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The times are a-changing indeed

November
14

By ANN SANNER
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) — This isn’t your grandfather’s fireside chat.
President-elect Barack Obama plans to tape a weekly address not just for radio listeners, as presidents have for years, but for YouTube Internet viewers, too.
Well, what else would you expect from the first post-baby boom president?
Connecting the White House hearth to the American home, Franklin Roosevelt talked to the people through the radio, with crackling broadcasts delivered near a crackling fire. John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan mastered television. For Obama, who built a big part of his campaign on the Internet, it’s YouTube.
About 75 years after Roosevelt used a new medium to reach out during troubled times, the president-elect is doing the same with Web videos.
Obama was recording a four-minute address Friday at his transition office in Chicago. It will be posted Saturday through a YouTube link on his transition Web site, www.change.gov. And he will continue to do the videos when he takes office on Jan. 20.
And he won’t be the only one in his administration taking a starring role online.
Transition leaders and policy advisers will also appear in videos on a regular basis, Obama spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. Other officials, such as Cabinet members, could also take part.

This entry was posted on Friday, November 14th, 2008 at 5:04 pm by Liz Anderson.
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27 Responses to “The times are a-changing indeed”

  1. the consultant

    he can tape as many messages as he wants…but until
    the housing market is stabilized it won’t make
    a bit of difference…all mortgages coming up
    for adjustment have to be reformed at the original
    interest rate to keep people from going into foreclosure
    all homeowners now late on their mortgage payments have
    to have their mortgages reformed to reduce the monthly
    payment based on a government subsidized 4% rate
    interest only until housing values come back but
    at least for 7 years..for anyone else who does
    pay their mortgage on time and says..why should everyone
    who can’t get help the government should either guarantee
    a 4% interest rate based on a 30 year amortization period
    or offer a 4000 tax credit per year to each home owner
    the housing market will then stabilze…inventories will
    be decreased…and consumer spending will be stimulated
    avoiding a deep recession….all that money that is
    supposedly going to the banks needs to be redirected to
    the housing issue…

  2. EnglishMajor

    Right. I and two million college students are going to meet weekly to check out his Utube oratory on foreign investments and the consumer price index. Who’s got the keg tap?

  3. Tim Hays

    The election is over. There’ll be another one in four years.

    In the time being, the president-elect forges ahead, in a manner similar to Ronald Reagan’s. In fact, the two have many good similarities.

    Here are some facts to chew over.

    Mr. Obama won by more than seven million votes nationwide. His victory is equivalent to the 1980 win by RWR and the non-incumbent party. It was a definite repudiation of the incumbent party by centrists—you know, those folks who have bills to pay.

    Mr. Obama’s public speaking skills are sine qua non. Forget who’s writing his speeches: HE is delivering them. Unflappably.

    We are in an economic crisis not dissimilar to that of the great “misery index” suggested in 1980 by Reagan.

    The bigotry of the knucklehead far right will be overcome once his first ten days in office (to borrow from Huey Long) are established.

    It’s the “liberals” who will turn on him first. (Opinion, not necessarily fact.)

    In a more perfect world, John McCain would be finishing his second term as president, having overcome the forces of evil from Texas in the 2000 primaries. That didn’t happen. So I won’t romanticize the past.

    “We are here, and this is now.” (Which movie icon said those words in a prominent film 40 years ago?)

    We are Americans first, Republicans second.

    President-elect Obama is good for America. He has only to thwart those who supported him and now claim, “IT’s OUR turn.” That will be his first enormous task as president.

    If he proves worthy of the challenge, and revives our economy, he could serve for eight years. Otherwise, he could be like Carter, or the first President Bush.

    Disclosure: I voted for John McCain on election day.

  4. TugboatAnnie

    I suppose he can’t help it, but the man has a voice like a fog horn.

  5. Jiminy Cricket

    You mean Tim Hays? LOL. Just kidding. But rather than a fog horn, Tim is more like a weather vane.

  6. Tim Hays

    Foghorn leghorn here. lol

    By the way, it was the great Chuck Heston in Planet of the Apes to whom I was referring.

