Returning to the ancestral void

"Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it."
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  • underthemountainbunker:

Dimon On Whether JP Morgan’s $2 Billion Loss Proves Banks Are Still Too Risky: ‘I Don’t Think So’ – [JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie] Dimon has been one of the biggest critics of the Volcker Rule, which is meant to prevent banks from making massive bets with federally insured dollars. […] Of course, the point isn’t whether JP Morgan, the biggest bank in the U.S., can survive a trade like this. It’s whether the financial system can sustain this sort of trading by all of the big banks, many of which are not in the same financial shape as JP Morgan. As the New York Times detailed yesterday, JP Morgan and the rest of the nation’s biggest banks have been fighting to widen exemptions to the Volcker Rule that would allow banks to continue making risky trades of this sort. ”I hope that the final [Volcker] rule will prevent this,” said Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), whose name graces the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, on ABC today. “The Volcker Rule is still being formulated.” — Think Progress
One Month Ago, Dimon Called Critics Of Big Bank Trading ‘Infantile’ And ‘Nonfactual’
RNC Chief: Leave Wall Street alone – Host David Gregory asked a straightforward question: “In light of the losses on Wall Street this week, you think we need less financial regulation rather than more?” In Preibus’ mind, it’s not even a close call: “I think we need less.” The RNC chief added that Democrats have “made things worse” by approving new safeguards and adding new layers of accountability to the financial system. It reminded me of an Upton Sinclair line: “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.” — Steve Benen
Democratic Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren called for JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to resign his position as a director at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In a statement posted on her website, Warren said Dimon stepping down would “send a signal to the American people that Wall Street bankers get it and to show that they understand the need for responsibility and accountability.” – The Hill
JPMorgan Chase has been lobbying to make exactly the kind of trades that just lost the company billions of dollars. – Edward Wyatt in The New York Times
JPMorgan Chase’s loss proves the need for bank regulation. – Paul Krugman in The New York Times
More from Ezra Klein…
How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform – The fate of Dodd-Frank over the past two years is an object lesson in the government’s inability to institute even the simplest and most obvious reforms, especially if those reforms happen to clash with powerful financial interests. From the moment it was signed into law, lobbyists and lawyers have fought regulators over every line in the rulemaking process. Congressmen and presidents may be able to get a law passed once in a while – but they can no longer make sure it stays passed. You win the modern financial-regulation game by filing the most motions, attending the most hearings, giving the most money to the most politicians and, above all, by keeping at it, day after day, year after fiscal year, until stealing is legal again. “It’s like a scorched-earth policy,” says Michael Greenberger, a former regulator who was heavily involved with the drafting of Dodd-Frank. “It requires constant combat. And it never, ever ends.” That the banks have just about succeeded in strangling Dodd-Frank is probably not news to most Americans – it’s how they succeeded that’s the scary part. –  Matt Taibbi | Rolling Stone

    underthemountainbunker:

    Dimon On Whether JP Morgan’s $2 Billion Loss Proves Banks Are Still Too Risky: ‘I Don’t Think So’ – [JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie] Dimon has been one of the biggest critics of the Volcker Rule, which is meant to prevent banks from making massive bets with federally insured dollars. […] Of course, the point isn’t whether JP Morgan, the biggest bank in the U.S., can survive a trade like this. It’s whether the financial system can sustain this sort of trading by all of the big banks, many of which are not in the same financial shape as JP Morgan. As the New York Times detailed yesterday, JP Morgan and the rest of the nation’s biggest banks have been fighting to widen exemptions to the Volcker Rule that would allow banks to continue making risky trades of this sort. ”I hope that the final [Volcker] rule will prevent this,” said Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), whose name graces the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, on ABC today. “The Volcker Rule is still being formulated.” — Think Progress

