The Trump Administration: Theft on a massive scale

The Russiagate scandal is a hilariously, fact-less conspiracy theory. But it serves a purpose of distracting people away from outright government stealing on a scale comparable to feudal robber barons.
Civil asset forfeiture was always an idea open to abuse, and abuse it they have done.
It has the very same conflict of interests (Policing for profit) that private prisons do (Kids for cash).
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The forfeiture system is self-perpetuating.

It’s also a lucrative tactic for law-enforcement agencies in an era of tight budgets: A Justice Department inspector general’s report in April found that federal forfeiture programs had taken in almost $28 billion over the past decade...
In its report, the inspector general’s office also raised concerns about how federal agencies take funds, after it found almost half of the Drug Enforcement Agency’s seizures in a random sample weren’t tied to any broader law-enforcement purpose. “When seizure and administrative forfeitures do not ultimately advance an investigation or prosecution, law enforcement creates the appearance, and risks the reality, that it is more interested in seizing and forfeiting cash than advancing an investigation or prosecution,” the report concluded.

Polls have shown 80 percent of Americans oppose the practice. Even Republicans hate it.

In 2015, the Obama administration ended the Equitable Sharing program, which allowed local law enforcement to seize assets and then transfer them to the federal government, with the federal government passing back part of the proceeds to the local department. It was a very modest half-step at reform.

For the Trump Administration even that modest reform was too much.

In April, 2015, New Mexico’s Republican governor, Susana Martinez, signed into law a sweeping forfeiture-reform bill abolishing the practice in the state altogether. Connecticut, Nebraska, New Hampshire, and other states have, to different extents, followed suit.
But Sessions’s order bucks this trend. In particular, it resuscitates a practice known as “federal adoption,” which allows police and prosecutors to circumvent state restrictions on asset seizures by collaborating with federal authorities. Through this partnership, state and local authorities turn their seizures over to federal colleagues, who “adopt” them for prosecution—ultimately returning up to eighty per cent of the assets to the originating cops or prosecutors to keep. One result, often unaddressed in critiques of forfeiture, is the tacit encouragement of racial profiling and targeting of property owners of color, who remain prime targets of the practice in much of the country.

This is bad, but it's no worse than a return to pre-2015.
That is until this week, when the Trump Administration decided to extend asset forfeiture to a global scale.

Like domestic civil asset forfeiture, the idea behind the executive order is sound and just, but with one big, familiar exception - it doesn't require a legal conviction.
Which makes one wonder, how are we different from Saudi Arabia?

The United States has set itself up as the judge and jury of the world.
But it's a "Do as I say, not as I do" world.
For instance, remember all those stories about overseas tax havens? We've wagged so many fingers at those darn corrupt foreigners.

Last September, at a law firm overlooking San Francisco Bay, Andrew Penney, a managing director at Rothschild & Co., gave a talk on how the world’s wealthy elite can avoid paying taxes.

His message was clear: You can help your clients move their fortunes to the United States, free of taxes and hidden from their governments.

Some are calling it the new Switzerland.
After years of lambasting other countries for helping rich Americans hide their money offshore, the U.S. is emerging as a leading tax and secrecy haven for rich foreigners.

Wait a second. How is this possible?
What happened is that, like an organized crime boss, we shut down the competing crime bosses.

Under threat of losing access to the U.S. financial system, more than 100 countries -- including such traditional havens as Bermuda and the Cayman Islands -- are complying or have agreed to comply.

The U.S. was expected to reciprocate, by sharing data on the accounts of foreign taxpayers with their respective governments. Yet Congress rejected the Obama administration’s repeated requests to make the necessary changes to the tax code. As a result, the Treasury cannot compel U.S. banks to reveal information such as account balances and names of beneficial owners. The U.S. has also failed to adopt the so-called Common Reporting Standard, a global agreement under which more than 100 countries will automatically provide each other with even more data than FATCA requires.
...
New York lawyers are actively marketing the country as a place to park assets. A Russian billionaire, for example, can put real-estate assets in a U.S. trust and rest assured that neither the U.S. tax authorities nor his home-country government will know anything about it. That’s a level of secrecy that not even Vanuatu can offer.

