Private equity firms are being pressed to give out more information about how they operate.
If this gets written into statute or regulation, it would be a good thing.
Private equity firms are being pressed to give out more information about how they operate.
If this gets written into statute or regulation, it would be a good thing.
There has been a bit of nastiness going on in the Republican Presidential Primaries in Iowa. Someone has been push polling* in Iowa and New Hampshire:
Among the questions asked during the 20-minute calls placed last week were whether the person polled knew Romney received Vietnam-era military deferments while serving in the Mormon missionary in France, that none of his sons served in the military and that the Mormon religion didn’t accept blacks as bishops until the 1970s.
Needless to say, push polling is sleazy, and when one adds the despicable pandering to religious bigotry, it gets worse.
Here, however, is where it gets weird, the calls are believed to have been made by Western Wats, a Utah-based firm closely tied to the BYU, the preeminent Mormon University in the world, and it’s hard to believe that they would do this, and threaten many existing business contacts.
The National Review‡ looks into all of this, and mentions their pet theory that Romney did it so that he could play the victim.
I don’t think so. The downside of getting caught is just too much.
However, the number two theory makes sense:
According to another source at a rival campaign who wished to remain anonymous, there’s speculation that Romney may have push polled himself because his campaign wanted polling data regarding the negative perception of his Mormon faith for internal use. But since they couldn’t do so without causing controversy, they took steps to make it look like McCain.
*A push poll is a phony poll, in which the goal is not to get information, but to place a bit of slander in the voter’s head, so they might ask something like, “Did you know that Matthew Saroff has a guilty plea for disturbing the Peace?”†
†Actually, I do, it was pled down from the traffic infraction of an “improperly fastened load” so that it would not bump my insurance rates.
‡They are professional liars. You need to confirm every period and comma.
They are using the same method as Comcast, though they are more honest about it, as evidenced by this response from the company:
To ensure the best possible online experience for our customers, Cox actively manages network traffic through a variety of methods including traffic prioritization and protocol filtering. Cox does not prohibit the use of file-sharing services for uploads or downloads, or discriminate against any specific services in any way. To help our customers make the most out of their Internet experience, we take proactive measures to ensure that bandwidth intensive applications do not negatively impact their service. These network management practices are outlined in our subscriber agreement and Acceptable Use Policy.
Certainly, I can see how, during periods of high bandwidth, one might want to drop priority on bit-torrent or similar applications (full disclosure, I use bit-torrent), but this is basically blocking:
According to Topolski, Cox is in fact using traffic shaping to degrade p2p traffic. In analyzing a user log, he has concluded that Cox is using traffic shaping hardware to send forged TCP/IP packets with the RST (reset) flag set — with the goal of disrupting eDonkey traffic. He’s been unable to tell precisely what hardware Cox is using, but he notes that the technique being used is very similar to Comcast’s treatment of BitTorrent.
It raises two questions: what is it about cable companies that make them so inclined to bull this bull$#@!, and why are they going through a backdoor block, as opposed to simply lowering the priority of the packets on their own internal network.
The New York Times is reporting that 43 Contractors have been taken into custody. It appears that the contract that they had was for resupply, and that these guards covered the resupply contract, and were not a part of any American security contract.
At this point, none of the detained are believed to be American.
I think that this is a shot across the bow of all the contractors by the Iraqi army.
This would be the Wall Street pukes who have engineered the housing bubble, and are now NOT reaping the consequences of its deflation.
Wall Street firms are planning record bonuses of $34 Billion this year.
That money, split among about 186,000 workers at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch & Co., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Bear Stearns Cos., equates to an average of $201,500 per person, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The five biggest U.S. securities firms paid $36 billion to employees last year.
What happened to pay for performance?
FWIW, Chavez loses to both Wilson and Pearce in the polls.
It’s not done yet, the election is a year out, but perhaps it’s time for Mr. Chavez to stop pretending that he is a Democrat, and get out of the race.
Originally, I listed this as Arizona, probably based on my recollections of Tom Udall’s dad, Stuart Udall.
I am such a complete pratt sometimes.
Oxfam complaining about this. It appears that in addition to not spending enough money, $4.4 billion in Afghanistan since 2002, as versus $35 billion in 2007 alone for military efforts, too much is spent on, “profits of companies and subcontractors, on non-Afghan resources and on high expatriate salaries and living costs,” (up to ½ million/year for each contractor).
Additionally, “Some two-thirds of U.S. foreign assistance bypasses the Afghan government that officials say they want to strengthen”.
It’s almost as if there were a conscious decision among Bush and His Evil Minions™ to treat this as an opportunity for political payback to incompetent contractors who are political allies.
Finally, but given the degree to which the State Department has sabotaged this investigation from the beginning, I do not expect any indictments to come of it.
