Wilding, et. al. v. DNC Services, d/b/a DNC and Deborah “Debbie” Wasserman Schultz, it prevailed over enraged Bernie Sanders primary supporters who sued it for unfairly rigging the 2016 primary for Hillary Clinton by arguing that it doesn't owe anyone a “fair process” because it is a private organization that has every right to disregard its own rules to choose the candidate it wishes.
Legal definition of fraud by misrepresentation: when an individual or business deliberately lies or misrepresents the truth when conducting a transaction in order to make a financial gain for themselves and/or deprive another of his/her/its money, property, or a legal right.
Thanks to TDS Democrats in NY, any political sock puppet in any given State now has the power to legally dismantle any Corporation they wish and not only distribute all its assets any way they see fit but reduce both its stock and any relevant real estate prices by as much as 90%.
It’s time for Red State judges and Red State AGs to “Trump” the DNC and their cabal of Corporate minions into an ash heap and this thoroughly disgusted and enraged Independent has screen shot images of Omar and Mynett in full Antifa regalia from a livestream of that 2019 crowd to help them out.
Tick. Tock.
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=History%27s+G ... &ia=images last map and you know the rest of the current story lie cheat steal
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1nppst
The deracinated zek told you point blank you are that stupid in Robert Freidman's book also.
All they had to do was remove the pathogen they removed to survive the lunatics.
Andropov was correct to the point it worked as you are taken out. Every single time as over the last 800 years should ring a bell.
They are liberals as you reap the whirlwind of these lunatics.
https://historyheist.com/wp-content/upl ... lution.png He is still correct.
https://c8.alamy.com/comp/TXGF00/street ... TXGF00.jpg they booted them to your zone is all they did and you know who they are
Search found 11 matches: debbie
Searched query: debbie
- Sat Sep 30, 2023 12:36 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
- Sat Feb 06, 2021 9:27 am
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
https://www.wionews.com/india-news/unio ... get-360606
india surge - maybe...
Union Budget 2021-22 proposals rest on six pillars.
.9936 trend
closed book four same day H
adapt
keep the small wins
they bitch its because they cannot comprehend liquidity providers anyways
they start a hft tax capital will leave in under 46 milliseconds
China’s hefty economic footprint in Myanmar has arguably been a pilot for its Belt and Road Initiative. t
Myanmar is finished.
To date by July 2020, well over 1300 CEOs from massive corporations throughout the world had stepped down from their positions in the preceding twelve months.
To the recent list, add Jeff Bezos, Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier, Leon Black from Apollo - and here is a list of politicians that have died or vanished in the last 10 days:
-Bobby McKee, Northern Irish politician
-Jean-Pierre Michel, French Politician
-Moshe Moskowitz, Israeli politician
-Bootie Neal, American politician
-Patrick O'Donoghue, Irish roman catholic bishop
-Joseph Donna end, South African politician
-Sifis Valirakis, Greek politician, drowned
-Steven T. Kuykendall, American politician, U.S. house of representatives
-Nilda Pedrosa, American politician, public affairs
-Robert Rowland, British politician, drowned
-George Weatherill, Australian politician
-Gunawan Wirosaroyo, Indonesian politician
-Jean-Pierre Baeumier, French Politician
-Jacqueline Berenstein-Wavre, Swiss politician
-Jose Manuel Botella Crespo, Spanish Politician
-Aenenas Chigwedere, Zimbabwean Politician
-Routouang Yoma Golom, Chandran militant & Politician
-Jerzy Grelewski, Polish Politician
-Feliks Gromov, Russian Commander-in-Chief
-Meherzia Labidi Maiza, Tunisian Politician
-Joel Matiza, Zimbabwean Politician
-Raphael Steger Catano, Mexican diplomat
-Hank Coe, American politician & Senate
-Mauricio Herdocia Sacasa, Nicaraguan, integration systems
-Jackson Mthembu, South African Politician
-Jose Pampuro, Argentinian politician, minister of defense & defense secretary
-Joyce Hearn, American politician
-Justin Lekhanya, Mosotho Politician
-Sibusiso Moyo, Zimbabwean Politician
-Brian Hillery, Irish politician
-Emanuele Macaluso, Italian politician
-Toleafoa Ken Vaafusuaga Poutoa, Samoan Politician
-Felipe Quispe, Bolivian politician
-Carlos Tapia Garcia, Peruvian Politician
-Jim Vickerman, American politician & Senate
-Jean Dumont, French Politician
-Savavar Gestsson, Icelandic Politician
-Nombulelo Hermans, South African politician
-Akos Kizra, Hungarian Politician
-Joshua Kyeremeh, Ghanaian politician
-Dundar Ali Osman, Turkish Royal
-Henryk Ostrowski, Polish Politician
-Gatot Sudjito, Indonesian politician
-K.V. Vijayadas, Indian Politician
-Aminuddin Ponulele, Indonesian Politician
-Billy Kinoi, American politician
-Sergei Prinkhodko, Russian politician
-Carlos Holmes Trujillo, Columbian Politician
