Highlights of this day in history: America mourns victims of Sept. 11th attacks; Theodore Roosevelt becomes President; ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ written; Monaco’s Princess Grace dies; Baseball season cancelled due to players’ strike. (Sept. 14)
Continue reading …Highlights of this day in history: America mourns victims of Sept. 11th attacks; Theodore Roosevelt becomes President; ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ written; Monaco’s Princess Grace dies; Baseball season cancelled due to players’ strike. (Sept. 14)
Continue reading …It would appear that there is a reason beyond alleged “journalistic integrity” why the New York Times hasn't pulled its error-riddled, only partially corrected mid-August story by Eric Lichtblau (“A Businessman in Congress Helps His District and Himself”) about California Republican Congressman Darrell Issa. Issa has identified 13 serious errors in the Times story, the cumulative effect of which, in the words of Powerline's John Hinderaker several weeks ago, show the story to be “nothing but lies and fabrications … (which) never should have been published.” The Times has corrected three. Though it appears to be dead wrong on the other ten, it hasn't given any further quarter and won't pull the story. Its Public Editor, as Clay Waters at NewsBusters noted, has found Issa's request for a retraction “troubling.” What's really troubling is that it appears that the Times's intransigence is from all appearances the result of a coordinated effort to neutralize Issa. That isn't how an early Tuesday report at The Hill (“Rep. Issa hit with ethics allegations”) described it, but it's impossible to escape the implications: A liberal advocacy group is filing an ethics complaint against Rep. Darrell Issa, alleging that the California Republican has repeatedly used his public office for personal gain. The group, American Family Voices, is planning to file the complaint with the House Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) on Tuesday. The five-page complaint, which was obtained by The Hill, accuses Issa of using his position as chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee to add to his multimillion-dollar fortune. An Issa spokesman on Monday said the allegations have absolutely no merit and are part of a smear campaign spearheaded by the White House. The complaint alleges that Issa pressured the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to halt an investigation of Goldman Sachs shortly after he bought a huge stake in one of Goldman’s high-yield mutual funds. It also claims Issa used his authority to improperly defend Merrill Lynch, a firm with “which he has a significant financial interest,” the document states. “In fact and in appearance, Rep. Issa has repeatedly — and impermissibly — used his public position to promote his private financial interests,” Mike Lux, president of American Family Voices, wrote in a letter to former Reps. Porter Goss (R-Fla.) and David Skaggs (D-Colo.), co-chairmen of the OCE. A spokesman for Issa said the complaint is part of an effort orchestrated by the White House to discredit its critics. “This complaint is entirely without merit. The White House has used an assortment of outside progressive groups in an effort to attack Oversight and Chairman Issa directly. This is just their latest salvo in an ongoing effort to obstruct oversight,” said Frederick Hill, Issa’s spokesman. So American Family Voices (AFV; press release here ) is using a story which should never have been published to file an ethics complaint which should never have been brought so that the congressman who is hot on the trail of the Gunwallker and other Obama administration can have his credibility and integrity dragged through the mud. Again, in case it's not clear, the Times's refusal to pull its story seems to be based on the need to provide a basis for AFV's complaint than on dogged defense of the truth. And who is AFV? No surprise here : American Family Voices serves as an umbrella group that helps fund a broad network of organizations – including civil rights, environmental, women’s rights, consumer advocacy and health care organizations, and multi-issue think tanks – and build their infrastructure, both in the field and in communications. We also fill gaps in the progressive movement by conducting research and providing strategic messaging and public relations work that nobody is doing, which helps to drive new media stories. AFV's somewhat dated Projects page indicates that it is the driving force behind Health Care for America Now (HCAN) and “the Progressive Donor Network.” And though I wouldn't want to mistake by confusing people with the same names, AFV's board is from all appearances “progressively” connected. Powerline's Hinderaker described the situation perfectly in a Tuesday post : This is how the Left operates: they pay for lies to be published, and then demand investigations on the basis of those lies. … The word “corruption” is often tossed around in connection with politics, generally wrongly. In my opinion, this story illustrates the real corruption that infects our public life. Indeed. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .
