Sunday, February 22, 2015

OBOF TYMHM & MORE Vol 15 - No 3


OPINOINS  BASED  ON FACTS (OBOF)

&

THINGS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED (TYMHM)

YEAR ONE

YEAR TWO

YEAR THREE

YEAR FOUR

YEAR FIVE

 

OBOF YEAR FIVE INDEX
 
OBOF TYMHM
Jan. 07, 2015
OBOF TYMHM Vol 15 - No 1
Jan. 19, 2015
OBOF TYMHM Vol 15 - No 2
Feb.  03, 2015
OBOF TYMHM Vol 15 - No 3
Feb.  23, 2015

 

Agenda


 


1.  Hello from Floyd.


2.  Comments from readers.


3.  Resources I use.


4.  A note from Michelle Obama.


5.  From Senator Bernie Sanders.


6.  A Corporate Apostate.


7.  A Bad, Sad Story.


 


 


HELLO  FROM FLOYD


 


Hello to all of you and especially those of you who have been checking in every week to see if I have any news for you.  I am so grateful to all of you great Americans out there.  There is a great deal to provide for you and it is entirely too much for one posting.  So, maybe, I have a head start already for the next posting.


 


Physically, I am not improving much, or actually not at all.  However, I have made myself to get doing things that I know need to be done and one is to get a posting out to all of you.


 


As I started I found some e-mails from a very dear friend Dr. Allen Smith.  I had looked at them before, but I have not been able to respond to him or even realize what he has written me.


 


Many of you know that I have been blessed with the friendship of Dr. Smith and I have the greatest respect for him.  He has written a large number of essays that are available to all of us in two forms.  First, and this is terrific, there are about 30 plus essays entitled "Think Your Way To A Better Life."  He provides specific thoughts that you can relate to and I defi any one to read these and not find themselves in a better frame of mind and the beginning of a better life.


 


The second is a new book of essays that are entitled "Coping With Life's Problems, One Day At A Time."  The book is available Kindle $2.99.  I do urge you to get the book as it is well worth the price many times over.  When you get the book and read it, I know that Dr. Smith would greatly appreciate it if you would write a review for Amazon.


 


COMMENTS FROM READERS


 


I seldom receive any comments from readers.  Thanks to a faithful reader I may know why.  Hal has followed my posting all of the five years that I have been doing this.  Recently, Hal was able to write a comment and he told me what he finally found the way to write comments on the postings.  He said that he had tried and tried for a long time, but finally found that by using his Google account he was able to write comments easily. 


 


Maybe, some of you have wanted to make a comment from time to time, but it was to hard to get link that would permit you to make the comment.  If that is the case I urge you to try using your Google account and see if works better for you.  I thank Hal for providing me this information.


 


The resources I use:


 


I receiver between 50 and 150 E-mails every day.  They provide me a ton of information.  I sift through them, reading the headlines and introductory commentary.  From that, I look a little deeper into those that had caught my eye. 


 


Out of all that, I actually use about one out of every 40 or 60 to transfer to my Blog and adjust the format so that it fits the limitations of the Blog.  I do not change any of the content of the article.  Sometimes I write a comment in the middle of an article, but when I do, it is plainly marked so that you know it is my comment, not the article.   


 


The following is a SMALL sample of the material I go through to put together a posting.  Just thought you might like to see some of the resources I use.  There is nothing here that you can't find yourself, but, as I have said before, I do this because I have the time and I think that maybe you don't have the time to find this information.  Again, the computer has a mind of it's own and has pretty well messed up the following resource listing. 


 
 



 
 



Will Europe Obediently Follow the US into a Catastrophic War?
Michael Payne, Op-Ed
The EU has the opportunity to avoid taking the same steps the U.S. did when it comes to war. They have the opportunity to move in a positive direction and reject the dictates of Washington. But will they?

Read the full story...
 
 

War: Where 69¢ of Each of Your Tax Dollars Goes

Dave Lindorff, Op-Ed
A high majority of U.S. tax dollars are not going to schools, universities, parks, roads, science, environment, or health, but to war. In order to shy away from this type of militaristic government, we need a peace president and congress.

Read the full story...

