The Two Trillion Dollar Black Hole

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The Two Trillion Dollar Black Hole

Postby American Dream » Thu Nov 13, 2008 11:49 am

http://counterpunch.org/martens11132008.html

The Two Trillion Dollar Black Hole

By PAM MARTENS




Purge your mind for a moment about everything you've heard and read in the last decade about investing on Wall Street and think about the following business model:

You take your hard earned retirement savings to a Wall Street firm and they tell you that as long as you "stay invested for the long haul" you can expect double digit annual returns. You never really know what your money is invested in because it’s pooled with other investors and comes with incomprehensible but legal looking prospectuses. The heads of these Wall Street firms have been taking massive payouts for themselves, ranging from $160 million to $1 billion per CEO over a number of years. As long as new money keeps flooding in from newfangled accounts called 401(k)s, Roth IRAs, 529 plans for education savings, and hedge funds (each carrying ever greater restrictions for withdrawing your money and ever greater opacity) everything appears fine on the surface. And then, suddenly, you learn that many of these Wall Street firms don't have any assets that anybody wants to buy. Because these firms are both managing your money as well as having their own shares constitute a large percentage of your pooled investments, your funds begin to plummet as confidence drains from the scheme.

Now consider how Wikipedia describes a Ponzi scheme:

“A Ponzi scheme is a fraudulent investment operation that involves promising or paying abnormally high returns (‘profits’) to investors out of the money paid in by subsequent investors, rather than from net revenues generated by any real business. It is named after Charles Ponzi...One reason that the scheme initially works so well is that early investors – those who actually got paid the large returns – quite commonly reinvest (keep) their money in the scheme (it does, after all, pay out much better than any alternative investment). Thus those running the scheme do not actually have to pay out very much (net) – they simply have to send statements to investors that show how much the investors have earned by keeping the money in what looks like a great place to get a high return. They also try to minimize withdrawals by offering new plans to investors, often where money is frozen for a longer period of time...The catch is that at some point one of three things will happen:

(1) the promoters will vanish, taking all the investment money (less payouts) with them;

(2) the scheme will collapse of its own weight, as investment slows and the promoters start having problems paying out the promised returns (and when they start having problems, the word spreads and more people start asking for their money, similar to a bank run);

(3) the scheme is exposed, because when legal authorities begin examining accounting records of the so-called enterprise they find that many of the 'assets' that should exist do not."

Looking at outcomes 1, 2, and 3 above, here’s where we are today. The promoters have clearly not vanished as in outcome 1. In fact, they are behaving as if they know they have nothing to fear. As over $2 trillion of taxpayer money is rapidly infused through Federal Reserve loans and over $125 Billion in U.S. Treasury equity purchases to keep these firms from collapsing, the promoters are standing at the elbow of the President-Elect in press conferences (Citigroup promoter, Robert Rubin); they are served up as business gurus on the business channel CNBC (former AIG CEO and promoter, Maurice “Hank” Greenberg); they are put in charge of nationalized zombie firms like Fannie Mae (Herbert Allison, former President of Merrill Lynch); they are paying $26 million and $42 million, respectively, for new digs at 15 Central Park West in Manhattan, where their chauffeurs have their own waiting room (Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs; Sanford “Sandy” Weill, former CEO of Citigroup, who put his penthouse in the name of his wife’s trust, perhaps smelling a few pesky questions ahead over the $1 billion he sucked out of Citigroup before the Fed had to implant a feeding tube).

We are definitely seeing all the signs of outcome 2: the scheme is collapsing under its own weight; there are panic runs around the globe wherever Wall Street has left its footprint.

