Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Wednesday, September 30, 2015

RSN: Glacier Melt Shows a Climate Change Tipping Point, Robert Reich | Donald Trump Proves What's Wrong with Bankruptcy Laws in America






It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News

Robert Reich | Donald Trump Proves What's Wrong with Bankruptcy Laws in America
Robert Reich. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog
Reich writes: "Bankruptcy was designed so people could start over. But these days, the only ones starting over are big corporations, wealthy moguls and Wall Street bankers, who have had enough political clout to shape bankruptcy laws to their needs."
READ MORE
How Elizabeth Warren Picked a Fight With Brookings - And Won
Tom Hamburger, The Washington Post
Hamburger writes: "The hero of the country's liberal movement launched a surprise attack Tuesday against Washington's most revered Democratic-leaning think tanks - and drew blood."
READ MORE


he hero of the country’s liberal movement launched a surprise attack Tuesday against Washington’s most revered Democratic-leaning think tanks — and drew blood.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, stepping up her crusade against the power of wealthy interests, accused a Brookings Institution scholar of writing a research paper to benefit his corporate patrons.
Warren’s charge prompted a swift response, with Brookings seeking and receiving the resignation of the economist, Robert Litan, whose report criticized a Warren-backed consumer protection rule targeting the financial services industry.
The episode underscored the growing clout of Warren (D-Mass.), who has resisted calls for a presidential run but is positioning herself as a leading critic of corporate interests and their power over the Washington establishment.
And it marked the most dramatic response yet from Brookings, an icon of that establishment, amid criticism and internal debate over the influence of corporate sponsors.
“I learned there was discomfort with the Warren letter, and I did not want to add to it,” Litan said in an interview. “I said, ‘If it will make Brookings more comfortable, I’ll resign.’ ”
Litan rejected Warren’s criticism, saying that the company that sponsored his research, the Capital Group, a leading mutual fund manager, had no influence over his findings. But Litan, an unpaid “resident scholar,” acknowledged that he had violated a new think tank rule prohibiting researchers with such status from citing their Brookings affiliation when testifying before Congress.
Brookings President Strobe Talbott said Tuesday that Litan “made a mistake in not following Brookings regulations designed to uphold the independence of the institution.” A Brookings spokesman added Litan’s work on the rule came “in his private capacity, not connected with Brookings in any way.”
Warren leveled her criticisms in letters sent Tuesday to Brookings leaders and the Obama administration, citing the $85,000 combined fee that Litan and a co-author received from the investment firm.
Warren called the report “highly compensated and editorially compromised work on behalf of an industry player seeking a specific conclusion.”
Her complaint pointed to a relatively new form of influence peddling in the nation’s capital, with industry groups and even foreign governments paying think tanks and scholars for research papers that support lobbying goals.
Brookings over the past decade has embarked on aggressive fundraising drives to pay for major expansions. Investigations last year by The Washington Post, the New York Times and others found that donors had gained the ability to influence Brookings’s events and research agenda.
In resigning Tuesday, Litan said that he had not been aware of Brookings’s new rules put in place following the Post and Times reports. Litan, who was a senior official in the Bill Clinton administration, once led Brookings’s economic studies division and has been affiliated with the think tank for four decades.
He said that he repeatedly disclosed his funding sources in both the original study of the proposed consumer protection rule and when he appeared on Capitol Hill for July 21 testimony.
“I think it’s unfortunate that, even when I disclosed the funding, people spent their time discussing who funded my work rather than discussing the merits of it,” he said.
Tom Joyce, a spokesman for the Capital Group, said his company was following standard practice. “It is typical for organizations to sponsor academic studies,” Joyce said, noting that in this case, “no preconditions or predetermined conclusions were imposed.”
Brookings’s action Tuesday could have implications for industry lobbyists who advise clients to fund think tank research to influence policymakers.
Scholars have opened private consultancies, attracting fees from corporate sponsors at least in part because their studies could enjoy the Brookings imprimatur.
Litan, for instance, works with a firm called Economists Incorporated, where his bio describes him as a “Non-resident Senior Fellow” at Brookings. He used the same description when he testified before Congress.
For Warren, Litan’s departure represents a small victory in her quest to rein in big banks.
The proposed rule, written by the Labor Department, would prohibit retirement plan brokers from receiving enticements from big investment houses that can distract them from the best interests of consumers. Litan concluded that the rule, while well-intentioned, would be too costly.
Some advisers and brokers recommend investments based on the free vacations, cars, bonuses, fees and other kickbacks that the adviser can earn from selling a lousy product,” Warren wrote.


Russia Launches Air Strikes in Syria
Andrew Osborn and Phil Stewart, Reuters
Excerpt: "Russia said it launched air strikes against Islamic State in Syria on Wednesday after President Vladimir Putin secured his parliament's unanimous backing to intervene to prop up the Kremlin's closest Middle East ally."
READ MORE
How US Immigration Officers Use Dubious ID Papers to Deport People
Aviva Stahl, Al Jazeera America
Stahl writes: "In a report released today, 'Smuggled into Exile,' the New York-based advocacy group Families for Freedom raises concerns about cases in which ICE officials deported people based on falsified identity documents."
READ MORE
Planned Parenthood Fights Back
Tara Culp-Ressler, Think Progress
Culp-Ressler writes: "For weeks, Planned Parenthood has been embroiled in a high-profile political controversy that's triggered congressional hearings and a potential government shutdown. Now, the national women's health organization is fighting back with a grassroots day of action that relies on some creative means."
READ MORE
Volkswagen Director Says Staff Acted Criminally Over Emissions Tests
Sean Farrell, Guardian UK
Farrell writes: "A Volkswagen board director has said some staff acted criminally in cheating emissions tests."
READ MORE
Glacier Melt Shows a Climate Change Tipping Point
Wendell Tangborn, Guardian UK
Tangborn writes: "The earth's 190,000 glaciers, sentinels of climate change that appear to be more sensitive to the climate than are humans, are disappearing at an unprecedented pace, the canaries in climate change's coal mine."
READ MORE



No comments: