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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: T L Comiskey who wrote (2380)7/17/2002 2:28:26 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Security, Not Secrecy

Washington Post Editorial
Wednesday, July 17, 2002


DEEP IN THE homeland security legislation now being prepared by the House of Representatives is a provision designed to protect sensitive information about America's critical infrastructure. Most of this country's vulnerable infrastructure -- dams, computer networks, chemical plants -- is privately owned. So, for counterterrorism to be effective, the government needs companies to share information about their vulnerabilities. But companies are sometimes unwilling to do so, fearing public disclosure or regulatory action. So the administration is backing a proposal to exempt from public disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act critical infrastructure information that companies provide voluntarily to federal agencies. It also would bar the government from using such information in regulatory proceedings against companies.

But all kinds of information might be designated by companies as related to critical infrastructure. Merely by labeling their own information as sensitive, companies might avoid public disclosure and keep damning data off-limits in enforcement actions. A company that feared an impending government action over an environmental hazard risk could preempt the action by "voluntarily" delivering self-incriminating documents as critical infrastructure information. This material would then presumptively become unavailable to regulators in enforcement actions -- unless they could show they had obtained it independently -- and to the public and private litigants as well. No law should put in the hands of a regulated party the power -- by turning over information -- to preclude government's use of that information for legitimate law enforcement purposes.

It's not clear that such protections against disclosure are needed. While companies say they are reluctant to cooperate with government because of fears of disclosures, executives testifying in favor of the provision last week offered no examples of such unwarranted disclosures. The Freedom of Information Act already broadly shields confidential business information as well as national security information; the burden now ought to be on industry to identify specific categories of information that are vulnerable to improper disclosure under current law and legitimately in need of protection. Exemptions ought to be crafted narrowly to apply to those categories. Homeland security should not be about secrecy for secrecy's sake, and it certainly shouldn't be about strengthening industry's hand against government's other important regulatory functions.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

washingtonpost.com



To: T L Comiskey who wrote (2380)7/17/2002 4:10:35 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Cheney's Grimy Trail in Business

His career offers a textbook example of shady doings.

By Robert Scheer
Editorial
The Los Angeles Times
July 16, 2002

Vice President Dick Cheney has spent most of the past year in hiding, ostensibly from terrorists, but increasingly it seems obvious that it is Congress, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the media and the public he fears. And for good reason: Cheney's business behavior could serve as a textbook case of much of what's wrong with the way corporate CEOs have come to play the game of business.

The game involves more than playing loose with accounting rules, as Halliburton Co. is accused of doing while Cheney was the Texas-based energy company's chief executive.

On Sunday, SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt, whom Cheney pushed for the job, reluctantly turned on his sponsor and announced a vigorous investigation of Halliburton's accounting violations. Recent business scandals, however, are also the product of legal loopholes that allow firms to scoop up billions in unregulated profits.

It was just such loopholes that allowed the rise and subsequent fall of Enron and telecom heavyweights like WorldCom--in the process making CEOs like Dick Cheney very, very rich.

Recall that Cheney was a political hack for most of his professional life, first as a staffer in the Ford White House, then as a congressman for a decade and after that as secretary of Defense under the current president's father.

During the Clinton years, however, Cheney took an extremely lucrative five-year cruise into the private sector as chief executive of Halliburton.

After deciding, following an extensive search, that he would be George W. Bush's best candidate for vice president, Cheney resigned from the energy services company with a $36-million payoff for his final year of corporate service.

This journey from the public payroll to the corporate towers and back left a slimy trail of conflict-of-interest questions. For example, Defense Secretary Cheney conveniently changed the rules restricting private contractors doing work on U.S. military bases, allowing the Kellogg Brown & Root subsidiary of his future employer, Halliburton, to receive the first of $2.5 billion in contracts over the next decade. When Cheney left to become CEO of the entire company, he recruited his Pentagon military aide, Joe Lopez, to become senior vice president in charge of Pentagon dealings, which ultimately formed the most lucrative part of the otherwise ailing company's business.

Since returning to the public office, these disturbing patterns have continued.

In a scathing expose of Halliburton's military contracts, for example, the New York Times revealed that the vice president's old company had been the main beneficiary of the Pentagon's rush to build anti-terrorism military bases around the world. This new work will cost taxpayers many billions, and, according to Pentagon investigators' estimates, without any cost controls the final bill will be considerably higher than if the military's own construction units do the work.