-Ihwan Datu Adam, Indonesian politician
-Soichi Aikawa, Japanese Politician
-Avelino Mendez Rangel, Mexican Politician
-Debbie Bath Hadden, Canadian Politician
-Robert Canas Lopez, Salvadoran Politician
-Antonio Cardoso e Cunha, Portuguese Politician
-Abdullahi Ibrahim, Nigerian Politician
-Dave Arnold, American politician & Senate
-Joevana Charles, Seychellois Politician
-Victor Crisologo, Peruvian Politician
-Barbara Gronemus, American politician
-Marlin Kuykendall, American politician
-Jubril Martins-Kuye, Nigerian Politician
-K. G. Shankar, Indian Politician
-Jon Sullivan, Australian politician
-Marius Swart, South African politician
-Vicent Tur, Spanish Politician
-Maynard Wallace, American politician & House of representatives
-Salleh Abas, Malaysian Politician
-Mahaveer Bhagora, Indian Politician
-Xavier Hunault, French Politician
-Sergi Mingote, Spanish Politician
-Bheki Ntuli, South African politician
-Phuong Mai, Vietnamese Royal
-Om Prakash Sharma, Indian Politician
-Sayidiman Suryohadiprojo, Indonesian diplomat
-Mauro Telles, Brazilian Politician
india surge - maybe...
Union Budget 2021-22 proposals rest on six pillars.
.9936 trend
closed book four same day H
adapt
keep the small wins
they bitch its because they cannot comprehend liquidity providers anyways
they start a hft tax capital will leave in under 46 milliseconds
China’s hefty economic footprint in Myanmar has arguably been a pilot for its Belt and Road Initiative. t
Myanmar is finished.
To date by July 2020, well over 1300 CEOs from massive corporations throughout the world had stepped down from their positions in the preceding twelve months.
To the recent list, add Jeff Bezos, Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier, Leon Black from Apollo - and here is a list of politicians that have died or vanished in the last 10 days:
-Bobby McKee, Northern Irish politician
-Jean-Pierre Michel, French Politician
-Moshe Moskowitz, Israeli politician
-Bootie Neal, American politician
-Patrick O'Donoghue, Irish roman catholic bishop
-Joseph Donna end, South African politician
-Sifis Valirakis, Greek politician, drowned
-Steven T. Kuykendall, American politician, U.S. house of representatives
-Nilda Pedrosa, American politician, public affairs
-Robert Rowland, British politician, drowned
-George Weatherill, Australian politician
-Gunawan Wirosaroyo, Indonesian politician
-Jean-Pierre Baeumier, French Politician
-Jacqueline Berenstein-Wavre, Swiss politician
-Jose Manuel Botella Crespo, Spanish Politician
-Aenenas Chigwedere, Zimbabwean Politician
-Routouang Yoma Golom, Chandran militant & Politician
-Jerzy Grelewski, Polish Politician
-Feliks Gromov, Russian Commander-in-Chief
-Meherzia Labidi Maiza, Tunisian Politician
-Joel Matiza, Zimbabwean Politician
-Raphael Steger Catano, Mexican diplomat
-Hank Coe, American politician & Senate
-Mauricio Herdocia Sacasa, Nicaraguan, integration systems
-Jackson Mthembu, South African Politician
-Jose Pampuro, Argentinian politician, minister of defense & defense secretary
-Joyce Hearn, American politician
-Justin Lekhanya, Mosotho Politician
-Sibusiso Moyo, Zimbabwean Politician
-Brian Hillery, Irish politician
-Emanuele Macaluso, Italian politician
-Toleafoa Ken Vaafusuaga Poutoa, Samoan Politician
-Felipe Quispe, Bolivian politician
-Carlos Tapia Garcia, Peruvian Politician
-Jim Vickerman, American politician & Senate
-Jean Dumont, French Politician
-Savavar Gestsson, Icelandic Politician
-Nombulelo Hermans, South African politician
-Akos Kizra, Hungarian Politician
-Joshua Kyeremeh, Ghanaian politician
-Dundar Ali Osman, Turkish Royal
-Henryk Ostrowski, Polish Politician
-Gatot Sudjito, Indonesian politician
-K.V. Vijayadas, Indian Politician
-Aminuddin Ponulele, Indonesian Politician
-Billy Kinoi, American politician
-Sergei Prinkhodko, Russian politician
-Carlos Holmes Trujillo, Columbian Politician
-Ihwan Datu Adam, Indonesian politician
-Soichi Aikawa, Japanese Politician
-Avelino Mendez Rangel, Mexican Politician
-Debbie Bath Hadden, Canadian Politician
-Robert Canas Lopez, Salvadoran Politician
-Antonio Cardoso e Cunha, Portuguese Politician
-Abdullahi Ibrahim, Nigerian Politician
-Dave Arnold, American politician & Senate
-Joevana Charles, Seychellois Politician
-Victor Crisologo, Peruvian Politician
-Barbara Gronemus, American politician
-Marlin Kuykendall, American politician
-Jubril Martins-Kuye, Nigerian Politician
-K. G. Shankar, Indian Politician
-Jon Sullivan, Australian politician
-Marius Swart, South African politician
-Vicent Tur, Spanish Politician
-Maynard Wallace, American politician & House of representatives
-Salleh Abas, Malaysian Politician
-Mahaveer Bhagora, Indian Politician
-Xavier Hunault, French Politician
-Sergi Mingote, Spanish Politician
-Bheki Ntuli, South African politician
-Phuong Mai, Vietnamese Royal
-Om Prakash Sharma, Indian Politician
-Sayidiman Suryohadiprojo, Indonesian diplomat
-Mauro Telles, Brazilian Politician
- Wed Jul 10, 2019 4:26 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
John wrote:
- Debbie Downer

How's that?
