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Crossing Arizona

With Americans on all sides of the issue up in arms and Congress embroiled in a knock-down-drag-out policy battle over how to move forward, CROSSING ARIZONA ...
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FUKUSHIMA INFORMATIONS Freewares Veille Techno et Informatique "Autrement" E-Learning-Inclusivo (Mashup) Logiciel Gratuit Licence Gratuite Chronique des Droits de l'Homme
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Open Letter to #Nestlé by @yasminemotarjem #FoodSafety #Suisse #Ethic

Open Letter by 
Yasmine Motarjemi , Former Corporate Food Safety Manager (2000-2010), Assistant Vice President
to
Mr Peter Brabeck-Letmathe
Chairman of the Board of Directors
Nestlé, S.A
55 Avenue Nestlé
CH-1800 Vevey

"Nyon, 4th Septembre 2010
Dear Mr Chairman,
I was your Corporate Food Safety Manager from 2000 to 2010. I write to you today for two reasons: 
first, to share with you my concerns regarding a culture and management practices in Nestlé, which 
undermine food safety; and, second, to inform you of my personal experiences while attempting to
improve the situation.
I long nouris

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Open Letter by 
Yasmine Motarjemi , Former Corporate Food Safety Manager (2000-2010), Assistant Vice President
to
Mr Peter Brabeck-Letmathe
Chairman of the Board of Directors
Nestlé, S.A
55 Avenue Nestlé
CH-1800 Vevey

"Nyon, 4th Septembre 2010
Dear Mr Chairman,
I was your Corporate Food Safety Manager from 2000 to 2010. I write to you today for two reasons: 
first, to share with you my concerns regarding a culture and management practices in Nestlé, which 
undermine food safety; and, second, to inform you of my personal experiences while attempting to
improve the situation.
I long nourished the hope that you would be interested in meeting the person responsible for dealing 
with everyday problems of the Company in an area as important as the safety of Nestlé products. 
However, to my regret we have never had the opportunity to meet and discuss the food safety 
situation in the Company. As both corporate-level management of food safety and my professional 
status deteriorated to the point of being unacceptable, I was compelled to report my concerns to 
Management with the expectation that a fair evaluation of the situation would be undertaken. In 
the event, my efforts were in vain. 
Mr Chairman, I always found listening to your speeches a source of motivation and inspiration. 
Moreover, Nestlé Policies and Management Principles portray a model Company, with the most 
laudable corporate values. A glance at the Company building, offices and facilities is enough to make 
any outsider believe that this is an ideal working environment. 
However, after only a short time, I was profoundly disappointed at how people are managed, the 
discrepancies between your public statements and the private deeds of managers; between the 
Company’s policies and management principles and actual practices; and between the proclaimed 
values and the prevailing fear culture (including mobbing and intimidation) that managers nourished. 
I was particularly saddened by the growing realisation that Management was not only aware of this 
situation but that it was also fully accepted by the very people who should have been, in fact, the inhouse guardians of policy compliance.I failed to see the flawless execution of policy that you promoted in your speeches. Didn’t you state 
that the management of food quality and safety depends on the quality of management? What can 
be said about food safety management when the members of Management themselves do not 
respect Company policies and principles? 
If I dared challenge the Company’s food safety and human resource practices I can assure you that it 
was not out of disrespect. On the contrary, it was because of my loyalty to the Company, my 
colleagues and the consumers we served. It was also because for me the safety of our products and 
respect for our colleagues were non-negotiable values. Involving staff in building a better company 
unavoidably includes exposing shortcomings. But surely it is better to receive timely feedback from 
within than to be publicly embarrassed later by failures.
You have often expressed your commitment to food safety. Please allow me to share with you my 
own vision in this regard. Over and above the technical and scientific aspects, the foundation of 
good food safety management is an equitable system of people management that is based on 
professionalism, fairness, objectivity, open-mindedness, respect for staff and, most importantly, for 
their dignity. I regret to say that I failed to see this approach implemented at the Nestlé Head Office. 
My own situation is a case in point. 
On several occasions I reported – first to members of Management and then, in November 2009, to 
Mr Paul Bulcke – serious shortcomings in food safety management, the professional difficulties I 
faced, and the shameful treatment that I experienced in Nestlé. I hoped that I would be given the 
opportunity to provide a full and accurate account of events during the period 2005-2010. In 
response, my contract was terminated with no opportunity to provide details of my experience. 
Nevertheless, I am prepared to meet with you, at your convenience, to share my observations on 
practices in Nestlé and their eventual repercussions on Nestlé’s reputation and consumers. I would 
also hope to use this opportunity to identify an equitable solution for my personal difficult situation, another consequence of the past events in Nestlé" 
source : http://www.rts.ch/info/3989665.html/BINARY/Mr+CEO.pdf
more here (in french) http://www.rts.ch/info/economie/3988696-une-ex-responsable-de-la-securite-alimentaire-depose-plainte-contre-nestle.html
more again (in french) 
more (in german ) : http://www.handelszeitung.ch/unternehmen/nestle-im-keim-erstickt

