Saturday, May 1, 2010

Journalists Must Donate To Anti-Choice Organization In Order To Cover Palin’s Speech

sarah-palinToday, Sarah Palin will be speaking at a fundraiser for the Austin-based Heroic Media, a “faith-based” anti-choice organization that seeks to reduce the number of abortions “by creating a Culture of Life through television, billboard and internet advertising.” As part of its anti-choice media strategy, Heroic Media airs television commercials that “encourage viewers to learn more about and rethink the Life issue.” The group’s Internet strategy tries to direct Google users to an anti-choice website:
Heroic Media utilizes an online strategy to purchase top listings on search engines, such as google, so when teens “google” the word “abortion,”… “I think I’m pregnant,” … or “terminate pregnancy,” one of the top web sites they’ll see is our partner web site http://www.teenbreaks.com
Teenbreaks.com provides information about abortion, communicating with parents, adoption, cutting and more.
As Indecision Forever notes, the fact that Teenbreaks.com provides “information” on “cutting” is a giveaway that it isn’t interested in providing women with the best possible facts about their reproductive rights: “Cutting, that’s right, because self-mutilation has everything to do with handling an unplanned pregnancy.”
But in order to cover Palin’s speech, the Austin-American Statesman reports that journalists will have to make a contribution to Heroic Media:
Restrictions: Heroic Media will try to prohibit video and audio recordings of Palin’s appearance, and news organizations wishing to cover her speech must buy a ticket, the proceeds of which will go to Heroic Media.
Denying media access has become Palin’s standard operating procedure. After the debacle that was her interview with CBS’ Katie Couric during the 2008 presidential campaign, Palin made sure she wouldn’t step into any embarrassing interviews — often demanding that reporters submit their questions “ahead of time” to guarantee a one-on-one. And as a private citizen, the former Alaska governor requires that any questions asked at her speaking engagements be pre-screened. Just last week at an event in Eugene, OR, media were “not…allowed to ask her questions and take still pictures… [or] videotape or record it in anyway.”
Earlier this year, after conservatives criticized Palin’s $100,000+ fee to speak at the Tea Party convention, she said she would donate the proceeds to “the cause.” Perhaps that’s what she is trying to get the media to do as well.


Let The Sun Shine In......

Whistleblower: BP Risks More Massive Catastrophes in Gulf



 
by: Jason Leopold, t r u t h o u t | Report




A former contractor who worked for British Petroleum (BP) claims the oil conglomerate broke federal laws and violated its own internal procedures by failing to maintain crucial safety and engineering documents related to one of the firms other deepwater production projects in the Gulf of Mexico, according to internal emails and other documents obtained by Truthout.

The whistleblower, whose name has been withheld at the person's request because the whistleblower still works in the oil industry and fears retaliation, first raised concerns about safety issues related to BP Atlantis, the world's largest and deepest semi-submersible oil and natural gas platform, located about 200 miles south of New Orleans, in November 2008. Atlantis, which began production in October 2007, has the capacity to produce about 8.4 million gallons of oil and 180 million cubic feet of natural gas per day.

It was then that the whistleblower, who was hired to oversee the company's databases that housed documents related to its Atlantis project, discovered that the drilling platform had been operating without a majority of the engineer-approved documents it needed to run safely, leaving the platform vulnerable to a catastrophic disaster that would far surpass the massive oil spill that began last week following a deadly explosion on a BP-operated drilling rig.

BP's own internal communications show that company officials were made aware of the issue and feared that the document shortfalls related to Atlantis "could lead to catastrophic operator error" and must be addressed.

Indeed, according to an August 15, 2008, email sent to BP officials by Barry Duff, a member of BP's Deepwater Gulf of Mexico Atlantis Subsea Team, the Piping and Instrument Diagrams (P&IDs) for the Atlantis subsea components "are not complete." P&IDs documents form the foundation of a hazards analysis BP is required to undertake as part of its Safety and Environmental Management Program related to its offshore drilling operations. P&IDs drawings provide the schematic details of the project's piping and process flows, valves and safety critical instrumentation.

"The risk in turning over drawings that are not complete are: 1) The Operator will assume the drawings are accurate and up to date," the email said. "This could lead to catastrophic Operator errors due to their assuming the drawing is correct," said Duff's email to BP officials Bill Naseman and William Broman. "Turning over incomplete drawings to the Operator for their use is a fundamental violation of basic Document control, [internal standards] and Process Safety Regulations."

BP did not respond to repeated requests for comment for this story. Despite the claims that BP did not maintain proper documentation related to Atlantis, federal regulators continued to authorize an expansion of the drilling project.

Last May, Mike Sawyer, a Texas-based engineer who works for Apex Safety Consultants, voluntarily agreed to evaluate BP's Atlantis subsea document database and the whistleblower's allegations regarding BP's engineering document shortfall related to Atlantis. Sawyer concluded that of the 2,108 P&IDs BP maintained that dealt specifically with the subsea components of its Atlantis production project, 85 percent did not receive engineer approval.

Even worse, 95 percent of Atlantis' subsea welding records did not receive final approval, calling into question the integrity of thousands of crucial welds on subsea components that, if they were to rupture, could result in an oil spill 30 times worse than the one that occurred after the explosion on Deepwater Horizon last week.

