a camera crew has been allowed "extraordinary access" to texas prosecutor ronnie earle for the past two years coinciding with his pursuit of majority leader tom delay. the filmmakers describe the forthcoming documentary "the big buy" as "a Texas noir political detective story that chronicles what some are calling a 'bloodless coup with corporate cash'" which "follows maverick Austin DA Ronnie Earle's investigation into what really happened when corporate money joined forces with relentless political ambitions to help swing the pivotal 2002 Texas elections, cementing Republican control from Austin to Washington DC."
But DeLay did not cooperate with the filmmakers, and neither did a number of DeLay allies. Earle, on the other hand, did. "I had known about Ronnie Earle for a very long time," Schermbeck says. "I thought that would be an angle to approach the whole story, telling something about Tom DeLay, even though Tom DeLay wouldn't grant us an interview."
the idea of socially responsible investing is noble. investing guru peter lynch famously established the 'invest in what you know' strategy. socially responsible investing takes a different 'invest in what you believe' approach. often SRI means avoiding 'sin stocks' (alcohol, tobacco, gambling) and/or violence-tinged stocks (guns, military, etc).
The divestment list for the most recent fiscal year included 71 companies -- both domestic and foreign -- most of which were connected to either tobacco, alcohol, or gambling. Banned companies include Boeing (BA ), General Dynamics (GD ), Altria Group (MO ), Anheuser-Busch (BUD ), and Harrah's Entertainment (HET ).- bank of america and citigroup were involved in alotta shenanigans in the 90's including enron and worldcom
[snip]
As of June 30, the fund's top 10 holdings were Citigroup (C ), 1.8%; Exxon Mobil (XOM ), 1.6%; Microsoft (MSFT ), 1.6%; General Electric (GE ), 1.5%; Bank of America (BAC ), 1.5%; Time Warner (TWX ), 1.4%; Intel (INTC ), 1.4%; Procter & Gamble (PG ), 1.2%; Pfizer (PFE ), 1.2%; and CIGNA (CI ), 1.1%.
i'm a bit of a germ-o-phobe,
Ninety percent of the women observed washed their hands, compared to 75 percent of men. By contrast, in an August 2005 telephone survey of 1,013 American adults also conducted by Harris Interactive®, 97 percent of women and 96 percent of men say they always or usually wash their hands after using a public restroom.the particularly disturbing thing is that people tend to overstate good behavior and/or understate bad behavior in these types of surveys, so the situation could be even worse
the media seems to have latched onto a policy of 'fake but accurate' when they are caught making up stuff...
former playboy playmate of the year anna nicole smith's long-running case involving the estate of her late billionaire husband J. Howard Marshall will be heard before the US Supreme Court.
slate's fred kaplan is nothing if not consistent....
one of my favorites, don adams of television spy spoof get smart fame passed away.
an la times editorial gently questions the operations of the red cross which has received the bulk of hurrican relief donations.
The national Red Cross reports it spent $111 million last year on fundraising alone. And it's hard to escape the organization's warning of Armageddon if you don't call in a credit card number or send a check or donate blood (which it resells to the tune of more than $1.5 billion annually, part of its $3 billion in income).[note: the editorial is written by the head of another relief agency who acknowledges with "But asking where all the privately collected money will go and how much Red Cross is billing FEMA and the affected states is a legitimate question — even if posed by the president of a small relief agency.]
[snip]
As Hurricane Rita dissipates, let me answer my unpopular question like this: Giving so high a percentage of all donations to one agency that defines itself only as a first-responder and not a rebuilder is not the wisest choice. Americans ought to give a much larger share of their generous charity to community foundations, grass-roots nonprofit groups based in the affected communities and a large number of international "brand name" relief agencies with decades of expertise in rebuilding communities after disasters.
louisiana lawmakers begin with $40 billion as a "starting point"
"about 10 times the annual Corps budget for the entire nation, or 16 times the amount the Corps has said it would need to protect New Orleans from a Category 5 hurricane."meanwhile, predictably, the lawyers are salivating at the lawsuit opportunities
[snip]
"The overall Corps budget for fiscal 2005 was $4 billion, and Corps officials have estimated that they could upgrade the New Orleans flood protection system to defend against a Category 5 storm for about $2.5 billion."
