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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony@Pacific & TRUTHSEEKER Expose Crims & Scammers!!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: nova222 who wrote (5374)5/8/2008 7:58:23 AM
From: scanshift  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5673
 
That is a good question, and I do not know the answer to it. I went over there to help my girlfriends hair dresser, a woman named Ana. Initially I tried some political pull, where I tried to get Ana's sister and niece out through state department sources. When that failed, I said what the hell, why don't I just head over there and see what is going on in person. I knew a guy, Meyer Berman, a big time trader in Boca Raton, and he was able to get some visas (by having a member of the house of representative get it) for us to macedonia (which at the time was closed to americans because of the war,) and I posted that I was heading over there. Tony contacted me after he saw me put up the post that I was heading over there, and said that he wanted to go. So the first time I met him was in the plane ride over there, when we met at JFK airport.

Once we arrived, we got some press passes from TV Era, and went to the refugee camp on the border. That is when both Tony and Ana started acting differently. After the second day, they stopped heading to the refugee camps with me and the other reporters, and started going some place by themselves and would not tell anyone where it was. So myself, a translator from OSCE, and some other reporters would go to the camps everyday.

One day, a group of reporters I was hanging with, decided to sneak out of the camp gate a young woman who spoke perfect english, but was a refugee. We gave her a levi jacket to put on from one of the guys, and stuck her in the middle of our group, and walked out of the gate with me walking off to the side distracting the guards by yelling that I was tired of walking around in this big mud hole. I acted pissed off, and kept asking the guards when were they going to put some rock down to deal with the mud. As a result they never checked our press passes, because we did not have one for the girl. When we got outside, she started crying hysterically that she was so happy we got her out of that hell hole, and that she had a relative somewhere in skopje. We said that we would try to find him for her. We went back to Tv-Era's studios, which was one building, that was adjoined to another building that had some kind of living quarters in it. She had been sleeping in the dirt for three weeks, so I told her that she could go next door and a take a shower, when all over a sudden, Tony burst out of an adjoining room and started screaming. I had not seen him in a few days since he had disappeared. The OSCE translator was with me, along with some of the staff of TV ERA. Tony started screaming that who was I to tell a "muslim woman" anything, that it was disrespectful for me to do that, and he started cursing me out in a "manic range."

I and others told him to calm down, I said that all I did was tell her that she could take a shower next door, what was the big deal. Then the real freaky stuff happened. He launched into an anti-american tirade and talked about some brotherhood of his muslim brothers in lebanon, and how they hated americans. He then launched into an anti-semitic tirade about how the jews were responsible for destroying everything and how hitler should have killed Greenspan? There was a couple other guys with him at the time who I did not know, nor did anyone else at the tv station for what that was worth.

I thought for sure he was going to walk over and try and get in a fist fight with me, because his manic rage was beyond anything I had ever witnessed before. He finally walked out of the tv station, and I said wtf was that all about? After that he and Ana continued doing stuff by themselves, and I along with my OSCE translator, would go with other reporters to the camps. At night we went to a hotel bar to hang with these reporters, and hear their stories from the other wars they had covered in their careers. They were some hard drinking guys and it was fascinating to hear about their experiences.

I never saw Tony visit the camps again, and I ended up heading back to greece by myself. So the only time I saw him and Ana at the refugee camp was on the first and second day. Thus I have no idea about who they got out of the camps.

I kept in touch with the OSCE translator, who ended up moving to england and going to school there. I sent him an IBM thinkpad as a present back in 2000 or 2001, and have not heard him in five years.



To: nova222 who wrote (5374)3/23/2013 1:56:56 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 5673
 
Hoisted from the Archives: Columbia Journalism School 701: Highly Advanced Journamalism: Mark Mitchell Utter and Complete #FAIL Edition

Why oh why can't we have a better press corps?

