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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 8:18:14 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
Bush was the one insider trading at Harken. Soros bought GW out. That's how Soros knows first-hand that Bush is a crook.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:23:37 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Soros is a piece of human garbage.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:35:47 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Annan's chief of staff won't explain his financial relationship with George Soros.

Malloch Brown's Judgment

New York Sun
Editorial
June 23, 2005

[Excerpt]

Quite a little donnybrook erupted Monday at the United Nations when a reporter of the London Times asked Mark Malloch Brown, chief of staff for the secretary-general, Kofi Annan, whether he could explain the full extent of his financial relationship with George Soros. Mr. Malloch Brown answered by challenging the Sun's correspondent to name who gave him the story about how Mr. Malloch Brown, while making a net take-home salary of $125,000 a year, was paying $120,000 to rent from Mr. Soros a house adjacent to the billionaire's own home in Westchester County. Mr. Malloch Brown also challenged our Benny Avni and the gentleman from the Times, James Bone, to declare the motive of their sources.

^snip^

But even if it were on full commercial terms, it's an error of judgment for Mr. Malloch Brown to rent a place from Mr. Soros in the first place. The billionaire and the United Nations Development Program cooperate in huge joint projects involving millions of dollars. Unlike Mr. Soros's organization, the resources Mr. Malloch Brown is devoting to these projects are not his own; they are financed with other people's money, namely taxpayers' money, the biggest share of them in America.

And taxpayers just have this pesky tendency to want their representatives to live modestly and conduct public affairs with private interests at arms length. And how is Mr. Malloch Brown going to deal with Mr. Soros at arms length if he is locked into an arrangement with the billionaire that requires the U.N. official to fork over each month nearly 100% of his net pay check? That may make sense to Mr. Malloch Brown, but it won't make sense to the ordinary man in the street.

And then there is the political blunder. Mr. Malloch Brown can assert all he wants about his right to choose his friends. But what does it say about the political orientation of the United Nations' top brass when the friend turns out to be the most ardent foe of the man the United Nations wants to sign the checks for hundreds of millions of dollars in its operating expenses. We speak here of President Bush, whose approach to foreign affairs Mr. Soros has likened to that of the Nazis. He pledged himself to spend millions on Mr. Bush's defeat.

nysun.com



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:38:24 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Washington Post Pushes Pot; Conceals Soros Link to Marijuana AIM Report - May 4, 2005 Cliff Kinkaid

WASHINGTON -- Accuracy in Media (AIM) said today that The Washington Post’s coverage of the marijuana problem in today’s paper shows that it has become little more than a house organ of the pro-dope movement and its patron, billionaire George Soros.

In a front-page story today, Dan Eggen of The Washington Post publicizes a report from the Sentencing Project, identified only as a left-leaning “Washington-based think tank,” lamenting the number of arrests of marijuana users and dealers. Eggen neglects to mention that the group is heavily financed by drug-legalizer George Soros and his Open Society Institute (OSI), and that the report was underwritten by OSI and the pro-dope Marijuana Policy Project (MPP).

“The Post concealed the facts about where the so-called study came from and who financed it,” declared Cliff Kincaid, editor of AIM. “These facts are directly relevant to whether it deserves serious consideration, let alone front-page treatment. The Eggen story amounts to a press release for the Soros line on drug policy.”

In a separate part of the paper, the Style section, The Post ran an item favorably highlighting tonight’s MPP 10th anniversary celebration in Washington, D.C., which is attracting several liberal Democrats who accept the group’s claim that pot has medical benefits.

Kincaid commented, “Tell that to the families of the victims of the killer student in Red Lake, Minnesota, Jeff Weise, an admitted pothead who bragged about marijuana being his ‘gal of choice’ before he killed nine people and himself.” Weise was also on psychiatric drugs.

Meanwhile, a new government study linking marijuana to mental illness, including depression, schizophrenia and suicide, got only a few sentences from The Post.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:40:20 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
George $oro$ in the Eugenics of America or as he has labeled it: "Project on Death In America".



Open Society Institute Examines Impact of $45 Million
Press Release
OSI's Project on Death in America published a special report, Transforming the Culture of Dying, which reviews nine years and $45 million devoted to improving care available to patients and their families at all stages of serious illness. more

Project on Death in America: January 2001–December 2003 Report of Activities
This final three-year report describes the 2001–2003 grantmaking program of OSI's Project on Death in America. more






To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:42:35 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
French appeals Court confirms Soros insider trading conviction
PARIS, March 24 (Reuters)

A court on Thursday confirmed a conviction of U.S. billionaire George Soros for insider trading and a 2.2 million euro ($2.87 million) fine.

news.ft.com



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:44:30 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
SOROS: US terrorism approach 'creates hate'
news.com.au ^ | 03/09/05

US billionaire financier George Soros today slammed as dangerous Washington's strategy to fight terrorism, saying it was creating anger and resentment around the world.

Speaking on Spanish radio station Cadena Ser the day an international conference on terrorism opened in Madrid, Soros said Spain had "a very different response to terrorism - a healthier response". The Hungarian-born businessman, who spent millions last year opposing US President George W. Bush's re-election, said US policies had had negative consequences.

"Producing innocent victims creates anger and resentment. And this anger and resentment feeds terrorism," he said, according to the station's Spanish translation of his English comments.

In Iraq, he said, "there are more people wanting to kill Americans than there were before.

"These people didn't think like that before the Americans arrived and did what they did. The attitude of creating innocent victims creates terrorists. It's as simple as that."

Soros was among more than 200 personalities, leaders and experts attending the conference on terrorism under way in Madrid.

The three-day symposium is to be followed Friday with solemn commemorations marking the one-year anniversary of the March 11, 2004 train bombings in the city which killed 191 people and wounded 1900.

An Islamic extremist cell with links to al-Qaeda has been blamed for the attacks, which gave a new context and challenges to Spain's anti-terrorism strategy, focused up to then on the four-decade-old conflict with the Basque separatist group ETA



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:45:19 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
David Brock Group Backpedals on Soros Funding...............................
By Marc Morano
CNSNews.com Senior Staff Writer
March 03, 2005

(CNSNews.com) - Media Matters for America, the group headed by conservative turned liberal writer David Brock, has changed course on its stated association with billionaire liberal financier George Soros.

After initially claiming on Dec. 1, 2004 that "neither Media Matters nor its president and CEO David Brock has received any money from Soros or from any organization with which he is affiliated," the group is no longer disavowing any connection with groups "affiliated" with Soros.

The Media Matters shift came after Cybercast News Service questioned the group's financial ties and demonstrated that there were numerous and extensive links between Media Matters and several Soros "affiliates" like MoveOn.org, the Center for American Progress and Soros ally Peter Lewis.

