A list of those leading the way toward fascist slavery

Posted on July 29th, 2008 by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://www.bethechangeinc.org/…

ServiceNation Summit Co-chairs:

  • Vartan Gregorian, President, Carnegie Corporation of New York
  • Caroline Kennedy, Vice-Chair, New York City Fund For Public Schools
  • Bill Novelli, CEO, AARP
  • Alma Powell, Chair, America’s Promise Alliance
  • Rick Stengel, Managing Editor, TIME Magazine

ServiceNation Leadership Council:

  • Andi Bernstein
  • Tom A. Bernstein, President and Co-founder, Chelsea Piers
  • Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor, New York, NY; Chairman, National September 11 Memorial and Museum
  • Cory Booker, Mayor, Newark, NJ
  • Richard H. Brodhead, President, Duke University
  • Neil Bush, CEO, Global XS
  • Geoffrey Canada, President and CEO, Harlem Children’s Zone
  • Mortimer Caplin, Former Commissioner, Internal Revenue Service
  • Vice Admiral Richard Carmona, Former U.S. Surgeon General
  • Jean Case, CEO, The Case Foundation
  • Richard Celeste, President, Colorado College
  • Ray Chambers, Amelior Foundation
  • Richard Cizik, Vice President, National Association of Evangelicals
  • Glenn Close, Actress
  • William Cohen, Former Secretary of Defense; Former U.S. Senator
  • Janet Langhart Cohen, Author; Founder, Citizen Patriot Organization
  • Scott Cowen, President, Tulane University
  • Tom Daschle, Former U.S. Senator
  • John J. DeGioia, President, Georgetown University
  • Manny Diaz, Mayor, Miami, FL
  • John Dilulio, Former Director, Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives; Author, The Godly Republic
  • Melinda Doolittle, Recording Artist
  • Paul Fireman, Founder, Reebok
  • Al From, Founder and CEO, Democratic Leadership Council
  • Susan Fuhrman, President, Teachers College, Columbia University
  • Mark Gearan, President, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
  • David Gergen, Professor of Public Service and Director, Center for Public Leadership, Harvard University
  • Michael Gerson, Columnist, The Washington Post
  • Stephen Goldsmith, Former Mayor, Indianapolis, IN
  • Jennifer Granholm, Governor, Michigan
  • Rabbi Irving Greenberg, Theologian; Author, The Jewish Way; Founding President, Jewish Life Network
  • Amy Gutmann, President, University of Pennsylvania
  • Lee Hamilton, Former Congressman; Former Co-chair, 9/11 Commission and Iraq Study Group
  • Jenny Chin Hansen, President, AARP
  • Gary Hart, Former U.S. Senator
  • Admiral James R. Hogg, USN (Ret), Director, Strategic Studies Group, Naval War College
  • James J. Jensen
  • Martin Luther King, III, Chairman, Realizing the Dream
  • Joel Klein, Chancellor, New York City Public Schools
  • Sherry Lansing, Founder, The Sherry Lansing Foundation
  • Jim Leach, Former Congressman; John L. Weinberg Professor of Public and International Affairs, Woodrow   Wilson School, Princeton University
  • Anthony Marx, President, Amherst College
  • Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, Chairman, American Red Cross
  • Sam Nunn, Former U.S. Senator
  • Michael Nutter, Mayor, Philadelphia, PA
  • Martin O’Malley, Governor, Maryland
  • Lt. General Dave R. Palmer, USA (Ret), Former Superintendent, U.S. Military Academy at West Point; Author
  • David Paterson, Governor, New York
  • Kal Penn, Actor
  • Gregg Petersmeyer, Former Assistant to the President; Director, Office of National Service under George H.W. Bush
  • Peter G. Peterson, Founder and Chairman, Peter G. Peterson Foundation; Co-founder, Blackstone Group Management
  • Rob Portman, Former Congressman; Former Director, Office of Management and Budget
  • Samantha Power, Anna Lindh Professor of Practice of Global Leadership and Public Policy, Harvard University; Author
  • Marc Racicot, Former Governor, Montana
  • Susan Rice, Foreign Policy Advisor, Obama for America
  • Bill Richardson, Governor, New Mexico
  • David Shaw, Managing Partner, Black Point Group
  • Rodney Slater, Former Secretary of Transportation; Chair, United Way of America
  • Laurie M. Tisch, President, Laurie M. Tisch Illumination Fund
  • Paul Vallas, Superintendent, New Orleans Recovery School District
  • David Walker, President and CEO, Peter G. Peterson Foundation
  • Silda Wall, Founder, Children For Children
  • Rick Warren, Senior Pastor, Saddleback Church; Author, A Purpose Driven Life
  • Harris Wofford, Former U.S. Senator; Former CEO, Corporation for National & Community Service

Is it surprising that a large portion of those in support are directly or indirectly government bureaucrats?

