http://my.barackobama.com/page/speakout/advertisers
Contact companies advertising on these stations and tell them to take their money elsewhere.
Our online tool will help you share your voice.
Thursday, September 04, 2008
Hit 'em where it hurts!
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Microplace, invest change for change
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Monday, August 04, 2008
Dividend research links
The DIV-Net
The Dividend Growth Investor
I will add more as I find them.
Warren Buffett
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7
Part 8
Part 9
Part 10
Friday, August 01, 2008
Ching. Ching. Ching.
I like to think of it like the hammer of a blacksmith, continually shaping the future, one strike at a time. The higher the dividend amount, the harder the strike, and the more stocks paying dividends, the more blacksmiths working. After enjoying reading the Elfquest saga over the last week or so, it's like I'm hearing the Trolls down in the depths of the mountain, pounding out their future with hammers, anvils and forges.
How many blacksmiths do you have working for you? Are they getting stronger? Are they training future blacksmiths to strike when the iron is hot?
T: $22.18. Holding the iron firm.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Open source investing
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Dividends
The list I'm collecting has some stocks that are currently paying up to 40% yield. I don't have a lot of money to put into them, but the money I am putting in is growing fast. I'm also focusing on monthly dividend stocks so they compound faster. As long as I keep my eye on things, they'll be growing pretty fast.
Let me know if you want to know more.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Citadel Broadcasting, 2008
Michael J. Regan has been a Director of the Company since 2007. Mr. Regan (age 65) is a former Vice Chairman and Chief Administrative Officer of KPMG LLP and was the lead audit partner for many Fortune 500 companies during his 40 year tenure with KPMG. Mr. Regan is a member of the board of managers of Allied Security Holdings LLC and serves on its audit committee. He also is a director of Scientific Games Corporation and serves on its audit committee. Mr. Regan is a member of the Board of Trustees of Manhattan College.
Hard to narrow down on OpenSecrets, since it's a popular name. Approve.
Thomas V. Reifenheiser has been a Director since 2007. Mr. Reifenheiser (age 72) served as Managing Director and Group Executive for the Global Media and Telecom Group of Chase Securities Inc. (“Chase”) from 1977 until 2000. He joined Chase in 1963 and was the Global Media and Telecom Group Executive since 1977. Mr. Reifenheiser is a member of the board of directors and also serves as a member of the audit committee of Lamar Advertising Company, Mediacom Communications Corporation and Cablevision Systems Corporation.
Donates to Republicans. Deny
Herbert J. Siegel has been a Director since 2003. Mr. Siegel (age 79) was Chairman of the Board and President of Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. and Chairman of the Board of BHC Communications, Inc. until July 2001, when the two companies were acquired by The News Corporation Limited. Mr. Siegel was a senior advisor to The News Corporation Limited. He is currently a consultant to News America, Inc. Mr. Siegel is also a
director of IMG Worldwide Holdings Inc.
Donates to Republicans. Deny
Deloitte & Touche LLP: Approve
Saturday, April 12, 2008
3M Proxy Votes
MEETING DATE: May 13, 2008
For Holders as of: March 14, 2008
Research on OpenSecrets.org shows the following:
Linda G. Alvarado - Gives to mostly Democrats - Approve
George W. Buckley - 3M Co PAC only - Approve
Vance D. Coffman - Mixed, but Rep Senatorial Committee stands out. - Deny
Michael L. Eskew - All Republicans - Deny
W. James Farrell - Mixed. Ted Stevens and Dick Durbin? Interesting combination... - Deny
Herbert L. Henkel - 15K to RNC. - Deny
Edward M. Liddy - Donates to Hillary - Approve
Robert S. Morrison - Donated to Mark Kennedy (R) - Deny
Aulana L. Peters - Mixed, mostly D - Approve
Robert J. Ulrich - Massive Republican Donor - Deny
Mr Ulrich is a new nominee, and was the CEO of Target. I'm not interested in rewarding that anyway, but he has given 176 times, nearly all to Republicans and Republican PAC's for a total of $201,827. No thank you.