 

Ice Cream Giant Announces Plans to Stop Using Milk From Cows Treated With Artificial Hormone rBST

Cole Mellino, News Report
Breyers ice cream has announced that they will not longer use milk from cows treated with the controversial, artificial growth hormone called rBST. Health issues were found in both cows and humans who were exposed to the hormone.

Read the full story...
 

 
 

8 Million Metric Tons of Plastic Dumped Into World’s Oceans Each Year

Anastasia Pantsios, News Report
China, followed by Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam, are the biggest contributors to the mass of plastic in our oceans. Waste management techniques must improve, or the amount of plastic could reach 155 metric tons by 2025.

Read the full story...
 

Help NationofChange End Dark Money

NationofChange Video
End Dark Money is a new campaign designed to expose the truth to millions of Americans via the internet. LAST DAY to raise almost $2000 more to create a documentary-style film that outlines the shocking realities of corporate money in the American political system. Our exposé film will be promoted and advertised across all major social media websites.

Read the full story...
 

Tired of Money Buying Politicians? So Are We. Here’s How to End It.

Adam Smith, Op-Ed
Our democracy has been cheapened by a handful of wealthy Americans who pick and choose who runs for office while having their hands in the policy process. It's time we fight back as people from across the country are joining forces to put an end to dark money.

Read the full story...
 

Good Samaritans Bought Homeless Couple 3 Nights Out of the Cold, but the Hotel Kicked Them Out

Bryce Covert, News Investigation
After two good samaritans bought a homeless couple a hotel room in Columbus, Ohio to get them out of the frigid winter temperatures, they were eventually kicked out of the hotel for lack of ID. The Wyndham Hotel Group "missed the opportunity to help someone.”

Read the full story...
 
 

Leader of the Biggest Social Movement the Media Won’t Talk About

Carl Gibson, News Investigation
Reverend Dr. William Barber, president of the North Carolina NAACP and voice of the Forward Together movement is "challenging the legislators and governor to be true to the constitution and true moral values." So where's the media coverage?

Read the full story...
 
 

In Richmond, We Would Not Let Democracy Be Bought

Gayle McLaughlin , Op-Ed
"Imagine if elections were not allowed to be bought and public financing were the law of the land?" That's what the community of Richmond is trying to do by threatening Chevron. It's time we stop those who deluge our local democracy with its money.

Read the full story...
 
 

Nestlé to Dump Artificial Colors and Flavors in US Candy, Something It Did in Europe Years Ago

Anastasia Pantsios, News Report
Nestlé announced it would remove all artificial coloring and flavoring from its candy products sold in the U.S. Funny how “the world’s leading nutrition, health and wellness company” is just starting to do in the U.S. what its already done in Europe.

Read the full story...
 

We Need a Pro-Worker, Anti-Austerity Agenda

Bernie Sanders, Op-Ed
In order to help save the middle class of this country, we need a pro-worker agenda, not an austerity agenda. It's time we demand corporate America start investing in the U.S. rather than in China.

Read the full story...
 
 

HSBC’s Clients Linked to Dictators, Arms Dealers and Tax Dodgers

Gerard Ryle, News Investigation
Recently released documents revealed that HSBC has profited from doing business with arms dealers. This rare glimpse into the super-secret Swiss banking system is one the public has never seen before—a spectrum of illegal behavior.

Read the full story...
 
 

First Nationwide Oil Worker Strike in Decades Grows Even Bigger

Ari Phillips, News Report
The United Steelworkers Union's president backed the strike in saying, the "oil industry is long overdue in addressing many of the issues that directly impact workers’ health and safety." How will the industry respond?

Read the full story...
 
 

Has President Obama Once Again Sold Us Down the River?

Michael T. Hertz, Op-Ed
What does all this mean? It just means that (as I said before) “ . . . the people who control him and the government want war.” It's all about the money, and nothing else.

Read the full story...
 
 

First Gray Wolf Spotted at Grand Canyon in 70 Years Shot Dead by Hunter

Ari Phillips, News Report
Although it is sad news that the first gray wolf to be seen near the Grand Canyon in 70 years was shot by a hunter mistaking it for a coyote, the fact that the wolf ventured over 700 miles into new territory is further evidence that gray wolf populations are coming back from the brink of extinction.

Read the full story...
 