- Wed Jul 10, 2019 3:12 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
** 10-Jul-2019 Debbie Downer
exciting!!! I don't understand why you have to be such a Debbie
Downer.

The market is just about to reach a new all-time high. That's soHiggenbotham wrote: > A google search shows that the above has only been quoted twice on
> the Internet. It's just not relevant or interesting to the herd.
> S&P 3000, on the other hand, is quite mesmerizing to the
> herd.
exciting!!! I don't understand why you have to be such a Debbie
Downer.

- Debbie Downer
- Wed Jul 26, 2017 6:52 am
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
https://archive.is/pRnGo
BASIC GESTALT ON DNC HAPPENING
>Debbie Wasserman Schultz, former DNC chair, hires Pakistani nationals (Imran Awan and four others) for IT work at the DNC in 2005
>Extremely overpaid ($4 million+ salary), had massive debts, years of suspicious activity (taking money from Iraq, Hezbollah, fraud, wiretapping and extorting their own mother etc)
>Awans' father changed name and disowned sons for "detestable illegal behavior"
>Despite being IT staff, Awans ignored requests for computer repairs and didn't do their actual job
>Other IT competitors offered their services at much lower rates, yet for some mysterious reasons the DNC kept the Awans
>More Democrat lawmakers enlist the Awans' "service" over the years
>House staffers get concerned about the Awans, they don't show up to meetings and their computers were being used to transfer data off site
>Huge data breach, Congress compromised, DNC emails at risk
>House Democrats respond with claims that Capitol Police framed them because they are Muslim
>Some flee to Pakistan
>Awan banned from the House network
>DWS refuses to fire them for mysterious reason
>Awan roaming the Capitol complex despite ban
>Capitol police finds a secret laptop in an empty office
>DWS openly threatens the police chief to give it back or there will be "consequences"
>Police can't look at laptop because of law
>Awan covering his tracks
>Abruptly moves out of his house and rents it out to military families
>Last week, DWS finally negotiates for laptop access
>Back at Awan's house, a Marine renter stumbles upon hardware stash: “wireless routers, hard drives that look like they tried to destroy, laptops, a lot of brand new expensive toner.”
>Marine calls the Feds to take it
>FBI now involved
>Awan chimps out over the missing hardware, threatens to sue Marine for "stealing" them
>Tried to get inside the house "three or four times", Marine wouldn't let him in
>Awan panics and tries to flee the country at Dulles Airport
>Feds nab him
|*.*/kek/pol/anon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECiMhe4E0pI
"If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking." George S. Patton
BASIC GESTALT ON DNC HAPPENING
>Debbie Wasserman Schultz, former DNC chair, hires Pakistani nationals (Imran Awan and four others) for IT work at the DNC in 2005
>Extremely overpaid ($4 million+ salary), had massive debts, years of suspicious activity (taking money from Iraq, Hezbollah, fraud, wiretapping and extorting their own mother etc)
>Awans' father changed name and disowned sons for "detestable illegal behavior"
>Despite being IT staff, Awans ignored requests for computer repairs and didn't do their actual job
>Other IT competitors offered their services at much lower rates, yet for some mysterious reasons the DNC kept the Awans
>More Democrat lawmakers enlist the Awans' "service" over the years
>House staffers get concerned about the Awans, they don't show up to meetings and their computers were being used to transfer data off site
>Huge data breach, Congress compromised, DNC emails at risk
>House Democrats respond with claims that Capitol Police framed them because they are Muslim
>Some flee to Pakistan
>Awan banned from the House network
>DWS refuses to fire them for mysterious reason
>Awan roaming the Capitol complex despite ban
>Capitol police finds a secret laptop in an empty office
>DWS openly threatens the police chief to give it back or there will be "consequences"
>Police can't look at laptop because of law
>Awan covering his tracks
>Abruptly moves out of his house and rents it out to military families
>Last week, DWS finally negotiates for laptop access
>Back at Awan's house, a Marine renter stumbles upon hardware stash: “wireless routers, hard drives that look like they tried to destroy, laptops, a lot of brand new expensive toner.”
