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


To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 1:54:09 PM
From: tonto  Respond to of 93284
 
LOLOL,,,as long as one is simply a party member like you, politicians will be corrupt. You make them so...you will tolerate it as you always have...

Dems must represent ethics and honesty from now on. No bribe-taking will be tolerated.



To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 1:54:10 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 93284
 
Because repubs aren't as partisan as dems



To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 2:00:13 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 93284
 
AS why don't you give it a rest... Sniveling here on SI 24/7 ain't gonna make a bit of difference. So ask a nurse at the institution if maybe you can go outside and stare at a tree for awhile. Enough of your blather and drivel.... No one really cares...



To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 4:56:08 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
"Dems must represent ethics and honesty from now on."

Starting now ... deal?? What do you mean by the word 'must'?

And if they don't will you continue as usual? Of course I am talking about individual persons not the Institution itself. Waddya say, you ready to step into the light?



To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 9:04:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Lay Convicted, Bush Walks
________________________________________________________

By Greg Palast
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Thursday 25 May 2006

Don't kid yourself. If you think the conviction of Ken Lay means that George W. Bush is serious about going after corporate bad guys, think again.

First, Lay got away with murder - or at least grand larceny. Like Al Capone convicted of failing to file his taxes, Ken Lay, though found guilty of stock fraud, is totally off the hook for his BIG crime: taking down California and Texas consumers for billions through fraud on the power markets. Lay co-convict Jeff Skilling and Enron did not act alone. They connived with a half dozen other power companies and a dozen investment banks to manipulate both the stock market and the electricity market. And though their co-conspirators have now paid $3 billion to settle civil claims, the executives of these other corporations and banks get a walk on criminal charges. Furthermore, to protect our president's boardroom buddies from any additional discomfort, the Bush Justice Department, just days ago, indicted Milberg-Weiss, the law firm that nailed Enron's finance industry partners-in-crime. The timing of the bust of this firm - the top corporation-battling law firm - smacks of political prosecution, and is a signal to Big Business that it's business as usual. Lay and Skilling have to pay up their ill-gotten gains to Enron's stockholders, but what about the $9-plus billion owed to electricity consumers? The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Bush's electricity cops, have slapped Enron and its gang of power pirates on the wrist. Could that have something to do with the fact that Ken Lay, in secret chats with Dick Cheney, selected the Commission's chairmen? Team Bush had to throw the public a bone, so they threw us Lay and Skilling for the crime - note - not of ripping off the public, but of ripping off stockholders - the owner class. This limited conviction, and the announcement of only one more indictment - of the crime-busters at Milberg-Weiss - is Team Bush's "all clear!" signal for the sharks to jump back into the power pool.

That leaves one question: If Bush's Justice Department let Ken and company keep the California loot, what about that state's own government? If you want to know how Californians' $9 billion went bye-bye, read on...

When Ahnold Got Lay'd

Peninsula Hotel, Beverly Hills. May 17, 2001. The Financial Criminal of the twentieth century, not long out of prison, meets with the Financial Criminal of the twenty-first century, who fears he may also have to do hard time. These two, bond-market manipulator Mike Millikin and Ken Lay, not-yet-indicted Chairman of Enron Corporation, were joined by a selected group of movers and shakers - and one movie star.

Arnold Schwarzenegger had been to such private parties before. As a young immigrant without a nickel to his name, he put on private displays of his musculature for guests of his promoter. As with those early closed gatherings, I don't know all that went on at the Peninsula Hotel meet, though I understand Ahnold, this time, did not have to strip down to his Speedos. Nevertheless, the moral undressing was just as lascivious, if you read through the 34 page fax that arrived at our office.

Lay, who convened the hugger-mugger, was in a bit of trouble. Enron and the small oligopoly of other companies that ruled California's electricity system had been caught jacking up the price of power and gas by fraud, conspiracy and manipulation. A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon it was real money - $6.3 billion in suspect windfalls in just six months, May through December 2000, for a half-dozen electricity buccaneers, at least $9 billion for the year. Their skim would have been higher, but the tricksters thought they were limited by the number of digits the state's power-buying computers could read.

When Ken met Arnold in the hotel room, the games were far from over. For example, in June 2003, Reliant Corporation of Houston simply turned off several power plants, and when California cities faced going dark, the company sold them a pittance of kilowatts for more than gold, making several million in minutes.

Power-market shenanigans were nothing new in 2000. What was new was the response of Governor Gray Davis. A normally quiet, if not dull, man, this Governor had the temerity to call the energy sellers "pirates" - in public! - and, even more radically, he asked them to give back all the ill-gotten loot, the entire $9 billion. The state filed a regulatory complaint with the federal government.

The Peninsula Hotel get-together was all about how to "settle" the legal actions in such a way that Enron and friends could get the state to accept dog food instead of dollars. Davis seemed unlikely to see things Ken's way. Life would be so much better if California had a governor like the muscle guy in the Speedos.