Jon Stewart on Comedy in Times of Tragedy

 

Bernie Sanders: Keeping US from Becoming Oligarchy Is 'A Struggle We Must Win'

 

Why Do So Many Young Americans Misunderstand Vaccination?

 

New Report on Lynching Reveals America's Sinister Legacy of 'Racial Terrorism'

 

Money Talks: Must-Read Stories About Money and Politics

 

The Koch Brothers Raised $249 Million at Their Latest Donor Summit

 

How US Companies Stash Billions Overseas — Tax-Free

 

Will the United States End Up Like Greece? The Risks of the Trans-Pacific Partnership

 

~~~
 



From Michelle Obama


 


Hey there --

I just wanted to send along a note to let you know how proud I am of you and how grateful Barack and I are to have you on our team.

Because of the work we've done together, our economy has been creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a month, and because of the health reform we all fought for, 10 million Americans now have quality, affordable health coverage.

All of this happened because you stood by Barack and great Democrats across the country -- and I cannot thank you enough.

But we know that we have so much work left to do, from making it easier for young people to go to college, to fixing our broken immigration system, to making child care more affordable.  So for the next two years, we need to keep on pushing and innovating and moving forward until we see the changes we want.

I know we can do it, and I know that your support is at the heart of everything we've done, and everything we'll continue to do going forward.

So thank you.  Thank you for everything.

Michelle

P.S. -- If you're fired up about Barack's agenda for this year and about continuing to make progress together, chip in $10 or whatever you can to help us reach those goals:
~~~

From Senator Bernie Sanders


 

 

 

 

 

 
Sen. Bernie Sanders this week issued a new report that provides a fresh glimpse into the far-reaching corporate tax avoidance strategies of large and profitable companies represented by the Business Roundtable, including what he calls the "legalized tax fraud” of sheltering profits in offshore tax havens.
 
The report shows for the first time how more than half of the companies represented by the Business Roundtable are collectively holding more than $1 trillion in profits in offshore tax haven countries where money is not subject to U.S. taxes. A number of huge corporations – including General Electric, Boeing, Duke Energy and Verizon – not only have paid nothing in federal income tax in recent years, they received refunds from the IRS.

“Instead of sheltering profits in the Cayman Islands and other offshore tax havens, the largest corporations in this country must pay their fair share of taxes so that our country has the revenue we need to rebuild America and reduce the deficit,” Bernie said. "At a time when corporations are making record-breaking profits, while the middle class is disappearing and senior poverty is on the rise, the last thing we should be doing is giving huge tax breaks to profitable corporations that don’t need it.”  Bernie will soon reintroduce legislation to crack down on corporate tax avoidance by making sure that profits shifted to offshore tax haven subsidiaries are taxed at the top U.S. corporate tax rate.
 

~~~
A Corporate Apostate


 


Authors: Jim Hightower


Published: February 14, 2015


 


Business schools preach a strict, anti-social doctrine of corporate management that comes down to this: CEOs must be idiots.

By that I mean the original Greek word idiotes, which applied to people who care only about themselves and the prosperity of their immediate family.  They’re the ones who reject any responsibility to the larger society, civic affairs, and the common good.

That selfish ethos is what prevails in today’s corporate suites, where it’s claimed that the only responsibility of executives is to maximize profits for the “family” — that is, for themselves and their major shareholders.

If they have to stiff workers, sidestep environmental rules, and shaft consumers to do it, well, that’s the lot of idiotes.

But now comes an apostate to this doctrinal idiocy.

Mark Bertolini, corporate chief of the health insurance giant Aetna, says CEOs should raise the minimum wage their companies pay to a level approaching minimal fairness.  Rather than just calling for it, though, he actually did it.  He lifted Aetna’s lowest wage to $16 an hour, plus improved health benefits.

Then Bertolini really gave up the game: He publicly revealed that these increases aren’t so financially painful after all.

The total cost to Aetna will be about $26 million a year. That’s nothing for a company with annual revenues of $62 billion.

The only pain Bertolini might feel is loneliness when he enters the CEO Club and sees other insurance chieftains turn their backs and shun him over his leadership on the moral matter of shared prosperity.

Indeed, the CEOs of Humana, Anthem, and other insurers say “no” to raises for their employees, sniffing that they pay “competitive wages” — which is just a dishonest way of saying “low wages.”

Whether those idiotes like it or not, Aetna just lifted the national standard for competitive wages.

Moreover, the insurer has thrown open the doors of the executive suites to an honest public conversation about the morality of the suits inside jacking up their compensation while holding down everyone else’s pay.

