guardian | It was more sophisticated than we had imagined: new documents show
that the violent crackdown on Occupy last fall – so mystifying at the
time – was not just coordinated at the level of the FBI,
the Department of Homeland Security, and local police. The crackdown,
which involved, as you may recall, violent arrests, group disruption,
canister missiles to the skulls of protesters, people held in handcuffs
so tight they were injured, people held in bondage till they were forced
to wet or soil themselves –was coordinated with the big banks
themselves.
The Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, in a
groundbreaking scoop that should once more shame major US media outlets
(why are nonprofits now some of the only entities in America left
breaking major civil liberties news?), filed this request. The document –
reproduced here in an easily searchable format
– shows a terrifying network of coordinated DHS, FBI, police, regional
fusion center, and private-sector activity so completely merged into one
another that the monstrous whole is, in fact, one entity: in some
cases, bearing a single name, the Domestic Security Alliance Council.
And it reveals this merged entity to have one centrally planned, locally
executed mission. The documents, in short, show the cops and DHS
working for and with banks to target, arrest, and politically disable
peaceful American citizens.
The documents, released after long
delay in the week between Christmas and New Year, show a nationwide
meta-plot unfolding in city after city in an Orwellian world: six
American universities are sites where campus police funneled information
about students involved with OWS to the FBI, with the administrations'
knowledge (p51); banks sat down with FBI officials to pool information
about OWS protesters harvested by private security; plans to crush
Occupy events, planned for a month down the road, were made by the FBI –
and offered to the representatives of the same organizations that the
protests would target; and even threats of the assassination of OWS
leaders by sniper fire – by whom? Where? – now remain redacted and
undisclosed to those American citizens in danger, contrary to standard
FBI practice to inform the person concerned when there is a threat
against a political leader (p61).
"FBI
documents just obtained by the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund
(PCJF) … reveal that from its inception, the FBI treated the Occupy
movement as a potential criminal and terrorist threat … The PCJF has
obtained heavily redacted documents showing that FBI offices and agents
around the country were in high gear conducting surveillance
against the movement even as early as August 2011, a month prior to the
establishment of the OWS encampment in Zuccotti Park and other Occupy
actions around the country."
"This production [of documents],
which we believe is just the tip of the iceberg, is a window into the
nationwide scope of the FBI's surveillance, monitoring, and reporting on
peaceful protestors organizing with the Occupy movement … These
documents also show these federal agencies functioning as a de facto
intelligence arm of Wall Street and Corporate America."
The
documents show stunning range: in Denver, Colorado, that branch of the
FBI and a "Bank Fraud Working Group" met in November 2011 – during the
Occupy protests – to surveil the group. The Federal Reserve of Richmond,
Virginia had its own private security surveilling Occupy Tampa and
Tampa Veterans for Peace and passing privately-collected information on
activists back to the Richmond FBI, which, in turn, categorized
OWS activities under its "domestic terrorism" unit. The Anchorage,
Alaska "terrorism task force" was watching Occupy Anchorage. The
Jackson, Michigan "joint terrorism task force" was issuing a
"counterterrorism preparedness alert" about the ill-organized grandmas
and college sophomores in Occupy there. Also in Jackson, Michigan, the
FBI and the "Bank Security Group" – multiple private banks – met to
discuss the reaction to "National Bad Bank Sit-in Day" (the response was
violent, as you may recall). The Virginia FBI sent that state's Occupy
members' details to the Virginia terrorism fusion center. The Memphis
FBI tracked OWS under its "joint terrorism task force" aegis, too. And
so on, for over 100 pages. Fist tap Arnach.
Greenspan states that the Fed is above the law shortly after 7:30 in the interview
Churches, modern
banks and associated political
institutions are based largely on perception, and deception. In order
to work, they have to convince you that they are doing you a favor, bringing
value to the transaction in exchange for getting you
to relinquish real labor value to their custody.
In order to make the scam
complete, they must make the bank/church, its employees,
its building, its presentation - all look authoritative and legitimate. The bank
building, like a church or government
building, is large with pillars and official looking facades - conveying strength, stability and legitimacy.
Usually there's some
picture of an old guy or several guys with a big beard and royal/high
class clothing to make you feel like someone important is here. The altar/safe is placed in clear view
of the public to add to the deception. This is so when you enter the bank,
church etc, you feel a sense of safety, reverence and awe.
The entire
presentation is a scam or a confidence game of
the highest order. The whole objective is to rob you of your earned value,
and make you an obedient, pliable, reliable, submissive and easily
managed peasant.
The
big inside joke is that the only money the bank/church really has is the money
you are depositing in it plus the money they collected as fractional reserves to get
the banking/churching license in the first instance.
In
principle, as should be self-evident by now, money should be
intrinsically worthless, and only used as a means of exchange for things of
similar value. It should not be permitted for banks to create money,
unless they are carefully regulated (nature, type of loans and interest
rates) and/or the bank is in the public interest (usually with a public
bank, a nationally chartered bank), and has a measurable multiplier effect on
the economy.
The multiplier effect should be in the expansion of goods and
services which make society more productive. Like schools which
educate children (creating human capital), bridges, canals and roads
which expand trade, new technologies to exploit
natural resources, dams and power plants (which actually produce energy
to electrify towns and cities at an affordable price).