Media Matters for America (MMA) spokeswoman Sally Aman responded to Cybercast News Service's questions with an e-mail. "In response to your query regarding donor funding Media Matters for America has never received funding directly from George Soros," Aman stated, no longer denying any relationship with organizations affiliated with Soros.

She went on to reference the "early support from Moveon.org, and the New Democrat Network," that Media Matters had received.

In its role as a liberal media watchdog, Media Matters for America takes on some of the biggest names in media. Brock also authored the 2002 book, "Blinded by the Right, The Conscience of an Ex-Conservative," in which he denounced the conservative movement where he first gained fame and disclosed his homosexuality.

'Typical of Brock's operation'

"It's good that they are now being honest by [this new statement regarding Soros]," said John Carlisle, director of policy for the conservative National Legal and Policy Center. "Clearly MMA worked very closely with Soros-funded groups. There is definitely a Soros connection there."

Carlisle told Cybercast News Service , "While there is no evidence Soros gave directly to Brock and Media Matters, clearly Soros-funded groups have been instrumental in getting MMA started."

David Horowitz is familiar with the practice of changing one's political ideology, but in Horowitz' case, he was a 1960s radical who became a conservative author. Horowitz charged that Media Matters' original claim that it had taken no money from Soros or groups affiliated with Soros was "a lie."

"This is typical of Brock's operation," Horowitz told Cybercast News Service . "They split hairs to present an untruth."

Media Matters can no longer deny its Soros affiliation because "once you have the names (of donors), once you know that Peter Lewis is involved, you can't deny it," said Horowitz, who as a conservative, co-founded the Los Angeles-based Center for the Study of the Popular Culture and Front Page Mag.com, a news and commentary website.

Horowitz said he is not surprised that Brock's group altered its statement after being questioned about donations. "[Brock is] a guy who turned on his friends. He was a sleazy gossip sort of writer when he was on the right, and he's a sleazy gossip writer on the left, and an unscrupulous one on both sides," Horowitz said.

'Progressive causes'

In Monday's e-mail statement, Aman wrote that the group receives "funding from grants and individual donors." Some of those donors, she added, "are regular contributors to progressive causes ..."

Among the individuals that Aman mentioned was Peter Lewis, the chairman of the Cleveland based insurance company Progressive Corporation and a close confidant of Soros. Lewis and Soros are so interlinked that Lewis' son Jonathan told Jane Mayer of The New Yorker in October 2004 that his father and Soros were "like a married couple."

According to Carlisle of the NLPC, "Peter Lewis works very closely with Soros. When Soros works with other groups, they match each other's giving." Soros and Lewis "are pretty much comrades in arms when it comes to left wing giving," Carlisle added, noting that both men played a critical role in the funding of MoveOn.org, a liberal group that posted on its website last year TV commercials comparing President Bush to Adolf Hitler.

A Cybercast News Service examination of Brock's financial records and public documents showed that the heavily funded Soros liberal think tank, The Center for American Progress, (CAP) was instrumental in getting Brock's media group off the ground.

Former Clinton administration chief of staff John Podesta, the current president of (CAP), also confirmed to the New York Sun that his group provided office space and logistical assistance to Brock in 2004.

Soros has reportedly given $3 million to CAP and its senior vice president, Morton H. Halperin, is also the director of Soros's Open Society Institute.

Brock's critics point to his efforts at rising to the personal defense of Soros as further evidence of a link between the two men. In December 2004, Brock issued one of numerous challenges to Fox News Channel's Bill O'Reilly, host of "The O'Reilly Factor" to a television debate to defend attacks on Soros.

In the December 16th letter to O'Reilly, Brock wrote "In May of this year, I asked that you allow me to come on the 'O'Reilly Factor' to discuss your attacks on philanthropist George Soros ... Despite my offer to discuss Soros, you still did not invite me on ..."

MMA has also defended Soros' criticism of the U.S. invasion of Saddam Hussein's Iraqi regime. In a Sept. 30, 2004 Internet posting, an MMA headline read in part: "Evidence supports Soros's claim that Iraq war is a recruiting tool for Al Qaeda."

"Nobody can utter a word about Soros without [Brock] pounding on him," Horowitz said, adding that MMA is "a hit site that is set up to attack all the enemies of the Soros network.

"There is a shadow party that has taken control of the Democratic Party and David Brock is their rapid response team. That is all it's about," Horowitz said.

See Related Articles:
David Brock: Conservatives 'Willing to Lie' to Influence Media
David Brock: Conservatives 'Willing to Lie' to Influence Media
Liberal Financier Accused of Violating Federal Election Law





To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:47:57 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
SOROS Accused of Violating Federal Election Law

By Marc Morano
CNSNews.com Senior Staff Writer
January 19, 2005

(CNSNews.com) - A conservative legal group has accused billionaire investor George Soros of violating federal election law.

The National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) on Tuesday filed a 41-page complaint against Soros with the Federal Election Commission, alleging "extensive apparent violations of the Federal Election Campaign Act."

The NLPC alleges that Soros failed to disclose a series of expenditures stemming from his October 2004 speaking tour to several swing states, where he called for the defeat of President Bush. Soros is a major financier of liberal causes.

"This is possibly the largest off-the-books independent expenditure ever run. It's especially important that the FEC look at it, because [his media tour] occurred the month before a very close election in key swing states," Ken Boehm, chairman of the NLPC, told Cybercast News Service.

<snip>

Read rest of article here.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:50:54 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Billionaires add to left-wing funds [Soros & friends AGAIN]
financial times ^ | 1/11/5

A group of billionaire philanthropists is to donate tens of millions more dollars to develop progressive political ideas in the US in an effort to counter the conservative ascendancy.

George Soros, who made his fortune in the hedge fund industry; Herb and Marion Sandler, the California couple who own a multi-billion dollar savings and loan business and Peter Lewis, the publicity-shy [?????????????????] chairman of an Ohio insurance company, gave more than $63m in the 2004 election cycle to organisations seeking to defeat George W. Bush.

The left-leaning billionaires agreed, at a meeting in San Francisco last month, to commit a larger sum over a longer period, to foster progressive ideas and people.

Far from being disillusioned by the defeat of John Kerry, the Democratic presidential candidate, the billionaires have resolved to invest further in the intellectual future of the left, said one person involved. Their commitment to provide new money comes amid criticism of the efforts of high-profile donors such as the Hungarian-born Mr Soros to sway US politics, as well as doubts about the effectiveness of record funding in helping the Democrat cause in 2004.