And so it came to pass that, in 2003, quiet Gray Davis, who had the cojones to stand up to the electricity barons, was thrown out of office by the voters and replaced by the tinker-toy tough guy. The Governator performed as desired. Soon after Schwarzenegger took over from Davis, he signed off on a series of deals with Reliant, Williams Company, Dynegy, Entergy and the other power pirates for ten to twenty cents on the dollar, less than you'd tip the waitress. Enron paid just about nothing.

--------

truthout.org



To: American Spirit who wrote (61953)5/25/2006 9:20:56 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
The people have spoken. Enron's executives are criminals. Who's next?

By Andrew Leonard

salon.com

May. 25, 2006 | The people have spoken. Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling are guilty, guilty, guilty. You name it: conspiracy, wire fraud, securities fraud. Lay was convicted on all counts. Skilling was convicted on 18 counts of conspiracy and fraud.

Let's hope that chief executives everywhere feel uneasy on their thrones. Because the ramifications of this verdict are profound. More than any other corporation, Enron symbolized a culture of greed and arrogance that made mockery of the values of a civilized society. From its "rank-and-yank" treatment of workers to its scorn for government regulation to its elevation of the scruple-free, gunslinging trader into highflying culture hero, Enron declared with every step: We know best; we are the state of the art of modern capitalism. Follow us to the future, or suck on our exhaust.

And at its height, the company was lauded for its balls-out braggadocio. The business press fawned over it: Fortune magazine named it "most innovative corporation" in America six years in a row. Lay hobnobbed with presidents and was considered on the shortlist for energy secretary. Skilling was the Harvard-educated, McKinsey-trained "genius" who created brand-new markets with the wave of a hand. Enron was endlessly innovative, endlessly creative, endlessly profitable. Enron was what all companies aspired to be, if only those darned governments would get out of the way and let them run free.

Except now we know, Enron was run by incompetent crooks. Enron lost billions of dollars. Enron didn't know best, Enron, in truth, was pathetically managed. Enron was the worst that America can be.

It's possible, in the fantasy world that Lay and Skilling evidently live in, that the two may have believed in their own defense -- that Enron was the powerless victim of a financial press feeding frenzy and Wall Street short-sellers eager to capitalize on Enron's declining stock value. And really, who would have been surprised if they had pulled it off, and walked out of the courtroom today grinning like bandits? To anyone who delved deep into the Enron saga, who has read a handful of the scores of books that have already been written about the company, or followed the painstaking day-by-day unveiling of the company's astounding machinations in the financial press, the defense was ludicrous. But hey, lots of ludicrous things happen in the United States every day.

Enron was a self-contained corporate version of a Ponzi scheme. As it moved out of its original business transporting and selling natural gas into one new market after another -- water, pulp, bandwidth, weather and credit derivatives -- it started hemorrhaging cash. It covered up its losses with "innovative" new schemes such as selling off company assets to private partnerships that were actually run by company executives. Inside the corporation, scores of voices warned against the path being taken. The whistle-blowers were ignored or transferred to jobs where they couldn't make trouble.

We will hear now, once again, that Enron was just a bad apple (although in the context of the corporate scandals of the turn of the century, it's abundantly clear something was rotten at the core of the entire harvest). And it is true, Enron had all the trappings of plain old venial sin. As Robert Bryce documents in his entertaining "Pipe Dreams: Greed, Ego, and the Death of Enron," Enron's executives wasted millions on corporate jets and strip clubs, cheated on their wives, and fought one another within the company like crazed wolverines.

But that's just surface froth. Far more important to the story of Enron is the story of its ideology.

Ken Lay and Jeff Skilling were men on a mission. Enron was an avatar of deregulation, the culmination of a quarter-century of political change that raised the icon of Corporation up onto a pedestal above every other element of society. Let the market have its way, and all would be well. Traders operating with as little supervision as possible would handle everything. Of course, when you're in the business of creating new trading markets out of thin air for things like Internet bandwidth, you hope no one is looking too closely over your shoulder. But Enron's pull was great enough to affect public policy -- to ensure that the government didn't look too hard at the fast-evolving arcane world of derivatives trading that Enron was plunging into.

It was fun to watch, five years ago, as George W. Bush distanced himself as fast as he could from his old pal "Kenny Boy." But there's no distancing oneself from the ideology that Lay pushed.

The people should take notice. Twelve jurors saw through Lay and Skilling's self-serving lies and deceptions and found them guilty. That should be a wake-up call. In this administration, more than any other in living memory, business executives with the morals and beliefs of Lay and Skilling have been given the keys to the palace. They run the government departments that are supposed to regulate their industries. They write the trade treaties that the U.S. signs with other countries, specifically so as to ensure their own greater opportunities to profit. They are hard at work eviscerating environmental rules, resisting calls for greater government scrutiny of their affairs, and even chafing to roll back the few new restrictions on their operating freedom (like the accounting regulation Sarbanes-Oxley) that did result from the corporate scandals that rocked the world half a decade ago.

Skilling and Lay may be guilty, but the spirit of Enron is alive and well in the White House and Congress. It's time to find them all guilty. Including, naturally, the executive at the very top, the man who doesn't listen to what he doesn't want to hear, makes up evidence to get his way, spends far more than he earns, and tries to cover it all up with misdirection and a folksy smile. Kenny Boy looks like he's down for the count. Who's next?