In this
regard, Alexander Hamilton insisted that credit for such products are
essential to a national economy (states included) and that debt for such
purpose can be a national blessing because it can be basis for
facilitating trade and national development. The notes were usually for
20 years at 5 percent. As such the price or interest rate should be
minimal and long term, providing a stable bill of exchange which could
be used for commercial transactions.
This later became known as
dollar bills and dollar notes. This is where
the whole concept of the dollar bill came from. The notes were
tied to productive legitimate investments so people were comfortable
using these as a medium of exchange. In fact, such bills of exchange
were more desirable than gold and silver (or private bank notes)
So federalized
(national) paper bills of exchange and other such instruments were
favored by small and medium size businesses since they knew they these
notes where for productive, useful activity for the commonwealth. This is how the Erie and Ohio Canals were built. This is the great innovation of Alexander
Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin and John Quincy Adams that freed the general
populace from reliance on England, Spain, the Netherlands, and France
for gold specie in order to promote business and the economy.
It was
the power of the sovereign to create money in the public interest and
use such dollar bills as currency directly tied to the productive
capacity of the nation. Gold, and silver, if necessary, was used for
payment of international trade, with countries who did not at that time
accept dollars bills as mediums of exchange.
Gold and silver (or other
precious metals) were preferred by kings and other sovereigns because
the quantity was usually in the hands of the powerful and wealthy, and
therefore could give them power over the general population. Bonds or
paper represented how much gold you had on reserve, not anything of real
value or use to the general population. It served the royalty, bankers
and aristocrats, not the peasantry and small businessmen.
Under the
old European system (represented by feudal lords, kings, bankers, etc),
in order to get credit you had to have gold, silver, and issue bond,
paper notes promising to pay the same in gold, silver, etc). This
severely restricted trade and made it difficult for the common man. His
economic destiny depended on whether he could convince some banker, or agent
of the king to part with his gold or lend against his gold for some purpose.
In this way, power over the peasantry was maintained.
Since peasants didn't have gold, they usually had to pledge their land, and anything
they had, sometimes even their wives and children, as collateral.
Taxes became oppressive and cruel. The church merely enforced the same
system under penalty of eternal damnation, etc. As a result, people
began to leave Europe in search of religious, political and economic
freedom. Most royalty and bankers were happy to see some peasants go as long as they continued to pay their taxes.
When
Americans didn't have any gold or precious metals (under the old
system), in the early days before it was discovered in the Southwest, it
forced the early settlers to innovate and create a new medium
which served the public interest. Benjamin Franklin was one of the
first do this in Massachusetts and later in Pennsylvania. Later
Hamilton, after the revolution, out of necessity and invention, expanded
this concept on national level for the American States. This type of
national economic independence (from Royalty and their bankers), coupled
with political independence (from Royalty and their bankers), and
religious freedom (from Royalty and their Church), created a potential
for enormous power and influence.
You can easily see the threat the American
System presented to the British crown. Before that time, all taxes had to be paid in gold, silver
and other coins, determined and controlled by the king, and credit was
not easily available for the commonwealth. All religion and worship
was to the official church. It was a syndicate. That's why
traditional gold has always been a bad medium of exchange for the
general population and has always wound up increasing the concentration of
private and/or aristocratic wealth.
In fact, there was no common-wealth concept. There was the king and his subjects. You
were not citizens with rights under law than any aristocrat was bound to acknowledge. You were peasants. The
American Revolution was a radical departure from this notion. It
threatened every Monarchy and Empire on the globe, except those who
allied with it and adopted some of its principles, as did Germany
(protective tariffs, technological innovation, and a credit system) as a
way to free itself from the same destructive economic policies.
The
key features of the American Revolution, the real one, not the fake
one, was political, religious, and economic independence. That is why,
despite all its problems and failures, it remains the number one threat
to the psychopathocracy and must be destroyed. It cannot be allowed to complete and further
its original vision.
That is why the history of the American
Revolution has been systematically redacted, and distorted, and replaced
with a false narrative that distorts their forgotten original meaning. For example, Free Trade (means Austrian/London
School financial capitalism with no barriers), Debt or Sound Money
(Interest based or Gold based), Individual Liberty (Ayn Rand
selfishness irrespective of morality and impact on
others), Property Rights (Ayn Rand type (discrimination, human
slavery, etc.)), Limited Government (no equal protection under the law, Confederacy/State's Rights and American Exceptionalism (Imperialism/Manifest Destiny, etc).
npr | Have you ever borrowed an e-book from a library? If the answer is no, you're a member of a large majority. A survey
out Thursday from the Pew Internet Project finds that only 5 percent of
"recent library users" have tried to borrow an e-book this year.
About
three-quarters of public libraries offer e-books, according to the
American Library Association, but finding the book you want to read can
be a challenge — when it's available at all.
Brian Kenney is
the director of the White Plains Public Library in New York. He tells
NPR's Audie Cornish about a library patron who wanted to check out a
digital copy of Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs.
"It
was a middle-aged guy, you know, had a high techno-comfort zone, he was
carrying his iPad, and he approached the desk carrying the Isaacson bio
and said, 'How do I download this,' " Kenney recalls. "And it was the
classic case where I had to explain to them, 'Well, sir, actually, you
can't download that from here.' And then ensues the discussion why, as
though somehow or other the library was stupid or failing in its job."
