The Lunatic Fringe in the Middle | ramblings on modern life

Attack of the Giant Page 425

Many of you have gotten this email.

B-note: This is a partial quote from the email. He cites several dozen more, but these are the “horrifying, shocker” lines referred to and originally printed by the author in red.

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I URGE YOU TO READ THIS ALL THE WAY THROUGH AND IF YOU DON’T LIKE WHAT IS THERE TO PLEASE CALL YOUR CONGRESSMAN AND SENATORS TO OBJECT BECAUSE IF WE DON’T OBJECT THIS WILL BECOME THE LAW.

Subject: If you don’t want to even think about this, but surely you must oppose i…

If you have been in favor of any of the healthcare plan, you better think again. It will be tyranny for us. Let your congressman and senator know how you feel.

All of this is more than HORRIFYING, but for the biggest shocker look at page 425.

Peter Fleckstein has looked at Obama’s Healthcare Bill and if his comments are accurate this bill would be the most encompassing act of tyranny ever in the history of these United States. Here is what he says the bill says:

At the end of his comments there is a link to the actual bill itself so that you may check the accuracy of his comments.

PG 425 Lines 4-12 Govt mandates Advance Care Planning Consultation. Euthanasia and Doctor-Assisted Suicide.

Pg 425 Lines 17-19 Govt will instruct consult regarding living wills, and assume power of attorney of all enrollees. Mandatory!

PG 425 Lines 22-25, 426 Lines 1-3 Govt provides approved list of end of life resources, guiding you in death decisions to end your life.

PG 427 Lines 15-24 Govt mandates program to mandatory end of life programs. The Govt will mandate how your life ends.

Pg 429 Lines 1-9 An “advance care planning consultant” will be used frequently as a patient’s health deteriorates

PG 429 Lines 10-12 “advance care consultation” may include an ORDER to initiate end of life plans. AN ORDER from GOV to terminate a life.

Pg 429 Lines 13-25 – The govt will specify which Doctors can write an end of life order.

PG 430 Lines 11-15 The Govt will decide what level of treatment you will have at end of life

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Oh my God!!!!!
Government mandated suicide!!!
Just like that Star Trek episode with the guy from MASH committing suicide at age 60 by law. How horrific!!!!!!

I don’t want anyone to think I’m for bill HR 3200 in any way. It’s garbage for 32,000 reasons including the euthanasia scare.

But not the way you think.

We’ve all gotten the horror email about killing old people. It says the bill mandates this outright in black and white.

The concern is real, though the bill doesn’t say that.

HR 3200 doesn’t give the government the powers of euthanasia that the emails describe.

It does guarantee the medical community, especially insurers like Blue Cross, that they can charge Uncle Sam once every 5 years for a “consultation” for every patient that qualifies for Medicare. More often than that if there’s a change in the person’s health.

These provisions are supposed to be about making sure people plan ahead for future care and have their wishes honored. The section lays out all the reasons you might need it: long-term care, life-sustaining care, decisions to be made if you can’t, and, yes, hospice.

No government agent is supposed to sit in on this consultation. You and your doctor, nurse, or – here’s the dangerous part – your proxy. Which can be your provider’s medical administrator.

According to the bill, this is a choice for the patient that the government must pay for. To insurers, doctors and health care providers, it’s a goldmine of guaranteed fees from the US coffers with no treatment or service expense. All providers will make this consultation mandatory by policy so they won’t miss out on any cash. Then, doctors will start telling all their patients of age, but not covered, that it’s mandatory but free, and everybody will get in on it.

Then, the providers and certain doctors will use the consultations as an excuse to suggest or deny treatments, minimize expenses, or, yes, convince folks to give up and let their illness win to maximize profit.

Facilities and providers under the current system can’t wait to bury patients who are terminal and no longer generating income through treatments and procedures.

They practically killed my dad with horrendous care and practices after botching his surgery. He couldn’t die soon enough. The nursing home doped him up and gave him pneumonia. Then the ER was going to deny him the antibiotics because he was going to die anyway. I almost hit the doctor. I demanded my dad get them, and he was eating a steak the next day. We set him up to do home hospice with me and my brothers. He left this world at his time, in his own home, watching his TV.

This bill will empower providers to lie about the law at will, applying it as they see fit to maximize their cash flow from the government. Every healthy person over 65 would be encouraged to test for some possible ailment at every consultation. Anyone with a problem would find themselves taking numerous tests, procedures, and drugs unrelated to the illness. God forbid you be terminally ill. They’ll send you down the hospice chute faster than you can wink. On life support? Not anymore. Cutting costs mean cutting your life.