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A Troubling Survey on Global #Corruption

A Troubling Survey on Global #Corruption | News in english | Scoop.it
Ernst & Young found that 20 percent of corporate officials and employees knew of financial manipulation within their company in the last year.
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CORRUPTION is a growth business.

Bribery scandals have dominated headlines in several countries in recent months, among them India and Nigeria. International enforcement of antibribery laws has been increasing in the United States and major European countries.

A new survey of corporate officials and employees in 36 countries — in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, as well as India — indicates that there is plenty of corruption that needs investigating.

Over all, 20 percent of the respondents said they knew of incidents at their own companies within the previous year that could be construed as cooking the books — moves to either understate expenses or overstate revenue. Among senior managers and directors, the figure was 42 percent.

The survey was conducted late last year by Ipsos, a market research firm, on behalf of Ernst & Young, a major accounting firm.

Ernst did not break down responses to the cooking-the-books question by country, but indicated that managers from emerging markets were more likely to say that had happened than were managers from more developed economies.

The firm did provide country-by-country results for some questions, as can be seen in the accompanying charts. Asked if companies in their countries “often report their financial performance as better than it is,” more than half the respondents in nine countries — Nigeria, Slovenia, Russia, Spain, Croatia, India, Serbia, Kenya and Austria — said that they did.

At the other end of the scale, fewer than a quarter of respondents in eight countries — Finland, Norway, Switzerland, France, Romania, Sweden, Hungary and the Netherlands — said that happened.

The survey was commissioned by Ernst’s fraud investigation and dispute services group, which does not perform standard corporate audits but instead is hired by companies to look for signs of corruption or fraud in their own operations. It did not include either China or the United States.

David Stulb, the global leader of that group, said it was growing in part because many companies were worried about enforcement of the American Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bars the bribing of foreign officials, and of similar laws in other developed countries. Those surveyed included employees and officials of overseas subsidiaries of multinational companies. The respondents were promised anonymity, Ernst said.

The survey revealed what Ernst called a “corruption perception gap” in many countries, where respondents said bribery and corrupt practices were far more common in other parts of their country than they were in their own industry. At the extreme, 94 percent of respondents in Kenya thought corruption was widespread in the country, but only 34 percent thought it was a problem in their own industry.

The responses indicated that corruption and bribery are rare in the Scandinavian countries, but common in some Southern and Eastern European countries, as well as in India, the Middle East and Africa.

Floyd Norris comments on finance and the economy at nytimes.com/economix.

 A version of this article appeared in print on May 18, 2013, on page B3 of the New York edition with the headline: A Troubling Survey on Global Corruption.



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Jello Biafra verbal confrontation occupysf

A verbal confrontation with obama supporters that think its racist not to support him because of his policies!
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considerer quelqu'un comme un raciste car il ne supporte pas Obama est aussi crétin que de considérer quelqu'un comme antisémite car il ne supporte pas Israël
Obama est un larbin, je suis d'accord avec ce cher Jello

"A verbal confrontation with obama supporters that think its racist not to support him because of his policies!"

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Big Oil’s War on the Sun » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names

Big Oil’s War on the Sun » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names | News in english | Scoop.it
Big Oil’s War on the Sun
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by JP SOTTILE

Remember “Peak Oil?”

Neither does anyone else.

That’s because the operational theory of why, at the turn of the century, Big Oil tightened its grip on the political system and used it to acquire as much of the “dwindling” resource as possible, often through proxy imperialism, has suddenly become irrelevant.

It’s not as if the fear of an impending, precipitous decline in oil production wasn’t an effective tool to massage markets, influence decision-makers and pique oil-thirsty populations into supporting petroleum-based wars, even if only subconsciously.

It was effective.

Rather, the planet is suddenly awash in oil. New discoveries in Africa, the long-awaited Caspian Sea oil and gas pipeline, expanding reserves in the US and the possibilities of the South China Sea have turned the earth’s ecosystem into a fountain of youthful exuberance for Big Oil.

