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Timothy Kline – Thoughts, Reflections and Insights

‘We the People’ versus ‘We the Corporation’: Sentiment Builds for Banning Corporate Personhood, But Tough Road Ahead.

November 28, 2011  |

Bill of Rights

Across the country, momentum has been building for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution declaring that the democratic rights and freedoms granted to people do not apply to corporations and corporate entities.

In November alone, local voters in ColoradoMontanaMaineWisconsin andCalifornia passed various resolutions to ban corporate personhood. Seven bills have been introduced in the current Congress, including four this month—includingamendmentproposals. Public interest groups have been gathering petition signatures, all with an eye to the two-year anniversary of a Supreme Court ruling, known as Citizens United, which granted significant new political powers to corporations by ending a century-old prohibition on directly spending money from their corporate treasuries for political campaigns.

constitutional amendment proposed by Congress must pass House and Senate chambers with two-thirds majorities and then be ratified by three-fourths of the states. The last amendment, passed in 1992, concerned congressional pay and was proposed in 1789. The 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18, passed in 1971, after tens of thousands of youths that age died in Vietnam but could not vote. Though the political equivalent of climbing Mt. Everest, supporters of an amendment to reverse or reign in corporate constitutional rights are not deterred.

“We are facing a crisis in American democracy today,” said John Bonifaz, co-founder and director of Free Speech for People, who has been involved with various proposals in Congress. “The question is whether it is ‘We the people’ or ‘We the corporations.’ The response to that crisis has to be a bold vision that will restore democracy to the people. Constitutional amendment fights are the very kind of fights that return us to the basic principles of what we are as a nation.

[To read the rest of this article, follow the link]

AIG Sues U.S. Taxpayers for 25 Billion…Really.

It said this violated the Fifth Amendment, which bars the taking of private property for public use without just compensation.

It said this violated the Fifth Amendment, which bars the taking of private property for public use without just compensation.

A company run by former American International Group Chief Executive Maurice “Hank” Greenberg Monday filed a $25 billion lawsuit against the United States, claiming that the government takeover of the insurer was unconstitutional. In its complaint, Greenberg’s Starr International said that in bailing out AIG [AIG 21.01 --- UNCH ] and taking a nearly 80 percent stake, the government failed to compensate existing shareholders. It said this violated the Fifth Amendment, which bars the taking of private property for public use without just compensation.

“The government’s actions were ostensibly designed to protect the United States economy and rescue the country’s financial system,” Starr said. “Although this might be a laudable goal, as a matter of basic law, the ends could not and did not justify the unlawful means employed.”

The United States, it went on, “is not empowered to trample shareholder and property rights even in the midst of a financial emergency.”

Monday’s lawsuit was filed with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington, D.C., which handles lawsuits seeking money from the government. Once the world’s largest insurer by market value, AIG accepted $182.3 billion of federal bailouts beginning on Sept. 16, 2008, amid a liquidity crisis spurred by its exposure to risky debt through credit default swaps.

[As reported by McCullough, on Dvorak Uncensored]

Media Can Avoid NYPD Arrest By Getting Press Pass They Can’t Get

A crowd of protesters shouted “shame” and booed the police officers as they dragged her into the street. Others could be heard shouting, “help her.”

A crowd of protesters shouted “shame” and booed the police officers as they dragged her into the street. Others could be heard shouting, “help her.”

Stu Loeser, a spokesman for New York City’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg, says the best way for reporters to avoid being arrested while covering Occupy Wall Street is to carry a press pass issued by the New York Police Department.

But the NYPD isn’t issuing press passes to reporters covering Occupy Wall Street, as we learned when we contacted them Thursday.

“We aren’t issuing press credentials to reporters covering Occupy Wall Street,” said Detective Gina Sarubbi, NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner of Public Information.

So far the NYPD has arrested  26 journalists covering the protests in New York this week,  including two AP reporters and a Vanity Fairphotographer. Loeser  defended the arrests Thursday, according to a memo reprinted by The New York Observer. “You can imagine my surprise when we found that only five of the 26 arrested reporters actually have valid NYPD-issued press credentials,” he wrote.

Loeser added, in a tweet to Megan McCarthy, the news editor at The New York Observer (and a former Wired writer), “you don’t have a press pass; that’s your option. But why should some random NYPD take your word that you’re press?”

But Detective Sarubbi said that even if the NYPD were issuing press passes to cover the protests, there are no appointments available to get a press pass before January 2012.

Wired has been trying to get NYPD press credentials for freelancer Quinn Norton, who is on special assignment to cover the Occupy movement. Even before this week’s arrests, the NYPD made it clear they would not issue her credentials, as she first had to comply with Kafka-esque rules, such as proving she’d already covered six on-the-spot events in New York City — events that you would actually need a press pass to cover.

When I asked if six stories on Occupy Wall Street would count, Sarubbi said no.

I then tried to make the case that issuing press passes to legitimate reporters might help prevent arrests and prevent police from beating reporters, as happened to two journalists for the conservative Daily Caller on Thursday, and that the lack of spots until January seemed odd, and Sarubbi got angry.

“Don’t tell me how to do my job and I won’t tell you how to do yours,” she said.

Sarubbi then hung up without even a goodbye.

[To read the rest of Ryan Singel's article, follow this link]

Michigan One of a Few States Raising Taxes on the Poor and Cutting Back for Businesses

Low-income workers losing credits while businesses saving more than $1 billion

Low-income workers losing credits while businesses saving more than $1 billion

Michigan is among just a handful of states raising taxes on low-income working families while cutting taxes for other groups, the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities said in a report released Tuesday.

The Washington-based group notes that Michigan, New Jersey and Wisconsin all have scaled back tax credits for low-income workers in recent years while cutting business taxes. In Michigan’s case, low-income families will see their tax breaks shrink starting next year by about $260 million annually while businesses will get a $1.1 billion tax break starting in January and a $1.7 billion tax break the year after.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder originally wanted to eliminate the state Earned Income Tax Credit, but agreed to reduce it from 20 percent of the federal credit to 6 percent for tax year 2012.

[Read the rest of this AP article by clicking here]

How Social Media Distorts the Occupy Movement

...not even a crawler along the bottom of any news network reporting that this was going on. Yet, these folks can cover Egypt and Moscow. Odd.

...not even a crawler along the bottom of any news network reporting that this was going on. Yet, these folks can cover Egypt and Moscow. Odd.

If you were on the West Coast last night, as you were about to go to bed, you would have figured out that something was up in New York City. The encampment called Occupy Wall Street was about to be attacked by a large police contingent and removed from lower Manhattan, forcibly.

You would have been alerted to this via social media, either Facebook or Twitter. You would’ve then gone to your computer to visit either UStream.com or any number of Occupy Wall Street websites to watch a live stream amateurishly filmed by someone with an iPhone. This would’ve been accompanied by miscellaneous commentary.

CNN, which seemed to have no difficulty being in Moscow during the fall of communism, had no reporter on the grounds.

Apparently, the bridges were all shut down, the subway was closed, and a huge armed police contingent marched through the city, but the mainstream media was M.I.A. The only footage came from cell phones.

I checked all the networks and there was not even a crawler along the bottom of any news network reporting that this was going on. Yet, these folks can cover Egypt and Moscow. Odd.

Finally, Al Jazeera comes on with live reports. Geez.

So the streaming continues but then stops abruptly as the plug was pulled on the cell towers serving the park area. Just like in Egypt. Funny how that works.

[Read the rest of John C. Dvorak's excellent article by visiting PCMag.com]