[snip]
"This bill boggles the mind," said Steve Ellis, a water resources expert at Taxpayers for Common Sense. "Brazen doesn't begin to describe it. The Louisiana delegation is using Katrina as an excuse to resurrect a laundry list of pork projects."
[snip]
"But the list of potential projects also includes a 50-year-old plan for a $750 million lock for the New Orleans Industrial Canal, a project rated the fifth-worst Corps boondoggle in the country by an alliance of taxpayer advocates and environmentalists. It also includes an effort to deepen the Port of Iberia for oil and gas tankers, a project that the Corps had concluded would provide only 30 cents of economic benefit for each dollar expended by taxpayers."
reminiscent of arthur chrenkoff's always compelling 'good news from iraq' series, michael barone catalogs some of the good things happening in the world.
conventional wisdom subscribes to the 'seinfeld curse', but friends may be generating similar bad mojo:
contrary to the fabled VRWC, there is a very public concerted effort by democrats/liberals to undermine minority conservatives.
The Baltimore Sun's editorial-page endorsement of the losing Democratic ticket in the 2002 election addressed the presence of a Republican candidate for lieutenant governor on the ballot with an astonishingly dismissive wave: "Michael S. Steele brings little to the ticket but the color of his skin." A state legislator dubbed Steele an "Uncle Tom." Activists brandished Oreo cookies in an orchestrated stunt at a campaign debate. A Maryland congressman dropped the word "token" while talking about Steele.unfortunately, the savaging of minority conservatives has been a long-standing tradition. clarence thomas has been eloquently dubbed 'uncle thomas'--uncle tom appears to be a favorite slur. colin powell received similar treatment from a calypso singer....
while the US public says its tiring of reality tv (i don't believe it given the continued success of survivor, amazing race, etc--it's bad reality tv people don't like), europeans seem to be eating it up alternative tv (that's not a fear factor reference).
initially, i sort of downplayed 'able danger' revelations as flawed government 'business as usual'/'if only they listened to me', but the active suppression by the 9/11 commission raised the proverbial red flags.
i thought only humans caused global warming...
The images, documenting changes from 1999 to 2005, suggest the climate on Mars is presently warmer, and perhaps getting warmer still, than it was several decades or centuries ago.... [Michael Malin, principal investigator for the Mars Orbiter Camera] said scientists had no explanation yet as to why Mars might be warming.those martians need to sign on to kyoto protocol.
'alternative' browser opera goes ad-free.
my thoughts on ebay and its convenient 'see no evil'-as-long-as-it-makes-money policies are on the record... but bill robinson over at the register goes much further
eBay’s not a bad little business. I say with tongue planted firmly in cheek while holding out the distinct possibility that all is not well there. Being a convicted Contrarian, I don't subscribe to conventional wisdom of any kind.robinson continues, questioning the wisdom of eBay's planned purchase of skype
[snip]
After all, we have witnessed the glowing press and corporate admiration for Enron as near-to-death as a few weeks, days even. And what of Worldcom? And Global Crossing? These massive ethical implosions were shocking with their speed of delivery and the Tech sector has worse ethics, in my opinion, than the rest of the corporate world. No, I could well be wrong. But I certainly have the right to say what I think. Fact is, nobody would bat an eyelash if these web giants crashed and burned So, I repeat: eBay's not a bad little business - but it is unproven, we don't know what the hell's going on behind the scenes. The fact that it has a ridiculously high market cap or stock price doesn't mean it'll have the longevity of a General Electric or even Microsoft.
