Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Debate for Pres. AFL-CIO?

Petitioning Richard Trumka for an AFL-CIO Presidential Debate
http://www.change.org/petitions/petitioning-richard-trumka-for-an-afl-cio-presidential-debate

Petition by CWA's
Harry Kelber for AFL-CIO President 2013

AFL-CIO members need to hear from ALL the presidential candidates, not just the incumbent, Richard Trumka. How can the country's largest labor organization have a presidential election without a true debate?

To:
Richard Trumka, President of the AFL-CIO
rtrumka@aflcio.org

Petitioning Richard Trumka for an AFL-CIO Presidential Debate

Dear President Trumka,
The unions and labor movement are in dire straights. We are losing hundreds of thousands of members and the government is allowing a flagrant violation of our democratic rights. The privatization of public services and education are rapidly expanding, destroying the public commons.

Regardless of who is in charge in Washington, these attacks are continuing. In light of this, we call on you to debate the only other candidate for president of the AFL-CIO, CWA member and journalist Harry Kelber, who has submitted his name in nomination for president of the AFL-CIO. In order to have a democratic trade union movement we must have a democratic process for discussion of the issues facing the members of the AFL-CIO and the entire working people of the United States.

We call on you to agree to have this debate and discussion on the issues facing working people including:

* How to fight privatization and deregulation in education and public services?

* How to put millions of people back to work now? Should the AFL-CIO continue to support labor management partnerships and concession bargaining.

* How to stop the attacks on millions of immigrant workers so they have democratic labor rights?

* How to stop the Trans Pacifica Partnership and rescind anti-labor agreements like NAFTA which have been used to destroy working people around the world?

* Should the AFL-CIO convention be streamed on the web for all AFL-CIO members having the right to see what issues are presented and debated at the AFL-CIO convention?

* How to stop the growing militarization in the US and the wars around the world?

* Why labor does not have a 24 hours labor channel for workers and their unions to have a voice countering the anti-labor propaganda?

* How labor can fight multi-nationals in the US and around the world when they have no borders and operate above the law.

* Why there are no criminal prosecution of corporations and their executives who flagrantly violate labor and health and safety laws with impunity.

* How does the AFL-CIO have be reorganized to stop the loss of members and become relevant to the tens of millions of unorganized workers.

* Should the rank and file members of the AFL-CIO have the right to vote for the leadership of the AFL-CIO and should their salaries by significantly above the average wages of US workers?

* Should the unions in the US begin to investigate the formation of a democratic labor party that will have a program for all working people and not be driven by corporate interests?

We know you want to workers to be educated about these issues and we hope you will agree to participate in a televised debate so the AFL-CIO members of this country can see how you and CWA member Harry Kelber address these issues.

Please let the voices of the rank and file AFL-CIO members be heard in this upcoming AFL-CIO convention on which way forward.
Sincerely,
[Your name]

PIRG: States Should Tax Corp IRS Dodgers


A new report from the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) reveals that state governments lost $39.8 billion in revenues because corporations and wealthy individuals are using offshore tax havens to avoid paying their statutory tax rates. We've seen the devastating effects that offshoring jobs have had on America's workers, and offshoring has long been talked about in terms of lost federal revenue, where $150 billion a year goes unpaid, but little focus has been given to state losses from the practice. Federal and state tax laws allow companies to claim that at least some portion of their profits were earned in other countries, particularly those whose tax rates are low or nonexistent. 
According to PIRG, such offshoring is both damaging to the states and unfair:
Tax haven abusers benefit from our markets, infrastructure, educated workforce and security, but they pay next to nothing for these benefits. Ultimately, taxpayers must pick up the tab, either in the form of higher taxes, cuts to public spending priorities or increased national debt.
While the federal government is gridlocked and has little chance for changing these tax laws right now, PIRG says it is much easier for the states to attempt to recapture this lost revenue and offers up several legislative options that could make state revenue collection more fair:
1. States can “decouple” their tax system from the federal tax system.
2. States can require worldwide combined reporting for multinational corporations.
3. States should urge their federal representatives to reject a “territorial” tax system, which would further erode state revenue.
4. States can require increased disclosure of financial information about corporations’ business presence in other countries and how they price their transfers with their own foreign subsidiaries; as well as to explain why large disparities exist between the profits corporations report to shareholders and tax authorities.
5. States could withhold taxes as part of federal FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliant Act) withholding.