But outcome 3 is the most fascinating area of departure from the classic Ponzi scheme. Legal authorities have, indeed, examined the books of these firms, except for one area we’ll discuss later. They found worthless assets along with debts hidden off the balance sheet instead of real depositor funds. Instead of arresting the perpetrators and shutting down the schemes, Federal authorities have developed their own new schemes and pumped over $2 trillion of taxpayer money into propping up the firms while leaving the schemers in place. Equally astonishing, Congress has not held any meaningful investigations. This has left many Wall Street veterans wondering if the problem isn’t that the firms are “too big to fail” but rather “too Ponzi-like to prosecute.” Imagine the worldwide reaction to learning that all the claptrap coming from U.S. think-tanks and ivy-league academics over the last decade about efficient market theory and deregulation and trickle down was merely a ruse for a Ponzi scheme now being propped up by a U.S. Treasury Department bailout and loans from our central bank, the Federal Reserve.

Fortunately for American taxpayers, Bloomberg News has some inquiring minds, even if our Congress and prosecutors don’t. On May 20, 2008, Bloomberg News reporter, Mark Pittman, filed a Freedom of Information Act request (FOIA) with the Federal Reserve asking for detailed information relevant to whom the central bank was giving these massive loans and precisely what securities these firms were posting as collateral. Bloomberg also wanted details on “contracts with outside entities that show the employees or entities being used to price the Relevant Securities and to conduct the process of lending.” Heretofore, our opaque central bank had been mum on all points.

By law, the Federal Reserve had until June 18, 2008 to answer the FOIA request. Here’s what happened instead, according to the Bloomberg lawsuit: On June 19, 2008, the Fed invoked its right to extend the response time to July 3, 2008. On July 8, 2008, the Fed called Bloomberg News to say it was processing the request. The Fed rang up Bloomberg again on August 15, 2008, wherein Alison Thro, Senior Counsel and another employee, Pam Wilson, informed the business wire service that their request was going to be denied by the end of September 2008. No further response of any kind was received, including the denial. On November 7, 2008, Bloomberg News slapped a federal lawsuit on the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, asserting the following:

“The government documents that Bloomberg seeks are central to understanding and assessing the government’s response to the most cataclysmic financial crisis in America since the Great Depression. The effect of that crisis on the American public has been and will continue to be devastating. Hundreds of corporations are announcing layoffs in response to the crisis, and the economy was the top issue for many Americans in the recent elections. In response to the crisis, the Fed has vastly expanded its lending programs to private financial institutions. To obtain access to this public money and to safeguard the taxpayers’ interests, borrowers are required to post collateral. Despite the manifest public interest in such matters, however, none of the programs themselves make reference to any public disclosure of the posted collateral or of the Fed’s methods in valuing it. Thus, while the taxpayers are the ultimate counterparty for the collateral, they have not been given any information regarding the kind of collateral received, how it was valued, or by whom.”

As evidence that Bloomberg News is not engaging in hyperbole when it uses the word “cataclysmic” in a Federal court filing, consider the following price movements of some of these giant financial institutions. (All current prices are intraday on November 12, 2008):

American International Group (AIG): Currently $2.16; in May 2007, $72.00

Bear Stearns: Absorbed into JPMorganChase to avoid bankruptcy filing; share price in April 2007, $159

Fannie Mae: Currently 65 cents; in June 2007 $69.00

Freddie Mac: Currently 79 cents; in May 2007 $67.00

Lehman Brothers: Currently 6 cents; in February 2007, $85.00

What all of the companies in this article have in common is that they were writing secret contracts called Credit Default Swaps (CDS) on each other and/or between each other. These are not the credit default swaps recently disclosed by the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC). These are the contracts that still live in darkness and are at the root of why the Wall Street banks won’t lend to each other and why their share prices are melting faster than a snow cone in July.

A Credit Default Swap can be used by a bank to hedge against default on loans it has made by buying a type of insurance from another party. The buyer pays a premium upfront and annually and the seller pays the face amount of the insurance in the event of default. In the last few years, however, the contracts have been increasingly used to speculate on defaults when the buyer of the CDS has no exposure to the firm or underlying debt instruments. The CDS contracts outstanding now total somewhere between $34 Trillion and $54 Trillion, depending on whose data you want to use, and it remains an unregulated market of darkness. It is also quite likely that none of the firms that agreed to pay the hundreds of billions in insurance, such as AIG, have the money to do so. It is also quite likely that were these hedges shown to be uncollectible hedges, massive amounts of new capital would be needed by the big Wall Street firms and some would be deemed insolvent.