Brad DeLong: Columbia Journalism School 701: Highly Advanced Journamalism

UPDATE January 17, 2012: Bree Nordenson emails that the email sent me signed by her was actually written by Mark Mitchell:

[F]ive years or so ago I wrote an article about Paul Krugman and David Brooks for what was then CJRDaily. Anyway, it was not a pretty incident. I had just graduated and taken a position at CJR the magazine and I occasionally wrote for the Daily. I wrote a piece about how Krugman and Brooks used statistics and it was significantly re-written with inflammatory language ("partisan slipperiness" etc) and posted by then assistant editor of CJR Daily Mark Mitchell (he left/was let go a few months afterwards, along with the editor). Anyway, I just googled myself for the first time in ages (I am no longer in journalism, probably for many of the reasons you do not like the press) and saw that you posted a letter that is attributed to me but that was actually written and sent to you by Mark Mitchell. I would never have written anything like that– smug, self-righeous etc (very similar to how Mark changed the original piece). If possible, it would be great if your website could reflect that Mark Mitchell wrote that letter: quality-control problems at Columbia Journalism Review are bigger than I had imagined.

It turns out that Bree Nordenson's Mark Mitchell' true beef with Paul Krugman is that Paul "fails to reveal [in his column] that during... [2000-2005] incomes dropped for [the median] household."

The idea that somebody could accuse Paul Krugman of being "partisan" for failing to reveal to his readers that median household incomes have fallen during the Bush administration... well, words really do fail me. That really doesn't pass the laugh test.

Funniest thing I have heard all month.

Here's what Bree Nordenson Well, it turns out not to be Bree Nordenson, but rather her then-boss Mark Mitchell pretending to be Bree Nordenson. No, I don't understand it either. What Mark Mitchell has to say, on the record. Not believing that she he really wanted to call Krugman "partisan" and "slippery" for "fail[ing] to reveal" that median household incomes have fallen during the Bush dministration, I gave her him a chance to amend it. She he declined:

Dear Mr. DeLong:

Here is my response to be posted in its entirety (or not at all) on your blog (not simply the comments section):

Leaving aside the question of whether "typical" households can be characterized as "median" (rather than, say, "average" or "neighbors of Paul Krugman"), we stand by our conclusion that Mr. Krugman's statistic was cherry-picked and utterly unsupportive of his argument.

We wonder whether Professor DeLong's economics students would be permitted to look at the median personal income of college graduates in two separate years, chosen at random, and then present a paper suggesting that this data alone sheds light on the question of education's effect on income inequality. Mr. Krugman notes that the (median) real income of college graduates was lower in 2005, compared to 2000, and offers this as evidence that education does not improve income disparities. But he fails to reveal that during the same time frame, incomes dropped for all households, regardless of their level of education (see http://www.census.gov/prod/2006pubs/p60-231.pdf, p. 31). To determine whether a gap between the incomes of two groups has narrowed, one must know the incomes of both groups.

And unless the objective is merely to win the argument, rather than identify the truth, it is also necessary to test one's hypothesis against a range of years and other information. Krugman compares college graduates' incomes in 2000 and 2005, because that suits his ends. An entirely different picture emerges, however, if we compare the median incomes of college graduate in, say, 2004 to those in 2005. During that time frame, the number increases (after adjusting for inflation, of course).

Ideology passed off as science is the essence of demagoguery. An economist of Professor DeLong's stature should know this.

Sincerely,

Bree Nordenson Mark Mitchell
Assistant Editor, Columbia Journalism Review

Her boss Mark Mitchell, assistant managing editor of the Columbia Journalism Review, backs her up at the price of damage to his own reputation, and says that Paul Krugman is indeed culpable for suppressing knowledge that median incomes have fallen during the Bush administration (I think this is a fair summary quote from our conversation):

If you are talking about income inequality, you cannot just take the statistic of one group's income dropping over a period of time and not compare it to the other group's income. I am surprised that the Berkeley economics department cannot figure this out...

And--of course--never any attempt by Bree Nordenson Mark Mitchell (or anybody else) to talk to Paul Krugman or any labor economist about where the numbers were coming from, and whether they were reasonable.

Can there be any reaction other than "Wow. Look at the circular firing squad of flying journamalistic attack monkeys?"

Let's recap.