So, yes, these fears are justified, but not because the government is going to suddenly become fascist, commie Nazis.

It’s because our medical providers will instantly abuse it completely and leave us worse off no matter what it says.

My brother pointed out to me that Nazi Germany had similar legislation, that had a distinction, read between the lines, that allowed for the elimination of “useless eaters” – euthanasia of those too old or infirm to contribute to society. Although the law didn’t say that, it could be interpreted by the Nazis intentionally to use it this way without the public’s awareness, most believing the law was fair.

This is exactly like that. The pages just say a Medicare patient can have this every 5 years or more often if their health changes.

Providers will say it’s mandatory. Even though they don’t provide that consultation at all now unless it’s demanded by the patient’s advocates and approved by the provider, however useful it might be.

A counseling session like this may have allowed me to get my dad into home hospice much earlier. Even to have planned for it when his cancer metastasized. We only got him home after 3 near-death experiences exposing horrendous negligence. And begrudgingly. They fought us over it until we exhausted them. This is with full BlueCross/BlueShield and supplemental up the wazoo. They couldn’t wait to put him in a black gurney.

Imagine what they’ll do when they can charge the government full rate, say it’s mandatory, and dictate patient care from then on.

The bill doesn’t say that, but we’re already being told it does just to hide the fact that it’s already status quo.

They want more. This is a license to print money from Medicare patients and discard them when they don’t bring a profit.

The whole thing is written like this – vague, technical, and ripe for abuse by the current system.

I hate this bill, but I also hate to see all this larceny continue unabated because of some semantic sleight of hand.

The providers need to change to accommodate the market. No government-anything past fixing Medicare for now.

This bill will make everything worse.

Even worse yet, no bill will be any good until we start using the actual language against them instead of taking interpretations as fact.

This is the info I wish was going around the internet. The bill can’t be trusted because it gives free reign to all the morons and profiteers already ruining our system for most folks.

Obama is not out to kill our elderly, he just doesn’t know the medical insurance industry already is.

I hope you’ll pass this on. I hate to see this bill go through because this “euthanasia” point is too easy to dismiss.

It’s already happening now, and it will grow unchecked if this bill is passed.

Please send the real page 425 to everyone and your congress-morons.

Now, those actual pages from the house bill, accessed via the link in the email (you actually have to start at page 424 to get the entire section):


————————————————–

[pg. 424]

HR 3200 IH
§1233. ADVANCE CARE PLANNING CONSULTATION.

(a) MEDICARE.—

(1) IN GENERAL.—Section 1861 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395x) is amended—
(A) in subsection (s)(2)—
(i) by striking ‘‘and’’ at the end of subparagraph (DD);
(ii) by adding ‘‘and’’ at the end of subparagraph (EE); and
(iii) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:

‘‘(FF) advance care planning consultation (as defined in subsection (hhh)(1));’’; and (B) by adding at the end the following new subsection:

‘‘Advance Care Planning Consultation
‘‘(hhh)(1) Subject to paragraphs (3) and (4), the term ‘advance care planning consultation’ means a consultation between the individual and a practitioner described in paragraph (2) regarding advance care planning,
if, subject to paragraph (3), the individual involved has

[pg. 425]

not had such a consultation within the last 5 years. Such consultation shall include the following:

‘‘(A) An explanation by the practitioner of advance care planning, including key questions and considerations, important steps, and suggested people to talk to.

‘‘(B) An explanation by the practitioner of advance directives, including living wills and durable powers of attorney, and their uses.

‘‘(C) An explanation by the practitioner of the role and responsibilities of a health care proxy.

‘‘(D) The provision by the practitioner of a list of national and State-specific resources to assist consumers and their families with advance care planning, including the national toll-free hotline, the advance care planning clearinghouses, and State legal service organizations (including those funded through the Older Americans Act of 1965).

‘‘(E) An explanation by the practitioner of the continuum of end-of-life services and supports available, including palliative care and hospice, and benefits for such services and supports that are available under this title.

[pg. 426]

‘‘(F)(i) Subject to clause (ii), an explanation of orders regarding life sustaining treatment or similar orders, which shall include—

‘‘(I) the reasons why the development of such an order is beneficial to the individual and the individual’s family and the reasons why such an order should be updated periodically as the health of the individual changes;

‘‘(II) the information needed for an individual or legal surrogate to make informed decisions regarding the completion of such an order; and

‘‘(III) the identification of resources that an individual may use to determine the requirements of the State in which such individual resides so that the treatment wishes of that individual will be carried out if the individual is unable to communicate those wishes, including requirements regarding the designation of a surrogate decisionmaker (also known as a healthcare proxy).