>Marine calls the Feds to take it
>FBI now involved
>Awan chimps out over the missing hardware, threatens to sue Marine for "stealing" them
>Tried to get inside the house "three or four times", Marine wouldn't let him in
>Awan panics and tries to flee the country at Dulles Airport
>Feds nab him
|*.*/kek/pol/anon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECiMhe4E0pI
"If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking." George S. Patton
- Thu Apr 20, 2017 1:14 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-04-2 ... ty-grounds
http://gdxforum.com/forum/search.php?ke ... sf=msgonly back when 12,000 where to be under the nafta bus on design
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6rv8rwghn4
nafta ruling in a few weeks - decades of being fucked
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFRV23 ... 3tyq1CAoMA
Still waiting for our guys since 1996 to step up.
As for the kill switch notes we had pegged early, we took our lumps from you retards and political dullards since we knew better as we sipped our tea in patience and caring for others actual community needs called work. Red and Blue does not exist in discussions past the welcome mat which is still open to all thinking souls in forbearance since as reminded they will be known by the fruit they bear. Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:29 pm
http://gdxforum.com/forum/search.php?ke ... sf=msgonly back when 12,000 where to be under the nafta bus on design
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6rv8rwghn4
nafta ruling in a few weeks - decades of being fucked
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFRV23 ... 3tyq1CAoMA
Still waiting for our guys since 1996 to step up.
As for the kill switch notes we had pegged early, we took our lumps from you retards and political dullards since we knew better as we sipped our tea in patience and caring for others actual community needs called work. Red and Blue does not exist in discussions past the welcome mat which is still open to all thinking souls in forbearance since as reminded they will be known by the fruit they bear. Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:29 pm
- Tue Jan 29, 2013 2:05 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
.
U.S. Tax Payer funded Intellectual property being sold to China for pennies on the dollar
U.S. Tax Payer funded Intellectual property being sold to China for pennies on the dollar
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/2013 ... z2JO6IUkY9From the Detroit News Article Linked Below wrote:
The Obama administration awarded $2.4 billion in stimulus grants in August 2009 for advanced batteries and electric vehicles, saying the awards would create thousands of jobs.
The president set a goal of 1 million electric vehicles on the road by 2015, but sales have totaled fewer than 40,000 since 2011. Many battery suppliers have created a small fraction of the promised jobs.
President Barack Obama hailed A123 and even invited the company's CEO to the Rose Garden in April 2010.
"This is what happens when we place our bets on American workers and American businesses. And we're going to continue working to help them manufacture more success stories like these across all sectors of our economy," Obama said.
January 29, 2013 at 12:35 pm
The Obama administration approved the sale of most of bankrupt battery maker A123 Systems' assets to Chinese firm Wanxiang Group Corp.
A123 filed for bankruptcy in October ( 2012 - at the time Obama called claims by the Romney campaign that A123 would be sold to China false )
In November, Michigan's two senators and 11 House members raised concerns that the acquisition of bankrupt battery maker A123 by a Chinese company may pose a "threat to U.S. national security."
In a letter to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner — who chairs the Committee on Foreign Investment, which reviews the sale of U.S. companies — Sens. Carl Levin, D-Detroit, Debbie Stabenow, D-Lansing, and members of the House raised concerns.
Rep. Bill Huizenga, R-Zeeland, said Tuesday the decision ( the decision by the Obama administration to give the Intellectual property to China as part of the bankruptcy sale ) hasn't "changed my opinion that the core technology developed by A123 and the intellectual property that goes along with it can be separated along A123's business lines. It is also apparent that this technology was developed using taxpayer dollars through President Obama's stimulus program and is now falling into the hands of a foreign company. American taxpayers should not be funding technology that will in turn be used in competition against American companies."
- Sun Jun 03, 2012 11:22 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
“President Clinton is a true public servant who has dedicated his career to helping middle-class Americans and those trying to reach the middle class achieve the American Dream,” said Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, who announced the trip."