Details of the San Francisco meeting are closely guarded. Mr Soros and his son Jonathan, the Sandlers and Mr Lewis asked aides to leave the room.

But the still-evolving plan, according to one person involved, is "joint investment to build intellectual infrastructure".

The intention is to create organisations in Washington which can match right-wing think-tanks such as the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute. At a state level, the aim is to build what one person called a "deeper progressive bench".

The sums involved are the subject of speculation: one person said he had heard a commitment to spend more than $100m over 15 years, another said at least $25m over five years. Several people said their understanding was that the billionaires intended to spend more than they did in 2004.

Mr Soros donated $27m, the Sandlers $13m and Mr Lewis $23m to the so-called 527 groups - privately funded political organisations - according to PoliticalMoneyLine, the campaign finance tracking service.

John Podesta, the former chief-of-staff to Bill Clinton who now runs the Center for American Progress, a two-year-old Washington think tank, is expected to play a central role in dispensing the funds. The Open Society Institute, Mr Soros' foundation in New York, is also due to have a big say.

Left-wing policy experts have already got wind of the new funds. One former aide to Mr Kerry said there had been talks with the Center for American Progress about making permanent the network of foreign policy experts established in the 2004 campaign. He said he was told: "Money is not a problem."




To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:52:07 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Soros charged with tax evasion in Kazakhstan ........................
AFP: 12/28/2004
turkishpress.com

ALMATY, Dec 28 (AFP) - The Open Society Institute of billionaire US financier George Soros has been charged with tax evasion in the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan, police said here Tuesday.

A spokesman for the tax police, Ruslan Tlemisov, said the institute which promotes civil society and good governance throughout the world had not paid 623,000 dollars (458,000 euros) in taxes.

He said charges had been laid and the case would be heard in the district court early next year.

"The court may fine the foundation in addition to the (unpaid taxes) and avoiding the payment may lead to the cancellation of the licence of the foundation," Tlemisov said.

Soros has come under attack throughout the former Soviet bloc for his alleged support for the overthrow of post-Soviet Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze last year.

The Open Society Institute has been banished from Belarus and Uzbekistan, and its activities were severely curtailed in Russia in November last year over a complicated property dispute.

Soros himself was splashed with water and glue by two protesters as he addressed a human rights conference in Ukraine in March.

12/28/2004 14:51 GMT - AFP

Copyright © 2004 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AFP News report



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 9:56:11 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
George Soros spending millions in Ukraine election situation
..............................................
Embassy Row By James Morrison washingtontimes.com
Ukraine undecided
A chief adviser to the Ukrainian prime minister sees uncanny parallels between his boss's campaign for president and last week's U.S. presidential election.
The Nov. 21 runoff between Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych and Viktor Yushchenko, a former prime minister, is too close to call. Each candidate received about 39 percent in the first round of voting on Oct. 31. Ukrainians appear divided between Mr. Yanukovych's rural supporters and Mr. Yushchenko's urban ones.

Also, as in the American election, billionaire George Soros, who poured millions of dollars into efforts to defeat President Bush, is also spending millions on the campaign against Mr. Yanukovych, said Eduard Prutnik, the prime minister's adviser, on a visit to The Washington Times yesterday.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:00:27 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Lou Dobbs and His Buddy George Soros
By Cliff Kincaid | AIM October 31, 2004

No one really knows where the Soros money comes from because he operates behind a financial "hedge fund" that is based offshore.

If President Bush goes down to defeat on Tuesday, one factor will be the influence of mysterious pro-Kerry "527" organizations funded by billionaire George Soros, who almost single-handedly is trying to put the Democrat in the White House. The media have not only excused Soros for using a loophole in campaign finance law to buy the White House for Kerry, they have fawned over Soros with coverage that borders on hero worship. A recent example came last Wednesday, when Lou Dobbs of CNN interviewed "George," a friend he has known "for a long time," and permitted Soros to launch his typical anti-Bush diatribe.

What's worse, as "balance," Dobbs then interviewed Ken Duberstein, a Republican operative who declared that "I respect George Soros for putting his money where his mouth is" and "I salute him for getting involved in the process that way." This was the "opposing view?" Duberstein, a former chief of staff to President Ronald Reagan who presumably supports Bush for president, completely blew his opportunity to set the record straight about this "international financier" and his wild spending to defeat the President. Then again, neither Bush nor Vice President Cheney has ever uttered the word "Soros" on the campaign trail. They have seemed curiously reluctant to highlight this controversial foreign-born billionaire's unprecedented intervention in the U.S. presidential contest. Yet Bush and Cheney have taken a relentless beating over Cheney's old firm, Halliburton.

As we have contended, however, Soros is a human Halliburton whose network of companies, organizations and foundations actually makes the real Halliburton look like a Mom & Pop operation. No one really knows where the Soros money comes from because he operates behind a financial "hedge fund" that is based offshore. For the first time in history, despite the opposition of Soros and other international financiers and currency speculators, the Securities and Exchange Commission just recently voted to regulate these mysterious entities. Soros claims to be motivated to defeat Bush because of his policy of Iraq, but his long-time goal has been to legalize drugs. Dobbs didn't bring that subject up, and neither did Duberstein. Soros has been labeled the "Daddy Weedbucks" of the drug culture.

The media have never asked Kerry whether he agrees with the Soros agenda for America. If he becomes president, he may have no alternative but to implement it.

After permitting Soros to bash Bush on issues ranging from Iraq to the environment, Dobbs concluded by hailing Soros as "a man who has put his money, his energy and his time behind his political convictions." They parted ways, with Dobbs saying, "Good to have you here. Always good to see you, George." One got the impression that Soros was handling Dobbs' investments.

One day later, however, Soros got into potential legal trouble when the National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) filed a formal Complaint with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) against Soros, alleging that he may have made illegal expenditures by failing to fully disclose expenses related to his swing-state speaking tour. This tour concluded on October 28 with a speech at the National Press Club. The NLPC noted that, according to FEC filings, Soros reported the expenditures for two-page newspaper ads he bought in swing states titled "Why We Must Not Re-Elect President Bush," and for mailings with a similar theme. But nothing apparently has been reported for the significant travel, public relations and the other costs associated with his speaking tour.

In a press release, NLPC President Peter Flaherty said, "Soros is a hypocrite. First, he bankrolled the groups that lobbied for passage of McCain-Feingold, but now he's pouring millions through the law's loopholes. And he has apparently violated the Federal Election Campaign Act by not disclosing the substantial sums he is spending on this speaking tour. We expect a complete, expeditious and fair investigation of our Complaint." NLPC said that it also filed the complaint against two nonprofit organizations that hosted Soros' anti-Bush speeches, the World Affairs Council of Philadelphia and the Metropolitan Club of Columbus, Ohio. Soros spoke before other nonprofit organizations in other cities.

