Posted on 02/26/2009 9:55:29 AM PST by rhetorica
There was one line in Obama's Address to the Nation last night that just floored me. It came near the beginning of the speech where he lays out the causes for our economic troubles:
"A surplus became an excuse to transfer wealth to the wealthy instead of an opportunity to invest in our future."
Wow. I don't think there is a more telling statement of the Obama administration's philosophy than that single statement. What did we learn?
According to Obama:
1. Wealth is not earned.
2. Wealth is a commodity that governments can transfer from one segment of the population to another.
3. Wealth transferred into private hands prevents governments from "investing" the money.
4. The future depends on the government "investing" wealth as opposed to the private sector.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why the Obama administration terrifies me.
Want to be fair....... ditch income tax completely.
Yes! I deconstruct his rhetoric also and you got it.
What, pray tell, does a flat tax have to do with an out of control Government that is spending our tax dollars like group of kids who just broke into the cookie jar?
FLAT TAX OR NOT, WHAT IS TO STOP THEM FROM SPENDING IT, OR RAISING IT AGAINST OUR WILL?
(Just a thought)
New Hedge Fund Gets Seed Money From Citi, Blackstone
Last update: 2/26/2009 1:31:20 PM
By Dan Molinski
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)—A pair of former Citigroup Inc. (C) executives who are starting a $200 million hedge fund are getting most of their initial funding from Citi and Blackstone Group LP (BX), one of its founders said Thursday.
Jeff Jacob, who along with John Humphrey recently founded New York-based Archview Investment, said their Archview Credit Opportunities Fund will focus on corporate credit and distressed corporate assets.
He didn’t say specifically how much Blackstone, the world’s largest private equity firm, or Citigroup, were investing. He also didn’t indicate what other investors may be involved.
“Basically, we took our group from Citigroup to start this ... it’s not so much a start-up as a spin-off,” Jacob said, adding about 10 people from Citigroup are part of Archview.
Their foray into hedge funds comes amid serious problems in the industry, which has shrunk in size to about $1.2 trillion from a record $1.9 trillion in early 2008. The losses by hedge funds are partly due to the sharp declines in equity markets, but also due to a surge in redemption requests by investors who need cash.
Winning the next election?
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