In
fact, Kenney says, it's not a failure on the part of the library —
Simon and Schuster, which published the book, would not license it to
the library for download.
You might think about all this as the
Wild West of digital licensing — a frontier environment where every
publisher has its own set of rules. Among the six biggest companies,
Simon and Schuster currently licenses none of its e-books to libraries.
The company says it simply hasn't found a model that works.
npr | What counts as a book these days, in a world of Kindles, Nooks and
iPads — and eager talk about new platforms and distribution methods?
Traditional
publishers are traveling a long and confusing road into the digital
future. To begin with, here's the conventional wisdom about publishing:
E-books are destroying the business model.
People expect them
to be cheaper than physical books, and that drives down prices. But the
story's not that simple. For one thing, digital publishers have the same
problem that record labels do: piracy. And there's just not the same
stigma attached to pirating an e-book as there is to holding up a Barnes
& Noble.
It turns out, though, that some publishers are
doing pretty well despite the piracy problem. "We've had an incredible
year," says Sourcebooks President Dominique Raccah. "Last year was the
best year in the company's history. This year we beat that, which I
didn't think was even possible." Raccah adds that her company is doing
well because of digital publishing, not in spite of it. "It's been an
amazing ride," she says.
It turns out there are some huge
advantages — at least for publishers. A big one: The price of an e-book
isn't fixed the way it is with physical books. Ten years ago, a
publisher would have sent out its books to the bookstore with the price
stamped on the cover. After that, it was done — the publisher couldn't
put it on sale to sell more books.
HuffPo | We are all on a journey. None of us know with absolute certainty what
happens next. All we can do is position ourselves for the future we
prophetically or delusionally imagine. History will judge us all. Those
who position correctly will be rewarded. Those who aren't prepared will
face the harsh realities of the future marketplace.
Every one of us holds the power to change the course of history by
taking actions today that enable the future we desire. Our actions
mirror our aspirations, which means the future of publishing will be
determined by our collective and sometimes competing aspirations.
Readers are our gatekeepers.
I challenge you, my dear writer, publisher or reader, to take charge
of your future. Imagine a brighter and better future ahead, where the
culture of books reigns supreme, where more people are discovering,
reading, purchasing, publishing, selling, and profiting-from books.
Imagine a future where more readers than ever before will enjoy a
greater diversity of books than ever before. Imagine a future where the
power center of the publishing business shifts from traditional
publishers to ordinary writers where it belongs.
The utopian and often self-serving aspirations of industry
participants don't always intersect. Sometimes, objectives are at odds
with one another, and at other times objectives are aligned. Our
experiences, biases and fears color our perceptions, and sometimes
distort them.
Much is at stake. The world's 50 largest book publishers alone achieved $68 billion in sales in 2011, according to Publishers Weekly. Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC) estimates the US consumer ebook market alone will surpass $10 billion
by 2016. When so much money and power is up for grabs, industry
players have a lot to fight over, and much to protect. Books are worth
fighting for, so fight for the future you want. Otherwise, someone else
may determine your future for you.
None of us can truly predict the future, but we can still prepare for
it by remaining flexible. We must be willing to roll with the punches
when fate tries to smack us upside the head, and adjust our course and
our beliefs when we make mistakes, or when we discover new opportunities
on the horizon.
The doubters like Donald Maass are becoming the exception, not the
rule, and that worries me. When everyone starts swimming in the same
direction and believing the same group think, that's when I start
wondering about what comes next. It's the job of any entrepreneur - and
we are all entrepreneurs of our own destiny - to prepare for the future
while surviving today.
Hearing the complaints of book buyers must be frustrating for publishers, because they actually have a pretty good case
for why e-books cost what they do. Although many see the price of
old-fashioned things like paper and printing presses and trucks to ship
them as a big cost for printed books, publishers like Penguin point out
that the main costs involve advance payments to authors, marketing and
other support expenses — things that also apply to e-books. As Wendig
puts it:
[P]roducing e-books costs more than you think. You’re
paying for editors and cover design and, of course, for the book itself,
and the mechanics of putting those things into a container are not the
bulk of a book’s cost. Hence, e-books are always going to be close to
their physical counterparts in cost.
But as the author also notes, consumers don’t really care what a publisher’s costs are,
nor are they likely to pay more simply because a publisher argues that
their content is really valuable. In the same way, movie-goers don’t
really care how many millions of dollars a movie studio spent on their
latest blockbuster — that has no bearing on whether they want to see it
or not. It is the perceived value of the e-book that matters, not the cost — and there are some good reasons why e-book consumers might want to pay less.
ala | As e-books and the emerging digital library occupy today’s headlines, there appears to be a tacit consensus emerging from the discourse among academics, journalists, and librarians about the future of the book. That vision of the future, as portrayed in the trade literature and popular press, consigns this centuries-old technology to obsolescence, as if it were merely another information format.
This report explores alternative scenarios, where the technology of the printed book does not disappear or become extinct, but occupies a different position in a technological ecology characterized by the proliferation of e-books and digital libraries. The printed book has for centuries been the chief cognitive object of the library. The future status of that object should be of interest to all librarians, especially as they plan for the future; therefore, this report intentionally favors the continued existence of the printed book as a viable technology.