Until Congress holds serious investigations and hearings, the U.S. taxpayer may be funding little more than Ponzi schemes while companies that provide real products and services, legitimate jobs and contributions to the economy are left to fail.

Pam Martens worked on Wall Street for 21 years; she has no security position, long or short, in any company mentioned in this article. She writes on public interest issues from New Hampshire. She can be reached at pamk741@aol.com
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Postby JackRiddler » Thu Nov 13, 2008 7:55 pm

.

BLOOMBERG ARTICLE IN QUESTION:

I am confused by the story because the $2 trillion figure does not seem to be in taxpayer-financed funding (whether by subsidy or loan). Rather, it represents the increased assets of the Federal Reserve, i.e. it is money created on the spot and loaned out to private institutions during the last few months of crisis. (In the world of capitalist accounting loans are "assets," although they are equally "risks.") It's new money. Fed assets were under $1 trillion at the beginning of this year, now they're over $2 trillion. Read it.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... =worldwide

Fed Defies Transparency Aim in Refusal to Disclose (Update2)

By Mark Pittman, Bob Ivry and Alison Fitzgerald

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve is refusing to identify the recipients of almost $2 trillion of emergency loans from American taxpayers or the troubled assets the central bank is accepting as collateral.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in September they would comply with congressional demands for transparency in a $700 billion bailout of the banking system. Two months later, as the Fed lends far more than that in separate rescue programs that didn't require approval by Congress, Americans have no idea where their money is going or what securities the banks are pledging in return.

``The collateral is not being adequately disclosed, and that's a big problem,'' said Dan Fuss, vice chairman of Boston- based Loomis Sayles & Co., where he co-manages $17 billion in bonds. ``In a liquid market, this wouldn't matter, but we're not. The market is very nervous and very thin.''

Bloomberg News has requested details of the Fed lending under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act and filed a federal lawsuit Nov. 7 seeking to force disclosure.

The Fed made the loans under terms of 11 programs, eight of them created in the past 15 months, in the midst of the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

``It's your money; it's not the Fed's money,'' said billionaire Ted Forstmann, senior partner of Forstmann Little & Co. in New York. ``Of course there should be transparency.''

Treasury, Fed, Obama

Federal Reserve spokeswoman Michelle Smith declined to comment on the loans or the Bloomberg lawsuit. Treasury spokeswoman Michele Davis didn't respond to a phone call and an e-mail seeking comment.

President-elect Barack Obama's economic adviser, Jason Furman, also didn't respond to an e-mail and a phone call seeking comment from Obama. In a Sept. 22 campaign speech, Obama promised to ``make our government open and transparent so that anyone can ensure that our business is the people's business.''

The Fed's lending is significant because the central bank has stepped into a rescue role that was also the purpose of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, bailout plan -- without safeguards put into the TARP legislation by Congress.

Total Fed lending topped $2 trillion for the first time last week and has risen by 140 percent, or $1.172 trillion, in the seven weeks since Fed governors relaxed the collateral standards on Sept. 14. The difference includes a $788 billion increase in loans to banks through the Fed and $474 billion in other lending, mostly through the central bank's purchase of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds.

Sept. 14 Decision


Before Sept. 14, the Fed accepted mostly top-rated government and asset-backed securities as collateral. After that date, the central bank widened standards to accept other kinds of securities, some with lower ratings. The Fed collects interest on all its loans.

The plan to purchase distressed securities through TARP called for buying at the ``lowest price that the secretary (of the Treasury) determines to be consistent with the purposes of this Act,'' according to the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, the law that covers TARP.