Obama's 15 Institutes for New US Manufacturing



STATE_OF_UNION_14263831.JPGVice President Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio applaud President Barack Obama as he gives his State of the Union address Tuesday evening. 

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio -- The National Additive Manufacturing Innovative Institute in Youngstown, mentioned by President Barack Obama is his State of the Union address, is called the hub of the nation's "catch-up" efforts to get back into the manufacturing game.

It's the first of 15 "innovative institutes" to be established by Obama's $1-billion National Network for Manufacturing Innovation strategy he introduced last March.

The Institute is focusing on the development of additive manufacturing technology and processes. The goal is to take 3-D printing and other methods for translating digital 
images into parts that you can hold in your hand from laboratories and specialty 
shops into factories.

Most large manufacturers use 3-D printers to create prototypes for parts so they can test them in large machines. But when it comes time to go into production, those companies typically used cheaper methods such as metal stamping for production.

With this technology companies could design parts that cannot be made using traditional manufacturing methods.

The federal defense and energy departments has put $30 million toward the Institute,with NASA, the National Institute of Standards and Technology and National Science Foundation expected to kick in the remaining $15 million over the next four years.

A consortium of other manufacturing firms, universities, community colleges and nonprofit organizations has promised an additional $40 million.

Last August 16, the Institute was named one of the top 10 most innovative economic development initiatives in the country by The Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program and The Rockefeller Foundation.

http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2013/02/the_national_additive_manufact.html

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Monsanto Monopolizes Corn, Soy, Courts

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New CFS Report Exposes Devastating Impact of Monsanto Practices on U.S. Farmers
Today, one week before the Supreme Court hears arguments in Bowman v. Monsanto Co., the Center for Food Safety (CFS) and Save our Seeds (SOS) launched our new report, Seed Giants vs. U.S. Farmers.

The report investigates how the current seed patent regime has led to a radical shift to consolidation and control of global seed supply and how these patents have abetted corporations, such as Monsanto, to sue U.S. farmers for alleged seed patent infringement.

Seed Giants vs. U.S. Farmers also examines broader socio-economic consequences of the present patent system including links to loss of seed innovation, rising seed prices, reduction of independent scientific inquiry, and environmental issues.

Among the report’s discoveries are several alarming statistics:


  • As of January 2013, Monsanto, alleging seed patent infringement, had filed 144 lawsuits involving 410 farmers and 56 small farm businesses in at least 27 different states.
  • Today, three corporations control 53 percent of the global commercial seed market
  • Seed consolidation has led to market control resulting in dramatic increases in the price of seeds. From 1995-2011, the average cost to plant one acre of soybeans has risen 325 percent; for cotton prices spiked 516 percent and corn seed prices are up by 259 percent.
Additionally, Seed Giants vs. U.S. Farmers reports a precipitous drop in seed diversity that has been cultivated for millennia. As the report notes:  86% of corn, 88% of cotton, and 93% of soybeans farmed in the U.S. are now genetically-engineered (GE) varieties, making the option of farming non-GE crops increasingly difficult.

While agrichemical corporations also claim that their patented seeds are leading to environmental 

improvements, the report notes that upward of 26 percent more chemicals per acre were used on GE crops than on non-GE crops, according to USDA data.

At the launch of the report via teleconference today, experts from the Center for Food Safety and Save our Seeds were joined by Mr. Vernon Hugh Bowman, the 75-year-old Indiana soybean farmer who, next week, will come up against Monsanto in the Supreme Court Case.  When asked about the numerous comparisons being drawn between his case and the story of David and Goliath, Mr. Bowman responded, “I really don’t consider it as David and Goliath. I don’t think of it in those terms. I think of it in terms of right and wrong.”

In December of 2012, the Center for Food Safety and Save Our Seeds submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court on behalf of Mr. Bowman, which supports the right of farmers to re-plant saved seed. Arguments in the case are scheduled for February 19th.