    • One Month Ago, Dimon Called Critics Of Big Bank Trading ‘Infantile’ And ‘Nonfactual’
    • RNC Chief: Leave Wall Street alone – Host David Gregory asked a straightforward question: “In light of the losses on Wall Street this week, you think we need less financial regulation rather than more?” In Preibus’ mind, it’s not even a close call: “I think we need less.” The RNC chief added that Democrats have “made things worse” by approving new safeguards and adding new layers of accountability to the financial system. It reminded me of an Upton Sinclair line: “It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.” — Steve Benen
    • Democratic Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren called for JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to resign his position as a director at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In a statement posted on her website, Warren said Dimon stepping down would “send a signal to the American people that Wall Street bankers get it and to show that they understand the need for responsibility and accountability.” – The Hill
    • JPMorgan Chase has been lobbying to make exactly the kind of trades that just lost the company billions of dollars. – Edward Wyatt in The New York Times
    • JPMorgan Chase’s loss proves the need for bank regulation. – Paul Krugman in The New York Times
    • More from Ezra Klein…
    • How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform – The fate of Dodd-Frank over the past two years is an object lesson in the government’s inability to institute even the simplest and most obvious reforms, especially if those reforms happen to clash with powerful financial interests. From the moment it was signed into law, lobbyists and lawyers have fought regulators over every line in the rulemaking process. Congressmen and presidents may be able to get a law passed once in a while – but they can no longer make sure it stays passed. You win the modern financial-regulation game by filing the most motions, attending the most hearings, giving the most money to the most politicians and, above all, by keeping at it, day after day, year after fiscal year, until stealing is legal again. “It’s like a scorched-earth policy,” says Michael Greenberger, a former regulator who was heavily involved with the drafting of Dodd-Frank. “It requires constant combat. And it never, ever ends.” That the banks have just about succeeded in strangling Dodd-Frank is probably not news to most Americans – it’s how they succeeded that’s the scary part. –  Matt Taibbi | Rolling Stone

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: underthemountainbunker.com
    • 1 year ago
    • 30 notes
    • #jp morgan
    • #pbs
    • #Planned Parenthood
    • #teachers
    • #npr
    • #social workers
    • #gulf of mexico
    • #oil spill
    • #bail outs
    • #ows
  • occupyla:

    OccupyLA Mayday takes the streets. We are unstoppable, together we are growing an alternative narrative and a better world. Solidarity with global resistance!

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: occupyla
    • 1 year ago
    • 27 notes
    • #occupy la
    • #ows
    • #may1
    • #nationalism
    • #imagine fairness
    • #justice
    • #equality
  • oldenough2burmom:

Occupy Oakland protester faces a tank. That’s right, a tank.

    oldenough2burmom:

    Occupy Oakland protester faces a tank. That’s right, a tank.

    Source: on.fb.me
    • 1 year ago
    • 149 notes
    • #ows
    • #oo
    • #occupy
    • #tank
    • #tanks
    • #military
    • #protest
    • #protester
  • noise2010:

OWS May Day March

    noise2010:

    OWS May Day March

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: noise2010
    • 1 year ago
    • 15 notes
    • #ows
    • #may1
    • #occupy
    • #nyc
    • #parade
    • #may day parade
    • #general strike
  • visual-poetry:

    “descriptive camera” by matt richardson

    The Descriptive Camera works a lot like a regular camera—point it at subject and press the shutter button to capture the scene. However, instead of producing an image, this prototype outputs a text description of the scene. Modern digital cameras capture gobs of parsable metadata about photos such as the camera’s settings, the location of the photo, the date, and time, but they don’t output any information about the content of the photo. The Descriptive Camera only outputs the metadata about the content. (more)

    Source: visual-poetry
    • 1 year ago
    • 1109 notes
    • #games
    • #computer games
    • #online games
    • #ows
    • #non-violence
    • #fun
  • Source: theaquabrat
    • 1 year ago
    • 12 notes
    • #may 1
    • #General Strike
    • #International Workers' Day
    • #May 1st
    • #May Day
    • #m1gs
    • #occupy
    • #our
    • #our time
    • #ows
    • #strike
    • #sun
    • #time
    • #rising
    • #uprising
    • #sundial
  • streetartsdistrict:

A stylish old man dozes on an L.A. subway car Sunday evening after youths put up a poster for the May 1 Occupy event happening in the city and elsewhere. I snagged a copy of the cat poster, which I really like. 
From the standpoint of communication revolutions, I’m particularly fascinated that the poster contains such sparse information, just a date and a Twitter hash tag. Those who check out #M1GS will finds lots of talk and connections for Occupy events on May 1 around the country. Fascinating. 

    streetartsdistrict:

    A stylish old man dozes on an L.A. subway car Sunday evening after youths put up a poster for the May 1 Occupy event happening in the city and elsewhere. I snagged a copy of the cat poster, which I really like. 

