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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 6:36:10 AM
From: TideGlider6 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 224786
 
Damned if you don't know everything! Palin scares you, doesn't she? ;^)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 7:11:25 AM
From: lorne5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224786
 
ken...Most people are proud of their political convictions so with that in mind ...are you a commie..socialist, no one can believe and say the things you say if they are a mere confused democrat?

It is good that Palin scares you, as/if she becomes a greater threat to your kind will you start using the fact that she is a woman to denigrate her.?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 7:46:49 AM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224786
 
Poll: Palin near top of re-shaped GOP field
By: Byron York
05/26/11
washingtonexaminer.com

Former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin has moved up in the latest Gallup poll of the Republican presidential race. A new survey, completed after decisions by Mitch Daniels, Mike Huckabee, and Donald Trump not to run for president, shows Palin in second place, close behind leader Mitt Romney. But the number of voters who are undecided is larger than any single candidate's support.

The poll, which was limited to Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, has Romney in first place with 17 percent. Palin is next, with 15 percent. After that is Ron Paul, with 10 percent, Newt Gingrich with nine percent, Herman Cain with eight percent, Tim Pawlenty with six percent, Michele Bachmann with five percent, and Jon Huntsman, Rick Santorum, and Gary Johnson with two percent. Twenty-two percent say they have no opinion.

Although Romney and Palin are in the lead, the poll represents a significant boost for Herman Cain, the former CEO of Godfather's Pizza, who has long been a favorite with the Tea Party. Cain was not included in previous Gallup surveys; now, he is virtually tied for third place.

In the last Gallup poll, taken a month ago, Huckabee and Trump led the field, with Romney and Palin behind. "In the short term, Romney and Palin seem to have benefited most from several prominent potential Republican candidates' decisions not to run for president," writes Gallup. Also at that time, the number of people who said they had no opinion, 14 percent, was significantly smaller than the 22 percent who say they have no opinion now.

In the new poll, Palin is the only name in the top six who might not be running for president. Although there have been stories highlighting recent Palin actions -- buying a house in Arizona and cooperating with a movie highlighting her career -- Palin has not revealed her plans for 2012. Gallup asked Republicans who they support in a race without Palin, and Romney still came out in the lead, but by a relatively small margin over Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. "Should Palin…not enter the race," Gallup writes, "Romney would be the clear front-runner, but arguably the weakest front-runner in any recent Republican nomination campaign."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 7:49:57 AM
From: lorne5 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224786
 
ken...guess which party is the biggest thief? come on ken take a wild guess.

House members in the know score ‘abnormal’ stock profits, study says
By Valerie Richardson
-
The Washington Times
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
washingtontimes.com

It’s no secret that members of Congress qualify as political insiders, but a new report strongly suggests that they also may be insiders when it comes to trading stocks.

An extensive study released Wednesday in the journal Business and Politics found that the investments of members of the House of Representatives outperformed those of the average investor by 55 basis points per month, or 6 percent annually, suggesting that lawmakers are taking advantage of inside information to fatten their stock portfolios.

“We find strong evidence that members of the House have some type of non-public information which they use for personal gain,” according to four academics who authored the study, “Abnormal Returns From the Common Stock Investments of Members of the U.S. House of Representatives.”

To the frustration of open-government advocates, lawmakers and their staff members largely have immunity from laws barring trading on insider knowledge that have sent many a private corporate chieftain to prison.

The watchdog group OpenSecrets.org said on its blog Wednesday that the findings suggest “that U.S. House members are using their powerful roles for more than just political gain.”

The professors reviewed more than 16,000 common stock transactions carried out by about 300 House members as revealed in the members’ financial-disclosure forms from 1985 to 2001.

In a 2004 study, the same professors found that U.S. senators also enjoy a “substantial information advantage” over the average investor — and even corporate bigwigs — when it comes to picking stocks. The latest study shows that members of the Senate outperform their House colleagues by an average of 30 points per month.