Add to that the ever-more refined technologies now employed to extract shale oil, to cook up Canada’s toxic tar-sand goop and to build massive new infrastructure projects to move it around the continent and the globe, and you’ve

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#petition Take action: stop the crop - EU-US trade deal must not compromise food safety

#petition Take action: stop the crop - EU-US trade deal must not compromise food safety | News in english | Scoop.it
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What can you do for a sustainable, GM-free future?

Action! May 2013
EU-US trade deal must not compromise food safety

The European Union is about to enter into talks with the United states on a new trade agreement. A deal raises a raft of serious environmental and social concerns that could weaken safeguards and consumer choice in order to please multi-national corporations. This could include opening the door to more  genetically modified food and plants in Europe.

The European Parliament is not involved in framing the trade deals. But MEPs do have the chance to speak out and are about to agree on their position. Please ask your MEPs to speak out in favour of making Europe GM-free. Tell your parliamentarians that Europe does not want or need GM crops. Europe must keep the right to make our own decisions about food safety and GM crops.

Any trade deal should not force feed us GM food!

Tweet MEPs: 
"Citizens want a GMO-free Europe!  Don't allow free trade talks to impose GM crops: http://stopthecrop.org"

Choose a Political Group, and click on tweet:

European People's Party (Christian Democrats) - tweet! @EPPGroup

Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats - tweet! @TheProgressives

Alliance...

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“I will Survive” the Muslim Brotherhood: Leftist Egyptian Youth Music Video

“I will Survive” the Muslim Brotherhood: Leftist Egyptian Youth Music Video | News in english | Scoop.it
Juan Cole | Uncategorized
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Not an endorsement, but this cover by secular leftists of Gloria Gaynor’s 1978 “I will Survive,” with satirical Arabic lyrics (translated in subtitles) about the rule of the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafis in Egypt since the fall of dictator Hosni Mubarak gives a window into the grievances and disappointments of the youth who made the January 25, 2011 revolution.

Thousands of protesters gathered in Tahrir Square today, Friday, demanding that Muslim Brotherhood leader and Egyptian president Muhammad Morsi call early presidential elections. The ‘Rebel’ campaign is supported by a group of leftist and liberal parties.

The video

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#USA Released From Prison, Climate Activist Tim DeChristopher on Civil Disobedience & Building Movements

http://www.democracynow.org - We turn now to climate justice activist Tim DeChristopher, who was released last month after 21 months in federal custody. DeCh...
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We turn now to climate justice activist Tim DeChristopher, who was released last month after 21 months in federal custody. DeChristopher was convicted of interfering with a public auction in 2008 when he disrupted the Bush administration's last-minute move to auction off oil and gas exploitation rights in Utah by posing as a bidder. He is the subject of the new documentary, "Bidder 70." "We need to be building power as a social movement. One of the weaknesses for the climate movement," DeChristopher explains is that "we still have this huge divide between the political side of the movement that focuses on Washington and the grassroots side of the movement that's been building real power."

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#usa The AP spying scandal and the crisis of American democracy - World Socialist Web Site

#usa The AP spying scandal and the crisis of American democracy - World Socialist Web Site | News in english | Scoop.it
The Obama administration’s secret seizure of the phone records of Associated Press reporters is the latest attack on core democratic rights in the United States.
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The Obama administration’s secret seizure of the phone records of Associated Press reporters is the latest attack on core democratic rights in the United States.

Last week, the Justice Department acknowledged that it had obtained a subpoena in February of this year to require telecommunications companies to turn over two months of phone records on some 20 lines used by the AP. The subpoena was part of

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New Fracking Rules Show US Bowing to Industry

New Fracking Rules Show US Bowing to Industry | News in english | Scoop.it
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Regulations go from minimal to 'harebrained' as BLM proposes fracker handout- Jacob Chamberlain, staff writer

The U.S. Bureau of Land Management released new draft rules for fracking on public lands Thursday afternoon that would vastly weaken safeguards against the highly toxic gas extraction

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Noam Chomsky, Scholars Ask NY Times Public Editor to Investigate Bias on Honduras and Venezuela

Noam Chomsky, Scholars Ask NY Times Public Editor to Investigate Bias on Honduras and Venezuela | News in english | Scoop.it
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The following petition, signed by over a dozen experts on Latin America and the media, was sent today to Margaret Sullivan, Public Editor of The New York Times:

May 14, 2013

Dear Margaret Sullivan,

In a recent column (4/12/13), you observed:

Although individual words and phrases may not amount to very much in the great flow produced each day, language matters. When news organizations accept the government’s way of speaking, they seem to accept the government’s way of thinking. In The Times, these decisions carry even more weight.