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/06/01/d ... tt-walker/
It is putrid ripe for political economy to self serve destruct. Spillover will be real as the real money sorts out these idiots.
HFT is the marginal setter of prices, with no regard for value, logic or analysis
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-06-04/s ... nd/4050256
June 04, 2012 12:03:25
Investors are set for a rough day of trade on the Australian share market. (AFP: Torsten Blackwood, file photo) Related Story: US jobless rate rises, growth stumblesRelated Story: Wall Street slips as job woes worry investorsMap: Australia
The Australian share market slipped below 4,000 points this morning amid fears that the world's major economies will fall back into recession.
At 11:25am (AEST) the benchmark ASX 200 index was 1.7 per cent lower at 3,994, dropping below 4,000 for the first time in seven months, and the broader All Ordinaries Index had fallen 1.8 per cent to 4,044.
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/stocks/futures/
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/06/01/d ... tt-walker/
It is putrid ripe for political economy to self serve destruct. Spillover will be real as the real money sorts out these idiots.
HFT is the marginal setter of prices, with no regard for value, logic or analysis
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-06-04/s ... nd/4050256
June 04, 2012 12:03:25
Investors are set for a rough day of trade on the Australian share market. (AFP: Torsten Blackwood, file photo) Related Story: US jobless rate rises, growth stumblesRelated Story: Wall Street slips as job woes worry investorsMap: Australia
The Australian share market slipped below 4,000 points this morning amid fears that the world's major economies will fall back into recession.
At 11:25am (AEST) the benchmark ASX 200 index was 1.7 per cent lower at 3,994, dropping below 4,000 for the first time in seven months, and the broader All Ordinaries Index had fallen 1.8 per cent to 4,044.
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/stocks/futures/
- Fri Nov 18, 2011 12:56 pm
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
http://roberts.senate.gov/public/index. ... 6cdf664908Senator Roberts Calls for Hearing on MF Global Bankruptcy
Nov 17 2011
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) today called on Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) to hold a hearing on the collapse and bankruptcy of MF Global, given its devastating effect on the agriculture industry.
Roberts has also called on the Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the exchanges, and the bankruptcy trustee to work together to immediately release frozen MF Global margin account funds to customers, many who are Kansans.
This effort is in addition to Roberts’ concern over the timing and extent of CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler’s recusal due to his prior relationship with former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine. Roberts’ two letters requesting answers about the date and scope of this recusal have gone unanswered.
The following is the text of the letter sent to Chairwoman Stabenow today:
I write to you today regarding a pressing matter deserving of our committee’s urgent action. The MF Global, Inc. bankruptcy is a critically important event that is having a devastating effect on farmers, country grain elevators, hog and cattle operations and bankers across the country. I respectfully request that the committee conduct a hearing focused solely on this matter as soon as possible...
- Sat May 02, 2009 7:50 am
- Forum: Finance and Investments
- Topic: Financial topics
- Replies: 29822
- Views: 17056987
Re: Financial topics
Time is running out: It appears the cool aid drinkers have refilled there glass. For us taxpayers this is going to be a bitter time since we seen it before they wanted to and will have to linger in this condition until fair trade is a matter of fact. Meanwhile Hedge Funds are leaving to terms which will be presenting themselves in the press.
Summers made five points that reveal a great deal about his personal thinking - and the structure of thought that lies behind most of what the Administration is doing vis-a-vis the crisis. Some of this we knew or guessed at before, but it was still the clearest articulation I have seen.
All crises must end. The “self-equilibrating” nature of the economy will ultimately prevail, although that may take massive one-off government actions. Such a crisis happens only ”three or four times” per century, so taking on huge amounts of government debt is fine; implicitly, we will grow out of that debt burden.
http://baselinescenario.com/2009/04/27/ ... new-model/
Meanwhile: http://zerohedge.blogspot.com/2009/05/s ... hoots.html
The U.S. crisis reflects regulatory problems in the U.S. and innovative financial products that ignored basic economic rules,'' former Chinese central bank deputy governor Wu Xiaoling told a financial conference in Beijing recently." "The U.S. crisis today would be China's tomorrow if financial products such as securitization are introduced without proper risk-control measures.'' Chinas' cautious attitude, government banks, and regulatory framework have helped China to restrict its losses and write-downs from the credit-market crisis to less than 1 percent of the massive global total. The feasibility of bank nationalizations, closer regulation, and banning certain types of transactions, such as derivatives, which carry excessive risk are all lessons which can be learned from China. Banks, financial companies, and the wealthy should not be allowed to unload their bad debts onto ordinary workers and taxpayers. It's sheer madness to allow them to transfer a trillion dollars from workers and taxpayers to themselves.