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Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum told supporters in Lancaster, South Carolina Tuesday that the Social Security retirement age had to be increased because “people are living too long.” “Does anybody in this room believe that somebody that 62 years old is too old to work in America today?” Santorum asked. “Social Security was established for people who were too old to work and therefore they needed the support of the federal government.” “Now back in 1936 we probably did and that made sense. Why? Because life expectancy in 1936 was 61. It’s now 80… So you have a situation where things have changed, and for our young people it will even be longer. We keep gaining about a month every few years, we gain in life expectancy. And so the idea that we’re going to keep the Social Security program locked in on a 1937 actuarial chart makes no sense at all.” He continued: “Do you know what your life expectancy at 65 is? Eighty-five. So you have folks living at least 20 years… Ronald Reagan saw this problem and said, ‘Look, we have to do the common sense thing. We have to phase the retirement age back.’ What did he do? Twenty-five years from 1983 he started to phase it back. And we did and that’s where we are right now. We are in the middle of a phase up to age 76 which will be normal retirement age.” “Well, we need to continue to do that. Not radically. But look at where the revenues are coming in and where the expenses are and we need to adjust everything from cost of living increase for high income seniors is one thing. We can look at retirement ages. And again, you still will be able to retire at 62 and take Social Security, you’ll just get a slightly smaller benefit. Why? Because we can’t afford the benefit structure we have because people are living too long.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media House Judiciary Committee member Rep. Steve King (R-IA) is calling for President Barack Obama’s “drunken uncle” to testify before Congress. Onyango Obama, who allegedly does not have a valid visa, was arrested in Framingham, Massachusetts, on August 24 and charged in Framingham District Court with operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol. He is the half-brother of President Obama’s father. King suspects that Onyango Obama will get favorable deportation proceedings due to his relation to the President. “We have to bring drunken ‘Uncle Omar’ in front of the House Judiciary Committee, drill down into this, and tell America what’s going on,” the Iowa Republican told Fox News’ Chris Stirewalt Monday. “I watched as President Obama’s aunt, Zeituni Onyango, also evaded [Immigration and Customs Enforcement],” King added. “The sympathy, the bleeding heart, of [Department of Homeland Security Director] Janet Napolitano decided to use an administrative authority to grant President Obama’s aunt asylum.”
Continue reading …News emerged as fresh revelations placed the conduct of Murdoch’s global media group News Corp under intense scrutiny The mother of a victim of the 2005 London terrorist attacks is suing Rupert Murdoch’s media empire after she was told by police that her son’s mobile phone is likely to have been targeted by a private investigator working for the News of the World. Sheila Henry filed a high court writ this week against the paper’s owner, News Group Newspapers, alleging that journalists at the tabloid, which was shut down in July, hacked into a mobile belonging to Christian Small, 28, on the day he was killed by a bomb blast on the London Underground. Henry left messages on her son’s phone on the day of the attacks in which 52 people died. In common with many victims of the 7/7 disaster, Small was missing for some time after the initial bomb blasts, and his family were trying to discover where he was. News that Henry is suing the paper’s publisher emerged on a day of fresh revelations in the phone-hacking affair that once again placed the conduct of Murdoch’s global media group News Corp under intense scrutiny. The company’s UK subsidiary told the high court on Tuesday that it had found “tens of thousands” of additional emails that could potentially shed light on the extent of phone hacking at the paper “which the current management were unaware of”. Those emails are understood to include correspondence between reporters and senior managers at the News of the World and the Sun. Mr Justice Vos, the judge who is overseeing the phone hacking cases, said : “There’s some important material in what has already been disclosed. I took the step of looking at some of the material. There’s some significant material. I’m sure there’s lots more to come.” The high court was also told Scotland Yard has handed a 68-page document to phone-hacking litigants who are pursuing civil cases . It lists the names of News of the World journalists who commissioned Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator the paper employed, to hack into mobile phones. The fact that the document runs to so many pages suggests Mulcaire acted on the orders of a number of News of the World reporters. Separately, James Murdoch, Rupert’s 38-year-old son and News Corp’s third most senior executive, was recalled to parliament to face a second grilling by MPs over whether he was told three years ago that hacking extended beyond a single “rogue reporter” at the paper. Murdoch’s denial was contradicted by the News of the World’s last editor, Colin Myler, and former legal head Tom Crone, at the Commons culture, media and sport committee last week. Meanwhile, a group of News Corp shareholders in America who are suing the company for corporate negligence widened their action against the company. The investors now allege that “illicit phone hacking and subsequent cover-ups at News of the World were part of a much broader, historic pattern of corruption”. The action targets Murdoch, chief operating officer Chase Carey, and Carey’s deputy, James Murdoch. The case brought by Sheila Henry is the first to be launched by a 7/7 victim or a family member of someone who was caught up in the atrocity. The Metropolitan police have warned relatives of a handful of the 52 people who were killed in the capital that day that mobile phone numbers belonging to their deceased relatives were found in Mulcaire’s notebooks. It is understood that Mulcaire made a note of Henry’s own mobile