The goal of this report is to draw attention to our assumptions about the future of the book, assumptions that are grounded in our current e-book zeitgeist. Strategic decisions are often based on underlying—and often unexamined—assumptions about the larger environment in which those decisions will be carried out. The future often turns out not as expected because we do not entertain alternative possibilities and base strategic thinking and actions on one specific belief about the future. Much of our current thinking about the future of libraries appears based on the assumption that printed books will give way to e-books and the digital transmission of textual objects.
This research report presents four scenarios so that academic and research librarians may expand their thinking about the future to include a richer set of environmental conditions:
Consensus: a scenario where e-books overwhelm and make obsolete the printed book
Nostalgic: a scenario where printed books are still highly in demand and e-books haveproven to be a fad
Privatization of the book: a scenario where printed books are vestigial to an ecology dominated bye-books
Printed books thrive: a scenario where e-books and printed books exist in balance and have equal importance
Scenario thinking exercises can help to develop situational awareness. Mica R. Endsley defines situational awareness as “the perception of elements in the environment within a volume of time and space, the comprehension of their meaning, and the projection of their status in the near future.”
Futuring is an exercise in expanding situational awareness by developing greater comprehension of the elements that make up the larger environment of libraries—indeed, viewing the library as a complex dynamic system affected not only by operational elements such as collections and user services but also by political, economic, social, and technological elements of the environment within which the library is situated. Beyond comprehending these elements and understanding the complex ways in which they interact, academic and research librarians must also be able to envision the future status of that system. We assume that the complex system that is the library will itself undergo change, and librarians must be able to anticipate those changes. Thus, using the language of situational awareness, scenarios should be viewed as one effort to describe a future state of the system in which decisions will need to be carried out. As academic and research librarians undertake strategic planning for their organizations, awareness of the larger environment and understanding the potential for changes in that environment will prove critical to improved decision making.
After reviewing each of the scenarios, those involved in strategic decision making should then consider their own plans—and their budgets— with respect to these questions:
Which state of the system do you believe best describes the environment in which your library’s strategic thinking and planning will unfold?
Which of these models of the future currently guides your strategic thinking and actions regarding printed books?
Note:
Reader’s Digest figures are revenue for the entire company. Book sales
in 2011 were $545 million and $590 million in 2010. Figures are based on
sales generated in calendar 2011 or—for corporations with a fiscal
year—from fiscal 2011. Data are from publicly available sources and
include sales of books, journals, and digital products. Because
publishing data were unavailable, Pannini, Weltbild, and Disney/Hyperion
are excluded from the rankings. The listing was compiled by
international publishing consultant Rudiger Wischenbart under the aegis of Livres Hebdo.
atkearney | The e-book revolution has begun, capturing consumers' imaginations
and pocketbooks. More people today are downloading e-books, a trend that
will only accelerate in the next decade and undoubtedly change the
publishing value chain. Core industry participants—printing companies,
distributors and book retailers—will find it difficult to adapt. While
some existing players and newcomers to the market—publishers, authors,
telecommunications operators and device manufacturers—will find this an
ideal time to capitalize on the opportunities.
In this paper, we analyze the evolution of the e-book market, the main factors around its
growth, recent trends in the United States and Europe, and the changing
structure of the publishing value chain. Our goal is to answer a larger
question: What should the publishing industry expect and how should
they prepare?
After years of false starts, e-books finally took off in the United States. While the overall publishing market has constricted slightly, e-book sales in the trade sector have grown five-fold in three years, to $165 million in 2009, or roughly 1.3 percent of the market, according to the International Digital Publishing Forum. It could reach 20 percent penetration within seven years (see sidebar: What Took So Long for E-Books?).
U.S. e-book penetration differs by segment and target sector. Within the non-trade sector, which includes educational, reference, technical and scientific books, e-book penetration is near 30 percent and rising, thanks to their easy access (from university workstations), search options (dictionaries and research papers) and storage capacity (educational books and technical manuals).
jakobgoesblogging | Enablers are the development of advanced hardware and software products as well
as the increased importance of internet and especially social networks.
During my research, I found a number of interesting statistics about
recent changes in the music industry. Based on this data I will try to
analyze each step of the value chain to explore how new technologies and
the change in customer behavior affect the companies’ business models
as well as the music industry as a whole.
Approach: After a short description of the music industry as it was some years
ago, I will have a look at the most recent trends. Based on that I will
point out the changes in the business model of record labels and
identify some important areas in which companies have to act in order to
stay competitive. To make this analysis more practical, I want to
include the income statement of Warner Music Group, a leading record
label to show how it is affected by recent industry chances.
The typical value chain in the music industry shows five steps. It starts
with creation of the content by the artist. Traditionally, the artist
tried to raise awareness by sending demo tapes to the record companies
and participate in band contests. The artist and repertoire (A&R)
unit is the division of a record label that is responsible for talent
scouting, contracting and overseeing the artistic development. Once the
contract is signed, the record company takes care of the financing and
records the songs. The next step is the promotion and PR of the album
done by the record company. The distribution traditionally was done
through merchants and retail stores. Most of them were independent but
there were also big retail chains, owned by the major record labels.
abc.net.au |Source: There are many variations of the same graph. The point is that there was a huge spike in the 90s and I aim to explain that.