This is not a frivolous complaint because NLPC has a record of success before the FEC. The FEC has ruled favorably on NLPC complaints filed against House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senator Maria Cantwell, and Democratic presidential candidate Al Sharpton.

The NLPC press conference was disrupted by Soros aide Michael Vachon, who insisted the allegations were false. When asked about the allegations during the question-and answer period following his speech, Soros attacked NLPC as "shady." Soros is the shady one, and the media refuse to shine the light of public scrutiny and accountability on his activities. This is because they want Kerry to win.



Cliff Kincaid is the Editor of the AIM Report and can be reached at cliff.kincaid@aim.org



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:01:49 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Protester Mugged as Press Club Honors Nutty Billionaire ................
By Cliff Kincaid | AIM October 29, 2004

The Soros press-club performance was bizarre.

A grieving parent who lost one of his children to a drug overdose attempted to tell the National Press Club on Thursday that billionaire George Soros has to be stopped in his campaign to put John Kerry in the White House. But as he held up a photograph of his dead child and began to speak, Steve Steiner was quickly surrounded by security personnel who grabbed and muzzled him. He was roughed up and led away, suffering a dislocated shoulder, a punch to the back, threats of more physical violence, and five hours in the hospital undergoing X-rays and other tests. After the commotion, Soros gave his own speech and received a National Press Club coffee mug as a token of appreciation.

Steiner told AIM that he was accused of "trespassing," when he had a ticket to the event, and that he simply wanted people to see a picture of his dead 19-year-old son, Stevie, and to explain why Soros-supported legalization would only make the drug problem worse. This "disruption" occurred before the official program was underway and Soros had been introduced. There was nobody else at the podium at the time. Yet security came down on him like a ton of bricks. Steiner wasn't sure if the people pulverizing him were associated with Soros personally or the National Press Club.

Meanwhile, less than an hour earlier, at an event just down the hall, a personal representative of the billionaire, Michael Vachon, interrupted a press conference called by the National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) to present evidence that Soros has been violating campaign finance laws in his multimillion dollar effort to put John Kerry in the White House. Vachon interrupted the question-and-answer period by shouting that the NLPC allegations were false and that he and a Soros lawyer were there to answer any questions. No press club security personnel were there to remove him from the room or to tell him that Soros could answer the allegations in his own press club speech. Peter Flaherty of the NLPC permitted Vachon to speak rather than make more of a scene by demanding that he cease his provocative activities. However, Flaherty later issued a press release accusing Vachon of having "disrupted" the news conference. The NLPC had paid $700 to rent the room to get their message out, not have the event disrupted by paid agents of Soros.

Steve Steiner, of course, wasn't supposed to get anywhere near Soros or the press-club podium. He was not one of the press-club officials or special "guests of Soros" on the dais of the National Press Club. He was not there to get one of dozens of free copies of the Soros book, The Bubble of American Supremacy, that were being handed out for free. Steiner was one of about 20 representatives of anti-drug groups who had paid $35 to attend in the hope of forcing the billionaire to explain and defend his support for drug legalization. They fear that Soros, who is spending more than $20 million to defeat President Bush, will run the nation's drug policy if Kerry is elected and that a Kerry administration would move toward tolerance and acceptance of illegal drugs. Kerry is on record in favor of "responsible" drug use, has endorsed the scam known as "medical marijuana," and has even joked about "toking" the drug.

The Soros press-club performance was bizarre. During the question-and-answer session after the speech, Soros claimed that he did not support drug legalization but that he favored the distribution of heroin to addicts under "controlled conditions" such as they do in Switzerland. This is a form of legalization. The Swiss government gives heroin addicts their fixes in government facilities, where they "shoot up" with needles, also supplied by the government. Soros said that he, too, advocates "clean needles" for addicts, at taxpayer expense, so they can avoid getting diseases as they get high and kill themselves by other means. For Soros, abstinence from drugs and "cold turkey" withdrawal are not the main options.

Although he said that marijuana was harmful to young people because it destroys their ability to think and causes memory problems, he said that he opposes the "criminalization" of the problem. So, in effect, he does favor the legalization of marijuana. He said marijuana should be addressed like the tobacco problem, through "persuasion" and "education," but quickly noted that the anti-tobacco message was being lost on many young people, who are, in fact, smoking more cigarettes these days.

Contradicting oneself is apparently not a problem for a billionaire who is regarded by many in the media as some kind of great philosopher and expert on the world's problems. Were it not for his wealth and power, he would be dismissed as a crank or an eccentric. Bluntly speaking, he's a nut.

In other matters, he commented that although he opposes the Iraq war, he thinks we need more troops there. The currency speculator said he's comfortable with the recent decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission to impose regulations on his mysterious financial "hedge fund," even though he lobbied against them. Finally, Soros, an atheist, said he'd go live in a monastery if Bush wins re-election. I came away from the event concluding that he was even more of a flip-flopper than his candidate Kerry.

Members of the press club audience were not allowed to ask questions directly of Soros. They had to write them down on cards that were submitted to the National Press Club president, who screened them. Steiner, the founder of Dads and Mad Moms Against Drug Dealers (DAMMAD), feared that the questions would not convey the emotion and grief of parents who have lost children to the drug problem. After the incident, National Press Club security personnel proceeded to warn other people in the audience that they, too, would be evicted if they attempted to confront Soros with unapproved and unscripted questions. In fact, the security official said that if one person at a table disrupted the Soros speech, all of the people at the table would be thrown out.

The word had gone out—no one would embarrass Soros on the final day of his national speaking tour to defeat Bush.

The events illustrated how Soros has emerged not only as a financial patron of John Kerry but a beloved figure of the Washington, D.C.-based national press corps, who regard him as a "philanthropist."

In addition to the NLPC press conference, a "National Summit to Stop Drug Legalization by Exposing and Opposing Soros" was held earlier in the day at the House Rayburn office building. This is where Steven Steiner and other parents of children killed by drugs presented their testimonies.

The event also featured Donnie R. Marshall, a former head of the Drug Enforcement Administration; Robert Charles, Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs; Robert Dupont, former director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse; veteran anti-drug activist Joyce Nalepka, founder of "America's Children Drug-Free," and others. Accuracy in Media contributed a presentation on the media's love affair with George Soros, in which we documented how press groups and news organizations are on the Soros payroll. You can read that report at: aim.org

Joyce Nalepka revealed that the Bush and Kerry campaigns had been asked to respond to three questions about the need to prosecute the war on drugs. The answers from the Bush campaign showed a determination to keep illegal drugs out of the hands of America's children. The Kerry campaign refused to respond, despite ten different requests for answers to the questions. That would seem to indicate that Kerry may be in the back pocket of George Soros. And Soros has very deep pockets indeed.