In my conversations with strutting Skype VCs a few years ago, they admitted the lack of a serious revenue model and when pressed promised that they had one in the works. Just in the works? Well actually they promised, there is one already devised and ready to roll-out. So how does it work then? They refused to elaborate.robinson concludes, perhaps overreaching
In the ensuing two years, I’ve failed to see any genuine - much less successful - revenue models for Skype to make bona fide cash flow a reality; so much for candor. $60 million in revenues an absurdly low some and pretty paltry when your price tag is upwards of $2.3 billion. Now this becomes eBay’s big, expensive problem.
If this transaction goes bad in a big way, as I believe it will, then look for Whitman to be out on her ear faster than “HP Carly.” AOL Time-Warner will look like a good probability merger by comparison.few transactions will rival the idiocy of aol-time warner, but another gold rush mentality appears to have arisen given the success of google.
Regrettably, this acquisition looks to be the concrete confirmation that in Technology, at least for the time being, the inmates are still in charge of the asylum.
- the afghan parliamentary elections don't appear to have received the media coverage adequate to importance. afghan president Hamid Karzai sums up
"We are making history. It's the day of self-determination for the Afghan people. After 30 years of wars, interventions, occupations and misery, today Afghanistan is moving forward, making an economy, making political institutions."- meanwhile, as for the north korea nuke breakthrough [bugmenot login], i'm not optimistic....given the shaky history
the washington post's media critic howard kurtz examines the sudden coverage the race and/or poverty issue in major metropolitan newspapers during the aftermath of hurricane katrina.
"Apparently none of these ace reporters has ever set foot in Washington's Anacostia district, or South Central Los Angeles, or the trailer parks of rural Arkansas"i think politicians and news media avoid the topic since its depressing and/or not comfortable for audiences to watch. as evidenced by katrina coverage, its only mentioned when it's convenient at that particular moment.
As the country begins the long slog of rebuilding New Orleans, with many of its poor scattered in other states, how long before the press moves on to more scintillating subjects?
i'm surprised no one has linked president bush, republicans and/or america for this
during the immediate aftermath of hurricane katrina, the news media appeared very happy with its own performance.
Before self-appointing itself the role of discovering all the failures of the Bush administration in the ongoing national disaster, perhaps they should try to account for how they could have spent so much time informing the American people of a catastrophic loss of life that never occurred. Much of the public perception of governmental incompetence and failure in the relief effort was based on their vastly exaggerated projected body count.aside from the high death toll predictions which fortunately have not proven true, the early characterization of new orleans as 'toxic' proved to be an exaggeration according to tests
[snip]
Tales of anarchy at the Superdome with large numbers of rapes and murders did not turn out to be true (though they have done enormous damage to our international reputation), as police reported no claims of rapes and few weapons were found.
Despite descriptions of the floodwater as a "toxic soup" and a "witch's brew" of contaminants, the preliminary tests reveal it contains little that is different from what has been seen after past floods in other cities and here.the news media's tendency towards the sensational--specifically the sensational and dire--must be taken into account in other events such as the iraq war
despite the fact that the viewing public may be tiring of the onslaught of reality television, the execs at TVLand are giving Mr T a shot at his own brand of reality.
one of the easiest ways to become irrelevant on the web is to change a formerly free service to a subscription.
a blogger apparently part of the VRWC, let the republican talking points memo everyone gets out of the bag
oracle head honcho came up with a "very innovative settlement by donating $100 million to charity to make up for nearly $1 billion in alleged insider trading.... don't worry the lawyers made $22.5 million.
after removing documents from the national archives and destroying them, sandy berger was fined $50,000.[bugmenot login] U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah Robinson went above and beyond the recommended $10k fine since "The court finds the fine is inadequate because it doesn't reflect the seriousness of the offense."
"I let considerations of personal convenience override clear rules of handling classified material," Berger said. "I believe this lapse, serious as it is, does not reflect the character of myself."that he should have known better.