‘‘(ii) The Secretary shall limit the requirement for explanations under clause (i) to consultations furnished in a State—

[pg. 427]

‘‘(I) in which all legal barriers have been addressed for enabling orders for life sustaining treatment to constitute a set of medical orders respected across all care settings; and

‘‘(II) that has in effect a program for orders for life sustaining treatment described in clause (iii).

‘‘(iii) A program for orders for life sustaining treatment for a States described in this clause is a program that—
‘‘(I) ensures such orders are standardized and uniquely identifiable throughout the State;
‘‘(II) distributes or makes accessible such orders to physicians and other health professionals that (acting within the scope of the professional’s authority under State law) may sign orders for life sustaining treatment;

‘‘(III) provides training for health care professionals across the continuum of care about the goals and use of orders for life sustaining treatment; and
‘‘(IV) is guided by a coalition of stake holders includes representatives from emergency medical services, emergency department physicians or nurses, state long-term care associa-

[pg. 428]

tion, state medical association, state surveyors, agency responsible for senior services, state department of health, state hospital association, home health association, state bar association, and state hospice association.

‘‘(2) A practitioner described in this paragraph is—
‘‘(A) a physician (as defined in subsection
(r)(1)); and
‘‘(B) a nurse practitioner or physician’s assistant who has the authority under State law to sign
orders for life sustaining treatments.
‘‘(3)(A) An initial preventive physical examination under subsection (WW), including any related discussion
during such examination, shall not be considered an advance care planning consultation for purposes of applying
the 5-year limitation under paragraph (1).

‘‘(B) An advance care planning consultation with respect to an individual may be conducted more frequently
than provided under paragraph (1) if there is a significant change in the health condition of the individual, including diagnosis of a chronic, progressive, life-limiting disease, a life-threatening or terminal diagnosis or life-threatening injury, or upon admission to a skilled nursing facility, a long-term care facility (as defined by the Secretary), or a hospice program.

[pg. 429]

‘‘(4) A consultation under this subsection may include the formulation of an order regarding life sustaining
treatment or a similar order.

‘‘(5)(A) For purposes of this section, the term ‘order regarding life sustaining treatment’ means, with respect to an individual, an actionable medical order relating to the treatment of that individual that—

‘‘(i) is signed and dated by a physician (as defined in subsection (r)(1)) or another health care
professional (as specified by the Secretary and who is acting within the scope of the professional’s authority under State law in signing such an order, in cluding a nurse practitioner or physician assistant) and is in a form that permits it to stay with the individual and be followed by health care professionals and providers across the continuum of care;

‘‘(ii) effectively communicates the individual’s preferences regarding life sustaining treatment, including an indication of the treatment and care desired by the individual;

‘‘(iii) is uniquely identifiable and standardized within a given locality, region, or State (as identified by the Secretary); and

[pg. 430]
‘‘(iv) may incorporate any advance directive (as defined in section 1866(f)(3)) if executed by the individual.

‘‘(B) The level of treatment indicated under subparagraph (A)(ii) may range from an indication for full treatment to an indication to limit some or all or specified interventions. Such indicated levels of treatment may include indications respecting, among other items—

‘‘(i) the intensity of medical intervention if the patient is pulse less, apneic, or has serious cardiac or pulmonary problems;

‘‘(ii) the individual’s desire regarding transfer to a hospital or remaining at the current care setting;

‘‘(iii) the use of antibiotics; and

‘‘(iv) the use of artificially administered nutrition and hydration.’’.

—————————————————————


I simply did as the email suggested: I followed the link to verify his comments.

To make it even simpler, I chose to first investigate his “horrifying” mandates on pages 425-430.

As you’ve read, there is no way to confuse this section as “mandatory euthanasia at the government’s discretion”. It merely demands counseling and knowledge of all aspects of care and assistance available, spelling them out by application – critical care, long term care, life-sustaining, and hospice.

This kind of misquote is rampant on both sides. Read the bill yourself. Don’t take someone’s word for what’s in it. There’s surely plenty wrong and right in the same pages, and much to be discussed. This is, however, a blatant attempt to frighten people into
fearing any health care bill, outright. We aren’t living in Logan’s Run unless we allow this to continue.

But, as my brother wryly observed, “objects in mirror are closer than they appear”.

All this nonsense has to stop.

And we’re just the hairpins to do it.
 