From a certain perspective, all this might look pretty smart: Shut down foreign tax havens and then steal their business. That would be the kind of thinking that’s undermining America’s standing in so many areas, from trade to climate change. Instead of using its power to establish an equitable system of global governance, it’s demanding a standard from the rest of the world that it refuses to apply to itself.

This makes perfect sense as long as you cast off any morals and common decency.
It's SOP for, say, a casino owner.
However, why would anyone ever want to do business with you if they had any other choice?
The United States cannot be shut out, but this duplicity has left us with no diplomatic "leverage".
Our word counts for nothing, as it should be when your nation is run by mobsters.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

Our word counts for nothing, as it should be when your nation is run by mobsters.

That's an insult to mobsters, the La Cosa Nostra variety at least.....

People who can’t be part of Cosa Nostra: anyone who has a close relative in the police, anyone with a two-timing relative in the family, anyone who behaves badly and doesn’t hold to moral values.

When asked for any information, the answer must be the truth.

-- "The Ten Commandments of the Mafia" source

[video:https://youtu.be/OzTfv1Nh44w]

EDIT: Added embedded video as soon as I found the same! Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

@thanatokephaloides

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@gjohnsit

I meant no offense to mobsters.

I'm sure the Mob knows and understands! Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

shaharazade's picture

@thanatokephaloides They not only understand but lend a hand and learn new 'legal' tricks from the pols and those who run them. Visa Versa as I look at pols as consiglieri's backed by their and the owners of the place's enforcers.

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When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it." Frederic Bastiat

Goldman doing god's work.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e2WpY221nOo]

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@MrWebster

And the theft has become legal and moral.

"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it." Frederic Bastiat

"They're the real Mafia!" -- M. Corleone, The Godfather Part III

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

@thanatokephaloides I think the real mafia types know they are breaking laws and doing wrong, but don't care or have no conscience. But intellectually they understand it is all a crime.

US banksters who in terms of what they stole, make mafias look like minor leaguer's, see nothing morally wrong and in fact, they are morally justified.

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@MrWebster

The Dominionists are coming out of the closet, waving their 'religious excuse' like a flag.

"If God didn't love me, He wouldn't let me bleed the people He considers unworthy and therefore sacrifices to Me, to show His love by making Exceptional Me exceptionally wealthy and to show His disgust for the unworthy by making them exceptionally poor as a result. That's my religion; worship Mammon and Me, His priest on Earth, this made evident by my success as a Holy Conman and thief."

That is their corporate-sponsored 'religion' - might makes right, especially when their own financial might is involved...

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

thanatokephaloides's picture

@Ellen North

The Dominionists are coming out of the closet, waving their 'religious excuse' like a flag.

"If God didn't love me, He wouldn't let me bleed the people He considers unworthy and therefore sacrifices to Me, to show His love by making Exceptional Me exceptionally wealthy and to show His disgust for the unworthy by making them exceptionally poor as a result. That's my religion; worship Mammon and Me, His priest on Earth, this made evident by my success as a Holy Conman and thief."

That is their corporate-sponsored 'religion' - might makes right,

As I quoted Michael Corleone above, "they're the real Mafia"! La Cosa Nostra come off as honest men of honor by comparison!

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

SnappleBC's picture

And my thought was...

If the point of the whole program was to prevent drug money from funding drug cartels by taking their assets, then when the big banks are found to be aiding and abetting said drug cartels by laundering their money then why aren't we taking their assets?

And for that matter, whatever happened to RICO charges... sufficient to put a grandmother in prison because she couldn't tell the authorities anything about her grandson's drug business... but apparently not sufficient to tackle the big banks.

Don't you just love a two-track justice system?

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A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard

snoopydawg's picture

@SnappleBC

I've asked this same thing. The bank that did it only had to pay a fine and of course no one had to admit wrongdoing or go to jail. Just the cost of doing business in this brave new world. Banks made billions from their frauds and only had to pay a couple million in fines. Then they continued doing the same damn things..