In a report Sawyer prepared after his review, he said BP's "widespread pattern of unapproved design, testing and inspection documentation on the Atlantis subsea project creates a risk of a catastrophic incident threatening the [Gulf of Mexico] deep-water environment and the safety of platform workers." Moreover, "the extent of documentation discrepancies creates a substantial risk that a catastrophic event could occur at any time."

"The absence of a complete set of final, up-to-date, 'as built' engineering documents, including appropriate engineering approval, introduces substantial risk of large scale damage to the deep water [Gulf of Mexico] environment and harm to workers, primarily because analyses and inspections based on unverified design documents cannot accurately assess risk or suitability for service," Sawyer's report said. He added, "there is no valid engineering justification for these violations and short cuts."

Sawyer explained that the documents in question - welding records, inspections and safety shutdown logic materials - are "extremely critical to the safe operation of the platform and its subsea components." He said the safety shutdown logic drawings on Atlantis, a complex computerized system that, during emergencies, is supposed to send a signal to automatically shut down the flow of oil, were listed as "requiring update."

"BP's recklessness in regards to the Atlantis project is a clear example of how the company has a pattern of failing to comply with minimum industry standards for worker and environmental safety," Sawyer said.

The oil spill blanketing roughly 4,000 square miles in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, which killed eleven workers, was exacerbated, preliminary reports suggest, by the failure of a blowout preventer to shut off the flow of oil on the drilling rig and the lack of a backup safety measure, known as a remote control acoustic shut off switch, to operate the blowout preventer.

Congressman Henry Waxman, chairman of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, sent a letter Thursday to BP Chairman and President Lamar McKay seeking documents related to inspections on Deepwater Horizon conducted this year and BP's policy on using acoustic shut off switches in the Gulf of Mexico.

The circumstances behind the spill are now the subject of a federal investigation.

Profits Before Safety

Whether it's the multiple oil spills that emanated from BP's Prudhoe Bay operations in Alaska's North Slope or the March 2005 explosion at the company's Texas refinery that killed 15 employees and injured 170 people, BP has consistently put profits ahead of safety.

On October 25, 2007, BP pled guilty to a criminal violation of the Clean Water Act and paid a $20 million fine related to two separate oil spills that occurred in the North Slope in March and August of 2006, the result of a severely corroded pipeline and a safety valve failure. BP formally entered a guilty plea in federal court on November 29, 2007. US District Court Judge Ralph Beistline sentenced BP to three years probation and said oil spills were a "serious crime" that could have been prevented if BP had spent more time and funds investing in pipeline upgrades and a "little less emphasis on profit."

Also on October 25, 2007, BP paid a $50 million fine and pleaded guilty to a felony in the refinery explosion. An investigation into the incident concluded that a warning system was not working and that BP sidestepped its own internal regulations for operating the tower. Moreover, BP has a prior felony conviction for improperly disposing of hazardous waste.
The incident involving Deepwater Horizon, now the subject of a federal investigation, may end up being the latest example of BP's safety practices run amuck.

The issues related to the repeated spills in Prudhoe Bay and elsewhere were revealed by more than 100 whistleblowers who, since as far back as 1999, said the company failed to take seriously their warnings about shoddy safety practices and instead retaliated against whistleblowers who registered complaints with their superiors.

In September 2006, days before BP executives were scheduled to testify before Congress about an oil spill from a ruptured pipeline that forced the company to shutdown its Prudhoe Bay operations, BP announced that it had tapped former federal Judge Stanley Sporkin to serve as an ombudsman and take complaints from employees about the company's operations.

That's who the whistleblower complained to via email about issues related to BP's Atlantis operations in March 2009 a month after his contract was abruptly terminated for reasons he believes were directly related to his complaints to management about BP's failure to obtain the engineering documents on Atlantis and the fact that he "stood up for a female employee who was being discriminated against and harassed." The whistleblower alleged that the $2 million price tag was the primary reason BP did not follow through with a plan formulated months earlier to secure the documents.

"We prepared a plan to remedy this situation but it met much resistance and complaints from the above lead engineers on the project," the whistleblower wrote in the March 4, 2009, email to Pasha Eatedali in BP's ombudsman's office.

Federal Intervention

Additionally, he hired an attorney and contacted the inspector general for the Department of the Interior and the agency's Minerals Management Service (MMS), which regulates offshore drilling practices, and told officials there that BP lacked the required engineer-certified documents related to the major components of the Atlantis subsea gas and oil operation.

In 2007, MMS had approved the construction of an additional well and another drilling center on Atlantis. But the whistleblower alleged in his March 4, 2009, email to Eatedali in BP's Office of the Ombudsman that documents related to this project needed to ensure operational safety were missing and that amounted to a violation of federal law as well as a breach of BP's Atlantis Project Execution Plan. The ombudsman's office agreed to investigate.
MMS, acting on the whistleblower's complaints, contacted BP on June 30, 2009, seeking specific engineering related documents. BP complied with the request three weeks later.