"In this case, I failed. I will not again," he said.
the pew research center released the findings of a poll regarding hurricane katrina. i quibble with the nature of the poll (glancing reference to state and local governments), but i've already voiced my general displeasure about polls before.
the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee used the aftermath of katrina to raise funds for democratic candidates.
When recipients clicked on a link to the petition, the top center of the screen _ above the call to "Fire the FEMA director" _ had asked for a donation to the DSCC.after they were caught, the DSCC took the page down
when i was in college, sportscenter was a staple of daily life. there was a communal nature to sitting around and watching it with your buddies.
- "Of late, I find myself doing double takes to make sure I’m watching ESPN and not E!SPN."i especially like the statistical breakdown of a typical sportscenter
- "ESPN has abandoned its friends — the fans."
- "You took the best years of my life, Stuart Scott, and I want them back."
michelle malkin has been all over this 'air america taking money from a kid's charity, then not paying it back...all while the MSM doesn't cover it at all' ruckus (that's my name for it at least).
this just in, mayor ray nagin authorized a forced evacuation of new orleans.
While acknowledging the declaration, police Capt. Marlon Defillo said late Tuesday that forced removal of citizens had not yet begun. He said that officers who were visiting homes were still reminding people that police may not be able to rescue them if they stay.one would hope saving lives would outweigh "a P.R. nightmare"
"That would be a P.R. nightmare for us," Defillo said of any forced evacuations. "That's an absolute last resort." [emphasis added]
after several months of self-criticism,
columnist mark steyn apologizes...for predicting, a week ago, a noble response to hurricane katrina:
What the hell was I thinking? I should be fired for that. Well, someone should be fired. I say that in the spirit of the Mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, the Anti-Giuliani, a Mayor Culpa who always knows where to point the finger.he didn't expect significant segments of the NO police to go awol [bugmenot login]let alone join in the looting. or the ineffectual pre-planning
Consider the signature image of the flood: an aerial shot of 255 school buses neatly parked at one city lot, their fuel tanks leaking gasoline into the urban lake. An enterprising blogger, Bryan Preston, worked out that each bus had 66 seats, which meant that the vehicles at just that one lot could have ferried out 16,830 people. Instead of entrusting its most vulnerable citizens to the gang-infested faecal hell of the Superdome, New Orleans had more than enough municipal transport on hand to have got almost everyone out in a couple of runs last Sunday.the school bus issue represents all the lost opportunities.
Why didn't they? Well, the mayor didn't give the order. OK, but how about school board officials, or the fellows with the public schools transportation department, or the guy who runs that motor pool, or the individual bus drivers? If it ever occurred to any of them that these were potentially useful evacuation assets, they kept it to themselves.
So the first school bus to escape New Orleans and make it to safety in Texas was one that had been abandoned on a city street. A party of sodden citizens, ranging from the elderly to an eight-day-old baby, were desperate to get out, hopped aboard and got teenager Jabbor Gibson to drive them 13 hours non-stop to Houston. He'd never driven a bus before, and the authorities back in New Orleans may yet prosecute him. For rescuing people without a permit?
with the single largest pledge of international aid i have heard of yet, kuwait offers $500 million in hurricane relief [bugmenot login]:
"It's our duty as Kuwaitis to stand by our friends to lighten the humanitarian misery and as a payback for the many situations during which Washington helped us through the significant relations between the two friendly countries"that 'no blood for oil' crowd didn't see the karmic value of stopping saddam's violation on the sovereignty of its neighbor.
excuse me, mr president
despite promises and being a charter member of the trusted computing group, microsoft resists trusted computing standards in the forthcoming version of windows, vista
eweek (link found through the register) should be more careful with headlines:
news/blog links - kinja - technorati - daypop - blogdex - boing boing - fark - metafilter - memeorandum - watching america - lucianne - instapundit - best of the web - oh, that liberal media - kaus files - daily kos - talking points memo - wonkette - scott rosenberg - mozilla - bugmenot - avg anti-virus - ad-aware |