Man Bites Dog

Russia backs return to Gold Standard to solve financial crisis?!?!?!?

I never thought I’d read that headline about any country, particularly Russia. I don’t know anything about the particulars of the plan (if there are any particulars yet). The story makes clear it would be only the tiniest step back in the direction of a Gold Standard, but still – every step helps, right?

Yaron Brook on the Auto Bailouts

Right on the heels of my post below, I see that Yaron Brook was on PJTV today discussing the Auto Bailouts as well.

He hits on many of the points I touched on below, specifically the outright fascism that was on display today.

I’m sorry, and I guess I shouldn’t be surprised, but if you’d have told me 4 years ago that we’d have had such brazen a display of true fascism any time soon by an American President, I’d have called you crazy. Didn’t we bury it when we won WWII?

Clearly we did not.

Let’s call it what it is.

First, a definition:

“Under fascism, men retain the semblance or pretense of private property, but the government holds total power over its use and disposal.”

Second, a series of quotes from the Wall Street Journal:

Mr. Wagoner was asked to step down on Friday by Steven Rattner, the investment banker picked last month by the administration to lead the Treasury Department’s auto-industry task force. Mr. Rattner broke the news to Mr. Wagoner in person at his office at the Treasury, according to an administration official. Afterward, Mr. Rattner met one-on-one with Mr. Henderson, who will fill in as GM’s CEO.

“On Friday I was in Washington for a meeting with administration officials,” Mr. Wagoner said in a statement released by GM. “In the course of that meeting, they requested that I ’step aside’ as CEO of GM, and so I have.”

And this:

Mr. Henderson said “we’ll be in bankruptcy” if the company cannot meet the U.S. government’s demands for faster progress on its turnaround plan, this dealer said.

Mr. Henderson told employees that the Obama administration was disappointed with the company’s viability plan, feeling it didn’t move fast enough or cut deeply enough into the company’s debt. GM was told it didn’t leave enough money in the company’s pockets to get it through a full business cycle, either, according to the dealer.

GM was also told in no uncertain terms that it must learn to make money on smaller cars–not just trucks and sport-utility vehicles, the dealer said.

Next:

The administration’s task force said it had no intention of replacing CEO Robert Nardelli. Unlike Mr. Wagoner, who had been at the helm of GM since 2000, Mr. Nardelli is considered an auto-industry outsider who has only been in charge at Chrysler since the company was acquired by Cerberus Capital Management LP in 2007.

In addition to pushing out Mr. Wagoner, the task force said GM is in the process of replacing the majority of its directors. Kent Kresa, a longtime director, will serve as interim chairman. Mr. Wagoner will be replaced as CEO by Mr. Henderson, who has been serving as chief operating officer.

Now – let’s be clear, neither GM or Chrysler would be in this position if they weren’t begging the gov’t to keep them afloat. As such, neither company gets much sympathy from me. As many banks are finding out these days, make deals with the devil, and you’re going to get burned.

The MOST ironic thing of all is that the administration’s plan is increasingly likely to be for GM and Chrysler to file for bankruptcy! The desire to avoid this outcome is precisely what lead the two auto makers to come crawling to Washington in the first place. It’s despicable, in more ways than one. Had the auto giants received the proper response back in the fall, they would most likely be in bankruptcy proceedings already. Objectivists have been advocating this from the beginning! Bankruptcy law exists precisely to deal with failing companies. If they can be made solvent again, a bankruptcy judge can approve a reorganization which will allow that to happen. If not, they are liquidated. It’s not a fire sale – it’s a very methodical and measured process.

I was a (very) minor player in one of the largest and most successful reemergences from bankruptcy in US history, with MCI/Worldcom. The process worked then, magnificently. Here’s what the bankruptcy judge said about the process then, upon our emergence:

“The proposed settlement is not only fair and reasonable but as good an outcome as anyone could reasonably expect in these difficult circumstances,” said Judge Rakoff’s. “The court is aware of no large company accused of fraud that has so completely divorced itself from the misdeeds of the immediate past and undertaken such extraordinary steps to prevent such misdeeds in the future.”

At the time, this was the largest emergence from bankruptcy in history – although if GM files, it would surely be larger. Still, MCI had it’s own set of complexities – remember, this was a company trying to rebound from fraud of historic proportions. Heck, Sarbanes-Oxley was practically written for MCI (and Enron)! (That abortion of a law is a whole other subject.)