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

snoopydawg's picture

@SnappleBC

there is no reason why they shouldn't have been dissolved into a million pieces and the CEOs been sent to prison for decades.

Look at how many criminal acts they have done for decades, yet they are still in business and walking free

The amount of laws they have broken goes back decades and it's just beyond my comprehension that they are still allowed to do business.

But it's the same way that businesses like mining companies can have hundreds of safety violations and instead of being shut down until they are fixed, they can continue to put their worker's lives in danger.

Today we've learned that Sessions thinks that debtors' prisons should be allowed to make a comeback.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Song of the lark's picture

of good governance now practiced worldwide. KSA, Turkey, Russia,USA
Arrest your cousins, or pesky oligarchs, or helpless plebs, and strip their assets and carry on. They do it cause.... reasons...cause they can.

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Lol, put the two together and they're encouraging the wealthy of the world in other countries to avoid tax by hiding their wealth in America, where all wealth can be confiscated without any legal process being involved.

This right when the Petro dollar appears to be doomed.

In my view, these gross overreaches (to be polite) likely have little to do with anything but an expansion of 'legalized' theft and as a means of preventing financial support for the heads/projects of targeted foreign States, of which there's a very lengthy and long-running 'hit' list.

They have no business attempting to impose lawless property seizures (blatant theft) on anyone, in or out of America, any more than they have any right to attack or invade other people's countries - but they're expanding the world's largest army perhaps aiming for a size where they feel that they can attack virtually all countries not yet economically captured at once. They certainly have the nukes to destroy the planet multiple times over and themselves as well, of course, although reality is not an issue for this lot, or for any forming government certainly since Bush-2.

So maybe, since they're crazy enough to believe that they personally could survive mass MAD and that their money would be of any use without an economy or any world with a survivable outdoors or supplies, they just want to get all of the money they can from as many countries as they can before they go and make it all into radioactive particles, much like the internet and other systems thereby also rendered useless?

Not realizing that there'd any longer be anything to buy or anywhere to go other than their luxury bunkers, assuming that they made it there in time, that said bunkers didn't crack and that the power and internal oxygen supply stayed on, at least until the power supply ran out or the plants otherwise perished or proved insufficient, since the global oxygen-producing system would, very shortly, be dead.

I wouldn't be one of these idiots for a trillion dollars.

And if the above scenario or one similar isn't what they're currently planning, it'll be because they've come up with something even more destructively stupid. They do seem to be capable of that much.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

dervish's picture

to protect us from the cops? The cops have clearly become the bigger threat.

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

Citizen Of Earth's picture

is from 2014, but it appears nothing has changed. What really nails it is the videos of the sociopathic cops in their own words fudging police reports and laughing about how there is virtually no limit on what they can do with seized cash. Nazi SS comes to mind.

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Donnie The #ShitHole Douchebag. Fake Friend to the Working Class. Real Asshole.

@Citizen Of Earth
need to rewrite the constitution.

The problem being, if we rewrote the constitution, we'd end up in a serious pissing match amongst various extremists (a category that probably includes myself), with the dupes of the oligarchs eventually holding sway.