Download the report here: http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Seed-Giants_final.pdf 
 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Break Up Too Big To Fail Banks


Washington Post Columnist George Will wants to break up the big banks?  (photo: AP)
Washington Post Columnist George Will wants to break up the big banks? (photo: AP)

Time to Break Up the Big Banks

By George F. Will, The Washington Post
09 February 13

George Will? Yes, today we bring you a story from George Will. It may never happen again, but today he is right. SMG/RSN
ith his chronically gravelly voice and relentlessly liberal agenda, Sherrod Brown seems to have stepped out of "Les Miserables," hoarse from singing revolutionary anthems at the barricades. Today, Ohio's senior senator has a project worthy of Victor Hugo - and of conservatives' support. He wants to break up the biggest banks.
He would advocate this even if he thought such banks would never have a crisis sufficient to threaten the financial system. He believes they are unhealthy for the financial system even when they are healthy. This is because there is a silent subsidy - an unfair competitive advantage relative to community banks - inherent in being deemed by the government, implicitly but clearly, too big to fail.
The Senate has unanimously passed a bill offered by Brown and Sen. David Vitter, a Louisiana Republican, directing the Government Accountability Office to study whether banks with more than $500?billion in assets acquire an "economic benefit" because of their dangerous scale. Is their debt priced favorably because, being TBTF, they are considered especially creditworthy? Brown believes the 20 largest banks pay less when borrowing - 50 to 80 basis points less - than community banks must pay.
In a sense, TBTF began under Ronald Reagan with the 1984 rescue of Continental Illinois, then the seventh-largest bank. In 2011, the four biggest U.S. banks (JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo) had 40 percent of all federally insured deposits. Today, the 5,500 community banks have 12 percent of the banking industry's assets. The 12 banks with $250?billion to $2.3?trillion in assets total 69?percent. The 20 largest banks' assets total 84.5?percent of the nation's gross domestic product.
Such banks have become bigger, relative to the economy, since the financial crisis began, and they are not the only economic entities to do so. Last year, the Economist reported that in the past 15 years the combined assets of the 50 largest U.S. companies had risen from around 70 percent of GDP to around 130 percent. And banks are not the only entities designated TBTF because they are "systemically important." General Motors supposedly required a bailout because a chain of parts suppliers might have failed with it.
But this just means that the pernicious practice of socializing losses while keeping profits private is not quarantined in the financial sector.
To see why TBTF also can mean TBTM - too big to manage - read "What's Inside America's Banks?" in the January/February issue of the Atlantic. Frank Partnoy and Jesse Eisinger argue that banks are not only bigger but also "more opaque than ever." And regulations partake of the opacity: The landmark Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, separating commercial banking from investment banking, was 37 pages long; the 848 pages of the 2010 Dodd-Frank law may eventually be supplemented by 30 times that many pages of rules. The "Volcker rule" banning banks from speculating with federally insured deposits is 298 pages long.
There is no convincing consensus about a correlation between a bank's size and supposed efficiencies of scale, and any efficiencies must be weighed against management inefficiencies associated with complexity and opacity. Thirty or so years ago, Brown says, seven of the world's 10 largest banks were Japanese, which was not an advantage sufficient to prevent Japan's descent into prolonged stagnation. And he says that when Standard Oil was broken up in 1911, the parts of it became, cumulatively, more valuable than the unified corporation had been.
Brown is fond of the maxim that "banking should be boring." He suspects that within the organizational sprawl of the biggest banks, there is too much excitement. Clever people with the high spirits and adrenaline addictions of fighter pilots continue to develop exotic financial instruments and transactions unknown even in other parts of the sprawl. He is undecided about whether the proper metric for identifying a bank as "too big" should be if its assets are a certain percentage of GDP - he suggests 2 percent to 4 percent - or simply the size of its assets (Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, has suggested $100 billion).
By breaking up the biggest banks, conservatives will not be putting asunder what the free market has joined together. Government nurtured these behemoths by weaving an improvident safety net and by practicing crony capitalism. Dismantling them would be a blow against government that has become too big not to fail. Aux barricades!