My point is not so much to compare the two, but to simply state: If MCI can do it, GM can too. And if they can’t, they should be liquidated. That’s what would have happened to MCI had we not pulled it off.

And now, almost $40 billion in to the auto bailouts, after forcing out the CEO of one of the largest companies in the world, that’s what the Obama administration has apparently decided upon as well. But, they made sure they grabbed as much control as they could first. Instead of simply letting the process work, and allowing GM and Chrysler to go into bankruptcy initially, they now have the power to force out CEOs and Board of Directors, and are actively striving to make the UAW part owners of the company before all is said and done.

As Myhraf, of The New Clarion, says, “If the state is firing CEO’s and telling businesses how much in bonuses they can get, how is this not fascism? At what point does a mixed economy that is heading toward fascism actually cross the line to fascism?”

Uncle Ty

It only takes 3 seconds to make John and me laugh hysterically…

Good and Funny

Good
• Getting a shout out from one of my very favorite bloggers, Rational Jenn
• Bass Pro Shops

Funny
• Thinking about how Charlie’s cleaning skills are much like John’s…I found a ball and a pack of baby wipes when I opened the dishwasher. I found a pair of shoes and an umbrella in the washing machine. And the only way to keep everything out of the sink is to completely cover it.

1 in 54,132…

So my name is a little common…

HowManyOfMe.com
Logo There are
5,526
people with my name in the U.S.A.

How many have your name?

Ansley, on the other hand, is 1 in 150,000,000…(but we all knew she’s *different*)

HowManyOfMe.com
Logo There are
2
or fewer people with my name in the U.S.A.

How many have your name?

Charlie is 1 in 1,851,851…

HowManyOfMe.com
Logo There are
162
people with my name in the U.S.A.

How many have your name?

Photobooth Fun!

Brooke and I decided to be cool this past Saturday night and walk around the fabulous LaGrange Mall for about an hour. As we were leaving, we passed a photo booth and I dragged her in. We laughed and goofed off with the confidence of no one else watching……or so we thought!

When we got out of the booth we had a little audience. I asked them if I had been really loud, (because I suddenly remembered that we were in a public place), but they just smiled and pointed to the television screen above the booth. We were on camera for the rest of the world to see the entire time! I was laughing so hard I was crying!


I need to remember to be make more creative expressions next time!

Random Still Life

Huh.

I opened the cabinet for a glass and saw this.

I stood there thinking about how it was a pretty arrangement of fruit.

Then I realized that it was sitting in a cabinet where our drinking glasses are supposed to go.

I love how my husband cleans.

Fantastic Weekend

What a weekend! Dad and I threw Mom a little party for her 60th birthday and it was so much fun. We had a great turnout despite the yucky rainy day. Even Radar enjoyed himself and ate his weight in cheese!
Charlie surprised me with how well he handled a big group. I had a lot of fear that it might be too overwhelming for him. But he was completely comfortable and happy to visit with any random person – as long as he approached them. This included a couple of people that I had never met. It was very neat to stand back and watch this and learn more about the decisions he makes independently.
Once some children showed up he was even more entertained. Me too, as it was easier to just hang with the kids than chase Charlie while attempting an adult conversation…each time I took my eyes off that kid, he was running into a table and getting his first black eye, diving headfirst off the couch, knocking over a statue of Venus and somehow pinching his finger, etc. (Thankfully, Venus is still only missing her arms.) John spent more time than anyone chasing Charlie around, but I sent him home after a couple of hours so that he could relax for the evening before going to work the next day. He is such a Super Dad! He stayed home with Charlie and had a Boys’ Weekend until they drove down for Mom’s party.
My only regret about the party – I barely took any photos. How is that possible?


Catherine Shirilla, Charlie, and Alex Shirilla

Charlie, Lynda, Marilyn, Cathy Allgood and Diane Dimmick

Good and Funny

Good

  • Finding a really good Mother’s Morning Out program
  • Transitioning from bottle to cup in just one easy day
  • Figuring out that I can plan a party long distance

Funny

  • Charlie’s cute conversation with Grandmommy (my mom).  He does a great impression of me talking on the phone.
  • John going on a business lunch to Dreamland and so wisely not ordering ribs!  If you know John, you know why this is funny and not just a smart decision.