On July 9, 2009, MMS requested that BP turn over certification documents for its Subsurface Safety Valves and Surface Controlled Subsea Safety Valves for all operational wells in the Atlantis field. MMS officials flew out to the platform on the same day and secured the documents, according to an internal letter written by Karen Westall, the managing attorney on BP's Gulf of Mexico Legal Team.

But according to the public advocacy group Food & Water Watch, a Washington, DC-based nonprofit, which became involved in the case last July, BP did not turn over a complete set of materials to MMS.

"BP only turned over 'as-built' drawings for [Atlantis'] topsides and hull, despite the fact that the whistleblower’s allegations have always been about whether BP maintains complete and accurate engineer approved documents for it subsea components," Food & Water Watch said in a 19-page letter it sent toWilliam Hauser, MMS’s Chief, Regulations and Standards Branch.

During two visits to the Atlantis drilling platform last August and September, MMS inspectors reviewed BP's blowout preventer records. Food & Water Watch said they believe MMS inspectors reviewed the test records and failed to look into the whistleblower's charges that engineering documents were missing. The blowout preventer, however, is an issue at the center of the Deepwater Horizon spill.

An MMS spokesperson did not return calls for comment.

Last October, Food & Water Watch filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for expedited processing, seeking documents from MMS that indicate BP "has in its possession a complete and accurate set of 'as built' drawings ... for its entire Atlantis Project, including the subsea sector." "As-built" means lead engineers on a specific project have to make sure updated technical documents match the "as-built" condition of equipment before its used.
MMS denied the FOIA request.

"MMS does not agree with your assessment of the potential for imminent danger to individuals or the environment, for which you premise your argument [for expedited response]. After a thorough review of these allegations, the MMS, with concurrence of the Solicitor's Office, concludes your claims are not supported by the facts or the law," the agency said in its October 30, 2009, response letter.

In response, MMS said that although some of its regulatory requirements governing offshore oil and gas operations do require "as built" drawings, they need not be complete or accurate and, furthermore, are irrelevant to a hazard analysis BP was required to complete.
Unsatisfied with MMS's response, Food & Water Watch contacted Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Arizona), a member of the Committee on Natural Resources and chairman of the subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands, about the issues revolving around BP's Atlantis operations and provided his office with details of its own investigation into the matter.

"Unsubstantiated" Claims

On January 15, Westall, the BP attorney, wrote a letter to Deborah Lanzone, the staff director with the House Subcommittee on Energy and Minerals, and addressed the allegations leveled by Food & Water Watch as well as indirect claims the whistleblower made.

Westall said BP "reviewed the allegations" related to "noncompliant documentation of the Atlantis project ... and found them to be unsubstantiated." But Westall's response directly contradicts the findings of Billie Pirner Garde, BP's deputy ombudsman, who wrote in an April 13 email to the whistleblower that his claims that BP failed to maintain proper documentation related to Atlantis "were substantiated" and "addressed by a BP Management of Change document." Garde did not say when that change occurred. But he added that the whistleblower's complaints weren't "unique" and had been raised by other employees "before you worked there, while you were there and after you left."

Westall noted in her letter that "all eight BP-operated Gulf of Mexico production facilities" received safety awards from MMS in 2009.

"Maintenance and general housekeeping were rated outstanding and personnel were most cooperative in assisting in the inspection activities," MMS said about BP's Gulf of Mexico drilling facilities. "Platform records were readily available for review and maintained to reflect current conditions."

Westall maintained that the whistleblower as well as Food & Water Watch had it all wrong. Their charges about missing documents has nothing to do with Atlantis' operational safety. Rather, Westall seemed to characterize their complaints as a clerical issue.

"The Atlantis project is a complex project with multiple phases," Westall said in her letter to Lanzone. "The [August 15, 2008] e-mail [written by Barry Duff, a member of the Atlantis subsea team] which was provided to you to support [Food & Water Watch's] allegations relates to the status of efforts to utilize a particular document management system to house and maintain the Atlantis documents. The document database includes engineering drawings for future phases, as well as components or systems which may have been modified, replaced, or not used."

But Representative Grijalva was not swayed by Westall's denials. He continued to press the issue with MMS, and in February, he and 18 other lawmakers signed a letter calling on MMS to probe whether BP "is operating its Atlantis offshore oil platform ... without professionally approved safety documents."

Grijalva said MMS has not "done enough so far to ensure worker and environmental safety at the site, in part because it has interpreted the relevant laws too loosely."

"[C]ommunications between MMS and congressional staff have suggested that while the company by law must maintain 'as-built' documents, there is no requirement that such documents be complete or accurate," the letter said. "This statement, if an accurate interpretation of MMS authorities, raises serious concerns" and requires "a thorough review at the agency level, the legal level and the corporate level. The world's largest oil rig cannot continue to operate without safety documentation. The situation is unacceptable and deserves immediate scrutiny.

"We also request that MMS describe how a regulation that requires offshore operators to maintain certain engineering documents, but does not require that those documents be complete or accurate, is appropriately protective of human health and the environment."
On March 26, MMS launched a formal investigation and is expected to file a report detailing its findings next month.