You don't have to be an analyst to identify something wrong with the
record industry's graph. Predicting an unprecedented period of revenue
generation off the back of a two year growth period when two of the
preceding three years had seen revenue declines (one of them large) is
more than optimistic. It could be explained by new strategy, marketing
and innovation pushes by the music industry, but hindsight shows no
evidence of that.
In a nutshell, the music industry is adamant that illegal downloading
is the prime cause of its revenues dropping over the past decade.
Opponents say that we're buying more music than ever, but that we're buying individual songs and not expensive albums on CDs
and that's why revenue is down. But is the current quality of music
really comparable to what was on offer in the 90s? Or is it more akin to
the 80s?
digitalmusicnews | The recording industry has been fractionalized over the past decade. The touring sector suffered its worst decline ever last year. And music publishers are struggling to keep things flat.
So how is the broader music industry somehow worth $168 billion?
The answer comes from a broader list of music-related sectors,
including those tied to consumer electronics, radio advertising, and
musical instruments.
Take a look at this 2010 estimate from global trade group IFPI, which
pegs the figure at $167.7 billion, with radio advertising squarely in
the lead (larger graph here). Recognize this business?
Forbes | From the 1960s on, the LP album gave the music industry a main product to push, and business was good. In the 1990s the widespread acceptance of the Compact Disc format gave a giant boost to the music industry in album sales. By 2007, over 200 billion CDs had been sold worldwide. But sales of the long playing album have decreased dramatically. In 2000, U.S. consumers bought 785.1 million albums; in 2011, that figure was down to 330.57 million. In 2000, the ten top-selling albums in the U.S. sold a combined 60.4 million copies; in 2011, the top ten sold just 20.2 million copies.
While accounts of the “death of the music industry” have been greatly exaggerated, no one can deny that the music industry is experiencing major changes. For decades the industry relied on a business model of selling massive amounts of copies of a few albums to finance the high-cost of producing records, plugging songs to radio, and overcoming the losses from their other projects. Record companies used the clout of having access to recording studios and access to airplay on the radio to their advantage in contract negotiations with artists, which leveled their risk intake of the enormous costs and influence needed to both produce and push a record.
decryptedmatrix | The Federal Reserve wants to know what you are saying about it. In fact, the Federal Reserve has announced plans
to identify “key bloggers” and to monitor “billions of conversations”
about the Fed on Facebook, Twitter, forums and blogs. This is yet
another sign that the alternative media is having a dramatic impact. As
first reported on Zero Hedge, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has issued a “Request for Proposal”
to suppliers who may be interested in participating in the development
of a “Sentiment Analysis And Social Media Monitoring Solution”. In
other words, the Federal Reserve wants to develop a highly sophisticated
system that will gather everything that you and I say about the Federal
Reserve on the Internet and that will analyze what our feelings about
the Fed are. Obviously, any “positive” feelings about the Fed would not
be a problem. What they really want to do is to gather information on
everyone that views the Federal Reserve negatively. It is unclear how
they plan to use this information once they have it, but considering how
many alternative media sources have been shut down lately, this is
obviously a very troubling sign.
You can read this “Request for Proposal” right here. Posted below are some of the key quotes from the document (in bold) with some of my own commentary in between the quotes….
“The intent is to establish a fair and equitable partnership
with a market leader who will who gather data from various social media
outlets and news sources and provide applicable reporting to FRBNY. This
Request for Proposal (“RFP”) was created in an effort to support
FRBNY’s Social Media Listening Platforms initiative.”
A system like this is not cheap. Apparently the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York believes that gathering all of this information is very
important. In recent years, criticism of the Federal Reserve has become
very intense, and most of this criticism has been coming from the
Internet. It has gotten to the point where the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York has decided that it had better listen to what is being said and
find out who is saying it.
“Social media listening platforms are solutions that gather
data from various social media outlets and news sources. They monitor
billions of conversations and generate text analytics based on
predefined criteria. They can also determine the sentiment of a speaker
or writer with respect to some topic or document.”
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York intends to listen in on
“billions of conversations” and to actually determine the “sentiment” of
those that are participating in those conversations.
neweconomicperspectives | One of the “tells” that reveals how embarrassed Lanny Breuer (head of the Criminal Division) and Eric Holder (AG) are by the disgraceful
refusal to prosecute HSBC and its officers for their tens of thousands
of felonies are the false and misleading statements made
by the Department of Justice (DOJ) about the settlement. The same
pattern has been demonstrated by other writers in the case of the false and disingenuous statistics DOJ has trumpeted to attempt to disguise the abject failure of their efforts to prosecute the elite officers who directed the “epidemic” (FBI 2004) of mortgage fraud.
HSBC was one of the largest originators of fraudulent mortgage loans through its acquisition of Household Finance.
Three recent books by “insiders” have confirmed earlier articles
revealing the decisive role that Treasury Secretary Geithner has played
in opposing criminal prosecutions of the elite banksters and banks whose
frauds drove the financial crisis and the Great Recession.
