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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neeka who wrote (19720)5/3/2007 3:06:04 AM
From: sandintoes  Respond to of 71588
 
ROFLOL Great minds and all!

Message 23512612



To: Neeka who wrote (19720)5/9/2007 8:08:07 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 71588
 
Soros is VERY bad news: Axis of Soros ~~The men and motives behind the World Bank coup attempt.

opinionjournal.com

Wednesday, May 9, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT

Mark Malloch Brown spoke Monday to a crowded auditorium at the World Bank's headquarters, warning that the bank's mission was "hugely at risk" as long as Paul Wolfowitz remained its president. Only hours earlier, news leaked that a special committee investigating Mr. Wolfowitz had accused him of violating conflict-of-interest rules. A coincidence? We doubt it.

Mr. Malloch Brown, remember, was until last year Kofi Annan's deputy at the United Nations. In that position, he distinguished himself by spinning away the $100 billion Oil for Food scandal as little more than a blip in the U.N.'s good work, and one that had little to do with Mr. Annan himself. Last week, Mr. Malloch Brown was named vice president of the Quantum Fund, the hedge fund run by his billionaire friend George Soros. A former World Bank official himself and ally of soon-to-be British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Mr. Malloch Brown would almost surely be a leading candidate to replace Mr. Wolfowitz should he step down. Not surprisingly, Gordon Brown cold-shouldered Mr. Wolfowitz at a recent meeting in Brussels.

The bank presidency would be a neat coup for Sir Mark, and not just because the post has heretofore gone to an American. He also stands for everything Mr. Wolfowitz opposes, beginning with the issue of corruption. Consider Mr. Malloch Brown's defense of the U.N.'s procurement practices.

"Not a penny was lost from the organization," he insisted last year, following an audit of the U.N.'s peacekeeping procurement by its Office of Internal Oversight Services. In fact, the office found that $7 million had been lost from overpayment; $50 million worth of contracts showed indications of bid rigging; $61 million had bypassed U.N. rules; $82 million had been lost to mismanagement; and $110 million had "insufficient" justification. That's $310 million out of a budget of $1.6 billion, and who knows what the auditors missed.

Mr. Malloch Brown also made curious use of English by insisting that Paul Volcker's investigation into Oil for Food had "fully exonerated" Mr. Annan. In fact, Mr. Volcker's report made an "adverse finding" against the then-Secretary-General. Among other details, the final report noted that Mr. Annan was "aware of [Saddam's] kickback scheme at least as early as February 2001," yet never reported it to the U.N. Security Council, much less the public, a clear breach of his fiduciary responsibilities as the U.N.'s chief administrative officer. Mr. Malloch Brown described the idea that Mr. Annan might resign as "inappropriate political assassination"--a standard he apparently doesn't apply to political enemies like Mr. Wolfowitz.

Mr. Malloch Brown never made any serious attempt to reform the U.N. beyond the cosmetic, while doing everything he could to block the real reforms proposed by Americans Christopher Burnham and former Ambassador John Bolton. He was, however, energetic when it came to lecturing Americans about what they owed the U.N., such as joining the "reformed" Human Rights Council (whose only achievement to date has been to castigate Israel), pursuing a "new multilateral national security," and otherwise empowering the likes of Mr. Malloch Brown, his multilateral mates and their tax-free salaries.

Views like these help explain why Mr. Malloch Brown is in such favor with Mr. Soros, who has publicly suggested the U.S. will need a "de-Nazification" program to erase the taint of the Bush Administration. So close are the two that Mr. Malloch Brown lives in a suburban New York home owned by Mr. Soros. Mr. Malloch Brown says he pays market rent, though reporting by the New York Sun's Benny Avni disputes that. In any case, it's safe to assume that Mr. Soros's widely published views are close to Mr. Malloch Brown's somewhat more guarded ones.
So it's not surprising that many on the World Bank staff would cheer Mr. Malloch Brown: He's perfect for an institutional culture in which "progressive" thinking goes hand-in-glove with a tolerance for corruption. That culture has been on vivid display in the Euro-coup against Mr. Wolfowitz. This weekend the committee investigating the claims dropped 600 pages in the president's lap and told him he had 48 hours to respond--in direct violation of World Bank staff rule 8.01, 4.09, which states that "the amount of time allowed a staff member to comment [on an investigative report] . . . will not be less than 5 business days." Following protests from Mr. Wolfowitz's lawyer, the committee gave him 72 hours.

This is the same kangaroo court that last month leaked its guilty verdict to the Washington Post before Mr. Wolfowitz even had a chance to plead his case. Our sources who have seen the committee's report tell us it is especially critical of Mr. Wolfowitz for daring to object publicly to the committee's methods and thereby bringing the bank's name into disrepute. The Europeans running this Red Queen proceeding prefer that they be able to smear with selective leaks without rebuttal.