    I’ll have to try out that foghorn voice sometime soon.

    Like the late, great John Facenda? (NFL Films.) He made third-and-long sound like Armageddon.

  7. Tim Hays

    Jiminy, I like you.

    (Laughs) I still do not know whether the “weather vane” was a compliment, or a joke.

    But. . .see you after the inauguration. I like your keeping me confused.

    Faithfully yours,

    (Reagan) Republican Tim Hays

  8. not fair

    Consultant you want him to fix the mortgage market. Why should someone who speculated or bought a house that they could not afford benefit. Many people including myself had opportunities to buy bigger homes and bye investment properties that we could not soundly

    afford. How will we be compensated for being financially conservative.

  9. the consultant

    you didn’t read the entire proposal it contained a tax
    credit for owner occupied houses by people who make their
    payments on time…3000 per year…a credit against
    net income not a deduction…my proposal would reform
    mortgages for those approaching or in foreclosure,.its
    a better way to spend the 700 billion rather than just
    giving it to the banks..the problem is the housing
    market..solve that and everything else follows…
    I too did not buy a bigger home then i could afford
    and people like you and me although we have to bail
    out those who are way over their head…we also
    get to cut our mortgage payments with the credit…
    obviously it would not apply to second homes or
    those who have specuated ….they would lose whatever

  10. not fair

    In the long run people who speculated or bought homes they could not afford in the long run would benefit much more than a $3000 yearly benefit. You are still handsomely rewarding people who bought this they could not afford.

  11. ed1

    Any handicapper knows that you never bet a horse to suddenly change form unless you have fixed the race. The horses will almost always perform as their history indicates they will perform. The same is true with humans. (see recidivism as defined by Dan Webster) Brokers and bankers and politicians and businessmen who steal will (despite mother’s stern talk-to) will continue to do so, even if they already have millions (see Enron and myriad other examples that you can come up with while just lounging on your Sunday easy chair). The same is true with people who don’t pay other people back the money that they have “borrowed.” If we’re to have socialism, let everyone benefit. This way, even as we fool ourselves that we have “educated” the uneducable, that we have put everyone into a responsible job (that we, despite the obvious, cannot admit is beyond his ken so that everything disintegrates, and so that individual excellence eventually disappears entirely, everyone can get fat and kid themselves that we are “progressive.”

  12. 1446mre

    we already have a type of socialism..we have always
    had it..the fdic…fannie and freddie, social security
    medicare..its just a question of how best to save the
    housing market

  13. I missed ot

    I guess I missed out on my $50,000 salary. I should of bought a million dollar home. Then I would have a problem paying the mortage and taxez. Then I would have everyone else pay for it. While I live like a king.

  14. the consultant

    good point..except if you are given a continuing tax
    credit for 7 years, the governement is recognizing that
    you saved and did not live over your means…the plan
    which is CONSERVATIVE. does not give the 700 billion
    to the banks to stimulate credit..because so far it
    hasn’t worked..the banks have hoarded the money or
    bought other regional banks…what is proposed
    will deal with the housing crisis by
    allowing those who either got taken by mortgage
    lenders who didn’t disclose the ultimate cost of
    the mortgage or simply made bad financial moves
    to stay in their homes while paying their mortgages
    off just like you..only on terms that allow them
    to continue to do so…they would still owe the principal
    balance of the mortgage..they would still make payments
    the government agency would still get the asset if their
    was a default…solving the housing problem is the key
    to fixing the economy and getting consumers to be
    comfortable in spending their money again..in order
    to do this rather than enabling the banks…lets enable
    the homeowners..either way the 700 billion is gone..
    and you will be paying for it…the issue is where
    do you want it to go..to the wall street guys who
    created the mess..or to the average guy who has seen his
    income go way down and the value of his house go way
    down..and you as the good citizen and good creditor
    that you are will reap two rewards…1. your tax credit
    and 2. the ultimate value of your home may go up again

  15. I missed out

    Consultant you said a lot. The fact is I still live in my small home and pay a monthly amount to a bank. When other people live in a much larger house with all of things in it that I do not have they also pay a monthly amount to a bank. With your option some of these people will be paying a lower amount than I am paying. There is something wrong there. These people should crash and burn and the true value of the house will come out. At that time I might beable to pay for it because the value will come down.