~~~

A BAD, SAD STORY

 

 

From Floyd:

 

I picked up the following some time ago and I don't remember where I got it.  Obviously, it was from someone who knew me as they started off with my name.  Anyway, the time element referred to has pasted, but I feel we all should know about this.

 

 

 

Hi Floyd–

He was his mother’s favorite.  An exceptional student, Mohamedou Slahi even won a scholarship to study in Germany where he worked as an engineer, sending money home to support his mom and 11 siblings.

On Nov 20th, 2001, after he had returned home to Mauritania, Slahi voluntarily drove himself to a local police station for questioning.  That was the last time his
family saw him.

Slahi’s family didn’t even know he had been picked up by the U.S. and was being held in Guantánamo till his brother read the news in a German newspaper a year later. Meanwhile, they delivered clothes and food for him to the local prison, thinking he was still there.  His mother died in 2013, never setting eyes on him again.

Now, over 13 years later, Slahi continues to languish in Guantánamo
.  An innocent man, he is being held without charge or evidence – and has survived horrendous torture by our government.

In just 3 days, one of Slahi’s lawyers will personally deliver our message to Slahi in Guantánamo: that we’ve heard his story, and we’re clamoring for his release.

Over 35,000 ACLU supporters have already signed our petition to the Department of Defense to free Slahi – can you help us get to 50,000 signatures by Sunday?

Slahi did something brave and extraordinary.  Learning English in prison, his fourth language, he handwrote 466 gripping pages of his story.

"Guantánamo Diary" is the first book written by a still imprisoned detainee, and is already on the New York Times Best Seller list.  In it, Slahi details how he endured savage beatings, sleep deprivation, death threats, and sexual humiliation.

Yet the Slahi we come to know from his memoir is an optimist.  Empathetic even towards his guards, he’s kept his sense of humor despite his ordeal.  And most importantly, he’s never lost sight of his own humanity – or ours.


Slahi has no idea that so many Americans have heard his story and stand with him, demanding his release. Together we can let him know that we support him.

We have 3 more days before his lawyers’ visit – sign today to let Slahi know that you support his petition for release.

There's very little standing between Slahi and his freedom.  All it would take is for the Department of Defense to stop contesting his federal court petition for release.

One of his lawyers, Nancy Hollander, noted “It’s not that they haven’t found the evidence against him – there isn’t any evidence against him.  It’s just tragic, he needs to go home.”

Together, we can get him home.

Thank you for taking action,
Anthony for the ACLU Action team

 

~~~

If the good Lord is willing and the creek don't rise, I'll talk with you again as soon as I am able.  Hopefully, that will be next week.

 

God Bless You All

&

God Bless the United States of America

Floyd

 

 

                                                                  

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

OBOF TYMHM & MORE Vol 15 - No 01


 

OPINOINS  BASED  ON FACTS (OBOF)

&

THINGS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED (TYMHM)

YEAR ONE

YEAR TWO

YEAR THREE

YEAR FOUR

YEAR FIVE

 

OBOF YEAR FIVE INDEX
 
OBOF TYMHM
Jan. 07, 2015
OBOF TYMHM Vol 15 - No 1
Jan. 19, 2015

 

 

Agenda

 

1.  Hello: from Floyd.

2.  Day One - - GOP fires shot at SS.

3.  2015 is the year to build - together/

4.  Obama's budget and State of the Union

                   address Tuesday 1-20-15.

 

 

HELLO

from

FLOYD

 

Well, I guess this show you how out of it I have been.  I have just discovered, as I posted OBOF 15--02 that I never posted 15--01.  I wrote it back on Jan 19, but that is as far as I got. 

 

It is important, particularly the first article.  I am going to post it now - Feb. 03, 15.

 

Hi, to all who are still with me.  I know that it is hard for you to stick with a blog that isn't on a regular schedule, but I am grateful to those who have stayed the course.  To those that haven't, if you happen to look at this one, let me say that I am going to try harder to provide you information that I think you need to know. 

 

Now, I guess that sounds opinionated and I guess it is, because I am deciding for you what I think you need to know, which, I guess, is will almost always be slanted toward what I think is so important to all of us.  If any of you disagree with me, all you have to do is give me a shot at the end of any posting.

 

From a personal standpoint, I have been having a real rough time every since Thanksgiving.  I think I am starting to improve and I will try to be a little more reliable. 

