Owned? Pwned?

We are no longer free beings – we are robots beholden to the banking industry – a translation from today’s issue of Le Monde:

Goldman Sachs, the link between Mario Draghi, Mario Monti, and Lucas Papademos

LEMONDE.FR | 14.11.11 | 6:57 p.m. • Updated 14.11.11 | 7:16 p.m.

London correspondent – have in common Mario Draghi , Mario Monti , and Lucas Papademos ? The new president of the European Central Bank, the Chairman of the Board appointed the new Italian and Greek Prime Minister belong to varying degrees to the “Government Sachs” European. The U.S. investment bank has indeed woven in Europe a unique network of influence for ages sedimented through a dense network, such as underground public.

In any contest, you need a hierarchy. The first prize went to Mario Draghi, of course, vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs in Europe between 2002 and 2005. Named a partner, he is responsible “companies and sovereign.” In this way , one of the missions is to sell the financial product “swap” to cover a portion of sovereign debt, which helped make up the Greek accounts. Then Mario Monti, advisor International since 2005. Came third Lucas Papademos, who comes to be appointed prime minister of Greece, who was Governor of the Central Bank Hellenic between 1994 and 2002, who participated in this respect to the operation of faking accounts perpetrated by GS. The manager of the Greek debt is also a Petros Christodoulos , a former trader for the firm.

Two other trucks take the upper hand in the defenestration of the euro, Otmar Issing , former president of the Bundesbank and Jim O’Neill, the inventor of the concept of BRICS, the acronym for emerging markets with high potential growth (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa). Former president of Goldman Sachs International where he remained a director, Irishman Peter Sutherland has played a key role in the rescue of Ireland. Finally, Paul Deighton , who spent 22 years at Goldman Sachs, is executive director of the organizing committee of the London Olympics in 2012. The red lantern because everyone knows that sport is like friendship standout.

Yet, beyond appearances, the network of influence that has made its power before or during the political turmoil in financial 2008 has lost its effectiveness. Indeed, the old accomplices maintained by the former senior central bankers mobilized to pull the strings appear to be less useful against politicians sensitive to the unpopularity of financial professionals held responsible for the crisis. Where Goldman Sachs could easily exert his talents, a series of cases – Greece, speculation against the Euro, the Abacus scandal which was involved the French goldmanien Tourre – put him back in the public.

The address book is useful but not sufficient by itself a complex and technical financial world and facing a new generation of industrial least steeped in respect for the establishment. The European managers set out to conquer the world have emancipated the Crusaders of high finance style Goldman Sachs. The quest for value of the shareholder, the requirements of transparency of accounts and the imperatives of foreign expansion blunt the “network effect”. Finally, become more demanding about the quality and independence of business consulting, European customers, but not limited to requiring compliance with a minimum of ethics.

And that’s where the rub about Goldman Sachs. Because the bank likes to put his men never let down the mask. That is why his henchmen hide this relationship when they give an interview or conduct an official mission (as was the case of Monti who has been entrusted in 2010 a study on the single European market by the President of the Commission, José Manuel Barroso).

Mario Draghi asserts that took office in 2002, it had nothing to see with makeup accounts Greek orchestrated two years earlier by the bank. And resigned in 2005, one year before Goldman Sachs sell a part of the “swap” in question to the National Bank of Greece, the first commercial bank in the country, headed by a former Goldmanien, Petros Christodoulos today head of the agency managing the Greek debt.

Marc Roche

Sprinkles and Showers

While MPs and other elected members of political entities take advantage of insider news to line their pockets with all that does and does not glitter like gold, a Supercommittee (super as in “constituting a more inclusive category than that specified”*, not as in “great”) contemplates a purpose neither divine nor supporting Divine’s cinematic roles.  More on that later today.

Meanwhile, a jazzlike rendition of Haydn’s Piano Trio XV:28 in E Major: Allegretto sets the tone, a la the style of Claude Bolling and Jean-Pierre Rampal.

 

 

What’s next in scandal-filled football news?

So who’ll be the first investigative reporter(s) who claim(s) to have had the scoop on the scandal in Happy Valley/Second Mile years ago but the editor/producer/network executive(s) killed the story because it was detrimental to college football and the superconference goals of network broadcasting?

Inquiring readers want to know…

Federal whistleblower protection is an option.  Plus financial independence, if you’ve got it.

In other words, if we don’t flush out all the places/people who could’ve protected children, the U.S. looks like it puts commerce ahead of its children.

Put that into the supercomputer and see which entities/countries look better in the long run and thus will lead us into the 22nd Century.

Hmm…

Make a decision and don’t look back…

…unless you want to analyse/refine future decisions.

Over the past several years, my mother in-law fell a few times.