In previous episodes, David Brooks had written:

The Populist Myths on Income Inequality - New York Times: [T]he market isn't broken; the meritocracy is working almost too well. It's rewarding people based on individual talents. Higher education pays off because it provides technical knowledge and because it screens out people who are not organized, self-motivated and socially adept. But even among people with identical education levels, inequality is widening as the economy favors certain abilities. In short, government policy is not driving inequality and wage stagnation...

In response, Larry Katz--a source Brooks relies on--said that changes in government policy do play an important role:

Brad DeLong's Semi-Daily Journal: Larry Katz Weighs in on What Should Be Done About Inequality: There are clear market forces that have to do with the demand for talented individuals, but the current period is not that different from the past for that type of thing. In the past, however, we've done a very good job expanding access to education to keep up with growth, providing bargaining power to those left behind, and using government policy to help them. What's changed in the last twenty years is that we've eroded those ameliorating institutions....

In response, Paul Krugman wrote that there are powerful other causes of rising income inequality besides skill-biased technological change:

Whining Over Discontent - New York Times: [N]otice the desperate effort to find some number, any number, to support claims that increasing inequality is just a matter of a rising payoff to education and skill. Conservative commentators tell us about wage gains for one-eyed bearded men with 2.5 years of college, or whatever -- and conveniently forget to adjust for inflation. In fact, the data refute any suggestion that education is a guarantee of income gains: once you adjust for inflation, you find that the income of a typical household headed by a college graduate was lower in 2005 than in 2000...

I, at least, think the number Krugman cites is completely on point: Brooks said that inequality is widening because the market is providing increasing rewards to education and skills. Krugman responds that there is a lot more going on than just skill- and education-biased technological change: even the relatively well-educated have seen their household incomes fall over the current business cycle.

Yet Bree Nordenson, in CJR Daily, then wrote to accuse Paul Krugman of being "slippery" and "partisan"

The left-wing Krugman, while not as flagrant as Brooks, coats his column with a similar sort of partisan slipperiness.... chooses somewhat specific data... a decrease between 2000 and 2005 of incomes for a "typical household headed by a college graduate." This is not a widely published statistic, and Krugman doesn't tell us where he got it. He also fails to reveal the meaning of "typical," so we are left to guess who exactly these desperate college graduates might be.

That's the end of the recap.



January 17, 2012 at 11:41 AM | Permalink

Comments






1

Dave said...
I would hope audiences that read pieces that use statistics might have a grasp on their actual meaning, such that nobody is taking this Mark person seriously. Anybody who's read Brooks over a period of time knows he doesn't understand statistics, and he only repeats what he reads. On the other hand, some people who print statistics actually produce them knowing this is the most accurate way to represent them.

So if our meritocracy is working great, why would two people with these vastly different (in validity) approaches to writing columns be writing columns in the same paper? And why do we need a third person (some Mark guy posing as somebody else) from some other rag to back up Brooks with clearly desceptive information because Brooks couldn't do it himself?

I'm sure Politifact is on this as we speak! They'll get it right!

Reply January 17, 2012 at 12:19 PM



2

Tyrone Slothrop said...
It would be interesting to learn why Mark Mitchell thinks it's appropriate to correspond in someone else's name.

Reply January 17, 2012 at 01:33 PM



3

bakho said...
I was curious about what someone who did what Mitchell did (send letter under someone else's name) might be up to now.

Is this the same Mark Mitchell that is involved in the Overstock.com - DeepCapture.com DustUp?
whitecollarfraud.blogspot.com
This reads like a high school flame war.

Convene a Blogger Ethics Panel

Reply January 17, 2012 at 05:33 PM



4

Maynard Handley said...
"
Leaving aside the question of whether "typical" households can be characterized as "median" (rather than, say, "average"
"

Uhhh, no, let's NOT leave this aside.
Please, Mr Mitchell, give me ONE good reason why "typical" households are better characterized by the "average" (I assume you mean the mean) rather than the median. Just one. Note that word "typical".

Reply January 17, 2012 at 07:04 PM



5

howard said...
The amazing thing to me is the self-righteousness of the traditional journalist, who apparently only has one (insipid) thought: "i'm smarter than anyone who takes a position on anything by definition."