~~~

 

New GOP Congress Fires Shot At Social Security

 On Day One

 

 




















ith a little-noticed proposal, Republicans took aim at Social Security on the very first day of the 114th Congress.

 

The incoming GOP majority approved late Tuesday a new rule that experts say could provoke an unprecedented crisis that conservatives could use as leverage in upcoming debates over entitlement reform.

 

The largely overlooked change puts a new restriction on the routine transfer of tax revenues between the traditional Social Security retirement trust fund and the Social Security disability program.  The transfers, known as reallocation, had historically been routine; the liberal Center for Budget and Policy Priorities said Tuesday that they had been made 11 times.  The CBPP added that the disability insurance program "isn't broken," but the program has been strained by demographic trends that the reallocations are intended to address.

 

The House GOP's rule change would still allow for a reallocation from the retirement fund to shore up the disability fund -- but only if an accompanying proposal "improves the overall financial health of the combined Social Security Trust Funds," per the rule, expected to be passed on Tuesday.  While that language is vague, experts say it would likely mean any reallocation would have to be balanced by new revenues or benefit cuts.

 

House Democrats are sounding the alarm.  In a memo circulated to their allies Tuesday, Democratic staffers said that that would mean "either new revenues or benefit cuts for current or future beneficiaries."  New revenues are highly unlikely to be approved by the deeply tax-averse Republican-led Congress, leaving benefit cuts as the obvious alternative.

 

The Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees estimated last year that the disability insurance program would run short of money to pay all benefits some time in late 2016.  Without a new reallocation, disability insurance beneficiaries could face up to 20 percent cuts in their Social Security payments in late 2016 -- a chit that would be of use to Republicans pushing for conservative entitlement reforms.

 

"The rule change would prohibit a simple reallocation!  It will require more significant and complex changes to Social Security," Social Security Works, an advocacy group, said in a statement Tuesday.  "In other words, the Republican rule will allow Social Security to be held hostage."

 

Policy wonks who follow Social Security saw the GOP rule change as a play for leverage.

 

"Everybody's been talking about entitlement reform. Mr. Boehner and President Obama were pretty close to coming up with some kind of grand bargain, which ultimately fell apart," Tom Hungerford, senior economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute, told TPM.  "Maybe this could be used as a hostage to try to get back to something like that."

 

For their part, congressional Republicans were fairly transparent about their thinking.  Rep. Tom Reed (R-NY), who has been outspoken on the disability program, co-sponsored the rule amendment.  The disability program has been a favored target for the GOP; members were warning last month that the program could be vulnerable to fraud.

 

"My intention by doing this is to force us to look for a long term solution for SSDI rather than raiding Social Security to bail out a failing federal program," Reed said in a statement.  "Retired taxpayers who have paid into the system for years deserve no less.”

 

Liberal analysts counter, however, that the retirement fund, which pays out $672.1 billion in benefits per year versus $140.1 billion for the disability fund, is more than healthy enough to allow for a reallocation, as has historically been done.  CBPP's Kathy Ruffing wrote that, if a transfer was made before the 2016 deadline, both funds would be solvent until 2033.

 

From Floyd:

This doesn't make any kind of sense at all, as far as I can see.  I want to look more into the claims that are being made here.  I have been following the status of SS for the past six years along with Dr. Allen W. Smith, who has spent the past 14 years of his life and about $50,000 of his own money trying to bring the truth about SS to the public.  He has written 4 books on the subject.  I put my trust in him.    

 

The Republican angle in preventing that move then seems obvious.

 

"By barring the House from approving a 'clean' reallocation in 2016, the rule will strengthen the hand of lawmakers who seek to attach harsh conditions (such as sharp cuts in eligibility or benefit amounts) to such a measure," Ruffing wrote.