Bair, Sheila, Bull by the Horns: Fighting to Save Main Street from Wall Street and Wall Street from Itself” (2012); Barofsky, Neil, Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street (2012); Connaughton, Jeff, The Payoff: Why Wall Street Always Wins (2012).
Geithner’s fear is that the vigorous enforcement of the law against
the systemically dangerous institutions (SDIs) that caused the crisis
could destabilize the system and cause a renewed global crisis. I have
often expressed my view that the theory that leaving felons in power
over our largest financial institutions is essential to producing
financial stability is insane. Geithner, it turns out, is very
sensitive to that criticism.
To sum it up:
the regulators and Treasury opposed having HSBC admit the truth – that
it violated the money-laundering statutes. They warned that such a
guilty plea could cause a systemic crisis because HSBC was an SDI. When
Treasury warns DOJ that a prosecution could cause a global crisis there
is no chance that the AG will override Treasury’s warning on his own
initiative. That is why line prosecutors urged Holder to meet
personally with Geithner to urge him to withdraw his objections to the
proposed prosecution, but Holder apparently declined to seek a meeting.
Instead, Breuer emphasized that DOJ accepted Treasury’s warning that
HSBC was too big to prosecute because doing so would cause a global
systemic crisis.
Note the disingenuous statement made by the Treasury to the press.
Yes, DOJ makes the “decision” whether to prosecute, but if DOJ were to
prosecute in a case where Treasury had warned that the sky would fall if
there were a prosecution – and the sky did fall – then the DOJ’s
leaders would be the idiots who ignored Treasury and blew up the world’s
economy.
The Treasury statement completes setting the stage for the tale I
promised to complete about Geithner’s sensitivity to his role in
blocking prosecutions becoming better known. Breuer and I were
interviewed by NPR about the HSBC settlement. I criticized it and I
explained why settlement negotiations were unique in such circumstances
because the government’s overriding priority was in reducing its
fine to a level that it was sure would not pose any meaningful risk to
the health of the SDI. When the government fears that any SDI failure
will cause a global systemic crisis the government’s paramount priority
in negotiating a recovery is to restrict rather than maximize its
recovery in order to ensure there is no meaningful risk of the
settlement leading to the SDI’s failure. The government’s press flacks
find it easy to “spin” settlements with profitable SDIs because their
capital and profits are so enormous that the government can negotiate a
fine that sounds very large to the public but is relatively minor from
the SDI’s perspective. The settlement is both a “record” amount and a
modest cost of doing (fraudulent) business for HSBC.
When the NPR story ran originally it contained a quotation from me
noting Geithner’s long-standing opposition to prosecuting SDIs and the
government’s incentive to reduce greatly the penalties on HSBC because
it was an SDI. My quotation mentioning Geithner was removed from the
NPR story at the request of Treasury and replaced with this
“Clarification.”
Clarification: In an early radio
version of this story, a former regulator was quoted speculating that
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner did not want to put HSBC out of
business. We should have made it clear that it is the Justice
Department, not the Treasury Department that made the decision to defer
prosecution of HSBC.
I was not “speculating” that “Geithner did not want to put HSBC out
of business.” My statement was not only factual; it wasn’t
controversial given the many insider exposes that have confirmed
Geithner’s position on SDIs. (A position now parroted by Breuer.) The
statement that Treasury got placed in the “clarification” is the same
carefully crafted disingenuous statement that Treasury is using to
obscure the continuing success of Geithner’s efforts to prevent
prosecutions of the SDIs. What we now know definitively is how
hyper-sensitive Geithner is to anything that brings to greater public
attention his pusillanimous role in ensuring that fraudulent SDIs and
the banksters that control them can commit their crimes with impunity
from the criminal laws. As always, I emphasize the ultimate culpability
for the shameful “too big to prosecute” indulgence granted to the
criminal enterprise known as HSBC rests with President Obama and Prime
Minister Cameron. It is also worth noting that the Republican Party and
Governor Romney never protested this failure to prosecute and that
Obama is largely continuing President Bush’s failure to even investigate
seriously the banksters. Welcome to crony capitalism.
rollingstone | If you've ever been arrested on a drug charge, if you've ever spent
even a day in jail for having a stem of marijuana in your pocket or
"drug paraphernalia" in your gym bag, Assistant Attorney General and
longtime Bill Clinton pal Lanny Breuer has a message for you: Bite me.
Breuer this week signed off on a settlement deal with
the British banking giant HSBC that is the ultimate insult to every
ordinary person who's ever had his life altered by a narcotics charge.
Despite the fact that HSBC admitted to laundering billions of dollars
for Colombian and Mexican drug cartels (among others) and violating a
host of important banking laws (from the Bank Secrecy Act to the Trading
With the Enemy Act), Breuer and his Justice Department elected not to
pursue criminal prosecutions of the bank, opting instead for a "record" financial settlement of $1.9 billion, which as one analyst noted is about five weeks of income for the bank.
The banks' laundering transactions were so brazen that the NSA
probably could have spotted them from space. Breuer admitted that drug
dealers would sometimes come to HSBC's Mexican branches and "deposit
hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, in a single day, into a single
account, using boxes designed to fit the precise dimensions of the
teller windows."