Because she took a blood thinner, Coumadin, we worried that she’d fall, break open a major blood vessel and bleed to death before someone could get to her.

Thank goodness, in her falls, she merely scraped her skin or bumped her head.

However, when she bumped her head, blood vessels under the skin on her face burst and she built up a hematoma between the size of half a ping-pong ball and tennis ball.

Therefore, after she fell in April, we consulted with her doctor, who recommended that my wife’s mother stop taking a blood thinner, which would raise her risk of a stroke but, at her age, falling and bleeding to death was the greater risk.

Here I sit, two weeks after my mother in-law either a) had a stroke and fell, or b) fell and had a stroke in her bathroom.  She was discovered sometime before the call we received at 5:51 a.m. requesting which hospital emergency department to send her to.

As the days pass, the minute details of the days that followed diminish.

I’m cataloging as much as I want to remember here today.

27th October – spent most of the day in emergency room A05.  Pretty much nonresponsive.  ED doctor’s assessment of stroke with possible paralysis on the left side.

28th October – still mostly nonresponsive (or simply just very tired and sleepy) but more movement on the right side.  Slight movement on the left side.  When awake, requested water, cold, ice water.  Sponged water into her mouth until we decided to let her take sips of water.

29th October – When awake, she was  alert, remembering, by answering yes/no question, everything up until time of stroke/fall.  All extremities working but weaker on the left side.  Drank more water.

30th October – Able to hold whole conversations and drink water/juice.  Requested to sit on bedside commode, take a bath and have her hair combed – wanted to look like a proper lady.  Extra exertion without a lot of food intake definitely weakened her.

31st October – More tired than yesterday.  Given swallow test – able to hold ice in her mouth and swallow water/apple sauce.  Expressed great feelings of pain during test.  Requested not to be woken up for a while.  Seemed to have suffered an event (possibly another stroke) a little later.

1st November – Generally nonresponsive.  Water built up in lungs, causing her to choke.  Didn’t want her to choke to death so family requested Lasix to help remove excess fluid from her lungs.  Also given Demerol for pain because she moaned when moved.

2nd November – Some responsiveness – lifting of right arm, twitching of left hand, multiple facial expressions but cannot open eyelids.  Very weak.  Family wet her lips with sponge of cold, ice water.  Weak attempts at swallowing.  Overall weakness continued.  Considered moving her to nursing home in case she woke up enough to request food and/or physical therapy and there was nothing left for the hospital to do.  Given anti-anxiety medicine in anticipation of move.  IV needles removed.  Strength deteriorated throughout the day.  Afibrillation worsened.  Breathing got shallower.  Family came to sit by her bedside (granddaughter, grandson, daughter in-law, son in-law, step-daughter).  She stopped breathing twice but found will/strength to start again before her only living direct descendant, her daughter (my wife) arrived from work.  Died minutes later (less than half an hour).  Body gasped for breath a few times after heart stopped.  Family began mourning process.

 

Other details surface but are outside of time – eating in the hospital cafeteria, visits from friends/church family, consultations with doctors (cardiologist, neurologist, hospitalist), the kindness of nurses/techs/housekeeping/food services, specific phrases spoken by my mother in-law, sitting by my mother in-law’s side, holding my hand against her face, wiping a cold cloth over her forehead, watching her chin quiver and tears roll down her face when she couldn’t move her extremities, knowing that she was probably still there in some subconscious form right up to the end, even if she could no longer talk.

That’s enough for today. Reliving the last dying days of the world’s best mother in-law are dredging up raw feelings.

Time to enjoy life, sweep the driveway and decks, and give back to the world what my mother in-law gave me.  My mother in-law did not dwell on death.  Despite tragedies in her life – the death of one of her twins a few days after birth, the loss of her husband 14 years ago, the untimely early death of her son at 51 (the other twin) – she found a way to live, she sighed, read her Bible and moved on, rarely complaining about much that she couldn’t find a way to fix herself, except the decline of the national/world economy, which fed her fear of worse days to come (which means you/me/us have to step up and fix it!).

Unfolding the Past

How many times in one’s lifetime must one spend time sorting through a collection of material that summed one’s recently deceased loved one?

Je ne sais pas.  Je souhaite que je connaissais.

To know.  To be.  To have been.  To do.

Enough musing.  While packing up my mother in-law’s things at her apartment in the assisted living community, we once again found her childhood diary.  Also a folded note on typewriter paper (almost as good as new), retyped below, including spelling/grammar mistakes:

Moss Point, Mississippi
February 16, 1942

Dear Jane:

I suppose you think I am pretty awful for not writing any sooner and thanking you for the pictures but it seems as if I never get around to all the things I want to do.  I surely would have loved to have seen that wedding, it must have been awfully pretty.  I had a letter from Bruce and Clara the other day and they really seem supremely happy.  Bruce said that she has to rum him off to work every morning and then he works like the devil to get back in the afternoon, and as a result the company thinks that he is getting efficient and are going to give him a raise.  He has been defered until July and then he doesn’t know what is going to happyen but, they don’t seem to be very much worried about the matter.