In light of this comment we encourage you to compare The New York Times’s characterization of the leadership of the late Hugo Chávez in Venezuela and that of Roberto Micheletti and Porfirio Lobo in Honduras.

In the past four years, the Times has referred to Chávez as an "autocrat," "despot," "authoritarian ruler" and a "caudillo" in its news coverage. When opinion pieces are included, the Times has published at least fifteen separate articles employing such language, depicting Chávez as a "dictator" or "strongman." Over the same period—since the June 28, 2009 military overthrow of elected president Manuel Zelaya of Honduras—Timescontributors have never used such terms to describe Micheletti, who presided over the coup regime after Zelaya’s removal, or Porfirio Lobo, who succeeded him. Instead, the paper has variously described them in its news coverage as "interim," "de facto,” and "new."

Porfirio Lobo assumed the presidency after winning an election held under Micheletti's coup government. The elections were marked by repression and censorship, and international monitors, like the Carter Center,boycotted them. Since the coup, Honduras's military and police have routinely killed civilians.

Over the past 14 years Venezuela has had 16 elections or referenda deemed free and fair by leading international authorities. Jimmy Carter praised Venezuela’s elections, among the 92 the Carter Center has monitored, as having "a very wonderful voting system." He concluded that "the election process in Venezuela is the best in the world." While some human rights groups have criticized the Chávez government, Venezuela has had no pattern of state security forces murdering civilians, as is the case in Honduras.

Whatever one thinks of the democratic credentials of Chávez’s presidency—and we recognize that reasonable people can disagree about it—there is nothing in the record, when compared with that of his Honduran counterparts, to warrant the discrepancies in the Times’s coverage of the two governments.

We urge you to examine this disparity in coverage and language use, particularly as it may appear to your readers to track all too closely the U.S. government’s positions regarding the Honduran government (whichit supports) and the Venezuelan government (which it opposes)—precisely the syndrome you describe and warn against in your column.

Sincerely,

Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor Emeritus, MITEdward Herman, Professor Emeritus of Finance, Wharton School at the University of PennsylvaniaGreg Grandin, Professor of History, New York UniversitySujatha Fernandes, Professor of Sociology, Queens College, CUNY Graduate CenterCorey Robin, Professor of Political Science, Brooklyn College, CUNY Graduate CenterAdrienne Pine, Professor of Anthropology, American UniversityMark Weisbrot, Ph.D, Co-Director, Center for Economic and Policy ResearchMiguel Tinker Salas, Professor of History and Latin American Studies, Pomona CollegeKatherine Hite, Professor of Political Science, Vassar CollegeSteve Ellner, Professor of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, Universidad de OrienteGeorge Ciccariello-Maher, Professor of Political Science, Drexel UniversityDaniel Kovalik, Professor of International Human Rights, University of Pittsburgh School of LawGregory Wilpert, Ph.D, author of "Changing Venezuela by Taking Power"Joseph Nevins, Professor of Geography, Vassar CollegeNazih Richani, Director of Latin American Studies, Kean UniversitySteven Volk, Professor of History, Oberlin CollegeAviva Chomsky, Professor of History, Salem State UniversityKeane Bhatt, North American Congress on Latin AmericaChris Spannos, New York Times eXaminerMichael Albert, ZNetOliver Stone, Filmmaker, "South of the Border"Michael Moore, Filmmaker, "Capitalism: A Love Story"

 

Affiliations are used for identification purposes only.

Readers can add their names to the petition at New York Times eXaminer, or contact Ms. Sullivan directly at public@nytimes.com. Please limit emails to 300 words, and follow the guidelines listed at the public editor's web page.

Update (5/14): Oscar Award-winning director Oliver Stone has added his name to the list of signatories, and a Spanish-language translation of the petition is now available at New York Times eXaminer. (Una traduccíon al español ya está disponible aquí.)

Update (5/15): Another Oscar-winning filmmaker, Michael Moore, has added his support to the petition. Other prominent signatories of late include philosopher Slavoj Zizek, author Eva Golinger, and Marjorie Cohn, former president of the National Lawyers Guild.

*

Below is a list of 16 Times articles that served as the basis of an analysis piece from which this petition was derived. None of the terms below (autocrat, despot, authoritarian, ruler, strongman, caudillo, dictator, tyrant, sultan) have been applied to either of Honduras's post-coup regimes:

News:

"Shy U.S. Intellectual Created Playbook Used in a Revolution," Sheryl Gay Stolberg, 2/16/11: "Autocrats abhor Mr. Sharp. In 2007, President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela denounced him."