The US has become increasingly frustrated by what it says is the gutting of its proposals to cut farm tariffs. Rich WTO members such as the EU, Japan and Switzerland, and poorer countries such as India, Indonesia and the Philippines, have sought to protect a wide range of agricultural products from tariff cuts. Susan Schwab, US trade representative, said such exemptions would defeat the object of the talks, to create trade flows. “As we went through the layers of loopholes . . . we discovered that a couple of our trading partners were more interested in loopholes than market access,” she said. Pascal Lamy, WTO director-general, said the failure would “send out a strong negative signal for the future of the world economy amidst the danger of a resurgence of protectionism.
They are moving forward... we are eating our capital base to systemic malinvestments which will "are" unfolding.
There seed money is for revenue based infrasture trades of contract. Our basis is pointless since time is a function of reality
and permagrouth has led us where. The lack of contract and transparency to capital decisions to date have told the taxpayer what to date?
The President remains adamant that South Korea should do more to admit American cars. But the momentum has clearly shifted. After North Korea carried out a missile test early in April, Max Baucus, the senior Democratic senator on trade matters, and Charles Grassley, his Republican counterpart, urged Mr Obama to move the South Korean FTA forward to help a “steadfast ally”. Doug Irwin, a trade economist at Dartmouth College, notes that the White House website’s agenda lists 24 items from civil rights to urban policy, but not trade. “They don’t have a trade policy,” says Mr Irwin. “They want the issue to go away.” And bigger tests are coming. Charles Rangel, the top Democrat on trade issues in the House of Representatives, has introduced a bill that would toughen enforcement of existing trade laws in ways that could run foul of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rulings. And the United Steelworkers’ union has asked for duties to be imposed on Chinese tire imports under a little-used law known as Section 421. This does not require proof that imports break trade laws, only that they hurt someone, and it gives the administration discretion whether or not to impose duties. It will be Mr Obama’s “most important litmus test”, says John Veroneau, a Bush trade official. Mr Bush rejected all four Section 421 petitions that reached him. In 2007, at the American Economics Association conference, economist Ramya M. Vijaya gave a paper which stated that a sample of out-of-work manufacturing laborers who enrolled in job retraining through the program ended up, on average, in positions with a lower wage than those who skipped the retraining.
Lawrence Summers, who served as President Clinton's treasury secretary during the headiest days of free-trade enthusiasm, is now having some very public second thoughts. Writing in the Financial Times, he noted that "[e]ven as globalisation increases inequality and insecurity, it is constantly and often legitimately invoked as an argument against the viability of progressive taxation, support for labour unions, strong regulation and substantial production of public goods that mitigate its adverse impacts." But Summers argued that such an attitude was a political non-starter, particularly as globalization "encourages the development of stateless elites whose allegiance is to global economic success and their own prosperity rather than the interests of the nation where they are headquartered." In a subsequent column, he concluded that the "domestic component of a strategy to promote healthy globalisation must rely on strengthening efforts to reduce inequality and insecurity. The international component must focus on the interests of working people in all countries, in addition to the current emphasis on the priorities of global corporations." Mark Thoma, an economist at the University of Oregon who runs the popular blog Economist's View. "There's a growing perception that the political will to keep markets open or open them further depends on solving some of these distributional issues, health care, all of these things. I don't think there's complete buy-in on the welfare state, but what's new is the idea that opening trade further is going to require us to deal with the problem of winners and losers, rather than just acknowledge it. It won't just solve itself, and it won't happen quickly and easily."
July 8th 2008 I wrote my Senator and it was clearly conveyed back to me.
Thank you . . for contacting me about the impact of free trade agreements on our country. I share your deep concerns about our current trade policies and am leading the fight to change course. Last year, I voted against the Peru Free Trade Agreement, and I intend to lead the opposition to trade agreements with Columbia and South Korea that are being pushed by the Bush Administration. We live in a global economy that continues to grow and expand. Over the last century, we have consistently proven that Michigan businesses and workers can successfully compete with anyone in the world when the playing field is level. Unfortunately, persistent unfair trade practices by other countries are costing us jobs every day. Lack of trade enforcement has made it harder than ever for Michigan companies and workers to compete. We have 230 trade agreements on the books to enforce, but the United States still has the smallest trade enforcement agency of any industrialized nation. I have consistently pushed the Bush Administration to bring trade enforcement actions against countries who break the law, and I was pleased with the World Trade Organization's recent finding that China's policy of charging a higher tax on American-made auto parts violates WTO rules. However, while our workers and businesses waited for this ruling, six of our nation's largest auto suppliers declared bankruptcy, we lost 3.4 million manufacturing jobs, and our trade deficit with China grew to a record $1.1 trillion dollars - all while our state's unemployment rate remains the highest in the nation. Of course, China is not the only country refusing to play by the rules. South Korea is blocking American products from entering its economy by doing everything from instituting excessively rigorous testing on American appliances to placing higher insurance premiums on American cars, many of which are made here in Michigan. The results have been telling. For example, last year U.S. automakers sold only 9,723 vehicles in Korea, but Korean automakers sold nearly 773,000 vehicles in the United States. That's why I have joined with Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina to lead the fight to establish an office of Trade Enforcement to investigate other countries' illegal trade practices and take enforcement action on behalf of American businesses.