Cheney denies having a role in securing those recent contracts, as he does knowledge of Halliburton's alleged accounting improprieties.

Unfortunately for Halliburton's stockholders and employees, parlaying his Pentagon contacts into profit has proved to be Cheney's only major business success.

In fact, CEO Cheney put Halliburton's future in doubt by engineering the acquisition of rival Dresser Industries, a move ballyhooed at the time as justification of his $2.2-million annual salary and massive stock options.

But the acquisition has proved to be a disaster because Halliburton assumed Dresser's long-term liability under asbestos lawsuits.

Even without the Dresser acquisition, Cheney was running a failing operation at Halliburton.

The company, despite the government gravy garnered, had earnings well below Wall Street's expectations--until it suddenly changed its accounting rules. By assuming it would be able to collect on cost overruns on myriad construction projects, Cheney's Halliburton was able to inflate profits by $234 million over a four-year period.

Halliburton failed to disclose its accounting shenanigans to the SEC or the company's investors for more than a year afterward, leading to more than a dozen lawsuits alleging fraud, including one by Judicial Watch.

And why are we not surprised that Halliburton's accounting firm was Arthur Andersen, earlier this year convicted of obstruction of justice for shredding documents in connection with Enron?

Andersen's dubious methods have become the disgrace of American accounting. Cheney, however, was sufficiently enamored with it that in 1996 he glowingly endorsed the accounting firm in a video, thanking it for going "over and above the just-sort-of-normal, by-the-books audit arrangement."

Of course, ordinary investors did not know they were getting less than "by-the-books" auditing.

It is especially ugly that the president and vice president, men in a position to know just how sketchy the accounting practices of public companies are, were so eager to make our Social Security system a vehicle for pouring individuals' retirement money into a stock market they knew to be a house of cards.

________________________

Robert Scheer writes a syndicated column.

latimes.com



To: T L Comiskey who wrote (2380)7/17/2002 10:43:18 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Bush job performance drops 7 points to 62%

[This poll was quoted on NBC and MSNBC last night]

zogby.com

Released: July 15, 2002

Zogby Newswire

Bush job performance
drops 7 points to 62%;
One in three are worse off
today than one year ago;
Nearly one in three worse off
than two years ago;
Majority less likely to
invest because of scandals

President George W. Bush’s overall job performance rating has taken a seven percentage point drop in July to 62%, latest Zogby America results reveal.

The poll, conducted July 12-15 of 1,109 likely voters nationwide shows voters now giving Bush a 62% positive, 38% negative job performance rating, a new low mark since the September 11th terrorist attacks. In June, Bush received a 69% positive, 28% negative job performance rating, and a 70% positive, 30% negative, rating in May.

In February, voters gave Bush a 74% positive, 25% negative rating. The week before the attacks, voters gave Bush a 50% positive, 49% negative job performance rating.

The poll has a margin of sampling error of +/- 3.1%.

Results also show that nearly one in three Americans (32%) say they are worse off financially today than they were one year ago, compared to 45% who say they are financially better off now than one year ago. Another 22% say their finances are the same as a year ago. Respondents worse off today than one year ago include Democrats (38%), Independents (30%) and Republicans (27%).

Nearly just as many Americans (31%) say they are financially worse off today than two years ago, compared to 51% who are better off and 17% who are the same financially. Respondents worse off today than two years ago include Democrats (35%), Independents (33%) and Republicans (26%).

Investor insecurity

Results show the recent stock market scandals involving several major corporations make a majority of Americans (51%) less likely now to invest in the stock market. In comparison, 43% say the scandals make no difference in their likelihood now to invest in the stock market. Majorities not likely now to invest in the stock market include Americans earning $35,000-50,000 a year (58%), 55-69 year-olds (65%) and Moderates (53%).

Results also show half of Americans who own 401k plans (50%) and half (50%) who do not own 401k plans but invest in the stock market are now less likely to invest because of the scandals.

Pollster John Zogby: “Two out of three likely voters tell us that they have an IRA or a 401k. One look at their quarterly report and there goes confidence in the economy and the government. We are looking at a very close election with the Congressional Generic still tied at 34%, but this issue is THE issue.”