We need the constitution to include some explicit "use cases", as we call them in software design. The "new" 14th amendment (due process etc.) needs to spell out some things that are simply not allowed -- like, seizing assets, then placing the burden of recovery on the citizen. Any assets seized need to be returned within the same time frame as is required for holding the person without charge. We need hard, written-in-ink limits to things like how long you can be held without trial, and the extent to which you can (or cannot) be held incommunicado. (Personally, I think every prisoner should be entitled to a daily 5-minute face-to-face check-in with someone whose job is protecting the prisoner, not the system. And I think those check-ins should be constitutionally-required to be documented and recorded. And I think the someone checking-in should be drawn from a pool of people working out of different offices, so that each prisoner meets with several different people who are not coworkers over the course of a couple of weeks. Because I think that if a society is going to do something as extraordinary and bizarre as locking someone up, that society has an enormous obligation to ensure the safety and wellbeing of the person being locked up.) The "new" 4th amendment needs to make it clear that this FISA nonsense won't fly, that we are secure in our electronic "property" (as "personal effects"); and that nationals of other countries are entitled to the same fundamental protections from the US government as are nationals of the US, because those protections are based, not on political expediencies or exigencies or some sort of birthright-by-geography, but on essential principles concerning what is and is not just. An extension of this would be an absolute prohibition on covert interference in the politics of another country, other than one with which the US Congress has declared a state of war -- with various specific and inviolable conditions concerning what a state of war entails and requires (e.g., a 100% embargo on all trade; divestment of all corporate subsidiaries that trade with the "enemy"; "repatriation" of any American subsidiaries of any transnational corporations that trade with the enemy, or worse, maintain subsidiaries in the enemy country. Though really, this is for me a concession -- I would ban the holding company altogether, so that the concept of "subsidiary" simply wouldn't exist, and I would ban the operation within the US of any corporation not registered and headquartered in the US. In other words, the complete and entire end of the transnational corporation. If you want to sell your goods in the US market, find an American distributor, or better still, license your technologies to an American manufacturer. And of course, what's good for the goose is good for the gander -- I would not allow any American corporation to own property or have employees anywhere outside of US jurisdiction. Though maybe there would be exceptions for certain very specific types of enterprise -- e.g., journalism).

The constitution needs to spell out clearly a whole range of crimes that constitute "Sedition" (as opposed to Treason), sedition being:
a. the usurpation of state authority to carry out any agenda not subject to review by the duly-elected representatives of the republic, and ultimately, by the citizens themselves. This would include any and all malfeasant propaganda, whether directed domestically or abroad. Specifically, it would constitute sedition to deliberately misinform or disinform either the populace or the government of any nation, whether in official communication or in covertly-disseminated communication, and the penalties would be harsh, except, again, when there is a declared state of war between the US and the targets of the propaganda.
b. any effort to subvert the electoral process, whether by misinforming the public, or stealing ballots, or whatever. I need to be clear here: Sedition should be treated as a crime comparable to treason, with comparable penalties. As I've said more than once, I'm generally not big on the death penalty, but if you want to discuss it with me, you'll need to start by agreeing that the criteria to qualify would have encompassed the crimes of Oliver North, John Poindexter, Elliot Abrams, et al. I'm not joking, and I'm not exaggerating: I will not even engage in the conversation if you think there are crimes that should be punished by death, but that those of North, Poindexter, Abrams, and Negroponte aren't in the set.

Note that my definition of sedition does not include public civil disobedience -- that is, a public refusal by a citizen or group of citizens to abide under state authority. Whatever you're guilty of, should you occupy wall street or barricade a farm that the sheriff is trying to repossess, it is not sedition. I am not defining sedition as any effort at all to undermine state authority, but only efforts to exercise state authority outside the parameters of a democratic republic, or to subvert the democratic republican process by which state authority is granted and exercised.

Concomitant with these explicit definitions of sedition, the use of Executive Pardon needs to be restricted and constrained, preventing the bizarre circumstance wherein an officer or agent of the government carries out seditious crimes, with either implicit or explicit direction from higher officers, and then gets pardoned by the executive under whom the agent operated. (One presumes that the original framers would have perceived such a pardon to be an obvious cause for impeachment, as well as such an outrage that no person holding the Presidency would have been willing to face the associated disgrace of behaving in such a fashion.)

The main point being that, contrary to the expectations of the men who originally negotiated this document, broad statements of essential rights are not sufficient to protect the interests of the average citizen -- or even the average pseudo-aristocrat -- from legally-enforced and sanctioned depredation. The broad statements must be accompanied by a suite of explicit cases that are explicitly noted as not being comprehensive, but only establishing a "space" that defines the most very minimum boundaries of personal security from state violence. Anyone with experience in the AI field of "Machine Learning" will understand exactly what I'm getting at here -- something called "Supervised Learning by Induction". Ideally, in fact, there would be both "positive" and "negative" cases: Here are examples of what the government absolutely cannot do. Here are examples of what the government absolutely can do. Judges then have three distinct types of decisions to make:
A. Is this case clearly within the parameters spelled out by one of the "use cases"?
B. If not, does it lie clearly within the space defined by some set of of the "use cases"?
C. If not -- if it sits somewhere in the no-man's land -- where should it be assigned: to expand the space of that which government can do, or the space of that which government cannot?