Additionally, countries like Japan and China are manipulating their currencies to make their products artificially cheaper. For example, this practice provides a $2,100 to $6,300 per car subsidy to Japanese automakers. That's why I have joined with Senator Bunning of Kentucky to author legislation to provide U.S. manufacturers with the legal means to fight back against what amounts to an illegal trade subsidy. Recently, I brought together Michigan manufacturers from across our state and the nation's top trade enforcement official, Christopher Padilla, who serves as Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade. This meeting provided an open venue to discuss our current trade enforcement system and the unfair trade practices that are hurting companies and workers across the nation. We discussed issues ranging from the stealing of patents to illegal subsidies. The outcome of the meeting was clear. No one is looking for a free ride. Our businesses are simply looking for a level playing field, so we can keep jobs in America. You can count on me to continue fighting for a comprehensive trade policy in this country that enforces our trade laws, provides real assistance to workers and communities who are hurt by trade, improves product safety, and most importantly, puts Michigan workers and business first. Thank you again for contacting me. Please continue to keep me informed about issues of concern to you and your family.
Sincerely,
Debbie Stabenow
United States Senator
Summers made five points that reveal a great deal about his personal thinking - and the structure of thought that lies behind most of what the Administration is doing vis-a-vis the crisis. Some of this we knew or guessed at before, but it was still the clearest articulation I have seen.
All crises must end. The “self-equilibrating” nature of the economy will ultimately prevail, although that may take massive one-off government actions. Such a crisis happens only ”three or four times” per century, so taking on huge amounts of government debt is fine; implicitly, we will grow out of that debt burden.
http://baselinescenario.com/2009/04/27/ ... new-model/
Meanwhile: http://zerohedge.blogspot.com/2009/05/s ... hoots.html
The U.S. crisis reflects regulatory problems in the U.S. and innovative financial products that ignored basic economic rules,'' former Chinese central bank deputy governor Wu Xiaoling told a financial conference in Beijing recently." "The U.S. crisis today would be China's tomorrow if financial products such as securitization are introduced without proper risk-control measures.'' Chinas' cautious attitude, government banks, and regulatory framework have helped China to restrict its losses and write-downs from the credit-market crisis to less than 1 percent of the massive global total. The feasibility of bank nationalizations, closer regulation, and banning certain types of transactions, such as derivatives, which carry excessive risk are all lessons which can be learned from China. Banks, financial companies, and the wealthy should not be allowed to unload their bad debts onto ordinary workers and taxpayers. It's sheer madness to allow them to transfer a trillion dollars from workers and taxpayers to themselves.
The US has become increasingly frustrated by what it says is the gutting of its proposals to cut farm tariffs. Rich WTO members such as the EU, Japan and Switzerland, and poorer countries such as India, Indonesia and the Philippines, have sought to protect a wide range of agricultural products from tariff cuts. Susan Schwab, US trade representative, said such exemptions would defeat the object of the talks, to create trade flows. “As we went through the layers of loopholes . . . we discovered that a couple of our trading partners were more interested in loopholes than market access,” she said. Pascal Lamy, WTO director-general, said the failure would “send out a strong negative signal for the future of the world economy amidst the danger of a resurgence of protectionism.
They are moving forward... we are eating our capital base to systemic malinvestments which will "are" unfolding.
There seed money is for revenue based infrasture trades of contract. Our basis is pointless since time is a function of reality
and permagrouth has led us where. The lack of contract and transparency to capital decisions to date have told the taxpayer what to date?
The President remains adamant that South Korea should do more to admit American cars. But the momentum has clearly shifted. After North Korea carried out a missile test early in April, Max Baucus, the senior Democratic senator on trade matters, and Charles Grassley, his Republican counterpart, urged Mr Obama to move the South Korean FTA forward to help a “steadfast ally”. Doug Irwin, a trade economist at Dartmouth College, notes that the White House website’s agenda lists 24 items from civil rights to urban policy, but not trade. “They don’t have a trade policy,” says Mr Irwin. “They want the issue to go away.” And bigger tests are coming. Charles Rangel, the top Democrat on trade issues in the House of Representatives, has introduced a bill that would toughen enforcement of existing trade laws in ways that could run foul of World Trade Organisation (WTO) rulings. And the United Steelworkers’ union has asked for duties to be imposed on Chinese tire imports under a little-used law known as Section 421. This does not require proof that imports break trade laws, only that they hurt someone, and it gives the administration discretion whether or not to impose duties. It will be Mr Obama’s “most important litmus test”, says John Veroneau, a Bush trade official. Mr Bush rejected all four Section 421 petitions that reached him. In 2007, at the American Economics Association conference, economist Ramya M. Vijaya gave a paper which stated that a sample of out-of-work manufacturing laborers who enrolled in job retraining through the program ended up, on average, in positions with a lower wage than those who skipped the retraining.