Update: We now have reports that the Gand Jury is investigating other Mercenaries Security Contractors in addition to Blackwater:
The Washington grand jury has issued subpoenas to several private security firms, including Blackwater, a legal source briefed on the probe said yesterday. Authorities are seeking company “after-action” reports and other documents that may shed light on specific incidents, he said.
The source, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the probe, declined to say which incidents have been targeted, but he said the investigation ranges well beyond Blackwater. Private security companies in Iraq “have been shooting a lot of people,” he said.
Emphasis mine.
I think that if there is ever a fair accounting of the actions of the mercs in Iraq, a lot of people are going to be called to account.
A distressed property is either foreclosed or short sold (sold for less than it is worth). In Orange County, almost 20% of home sales are of distressed homes.
At some point, buyers are going to start expecting distressed asset prices, and then the home market plummet even more.
They have held the award winning photographer for more than 19 months, and now they are finally charging him in a process that his employer, the AP calls a sham. The AP claims, and I’m inclined to agree that these charges are because he got pictures that the military did not want:
Tomlin said the AP has faced chronic difficulties in meeting Hussein at the Camp Cropper detention facility in Baghdad and its own intensive investigations of the case—conducted by a former federal prosecutor, Paul Gardephe—have found no support for allegations that he was anything other than a working journalist in a war zone.
This is just disgraceful.
Oil is above $95/bbl, and there talk of switching denomination to the Euro, which peaked today at $1.4804:€1.000, though it’s currently at 1.4785.
I think that we will be seeing stagflation sooner rather than later.
Freddie Mac announces 2 billion dollar loss, and is looking at a capital crunch. It’s considering cutting its dividend, selling preferred stock, or cutting some of its mortgage holdings to meet US reserve requirements.
FWIW, Credit Suisse says that the losses might hit $5 billion.
The Washington Post has a generally glowing review of Martin O’Malley’s handling of the special session. He comes across as engaged, hard working, and willing to listen, as opposed to this characterization of his predecessor, which is prize:
Del. Tom Hucker (D-Montgomery) said O’Malley won points for his openness to lawmakers’ ideas and a work ethic that contrasted with that of Ehrlich, whose tenure Hucker derided as “four years of press conferences and golf.”
Personally, I will still vote against the slots proposal, but it was a productive session because O’Malley did his homework.
An excerpt from Scott McClellan’s new book:
The most powerful leader in the world had called upon me to speak on his behalf and help restore credibility he lost amid the failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. So I stood at the White house briefing room podium in front of the glare of the klieg lights for the better part of two weeks and publicly exonerated two of the senior-most aides in the White House: Karl Rove and Scooter Libby.
“There was one problem. It was not true.
“I had unknowingly passed along false information. And five of the highest ranking officials in the administration were involved in my doing so: Rove, Libby, the vice President, the President’s chief of staff, and the president himself.”
44% approval and 47% disapproval.
I think that the Democrats have a real pickup here, but they need to hit him hard. In addition to tying him to Bush, they need to bring up the fact that McConnel separated from the army after 10 days, allegedly for giving another guy a hand job in the shower.
The Republicans crossed a line when they went after Daschle in 2004. They need to be made understand that things have consequences.
Something that I hadn’t thought about before, but when a property is foreclosed on, renters are frequently evicted. As a result, renter protection was included in the House mortgage reform act, and Chris Dodd has proposed the same in the Senate.
Generally the protections come in the form of requiring purchasers continue leases of for 6 months following foreclosure.
Considering that about more than 10% of all foreclosures are non-owner occupied, and as the Times notes, “This figure probably underestimates the problem, according to the association, because buildings receive tax benefits if they are registered as owner-occupied”, we could see well in excess of 100,000 tenant evictions.
Alaska…They have a cases in Alaska???? What’s next? Antarctica?
Satan on spaghetti!!!!!! When we travel to the stars, we will discover that Catholic Church abuse cases have preceded us by decades!!!
Yep, once again, it’s those fun loving pedophiles in the Catholic church, and the people to timid, or too encompetent to do anything but enable them.
100 people, all Alaskan Natives, my guess would be that they were Indian, not Eskimo from the location.
But still, how does this organization function?
CQ Politics | Some House Backers of Thompson Are Starting to Lose the Faith.
Some quotes:
“I think he’s kind of done a belly flop”
“He seems to be perpetuating it instead of defeating it”.
“I’ve kind of pulled back. I’m not not supporting him, but I’m not doing anything”
The reincarnation of Ronald Wilson Reagan (666, count it), he ain’t.
She is back in Washington, back at what amounts to her old job, though she is still being looked at by the Office of Special Counsel discrimination and mishandling classified documents.
Eric Back has what amounts to the definitive description of the staff response, “The mood in the office is described as a combination of relief and euphoria.”, but I imagine that they were dancing and singing, “Ding, Dong, the Witch is Dead.”
Four-term Congressman Mike Ferguson (R-NJ). He’s only in his mid 30’s but he’s seeing the writing on the wall.
At the rate that this is going, there won’t be any Republithugs left in the East of Midwest.