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References:
 
Full text of HR 3200 IH on gpo.gov
Government Printing Office (GPO)
 
Related Media:
 
Star Trek: TNG episode “Half a Life” – Wikipedia entry
Star Trek store


Logan's Run


 

Finances, Schminances – Part 4

Part Four: Epilogue

Unfortunately, rate gouging to maintain margins is common practice for finance-based companies. They hold everyone hostage by controlling the money, charging for doing it, and penalizing you past your means if you get behind.

I don’t know, that sounds like extortion without the broken limbs, to me.

And that “new deal at the table” thing sounds like fraud.

Holding my deposit and bouncing a check against it, then charging $35?

Sounds like embezzlement, at least.

Raising interest rates and charging fees at will, pushing a debt to unpayable limits? Isn’t that loansharking?

And yet, Detroit automakers, their sales killed by these factors ruining their client base financially, are assailed for their gall in asking the government for 1/7th of what AIG has already received and blown.

GM and Chrysler make something we use. Many of us like their cars. AIG just charges premiums and bets it all on Wall Street. Which one is useful and which is self-serving? And which is being criticized for needing help while the other gets Pentagon-level funding with no strings attached?

Why not give all of AIG’s dough to Detroit? Tell them to have 50 miles per gallon alternative fuel cars and an average new car price of $10,000 in 7 years. They would do it, I’m sure. Ford would even pony up to the trough to stay up with the rest.

$180 billion is an obscenely huge amount of money. Almost any manufacturing industry on earth, short of military suppliers, could advance exponentially with that kind of funding from the government. Give it to World Health Organization and the whole planet is up to it’s knees in food. Give it to aids or cancer research and we see cures in our lifetimes. Give it to NASA and we’re practically on Mars.

Or, offer it as a refund incentive to mortgage companies that willingly reduce principle and interest to insure that homeowners can make their payments.

If “Mary’s” mortgagor was getting $50-100,000 of that $180 billion in return for adjusting her loan down to $180,000 at 4%/40 years, that would be just fine with people and “Mary” would be just fine, too.

The Fed could have said “Ok, folks – everyone who drops to 4% fixed APR and absorbs principle on upside-down loans and interest from payment arrears can claim those losses from this fund”.

There would be no foreclosure crisis and little complaint from most folks if the ‘bailout’ was based on saving people’s homes and livelihoods by capping interest rates and re-imbursing lenders for the lost principle.

That’s not what the bailout accomplished.

It’s company’s margins and share prices that were restored. Their value at – where? The Wall Street Casino.

It would not be unfair, un-American or communist to suggest a temporary federal hold on interest rates. All lenders and credit companies could be limited to 4 or 5% interest for a specific period of time. That would allow people to catch up and stabilize themselves financially. Then interest rates could start with a clean slate and rise or fall more naturally with the economy as it recovers.

Thus, helping the companies that we live on further reduce the cost of living for everyone by increasing quality and lowering prices. If everyone can afford to live, it’s likelier they can spend, too. If people can work things out to stay on track with their debts and expenses when times get rough, they’ll make it through to the next good time, and be all caught up.

And, when times get bad for the market, it’s those top-level execs and shareholders who own the business, like any small business owner, who owe it to the company to eat the margin if they have to in order to maintain stability.

But this isn’t about stability. This profit margining behemoth is motivated only by immediate gain and has little or no concern about longevity.

What about this current recession/depression does not stem from these financial practices?

We’re talking about a free market economy, right? Capitalism? Supply and demand? Fair market value? Free and fair trade? Is this really the way that’s supposed to work?

Strong-arming us with price hikes, penalties and fees, paying huge salaries and bonuses, and claiming billions in losses as they do it.

Getting their hooks into us with a small legitimate debt, and turning the screw as soon as we mess up.

No, not a scene from the “Sopranos”.

The epitome of organized crime – crime for sheer profit above all else, with no regard for human life or welfare, is not a bunch of mobsters.

It’s the money guys in the black silk ties.

You can see them. There’s a tour.

It’s called the Wall Street Casino.

Open 9:30am-4:00pm ET Monday through Friday.

 
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Return to the beginning – Part One: Genesis
 


Finances, Schminances – Part 3

Part Three: They Get Us Where We Live

In the housing industry, it all comes together – every form of margining, gouging, and fee wrangling takes place in the cavalcade of paperwork and fine print the unwary homebuyer faces.

Here’s how it works.

“Ed” watches some house-flipping show on TV.

He’s fascinated and thinks he can easily pull it off. The housing market is hot, and he’s sure he can fix up and sell a house in a couple months or less. Big dollars!!!