"The Arab Spring Finds Itself Upstaged by a New Season," Neil MacFarquhar, 9/22/11: "In fact, this year’s gathering was suffering from something of a despot deficit, or at least the ranks of haranguers raging against the evils of capitalism and the West have been drastically thinned by revolutions or disease. President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, undergoing chemotherapy treatment in Cuba, literally mailed it in . . ."

"Charges Against U.S.-Aided Groups Come With History of Distrust in Egypt," Scott Shane and Ron Nixon, 2/6/12: "Authoritarian rulers from Caracas to Moscow and beyond have long viewed pro-democracy groups financed by the United States with deep suspicion, regularly denouncing them as meddlers or spies and sometimes harassing their workers."

"A Polarizing Figure Who Led a Movement," Simon Romero, 3/5/13: "He maintained an almost visceral connection with the poor, tapping into their resentments, while strutting like the strongman in a caudillo novel. . . . He grew obsessed with changing Venezuela’s laws and regulations to ensure that he could be re-elected indefinitely and become, indeed, a caudillo."

Opinion:

"The Winner in Honduras: Chavez," Alvaro Vargas Llosa, 6/30/09: "The United States’ more measured response [to Honduras's coup d'etat], and the low-profile stance taken by some South American governments, have been lost amid the high-stakes campaign launched by Venezuela’s caudillo."

"Real Men Tax Gas," Thomas Friedman, 9/19/09: "Such a tax would make our national-security healthier by . . . increasing our leverage over petro-dictators, like those in Iran, Russia and Venezuela, through shrinking their oil incomes."

"As Ugly as It Gets," Thomas Friedman, 5/25/10: "[Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva] regularly praises Venezuela’s strongman Hugo Chávez and Fidel Castro, the Cuban dictator — and now Ahmadinejad — while denouncing Colombia, one of the great democratic success stories. . ."

"Wallflowers at the Revolution," Frank Rich, 2/5/11: "More damning, Morozov also demonstrates how the digital tools so useful to citizens in a free society can be co-opted by tech-savvy dictators, police states and garden-variety autocrats to spread propaganda and to track (and arrest) conveniently networked dissidents, from Iran to Venezuela."

"Why Tyrants Love the Murdoch Scandal," Bill Keller, 7/24/11: "And autocrats will be autocrats, with or without our bad example. Robert Mugabe and Hugo Chávez would be just as hostile to an unfettered press if no British journalist had ever hacked a phone."

"The Stomachs of Strongmen," Ann Louise Bardach, 8/21/11: "Ironically, the hemisphere’s most indomitable strongmen and determined foes of the United States and free market economics have both been felled, at least for now, by abdominal woes . . . The symbiosis between Cuba’s emeritus or former (and in most ways, still de facto) commander in chief and the Venezuelan colonel-turned-oil-sultan is the most powerful and fascinating political alliance in the Americas."

"The Realest Reality Show in the World," Rachel Nolan, 5/6/12: "[I]t’s hard to imagine another political figure with the combination of manic exhibitionism and entertainer’s stamina required to star in this sort of show, never mind the autocratic control required to make it, literally, must-see TV in his home country. . . . 'Aló Presidente' has that same wacky quality. The difference is that Mrs. Mouth wasn’t the autocratic leader of an oil-rich country of 29 million people."

"Velvet Gloves Over Iron Fists," Dwight Garner, 6/10/12: "The neo-authoritarians, from Vladimir Putin in Russia to Hugo Chávez in Venezuela to China’s more faceless technocrats, are still brutal, but they have learned to adapt."

"How Hugo Chávez Became Irrelevant," Francisco Toro, 10/5/12: "Mr. Chávez’s autocratic excesses came to look unnecessary and inexcusable to Venezuelans. . . . With oversight institutions neutered, the president now runs the country as a personal fief . . . Chávez-style socialism looks like the worst of both worlds: both more authoritarian and less effective at reducing poverty than the Brazilian alternative. . . . Mr. Capriles pitches himself as an ambitious but pragmatic social reformer committed to ending the Chávez era’s authoritarian excesses."

"The Missing President," Alberto Barrera Tyska and Christina Marcano, 1/22/13: "In the name of the dispossessed, he revived the ghost of the South American military caudillo, creating a new version of that traditional strongman. ... There is one element of the Chávez leadership, however, that is no different from any of Latin America's other personality-driven authoritarian regimes: its messianic nature." 