The legislation didn't require any specific method for the purchases beyond saying mechanisms such as auctions or reverse auctions should be used ``when appropriate.'' In a reverse auction, bidders offer to sell securities at successively lower prices, helping to ensure that the Fed would pay less. The measure also included a five-member oversight board that includes Paulson and Bernanke.

At a Sept. 23 Senate Banking Committee hearing in Washington, Paulson called for transparency in the purchase of distressed assets under the TARP program.

`We Need Transparency'

``We need oversight,'' Paulson told lawmakers. ``We need protection. We need transparency. I want it. We all want it.''

At a joint House-Senate hearing the next day, Bernanke also stressed the importance of openness in the program. ``Transparency is a big issue,'' he said.

The Fed lent cash and government bonds to banks, which gave the Fed collateral in the form of equities and debt, including subprime and structured securities such as collateralized debt obligations, according to the Fed Web site. The borrowers have included the now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Banks oppose any release of information because it might signal weakness and spur short-selling or a run by depositors, said Scott Talbott, senior vice president of government affairs for the Financial Services Roundtable, a Washington trade group.

Frank Backs Fed

``You have to balance the need for transparency with protecting the public interest,'' Talbott said. ``Taxpayers have a right to know where their tax dollars are going, but one piece of information standing alone could undermine public confidence in the system.''

The nation's biggest banks, Citigroup, Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, declined to comment on whether they have borrowed money from the Fed. They received $120 billion in capital from the TARP, which was signed into law Oct. 3.

In an interview Nov. 6, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank said the Fed's disclosure is sufficient and that the risk the central bank is taking on is appropriate in the current economic climate. Frank said he has discussed the program with Timothy F. Geithner, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and a possible candidate to succeed Paulson as Treasury secretary.

``I talk to Geithner and he was pretty sure that they're OK,'' said Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat. ``If the risk is that the Fed takes a little bit of a haircut, well that's regrettable.'' Such losses would be acceptable, he said, if the program helps revive the economy.

`Unclog the Market'

Frank said the Fed shouldn't reveal the assets it holds or how it values them because of ``delicacy with respect to pricing.'' He said such disclosure would ``give people clues to what your pricing is and what they might be able to sell us and what your estimates are.'' He wouldn't say why he thought that information would be problematic.

Revealing how the Fed values collateral could help thaw frozen credit markets, said Ron D'Vari, chief executive officer of NewOak Capital LLC in New York and the former head of structured finance at BlackRock Inc.

``I'd love to hear the methodology, how the Fed priced the assets,'' D'Vari said. ``That would unclog the market very quickly.''


((NOTE: Or so he thinks!))

TARP's $700 billion so far is being used to buy preferred shares in banks to shore up their capital. The program was originally intended to hold banks' troubled assets while markets were frozen.

AIG Lending

The Bloomberg lawsuit argues that the collateral lists ``are central to understanding and assessing the government's response to the most cataclysmic financial crisis in America since the Great Depression.''

The Fed has lent at least $81 billion to American International Group Inc., the world's largest insurer, so that it can pay obligations to banks. AIG today said it received an expanded government rescue package valued at more than $150 billion.


The central bank is also responsible for losses on a $26.8 billion portfolio guaranteed after Bear Stearns Cos. was bought by JPMorgan.

``As a taxpayer, it is absolutely important that we know how they're lending money and who they're lending it to,'' said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Arlington, Virginia- based Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Ratings Cuts

Ultimately, the Fed will have to remove some securities held as collateral from some programs because the central bank's rules call for instruments rated below investment grade to be taken back by the borrower and marked down in value. Losses on those assets could then be written off, partly through the capital recently injected into those banks by the Treasury.

Moody's Investors Service alone has cut its ratings on 926 mortgage-backed securities worth $42 billion to junk from investment grade since Sept. 14, making them ineligible for collateral on some Fed loans.