Zach Corrigan, a senior attorney with Food & Water Watch, said in an interview Thursday that he hopes MMS "will perform a real investigation" and if the agency fails to do so, Congress should immediately hold oversight hearings "and ensure that the explosion and mishap of the Horizon platform is not replicated."

"MMS didn't act on this for nearly a year," Corrigan said. "They seemed to think it wasn't a regulatory or an important safety issue. Atlantis is a real vulnerability." 

Creative Commons License
 

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

Let The Sun Shine In......

Jim Hightower; A Very Funny Man

MICHAEL WINSHIP FOR BUZZFLASH

I first became aware of Jim Hightower more than 20 years ago, during the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta. The Democrats were nominating Massachusetts Governor Mike Dukakis to run for president against Reagan's vice president, George H.W. Bush, and at the time Dukakis looked like he had a pretty good chance at the White House.

This was before a series of events did him in, including the notorious Willie Horton ad that attacked Dukakis for a Massachusetts weekend furlough prison program that allowed a convicted murderer back on the street, where he robbed and raped.

And it was before Dukakis bobbled a harsh debate question about what he would do if his own wife Kitty was raped and murdered. And it was before he was photographed atop an Abrams tank wearing a helmet that made him look like he was starring in Snoopy III: This Time It's Personal.

All of that misery lay ahead. The Democrats were still in giddy spirits during the convention and had a high old time poking fun at Bush, Sr.That was when the late Ann Richards, then the Texas state treasurer, famously lamented, "Poor George! He can't help it - he was born with asilver foot in his mouth!"

But it was the convention speech by Hightower that I especially remember. He was the Texas agriculture commissioner in those days - an important job in the Lone Star State - and described Bush as a "toothache of a man," a cruel but remarkable metaphor. And he said that Bush behaved like someone who was "born on third base and thought he hit a triple... He is threatening to lead this country from tweedle-dum to tweedle-dumber."

Maybe Hightower didn't originate those lines (as Milton Berle used to say, "When you steal from me, you steal twice"), but he delivered them with a gusto akin to genuine authorship and over the years has come up with enough original material of his own to absolve him - mostly -  from the sin of occasional joke-filching. Now others steal from him.

It was Jim, I believe, who came up with the notion that all elected officials be required to wear brightly colored, NASCAR-like jumpsuits with the corporate logos of their biggest campaign contributors, an idea I've heard appropriated by several others without proper attribution. And I think it was Jim who first said of George W. Bush, "If ignorance ever reaches $40 a barrel, I want the drilling rights to his head." (On hearing that another politician was learning Spanish, Hightower is supposed to have remarked, "Oh good. Now he'll be bi-ignorant.")

These days, Jim Hightower broadcasts daily radio commentaries and edits "The Hightower Lowdown," an invaluable monthly newsletter. With the passing of both Ann Richards and Molly Ivins, he has became the funniest person in Texas politics - intentionally, that is. But it is his steadfast advocacy of progressive politics, his unyielding embrace of the old time gospel of populism, that made him an especially appropriate guest on the final edition of the PBS series, Bill Moyers Journal.

"Here's what populism is not," he told my colleague Bill Moyers. "It is not just an incoherent outburst of anger. And certainly it is not anger that is funded and organized by corporate front groups, as the initial tea party effort [was], and as most of it is still today - though there is legitimate anger within it, in terms of the people who are there.
But what populism is at its essence is just a determined focus on helping people be able to get out of the iron grip of the corporate power that is overwhelming our economy, our environment, energy, the media, government.

"...One big difference between real populism and... the tea party thing is that real populists understand that government has become a subsidiary of corporations. So you can't say, 'Let's get rid of government.' You need to be saying, 'Let's take over government.'"

As Hightower's fond of saying, the water won't clear up until we get the hogs out of the creek. "I see the central issue in politics to be the rise of corporate power," he reiterated.
"Overwhelming, overweening corporate power that is running roughshod over the workaday people of the country. They think they're the top dogs, and we're a bunch of fire hydrants, you know?"

Of President Obama he said, "It's odd to me that we've got a president who ran from the outside and won, and now is trying to govern from the inside. You can't do progressive government from the inside. You have to rally those outsiders and make them a force... Our heavyweight is the people themselves.  They've got the fat cats, but we've got the alley cats..."

This weekend, Jim is being honored at Texas State University-San Marcos with an exhibition celebrating his life's work as a populist journalist, historian and advocate. They're calling the event "Swim Against the Current" because, as Moyers says, "That's what he does." In fact, "Swim Against the Current" also is the title of Hightower's most recent book, subtitled, "Even a Dead Fish Can Go with the Flow." He comes from a long history of flow resisters, a critical, American political tradition. "I go all the way back to Thomas Paine," he said.

"I mean, that was kind of the ultimate rebellion, when the media tool was a pamphlet." The men who wrote the Bill of Rights, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence "didn't create democracy. [They] made democracy possible.

"What created democracy was Thomas Paine and Shays Rebellion, the suffragists and the abolitionists and on down through the populists and the labor movement, including the Wobblies.  Tough, in your face people... Mother Jones, Woody Guthrie... Martin Luther King and CaesarChavez.  And now it's down to us.

