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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



Showing posts with label 'Too Big to Fail'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Too Big to Fail'. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2015

RSN: Why Is The Daily Beast's Russia Critic Silent About so Many Hideous Abuses?, Too Big to Fail: US Federal Reserve Says No More Bailouts, Big Win for Farm Workers as EPA Moves to Ban Dangerous Pesticide




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Glenn Greenwald | Why Is The Daily Beast's Russia Critic Silent About so Many Hideous Abuses? 
Glenn Greenwald. (photo: Occupy.com) 
Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept 
Greenwald writes: "A comprehensive review by The Intercept of the writings of Sam Charles Hamad - author of this Daily Beast article accusing the 'global left' of remaining 'silent' on abuses by Russia - reveals that he has been completely silent, shockingly and appallingly so, about the following wide array of severe global injustices" 
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Too Big to Fail: US Federal Reserve Says No More Bailouts 
Marcy Kreiter, International Business Times 
Kreiter writes: "The U.S. Federal Reserve may still be waffling on whether to raise interest rates, but one thing upon which governors are ready to act is making sure taxpayers are not again left holding the bag should the financial system face the same threats it did during the Great Recession." 
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Hundreds of Officers Lose Licenses Over Sex Misconduct 
Matt Sedensky and Nomaan Merchant, Associated Press 
Excerpt: "In a yearlong investigation of sexual misconduct by U.S. law enforcement, The Associated Press uncovered about 1,000 officers who lost their badges in a six-year period for rape, sodomy and other sexual assault; sex crimes that included possession of child pornography; or sexual misconduct such as propositioning citizens or having consensual but prohibited on-duty intercourse." 
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Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman | Why the Drug War Has Been a Forty-Year Lynching 
Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman, Reader Supported News 
Excerpt: "The Drug War has been a forty-year lynching ... the corporate/GOP response to the peace and civil rights movements." 
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Why Don't Syrian Peace Talks Include Any Syrians? 
Justin Salhani, ThinkProgress 
Salhani writes: "Talks aimed at finding a solution to the four-year-old Syrian Civil War are underway in Vienna today, with at least one notable absence. There are no representatives from Syria involved in the talks, either from the regime or the opposition." 
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Questions Swirl Over Russian Plane Crash in Sinai That Killed All 224 Aboard 
Jethro Mullen and Arwa Damon, CNN 
Excerpt: "The remains of Russian tourists killed in a passenger jet crash in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula are expected to start arriving back in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Sunday as questions swirl over what caused the disaster." 
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Big Win for Farm Workers as EPA Moves to Ban Dangerous Pesticide 
Matthew Daly, Associated Press 
Daly writes: "A common pesticide used on citrus fruits, almonds and other crops would be banned under a proposal announced Friday by the Environmental Protection Agency. The proposal would prohibit use of chlorpyrifos, a widely used insecticide that is sprayed on a variety of crops including oranges, apples, cherries, grapes, broccoli and asparagus." 

 common pesticide used on citrus fruits, almonds and other crops would be banned under a proposal announced Friday by the Environmental Protection Agency.
The proposal would prohibit use of chlorpyrifos, a widely used insecticide that is sprayed on a variety of crops including oranges, apples, cherries, grapes, broccoli and asparagus.
The pesticide, in use since 1965, has sickened dozens of farmworkers in recent years. Traces have been found in waterways, threatening fish, and regulators say overuse could make targeted insects immune to the pesticide.
U.S. farms use more than 6 million pounds of the chemical each year — about 25 percent of it in California.
The EPA said it will take public comments on the proposal for at least two months, with a final rule expected in December 2016. The rule would not take effect until 2017 at the earliest.
The EPA said in a written statement that its current analysis does not suggest risks from exposure to chlorpyrifos in food. But when those exposures are combined with estimated exposure from drinking water in certain watersheds, "EPA cannot conclude that the risk from aggregate exposure meets the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act safety standard," the statement said.
The EPA banned home use of chlorpyrifos in 2000 and placed "no-spray" buffer zones around sensitive sites, such as schools, in 2012.
But environmental and public health groups say those proposals don't go far enough.
The Natural Resources Defense Council and other groups filed a federal lawsuit seeking a national ban on chlorpyrifos. The advocacy groups say the pesticide interferes with brain development of fetuses, infants and children.
California's agricultural industry has pushed back against state restrictions, arguing that misuse of the pesticide by some groups should not lead to widespread limits.
Joel Nelson, president of the California Citrus Mutual, a trade association that represents citrus producers, said regulators in his state want to apply a "broad-brush approach" that he called unfair. Alternative pesticides exist, but Nelson said they're not as effective and are more expensive.
Veena Singla, a scientist with NRDC's health and environment program, said farm workers and rural communities "continue to be in harm's way" from the millions of pounds of chlorpyrifos applied to agricultural fields in California and other states.
The EPA's announcement "is a huge step in the right direction, but we think there's enough evidence to ban all its uses now," Singla said.
CropLife America, a trade group that represents pesticide producers, called the proposed ban a "drastic and unnecessary step that is caused by wasteful, agenda-driven litigation" filed by environmental groups.
"We are confident that due legal and scientific process will make this proposed action unnecessary," said Jay Vroom, the group's president.