"Hugo Chávez," Editorial Board, 3/6/13: "Hugo Chávez dominated Venezuelan politics for 14 years with his charismatic personality, populist policies and authoritarian methods . . . his legacy is stained by the undermining of democratic institutions."

"Death of a Strongman," Jonathan Tepperman, 4/5/13: "Finally, after years of riding the sugar binge of Chávez’s populist politics, which left the country 'flabby, enfeebled and import-­addicted,' much of the public lost enthusiasm for their latter-day caudillo. . . . efforts to underscore the inherent absurdity of autocrats and their personality cults are nothing new."

 

 

Keane Bhatt is an activist in Washington, D.C. He has worked in the United States and Latin America on a variety of campaigns related to community development and social justice. His analyses and opinions have appeared in a range of outlets, including NPR, The Nation, The St. Petersburg Times, and CNN En Español. He is the author of the NACLA blog “Manufacturing Contempt,” which critically analyzes the U.S. press and its portrayal of the hemisphere. Connect with his blog on Twitter: @KeaneBhatt

Tags: Edward Herman Honduras Hugo Chavez New York Times Noam Chomsky Porfirio Lobo Roberto Micheletti Venezuela
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Just 18% of UK television presenters over 50 are women, study finds

Just 18% of UK television presenters over 50 are women, study finds | News in english | Scoop.it
Harriet Harman accuses TV industry of ageism and sexism, saying female presenters' days on screen are numbered after 50
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Mind Control Who Owns the Media in USA ? #graphique

Mind Control Who Owns the Media in USA ? #graphique | News in english | Scoop.it
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Chris Hedges: From WikiLeaks to AP Scandal, U.S. Nears "Totalitarian Security & Surveillance State"

Watch the full interview with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges on Democracy Now! at http://owl.li/l3xAO. Hedges says that the Obama administrat...
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Syria Endgame Approaching Fast » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names

Syria Endgame Approaching Fast » Counterpunch: Tells the Facts, Names the Names | News in english | Scoop.it
Syria Endgame Approaching Fast
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by SHAMUS COOKE

The tempo of events in Syria has accelerated in recent weeks. The government forces have scored significant battlefield victories over the rebels, and this has provoked a mixture of war provocations and peace offers from the U.S. and its anti-Assad allies.

With Obama’s blessing Israel fighter jets recently attacked Syria on three occasions; in one massive air strike on a military installation in Damascus 42 Syrian soldiers were killed. Shortly thereafter Obama finally agreed to a peace conference with Russia, which had been asking for such talks for months.

Obama is entering these talks from a weakened position; the Syrian government is winning the war against the U.S.-backed rebels, and success on the ground is the trump card of any peace talks. Obama and the rebels are in no position to be demanding anything in Syria at the m

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Spanish Banker Goes to Prison

Spanish Banker Goes to Prison | News in english | Scoop.it
Miguel Blesa, the former executive chairman of Caja Madrid, is accused of leaving his bank saddled with huge losses because of the takeover of a bank based in Miami.
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Miguel Blesa, the former executive chairman of Caja Madrid, has become the first prominent Spanish banker to go behind bars since the start of the financial crisis. He is accused of leaving the company saddled with huge losses because of an ill-advised takeover of a bank based in Miami in 2008.

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Qatar buys into billion-dollar Milan skyscraper project

Qatar buys into billion-dollar Milan skyscraper project | News in english | Scoop.it
The project has already involved the construction of the skyscraper headquarters of Italy's biggest bank UniCredit by Argentine architect Cesar Pelli.
"Porta Nuova
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Qatar's sovereign wealth fund has bought a 40-percent stake in a new 290,000-square metre skyscraper project near the centre of Milan with a commercial value of 2.0 billion euros ($2.6 billion), the companies said on Friday.

The project has already involved the construction of the skyscraper headquarters of Italy's biggest bank UniCredit by Argentine architect Cesar Pelli.

"Porta Nuova is one of the most prestigious urban renovation projects in Europe," real estate giant Hines Italia and Qatar Holding said in a statement. Texas-based Hines' Italian arm leads the project. "Land is Italy's most important natural resources and we are confident it can be a strategic engine for development and economic growth," said Manfredi Catella, chief executive of Hines Italia.

"The agreement i

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Stop the Crop #gmo #ogm #video

Europe is faced with a new wave of GM-crops that could drastically change the way we produce food in Europe -- including extensive pesticide spraying. These ...
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Europe is faced with a new wave of GM-crops that could drastically change the way we produce food in Europe -- including extensive pesticide spraying. These GM-crops are unnecessary, risky and profit large multinational companies at the expense of small scale and sustainable farming. 