"These are agitators.  They extended democracy decade after decade.  You know, sometimes we get in the midst of these fights.  We think we're making no progress.  But... you look back, we've made a lot of progress... The agitator after all is the center post in the washing machine that gets the dirt out. So, we need a lot more agitation.... "We can battle back against the powers.  But it's not just going to a rally and shouting. It's organizing and it's thinking. And reaching out to others. And building a real people's movement."
------------------------------------------------------------------------

With this week's edition, Bill Moyers Journal goes off the air. But
we'll be continuing the conversation via our Web site at PBS.org/moyers.
These weekly columns will be continuing for the foreseeable as well. It
has been a delight and honor collaborating with Bill - and the entire
production team - so intensely over the last two years. I am always
improved in their presence and thank them all, especially Bill and
executive editor Judith Davidson Moyers, executive producers Judy
Doctoroff and Sally Roy and Diane Domondon and Jesse Adams, the two of
whom every week have made sure these scratchings make it out alive, with
alacrity and accuracy.



       Michael Winship is senior writer of the weekly public affairs
program Bill Moyers Journal, which concludes Friday night on PBS.
Watch online or comment at The Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers.



Let The Sun Shine In......

Thursday, April 29, 2010

GriTV: Jobless recovery


 

Let The Sun Shine In......

Wall Street Fraud

 
Let The Sun Shine In......

Holding Wall Street Accountable


ECONOMY

"We cannot let the narrow interests of a few come before the interests of all of us," President Obama said last year in a call for "an overhaul of U.S. financial regulations." Buoyed by success in the long battle to pass comprehensive health care reform behind them, Congress has set its sights on reining in Wall Street's recklessness and providing new protections for consumers, reducing risk, and increasing transparency. The bill introduced by Senate Banking Committee chair Chris Dodd (D-CT) "would create a new consumer protection bureau within the Federal Reserve to guard against lending abuses," "create oversight of the enormous derivatives market,"and "give the government authority to wind down large, troubled financial institutions in an orderly way." If institutions that are "too big to fail" repeat the kind of disastrous behavior that sent the global economy into a tailspin in 2008, "the Senate bill gives the government the authority to wind down the firm with no exposure to the taxpayer," Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner described. "No more bailouts. Instead, we will have a bankruptcy-like regime where equityholders will be wiped out and the assets will be sold." The legislation's wind-down provisions are similar to the insurance fund and resolution authority that the FDIC has to safely shut down smaller banks, and the fund is paid for by big banks, not taxpayers. Since September, Dodd has tried to work with committee Republicans Richard Shelby (AL) and Bob Corker (TN) to find bipartisan consensus. However, as a vote grows near, Republicans have been on the attack. Last week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) declared his opposition to the financial reform bill, claiming that it "institutionalizes...taxpayer-funded bailouts of Wall Street banks" and would give the Federal Reserve "enhanced emergency lending authority that is far too open to abuse."

MCCONNELL'S 'BAILOUT' LIE: McConnell has touted his opposition to financial regulation by pretending to speak on behalf of American citizens, opposing "bailouts" and "abuse." As Time's Adam Sorensen noted, McConnell's attack made "the exact argument pollster Frank Luntz urged Republicans to make earlier this year in a widely publicized memo." Luntz told the GOP to attack reform as "bailouts" and blame "Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal Reserve" for creating the "bubble." A number of other Republicans -- including House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) -- have repeated this false right-wing talking point. However, the disingenuous attempt at populist posturing to kill reform has fallen flat. CNBC's Ron Insana laughed when trying to explain McConnell's views, and MSNBC's John Harwood said that "Senator McConnell's argument is a little silly when you look at the text of the bill." Time's Mark Halperin told MSNBC's Joe Scarborough, "They are willfully misreading the bill or they are engaged in a cynical attempt to keep the president from achieving something." On Monday, Corker called his leader's attacks "silly," saying that the fund he designed with his colleague Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) "is anything but a bailout." Yesterday, fellow banking committee member Sen. Judd Gregg (R-NH) praised the resolution authority as a "good approach." Following an in-depth analysis, the nonpartisan PolitiFact rated McConnell's claim that the financial regulation bill "actually guarantees future bailouts of Wall Street banks" completely false.

IN BED WITH WALL STREET: McConnell did not mention in his attack on Wall Street regulation that the week before he traveled alongside National Republican Senatorial Committee chairman Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) to New York City for a private meeting with elite hedge fund managers and other Wall Street executives. The purpose of the meeting between the top Republicans and the financial executives was to enlist "Wall Street's help" in funding Republican campaigns in the fall and killing any tough financial reform. McConnell takes more money from the finance industry than any other sector. He has taken $1,147,924 for his current re-election campaign, including PAC contributions from megabanks like Citigroup and Bank of America. When pressed by reporters for details about his meetings on Wall Street, McConnell repeatedly refused to discuss the matter. But as the Wall Street Journal reported in February, Republicans have been "stepping up their campaign to win donations from Wall Street," "striving to make the case that they are banks' best hope of preventing President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats from cracking down on Wall Street." In a January meeting, Boehner told JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon that "congressional Republicans had stood up to Mr. Obama's efforts to curb pay and impose new regulations." Since 2009, contributions from JP Morgan, Citigroup, and Bank of America have all "trended toward Republicans." Hedge funds similarly shifted, going "from giving 2 to 1 to Democrats at the start of 2009 to providing almost half of its donations to Republicans by the end of the year."

