Hillary “Stepping Off The Very Fast Track”


Clinton ‘stepping off the very fast track,’ but not retiring

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton bucked the suggestion Wednesday that she’s retiring, instead saying that she’s taking a break.

“I don’t know if that is a word I would use, but certainly stepping off the very fast track for a little while,” she said in response to a reporter’s question about her retirement plans. The comments came at Clinton’s first appearance before the press since she returned to work following several weeks of illness including a brief hospitalization for a blood clot in her head.

“I am back in the swing,” she said. “I am thrilled to be back and I am also incredibly grateful for this fabulous team that I have here at the State Department who never missed a beat during the time I was away.”

But her return to Foggy Bottom is “somewhat bittersweet” because it will be followed soon by her departure.

Clinton said she is already working on “a very smooth, seamless transition” ahead of the expected confirmation of Sen. John Kerry to her job.


Take some time and put your feet up, Hillary. Sip some wine and watch a sunset. Turn off the ringer on the phone.

I give it six weeks and then she’ll be climbing the walls looking for something to do. She’s been going and going like the Energizer Bunny for several decades now. She might slow down but she won’t stop.


The Best Hitter Ever

barrybonds


Shut Out: Nobody Elected to 2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Class

Major League Baseball’s Hall of Fame will not add a new member to its 2013 class.

This was the first year steroid users like Barry Bonds, the sport’s single-season and career home run king and only seven-time Most Valuable Player, and Roger Clemens, the game’s only seven-time Cy Young Award Winner, were eligible to go to Cooperstown.

Players have to receive at least 75% of the votes from nearly 600 voters to get into Cooperstown. This season, former Houston Astros great Craig Biggio received the highest share of votes (68.2%). Clemens and Bonds received 37.6% and 36.2% of the vote, respectively. Clemens, Bonds, Mike Piazza, Biggio, and others who appeared for the first time on the ballot this year have 14 more years to get elected by the writers.

There are nearly 600 eligible voters from the Baseball Writers Association of America who are eligible to vote. Voters have to have been members of the organization for 10 consecutive years at any point in their careers.


Barry Bonds is the best hitter to ever play the game. Just ask any SF Giants fan. The same year he set the record for home runs in a single season he also set the record for intentional walks. Watching him turn on a pitch was a thing of beauty. Since AT&T Park opened in 2000 there have been 62 home runs hit over the right field wall into McCovey Cove. Barry Bonds hit 35 of them (including the first one).

Yes, Barry Bonds used steroids. So did lots of other players including pitchers. We really don’t know how many but steroids have been around since the 1950′s. There are players in the Hall of Fame who threw spitballs and used corked bats. The off-field exploits of Hall of Fame players like Babe Ruth and Mickey Mantle are both infamous and legendary.

There is a reason that the Major League Baseball owners and players resisted testing for steroids. Steroids enhance performance and performance puts fans in the stands. If Barry Bonds deserves to have an asterisk next to his records then so does every player and every team during the same era.

Barry Bonds deserves to be in the Hall of Fame.



Obama’s Binders Are Full Of Men

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The Boyz Club


Let us hearken back to those long ago days of autumn when Mitt Romney committed a major gaffe:

Mitt Romney showed up Tuesday night talking about “binders full of women” being brought to him when he was governor. Sounds kind of kinky and certainly not something you want to be touting.

The phrase was part of Romney’s answer to a question from an audience member at the second presidential debate about how he would “rectify the inequalities in the workplace.” Referring to when he took over as Massachusetts governor, he said, “I had the chance to pull together a Cabinet, and all the applicants seemed to be men,” he said. “I went to a number of women’s groups and said, ‘Can you help us find folks?’ and they brought us whole binders full of women.”

The “binders” moment went viral immediately on Twitter, spawning @RomneysBinders and @womaninabinder Twitter handles. As of Wednesday morning, almost 300,000 people had supported a Facebook page about what a politically dumb statement it was. Romney may soon say it was “inelegant” phrasing or he didn’t finish his statement or some other excuse, but the comment shows why voters, especially women, don’t trust him and don’t believe he has their back.


The media and internets went wild. Feminists in high dudgeon took turns explaining how insensitive and offensive the comment was. The general consensus on the left was that it was further proof of a GOP War on Women (GOPWOW).

Good thing for you wimmens that Romney lost, right?

Yesterday’s NY Fishwrap:

Obama’s Remade Inner Circle Has an All-Male Look, So Far

In an Oval Office meeting on Dec. 29, 11 of President Obama’s top advisers stood before him discussing the heated fiscal negotiations. The 10 visible in a White House photo are men.