Reply January 17, 2012 at 07:33 PM



6

John said...
I also wondered about the sleazy Mark Mitchell and saw this on Google. Evidently he leaves a slimy trail whereever he slinks. I think he is beneath your contempt for Journalists.

whitecollarfraud.blogspot.com

Reply January 17, 2012 at 08:34 PM



7

bay of arizona said in reply to Tyrone Slothrop...
In all seriousness, isn't there a journalism ethics panel for fraud/misrepresentation/plagiarism?

Reply January 18, 2012 at 11:38 AM

Comments on this post are closed.

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To: nova222 who wrote (5374)3/30/2013 1:16:43 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 5673
 
Internet Defamation: It Could Happen to You! Why this website? The inspiration for the website www. ItCouldHappenToYou.org came from the brave struggle of Mr. Altaf Nazerali against Internet defamation. He was victimized in a series of articles by an unscrupulous writer on an Internet website. Mr. Nazerali stood up to this type of online bullying and in doing so he inspired all of us to stand up against defamation on the World Wide Web. The key realization is that this situation can happen to anyone. Any of us can become the target of defamation online. This is an issue that deserves the attention of the public.



The Story of Altaf Nazerali Mr. Nazerali is a respected businessman who is based in Vancouver and works internationally. He came from a family of modest means. His parents immigrated to Canada as refugees from Africa in the 1970s. When he was just 15 years old, he attended Columbia University. Mr Nazerali graduated at 20 with a BA and MBA from Columbia working his way through university. Mr. Nazerali has been in the venture capital business for almost 30 years. He has financed numerous companies in the technology, telecommunications, Internet and natural resources sectors, and created jobs for hundreds.

In August of 2011 Mr. Nazerali became aware that some false articles against him were being circulated around the web. They had been published sometime before but Mr. Nazerali only learned about them when a business contact told him that he had done a Google search and had noticed some damaging statements about Mr. Nazerali on a website.

Mr. Nazerali was shocked by the lies written about him, putting him in places he had never been, with various criminals and international terrorists with whom he was supposedly associated. The author of the articles, Mark Mitchell is a writer with purported journalistic credentials, and his financial backer is Patrick Byrne, the CEO of Overstock.com, a public company, and stock conspiracy theorist. Mr. Nazerali emailed and called Mark Mitchell in September 2011 to advise him of the various falsehoods in the articles, and expressing surprise that someone with his journalistic credentials would write without seeking to confirm the facts prior to publication.

Mr. Nazerali offered to answer any question and advised Mitchell that he had either been misinformed, or was deliberately damaging Mr. Nazerali’s reputation. Among other things, the sloppy journalism of the writer had resulted in a case of mistaken identity, confusing Mr. Nazerali with another person bearing a similar name.

Although the writer initially offered to make changes to the articles, he eventually sent Mr. Nazerali an email response saying that he would remove any mention of his name if he would agree to become a “source” for the writer.

In this situation Mr. Nazerali had very few options. He was stuck with lies being spread around the Internet accusing him of being an arms and drug dealer, and being involved with various criminal and terrorist organizations. His sole recourse was to go to court and seek justice. Unfortunately the legal process is lengthy, expensive and time consuming. Following the injunction granted to Mr. Nazerali by the Canadian court in October 2011, the defendants claimed that Canada did not have jurisdiction in this matter, and a hearing was held in January 2012 to determine whether British Columbia was the appropriate jurisdiction to try this case of defamation. The Supreme Court of British Columbia ruled in February that British Columbia did indeed have jurisdiction in the matter, and dismissed the defendants’ motion (see Court Rulings). Three Canadian judges have now read the materials during hearings at the Supreme Court of British Columbia in October and December 2011, and in January 2012 and have ruled that these articles are defamatory. Mr. Nazerali hopes to prevail in the legal system, and just as importantly, in the court of public opinion – because what happened to him could happen to anybody.