Lawrence Summers, who served as President Clinton's treasury secretary during the headiest days of free-trade enthusiasm, is now having some very public second thoughts. Writing in the Financial Times, he noted that "[e]ven as globalisation increases inequality and insecurity, it is constantly and often legitimately invoked as an argument against the viability of progressive taxation, support for labour unions, strong regulation and substantial production of public goods that mitigate its adverse impacts." But Summers argued that such an attitude was a political non-starter, particularly as globalization "encourages the development of stateless elites whose allegiance is to global economic success and their own prosperity rather than the interests of the nation where they are headquartered." In a subsequent column, he concluded that the "domestic component of a strategy to promote healthy globalisation must rely on strengthening efforts to reduce inequality and insecurity. The international component must focus on the interests of working people in all countries, in addition to the current emphasis on the priorities of global corporations." Mark Thoma, an economist at the University of Oregon who runs the popular blog Economist's View. "There's a growing perception that the political will to keep markets open or open them further depends on solving some of these distributional issues, health care, all of these things. I don't think there's complete buy-in on the welfare state, but what's new is the idea that opening trade further is going to require us to deal with the problem of winners and losers, rather than just acknowledge it. It won't just solve itself, and it won't happen quickly and easily."
July 8th 2008 I wrote my Senator and it was clearly conveyed back to me.
Thank you . . for contacting me about the impact of free trade agreements on our country. I share your deep concerns about our current trade policies and am leading the fight to change course. Last year, I voted against the Peru Free Trade Agreement, and I intend to lead the opposition to trade agreements with Columbia and South Korea that are being pushed by the Bush Administration. We live in a global economy that continues to grow and expand. Over the last century, we have consistently proven that Michigan businesses and workers can successfully compete with anyone in the world when the playing field is level. Unfortunately, persistent unfair trade practices by other countries are costing us jobs every day. Lack of trade enforcement has made it harder than ever for Michigan companies and workers to compete. We have 230 trade agreements on the books to enforce, but the United States still has the smallest trade enforcement agency of any industrialized nation. I have consistently pushed the Bush Administration to bring trade enforcement actions against countries who break the law, and I was pleased with the World Trade Organization's recent finding that China's policy of charging a higher tax on American-made auto parts violates WTO rules. However, while our workers and businesses waited for this ruling, six of our nation's largest auto suppliers declared bankruptcy, we lost 3.4 million manufacturing jobs, and our trade deficit with China grew to a record $1.1 trillion dollars - all while our state's unemployment rate remains the highest in the nation. Of course, China is not the only country refusing to play by the rules. South Korea is blocking American products from entering its economy by doing everything from instituting excessively rigorous testing on American appliances to placing higher insurance premiums on American cars, many of which are made here in Michigan. The results have been telling. For example, last year U.S. automakers sold only 9,723 vehicles in Korea, but Korean automakers sold nearly 773,000 vehicles in the United States. That's why I have joined with Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina to lead the fight to establish an office of Trade Enforcement to investigate other countries' illegal trade practices and take enforcement action on behalf of American businesses.
Additionally, countries like Japan and China are manipulating their currencies to make their products artificially cheaper. For example, this practice provides a $2,100 to $6,300 per car subsidy to Japanese automakers. That's why I have joined with Senator Bunning of Kentucky to author legislation to provide U.S. manufacturers with the legal means to fight back against what amounts to an illegal trade subsidy. Recently, I brought together Michigan manufacturers from across our state and the nation's top trade enforcement official, Christopher Padilla, who serves as Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade. This meeting provided an open venue to discuss our current trade enforcement system and the unfair trade practices that are hurting companies and workers across the nation. We discussed issues ranging from the stealing of patents to illegal subsidies. The outcome of the meeting was clear. No one is looking for a free ride. Our businesses are simply looking for a level playing field, so we can keep jobs in America. You can count on me to continue fighting for a comprehensive trade policy in this country that enforces our trade laws, provides real assistance to workers and communities who are hurt by trade, improves product safety, and most importantly, puts Michigan workers and business first. Thank you again for contacting me. Please continue to keep me informed about issues of concern to you and your family.
Sincerely,
Debbie Stabenow
United States Senator