 

About The Author 


Dylan Scott is a reporter for Talking Points Memo.  He previously reported for Governing magazine in Washington, D.C., and the Las Vegas Sun.  His work has been recognized with a 2013 American Society of Business Publication Editors award for Best Feature Series and a 2010 Associated Press Society of Ohio award for Best Investigative

~~~

 

 

 

2015: The Year We Build Power Together

 

 

 

Published: January 3, 2015


 | Popular Resistance | Op-Ed

 

 

The major task for the social movement: 2015 the Year We Build Power Together.

 

In 2014 we saw tremendous growth of the movement across numerous fronts of struggle – worker rights and the wages, racism and policingclimate, the environment and extreme energy extraction, building a new economy and so much more.  We also saw how uniting and working in solidarity is essential for success.

 

“Building power together” means working together as a movement of movements to build on the progress of 2014 when people created a larger and bolder movement.  We build together because our issues are all connected and unified power is when we are strongest.

 

We have an immediate challenge in 2015 that threatens our progress. Obama and Congress are pushing to finalize the Trans-Pacific Partnership.  If we don’t stop it, our struggles will be set back and social, economic and environmental justice will be more difficult to achieve.  But we can defeat the corporate powers that exploit our communities if we unite and work together and doing so will strengthen us greatly.

 

Our Struggles Are Connected

 

The "#Black Lives Matter" movement, while focused on the urgent issues of police abuse and institutional racism, is also recognizing that economic injustice in black communities is pervasive.  The wealth divide between the top 1% and the rest of us is stark enough; but the wealth divide between African Americans and Caucasian Americans is extreme and growing rather than shrinking.  Whites have much greater wealth, with white median wealth at $142,000 to blacks at $13,700.
Black unemployment has been double white unemployment for 50 years, throughout that time black unemployment rates have averaged recession levels, 11.5%.  Also, during that time whites Americans have earned $20,000 per year more than blacks.  Poverty has been rising in the black community for 15 years.  Police are needed to keep unfairly treated communities in check.

 

When the bottom drops out of the economy or when wages are lowered, it is communities of color who feel the impact first and deepest.  That is why issues like global trade rigged for big business interests will most adversely impact these poorer communities. Global trade seems distant but it has impacts at the local level.


 

Communities will experience lost jobs and lower income, an expanding wealth and income divide.  They will find themselves competing with people in Vietnam where the average annual income is under $2,000 per year or Peru where it is $6,000.  How can the campaign for a living wage succeed with this reality? How can already poor and impoverished communities lift themselves up when big business seeks cheap labor abroad?

 

In St.Louis some are recognizing the need for a new economy where focus is put on black-owned businesses, cooperative businesses owned by workers and putting in place a solidarity economy.  However, trade pacts will make it more difficult for local governments to put in place a new economy. Transnational corporations will be required to be given greater access to local markets.  Practices like purchasing local or buying green will be seen as trade barriers and will be prevented.

 

The same is true for the climate justice movement. It will become impossible to ban extreme energy extraction in our communities because this will be a threat to corporate profits.  The global corporate trade agreements are pushing for more fracked gas and off-shore oil.  Europeans want the US to be exporting these climate-destroying fuels to lower their energy costs and diversify from their reliance on Russia to isolate it further.

We Can Win the First Big Challenge of 2015

 

President Obama and the Republican leadership in Congress have made it clear – their top priority is passing fast track trade promotion authority early this year.  Fast track is essentially Congress giving up its constitutional authority under the Commerce Clause “to regulate commerce with foreign nations.”  It gives almost all of their power to the president.  Obama will be able to sign trade agreements without Congress ever seeing them, and then Congress has to quickly vote – up or down, with no amendments – on these agreements that contain thousands of pages of complex legal language.  This is the only way that horrendous agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP, known as TAFTA) can become law.

 

When you see the first sentence above – Obama and the Republican leadership making this a priority – do not assume we cannot stop them, we can.  There is widespread opposition in both the Senate and House against fast track.  Democrats realize that these trade agreements will hurt their base.

 

And, Republicans, like Democrats, oppose fast track for several reasons.  First, they know that it undermines their constitutional responsibility to regulate trade.  Second, these agreements undermine the sovereignty of the US government as well as state and local governments by giving corporations veto power over laws they pass.  Third, they recognize that these trade agreements do not confront a critical issue – how countries manipulate the value of currency.  Finally, Republicans do not trust President Obama with that much power, while they give up their power.  More Democrats are agreeing with Republicans even on this issue as he continues to sell-out to corporations on issues like banking regulation and student debt.

 

The Congress is right not to trust the President on corporate trade agreements. Leaks have shown that the Obama administration is extremely pro-corporate when it comes to their proposals.  Documents show the main reason why countries have been unable to reach agreement is because the administration’s positions are distant from those of every other country who do not support such broad corporate power. Further, the leaks also show that enforcement of environmental protections is even weaker in these agreements than they were in Bush-era trade agreements.

 

All of the big Washington business lobbies are ready to push corporate trade.  They see billions in profits as well as a swelling of their power. They know they will become more powerful than governments if these trade agreements become law.

 

The fight over fast track is shaping up to be a fight between people power and transnational corporate power.  This is going to be a huge battle.  Opposition in Congress cracks open a door for the people, but if we do not force it open, corporate lobbyists will easily close it.

 

Stopping fast track will require all of us.  There is a path to victory but it will require the people – from all fronts of struggle – to mobilize, show our unity and stop the corporations.  You can join that fight by taking the solidarity, action pledge and sharing it.

 

We should all engage in this fight because the stakes are high. Every issue people are working on will be hurt by these agreements.  But, on the other side, if the people mobilize and stop fast track, corporate trade will be dead for the remainder of President Obama’s term in office.

 

If the people defeat transnational corporate power in the first big confrontation of 2015, we will be on our way to making 2015 the year we built our power together.  We will be freed to create the world in which we want to live and one that increases the chances of a livable future.

 

Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers are co-directors of Popular Resistance.  This article is based on their weekly newsletter.