Despite the GOP’s reputation as the party of the rich, House Republicans fared worse than their Democratic colleagues when it comes to investing, according to the study. The Democratic subsample of lawmakers beat the market by 73 basis points per month, or 9 percent annually, versus 18 basis points per month, or 2 percent annually, for the Republican sample.

“Given the almost folkloric belief that Wall Street invariably favors Republicans, the superior performance of trades made by Democratic representatives may seem surprising,” the study authors said.

One theory is that Democrats were the majority for most of the years under review and thus held more leadership posts, giving them greater access to nonpublic information. Once they took power in 1995, Republicans may have limited their ability to profit from the perks of political power because of their lack of leadership experience.

Strict laws ban corporate executives from trading on their insider knowledge, but no restrictions exist for members of Congress. Lawmakers are permitted to keep their holdings and trade shares on the market, as well as vote on legislation that could affect their portfolio values.

The rationale is that requiring lawmakers to divest their economic holdings would “insulate a legislator from the personal and economic interests that his/her constituency, or society in general, has in governmental decisions and policy,” according to the House ethics manual.

Even so, concerns about members of Congress enriching themselves based on inside information has prompted at least one House bill, the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act, which would limit the ability of lawmakers to buy and sell stock shares.

First introduced in 2006, the bill has yet to reach the House floor. Its sponsors, Reps. Louise McIntosh Slaughter, New York Democrat, and Timothy J. Walz, Minnesota Democrat, reintroduced the bill in March.

“This is a matter of equality under the law,” Mr. Walz said at the time. “The same standards we have established for Wall Street should apply to Congress. The potential for abuse is obvious and troubling, and there is simply no good reason Congress should get to play by a separate set of rules in the stock market.”

Opponents of the bill argue that the best way to restrain lawmakers from abusing their access to inside information is full disclosure and transparency. All members of Congress are required to file annual financial disclosure reports that include their stock purchases and sales.

Any member viewed as taking unfair advantage of the system may be voted out of office. “However, the electoral process can only be an effective restraint against unethical conduct if the electorate is well-informed both in terms of the assets held by their representatives and the representatives’ voting records,” the study said.

The study also found that House members are less likely than senators to play the market. About 16 percent of House members purchased common stock in the years 1993, 1995 and 1997, compared with 27 percent of Senate members.

The difference is “most likely attributable to the fact that the average senator is far wealthier than the average representative,” the study concluded.

The study also found that the best stock pickers were House members with the least seniority. Calling this finding “counterintuitive,” the report suggests that junior members of Congress have more incentive to invest aggressively because they have less access to campaign funding.

“Members with the least seniority may have fewer opportunities to trade on privileged information, but they may be the most highly motivated to do so when the opportunities arise,” the report said.

The authors recommend a policy requiring more timely and complete reporting of congressional security transactions, similar to those now mandatory for business executives.

“Reporting requirements similar to those imposed on corporate insiders could be appropriate for helping voters evaluate the behavior of their representatives in terms of the pursuit of personal profit versus obligations to the public interest,” said the study. “Such prompt reporting could also help level the playing field for all investors.”

The authors of the report are Alan J. Ziobrowski of Georgia State University, James W. Boyd of Lindenwood University, Ping Cheng of Florida Atlantic University and Brigitte J. Ziobrowski of Augusta State University.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 10:00:07 AM
From: chartseer2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224786
 
Palin has more to lose than to gain by running at this time. It would be foolish for her to take the risk. Then again maybe the state of affairs means more to her than the risk.
We shall see. Country or monetary gains?

citizen chartseer



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (105532)5/27/2011 12:04:32 PM
From: MJ1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224786
 
Trump never announced that he was running for President.

Trump was doing exploratory work.

Trump is a truth seeker. Trump shoved Obama into a corner--------if Trump had not done so Obama could not have stood up when Osama was killed and said I as CIC of the military and said I ordered the killing of Osama.

Trump demonstrated that Obama can be shoved into a corner like any wild animal.