C-SPAN ignored the anti-Soros events but covered his National Press Club speech. C-SPAN has also featured Soros speeches or presentations on September 28, September 16, and June 3 of this year. For someone who can easily spend what it takes to get press attention, Soros has received an awful lot of free media attention from C-SPAN —and the rest of the media as well. Some might say all of this coverage constitutes an illegal campaign contribution to the Kerry campaign. But anger in this regard seems to be reserved only for Sinclair Broadcasting and its alleged support for President Bush.

Don't look for journalists to pursue the story of how the media have helped Soros and, therefore, Kerry. And don't look for them to get to the bottom of why Steve Steiner was assaulted and by whom. That story might make Soros and his mouthpiece look bad.



Cliff Kincaid is the Editor of the AIM Report and can be reached at cliff.kincaid@aim.org



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:03:11 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
SOROS CLAN EYES ALBANY ("altruists" buying politicians left and right)
NY POST ^ | 10/24/04 | PAGE SIX BY RICHARD JOHNSON

The Soros family, which has spent gazillions trying to drive George W. Bush from the White House, has trained its sights on another Republican target: the GOP-controlled State Senate in Albany.

Robert Soros, the oldest son of George Soros and deputy chairman of his father's Quantum Group of investment funds, recently hosted a dinner at his Greenwich Village home, where Democrats asked a bunch of high-rollers, including Paul Francis, Susan and Alan Patricof and psychologist Gail Furman, for help in taking back the State Senate from the GOP this year.

New York Magazine reports the Soroses have contributed $200,000 to the effort, led by State Senators Eric Schneiderman and David Paterson.

"If we can't gain a foothold in New York," asks Soros, "how can we expect to gain power elsewhere?"

The elder Soros, who favors abolishing the Rockefeller drug laws, ran afoul of state election law earlier this year when he funneled $81,500 into the race for Albany District Attorney and succeeded in unseating incumbent Paul Clyne.

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:04:36 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Billionaires Secretly Met in Aspen to Defeat Bush
NewsMax.com ^ | 19 October 2004 | Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff

In the days following the Democratic National Convention in Boston this past August, several billionaire Democratic activists secretly met at the famed Aspen Institute in Colorado. The purpose of their clandestine meeting was "to use their fortunes to engineer the defeat of President George W. Bush," The New Yorker magazine reports in its most recent edition. Details of the meeting remain sketchy, but the magazine described the Aspen conference this way: "Five billionaires joined half a dozen liberal leaders in a lengthy conversation about the future of progressive politics in America." For sure, there were differences of opinion in the group, but they all shared one goal: to get George Bush this November. The Aspen meeting was supposed to have been a top secret within Democratic Party circles. When The New Yorker inquired about the meeting, an assistant to one of the attendees was surprised by the call. "No one was supposed to know about this," the aide told the magazine. "We don’t want people thinking it’s a cabal or some sort of Masonic plot!" Apparently the leader of the secret cabal is billionaire Peter B. Lewis, chairman of the Cleveland, Ohio-based insurance company Progressive Corporation. Like another attendee, wealthy financier George Soros, Lewis has poured millions into Democratic 527 groups, including Americans Coming Together and MoveOn.org. One of Lewis’ top agenda items has been the decriminalization of marijuana, a policy position also shared by Soros. Another billionaire who attended was John Sperling, founder of the online University of Phoenix. Also present were Herb and Marion Sandler from California. The couple founded Golden West Financial Corporation, a California bank reportedly worth $17 billion.

(Excerpt) Read more at newsmax.com ...



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:06:08 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Soros: U.S. Is Perpetrator in Terror War
AP ^ | 6/3/04
By EMILY FREDRIX Associated Press Writer

June 3, 2004

WASHINGTON -- America has gone from being the victim to the perpetrator in the war on terror and the pictures of prison abuse prove it, billionaire political activist George Soros said Thursday.

Seeing pictures of American soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners was a "moment of truth" for America, Soros said during a conference sponsored by the liberal-leaning Campaign for America's Future. "I think those pictures hit us the same way as the terrorist attack itself," Soros said, adding that it's a "very tough thing to say."

"There is, I'm afraid, that connection with those two events because the way President Bush conducted the war on terror converted us from victims into perpetrators," Soros said.

The war on terror has taken more innocent victims than the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Soros said.

"I think the American public now sees they have been misled," he said.

Soros joined other political notables at the three-day "Take Back America Conference," including former presidential candidate Howard Dean, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and former California gubernatorial candidate Arianna Huffington. He was introduced by New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, who said Soros is just one of many Americans becoming involved in politics in the hopes of ousting Bush.

The Republican National Committee was quick to dismiss Soros' statements, responding that the soldiers involved in the abuse are being punished.

"For Democrats to say that the abuse of Iraqi fighters is the moral equivalent of the slaughter of 3,000 innocent Americans is outrageous. Their hatred of the president is fueling a blame-America-first mentality that is troubling," RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie said in a statement.

Soros, who is plugging millions of his own dollars into anti-Bush groups like Moveon.org and The Media Fund, linked Bush's policies of pre-emption and U.S. supremacy to another George -- George Orwell, author of the political satire "Animal Farm."



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:08:03 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Uzbek Authorities Label Soros 'Undesirable'
...................................


Uzbek Authorities Label Soros Foundation 'Undesirable'

19 April 2004 -- The Uzbek government said today that George Soros's foundation is "undesirable," one day after the billionaire philanthropist criticized the human rights situation in Uzbekistan and said new regulations are forcing the group's office to close.

Today, Uzbek Foreign Ministry spokesman Ilkhom Zakirov said if the foundation was not accredited, it meant the organization's activities in Uzbekistan were undesirable.

Soros said at a meeting of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) yesterday that the Uzbek branch of his Open Society Institute (OSI) is being forced to close after the government declined to renew its registration.

The announcement of the closure of the OSI's Uzbek branch came after the EBRD said earlier this month it is limiting investment in Uzbekistan due to the government's lack of progress on democratic and economic reforms.

(AP)



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:12:51 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
The 'Sorosization' of the world
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review ^ | Sunday, February 29, 2004 | Dateline DC

WASHINGTON: He was known as the man who broke the Bank of England. In 1997, he destroyed the lives of millions of people in Thailand through his greed for money. A billionaire philanthropist, he meddles in politics and now blatantly buys and sells countries. He has never been elected to office, but easily uses the phrase "regime change" as an excuse for making even more money.