~~~

Obama’s budget proposal will take aim at the wealthy

 


 January 17 at 11:16 PM

 

President Obama plans to propose raising $320 billion over the next 10 years in new taxes targeting wealthy individuals and big financial institutions to pay for new programs designed to help lower- and middle-income families, senior administration officials said Saturday.

 

In his State of the Union address Tuesday night, Obama will propose raising the capital gains and dividend tax rates to 28 percent for high earners; imposing a fee on the liabilities of about 100 big financial institutions; and greatly broadening the amount of inherited money subject to taxes.

 

Obama will also seek to boost private retirement savings by requiring employers without 401(k) plans to make it easier for full-time and part-time workers to save in individual retirement accounts, which could assist as many as 30 million people.  The administration would provide small employers tax credits to cover costs.

 

Senior administration officials said that the package would highlight the president’s desire to boost taxes on the nation’s wealthy households and help lower- and middle-class families. New tax credits would help those in need of child care and households with two earners, they said, while other proposals — such as covering community college tuition — would help students.

 

The moves would “eliminate the biggest tax loopholes and use the savings to let the middle class get ahead,” said one of the senior administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity during a conference call with reporters to describe the plan before the president’s speech.  This person also said that 99 percent of the impact of the tax increases would fall on the top 1 percent of earners.

 

The ambitious — and controversial — proposals demonstrate the White House’s increasing confidence about the trajectory of the U.S. economy.  For the past year and a half, it has debated how much it could trumpet the recovery when so many Americans have not felt any change in their own economic outlook.

 

But the plan drew immediate fire from Republican — and could face criticism from some Democrats — who have in the past increased the amount of money exempt from inheritance taxes they branded “death taxes.”  Most Republicans have long opposed increases in capital gains rates, and many favor eliminating the tax altogether.

 

“This is not a serious proposal,” wrote Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) in an e-mail late Saturday.  “We lift families up and grow the economy with a simpler, flatter tax code, not big tax increases to pay for more Washington spending.”

 

“Slapping American small businesses, savers, and investors with more tax hikes only negates the benefits of the tax policies that have been successful in helping to expand the economy, promote savings, and create jobs,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) said in a statement Saturday night.

 

“The president needs to stop listening to his liberal allies who want to raise taxes at all costs and start working with Congress to fix our broken tax code.”

The administration tried to head off some of that attack by asserting that elements of the package resembled proposals endorsed by Republicans.  Officials also said that the capital gains tax rate was 28 percent during President Ronald Reagan’s terms in office. The Obama administration would also seek to limit the impact of the tax increases by saying the higher capital gains and dividend rates would apply only to couples earning more than $500,000 a year.