This website and film present some of the dangers of GM-crops, and calls for people across Europe and beyond to take action to stop them. We need a future of food and farming that benefits people and planet, and not the pockets of big business. We need to stop GM-crops from spreading across Europe.

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#gmo #ogm Genetically Modified Democracy: #Monsanto and Congress Move to Stomp on Your Rights

#gmo #ogm Genetically Modified Democracy: #Monsanto and Congress Move to Stomp on Your Rights | News in english | Scoop.it
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Reliable sources in Washington D.C. have informed the Organic Consumers Association (OCA) that Monsanto has begun secretly lobbying its Congressional allies to attach one or more “Monsanto Riders” or amendments to the 2013 Farm Bill that would preempt or prohibit states from requiring labels on genetically engineered (GE) foods.

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The Great American Descent into Plutocracy (Kroll)

The Great American Descent into Plutocracy (Kroll) | News in english | Scoop.it
Juan Cole | Uncategorized
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Andy Kroll writes at Tomdispatch.com

Billionaires with an axe to grind, now is your time. Not since the days before a bumbling crew of would-be break-in artists set into motion the fabled Watergate scandal, leading to the first far-reaching restrictions on money in American politics, have you been so free to meddle. There is no limit to the amount of money you can give to elect your friends and allies to political office, to defeat those with whom you disagree, to shape or stunt or kill policy, and above all to influence the tone and content of political discussion in this country.

Today, politics is a rich man’s game. Look no further than the 2012 elections and that season’s biggest donor, 79-year-old casino mogul Sheldon Adelson. He and his wife, Miriam, shocked the political class by first giving $16.5 million in an effort to make Newt Gingrich the Republican presidential nominee. Once Gingrich exited the race, the Adelsons invested more than $30 million in electing Mitt Romney. They donated millions more to support GOP candidates running for the House and Senate, to block a pro-union measure in Michigan, and to bankroll the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other conservative stalwarts (which waged their own campaigns mostly to help Republican candidates for Congress). All told, the Adelsons donated $94 million during the 2012 cycle — nearly four times the previous record set by liberal financier George Soros. And that’s only the money we know about. When you add in so-called dark money, one estimate puts their total giving at closer to $150 million.

It was not one of Adelson’s better bets. Romney went down in flames; the Republicans failed to retake the Senate and conceded seats in the House; andthe majority of candidates backed by Adelson-funded groups lost, too. But Adelson, who oozes chutzpah as only a gambling tycoon worth $26.5 billion could, is und

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Obama Worse Than Nixon? Pentagon Papers Attorney Decries AP Phone Probe, Julian Assange Persecution

http://www.democracynow.org - The Justice Department's disclosure that it had secretly subpoenaed phone records from the Associated Press has prompted a wave...
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The Justice Department's disclosure that it had secretly subpoenaed phone records from the Associated Press has prompted a wave of comparisons between President Obama and Richard Nixon. Four decades ago, the Nixon administration attempted to block The New York Times from publishing a secret history of the Vietnam War leaked to the newspaper by whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg. Two days after the Times first published excerpts of what became known as the "Pentagon Papers," the Nixon government asked for and received a Supreme Court injunction against the newspaper, arguing that publication of the documents posed a "grave and immediate danger to the security of the United States." We speak to James Goodale, the general counsel at The New York Times during the Pentagon Papers crackdown. Goodale is a leading legal expert on the First Amendment and has just published a new book, "Fighting for the Press: The Inside Story of the Pentagon Papers and Other Battles." Goodale said he wrote book in part because of the work of Julian Assange of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, and how he is likely being targeted by the U.S. government in an ongoing grand jury probe. "My book is meant to be a clarion call to the journalist community. Wake up! There's danger out there," Goodale says. "You may not like Assange . But wake up! The first amendment is really going to be damaged. If Obama goes forward and succeeds, he will have succeeded where Nixon failed."

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#UK : MP on Google tax avoidance scheme: 'I think that you do evil'

#UK : MP on Google tax avoidance scheme: 'I think that you do evil' | News in english | Scoop.it
Google and Amazon face fresh attack over claims that their multibillion-pound UK-facing businesses should not be taxed
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Google and Amazon face fresh attack over claims that their multibillion-pound UK-facing businesses should not be taxed

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#Spain Former Caja Madrid chief (close friend of ex PM Aznar ..) remanded in custody as flight risk

#Spain Former Caja Madrid chief (close friend of ex PM Aznar ..)  remanded in custody as flight risk | News in english | Scoop.it
Miguel Blesa ordered to turn over passport in case investigating purchase of lender and loan to failed travel company
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Miguel Blesa ordered to turn over passport in case investigating loan to failed travel company

 

A judge has ordered that the former president of Caja Madrid, Miguel Blesa, be remanded in custody on 2.5-million-euro bail over the lender’s purchase of City National Bank of Florida. The court considers Blesa a flight risk and has also confiscated his passport, according to judicial sources.