“Energy speculation has become a growth industry and it is time for the government to intervene” - Rep. John Dingell

Posted on June 24th, 2008 by bile Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , 2 Comments »

http://www.bloomberg.com/…

Speculators became the largest players in oil futures markets, nearly doubling their share in the past eight years as prices rose to records, in a “radical shift” for the market, according to a congressional committee.

In January 2000, speculators controlled 37 percent of contracts to buy West Texas Intermediate crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange, with the rest held by physical hedgers, including refiners and airlines that need to hedge against delivered fuel costs.

By this April, speculators controlled 71 percent of the contracts, according to data provided to the House Energy and Commerce Committee by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

“Energy speculation has become a growth industry and it is time for the government to intervene,” Representative John Dingell, the committee chairman, said at a subcommittee hearing today.

Isn’t it pretty damn obvious that interference by the government is why we have this supposed problem in the first place? Inflation of the currency, non-inflation based devaluations, higher demand, regulated supply, wars with oil producing nations, the threats of war with oil producing nations, artificially low interest rates, economic bubbles bursting. These push people to buy commodities. What better a commodity to buy but one almost guaranteed to be in high demand and shrinking supply?

Crude oil prices have doubled from last year, reaching a record $139.89 a barrel in trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange June 16. Congress has held several hearings on what is driving prices up, and President George W. Bush last week called for expanded drilling to respond to record prices. Crude oil for August delivery rose $1.38, or 1 percent, to settle at $136.74 a barrel at 2:57 p.m. today on Nymex.

Given how badly the dollar is doing it’s not really possible to adjust currently for that. Notice the increase in nominal price after we severed the last connection to the gold standard.

Lukken told reporters after the hearing that the 71 percent figure cited by the committee includes speculators and swap dealers, usually large banks that help facilitate trades.

Those swap dealers are not always working on behalf of speculators, Lukken said, adding that Morgan Stanley handles risk management on futures markets for United Air Lines Inc.

Dingell, a Michigan Democrat, said Congress should explore “a full range of options” to limit speculation, including raising margin requirements for financial speculators to 50 percent, preventing pension funds from investing in commodities and prohibiting investment banks from owning energy assets.

Intervention, which causes or exasperates the problem, leads to more intervention and more distortion and more problems. If these people actually wanted to “help” as they claim the only reasonable approach is leaving it alone and withdrawing intervention. They have been presented with the evidence yet choose the path which conflicts with their claims. I can only assume they are not concerned with the wellbeing of the US subjects.

Detroit police raids hipster party, finds nothing

Posted on June 9th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 1 Comment »

http://www.freep.com/…

The DJ was spinning old records by James Brown, Aretha Franklin and the Meters during Funk Night last weekend, when the heavily armed cops dressed in commando-style uniforms burst into the west-side Detroit art gallery.The cops yelled at the patrons to hit the floor. Witnesses said some officers used their feet to force down a couple of people who failed to move fast enough or asked too many questions.

Detroit police conduct raids frequently for all sorts of illegal activity, and the public never hears a thing. But cops almost never raid art galleries filled with young hipsters, students and at least one lawyer. So this May 30 raid, not unexpectedly, is turning out to have an afterlife: The gallery and patrons have decided to fight back, and the American Civil Liberties Union has become involved.

To the police, CAID was a blind pig, where people were buying beer after hours. They handed out 130 tickets for loitering in a place where alcohol was being sold illegally and impounded 44 cars, which cost $900 to get back.

Cops found no drugs, no weapons, no people with outstanding warrants.

Police spokesman James Tate said officers warned Timlin about violations during a visit several weeks ago. “We don’t often do that,” Tate said. “He was advised of the issues he needed to clarify.”