Ed has $50,000 in the bank. He finds a fixer-upper for $150,000. He has to put down 20% to get his loan at 6% and 3 points ($4500), and puts $10,000 into making it sellable. That climbs to $25,000 as the infirmities in the house are discovered.

Now Ed is $9500 in debt and has a mortgage payment on the spec house. He puts it on the market at $275,000, the same price range as other houses in the area. He wants his margin. But, a glut of houses for sale in his neighborhood drive the price down near $200,000 and his is not selling. So he decides to drop the price to $250,000 and rent it in the meantime for market value, almost double his mortgage payment. Tenant after tenant gets behind on the $1400 rent and has to be evicted, often leaving damage in their wake.

It goes on for like this for 6 months.

“Mary” wants to buy a house in Ed’s neighborhood. His is “just right” for her, but she can’t afford it. He was looking for something around $150,000. But she really loves it. Her bank won’t come up, and she only has $20,000 to put down. She can’t afford more than $1000 a month payment, tax and insurance included.

She’s talked to several real estate agents. Many told her there won’t be anything she wants in her price range – that she should lower her sights. One, though, insists that she can afford Ed’s house, even though her bank won’t touch it. He tells her he can recommend someone.

He insists – “we will get you into the house”.

Mary goes to the agent’s chosen mortgage broker, who also assures her that she will get her dream house. The sale price is the full $250,000. She is offered a typical 30 year mortgage at 5% fixed with 1/2 point loan fee. He quotes her $1200 without T/I. She says it’s too much. He says he’ll “come up with something”.

Weeks later, he calls Mary with a solution. He can get the principle down to under $1000 if she puts $70,000 down. She reminds him she only has $20,000 to put down. He says she can borrow the rest of the down payment for an extra $75 dollars a month.

And, he chimes, “you’ll be in your dream house.”

Mary agrees and he puts the loan in to the bank. He sets a closing day for July 1st. Her lease is up at the end of June, and the landlord won’t budge, so she has to move into storage anyway.

The paperwork takes longer than expected, so with her things in storage, Mary has to live in a motel for a 8 days waiting to close on her dreamhouse. When she gets to the pre-closing meeting, she suddenly finds herself in the Twilight Zone, beset with a mountain of new, horrifying contracts and numbers.

She is now looking at 8% interest variable up to 17%, $1320 PI per month, with 3 points down – $7,500, and a second mortgage for the downpayment – 20 years at 9% for $400 a month. Her combined payments with tax and insurance top $2000 a month, and she has to pay almost $29,000 at closing.

So, she has to take it because she works out of her home and can’t do business from a motel room. She rationalizes that she can rent a room, make some cutbacks – she still has $10,000 in the bank. She’ll just have to make it work. She will surely go broke being unable to work and paying for hotels and storage while looking for another house.

You see, Mary had only a $40,000 inheritance in the bank. She was counting on getting a mortgage lower than her current rent, and still having $20,000 security in the bank.

But, the mortgage company required Mary to show them that bank balance, as well as her credit and income. They decided after seeing the $40,000, her income of $30,000 a year, and a good credit score that Mary would be an ideal target for the maximum margin – she could be expected to somehow make the payments at that rate – at least until the $40,000 ran out.

All this time, Ed has seen his debt escalate as his maintenance of the house and tenants continues to worsen. Finally, he’s so far in debt and tied up maintaining the renters that he gets behind on the mortgage.

In the 7 months it’s taken Mary to figure her finances, decide to buy, find a neighborhood, find Ed’s house, apply for the loans and close, Ed has lost it to the bank. They foreclosed on the $120,000 loan and that’s who Mary is buying it from now.

For $250,000.

The agent makes 7%, $17,500, and the bank that foreclosed on Ed nets over $150,000.

Neither the agent nor the mortgage broker suggested offering less money for the house. They both wanted their maximum return.

So, in a years time -

Ed lost his entire $30,000 down payment, spent the other $20,000 and rang up an additional $12,000 in credit debt over the course of the project. Eventually it put him behind in his own home mortgage, and when he was laid-off from his job, he ended up losing his home.

Mary held on until the savings ran out and business slumped. A roommate could only be expected to pay about $500 a month including utilities. Making matters worse, house prices in her neighborhood plummeted farther, below $200,000, leaving her seriously “upside down” at $230,000 in total loans. Losing the house was inevitable.