Blesa, who headed up Caja Madrid between 1996 and 2009, is being tried for irregularities in the acquisition of the US bank, as well as for a loan of 26.6 million euros that was granted to Grupo Marsans, a travel agency that went bust with huge losses in 2010. Obscure right-wing union Manos Limpias is a plaintiff in the case against the banker.

Blesa was summonsed to court as a matter of urgency Thursday in relation to the 2006 purchase of City National Bank of Florida after Manos Limpias decided to extend its case beyond the initial complaint over the Marsans loan and on the findings of KPMG analysts, who confirmed that the loan did not meet legal requirements.

Blesa and former Marsans owner Gerardo Díaz Ferrán, who is also in jail as part of another investigation, are accused of corporate crimes and falsification of documents. On April 16, Judge Elpidio José Silva also issued summonses to six members of the bank’s financial committee.

Caja Madrid took control of City National Bank of Florida in 2008 after paying 618 million euros for 83 percent of the US lender in a deal approved unanimously by the Spanish bank’s board of directors in order to “strengthen” its presence in America. The Bank of Spain noted that as well as excessive investment in the US lender the purchase was carried out in such a way as to “elude the obligatory control of the tax and economy authorities in Madrid.”

Francisco Javier 's curator insight, May 16, 5:33 PM

#Spain Former Caja Madrid chief (friend of ex PM Aznar )  remanded in custody a... | @scoopit via @jchernandezjazz http://sco.lt/...

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Benghazi and the deepening crisis of the Obama administration - World Socialist Web Site

Benghazi and the deepening crisis of the Obama administration - World Socialist Web Site | News in english | Scoop.it
The controversy over last year’s assault on US facilities in Benghazi, Libya has been revived, even as the real issues underlying it remain hidden.
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16 May 2013

The controversy over last year’s Al Qaeda assault on US diplomatic and CIA facilities in Benghazi, Libya has been revived amid a deepening political crisis of the Obama administration.

Even as the debate between the Obama White House and its Republican opponents becomes more heated, however, the real issues underlying the September 11, 2012 attack, which claimed the lives of the US ambassador, Christopher Stevens, and th

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#sign #share this #petition How much is a worker's life worth to #Gap?

#sign #share this #petition How much is a worker's life worth to #Gap? | News in english | Scoop.it
Gap could save an untold number of lives in Bangladesh for just a few pennies per garment, so why aren't they taking action.
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It’s been two months since 112 garment workers burned alive at a Walmart supplier and Bangladesh, and we’re still waiting for the world’s largest retailer to get serious about its workers’ safety. But Walmart isn’t the only company that tIreats Bangladeshi lives as just another cost of doing business. Gap buys apparel from the same kinds of deadly sweatshops as Walmart, and it also needs to act before it causes the next Tazreen disaster.

In 2010, a fire at a Gap supplier killed 29 workers, and the company recently promised it would adopt ...

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“As Qatar’s investments grow, Europe, and in particular Britain, needs to consider the risks that such dependence entails”

“As Qatar’s investments grow, Europe, and in particular Britain, needs to consider the risks that such dependence entails” | News in english | Scoop.it
We recently saw Boris Johnson following in the footsteps of his predecessors and visit Qatar as part of a regional tour to develop trade relations in the Gulf. The t
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 HIGH POLITICS While no one doubts that alliance building with Qatar could be beneficial and mutually advantageous to both countries, Britain needs to start weighing up the risks that such dependency could bring, writes Adra El Azzouzi.

We recently saw Boris Johnson following in the footsteps of his predecessors and visit Qatar as part of a regional tour to develop trade relations in the Gulf. The tiny state is relatively unknown to m

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Oil giants BP + Shell targeted by European Commission in probe into suspected market manipulation

Oil giants BP + Shell targeted by European Commission in probe into suspected market manipulation | News in english | Scoop.it
A Tory MP has attacked the Office of Fair Trading inquiry into petrol prices as "limp-wristed and lettuce-like" in the wake of price-fixing allegations and has led calls for a probe.
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Oil giants targeted by European Commission in probe into suspected market manipulation

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