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Wednesday, June 07, 2006

50th clinging desperately to status quo


Developers run this city
(...The decision, a setback for City Attorney Michael Aguirre, is a victory for the San Diego County building industry, which sued the city ...The measure, similar to laws in cities throughout California, requires developers to set aside 10 percent of the houses in their residential projects for low-or moderate-income households....)
A hearing has been scheduled for July 14 on the motion, which was filed Friday.
Along with the
effing
military-industrial complex

Some of her supporters are fleeing (the average rent for all types of rental units countywide was $1,147, compared with $1,046 a year ago)

And interestingly enough, negative nasty campaign ads turn off more Dems than Rethugs. Well suprise suprise. Not. Of Course, I believe the repugnant thuglicans had some electronic help.

Optical scanners used
These people think they are safe....clinging to their way of life in their McMansions in the suburbs with Jose the gardener and Maria the weekly housecleaner and their double dip pensions with rental income from the second house and dividends from investments in Defense Contractors as a cherry on top

Isn't San Diego a Lovely Place?

Fucking idiots

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Vote

California vote could be midterm bellwether
Primaries test ethics, immigration issues for November
Tuesday, June 6, 2006; Posted: 2:29 p.m. EDT (18:29 GMT)

Brad reports a few problems

Get your ass out and vote anyway.

Monday, June 05, 2006

The Power of China

Corporations find it hard to think of China as being populated by actual human beings. China is not viewed as a nation, or a people, or even a system of governance. Through corporate eyes, China is, first and foremost, an enormous market that is therefore populated by needs. Being a supplier of "needs" is problematic to the degree that it focuses on the object of the need and ignores the humanity of the needy. When commerce abandons conscience, market share trumps social impact, profits take precedence over scruples, then rules are bent and statutes are circumvented. The more repressive and unpredictable the regime, the greater the fear of losing access to the market and the higher the urgency to protect it by ingratiating yourself to the authorities....
As I See It: Betrayal
Published: May 15, 2006
by Victor Rozek


Goldman Sachs rules the world
June 4, 2006
With Paulson's appointment as Treasury secretary, the firm is supreme in matters political and economic.
By Kyle Pope, a former writer and editor for the Wall Street Journal, writes about business and the media.

...Goldman Sachs alums now run the White House bureaucracy (in new Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten), , the state of New Jersey (Gov. Jon Corzine) and the New York Stock Exchange (Chief Executive John Thain). Not since John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil — and maybe not even then — has one firm exerted such muscle over national economic and fiscal policy....
The global economy has become a mammoth, interconnected firm, with no single country able to call the shots. Although the Bush team may not accept this view, there are signs — in Bolten's appointment, Condoleezza Rice's elevation and Karl Rove's sidelining — that it finally recognizes the importance of engaging the rest of the world. This is particularly important when it comes to economic policy, where markets are more linked than ever and where one country's trading foe (say, China, in the case of the U.S.) can also be its biggest creditor (ditto).
Finally, Goldman Sachs executives in general, and Paulson in particular, are pragmatists to the point of being mercenary. It's all about the markets, politics be damned...

China scares the crap out of me. The censorship, the human rights violations, the control that the government exerts over it's people. Do we really want to owe them billions?

(Blogger was a real pain in the ass this morning)


Ha! I beat Kos to the punch on this one.

Saturday, June 03, 2006

It was a good long ride




Requiem for the Faith-based Greenback


One of these pictures makes me sad and the other makes my skin crawl.
I think these people will be just fine, financially.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Tangled Web

Is the wild west culture of the Internet about to become a thing of the past? Big business is staking its claim on the information superhighway, lobbying Congress for an exclusive faster lane, which consumers could end up paying for. This week on NOW we look at a major battle brewing in Washington D.C. over the future of the Internet.

PBS NOW

Opposing Net Neutrality

...Companies such as Verizon, AT&T, and Comcast provide the lines -- copper, cable, and fiber-optic -- and other hardware that connects Web sites to consumers but make virtually no money from the content that flows through those lines.

They've been lobbying hard to push through a system of fees that would divide the Internet into two tiers: a fast lane for companies who can afford to pay a large toll, and a slow lane for those who cannot. They say the fees are necessary to earn a return on the multibillion-dollar investment in broadband infrastructure.

The group Hands Off the Internet -- backed by companies such as AT&T and Alcatel -- is fighting the concept of net neutrality. Mike McCurry, the former Clinton press secretary who is chairman of the group, says that the telecom industry simply wants the Internet to be governed by economics, not government regulation.

"Show me the money, or I'll choke the people's access to your website" say Mikey.



Now for the good news. This man is the coolest librarian. One of thirty-thousand who told the brownshirts to back off. Interview: George Christian

Thursday, June 01, 2006

FCC rules

The FCC now has 3 coroporate fellatio queens out of 5. Just like most of the "regulatory" agencies that have been hemorrhaging (good) people who used to think that their job was to protect the American people from corporate greed that caused the people harm. That's not the kind of watchdog W appoints.

Here's the crap they pulled three years ago. They just can't get enough, they never quit.

They are at it again:
FCC Confirmation
Broadcasters and newspaper owners looking for more latitude on the merger front got a lift with Senate confirmation of the Federal Communications Commission's fifth commissioner, Robert McDowell.

Martin Expected To Launch Ownership Rewrite
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 5/31/2006 6:54:00 PM

FCC's Martin Gets Ally As McDowell Confirmed
Jessica Holzer, 05.30.06, 3:40 PM ET

Rupert Murdoch is one ugly &*^#, inside and out

Complain. Protest. Tell them not to relax the media ownership rules. (Newest queen doesen't even have an e-mail address yet)

Chairman Martin

Michael J. Copps

Jonathan S. Adelstein

Deborah Taylor Tate

Or try here