200 million American voters, and let's say Bloomberg can buy votes at $200 per vote.

Let's say he buys 101 million votes.  That would cost him $20,200,000,000  about $20 billion

Unfortunately our mayor is a little short.  He only has about $16 billion currently.

Monday, December 7, 2009

mary wittenberg salary vs. running fees

Here's some comments that I've heard recently:

Now the NYC half marathon has risen from 65 dollars last year to 84 this year a 34 percent increase for members.  
  
The NYC marathon is 61.6 percent higher than 3 years ago.  now  $ 160 (for members)
 
Outrageous


We realize that they are the few that don't want to know about what is happening to our running community, but there are those that don't know and want to know.

So, here's an update.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

An Open Letter to Barack Obama

Hi,
 
 I support the health care message. I believe that you are not thinking things through however. If there is no price controls (of course because this is devil-take-the-hindmost america) and no public option AND you mandate that insurance companies MUST cover so-called pre-existing conditions, THEN what is to stop the insurance companies from saying: "no problem, we cover you even though you have cancer, that will be 1 million bucks a month." Also you are completely wrong on Bill Gates. His goal from the beginning was money and crushing competition. Which he still tries to do (albeit with less success) to this day.