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Auditor - Approve
Long-Term Incentive Plan - Approve
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Pfizer, Inc. Annual Meeting - My Votes
No records on OpenSecrets
Michael S. Brown
No records on OpenSecrets
M. Anthony Burns
No records on OpenSecrets
Robert N. Burt
No records on OpenSecrets
W. Don Cornwell
No records on OpenSecrets
William H. Gray III
John Kerry,
Constance J. Horner
No records on OpenSecrets
William R. Howell
No records on OpenSecrets
James M. Kilts
No records on OpenSecrets
Jeffrey B. Kindler
Mixed, mostly Democrats
George A. Lorch
No records on OpenSecrets
Dana G. Mead
No records on OpenSecrets
Suzanne Nora Johnson
No records on OpenSecrets
William C. Steere, Jr.
Mixed, mostly Republican
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL REGARDING STOCK OPTIONS
Voted against
SHAREHOLDER PROPOSAL REQUESTING SEPARATION OF CHAIRMAN AND CEO ROLES
Voted for
Monday, February 25, 2008
Veterans Family Fund
This is fantastic!
Friday, January 18, 2008
http://seattle.bizjournals.com/
With the goal of securing $300 million in deposits by the end of 2008, the Veterans Family Fund CD was conceived by Jane Jacobsen, a resident in Vancouver, Wash., with help from Mike Worthy, CEO of the Bank of Clark County. The two wanted a way to provide quick and flexible assistance for veterans in need of financial assistance.
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Ideas from Dennis Baer
Call GOP contributor and war contractor General Electric Corporation at 203 373 2211 and ask for the public relations department. Tell the person in public relations that you want the GE CEO to get Bush to end the war in Iraq and then Bush resign with Cheney and until that happens you will not buy any GE products and that you will tell your friends about this.
Call GOP contributor Rite Aid at 1-800-325-3737 and tell the person to get the CEO to get the GOP to enact HR 676 Single payer universal health care and repeal Medicare Part D and place the drug benefit in Medicare Part B covering 80% of drugs with no extra premiums, no extra deductibles, no means tests, no coverage gaps, and remove the means test for Medicare Part B and until that happens, you won't buy ANYTHING from Rite Aid.
Call GOP contributor Wendy's restaurants at 614 764-3553 and Tell the person in public relations that you want their CEO to get the GOP to help enact a $10/HR MIN. WAGE into law and until this happens you will not go to a Wendy's Restaurant.
Source: Email from "Dennis Baer"
I don't personally believe in the effectiveness of Boycotts, but then again who knows. I think the more people do, the better.
Saturday, July 14, 2007
Shared Debt Relief
http://shareddebtrelief.com/
Still getting a picture of what their plans are, but the articles written by Stephanie Wilkinson jive well with what I've been reading elsewhere.
Sunday, April 22, 2007
A missing piece of Savings
We can't, through changes in law, require individual savings. It's not that we couldn't pass a law requiring people to save some money, it's just that a law like that would cause a lot of ugly political consequences. Who wants to be the candidate for reelection who says "I voted for the bill that took 10% of your money away from you."
That doesn't work, and there's a better way.
While we can't have direct effect on the behavior of individuals, we can pass laws that affect how our government works. There has been a Balanced Budget Amendment introduced in Congress for years, if not decades. It's an idea that makes sense, and the last several years of the Clinton Administration shows what a budget written in balance can do. We were on track not just to pay down the National Debt, currently 8.9 Trillion Dollars, but to pay it off. This is a debt that exploded under Reagan and Bush I, and Bush II has reversed the positive direction that we had started to move.
So, why is a balanced budget so important? Because we owe money to other countries, and we have to pay interest on that money every year, regardless of anything else. Add that interest to the fixed expenses of Social Security, Medicare, and all the other promises that the Government has made, and we're heading towards a downward spiral that we won't be able to get out of.
Here's my spin. I don't think Balanced Budgets are the answer. They're not enough. We didn't pay down the Debt under Clinton by having Balanced Budgets, we paid it down by having a Budget Surplus. That's the key.