This bears repeating: in order to more efficiently move as much
illegal money as possible into the "legitimate" banking institution
HSBC, drug dealers specifically designed boxes to fit through the bank's
teller windows. Tony Montana's henchmen marching dufflebags of cash
into the fictional "American City Bank" in Miami was actually more subtle
than what the cartels were doing when they washed their cash through
one of Britain's most storied financial institutions.
guardian | The US is the world's largest prison state, imprisoning more of its citizens than any nation on earth, both in absolute numbers and proportionally. It imprisons people for longer periods of time, more mercilessly, and for more trivial transgressions than any nation in the west.
This sprawling penal state has been constructed over decades, by both
political parties, and it punishes the poor and racial minorities at overwhelmingly disproportionate rates.
But
not everyone is subjected to that system of penal harshness. It all
changes radically when the nation's most powerful actors are caught
breaking the law. With few exceptions, they are gifted not merely with
leniency, but full-scale immunity from criminal punishment. Thus have
the most egregious crimes of the last decade been fully shielded from
prosecution when committed by those with the greatest political and
economic power: the construction of a worldwide torture regime, spying
on Americans' communications without the warrants required by criminal
law by government agencies and the telecom industry, an aggressive war
launched on false pretenses, and massive, systemic financial fraud in
the banking and credit industry that triggered the 2008 financial
crisis.
This two-tiered justice system was the subject of my last book, "With Liberty and Justice for Some",
and what was most striking to me as I traced the recent history of this
phenomenon is how explicit it has become. Obviously, those with money
and power always enjoyed substantial advantages in the US justice
system, but lip service was at least always paid to the core precept of
the rule of law: that - regardless of power, position and prestige - all
stand equal before the blindness of Lady Justice.
It really is
the case that this principle is now not only routinely violated, as was
always true, but explicitly repudiated, right out in the open. It is
commonplace to hear US elites unblinkingly insisting that those who
become sufficiently important and influential are - and should be -
immunized from the system of criminal punishment to which everyone else
is subjected.
Worse, we are constantly told that immunizing those
with the greatest power is not for their good, but for our good, for
our collective good: because it's better for all of us if society is
free of the disruptions that come from trying to punish the most
powerful, if we're free of the deprivations that we would collectively
experience if we lose their extraordinary value and contributions by
prosecuting them.
This rationale was popularized in 1974 when
Gerald Ford explained why Richard Nixon - who built his career as a
"law-and-order" politician demanding harsh punishments and unforgiving
prosecutions for ordinary criminals - would never see the inside of a
courtroom after being caught committing multiple felonies; his pardon
was for the good not of Nixon, but of all of us. That was the same
reasoning hauled out to justify immunity for officials of the National
Security State who tortured and telecom giants who illegally spied on
Americans (we need them to keep us safe and can't disrupt them with prosecutions), as well as the refusal to prosecute any Wall Street criminals for their fraud (prosecutions for these financial crimes would disrupt our collective economic recovery).
A
new episode unveiled on Tuesday is one of the most vivid examples yet
of this mentality. Over the last year, federal investigators found that
one of the world's largest banks, HSBC, spent years committing serious crimes,
involving money laundering for terrorists; "facilitat[ing] money
laundering by Mexican drug cartels"; and "mov[ing] tainted money for
Saudi banks tied to terrorist groups". Those investigations uncovered
substantial evidence "that senior bank officials were complicit in the illegal activity."
As but one example, "an HSBC executive at one point argued that the
bank should continue working with the Saudi Al Rajhi bank, which has
supported Al Qaeda."
Needless to say, these are the kinds of
crimes for which ordinary and powerless people are prosecuted and
imprisoned with the greatest aggression possible.
nytimes | People widely report that crying relieves tension, restores emotional
equilibrium and provides “catharsis,” a washing out of bad feelings.
(Tears, in fact, seem to be the only body fluids that do not evoke
feelings of disgust.) The term “catharsis” has religious overtones of
purging evil and sin; it’s no surprise that religious icons so
frequently feature tearful saints and that religious ceremonies are,
around the world, one of the main settings for the release of tears.
Crying is a nearly universal sign of grief, though some mourners report
that, despite genuine sorrow, they cannot shed tears — sometimes even
for years after their loved one has gone. Unlike today, when the privacy
of grief is more respected, the public or ceremonial shedding of tears,
at the graveside of a spouse or the funeral of a sovereign, were once
considered socially or even politically essential. To avoid dry eyes,
widows would fill their handkerchiefs with onions lest their bereavement
be underestimated.
When I lecture on crying, I ask my audience to let me know, by a show of
hands, which art forms most move them to tears. About 80 percent say
music, followed closely by novels (74 percent), but then the figures
fall sharply, to 43 percent, for poetry, and 10 to 22 percent for
paintings, sculpture and architecture.
I am often asked why I do not include cinema in these surveys, but what
drives emotion in films is usually the music. Witness Michel
Hazanavicius’s recent “silent” film “The Artist,” which won the Academy
Award for best picture last year. Anything but silent, it arouses
intense emotions through its musical score.