Mr. Malloch Brown warned on Monday that, if Mr. Wolfowitz stayed as president, European countries might withhold funding from the next financing round for the bank's International Development Association. We hope he's right, though we know few European finance ministers who aren't eager to throw good money after bad. Still, it's a remarkable bit of chutzpah for the man who downplayed corruption at the U.N. to seek the ouster of the man who has fought to reduce corruption at the World Bank.

If the Bush Administration now abandons Mr. Wolfowitz as he faces a decision from the bank's board of governors, it will not only betray a friend but hand the biggest victory yet to its audacious enemies in the George Soros axis.



To: Neeka who wrote (19720)8/3/2007 10:08:46 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
Did I Miss The "Hip" Part?
By: Ann Coulter

CNN commentators keep telling us how young and hip the audience was for
last week's YouTube Democratic debate, apparently unaware that the
camera occasionally panned across the audience, which was the same
oddball collection of teachers' union shills and welfare recipients you
see at all Democratic gatherings.

Noticeably, Gov. Bill Richardson got the first "woo" of the debate — the
mating call of rotund liberal women — for demanding a federal mandate
that would guarantee public schoolteachers a minimum salary of $40,000.

So much for the "younger, hipper" audience. Maybe CNN meant "hippier,"
as in, "My, she's looking a bit hippy these days."

Not counting talking snowmen, the main difference in the YouTube debate
audience and the audience for the earlier CNN Democratic debate is that
the YouTube debate had 173,000 fewer viewers in the 18-49 demographic.
So it was provably not young and, on the basis of casual observation,
definitely not hip.

As usual, the audience consisted mostly of public schoolteachers.
According to CNN, the highest reading achieved on the CNN feelings-knob
was for Richardson talking about public schoolteachers. (Some in the
audience said they hadn't been that excited since the last time they had
sex with an underage student.)

B. Hussein Obama said he was for slavery reparations in many forms, but
the only one that got applause was for more "investment" in schools. In
Obama's defense, the precise question was: "But is African-Americans
ever going to get reparations for slavery?" So a switch to the subject
of education was only natural.

Moreover, a question on reparations has got to be confusing when you're
half-white and half-black. What do you do? Demand an apology for slavery
and money from yourself? I guess biracial reparations would involve
sending yourself money, then sending back a portion of that money to
yourself, minus 50 percent in processing fees — which is the same way
federal aid works.

It was fun to hear the Democratic candidates give heart-rending reasons
for not sending their own kids to public schools. Except John Edwards.
He got a "woo" for sending his kids to public schools from all those
"young, hip" Democrats whose greatest concern is how to transfer more
money to public schoolteachers while reducing their workload.

The candidates all managed to come up with good reasons for sending
their kids to private schools — with extra points for reasons that
involved a family tragedy or emergency — but it didn't seem to occur to
any of them that ordinary families might have good reasons, too.

In her first risible lie of the debate, Hillary said Chelsea went to
public schools in Arkansas. But when they moved to Washington, they were
advised that "if she were to go to a public school, the press would
never leave her alone, because it's a public school. So I had to make a
very difficult decision."
"Unfortunately," she said, it was "good advice."

Was it really that difficult a decision not to send Chelsea to public
schools in Washington, D.C.?
This is how The New York Times recently described the schools in
Washington, which it called "arguably the nation's most dysfunctional
school system."

"Though it is one of the country's highest-spending districts, most of
the money goes to central administration, not to classrooms, according
to a recent series of articles in The Washington Post. Its 55,000 mostly
poor students score far worse than comparable children anywhere else in
reading and math, with nearly 74 percent of the district's low-income
eighth-graders lacking basic math skills, compared with the national
average of 49 percent."

So Hillary was dying to send Chelsea to the D.C. public schools, but
"unfortunately" did not do so only because of the press? Did she also
agonize over whether to allow Chelsea to play in traffic?

She was not dying to send Chelsea to D.C. public schools. And no
Democrat cares about "education" or "the poor."

Democrats care about social service bureaucrats who make their living
allegedly working on behalf of the poor — the famed "public service" the
Democrats always drone on about — jobs that would disappear if we ever
eliminated poverty. That's why Democrats keep coming up with policies
designed to create millions and millions more poor people.

Democrats fight tooth and nail against any measures that would actually
help the poor, such as allowing schools to fire bad teachers. They
refuse to allow parents with children in the rotten D.C. public schools
to take money out of the public school system so their kids could go to
Sidwell Friends like Chelsea.

Most important, Democrats resolutely refuse to tell the poor the secret
to not being poor: Keep your knees together until marriage.

That's it. Not class size, not preschool, not even vouchers, though
vouchers would obviously improve the education of all students. You
could have lunatics running the schools — and often do — and if the kids
live with married parents, they will end up at good colleges and will
lead happy, productive lives 99 percent of the time.

But Democrats don't care about the poor. They don't care about the
children. They care about government teachers and other government
bureaucrats — grimy, dowdy women who "woo" at political debates. Or as
CNN calls them, the "young," "hip" crowd.

redstatesusa.com

From: PROLIFE 4 Recommendations Read Replies (2) of 764051