He is George Soros. The only citizen of the United States who has his own foreign policy and the power to impose it, according to his financial vision.

For many years, Soros has had countless irons in many fires -- drugs, euthanasia, immigrants and feminism -- and leaps from one to another with the agility of a star ballerina. This year, his targets are President George W. Bush, the country of Georgia and the Bake-Line Group -- with interests in Pittsburgh -- already consigned to bankruptcy and long forgotten by Soros.

Soros is now rushing around the country on his "Anyone But Bush" campaign while promoting yet another of his books spelling out his wit and wisdom. The basis is that Naziism, communism and fascism are evil because they put his "open society" at risk. President Bush, with the war against terrorism and his national security policies, also puts the Soros "open society" at the very same risk, and thus, in Soros-thought, is no different from these totalitarian philosophies.

Soros has put up $15.5 million of his money for his ABB campaign. It is being spent by several left-of-center "soft money" groups willing to promote his view. Among them, America Coming Together and the American Center for Progress.

But, Soros has other vehicles for his attacks on the president. He has joined Teresa Heinz Kerry in pouring millions of dollars into the leftist Tides Foundation and its allied Tides Center. A supporter of "regime change" in the United States, Soros was an avid supporter of Howard Dean, but to date has not announced who is his favored candidate.

Soros works mainly through the Open Society Institute (OSI) and Open Society Foundations (OSFs) that he has formed and funded in more than 50 countries. The control of these multimillion-dollar organizations rests, naturally, with George Soros, whose senior associates are academics who have for years worked for the ACLU. In Washington, the OSI office is run by Morton Halperin and other friends of the Clintons -- which tells you everything you need to know.

Their aims are stated clearly, "shaping government policies" in the areas of social, legal and economic reform. Until his attack on George Bush, the OSI had concentrated on our justice system -- it opposes the death penalty, opposes prison for addicts and dealers, and finances a campaign to free long-term death row inmates.

We can all get the feel of the OSI, through this month's favorite speech by Gara LaMarche, who is in charge of all their U.S. programs. Just the title will make your hair rise: "Suppose we had a Real Democracy in the United States?"

Georgian meddling

This month Soros is buying up not politicians or political parties but entire countries. Recently, in lock-step with James Baker III, another senior adviser to the Carlyle Group where Soros has a $100 million stake, his target was to topple the regime of Eduard Shevardnadze and install a system based on rule by veterans of the Soros-patented OSF.

It was a regime change that led Russia's leader, Vladimir Putin to say, "That Soros is making every head of state in the Confederation of Independent States (expletive) in his pants."

The Soros plan for Georgia is manifestly the latest template for his version of an Eastern-European revolution with George as the King Emperor. It is simple, just depends on cash, and his OSF foots the bill. In Georgia, OSF funded the student protest "Kmara (Enough)" -- with $500,000. A cheap price to pay for thugs who rough-up their opponents, run and riot in the streets and stuff the ballot boxes with fraudulent votes. Soros also pays the bureaucrats -- actual government employees who can then claim that they are fighting corruption by refusing local bribes. All it took was $16 million to topple one government and install another.

Working with their new comrade-in-chief, Mikhail Saakashvili, the OSF has shown its "resolve and strength to fight corruption" by planning a purge of corrupt officials and by filling key Cabinet positions such as the Education and the Economics, Industry and Trade ministries with former Soros employees from the OSF. And, of course, no criticism of Soros and his puppets ever appears in the media. They treat their supposed benefactor as a sister of Mother Teresa (and we don't mean Heinz Kerry).

Who is next for Sorosization? The Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Romania with some excursions into Haiti and Ireland where, with Tony O'Reilly, Soros has a major stake in a communications company --Eircom.

How much of this is revenge for his early years as a poor student from an undeciphered country at the London School of Economics, working several jobs to survive and cribbing from Third World Students to pass? Will he buy the country of every individual who ever looked at him cross-eyed? Will he destroy every economy that did not bow to him?

Dateline D.C. is written by a Washington-based British journalist and political observer.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:14:37 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
George Soros takes anti-Bush campaign to U. of C.
David Greising
Chicago Tribune
February 12, 2004

Billionaire investor George Soros has written a book that bashes President Bush. He funds an anti-Bush Web site, MoveOn.org, and backs a new liberal think tank in Washington. He has spent $12.5 million, and counting, on organizations committed to ousting Bush in the 2004 election.

And in Chicago on Wednesday, the currency trader-turned-political polemicist opened his newest front: college campuses.

In a one-day visit that included more traditional appearances--before the Tribune's editorial board and an audience of 1,500 at the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations--Soros spent the midday at the University of Chicago.

"If we re-elect George Bush, we will bear the consequences," Soros told a crowd that overflowed the 480-seat auditorium at Ida Noyes Hall. "The rest of the world will regard us with suspicion, and we will be embarking on a circle of violence because the threat of terrorism will never go away."

If Bush is rejected at the polls, Soros said, the so-called Bush Doctrine of pre-emptive force against security threats will be viewed as "an aberration" and an understandable reaction to the trauma of Sept. 11.

The speech before the U. of C.'s Graduate School of Business was an intriguing start for Soros' college campaign that by mid-March will take him to Duke University, the University of California at Berkeley and a still-undetermined New York City college.

A bastion of free-market economics and market-driven politics, the U. of C. business school did not guarantee Soros a receptive audience.

Luigi Zingales, a professor of entrepreneurship and finance who attended the event, questioned Soros' political acumen with a play on words off the title of the financier's new book, "The Bubble of American Supremacy."

Zingales noted that Soros lost money by arriving late and staying too long at the dot-com boom. "If a financial actor like George Soros was unable to identify and time properly a financial bubble, I suppose we should wonder about his ability to time and identify a political bubble," Zingales said.

In his book and speeches, Soros calls for the ouster of Bush and criticizes the U.S. war in Iraq. Soros prescribes major reforms to the United Nations, the World Bank and other international institutions.

The U.S. occasionally can take unilateral action, but only in deference to "the people's sovereignty" in the affected nations, Soros says.

From the 1970s through the early 1990s, Soros was a contrarian currency trader with an uncanny sense of timing. His successful $10 billion bet against the British pound in 1992 won him a reputation as "The Man who Broke the Bank of England."



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:15:52 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
The Soros Threat...............
American Enterprise Institute ^ | January 2004 | James K. Glassman

George Soros, the 38th richest person in the world according to Forbes, says that defeating President George W. Bush in 2004 is "the central focus of my life." In an eye-popping interview recently with the Washington Post, he argued that "America under Bush is a danger to the world."

"When I hear Bush say, 'You're either with us or against us,' it reminds me of the Germans." It evokes memories, he says, of the Nazi rhetoric of his childhood in Hungary.

