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To: maggief

Wonder how much dinner cost me/us?


2 posted on 08/24/2010 6:28:13 AM PDT by albie
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To: albie

ALERT!! No lobster of any size left within 60 nautical miles!


11 posted on 08/24/2010 6:33:37 AM PDT by WellyP
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To: albie
Michelle proving again - that no matter what ugly thing she wears, and where she got it from (a tablecloth, a shower curtain, a boat sail, a bag lady) - there must not be one iron for pressing clothes anywhere in the White House or in the hands of anyone of the hordes of Obama staffers who always accompany her.

But how I ROTFLing at FReeper clever comments here.

24 posted on 08/24/2010 6:50:23 AM PDT by CitizenM ("Do you miss me yet?" Yes, George, we do.)
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To: albie

Uh oh...rain and wind? Looks like Hussein will need another vacation to make up for the lost vacation days.


77 posted on 08/24/2010 8:00:02 AM PDT by Oldpuppymax
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To: albie

Robert Wolf golfing with Obama on Martha’s Vineyard vacation...

I found this...

Larry Doyle on February 2, 2010 3:02 PM

Who is Robert Wolf? The CEO of UBS Group Americas and one of if not the closest adviser President Obama has on Wall Street. Wolf was profiled in The Wall Street Journal on January 23rd, Obama’s Lead Blocker on Wall Street:

Mr. Obama has at least one buddy in the banking business: a former University of Pennsylvania fullback and ex-Salomon Brothers bond trader who now serves as an outside White House adviser.

Robert Wolf, chief executive of UBS Group Americas, first met then-Sen. Obama at the office of George Soros.

The two men first met in December 2006 in the New York office of billionaire investor George Soros. Mr. Wolf was a newcomer to elite Democratic donor circles. Then-Sen. Obama, still months from launching his bid for the White House, was desperate to raise campaign cash on Wall Street.

Mr. Wolf slipped the senator his business card. He got a call from Mr. Obama the next morning. “I picked up the phone and said, ‘Yeah, sure, this is really Obama.’ And it was.” The two men dined twice in Washington over the next month. A few weeks later, Mr. Wolf hosted New York’s first Obama fund-raiser. The event, at UBS’s Manhattan offices, drew nearly 200 people and raised $350,000 in three hours, Mr. Wolf says.

Mr. Wolf’s fund-raising clout helped seal a bond, despite their divergent personalities—a onetime bond trader and obsessive Little League coach hitting it off with a bookish former community organizer.

At a debate in July 2007, former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel took a dig at Mr. Obama for saying he spurned all lobbyists while accepting cash “from a Robert Wolf at USB [sic] Bank.” By then, U.S. employees of UBS had contributed more than $200,000 to the Obama campaign.

Two weeks later, Mr. Wolf took a call from Mr. Obama that he says changed their relationship. The two talked in depth about the country’s rising economic woes. Bear Stearns was wobbly. Foreclosures were skyrocketing. And some units within UBS itself were racking up losses. The bank later had to write down more than $50 billion in illiquid securities as part of the subprime-mortgage crisis. The losses came from a portion of the bank not directly under Mr. Wolf’s purview.

At this point, I nearly spilled my coffee. Why?

The fact that the President was reaching out to Robert Wolf for color on developments surrounding the mortgage business. Why might that be funny? As an institution, UBS could not spell mortgage in the early to mid-90s let alone think about properly underwriting and distributing the product.

I was hired in late ‘96 by a former Bear Stearns colleague who had recently joined UBS to help develop this business. My tenure and that of my colleagues within our fledgling mortgage effort was short-lived as a result of Swiss Bank’s takeover of UBS. Swiss Bank’s management had no desire to be in the mortgage business. UBS’s management, including Wolf, was not about to spend any political capital to truly defend our business.

Not a big deal truly. I took my francs and moved on.

I write now simply because I find it amazing that our President is getting insights on the mortgage market from an individual at an institution that had no meaningful understanding of the intricacies of the mortgage market.

Great country America.

You can’t make this stuff up.

LD

http://tinyurl.com/2dl23aj


86 posted on 08/24/2010 8:11:41 AM PDT by kcvl
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