    From the standpoint of communication revolutions, I’m particularly fascinated that the poster contains such sparse information, just a date and a Twitter hash tag. Those who check out #M1GS will finds lots of talk and connections for Occupy events on May 1 around the country. Fascinating. 

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: streetartsdistrict
    • 1 year ago
    • 11 notes
    • #street art
    • #may1
    • #ows
    • #occupy
    • #subway
    • #mta
  • thepeoplesrecord:

May Day Lineup 4 p.m. Union Square:
Tom Morello and the GuitarmyDan DeaconDas RacistThe Bobby Sanabria BandThe New York Labor Chorus+Brigades
The morning protestwill begin at 8 a.m. with a “pop-up occupation” at Bryant Park, a staging ground (as it was explained) for a number of actions against to-be-determined corporate targets in midtown. The park itself will also serve as a center for food, leisure and information, and then at 2 p.m. Occupy will march to Union Square where it will rally with the larger May Day coalition—unions, labor groups and immigrant rights organizations that have traditionally demonstrated each year on May 1. Source

    thepeoplesrecord:

    May Day Lineup 4 p.m. Union Square:

    Tom Morello and the Guitarmy
    Dan Deacon
    Das Racist
    The Bobby Sanabria Band
    The New York Labor Chorus
    +Brigades

    The morning protestwill begin at 8 a.m. with a “pop-up occupation” at Bryant Park, a staging ground (as it was explained) for a number of actions against to-be-determined corporate targets in midtown. The park itself will also serve as a center for food, leisure and information, and then at 2 p.m. Occupy will march to Union Square where it will rally with the larger May Day coalition—unions, labor groups and immigrant rights organizations that have traditionally demonstrated each year on May 1. Source

    Source: thepeoplesrecord
    • 1 year ago
    • 17 notes
    • #may 1
    • #General Strike
    • #May Day
    • #NYC
    • #OWS
    • #Occupy Movement
    • #Protest
    • #American Spring
    • #Working class
    • #Das Racist
    • #Dan Deacon
    • #Tom Morello
  • novenator:

 May Day Directory: Occupy General Strike In Over 115 Cities 
While American corporate media has focused on yet another stale election between Wall Street-financed candidates, Occupy has been organizing something extraordinary: the first truly nationwide General Strike in U.S. history.

    novenator:

    May Day Directory: Occupy General Strike In Over 115 Cities

    While American corporate media has focused on yet another stale election between Wall Street-financed candidates, Occupy has been organizing something extraordinary: the first truly nationwide General Strike in U.S. history.

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: occupywallst.org
    • 1 year ago
    • 77 notes
    • #general strike
    • #ows
    • #99 percent
    • #immigrants
    • #solidarity
    • #work
    • #workers
  • (via ashestoember)

    Source: cherrybam
    • 1 year ago
    • 269 notes
    • #politics
    • #corruption
    • #protest
    • #news
    • #NYC
    • #OWS
  • howtosurviveinthewoods:

Anonymous message, sliced corporate logos

    howtosurviveinthewoods:

    Anonymous message, sliced corporate logos

    (via oldenough2burmom)

    Source: howtosurviveinthewoods
    • 1 year ago
    • 20 notes
    • #ows
    • #occupy
    • #corporate logos
    • #collage
  • americandissident:

Stupid Progressives

    americandissident:

    Stupid Progressives

    (via )

    Source: beingliberal.org
    • 1 year ago
    • 29 notes
    • #Progressive
    • #politics
    • #political
    • #satire
    • #ows
    • #occupy Wall Street
    • #occupy
    • #occupy wall st
    • #we are the 99%
  • americanindignants:

    occupyallstreets:

    Pro-democracy protesters being tortured by Bahraini police.

    This is a regime that is backed by the United States and its allies.

    #ows #occupy

    Glad you noticed

    Source: occupyallstreets
    • 1 year ago
    • 15 notes
    • #ows
    • #occupy
    • #bahrain
    • #us
  • (via axefightin)

    Source: occupyla
    • 1 year ago
    • 12 notes
    • #generalstrike
    • #m1gs
    • #mayday
    • #may1st
    • #ows
    • #oo
  • Source: fuckyeahmarxismleninism
    • 1 year ago
    • 69 notes
    • #capitalism
    • #titanic
    • #imperialism
    • #revolution
    • #class struggle
    • #ows
    • #occupy
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