MCCONNELL FOLDS, FOR NOW: Yesterday, a battered McConnell abandoned his "bailout" lie, saying, "I'm convinced now there is a new element of seriousness attached to this, rather than just trying to score political points. ... I think that's a good sign." The change in tone came, the Washington Post writes, "as the Security and Exchange Commission's lawsuit against Goldman Sachs for allegedly defrauding investors continued to dominate headlines, underscoring public anger at Wall Street and reminding lawmakers of the potential consequences of inaction." Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) said yesterday that he plans to "wait until early next week to introduce the financial overhaul package on the Senate floor," to give Dodd and Shelby "more time to try to reach a compromise." However, hurdles to cleaning up the financial industry remain. "I think there's a continuing tension in the caucus between those who hold out hope for meaningful and sincere bipartisan negotiations," Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) said, "And those who see Lucy yanking the football away from Charlie Brown for the umpteenth time." Economist Paul Krugman is similarly concerned that the White House isn't taking seriously the "possibility that Republicans will filibuster financial reform." Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)warns that the fine print of the final legislation will determine "whether the Congress has the ability to regulate Wall Street or Wall Street continues to regulate the Congress." Lobbyists are fighting the effort by Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA) to bring transparency and price discovery to the shadowy derivatives market. Tomorrow, the President will go to New York City to begin the final push, reminding "Americans what is at stake if we do not move forward with changing the rules of the road as a part of a strong Wall Street reform package." It has been three years since the over-inflated housing market began to crash. It has been a year and half since the Wall Street meltdown and over a year since Treasury rolled out its principles for reform. It's time to get this done.

Let The Sun Shine In......

The WTO Now Controls Our Economy, Fate and Future

 
All our decisions regarding trade must be supervised and approved by this foreign undemocratic body – often to our detriment. This is why we can no longer do what is in our best interest and are forced to concede to their demands. Most decisions made by the WTO are unjustifiably made to our detriment.

The World Trade Organization (WTO) is an undemocratic non-American organization run by the rich, for the rich. The bylaws of the organization supersede our own Constitution. They override, supervise and control all our international trade laws.

The U.S. Constitution states that all treaties made under the authority of the United States become supreme law of the land. However, our government backtracked and irresponsibly allowed the World Trade Organization to rule over us when they signed this treaty. Now we have no choice but to conform many of our laws, regulations and administrative procedures to the agreement.

By signing the agreement with the World Trade Organization, the U.S. Congress agreed to concede a major portion of our sovereignty and usurp our democratic legislative process, including:
  • Conforming U.S. laws, regulations and administrative procedures to the will of the WTO
  • Subjecting all federal, state and local laws and practices that affect trade to international review by
  • Allowing any WTO member country to challenge federal, state and local laws and practices as trade impeding
  • Giving the WTO final jurisdiction over all trade altercations
  • Empowering the WTO to enforce its rulings by imposing fines on the United States until we comply
Those who signed this lengthy agreement did not read the fine print or did not have the interests of America in mind.

The WTO is inherently wrong for other reasons. This organization has little to no transparency as all of its hearing are closed to the public and all its decisions are final and uncontestable. We lose nine out of every 10 trade disputes brought before this body.

We must renegotiate terms or completely withdraw from the WTO – IMMEDIATELY!


Let The Sun Shine In......

Some people really don't CARE....

....if the whole damn planet goes down the tube because Jesus is gonna come back and make it all O.K. again. Seriously!
 
 
Waiting For Armageddon DVD: A Must See if You Want to Understand the 50 Million Americans Who Believe in End Times, Sarah Palin, Mike Huckabee and Michelle Bachmann Among Them (5/18/10 Release Date)

BUZZFLASH REVIEWS


 So much of the language of the right (think Palin and Bachmann) is in code for a desire to rule on behalf of heralding in the End Times, or Armageddon. This is not a joke that progressives should feel disdain for; it's one that they should regard with alarm.

And that is why this documentary is so informative. It doesn't cast harsh judgment. Instead, it lets representatives of the 50 million American Evangelists who believe in End Times explain and speak about what will happen, including the destruction of all the Jews who don't convert, but even that number will be limited.

This is a film that goes a long way toward explaining what appears on the surface to be an odd alliance between the End Times Evangelists and Israel. It's a particularly peculiar pairing since when the "rapture" occurs, the Jewish faith will no longer exist and only a few "lucky" converted Jews will survive as Christians.

It also explains how Evangelists see disaster as a heralding of Armageddon and therefore something to be celebrated not mourned.

This is one of the most insightful documentaries we have seen as BuzzFlash reviwers, precisely because it lets the Evangelists articulate their own views on Armageddon, and that's really quite chilling, considering they have so many people in our government and hoping to lead it into Armageddon.

