The forum for general posting. Come join the madness.

-
SportsFan68
- No Scritches!!!
- Posts: 21300
- Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2007 8:36 pm
- Location: God's Country
#26
Post
by SportsFan68 » Thu Mar 19, 2009 1:23 pm
Rexer25 wrote:themanintheseersuckersuit wrote: "Where WAS Mr. E. Squirrel when this bill was written"
I think he was checking first class airfares to Denver, and a limo service to Podunkville.
ES will never get booked into Denver because of the restraining order.
Nor on any limo service in the state.
The only way ES could conceivably visit in Colorado would be to get Ted Kaczynski as a roommate . . .
-- In Iroquois society, leaders are encouraged to remember seven generations in the past and consider seven generations in the future when making decisions that affect the people.
-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller
-
themanintheseersuckersuit
- Posts: 7635
- Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 6:37 pm
- Location: South Carolina
#27
Post
by themanintheseersuckersuit » Mon Mar 30, 2009 9:38 am
As Democrats prepared to take control of Congress after the 2006 elections, a top boss at the insurance giant American International Group Inc. told colleagues that Sen. Christopher J. Dodd was seeking re-election donations and he implored company executives and their spouses to give.
The message in the Nov. 17, 2006, e-mail from Joseph Cassano, AIG Financial Products chief executive, was unmistakable: Mr. Dodd was "next in line" to be chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, which oversees the insurance industry, and he would "have the opportunity to set the committee's agenda on issues critical to the financial services industry.
"Given his seniority in the Senate, he will also play a key role in the Democratic Majority's leadership," Mr. Cassano wrote in the message, obtained by The Washington Times.
Mr. Dodd's campaign quickly hit pay dirt, collecting more than $160,000 from employees and their spouses at the AIG Financial Products division (AIG-FP) * in Wilton, Conn., in the days before he took over as the committee chairman in January 2007. Months later, the senator transferred the donations to jump-start his 2008 presidential bid, which later failed.
Now, two years later, Mr. Dodd has emerged as a central figure in the government's decision to let executives at the now-failing AIG collect more than $218 million in bonuses, according to the Connecticut attorney general - even as the company was receiving billions of dollars in assistance from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). He acknowledged that he slipped a provision into legislation in February that authorized the bonuses, but said the Treasury Department asked him to do it.
The decision has generated national outrage and put the Obama administration into the position of trying to collect the bonuses after they were distributed. It also endangers Mr. Dodd's re-election chances in 2010 as his popularity tumbles in his home state.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/200 ... odd/print/
* AIG-FP the guys that actually screwed up the financial system
Suitguy is not bitter.
feels he represents the many educated and rational onlookers who believe that the hysterical denouncement of lay scepticism is both unwarranted and counter-productive
The problem, then, is that such calls do not address an opposition audience so much as they signal virtue. They talk past those who need convincing. They ignore actual facts and counterargument. And they are irreparably smug.
-
Bob Juch
- Posts: 27109
- Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 11:58 am
- Location: Oro Valley, Arizona
-
Contact:
#28
Post
by Bob Juch » Mon Mar 30, 2009 12:23 pm
themanintheseersuckersuit wrote:As Democrats prepared to take control of Congress after the 2006 elections, a top boss at the insurance giant American International Group Inc. told colleagues that Sen. Christopher J. Dodd was seeking re-election donations and he implored company executives and their spouses to give.
The message in the Nov. 17, 2006, e-mail from Joseph Cassano, AIG Financial Products chief executive, was unmistakable: Mr. Dodd was "next in line" to be chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, which oversees the insurance industry, and he would "have the opportunity to set the committee's agenda on issues critical to the financial services industry.
"Given his seniority in the Senate, he will also play a key role in the Democratic Majority's leadership," Mr. Cassano wrote in the message, obtained by The Washington Times.
Mr. Dodd's campaign quickly hit pay dirt, collecting more than $160,000 from employees and their spouses at the AIG Financial Products division (AIG-FP) * in Wilton, Conn., in the days before he took over as the committee chairman in January 2007. Months later, the senator transferred the donations to jump-start his 2008 presidential bid, which later failed.
Now, two years later, Mr. Dodd has emerged as a central figure in the government's decision to let executives at the now-failing AIG collect more than $218 million in bonuses, according to the Connecticut attorney general - even as the company was receiving billions of dollars in assistance from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). He acknowledged that he slipped a provision into legislation in February that authorized the bonuses, but said the Treasury Department asked him to do it.
The decision has generated national outrage and put the Obama administration into the position of trying to collect the bonuses after they were distributed. It also endangers Mr. Dodd's re-election chances in 2010 as his popularity tumbles in his home state.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/200 ... odd/print/
* AIG-FP the guys that actually screwed up the financial system
Only $160,000? If he was bought, he came cheap.
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
-
sunflower
- Bored Hooligan
- Posts: 8010
- Joined: Tue Apr 08, 2008 11:32 am
- Location: East Hartford, CT
#29
Post
by sunflower » Mon Mar 30, 2009 1:55 pm
It also endangers Mr. Dodd's re-election chances in 2010 as his popularity tumbles in his home state.
Ummm, what popularity in his home state??? I've never liked the guy, I don't know anyone who does. He's just a democrat that we all vote for without having any viable alternatives.
He tried to assert himself by acting all high and mighty against Joe Lieberman after he ran as an Independent, telling him it was the wrong thing to do and the party and the state wouldn't support him. Yeah, I still like Lieberman and I don't like Dodd. Sometimes I don't even remember if he's still alive or not.