Well, it shouldn’t have been. This is the kind of mess you end up with when margining rules every step of the way. Had Ed been offered and willing to take $200,000 and the bank willing to give Mary 5% @40 years with a 1 point loan fee, she could easily have made it and Ed would’ve collected $65,000, even after paying the agent. And he wouldn’t be in severe debt causing him to lose his own home.

But, everyone had to have the biggest piece they could along every step. From the mortgage companies to the title brokers to Ed’s credit cards, everyone wanted their maximum profit margin, right now.

Ed was trying to play the casino games, like the big guys on TV. He willingly took the risk, knowing he might lose, but not really believing it. Like many people, he was attracted to the golden apple of big money, portrayed all too often on TV as easy pickings. He got in over his head by rushing in as soon as his bank said “yes”. So many doing it – it must be a sure thing. Turns out, it’s not always so.

Only one person was margining for the right reason. Mary. The consumer. She was budgeting. She tried to increase her chance of maintaining cashflow by reducing her cost without having to charge more for her services. She was trying to obey the marketing rules. This is normal, healthy margining.

But the money monsters had both of their numbers all along. If you want it, you gotta pay for it.

Everyone involved marginalized Ed and Mary to the limit for the sake of immediately collecting cash that “we know you have”.

Gotta keep that margin up.

Ooh! Gotta run. The Casino’s open!

 
<<–prev   top   next–>>
 
Read Part 4: Epilogue
 


Finances, Schminances – Part 2

Part Two: The Monster Grows

So, all of our financial companies hit the Wall Street Casino with our collective cash from all our monthly payments, and it’s not going well. There’re way too many people betting on the same things and driving up the bets. Everyone has to raise their rates to make sure they keep their value and salaries and still have enough to play with. Their increased values force big companies that make the stuff we all use to raise their prices to keep their stock values competitive.

Higher financial prices propel rents higher and higher, pushing the limits for the majority of the population. The government makes more money to alleviate the pressure, but it backfires. Financiers just raise their rates to take up the slack. So, the Fed lowers the interest banks pay. That should help.

It does. The banks use the increased profit margin to bolster their stock value. More chips for the Casino.

Oh, and rates go up again.

This idiocy has grown into an unfathomable money monster, killing Americans dollar by dollar, day by day.

The sheer fact that an insurance company asked for and got $180 billion dollars from the government says something is horribly awry.

This company’s been paid billions of dollars by customers of their various insurance programs. How do you lose that much money when your only administrative costs are claims, staff, facility, and communications? Surely the nation’s largest insurer would have to see 50% of its customers drop or default to be in this kind of jam.

Um, no.

Remember, they figured out the minimum cash needed to sustain normal claims, expenses, salaries, and bonuses. The rest went – you guessed!

You see, if you have $100, the Wall Street Casino will lend you $500 and you can bet it all. If you win, cool. If not, you deduct your loss from your taxes and add the payments to your rates.

Free money to gamble with!!!

It’s very simple math, folks – if people can’t pay what you charge, you need to lower your rates. You don’t restore cashflow by charging more! You accommodate the market by lowering your rate and expanding your terms if that’s what it takes.

You certainly don’t pay anyone millions of dollars when the company is losing money, do you? And you surely don’t take risks like the stock market when your bottom line is in trouble — But, they did. And they are still. And it all goes on like before except they have $180 billion in free chips for the Casino.

You see, in all these cases, from apples to insurance, the one governing rule of capitalism is that you can’t charge more than the market will bear.

The current foreclosure rate in the US is graphic proof that this rule has been left in the dust.

Lots of people blame consumers for buying past their means, causing prices to go up.

No. Not even close.

There is a real evil at work. The one that wrought its way through the money belt and out into every form of commerce.

Margining.

Maintaining and increasing profit margin is the driving force in modern business. Lowering cost and increasing sales lead to bigger profit. That’s the theory, anyway.

That’s just not good enough for today’s financial honchos. They want more. Not just being profitable. Not just growing as a business, but by growing limitlessly through lower costs, more sales, and higher prices.

Everything is margined to the hilt. You’re supposed to charge double or more what it cost you. Period. You’re supposed to get that margin from everyone, everywhere, all the time.

Why would so many buy into this idea of raising prices and pushing margins to the edge?

It gets the company more chip credits in the Wall Street Casino.

To them, this is how it works. What it’s all about. Being up on the big board, in the game. The rise and fall of the stock prices, the thrill of the deal. The sweet smell of victory.

Sounds more like Vegas than Wall Street, doesn’t it?

This is where the controlling eschelons of finance live. This is how they see the world. Not in terms of how strong the foundation, but how tall the castle. The price per share is what it’s all about. That’s the bottom line to them.