The Message The case of Mr. Nazerali shows that this kind of problem can happen to anyone. No matter how hard you try to live a peaceful, productive and generous life, there are some bad apples out there who seek to gain notoriety by making false and sensational allegations against others to promote their own agenda, as twisted as it may be. It’s hard to understand this until it happens to you. Mr. Nazerali’s experience shows that any person anywhere can become the target of untrue and malicious articles posted on the Internet. How many of us have the time and ability to go beyond Google searches, and actually discern what is true and what is not? How many of us believe what we read on the Internet, and simply accept this as being true? We should all raise awareness about this problem that could happen to any of us!


http://www.itcouldhappentoyou.org/



To: nova222 who wrote (5374)5/23/2013 1:36:18 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 5673
 
'Brazen Fraud' Alleged at Dendreon Corp.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013Last Update: 11:42 AM PT
By JUNE WILLIAMS

SEATTLE (CN) - Directors of Dendreon Corp. committed "brazen fraud" by dumping $85 million of their own shares at inflated prices while falsely claiming its expensive cancer drug Provenge was "completely sold out," shareholders claim in court.
Investors sued Dendreon and its top three officers, CEO Dr. Mitchell H. Gold, COO Hans E. Bishop, and CFO Gregory T. Schiffman, in Federal Court.
"The revelation of the company's fraud was devastating, erasing $3.5 billion from Dendreon's market capitalization in a single day," the complaint states. "Unlike defendants, who were able to sell substantial holdings of Dendreon stock before the fraud was revealed, the company's unsuspecting shareholders suffered crippling losses. As TheStreet.com put it, Gold had turned out like other Chief Executive Officers who had 'hone[d] the fine craft of investor bamboozlement.'"
Dendreon's only FDA-approved product is Provenge, a prostate cancer treatment, the shareholders say in the complaint.
"From April29, 2010 through August 3, 2011 (the 'Relevant Period'), defendants repeatedly touted the strong demand for Provenge, which the Company claimed was so strong that it was overwhelming the company's ability to meet the demand," according to the complaint. "At numerous investor conferences, on conference calls and in its filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC'), defendants emphasized the 'very strong demand,' the 'incredibly high demand' and the 'no shortage of end-patient demand' that existed for Provenge, which demand, according to the Company, purportedly was 'exceeding our ability to supply the market' and was resulting in 'completely sold out capacity' and 'substantial waiting lists' for treatment with Provenge. To underscore their statements, defendants followed up with bullish financial guidance to investors, projecting revenues of $350 to $400 million from Provenge in 2011."
But the shareholders say the individual defendants knew the rosy statements were "completely false" and were receiving weekly reports from sales managers warning of low sales.
"As has now been revealed, these statements to investors were completely false. Furthermore, defendants knew at all times that these statements were false," the complaint states. "As confirmed by former Dendreon employees, the company's regional sales managers repeatedly warned defendants at weekly meetings that defendants' statements had no basis in fact, and that the real demand being observed in the field was running at a much lower rate. Not only were these warnings communicated verbally at numerous meetings, the evidence backing these warnings was provided to defendants in the form of various internal reports that were disseminated to all members of senior management, including defendants Gold, Bishop and Schiffman."
But the defendants continued to issue optimistic statements about Provenge, while dumping their own shares at huge profits, the shareholders claim. Gold sold his shares for $35 million, according to the complaint.
"All the while that they were disseminating these false statements to unsuspecting investors, defendants themselves were busily offloading their own holdings of Dendreon stock. During the relevant period, Dendreon's officers and directors realized over $85 million in proceeds from insider stock sales. Defendant Gold, Dendreon's chief executive officer, personally reaped over $35 million from the sale of Dendreon stock during the relevant period, including millions from sales made just weeks before the fraud was revealed to investors."
Shareholders claim the defendants were forced to "come clean" on Aug. 3, 2011, after close of trading, and admit the quarterly growth for Provenge would be "modest" at best. Dendreon also disclosed that demand for the drug had been hurt by physicians' concerns about reimbursement and that the company was slashing its workforce by 25 percent, according to the complaint.
Lead plaintiff Dr. Christoph Bolling and 23 other shareholders seek disgorgement and damages for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and violations of securities and consumer laws.
They are represented by Christina Haring-Larson with Slinde Nelson & Stanford.