 

Officials said that the relatively low capital gains tax rate with a top rate of 20 percent has enabled the 400 highest-earning taxpayers — with $139 million or more of income — to pay an average rate of 17 percent when the top income tax rate is 35 percent.

 

The proposal to impose a 7 basis point fee on financial institutions with assets of more than $50 billion will also run smack into opposition from big banks and insurance companies. The administration compared the fee with a proposal by former House Ways and Means Committee chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) for an excise tax on large financial institutions. And last week, the House Budget Committee’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), proposed a 0.1 percent surcharge on financial market transactions.

 

One of the senior administration officials Saturday said that the goal of the proposed fee from the White House was to discourage big financial institutions from excessive borrowing. He said that despite banking revisions after the 2008-2009 financial crisis, highly leveraged financial institutions “still pose risks to the broader economy,” adding that “this fee is designed to make that activity more costly.”

 

The economic recovery has freed the president to push for more ambitious domestic policies, many designed to help those in the poor and middle class who are still lagging behind.  In the past week alone, Obama has announced new proposals on paid sick leave, free community college tuition and expanded broadband access.  And while he might have trouble pushing those through the GOP-controlled Congress, Obama could still end up defining key issues for the elections in 2016.

 

“The battle for the next American agenda is already on,” said Donald A. Baer, chief executive of Burson-Marsteller and formerly chief speechwriter for President Bill Clinton.  “There’s this effort to define a new growth and share agenda — growth but not only growth alone, and sharing the growth but not just sharing the wealth.”  He said Obama’s college and broadband access are examples of proposals that could add to growth and give poor and middle-class people the tools to increase their share in it.

 

But Obama has to balance his rhetoric — between optimism and caution — by talking up the strong recovery while acknowledging that wage growth remains weak.

 

“There’s always been a tension between things are in fact getting better and people are not feeling great,” said Wade Randlett, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur and major Democratic donor.  “One is economic fact, and the other is polling, which always catches up over time.”

 

Now the president is so comfortable with the idea of talking up the economic recovery that his advisers have branded it — “America’s resurgence” — and made it a regular talking point in Obama’s stump speeches and weekly radio addresses.  And it is likely to be a centerpiece of the State of the Union address.

 

In bragging about performance, Obama administration officials point to factors including the best streak of job growth since the 1990s, a recovery in the housing market and healthier balance sheets for households, companies and the federal government. And they have contrasted that performance with the anemic economies of Europe and Japan as evidence that the United States has regained its global economic dominance in what Obama has called a “breakthrough year for America.”

 

But wages have been a stubborn reminder of the recovery’s shortcomings.  In November, average hourly private-sector nominal wages inched up 6 cents, but in December, they fell 5 cents.  After adjusting for inflation, wages for the entire year crawled up 0.7 percent, a modest amount in an economic recovery.  It is a point that has been featured prominently in comments by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who has emerged as a leader of the Democratic Party’s liberal wing.

 

“I’m feeling better about the economy, but I don’t think we have in place a set of policies that will assure that this recovery will be either sustained or fully inclusive,” said Lawrence H. Summers, a former top adviser to Obama, former Treasury secretary and now a professor at Harvard University.  “That’s why I think more needs to be done.”

 

The White House typically aims its messages directly at the middle class, but, partly in response to Warren, Obama administration officials are more comfortable talking about how some of its proposals benefit poorer Americans.

 

“We’re on offense on minimum wage and the environment,”

Randlett said.  “That’s the kind you only do when you have the leash of good economics.”

 

Steven Mufson covers the White House.  Since joining The Post, he has covered economics, China, foreign policy and energy.

 

Juliet Eilperin is a White House correspondent for The Washington Post, covering domestic and foreign policy as well as the culture of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.  She is the author of two books—one on sharks, and another on Congress, not to be confused with each other—and has worked for the Post since 1998.

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If the good Lord is willing and the creek don't rise, I'll talk with you again, hopefully, next week.  I am trying to get back to some schedule, but I have been having a pretty rough time health wise. 

God Bless You All

&

God Bless the United States of America.

Floyd