******

Buy more progressive premiums to support BuzzFlash progressive news and commentary (we accept no advertising, corporate or otherwise to maintain our complete independence)by going to The BuzzFlash Progressive Marketplace.


Let The Sun Shine In......

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Financial Reform: Stand By it or....

....Make it tougher. but.....

I wouldn't change a word of it, not even a comma.

I wouldn't negotiate further, I wouldn't concede anything further, I wouldn't further debate the matter.

What I would do, if I were Harry Reid, is say that this is the bill we have, painstakingly achieved 18 long and grueling months after the last Republican administration took us to the edge of our deepest economic abyss in nearly a century -- this is where we stand and we're not changing one bloody word of it.

We're playing no more Republican games. We've sat with them and haggled with them and added and subtracted assorted angels from the legislative pinheads. But no more. Their squalid game of obstructionism and delay stops here, on this bill, and it stops now.
Senate Democrats finally possess an unmitigated winner -- a reasonably stringent anti-Wall Street bill, or so agrees virtually every responsible economist; a financial bill which also registers a supermajority of popular support -- and what do they do?

"After meeting briefly on Monday," reported the NY Times, Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd and "Senator Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, the senior Republican on the banking committee, reported no progress."

Dear Sen. Dodd: Progress on what? How does one improve or progress on the winning hand, which later can only be strengthened by merger with the House bill and weakened by Republican accommodations?

From this point on, further "progress" can only be defined from the Republicans' political perspective: They'll tweak the bill just enough to declare that they saved it -- and the American people -- from a horrific Democratic mistake of apocalyptic proportions.

Dear Sens. Dodd and Reid, by shifting a comma or dotting one more "t" or crossing another enigmatic "i," you're only handing those operatically fussy, sea-lawyer Republicans your clear victory.

They've backed themselves into their own uncompromising, obstructionist corner -- and now you, Sens. Dodd and Reid, are opening an escape route for them.

Make them drop the procedural "F" bomb, which by rights they'd have to do -- right? -- sans any more legislative changes, since they've declared the current bill unworthy of divine Republican support.

Look, dear Sens. Dodd and Reid, this filibustering showdown has been in the offing for months. So I ask you: What better time to play your hand than when it's the undisputed winning one?

Damn it all you've got them on the ropes. Now deliver the lethal blow; pummel these latte-sipping, sunbooth-tanning, Volvo-driving, Wall Street-schmoozing predators for the unrehabilitated bullies they are.

Speaking from the Senate floor yesterday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell "rattled off a list of major legislation," reports the Times, "that he said had not benefited Americans in the ways Democrats had promised, including the economic stimulus measures" -- loaded with Republican amendments -- "and the health care legislation" -- loaded with Republican amendments.

And McConnell was absolutely right, the Dems can say. Had it not been for Republican accommodations achieved after prolonged watering-down sessions, the major legislation he cited would have been far superior -- by now we would have achieved full employment, banished the common cold, and all your children would be straight-A students. You know, real populist stuff.

Yet the minority leader is at it again, this time "pretending to stand up for taxpayers against Wall Street," as Paul Krugman wrote a few days ago, "while in fact doing just the opposite."
Or, to boil their antidemocratic chokehold down to its paradigmatic essence, as Krugman also did: What Senate Republicans are doing on the financial bill is a "truly shameless performance" -- three little profoundly accurate words that should be DNC-gilded and etched on every American brain.

Senate Republicans will come around, because they have to; in this overheated election year, populist anger will trump virtually all partisan allegiance. But that's the whole point. Why should Senate Democrats concede even a comma, if, in the longer run, the Republicans have no choice?

Good God we're begging you, Sens. Dodd and Reid: Declare -- now -- that enough is enough.
Please respond to P.M.'s commentary by leaving comments below and sharing them with the BuzzFlash community. For personal questions or comments you can contact him at fifthcolumnistmail@gmail.com

THE FIFTH COLUMNIST by P.M. Carpenter


Let The Sun Shine In......

FOREIGN CORPORATIONS IN OUR ELECTIONS?

If money is speech, it should be perfectly within the law for ordinary Americans "speak with silence" when it comes to paying for a criminal war, in other words, to refuse to support THE number one international crime which was committed during the Bush-Cheney administration in the country known as Iraq.

In the mean time, why should sociopathic fat cats have more influence over American elections than American citizens can afford to have? This is b.s. and Congress should address this as part of financial reform or any damn bill they can cook up. This just makes me crazy!

Monday, April 26, 2010   |   Posted by Jim Hightower
Bookmark and
 Share

Having decreed that Corporations have a free speech "right " to spend unlimited sums from their massive corporate treasuries to elect or defeat candidates in our elections, the Supreme Court's five-man corporatist majority has opened a colossal can of worms. One of those worrisome squigglies is this question: Does the Court's newly-fabricated political right extend to foreign corporations?

In their ruling, the answer from the five judicial monkeywrenchers was... silence. How sly. With no explicit ban to rule out foreign corporate money, the justices have implicitly ruled it in. After all, argue apologists for this constitutional l perversion, a corporation is a corporation, and its official domicile is irrelevant in determining its political rights.