Timlin confirmed the visit, but said he believed he had made the necessary changes. He said the police told club officials May 30 that they also need a permit to allow dancing.

As a response to the raid, Timlin has launched a week-long arts festival that started at midnight Friday and will end with a concert Saturday.

Timlin is lining up bands, artists, lecturers, filmmakers and others to keep the CAID going 24 hours a day for 8 days.

Timlin said the 192-hour art festival this week will be alcohol-free, but in featuring dancing, he seems to be asking for more trouble.

“We’re standing up for what we believe in,” Timlin said. “We’d prefer that the police come and dance with us.”

But if they are found guilty by the courts will they refuse to pay the fines? Are they willing to go to jail for what they believe in? Will they fight to get their $900 back?

Michael Moore endorses Obama, attacks Clinton for bigotry, talks like a bigot

Posted on April 21st, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://www.michaelmoore.com/…

I know some of you will say, ‘Mike, what have the Democrats done to deserve our vote?’ That’s a damn good question. In November of ‘06, the country loudly sent a message that we wanted the war to end. Yet the Democrats have done nothing. So why should we be so eager to line up happily behind them?

I’ll tell you why. Because I can’t stand one more friggin’ minute of this administration and the permanent, irreversible damage it has done to our people and to this world. I’m almost at the point where I don’t care if the Democrats don’t have a backbone or a kneebone or a thought in their dizzy little heads. Just as long as their name ain’t “Bush” and the word “Republican” is not beside theirs on the ballot, then that’s good enough for me.

I, like the majority of Americans, have been pummeled senseless for 8 long years. That’s why I will join millions of citizens and stagger into the voting booth come November, like a boxer in the 12th round, all bloodied and bruised with one eye swollen shut, looking for the only thing that matters — that big “D” on the ballot.Don’t get me wrong. I lost my rose-colored glasses a long time ago.

It’s foolish to see the Democrats as anything but a nicer version of a party that exists to do the bidding of the corporate elite in this country. Any endorsement of a Democrat must be done with this acknowledgement and a hope that one day we will have a party that’ll represent the people first, and laws that allow that party an equal voice.

He calls out Hillary for making race an issue and he goes and uses party bigotry instead. As if the D’s are better. As if the parties contain members of uniform belief. Because Ron Paul and John McCain have the same platform. Or Mike Gravel or Denis Kucinich and Obama or Clinton. If this guy wants a 3rd party to succeed why not find a candidate in the Green, Libertarian, Socialist, or other party to back? He is a collectivist so I understand it’s difficult for him to look at individuals instead of arbitrary groups but it’s still sad that these people who claim to be disgusted with business as usual continues to play the game as usual.

Pennsylvania, the state that gave birth to this great country, has a chance to set things right. It has not had a moment to shine like this since 1787 when our Constitution was written there.

As if Moore gives a shit about the Constitution. His policy surely doesn’t indicate it. He has little concern for individual liberty or hardly any of the intentions of the Constitutions.

I like what MooreWatch.com points out:

Michael Moore has endorsed Obama.  This should be the death knell for the Obama campaign, since not a single candidate for political office endorsed by Michael Moore has ever won.  The endorsement is aboout what you’d expect, the usual nonsensical ramblings of a multimillionaire socialist.  Read it yourself if you like, I just want to make a couple of observations.

I don’t get to vote for President this primary season. I live in Michigan.

No you don’t, Michael, you live in a penthouse in Manhattan.  Jim and I know your home address.  You own property in a swanky part of Michigan.  (You know, where you held your film festival, rather than in Flint, the town you claim to come from but don’t.  Why help out the disadvantaged in Flint when you can suck up to the rest of the millionaire liberals who own gigantic private estates?) So, either you’re registered to vote in two places (New York and Michigan) or you’re lying your ass off to perpetuate the farcical image of yourself as an average Joe.  Both of these sound equally plausible.

I, like the majority of Americans, have been pummeled senseless for 8 long years.

And here we see the classic liberal self-image as a pathetic waif being beaten by an all-powerful machine.  This is one of the things I find more vulgar and disgusting about liberalism than anything else, their incessant need to view themselves as victims.  I guess this is why they believe that the government is the solution to ever conceivable problem.  If people weren’t pathetic victims they might be able to find solutions to some of their own problems, and if that were to happen (God forbid!) it would deny liberals the ability to derive self-satisfaction from pointing to a government program and saying, “See what a wonderful person I am?  I supported that proposal!”