Friday, February 8, 2013

Obama's Suit Against AAA Junk Raters



Why the Government’s Lawsuit Against Standard & Poor’s Matters



Before we begin, let’s take a moment to ponder the absurdity of a system in which
a) for-profit corporations are allowed to call themselves “agencies”;
b) the government – that is, us – gives these for-profit companies given trillion-dollar influence over the financial system; and
c) they’re paid by the financial institutions whose work they’re rating – institutions who will take their business elsewhere if their products aren’t rated highly .
We gave these “agencies” all this power, along with a huge financial incentive to rate garbage as if it were roses. Then we, in the form of government regulators, looked the other way. And now we’re shocked – shocked! – that these for-profit companies were behaving … well, like for-profit companies.
There’s an extremely strong case for fraud in the government’s new lawsuit against Standard & Poor’s. The lawsuit says that Standard & Poor’s lied to the SEC in order to be certified as a credit rating agency, and that it lied to investors about the objectivity and thoroughness of its reviews. It also alleges that S&P knew that some of the mortgage-backed securities it rated “AAA” were, in fact, lousy investments, and did it to keep the bank’s business.
Body of Evidence
There’s a lot of compelling evidence in the lawsuit. Much of it is taken from the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Sen. Carl Levin, which we reviewed in detail in “The Rating Game” and “Poor Standards.”
One email exchange shows that an analyst was pressured by S&P to improve a rating for their “customer,” and when the analyst offered a somewhat higher score he was “I don’t think that will be enough to satisfy them.” When another analyst asked to look at some files for a review,which is the standard way of doing things, he was told that his request was “TOTALLY UNREASONABLE!”
S&P isn’t just ethically challenged. It’s also lousy at what it does. When it downgraded US debt in 2011, for example, the Treasury Department found a $2 trillion error in S&P’s calculations. S&P simply deleted the error from their report, then wrote up a completely different rational for their downgrade – one that relied on unmeasurable and intangible considerations. To the trained eye that suggests they’d already picked a number and they were now making up reasons to justify it.
A billion here or there is one thing. But a trillion? That’s just plain sloppy.  As long as that kind of workmanship is driving our financial system, this lawsuit is important. Here are five takeaways from this action:
1. Ratings agencies are very important – and very broken.
Ratings agencies are given enormous responsibility and enormous power. Some investments are required by law to invest in only “AAA” financial products. Others, like many pension funds, have made the decision to stick to these (supposedly) safe investments exclusively.
S&P and other ratings agencies took banks’ money in return for rating their mortgage-backed securities “AAA.” Many of those securities were a form of organized fraud that was perpetrated on investors. These securities were such an easy way to earn money that they drove the housing bubble: Banks didn’t want to know if a borrower was a bad risk, because they could just bundle the loan with a lot of other equally doubtful ones and sell them all off to unwary investors.
That’s a guaranteed way to make money – for a while – as long as the rating agencies were guaranteed to give these worthless investments a “AAA” rating.  And they were. That places the rating agencies at the heart of the financial crisis, the recession, and all the loss that resulted from those events.
That’s as important, and as broken, as it gets.
2. The naysayers are wrong. There’s a very strong case against S & P.
S & P’s attorney, Floyd Abrams, took to the court of public opinion to defend his client on CNBC. Abrams argued that everybody believed these mortgage-backed securities were good, including Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and the Federal Reserve.
But Standard & Poor’s sells a technical service. It isn’t paid all that money to repeat the conventional wisdom. And yet, within a year Standard & Poor’s was forced to downgrade many of these “AAA” investments to junk status. Apparently one of their key lines of defense will be: We weren’t crooked, just incompetent.
Besides, it isn’t true that “everybody” believed these investments were strong. Did Standard & Poor’s conduct any research into the work of the many economists who publicly said there was a housing bubble, as it continued to give these investments a “AAA” rating? I think we know the answer to that one.
The “incompetence” defense also fails to address the many emails and internal documents showing that sales, not accuracy, was the organization’s prime concern.
Abrams flirts with, but doesn’t embrace, the right-wing argument that this lawsuit is driven by revenge against S&P for downgrading the Federal debt. But that downgrade didn’t weaken the government’s ability to get cost-free loans, so there was no harm. And that was two years ago, which would make this a very delayed act of revenge.
Abrams and S&P are also trying to defend its actions on First Amendment grounds, claiming that they’re journalists.  Other agencies have tried this defense. But journalists aren’t “agencies.” They’re not given the authority to rate something, with billion-dollar implications. If these agencies were journalists, they’d have no product to sell.
A skeptical piece about the lawsuit from Peter J. Henning and Steven M. Davidoff in the New York Times also misses the mark. They write:
“The government will have to prove that ratings were in fact faulty, and published intentionally so as to deceive investors in the securities. In response, S.& P. could simply argue that the company was just as blinded by the financial crisis as anyone else, and that questionable e-mails are simply the work of lower-level employees who were not involved in the decision-making.”
This is Abrams’ “nobody saw it coming” argument. But that’s not what the government is alleging. The lawsuit shows that S & P claimed to have internal quality control standards, objectivity, and rigid methodology, that it made those claims in order to make money – and that it knew these claims weren’t true.
The issue isn’t whether S&P was as “blinded” as everyone else. The issue is whether it lied when it claimed to have better vision.
3. Political pressure works.
This lawsuit might never have been filed if it had not been for the hard work of Sen. Levin’s Subcommittee.
And it might not have been filed, or the government might have settled for a smaller fine, if there hadn’t been so much public demand for a tougher stand against those who brought down the economy.
Finally, there’s a case where the government wouldn’t settle for peanuts. That’s a pleasant surprise. It also shows that political pressure – whether from elected officials or the public at large – works.
4. Civil cases are important.
Republican Senator Charles Grassley, who has made some surprisingly good stands on banking issues, was dismissive because this is a civil suit and not a criminal prosecution. But this suit is already important, because it’s brought many important facts to the public’s attention. And it’s put the agencies on notice that there will be consequences for putting profits over performance.
And a civil suit seems like the right place to start. We’ve certainly hammered the Justice Department time and time again over its refusal to bring criminal cases against Wall Street bankers. That was, and is, outrageous.  But the burden of proof’s a little different here. What makes the lack of banker prosecutions so outrageous is the fact that the banks have paid hundreds of billions in fines for fraud — then committed the same kinds of fraud again.
Those settlements have created an enormous body of evidence regarding bankers’ crimes.  That’s not true in this case. Not does this lawsuit preclude criminal cases in the future. Hopefully they’ll be coming.
5. We need to dismantle the entire “credit ratings agency” system.
In the end, however, the real lesson is this: The entire system of “credit rating agencies” is broken. The Franken Amendment, which initially took away the most egregious salesmanship in the process, was downgraded to a requirement that the SEC conduct a study into rating agencies and make recommendations.
The SEC study found a lot of flaws, but the SEC has yet to take action. Instead the proposed set of regulations required by Dodd-Frank is being slow-walked to death.
That means nothing’s really changed: Credit rating agencies are still paid by the ultra-wealthy institutions they rate. Agency employees still have a revolving-door relationship with the banks, and so do the people who supervise the agencies.
Until the profit motive is removed from the agency process, the system will remain broken. In the meantime this lawsuit is at least a hopeful sign, and a step in the right direction.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Exxon Record Profits, Drivers Pay Record Prices