The physical act of crying is mainly one of inhaling — as opposed to
laughter, which requires exhaling — and involves the soft palate, larynx
and pharynx. Crying disrupts speech, which is why we choke up when we
weep. This suggests to linguists and anthropologists that emotional
crying evolved before propositional language, perhaps explaining why
tears communicate states of mind and feelings that are often so
difficult to express in words. Of course, from an evolutionary
perspective, recognition of emotion (usually through facial gesture) was
essential for survival.
the scientist | This September, Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart exposed
his brain to a live audience at the annual meeting of the American
Association of Retired Persons (AARP) in New Orleans, Louisiana. With an
electroencephalography (EEG) device strapped to his head, Hart strutted
across the stage, drum in hand, as images of the rhythms pulsing
through his brain were projected on big screens at the front of the
hall. “It was like taking my brain out of my skull and watching it
dance,” he says.
The stunt was the result of a collaboration between Hart and Adam Gazzaley,
a neuroscientist at the University of California, San Francisco.
Brought together by their shared interest in the power of rhythm, the
duo says they hope to generate new research into its role in
higher-order brain functions—and find ways to influence brain rhythms to
improve cognitive health.
“Mickey had an experience several years ago with his grandmother, who
had Alzheimer’s,” says Gazzaley. “He noticed she was most communicative
when he played the drums. It hit home that music and rhythm could have
therapeutic impact, something he’d suspected for a long time.” So the
AARP put Hart in touch with Gazzaley, who studies how brain rhythms
change with normal ageing and disease, to help raise funds for research
designed to explore the science behind Hart's observation.
“We’re going after the rhythm code,” Hart says. “If we crack it, we may
be able to use that information to diagnose and treat these brain
diseases. That’s the big enchilada!”
mikecanex | Three things were very clear to me in that night of self-examination
five years ago. First: A man’s chief loyalty must be to the woman who
has joined her life to his; to the children who call him father; and to
the business which feeds and clothes and houses them all. In my
easy-going willingness to befriend the world at large, I was sacrificing
my wife, my children, and my employer far more than I was sacrificing
myself. As I look back, I marvel that my wife and the children should
have borne with me as uncomplainingly as they did.
What was true of my family was true of the business as well. I
thought I was being friendly to the customers of the house. As a matter
of fact, I was too often being friendly to the customers at the expense
of the house. It is a common fault in salesmen. They let a thousand
trivial demands on the part of the men to whom they sell take their time
and energy from the business of the men for whom they sell.
Second: I am convinced that indiscriminate charity, whether one gives
money or time — which is life itself — merely pauperizes the
recipients. The business and social world are full of respectable
panhandlers, who will take and take and take, just as long as they can
find anyone to give. I gave to them for years, at the expense of those
who had a far better claim upon my generosity. I am still willing to
help any man who honestly needs help. But as for the strong, perfectly
well, and perfectly capable human beings who have chosen to ride through
the world on someone else’s back, they will have to look for another
beast of burden. They can buy their own theatre tickets, write their own
letters of introduction, make their own hotel reservations, use
somebody else’s office instead of mine for their engagements, and borrow
money from the banks which are in business to lend.
And, finally, I am persuaded that no one ever achieves anything
worth-while in this world unless he has so great a respect for his work
that he compels all other men to respect it. Unless, in a word, he
commands his time. Read the life of a great scientist like Agassiz. Was
he forever at the world’s beck and call? Not for a single day. To
letters inviting him to write, or to lecture for money, he replied that
he had no time for those things. He was the custodian of a certain
number of days — a number far too small for the great task he had laid
out for himself — and he would not be diverted even for an instant.
I was explaining this point of view to a good old aunt of mine one
afternoon and she exclaimed: “But, Joe, it is so selfish for a man to
put his work ahead of everything! It’s unchristian.”
“On the contrary, it is Christian in the very finest sense,” I
replied. “What was it that Jesus said when his parents rebuked him for
his failure to keep his engagement with them on that first journey down
from Jerusalem? ‘Wist ye not that I must be about my Father’s business?’
He demanded. He had work to do — great work and little time in which to
do it. Even He was no exception to the eternal rule that achievement
comes only through the subordination of every power to a great ideal;
and that no man is really obliging who does not first discharge in full his obligations to his work.” Fist tap Dale.
Model trains!
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When I was quite young, perhaps five or six, I got a model train for
Christmas. An O-gauge freight train with a steam engine and a few cars,
made by Lion...
Florida Vacation
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Five days in Cape Coral. Ate well, got some sun, got some color, got some
exercise. Alternating nights drinking. Cape Coral has canals, from above it
loo...
Wokeness in November
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Regardless of one’s personal feelings about wokeness and the culture wars
(I think such things are important for many reasons, but have also spilt
plenty o...
Return of the Magi
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Lately, the Holy Spirit is in the air. Emotional energy is swirling out of
the earth.I can feel it bubbling up, effervescing and evaporating around
us, s...
Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...
Silver
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Noticed this.
Today is the 11th and Silver is from the 11th Group.
Silver is atomic number 47
"The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom, which de...
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(Damn, has it been THAT long? I don't even know which prompts to use to
post this)
SeeNew
Can't get on your site because you've gone 'invite only'?
Man, ...
First Member of Chumph Cartel Goes to Jail
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With the profligate racism of the Chumph Cartel, I don’t imagine any of
them convicted and jailed is going to do too much better than your run of
the mill ...