It’s foolish to see the Democrats as anything but a nicer version of a party that exists to do the bidding of the corporate elite in this country.

Thus says a guy who has made himself filthy, stinking rich by working with massive corporations.  But let’s not let a little rank hypocrisy get in the way of your own perceived sense of victimhood, huh Mike?  Just keep dressing like a slob and wearing your baseball caps, the world is full of idiots who will actually buy your little persona.

Federal Credit Cards Misused

Posted on April 9th, 2008 by laur Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

(If this article surprises anyone, then you just haven’t been paying attention… to anything. Ever.)

http://www.washingtonpost.com/

Federal employees used government credit cards to pay for lingerie, gambling, iPods, Internet dating services, and a $13,000 steak-and-liquor dinner, according to a new audit from the Government Accountability Office, which found widespread abuses in a purchasing program meant to improve bureaucratic efficiency. The study, released by Senate lawmakers yesterday, found that nearly half the “purchase card” transactions it examined were improper, either because they were not authorized correctly or because they did not meet requirements for the cards’ use. The overall rate of problems “is unacceptably high,” the audit found.

The GAO also found that agencies could not account for nearly $2 million worth of items identified in the audit — including laptop computers, digital cameras and, at the Army, more than a dozen computer servers worth $100,000 each.

Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), who requested the study along with Sen. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.), said that money “intended to pay for critical infrastructure, education and homeland security is instead being spent on iPods, lingerie and socializing.”

“Too many government employees have viewed purchase cards as their personal line of credit,” Coleman said. “It’s time to cut up their cards and start over.”

I was delighted at how easy this was to stumble upon: A Practical Guide for Reviewing Government Purchase Card Programs A nice little pdf pamphlet that kindly goes over the processes of government purchase cards with fun Microsoft Word clip-art. Fancy.

Why not just cut up the cards and be done with it? Why bother to “start over”?
I suppose, while there’s still tax dollars coming in, why the hell not?!
Oh, yea, and throw in some proposed legislation while you’re at it: The Government Credit Card Abuse Prevention Act.

(All fixed!)

Restoring the Right to Resist

Posted on February 19th, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/…

Unless a police officer is dutifully enforcing a legitimate warrant, or has unassailable probable cause to believe that an individual has committed a felony, he has no business attempting to arrest anybody. That was the understanding that prevailed in the Anglo-Saxon world, in one form or another, from 1215 until the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, at least here in the United States.Fifty years ago, the statutes of nearly every state recognized the right to resist unlawful arrest. Today, it is recognized only Michigan, Wyoming, Oklahoma, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, North and South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Mississippi.* The question has been examined, and upheld in remarkably candid terms by courts in Mississippi. This is ironic, given that Mississippi is the same state where Cory Maye was convicted of first degree murder for killing a police officer who invaded Maye’s home in a late-night paramilitary raid at the wrong address.

A 1963 Mississippi Supreme Court decision (King v. State) favorably cited a legal scholar’s conclusion that “the right of personal liberty is one of the fundamental rights guaranteed to every citizen, and any unlawful interference may be resisted. Every person has a right to resist an unlawful arrest; and, in preventing such illegal restraint of his liberty, he may use such force as may be necessary.”

Not quite four decades earlier, a judge presiding over the criminal trial of a police officer accused of murdering a man who resisted arrest underscored the fact that a citizen has the right to kill a police officer attempting to arrest him without probable cause or a valid warrant. The judge instructed the jury that if the officer had been attempting an illegal arrest, the defendant was permitted to employ “whatever force was necessary to avoid the arrest, even to the extent of taking the life of [the] defendant.”

In other words: A police officer who kills a civilian in the course of an unlawful arrest is a murderer; a citizen who kills a police officer when threatened with lethal violence in the course of an unlawful arrest is exercising his innate right to self-defense.

Like jury nullification the right to resist unlawful arrest is something simply not talked about by those in power and generally not know by the public. It’s something which as our nation moves closer and closer to a police state needs to be taught to others in an attempt to counteract some of the government’s abuses.



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