But, the realities of capitalism say “no”.

It’s given public opinion that finance is thought to be in the hands of the richest 5% of the population. While this may or may not be accurate, it’s sure that the rich are a minority and that many wealthy people have gotten there through control of or profit from the Wall Street Casino.

Any market will bear what the bottom 50% can afford, or the controlling top 5% have to eat the balance to maintain stability, or risk assets and equity by losing customers. It’s supposed to be in their best interest to suffer the margin in favor of continued positive cashflow.

Current practices have no patience for bumps in the road. They want the maximum price, the widest margin, right now. They want all the money you have.

And, they get it. Your mortgage straps you and you have to put the refrigerator on a card. So you get one with a 5% introductory interest rate (going up to 17% in 30 days). You buy the fridge and make the minimum payments for 2 months, and suddenly the interest is 23%, and the finance charge has put you over your limit, earning you a $35 fee as well.

While there are people who just spend too much on credit cards when they shouldn’t, or get too many and max them all out frivolously, there are now far more people using credit just to get by. Emergencies like a new fridge or an unexpected dentist bill can be crippling. There are hundreds of new, rising costs facing consumers everyday. It’s common for people to be buying even groceries and gas on credit cards.

And the card companies eat it up. They don’t care if you’re strapped to the limit. They just keep piling it on, increasing your burden in fees and interest far, far past the amount of your purchases, all the while raising those rates and fees.

They want people to spend the max, pay the max interest, go over limit, pay fees, and catch up again – over and over and over.

Their margin-model is based on it.

And what do they do with that huge margin?

Yup.

They hit the Wall Street Casino again.

 
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Read Part 3: They Get Us Where We Live
 


Finances, Schminances – An oversimplified conceptual explanation

Part One: Genesis

One of the themes of President Obama’s administration that draws controversy is the idea of “redistributing” wealth. Depending on your point of view, this is either nobly responsible or outright larceny. Or if you don’t fancy yourself to be a “liberal” or “conservative” (I don’t like to use the terms – they don’t mean anything anymore), then you know this is all malarkey.

Robin Hood politics is not the answer here. Never going to happen.

The current economic crisis is not the result of too many people being rich, even obscenely so. The problem is in how some of them got that way.

The general, parental culprit is the financial industry itself – its parents, banking and lending, and it’s havoc-reeking progeny, the credit card, insurance, mortgage, and investment businesses.

Now, I, for one, have no problem with the idea of being rich. Not for me or anyone else, for that matter. I do have huge problems with some of the ways to become rich.

For instance, stealing, cheating, lying, committing fraud, selling ripoff deals, extortion, and loansharking are all ways of making money that I believe are just wrong. I’m not big on gambling, but I don’t think it’s criminal unless it’s fixed, and it’s your own business making the bet as long as you’re prepared to suck it up if you lose and stop when you can’t afford it.

So, I have no trouble with Paul McCartney being a billionaire. Or Steve Wynn or Mike Ilitch.
Really. If you make, create, or build something; provide a skill; build a business; improve or fix or refurbish or sell something – any way to earn money by providing a service or skill or taking the bet and facing the risk fairly. In other words, tangibly honest.

Banking starts out that way. It provides the service of safeguarding your money. Likely, it began as simply as holding accounts and charging a fee for it. I’m sure one of the very first bankers immediately saw the possibilities from having a whole village worth of money at once. So, lending money and charging interest on the payments quickly became a principle function of banks in general. Along with public knowledge of the bank’s profit came the payment of interest to the account holders – essentially their share of the profits from loans on their money.

But, this is just the tip of the financial iceberg that we have crashed into. It didn’t take very long at all for bankers to realize that the more ways you could raise large capital, the more you could invest in loans, the more profit you make in interest.

So simple.

Soon everyone is borrowing something somewhere – governments, businesses, individuals, other banks – all generating huge cashflow in monthly payments.

Then the brilliant idea that changed everything.

Let’s sell shares of it!

Let’s let people buy a piece of the cashflow by putting up cash in return for a dividend from the profits. Just a small extension of the original interest bearing account technique, right?

Oh. no. Much more than that.
We’re looking at every kind of mutual fund, investment accounts, insurance, and the mother of all financial goldmines – The Stock Exchange.

Now, selling shares of your business to generate capital is a pretty normal way to make a business work. The basic idea is for investors is to reap the rewards through dividends. If the company increases its earnings, the dividends go up, and this is, after all, why you put up the money in the first place.