The Fed's collateral ``absolutely should be made public,'' said Mark Cuban, an activist investor, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks professional basketball team and the creator of the Web site BailoutSleuth.com, which focuses on the secrecy shrouding the Fed's moves.

The Bloomberg lawsuit is Bloomberg LP v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 08-CV-9595, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

To contact the reporters on this story: Mark Pittman in New York at mpittman@bloomberg.net; Bob Ivry in New York at bivry@bloomberg.net; Alison Fitzgerald in Washington at afitzgerald2@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: November 10, 2008 15:08 EST
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Postby JackRiddler » Thu Nov 13, 2008 8:24 pm

.

My own confession of confusion, in the form of a letter to the Bloomberg authors.

Dear Ms. Fitzgerald, Mr. Pittman, Mr. Ivry,

With regard to your article, "Fed Defies Transparency Aim in Refusal to Disclose (Update2)" at

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... =worldwide

I write to pose the following question to you, in the hope you will find the time for a reply.

In the lede: "The Federal Reserve is refusing to identify the recipients of almost $2 trillion of emergency loans from American taxpayers or the troubled assets the central bank is accepting as collateral."

For the rest of the article, however, you refer to these loans as being from the Federal Reserve (i.e., accounted as assets on the Federal Reserve balance sheets, which have more than doubled in the last few months during the crisis).

Unless I am very mistaken, my impression is that the Federal Reserve cannot lend out money from the Treasury without a legal authorization. Rather, as the central bank, the Fed has the authority to create the money it lends (by writing it into its balance sheets as a liability and asset simultaneously). This is central to the money creation process generally, according to my understanding of the Fed's own publications such as "Modern Money Mechanics" (Chicago Federal Reserve Bank, 1994 edition).

Please correct me if I am wrong about that, but it seems inaccurate to say the taxpayers are providing these loans. Rather, the central bank is using its authority to create money by way of extending a credit.

I also don't think the taxpayers are on the hook for guaranteeing repayment of the loans. Presumably, the people will pay a price later in increased inflation, for example if the receiving institutions engage in large-scale defaults and this money remains in circulation, cheapening the currency, or if international investors judge the dollar to be less credit-worthy due to the loans.

Of course, this alters nothing in the gravity of the present crisis, or in the absolute requirement of transparency in the public institutions of a free society. Anything less is a license for fraud. I thank you for your reporting and applaud Bloomberg for pursuing this case.

I would appreciate it very much if you could take some time to answer the question. Thank you very much for your attention.
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Postby JackRiddler » Fri Nov 14, 2008 10:44 am

.

AN ANSWER:

Are the Fed injections coming from money creation or taxpayers? Apparently both, and it's not altogether clear to what proportion, and that's a subject of the Bloomberg suit, as one of the article authors wrote to me today:

Bloomberg author wrote:Some of this is money creation (and they're not really telling us how much) the rest is direct funding by the Treasury by selling t-bills and notes and turning proceeds over to fed.


I wrote back, "So are you saying the Treasury can sell t-bills, give the proceeds to the Fed, and keep the amount confidential?"

Sounds like they're sooner or later going to declare that the federal budget itself is a national security secret.

.
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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:32 pm

/

Are RIers losing interest in the biggest scam-reveal we've ever had?

/
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Postby Fixx » Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:38 pm

JackRiddler wrote:/

Are RIers losing interest in the biggest scam-reveal we've ever had?

/


Nope, some of us are reading it avidly but do not know enough to comment. :cheers:
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Postby nathan28 » Sun Nov 16, 2008 3:43 pm

JackRiddler wrote:/

Are RIers losing interest in the biggest scam-reveal we've ever had?