as well as her son’s. The apparent confirmation of the News of the World’s willingness to target victims of a terrorist attack brought immediate condemnation. Labour MP Tom Watson, who has vigorously pursued the hacking allegations, said: “If this is accurate it shows that in the week we commemorated the victims of 9/11 the victims of our own terrorist attack have had their memories insulted in a callous and inhuman way.” A spokeswoman for News International, News Group’s parent company, said: “We take very seriously the matters raised in court this morning and we are committed to working with civil claimants to resolve their cases.” Henry’s claim will be one of half a dozen lead cases heard at trial early next year. If successful it will set a benchmark for the amount of compensation awarded to victims of hacking. They could include the parents of Milly Dowler, the schoolgirl who was murdered in 2002. The revelation in July that their daughter’s phone had been targeted by Mulcaire led to the closure of the News of the World and the resignation of former NI chief executive Rebekah Brooks. Phone hacking News Corporation Rupert Murdoch National newspapers Newspapers Newspapers & magazines 7 July London attacks United States James Robinson Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …On Sunday, America remembered the 10th anniversary of September 11, 2001, but last night, Jon Stewart reminded us that there’s another important date to commemorate: September 13, 2001. After all, that was the day Jerry Falwell said that “the pagans and the abortionists and the feminists and the gays and…
Continue reading …The 64th Frankfurt motor show – the biggest in the world – runs until 25 September in Germany
Continue reading …Major US banks accuse Murdoch and News Corporation of corporate misconduct extending far beyond UK Full text of shareholders’ complaint A prominent group of US banks and investment funds with substantial investments in News Corporation has issued a fresh legal complaint accusing the company of widespread corporate misconduct extending far beyond the phone-hacking excesses of News of the World. The legal action, lodged in the Delaware courts, is led by Amalgamated Bank, a New York-based chartered bank that manages some $12bn on behalf of institutional investors and holds about 1 million shares of News Corporation common stock. Its lawsuit is aimed against the members of News Corp’s board, including Rupert Murdoch himself, his sons James and Lachlan, and the media empire’s chief operating officer, Chase Carey. In the complaint, the shareholders accuse the board of allowing Murdoch to use News Corp as his “own personal fiefdom”. In addition to the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World, the complaint focuses on the controversial business tactics of two News Corp subsidiaries in America, its advertising arm News America Marketing and a manufacturer of satellite TV smart cards called NDS Group Plc. In legal documents, the shareholders allege that the two companies were accused by multiple parties of “stealing computer technology, hacking into business plans and computers and violating the law through a wide range of anti-competitive behaviour”. The complaint draws on several lawsuits and trial transcripts in which the News Corp subsidiaries were prosecuted by rival businesses for alleged misconduct. In the case of News America, the company reached settlements with three separate competitors amounting to $650m. In one trial, involving an advertising company called Floorgraphics, evidence was presented to the jury that News America had broken into its rival’s secure computer systems at least 11 times. The chief executive of News America, Paul Carlucci, was also quoted as having told Floorgraphics: “If you ever get into any of our businesses, I will destroy you. I work for a man who wants it all, and doesn’t understand anybody telling him he can’t have it all.” The complaint says that as Carlucci and Murdoch talk regularly, “it is inconceivable that Murdoch would not have been aware about the illegal tactics being employed by NAM to thwart comptetition”. In the case of NDS, the shareholder complaint refers to lawsuits launched by rivals Vivendi and EchoStar, who accused the company, which News Corp acquired in 1992, of illegally extracting the code of its smart cards used to unscramble satellite TV signals and charge subscribers. In court documents, Amalgamated Bank says NDS posted the Vivendi code on the internet, allowing hackers to break into broadcasts for free and inflicting more than $1bn in damages on its competitor. In a separate case, EchoStar accused NDS of illegally intercepting one of its satellite television broadcasts, and a court injunction was obtained preventing the News Corp subsidiary from “intercepting or receiving, anywhere in the US, EchoStar’s satellite television signal without authorisation”. Jay Eisenhofer, a lawyer representing Amalgamated Bank and its other leading complainants, the New Orleans Employees’ Retirement System and Central Laborers Pension Fund, said the details of the alleged misconduct at News America and NDS were significant as they suggested a wider culture of improper behaviour that went beyond the illegality at the now-defunct News of the World. “These cases establish a pattern of misconduct that extends far beyond the UK subsidiary. It demonstrates a corporate culture that allows this sort of misconduct to take place over a very long period of time.” Eisenhofer pointed out that several members of the News America and NDS boards were also directors of News Corp. The latest complaint from Amalgamated and its co-plaintiffs provides the most detailed and serious allegations yet against News Corp for alleged business improprieties carried out within the US. The company is already under investigation by the FBI, which is looking into suggestions that News of the World reporters tried to gain access to the phone records of 9/11 victims. The justice department is also carrying out a wide-ranging inquiry in the wake of the phone-hacking scandal into News Corp’s corporate behaviour to see whether any US laws were broken. There was no immediate response from News Corp to the allegations. News Corporation Phone hacking Rupert Murdoch James Murdoch United States Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk
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