This wild antipathy toward the President is making Soros--who earned his $7 billion as a hedge-fund buccaneer--the single biggest funder of efforts to get Bush out of the White House. The Post figures he has spent over $15 million so far, and he is ready to give more. The 2004 Presidential race, he told the Post, is "a matter of life and death."

In early November, Soros and a partner donated $5 million to the liberal, anti-Bush MoveOn.org. He also gave $10 million to a similar organization, America Coming Together, which aims to mobilize voters in 17 battleground states. And he has promised $3 million to the Center for American Progress, a new Democratic think tank started by former Clinton aide John Podesta.

Soros has always fancied himself an intellectual as well as a moneymaker, and he wants desperately to be taken seriously. His first attempt came in 1997 with a weird, discursive article in the Atlantic Monthly called "The Capitalist Threat." He argued that "the spread of market values into all areas of life" is now the main threat to "open and democratic society."

The man-bites-dog nature of the anticapitalist article from the capitalist mogul brought it attention, but it was so appallingly stupid that it provoked the ire of even the typically mild-mannered, centrist journalist Robert Samuelson of Newsweek. He called Soros "a crackpot" and his essay "gibberish" akin to the "Unabomber's manifesto in its sweeping, unsupported, and disconnected generalizations."

Now Soros is back in the Atlantic with a piece called "The Bubble of American Supremacy." Here the problem is not so much incoherence as hysteria: "The Bush administration proceeded to exploit the terrorist attack for its own purposes," he writes of the 9/11 terrorist murder of innocents. "It fostered the fear that has gripped the country…and it used the war on terrorism to execute an agenda of American supremacy."

What does Soros propose? Not military action, but "preventive action of a constructive and affirmative nature. Increased foreign aid or better or fairer trade rules," and, of course, "international cooperation."

All of this would be harmless if Soros didn't have billions to spend and the intention to manipulate our politics with them. In the past, it was enough for him to lavish money on leftish causes like drug legalization through the Soros Foundations Network. But a more strident, ideological tone has now become evident.

Soros dubbed his main charity the "Open Society Institute," a reference to the 1945 book, The Open Society and Its Enemies, by Karl Popper (1902-94), who was driven out of his native Austria by the Nazis. Popper's ideas are complicated, but he stood for what Jonathan Rauch, in a perceptive essay following 9/11, called a free society's "irrepressible effervescence and astonishing durability." These truly are American traits, and ones that the Bush administration has tried to preserve and promote through the kinds of activities that Soros appears to detest: tax cuts, regulatory restraint, and yes, overthrowing tyrants in other parts of the world.

There is irony in Soros's simultaneous embrace of Popper and of the American Left. And hypocrisy in his attitude toward campaign finance regulation: In his foundation's annual report, Soros lauds the McCain-Feingold law limiting donations as an antidote to "a fundamental crisis in democratic self-government." Yet he pours millions into a loophole that lets nonparty groups accept funds without limit.

Let me be clear: Soros earned his money, and he can spend it on whatever he wants. What concerns me is the monstrous hatred Soros has developed toward the President of the United States--hatred shared by others in his social circle.

My guess is that the $15 million Soros has spent is just the beginning. Most voters are blessedly immune to dumb arguments even when they are well-funded. Nevertheless, it would be foolish to take Soros lightly. He is emerging as a great threat not just to the re-election of George Bush, but to our truly open society as well.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:17:52 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
SOROS Eastern Europe's uncrowned king, prophet of "the open society." But open to what?
New Statesman, Ltd. | 06/02/2003 | Neil Clark

George Soros is angry. In common with 90 per cent of the world's population, the Man Who Broke the Bank of England has had enough of President Bush and his foreign policy.

In a recent article in the Financial Times, Soros condemned the Bush administration's policies on Iraq as "fundamentally wrong" -- based as they were on a "false ideology that US might gave it the right to impose its will on the world".

Wow! Has one of the world's richest men--the archetypal amoral capitalist who made billions out of the Far Eastern currency crash of 1997 and who last year was fined $2m for insider trading by a court in France -- seen the light in his old age? (He is 72.) Should we pop the champagne corks and toast his conversion?

Not before asking what really motivates him. Soros likes to portray himself as an outsider, an independent-minded Hungarian emigre and philosopher-pundit who stands detached from the US military-industrial complex. But take a look at the board members of the NGOs he organises and finances.

At Human Rights Watch, for example, there is Morton Abramowitz, US assistant secretary of state for intelligence and research from 1985-89, and now a fellow at the interventionist Council on Foreign Relations; ex-ambassador Warren Zimmerman (whose spell in Yugoslavia coincided with the break-up of that country); and Paul Goble, director of communications at the CIA-created Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (which Soros also funds).

Soros's International Crisis Group boasts such "independent" luminaries as the former national security advisers Zbigniew Brzezinski and Richard Allen, as well as General Wesley Clark, once Nato supreme allied commander for Europe.

The group's vice-chairman is the former congressman Stephen Solarz, once described as "the Israel lobby's chief legislative tactician on Capitol Hill" and a signatory, along with the likes of Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz, to a notorious letter to President Clinton in 1998 calling for a "comprehensive political and military strategy for bringing down Saddam and his regime".

Take a look also at Soros's business partners. At the Carlyle Group, where he has invested more than $100m, they include the former secretary of state James Baker and the erstwhile defence secretary Frank Carlucci, George Bush Sr and, until recently, the estranged relatives of Osama Bin Laden. Carlyle, one of the world's largest private equity funds, makes most of its money from its work as a defence contractor.

Soros may not, as some have suggested, be a fully paid-up CIA agent. But that his companies and NGOs are closely wrapped up in US expansionism cannot seriously be doubted.

So why is he so upset with Bush? The answer is simple. Soros is angry not with Bush's aims -- of extending Pax Americana and making the world safe for global capitalists like himself -but with the crass and blundering way Bush is going about it. By making US ambitions so clear, the Bush gang has committed the cardinal sin of giving the game away. For years, Soros and his NGOs have gone about their work extending the boundaries of the "free world" so skilfully that hardly anyone noticed. Now a Texan redneck and a gang of overzealous neo-cons have blown it.

As a cultivated and educated man (a degree in philosophy from the London School of Economics, honorary degrees from the Universities of Oxford, Yale, Bologna and Budapest), Soros knows too well that empires perish when they overstep the mark and provoke the formation of counter-alliances.

He understands that the Clintonian approach of multilateralism -- whereby the US cajoles or bribes but never does anything so crude as to threaten -- is the only one that will allow the empire to endure.