We (Y.M.B.C.) gave our annual Carnavil Ball Friday night.  It was really one of the best and prettiest that we have ever had, although, it was by far too crowded to dance.  Friday a week ago, the Cotillion Club had theirs. I was a Duke in that one and you should have seen me.  I have gained about thirty pounds and the Tux I had at school fit me just like I had been poured in it.  It fact it was sorta painful to sit down so I had to dance most of the time.  The whole affiar was rather funny.  Since we had rented a local night club for the affiar it was impossible to practice.  The king and Queen gave a cocktail party before-hand and by the time some of the court got out there they were pretty well lit, with the result that some walked in fast, some slow and some just sorta flowed in.  The High School is having theirs tonight.  I think I will go over as a spectator because they will have such a pretty floor show.

We went to Mobile yesterday afternoon to see a Nazi bomber that had been shot down over London last year.  It was really pretty interesting because a man told the history of it.

Had a letter from Bob the other day and he is back at Pennington teaching.  Since teachers are so hard to get they have asked for his deferment until school is out.  I know he didn’t mean it like it sounded, but he was telling all about Klenor and her family.  Said that they own a large dyeing place there and that she had loads of possibilities.  Anyway I hope that he didn’t mean it to be as mercenary as it sounded.  He said that when they went to Brumuda on their honeymoon they would stop by/ Frankly I don’t think the boy knows exactly where Mississippi is.

How is school?  I know you must be back in the old grind by now.  I m ce am sending this letter to Rogersville because I am not sure just what your address is.

Well I had better stop before I get fired.  Please excuse the typing I type so seldon it is pretty awful.

love,

“Missip”

Two data points

Can you figure out how these two connect?:

  1. Carbon-based lifeforms using carbon – gee, who’d have thought of that?
  2. Is joblessness really the issue here?

Should Michael Bloomberg be cast in the remake of a movie that starred Paul Giamatti?

Do Italy and Greece matter when analysing the LHC test results?

When was the last time you paid attention to what’s going on in the Outback or Siberia?

Did you calculate the miniscule effect of YU55 on the orbits of Earth and the Moon?

Financial Medical Advice

When you go shopping, does your subculture encourage you to haggle over the price of the object you want to purchase?

Or do you walk into the market, see the price on display, and readily pay the posted amount without asking for a discount?

In my local subculture, I walk into a doctor’s office or hospital and see no posted prices for services to be rendered.

Instead, I hand the receptionist my medical insurance card(s) and after services are completed, I hand my credit card or cash to cover the cost of copay.

Days, weeks or months later, I receive a bill for the services.

The bill most often details the amount of money the doctor/hospital negotiated with the medical insurance company to cover the rendered services.

For instance, a recent surgery on my right wrist was listed as costing ~$9000 but the insurance company only paid about ~$900 and I owed a small copay ($250, if I remember correctly, that I paid before the surgery).  [Followup office visits, usually $25 copay, were included for “free.”]

And now, I get to my mother in-law’s recent hospital stay that concluded in death.

Yesterday, a third-party payment company (which my wife jokingly calls an “ambulance chaser”) called to see if I planned to pursue payment from the nursing/assisted living home for the hospital bill.

Why would they do that?

Well, if my mother in-law’s insurance (Medicare plus supplemental) pays for the hospital bill, the negotiated amount will be substantially less than the hospital’s stated total (think “retail” (the hospital’s stated total) versus “wholesale” (the negotiated amount)).

However, if the third-party payment company (contracted by the hospital, if I understand their relationship to the medical community correctly, in this case) is giving given authorisation to pursue payment, they will try to extract the hospital’s stated total, taking for themselves, I’m sure, a flat fee or percentage, if successful in charging the nursing/assisted living company, where my mother in-law fell, for the full hospital bill.

In other words, should you find yourself having to pay for medical services, you will be charged the full amount.  Therefore, be advised that you have plenty of room to negotiate a lower amount, easily down to the amount that insurance companies will pay; that is, if you have any haggling skills in you at all, unless you’re a retail shopper unaccustomed to bargaining for a deal.

In that case, ignore what you just read, and I’m going into the medical business, accepting only patients like you who are willing to pay retail.

By the way, this partially explains why doctors don’t perform as many free/pro bono services for the community as they used to, because it falsely gives medical insurance companies the right to claim that doctor services can be valued at zero.

More as it develops…