So, not only have the Supremes magically endowed all inanimate corporate things with the human ability to speak, but they've also granted corporate "persons" more speech than actual people-people have. Start with the fact that the Court's ruling equates our freedom of speech with the freedom to spend money – a plutocratic contortion of democracy that gives the most speech to those with the most money. American corporations alone have trillions of dollars they can draw from to shout down the voices of us mere humans.

But it appears that Toyota, Unilever, Deutsche Bank, Bin Laden construction company and thousands of other foreign entities can also add their trillions of dollars to drown out the democratic voices of real Americans. Interestingly, foreign humans are banned from spending money to influence our elections – so the Court has decreed that corporate foreigners have superior rights to human foreigners.

To help reverse this Supreme insanity, link up with the grassroots coalition called Move To Amend: www.movetoamend.org.

"Should Foreign Corpoations Spend Money on U.S. Political Candidates?" www.newsweek.com, January 22, 2010.

"The Supreme Court Just Handed Anyone, Including bin Laden or the Chinese Government, Control of Our Democracy," www.alternet.org, January 22, 2010.

"Will the Citizens United Ruling Let Hugo Chavez and King Abdullah Buy U.S. Elections?"www.publicintegrity.org, January 22, 2010.

"Watchdog groups warn 'Corporate globalization' of U.S. elections is upon us,"
www.rawstory.com, January 23, 2010.

Let The Sun Shine In......

Narcissistic , Sociopathic America


One of our current society's most salient characteristics is an absence of shame on the part of politicians, financial architects and media fulminators. No matter how scurrilous or dishonest their behavior, they exude, if not exactly respectability, an air of self-righteousness - - proud of their ability to delude the general public and do whatever it takes to get elected, get a gig on cable TV or just make as much money as possible.

At the start of the health-care debate, there was widespread support for reform. But, over the course of a tumultuous summer, disruptive town-hall meetings, raucous tea-party events and obstructionism in Congress managed to distort the process and turn support into dissent. Indeed polls showing voter dissatisfaction with the bill were a distortion themselves since some of the negative numbers were the result of people who weren’t against reform itself but felt the proposed legislation didn’t go far enough.

It is distressing now to see some of the same tactics being used by Republicans in the Senate to stall and perhaps kill legislation that would regulate the financial sector and rein in the systemic deceptions that came close to precipitating a full-blown depression. “Let’s start over” says Senate minority leader McConnell fresh from his visits to pals on Wall Street. Let’s not do anything to stifle the markets other conservative politicians and editorialists say. Like Alan Greenspan in his day they insist that unfettered markets would self-regulate and investors would be protected, all evidence to the contrary.

On Bill Moyer's Journal recently, William K. Black, Assoc. Professor of Economics and Law at the Univ. of Missouri and former bank regulator, described practices that were fraudulent in both intent and outcome. It isn’t that nobody saw danger in the casino-like activities at a number of the nation’s largest financial institutions. According to Black, people at the top had to know that shaky mortgages packaged as triple-A investment-quality instruments were likely to fail at some point which is why they ‘hedged’ their bets, notably at Goldman-Sachs. Aside from the obvious problems these questionable instruments would cause in the general markets, deceiving clients who trusted advisors he calls “financial sociopaths” was an unconscionable deception.

But it wasn't only at Goldman-Sachs that dubious transactions were occurring. In testimony before Congress, one Lehman Brothers executive told of being fired when he attempted to expose irregularities at the firm. Professor Black said most whistle blowers were intimidated from speaking out and that industry-wide fraud would be found if proper investigations were undertaken. SEC spokesmen have insisted disingenuously that they lacked the authority or the tools to detect and remedy infractions even after they had created a “deliberate black hole” by lobbying successfully for the repeal of Glass-Steagel, legislation that kept banks from engaging in securities trading.

Deceit has become a way of life in our society. Right-wing pundits repeat lies about the president and his policies with such regularity that they derive a kind of legitimacy through repetition and are discussed endlessly by the news media. Prevarigators rarely seem to suffer any consequences and are celebrated in some circles for having political smarts, or for just being amusing. Conservatives in Congress fail to disavow egregious distortions and outright lies by the more extreme members of the media or their party, so anxious are they to claim victory in the next election.

How strange it is that only a little over a year into a new administration, an impatient and frivolous electorate is poised, according to current estimates, to re-elect representatives of the very party that brought the country to near collapse. The only interesting outcome of a return to such an inglorious past would be to watch an old-time, new majority wrestle with the real world problems the country faces. No doubt lower taxes would be the most original idea a change of leadership in the House would promote.

Former vice-president Cheney provided insight into what the best and the brightest Republican minds have to offer when, guesting with comic Dennis  Miller, he said that telling Senator Leahy to “go f**k himself was “sort of the best thing I ever did.” Shameless as ever but in light of the awful policies he helped facilitate in the previous administration, his unstatesman-like remark to Leahy on the floor of the Senate may ironically have been his best thing in that it was the least reprehensible compared to his other bad acts.

Please respond to Ann Davidow's commentary by leaving comments below and sharing them with the BuzzFlash community.

FINDING A VOICE by Ann Davidow

Let The Sun Shine In......