If we could require a 1-10% budget surplus at the Federal level every year, we would be able to start to pay down the debt that we have, and after a few years (or decades since we're so far in the hole), we would start having extra money. Before people start crying for tax cuts, I have a different idea. Wouldn't it be better to put that money to use in our overall economy?
Here's an even larger picture. If every level of government, from Federal down through States, Counties and Cities, were required to have a 1-10% budget surplus, all of them could start to pay down their debts and start putting money aside. For my own city of Seattle, the extra revenue could be put into local banks, and made available to businesses and home buyers as low interest and fixed rate loans. The interest earned from those loans would be made available to the city in the next budget cycle as part of the general fund, and that extra money would justify a reduction in taxes.
There are 50 states. Washington has 39 counties. Each county has several dozen cities. We're talking big bucks, and it's time we started using that money to help ourselves and rebuild our infrastructure. Building our civilization on a foundation of Debt is destroying us a little at a time. Building on a foundation of wealth has long term positive consequences for us and our children's future. I think it's a better course.
Monday, April 16, 2007
Sallie Mae buyout
I found this really troublesome. It says that we won't see changes in how the loans are handled or paid, but how do we know that will stay true? If you're a shareholder in Sallie Mae, I would vote against this deal. It's not about the money, it's about keeping institutions like this out of the hands of private sector people that only care about the money. Which is more important, after all? Are we only out to make a buck, or do we actually care about how much debt we are putting on our kids?
Disclaimer, I am paying off a student loan to Sallie Mae, so I have a personal stake in this. Do I own Sallie Mae stock? No. I can't own everything.
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Research notes on Washington State Savings Plan
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
CEO Homes linked to stock performance
When your CEO buys a megamansion, is it time to dump stock?
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Capitalism is sooo 20th Century
Scroll to the 45:00 mark and listen to my talk with Ross from KUOW.
Saturday, April 07, 2007
City of Seattle Micro Bonds
Tom, we tried this about 12 years ago. Several other nearby jurisdictions had issued what are called "minibonds" in denominations of $500 or $1000, so we tried it with a City Light issue. The theory was that citizens and employees would want to buy these bonds. It turned out that there was almost no interest in these bonds. Further, they require a significant administrative expense because they aren't managed through the usual municipal bond process, which is administered through the Bank of New York. City Light incurred substantial administrative costs for a relatively small amount of bonds. So, our experience suggests this just isn't worth it. Please let me know if you have other thoughts. Thanks.
Here is my response:
Thanks for the voice of experience. I pretty much expected that the administrative costs of such an enterprise would limit the effectiveness. The problem is that just like almost nobody has $5,000 to put into an investment, not many more people have $1,000 or even $500. $1,000 is a mortgage payment. $500 is a car payment. $100 is groceries for a week. $50 is a dinner out. $25 is an amount that people can spare. Until we can figure out a way to enable people to put down as little as $25 for a community investment, the interest won't be there from the general public.
What we did not have 12 years ago was the Internet. We didn't have online banking institutions like PayPal and Sharebuilder, each of which have $25 minimum investments. We didn't have Citigroup or Bank of America having market capitalizations above $200 Billion. And we didn't have a negative national savings rate. We were just starting to launch the Internet, and everyone was after 10% returns. It makes sense that the administrative costs at that point were prohibitive for micro-bonds.
But new ideas are the only way that we are going to dig our way out of the mess that we are in. If it's not worth the investment for the Bank of New York, maybe it would be something that Google.org would look at. The online financial services are trying to figure out a way to enable efficient transactions of $25 or less. How many of them would jump at the chance to create an investment vehicle for people to put in $25 or more? All I can do is ask, and hope that I can find someone who shares my vision. I'm tired of watching my city and my country build a foundation of debt. I'd rather watch, and help, as we build a foundation of wealth instead.
I don't know if that sounds too much like a soapbox article or not, but I have real concerns that we're headed towards a financial meltdown at a global level, and that the only way to stem the tide is to start saving money at an individual level.
I've started to work on a presentation that outlines the issue and what I think the solution is. I guess I was inspired by Al Gore. And now that I have a laptop, I can work on it at any time.
PS, is anyone watching this blog? Please let me know. Dialoge is always better than an echo chamber.