Financial tools don’t work that way. They aren’t based on real cashflow. They’re based on a company’s total value of assets, capital investments, estimated cashflow, and the resulting stock market value.

With stock trading came the reality of values going up or down and shares being bought or sold on that alone. Along comes the caginess of the stock broker, gauging the profitability of the different companies and their potential.

From a capitalist view, there is still nothing wrong here yet. As long as people know what they’re getting – guaranteed interest or potential dividend, this works fine.

But, along comes the insurance industry, again, with humble, sensible beginnings. The idea of paying premiums to a company who agrees to pay on your behalf for damage, loss, or injury beyond normal means is practical and in many cases, prudent. At the front end, handling accounts, the agent’s office is no different from the local banker, honestly just looking at parameters and figuring out what coverages you’ll buy and premiums you’ll pay. The fact that the salesperson makes a commission from the premiums isn’t out of line, either – it’s a standard retail sales practice.

If all the money from premiums just went into the bank and the insurance company just collected interest, deducted payroll and expenses, and paid out for claims, it would all be fine. Thinking like a normal retailer might, as your bank balance goes up, your
interest earnings increase. As your margin rises, you lower rates to attract more customers, growing by volume rather than individual customer profit.

But, that’s not how it works at the top.

It’s soon realized that the claim payouts are a small percentage of premium revenues collected. Nothing compared to the potential profit from investing this huge sum.

They figured out that they can collect all that cash upfront from the customer, and invest it themselves just like the bank would and keep all the profit. Most of the money just sits there, so let’s make it work for us by investing it in the stock market.

So, they stop keeping much more than enough cash to cover the statistical number of claims per fiscal quarter and expenses, salaries, and of course, bonuses.

The real risk here is that if they have too many claims at once, say, from a natural disaster like “Katrina”, they may not have enough cash on hand to cover everything. They may be forced to sell stocks or shares to raise the cash to satisfy claims. Being margined for investment will leave them short, and they may even have to borrow the money to make good.

It’s no accident that an insurance company is one of the most publicized bailout recipients. By refusing to bend on margins, acquisitions and executive salaries, they pushed their customers to the edge while maintaining excessively large investments and compensations.

But, I’m getting ahead of myself. All of this leads to some pretty large corporate fortunes. Money to burn, so to speak. Insurance, investment, and mortgage companies with lots to lend and running out of new ways to generate that payment-fed cashflow, strike on an idea that solves it all.

Credit cards.

The idea of letting people just buy things on your capital and pay back with interest goes right back to the heart of banking at the local level. A truly useful, even noble idea, taking the burden of running accounts off of the merchants, and letting those with capital to risk make a profit from the interest.

A marvelously capitalist, yet democratic, fair, and humane thing to do.

For approximately 30 seconds.

It couldn’t have taken longer than that for someone to say, “Hey, we don’t have to use our money to cover this – they’ll owe us the money, so we can charge anything we want for everything we do and they have to agree to pay it if they want the card. We can charge a fee just for having it. We can charge a fee if they’re late. We can charge a fee if they go over their limit. We can charge them all at once on top of interest and raise them anytime we want. We don’t have to touch wages, bonuses, and investment funds at all.”

They merely fold all those projected fees and charges into the portfolio. Part of the estimated cashflow.

So, an industry that now COUNTS ON $15 billion just in late fees has a stranglehold on our society.

And worse, this venom has spread backwards through the entire financial family tree. Safeguarding the margin by raising rates and penalties.

Insurance rates, of course, are outrageous – unaffordable for many. Auto insurance is mandatory by law everywhere, so no surprise that rates are through the roof and go up for any reason you provide, from buying a newer car to getting a ticket.

Banks used to pay an average of 5% on savings accounts, which was considered small but not embarrassing. Return fees were reasonable. Overdraft fees as well. Before the credit card era, most people could survive a cashflow crisis without the bank looking to destroy them.

But, along with the newfound “We’ve got you hostage because you owe us” greed came the inevitable banker’s gouging, now common today.

Now, 1% interest tops without buying an investment bond of some sort to get that 5% – sometimes requiring minimums of $5000 or more tied up for 10 years to get that rate.

They all, creditors and banks alike, ply what they believe are “fair charges that encourage timely payments” at $25-$50 a pop. What’s more, even the banks are saying, “if you owe us money, we’ll charge you more”.

So, now, running out of money becomes a very costly thing. Being broke is expensive!!

Let me get this straight. You don’t have any money, so we’re going to charge you more.
You have nothing, so you owe us more. The more you owe us, the more you, um, owe us.

 
Read Part Two: The Monster Grows