Saturday, December 27, 2014

RSN: Former IMF Chief Economist: Break Up Citigroup




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FOCUS | Former IMF Chief Economist: Break Up Citigroup
Should Citigroup be broken up? (photo: Matt Buck/cc/flickr)
Simon Johnson, Project Syndicate
Johnson writes: "From the perspective of anyone seeking the nomination of either of America's political parties, here is an issue that cuts across partisan lines. 'Break up Citigroup' is a concrete and powerful idea that would move the financial system in the right direction."
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Monday, December 15, 2014

RSN: UN Agrees Way Forward on Climate Change - but Path Is Unclear, Dodd-Frank Budget Fight Proves Democrats Are a Bunch of Stuffed Suits



Americans who watched TAXPAYER DOLLARS used to BAILOUT Wall Street's Casino Gambling or lost their homes and jobs because of the meltdown might choose other words!





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IT’S NOT ENOUGH TO ‘LOVE’ RSN, RESPECT IT TOO: I love what you do, “but…” It’s what follows the “but” that kills us. People provide a vast array of reasons not to accept even minimal financial responsibility for this thing they say they love. Absurd and self defeating. / Marc Ash, Founder Reader Supported News




Matt Taibbi | Dodd-Frank Budget Fight Proves Democrats Are a Bunch of Stuffed Suits
Matt Taibbi appearing on Democracy Now! (photo: Democracy Now!)
Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone
Taibbi writes: "Gosh, the Democrats are really pushing hard to save a key portion of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform bill, aren't they? Like tigers, or Siamese fighting fish they battle! Thrilling to watch! Oh, wait, that's what they aren't doing."
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Elizabeth Warren Was Told to Stay Quiet, But She Didn't -- and It's Paying Off
Zachary A. Goldfarb, The Washington Post
Goldfarb writes: "She hasn't stopped throwing bombs at the rich and powerful - and causing trouble for the White House - but she's won a spot in Senate leadership, changed the shape of congressional debates over financial regulation and continued to draw widespread attention as a potential presidential candidate."
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Bernie Sanders Plans to Introduce Legislation to Break Up Wall Street Banks
Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News
Excerpt: "As the Senate met in a rare Saturday session, Sen. Bernie Sanders said he will introduce legislation to break up Wall Street megabanks that are using a bill before the Senate this weekend to put taxpayers on the hook for the banks' risky investments."
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CIA Tortured German Citizen it Mistook for a Terrorist
The Local - Germany Edition
Excerpt: "A German citizen abducted and tortured by Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) agents in 2004 should never have been detained, a US Senate report published on Tuesday showed."
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Black Sunday: The Day Turkey Detained Its Prominent Journalists
Today's Zaman
Excerpt: "The government-orchestrated crackdown on independent critical media outlets in Turkey took a turn for the worse on Sunday with dawn raids on Turkey's largest newspaper Zaman and popular national TV network Samanyolu TV that led to the detention of top managers at the media outlets."
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UN Agrees Way Forward on Climate Change - but Path Is Unclear
Nicholas Stern, Guardian UK
Stern writes: "Governments took a step back from chaos in the climate change discussions in Lima and found a way forward on Sunday, albeit with some fudges and compromises, giving themselves just 12 months to finalise a crucial international agreement to avoid dangerous levels of global warming."
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Remarks by Senator Warren on Citigroup and its bailout provision


From MoveON:

This speech could make Elizabeth Warren president.

 
You need to watch this speech. It's electrifying. It's historic.
Barack Obama's 2004 Democratic Convention speech launched him into the running for President. This could do the same for Elizabeth Warren.

So turn up your speakers and watch the whole thing. And then chip in to support MoveOn's work, as we get Elizabeth Warren's back in the Senate—and encourage her to run for president.








When big banks wrecked our economy, they went to Congress for a half-a-trillion-dollar bailout. Now—six years later—Citigroup thought they could quietly sneak a provision into a must-pass spending bill to let them gamble with taxpayer money again. But Senator Warren fought back hard, and is winning in the court of public opinion.

Barack Obama's 2004 Democratic Convention speech launched him into the running for president. This could do the same for Elizabeth Warren.

Please watch the video right now. And then chip in to help MoveOn as we support Elizabeth Warren's work in the Senate and encourage her to run for president.

Thanks for all you do.
–Mark, Robert, Kristin, Ilya, and the rest of the team

Sources:

1. "The Speech That Could Make Elizabeth Warren the Next President of the United States," The Huffington Post, December 13, 2014
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=302028&id=105927-3735812-oWJvA5x&t=1



http://warren.senate.gov
Senator Elizabeth Warren spoke on the floor of the Senate on Dec. 12, 2014 about the provision that Citigroup added to the omnibus budget package.


Sunday, July 20, 2014

RSN: We Need to Rein in 'Too Big to Fail' Banks




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APPEAL FOR IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE ON CONTRIBUTIONS: While we have made some progress on the July funding drive in the past 48 hours we are still well short of our goal. If everyone pulls together we can finish quickly. If you have not donated recently please throw something in the hat. In Peace an Solidarity. / Marc Ash, Founder Reader Supported News




FOCUS: Elizabeth Warren | We Need to Rein in 'Too Big to Fail' Banks
Senator Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Ted Fitzgerald/Boston Herald)
Elizabeth Warren, Reader Supported News
Warren writes: "More than five years after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and the beginning of the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression, lawmakers should ask themselves whether they have done enough to reduce the risk of another financial crisis. In our view, the answer is no."
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