Bush's policies have led to a divided Europe, Nato in disarray, the genesis of a new Franco-German-Russian alliance and the first meaningful steps towards Arab unity since Nasser.

Soros knows a better way -- armed with a few billion dollars, a handful of NGOs and a nod and a wink from the US State Department, it is perfectly possible to topple foreign governments that are bad for business, seize a country's assets, and even to get thanked for your benevolence afterwards. Soros has done it.

The conventional view, shared by many on the left, is that socialism collapsed in eastern Europe because of its systemic weaknesses and the political elite's failure to build popular support.

That may be partly true, but Soros's role was crucial. From 1979, he distributed $3m a year to dissidents including Poland's Solidarity movement, Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia and Andrei Sakharov in the Soviet Union.

In 1984, he founded his first Open Society Institute in Hungary and pumped millions of dollars into opposition movements and independent media. Ostensibly aimed at building up a "civil society", these initiatives were designed to weaken the existing political structures and pave the way for eastern Europe's eventual colonisation by global capital. Soros now claims, with characteristic immodesty, that he was responsible for the "Americanisation" of eastern Europe.

The Yugoslavs remained stubbornly resistant and repeatedly returned Slobodan Milosevic's unreformed Socialist Party to government.

Soros was equal to the challenge. From 1991, his Open Society Institute channelled more than $100m to the coffers of the anti-Milosevic opposition, funding political parties, publishing houses and "independent" media such as Radio B92, the plucky little student radio station of western mythology which was in reality bankrolled by one of the world's richest men on behalf of the world's most powerful nation.

With Slobo finally toppled in 2000 in a coup d'etat financed, planned and executed in Washington, all that was left was to cart the ex-Yugoslav leader to the Hague tribunal, co-financed by Soros along with those other custodians of human rights Time Warner Corporation and Disney.

He faced charges of crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide, based in the main on the largely anecdotal evidence of (you've guessed it) Human Rights Watch.

Soros stresses his belief in the "open society" propounded by the philosopher Karl Popper, who taught him at the LSE in the early 1950s. Soros's definition of an "open society" -- "an imperfect society that holds itself open to improvement" -- sounds reasonable enough; few lovers of genuine liberty would take issue with its central tenet that "the open society is a more sophisticated form of social organisation than a totalitarian one". But Soros's "open societies" don't tend to be all that open in practice.

Since the fall of Milosevic, Serbia, under the auspices of Sorosbacked "reformers", has become less, not more, free. The recently lifted state of emergency saw more than 4,000 people arrested, many of them without charge, political parties threatened with bans, and critical newspapers closed down. It was condemned by the UN Commission on Human Rights and the British Helsinki Group.

But there was not a murmur from the Open Society Institute or from Soros himself. In fairness, Soros has been far more critical of his former protege Leonid Kuchma, president of the Ukraine, a country described by the former intelligence officer Mykola Melnychenko as "one big protection racket", and now possibly the most repressive police state in Europe.

But generally the sad conclusion is that for all his liberal quoting of Popper, Soros deems a society "open" not if it respects human rights and basic freedoms, but if it is "open" for him and his associates to make money. And, indeed, Soros has made money in every country he has helped to prise "open". In Kosovo, for example, he has invested $50m in an attempt to gain control of the Trepca mine complex, where there are vast reserves of gold, silver, lead and other minerals estimated to be worth in the region of $5bn.

He thus copied a pattern he has deployed to great effect over the whole of eastern Europe: of advocating "shock therapy" and "economic reform", then swooping in with his associates to buy valuable state assets at knockdown prices.

More than a decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Soros is the uncrowned king of eastern Europe. His Central European University, with campuses in Budapest, Warsaw and Prague and exchange programmes in the US, unashamedly propagates the ethos of neoliberal capitalism and clones the next pro-American generation of political leaders in the region. With his financial stranglehold over political parties, business, educational institutions and the arts, criticism of Soros in mainstream eastern European media is hard to find. Hagiography is not.

The Budapest Sun reported in February how he had been made an honorary citizen of Budapest by the mayor, Gabor Demszky. "Few people have done to Budapest what George Soros has," gushed Demszky, saying that the billionaire had contributed to "structural and mental changes in the capital city and Hungary itself". The mayor failed to add that Soros is also a benefactor of Demszky's own party, the Free Democrats, which, governing with "reform" communists, has pursued the cl assic Soros agenda of privatisation and economic liberalisation -- leading to a widening gap between rich and poor.

The Soros strategy for extending Fax Americana differs from the Bush model, particularly in its subtlety. But it is lust as ambitious and lust as deadly. Left-liberals, admiring his support for some of their favourite issues such as gay rights and the legalisation of soft drugs, let him off lightly.

Asked about the havoc his currency speculation caused to Far Eastern economies in the crash of 1997, Soros replied: "As a market participant, I don't need to be concerned with the consequences of my actions." Strange words from a man who likes to be regarded as the saviour of civil society and who rails in print against "market fundamentalism".

COPYRIGHT 2003 New Statesman, Ltd.



To: tonto who wrote (38142)7/25/2005 10:20:47 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
GEORGE SOROS : PHILANTHROPIST OR PREDATOR ?

Recently billionaire George Soros has appeared prominently in the news as a bankroller of what he calls "regime change" in the US.

Soros has contributed $10 million to a new Democratic Party group designed to defeat George Bush.called "Americans Coming Together" (ACT). He has also given $5 million to MoveOn.org, which he calls "a popular Internet advocacy group that is airing advertisements to highlight the administration's misdeeds."

"I like what they do and how they do it," Soros says of MoveOn., a group originally formed by activists protesting Bill Clinton's impeachment. Beating Bush has become "the central focus on my life," Soros told The Washington Post.

Interestingly, it was Soros who contributed close to $15 million dollars to push passage of the McCain-Feingold law, the purpose of which is "To dramatically reduce the role of big special-interest money in American politics," according to Soros himself.

"Having helped finance the McCain-Feingold measure he is now actively circumventing the law by financing political groups that are nothing but Democratic Party fronts," writes economics writer Gerard Jackson .

Bloomberg news reported in October that despite the law banning coordination between the two, America Coming Together's headquarters was located on the fourth floor of 888 16th Street in Washington, with the Democratic National Committee on the seventh and eighth floors of the same building.

In a Washington Post op-ed Soros recently felt compelled to assert that in his contributions to ACT and Move-On.org., "I have scrupulously abided by both the letter and the spirit of the law "

The media reporting on Soros and his recent contributions repeatedly describe him as a "currency trader" and "philanthropist"

But what are they leaving out?

MASTER OF FRONTS

Soros' dealings are so complex that his name does not appear directly on many movements that he engineers.