In the days since, Mr. Obama has put together a national security team dominated by men, with Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts nominated to succeed Hillary Rodham Clinton as the secretary of state, Chuck Hagel chosen to be the defense secretary and John O. Brennan nominated as the director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Given the leading contenders for other top jobs, including chief of staff and Treasury secretary, Mr. Obama’s inner circle will continue to be dominated by men well into his second term.

[...]

The White House itself employs almost exactly the same number of men and women, and administration officials said they hoped to even out the ratio across the government and help ensure that future Democratic administrations have a diverse and deep bench of candidates for high-level jobs.

But Mr. Obama’s recent nominations raised concern that women were being underrepresented at the highest level of government and would be passed over for top positions.


Boy, nobody could have predicted that!

Obama was the candidate who called women reporters “Sweetie” and “Hon”. Obama was the candidate who paid his female staffers less than women. Obama was the candidate whose campaign weaponized misogyny. And now Obama’s White House has turned out to be the He-Man Woman Haters Club.

But wait! There’s more! The Times can’t let Obama go undefended:

Interviews with current and former members of the administration, both men and women, suggested that there was no single reason for the gender discrepancy in administration appointments, and several repeatedly spoke of the administration’s internal commitment to diversity and gender equity.

But several said that the “pipeline” of candidates appeared to be one problem. They said it seemed that more men than women were put forward or put their names forward for jobs. In part, that might be a result of the persistence of historical discrepancies: men have traditionally dominated government fields like finance, security and defense.


Sounds like a good place for some affirmative action!

Last but not least, the classic gender discrimination defense:

She noted that women with young families, more so than men with young families, tended to drop out of jobs that demanded long hours — a trend also noted by administration officials. Perhaps as evidence of that skew, there were about 57 percent more male appointees than female appointees at the assistant or deputy assistant level.


Statistics can be deceiving, but not in this case. Obama has shown a persistent pattern of discriminating against women. Oh, sure, he hires women. But he pays them less than men and promotes them less than men. Women in his administration tend to end up in subordinate positions or find their authority undermined.

Hillary was an exception but she didn’t end up as Secretary of State because Obama wanted her running foreign policy. That was the deal they made in exchange for her and Bill’s support. If he didn’t need her to get elected she wouldn’t even have been appointed as dog catcher.

I spent the past four years feeling sorry for all the people who were duped into voting for Obama. But I’m not feeling sorry for them any more. If you were stupid enough to vote for him you deserve what you get. The same thing goes for anyone who threw their vote away on somebody other than Mitt Romney.

You had your chance. You blew it. Now you own it.


Crimeless Victims

Foreclosure-Fraud-


(WARNING: This another one of those posts where I defy liberal orthodoxy and cause people to think I have turned into a whip-kissing racist Republican. You have been warned.)


Forbes:

Finding Little Evidence Of Foreclosure Fraud, Feds Give Up

Over at the Huffington Post they’re still talking about “rampant foreclosure fraud.” But I was always skeptical of claims banks were stealing houses from innocent homeowners. One big problem with that theory: Banks lose money on virtually every house they take back in foreclosure. And now the federal government seems to agree.

With a pair of terse notices yesterday, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency basically admitted that its elaborate process for turning up evidence of fraud in hundreds of thousands of loan files was a waste of money.

[...]

The outcome shouldn’t come as a surprise. After I wrote a piece critical of the parallel mortgage settlement with state attorneys general last year, comparing it to the deeply flawed tobacco settlement, I was barraged with comments from critics accusing me of downplaying foreclosure fraud. I responded with one simple question: Has there been a single case in the past five years of a homeowner who was current on his mortgage being foreclosed through fraud?

Silence. I did get a lot of legal gobbledygook from marginally competent lawyers who, as it turns out, were the real crooks in the foreclosure crisis. For excessive fees, they offered underwater borrowers the false hope they could somehow keep their homes without paying for them, either by challenging the foreclosure paperwork or convincing a judge that the national registry system known as MERS was not the legitimate party to foreclose. Those tactics mostly failed. The Federal Trade Commission has a website devoted to protecting borrowers from the real scammers in the foreclosure crisis, and prosecutors have found plenty of fraud. Last September North Carolina AG Roy Cooper, for example, sued three foreclosure assistance firms for charging upfront fees and delivering nothing in return.

The reality is robosigning couldn’t have been the cause of foreclosure fraud because robots can’t engage in the self-interested behavior that underlies fraud. Robosigning was just an acknowledgement that in a large, modern lending institution only the central computer registry of mortgages contains all the information about loans, and no lawyer at the periphery can possibly possess additional information beyond what is in that registry.