/


no.

all governments are, among other things, wealth-transfer devices. that's what they do. either they are distributing wealth broadly, or they are concentrating it.

it's just that at this late date, i'm not surprised. The moment Bailout 2.0 passed, I largely expected it to be mismanaged and to turn the gov't into a bagholder. It's not quite that, but instead it's gone towards what is technically termed "looting", i.e., raid the piggy bank... e.g., Goldman's paying bonuses, the money Citi took isn't being used to fund bank functions but instead acquisitions... etc., etc.

i.e., outright criminal behavior. Recently an NPR reporter snuck into a hunting event for one company, talked to an executive there, and the same executive later denied having been there.
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Postby barracuda » Sun Nov 16, 2008 4:05 pm

This is just further proof that a coup d'état whereby Goldman Sachs is now in defacto control of the government of the United States. As if anyone really needed further proof once the TARP was made effective. So the anti-climax is really extreme.

BTW, Charles Ponzi must be the proudest conman in hell to have this apocalypse hoisting his moniker.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Postby AlicetheKurious » Sun Nov 16, 2008 4:14 pm

Fixx wrote:
JackRiddler wrote:/

Are RIers losing interest in the biggest scam-reveal we've ever had?

/


Nope, some of us are reading it avidly but do not know enough to comment. :cheers:


Ditto. Speaking for myself, I read many threads with great interest (including this one), but only comment when I have something to contribute. Present comment excepted.
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Postby Penguin » Sun Nov 16, 2008 4:34 pm

barracuda wrote:BTW, Charles Ponzi must be the proudest conman in hell to have this apocalypse hoisting his moniker.


Hee...Nice.

"The key to a con is not that you trust the conman, but that he shows he trusts you."

:pancake:
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Postby JackRiddler » Sun Nov 16, 2008 4:53 pm

.

I'll stop pretending.

I don't know this stuff either - posting on it is a way of learning about it. I end up correcting whatever I thought before. Though the basic idea is simple: pyramid plunder.

The Bloomberg editor of the above story was on NPR earlier. Had to deal with the moron question of, well, shouldn't this stuff be secret since if it gets out it will cause a bigger catastrophe?

What's blowing my mind is it's not clear how much of the Fed's $2 trillion injection (or whatever the fuck) is money creation, and how much is channeled in from t-bill sales. I tell you, the deficit is going to be a national secret soon.

Anyway, it's all a holding action. They're just keeping a lid on current derivatives payments by assuming some failed paper and delaying the dominoes for a short while longer. But unless they're going to go into the $20 trillion range with this, there's no hope of covering the paper losses. (When I say that I actually get optimistic that they'll just have to write it all down in the end.)

.
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Postby ninakat » Sun Nov 16, 2008 9:50 pm

I'm paying attention too, so keep the postings coming Jack (and others). Check out the numbers on how many people are reading the threads, even if not commenting.

The global economic crisis is so confusing that even the experts are arguing about where this is going -- deflation? inflation? recession? depression? etc. It's clear to me that nobody really knows and understands a lot of this because there's a lot of hidden data and a lot of manipulation behind the scenes, leaving forecasting difficult at best.

And, the criminals behind the scenes love this -- they're pulling off what will probably be the biggest global heist EVER, and they're getting away with it. There are plenty of suspects, but there seems to be very little recourse for the victims (billions of us).
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Postby freemason9 » Sun Nov 16, 2008 10:00 pm

Please keep posting this stuff, by all means. I like to think that I know something about economics . . . but something new always presents itself to prove me wrong.

The most recent has to do with the idea of reducting global debt through a hyperinflated set of new currencies. Actually, it sounds logical in some some ways, but alas, I don't know enough about it.
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Postby Hilda Martinez » Mon Nov 17, 2008 12:27 am

I'll echo what everyone is saying here, Jack. Your postings and the contributions of others to this thread are making me think and learn and go out and do more research. This is why I love coming to RI (when my boss can lend me his laptop or when I can make it to the library for Internet access).

This is all such a mess, but I am coming closer and closer to getting my arms around it thanks to you guys.
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Postby Penguin » Mon Nov 17, 2008 2:48 am

A "bump" note of appreciation too!
JackRiddler, your input is greatly valued. Thanks.
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