  16. the consultant

    yes in principal you are correct…but when the situation
    is endemic…ie the entire economy is affected…then
    the rules change I like you pay my mortage (in fla)
    and don’t default but these are not ordinary times
    so your choices are limited..if all of those homeowners
    actually default and lose their homes you will be more
    adversly affected economically in terms of the tax
    increases you will have to pay than if the govt steps
    in now

  17. I missed out

    So then with your thinking. We should bail out the auto industry and the airline industry again when they have problems. AIG also needs more money so they should also be bailed out. Who knows tomorrow the {pick an industry} will have a prob lem so they should aso be bailed out. Where does it stop. What generates my income is slow so should we have our hands out also. Maybe we will. Everyone else is benefiting

    Why souldn’t I.

  18. ed1

    1446mre: I’ve seen this specious argument before. Fact is, we PAY for Social Security and Medicare throughout our working lives. That the government finds ways to squander most of the money is another matter.

  19. ron

    So what is your point.

  20. the consultant

    ED1 The argument is hardly specious..the government has
    already decided to spend th 700 billion..do you want
    it to go to the banks who are already not putting it
    back in the credit system or do you want to relieve the
    housing collapse…there is nothing specious about it
    just the way you are going to use the money not WHETHER
    you are going to use it

  21. Generation X

    Where does this all stop. We have already bailed out the financials institutions. AIG still wants more money. The auto industry wants money. As a nation we have to deside how far will we go to prop up companies. In my career if we don’t change with the times and adopt with the current market it will be over for me. Who will bail us out.

  22. the consultant

    your point is well taken..but in fact we haven’t
    really bailed out the financials…we have simply given
    them access to funds…we need to deal with the
    housing issue…first and foremost before we continue
    to piss away 700 billion

  23. ed1

    Con: My reference, of course, was to social security and medicare. I simply pointed out that we pay throughout our lifetimes for these things; they aren’t outright hand-outs.

  24. I missed out

    Housing issue
    I have lived within my means all of my life. I live in a modest house which I can afford. Some of my friends live in homes that are much bigger than the one I live in. These homes are new and have many modern up to date features. There mortgages were less than mine because they used creative financing. Some of them are currently having problems paying for there house. Some of these people also have 2nd & 3rd homes becaue they used used the same creative financing. Why should these people continue to live a nicer quality of life than I do. If we bail these people out my taxes will go up I will continue to live modesly and these other people will continue to benefit.

  25. the consultant

    those people will not be bailed out..to qualify you would
    have to be a one home owner..no speculation on other
    houses or second homes etc..its a question of solving
    the economic problem..what you are not looking at is
    that your house will be worth a lot less if all housing
    continues to be devalued…and deflation kicks in…
    that would be good for people all in cash..and very
    few are…most people are leveraged up to their
    eyeballs…the point is that housing is the focal
    point of the economic mess…and you would get your
    tax credit to make it a fair deal…now understand
    this is not the proposal sitting in the congress
    they still want to bailout the banks..this is
    the proposal that economists are talking about
    to replace the 700 billion facility

  26. I missed out

    So the people who own there home that they can not currently pay for. They do not own a 2nd home. They pay less than what I do and there homes are much larger than they should be living in. Will be able to continue to live a better quality of life. Something is wrong here.

  27. the consultant

    this is not about you…this is about the economy…there
    are also people in homes a lot smaller than you who cannot
    afford to live their 70,000-150,000 in the midwest who
    got snookered into adjustable rate and other creative
    financing mortgages..multiply that by a couple of million
    and you get a bubble and a collapse.you don’t seem to
    be able to see the whole problem..just your particular
    situation..thats called not being able to see the forrest
    for the trees…you have one choice and one only..give
    the 700 billion to the banks…that is already the choice
    of the bush administration..or the alternative..use
    the 700 billion to fix the housing problem..not everyone
    gets the same benefit..you would get a tax credit…
    under the plan I am talking about…so you would get
    300-400 per month that you are not getting now..

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