Exxon, Chevron Made $71 Billion Profit in 2012 

as Consumers Pay Record Gas Prices

By Rebecca Leber, ThinkProgress

02 February 13

hile 2012 might not be a banner year for Big Oil profits, it wasn't a bad one either. With just BP left to announce 2012 earnings, Big Oil earned well over $100 billion in profits last year, while the companies benefit from continued taxpayer subsidies. Average gas prices also hit a record high last year, showing how a drilling boom may help oil companies' profit margins, but not consumers' wallets.
ExxonMobil - now the most valuable company in the world, passing Apple -earned $45 billion profit in 2012, a 9 percent jump over 2011. Meanwhile, Chevron earned $26.2 billion for the year. In the final three months of the year, the companies earned $9.95 billion and $7.2 billion respectively.
Here are the highlights of how Exxon and Chevron spend their earnings:
ExxonMobil
Exxon received $600 million annual tax breaks. In 2011, Exxon paid just 13 percent in taxes. The company paid no taxes to the U.S. federal government in 2009, despite 45.2 billion record profits. It paid $15 billion in taxes, but none in federal income tax.
Exxon's oil production was down 6 percent from 2011.
In fourth quarter, Exxon bought back $5.3 billion of its stock, which enriches the largest shareholders and executives of the company.
Exxon's federal campaign contributions totaled $2.77 million for the 2012 cycle, sending 89 percent to Republicans.
The company spent $12.97 million lobbying in 2012 to protect low tax rates and block pollution controls and safeguards for public health.
Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson received $24.7 million total compensation.
Exxon is moving ahead with a project to develop the tar sands in Canada.
Chevron:
In October, Chevron made the single-largest corporate donation in history. Chevron dropped $2.5 million with the Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC toelect House Republicans.
The bulk of Chevron's federal contributions came from the super PAC donation, for a total of $3.87 million for the 2012 cycle. 85 percent went to Republicans.
Chevron spent $9.55 million lobbying Congress in 2012, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
Chevron paid 19 percent U.S. taxes last year (half of the top corporate tax rate of 35 percent), and received an estimated $700 million in annual tax breaks last year.
Chevron was fined $1 million for a refinery fire that sent 15,000 Richmond, California residents to the hospital. Though the company faces $10 million in medical expenses, Chevron earns it back in a couple of hours.
With Royal Dutch Shell and ConocoPhillips reporting $35 billion in combined profit in 2012, BP is the last company left to announce its profits for the year.