[...]

Fraud is a flexible term, of course, and many lawyers think it includes lending money to people who have no hope of paying it back. This so-called “predatory lending” doesn’t make any economic sense, unless you’re willing to buy the theory that the fees flowing from an ultimately unprofitable loan were enough to induce bankers to destroy their own institutions in search of a year-end bonus. That’s possible, but it downplays the responsibility of the borrowers who signed detailed loan documents, filled with caveats and cooling-off periods mandated by federal regulators.

As for robosigning computers stealing homes, still not much evidence for that. If you know of a case, do let me know.


I wrote a post or two about foreclosure fraud a while back. When the foreclosure crisis first started I was gullible enough to accept the claims of fraud at face value. But when I started to write about it something just didn’t add up.

According to the OWS crowd and some lefty bloggers, the foreclosure crisis was all a big scam wherein the Evil Big Banks conspired to steal peoples’ homes by getting the people to borrow money and then foreclosing on them. The only problem is that scheme does not make any sense.

The purpose of fraud is to make money. Fraud is a non-violent crime. The scam artist wants to convince the “marks” (that’s us) to part with our money and/or valuable property in exchange for something of little or no value. There are lots of variations, including everything from check forgery and credit card scams to pyramid schemes and full-fledged “stings”.

Now let’s look at a typical real estate transaction. You have a buyer, a seller and a lender. The seller is the grantor. They own the property and want to trade it for money. They will make money only if they receive more for the property than they originally paid. Up until recently it was commonplace for sellers of real estate to make huge profits (aka “capital gains”) from properties they held only a short time.

The buyer wants to acquire the property either to live in, as an investment, or both. They are willing to trade money in exchange for the property. Unfortunately, they don’t have enough money to make the seller happy.

This is where the lender comes in. The lender has money they want to invest in order to make more money. One way they do this is by loaning the money to other people with interest. The interest is their profit. They make money only if the loan AND the interest are paid. This may take 20 or 30 years to complete.

The lender agrees to give the buyer the money to pay the seller. The buyer agrees to repay the loan plus the interest. To protect the lender’s investment the buyer also agrees to give the lender a deed of trust securing the loan against the property. That way if the buyer fails to repay the loan the lender can sell the property to get their money back.

It is important to note that the lender does not really want the property. If they did they would have simply bought it themselves. They want the buyer to fulfill the loan agreement.

There are typically some other people involved such as realtors, inspectors, examiners and escrow agents. These people make their money off the transaction and once the sale is complete they are no longer involved. The seller walks away with the money and their part is finished as well. All that is left is the buyer and the lender. As long as the buyer keeps making the agreed upon payments everything is hunky-dory.

A default occurs when, for whatever reason, the buyer stops making the agreed upon payments. While this may not be the buyer’s fault it is definitely not the lender’s. It doesn’t matter why the buyer stopped making the agreed upon payments, it only matters that they stopped making them.

Before the lender can foreclose on a property there are lots of required hoops they have to jump through first, starting with an official notice to the buyer that they missed one or more of the agreed upon payments. I am not going to describe all those hoops because they vary from state to state and this post is getting too long already.

Normally when a property has been foreclosed upon it is sold at auction by a trustee. The proceeds of this sale are then used to satisfy the loan contract. The measure of damages for breach of contract is to put the lender in the same position they would have been in had the contract not been breached (including costs and fees).

If there is any money left over after the sale it is given to the buyer. If the sale does not cover the lender’s damages then they can pursue a deficiency judgment against the buyer. The lender cannot make an extra profit in a legitimate breach of contract action. Under the law the best case scenario is for lender to end up with the same amount of money either way. More than likely they will end up with less money after a foreclosure.

In order to make money though foreclosure fraud more than one party must be involved and the property in question must be worth substantially more than the value of the loan. The purpose of that kind of a fraud is to acquire the property for less than it is worth and then sell it at a profit and the scam takes place in relation to the trustee’s sale. But that won’t work if the property is worth less than what is owed. These days upside down mortgages are more common than the other kind.

Defenses to foreclosure like “show the note” and claims of robo-signing are legal technicalities rather than defenses on the merits. Mortgages are often bought, sold and traded between lenders. Sometimes Quite often they screw up the paperwork. But just because they screwed up the paperwork doesn’t mean you don’t owe the money.

Foreclosures and evictions are often traumatic because our homes are tied to our sense of identity. But it isn’t “yours” until you finish paying for it. If you don’t pay for it you gotta give it back. If somebody loans you money they aren’t being greedy when they expect you to pay it back.

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