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

travelerxxx's picture

@UntimelyRippd

I suspect none of them would see the light of day in any Convention of the States rewrite ... especially since the States who have voted for a such convention are pretty much controlled by right wing politicians, often extremist right wingers and/or religious extremists.

This Convention of the States may very well happen, depending on the the outcome of the 2018 elections throughout the 50 states. As we know, the proponents of such a convention are very, very close to having the number of states required to call for a convention.

I feel there would be no popular uprising against the extremist Right controlling such a convention, and even if there were any uprising, it would be easily put down -- whether simply by propaganda or with the addition of violence, possibly military. It is not the Left that has the means of overcoming the propaganda; a handful of obscenely wealthy men control all our mainstream media and now, evidently, will control the Internet. In the case of violence, it is not the Left who is armed to the teeth; rather, the opposite is true. I do not believe we can count on the American military as they are shot-through with right-wingers -- especially the officer corps. Soldiers will do as they were trained to do: follow orders.

Wish I could be more hopeful, but it doesn't look too good to me. Naturally, all this could change in a moment. All it takes is a stock market meltdown, a wildly unexpected natural disaster, a crazy man with a nuke, etc and etc.

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Lily O Lady's picture

@UntimelyRippd
ALEC has been working toward a constitutional convention. I just don’t think things will turn out the way you want them to. With Republicans in charge of so many state legislatures things could go badly for progressives.

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

@Lily O Lady
I think we are fucked, precisely because if we did have a full constitutional convention the result would be something that approximated the current political state of Somalia -- or worse, the result might be all-out civil war, which I fear already.

And this is the problem. Our current constitutional "settlement" is a disaster, but we don't dare try to repair it, because our current cultural/political circumstance is also a disaster. We have this document that is supposed to guarantee us certain protections from our government, but which does not. The 1st, 4th, 5th and 14th amendments are all hopelessly crippled by fascist decisions that have come down from the Supreme Court. Because of the precedent-based culture of the court, it is almost impossible for this damage to be repaired by any means other than explicit amendment -- but amendment by legislative process is no longer doable, and amendment by convention is a Pandora's box that we do not dare open.

Curiously, there's a right-wing attempt to authorize a very limited-scope convention -- basically, to produce some sort of balanced-budget amendment. They're jumping through all sorts of hoops to try to place the necessary constraints on the delegates, because the majority of Americans who have given it any thought are scared witless at the prospect of a wide-open convention -- but it's not at all clear that the Supreme Court would recognize those constraints as having any legal weight, once the convention were under way.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

snoopydawg's picture

@UntimelyRippd

because we are 6 states short of having one. This is what the Koch brothers have been working towards.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

@snoopydawg
Some of the states that have signed on to the constitutional convention call have done so only with respect to a balanced budget amendment. They have done this largely because it's the only way they could sell it to whomever they might imagine their constituency to be. However, as I noted, and as is mentioned in the story to which you linked, it is unclear that the convention can, in fact, be limited in the fashion they (claim) to want:

And here’s the kicker: the promise to balance the budget at a constitutional convention is like the loss leader sale in the grocery store. It gets you in the door and the rest follows. As the conservative Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger once warned, “There is no effective way to limit or muzzle the actions of a constitutional convention.”

Should a constitutional convention take place, it could easily become a “runaway convention.” Attendees would be free to consider a wide range of “Liberty Amendments” that have been listed in a book by that title by the radio talk show host and attorney Mark Levin. They include an end to the direct election of U.S. Senators by the people.

Either way, the reality is that a balanced budget requirement would probably destroy the United States as a going concern. No modern government can operate under that limitation -- probably not even one attempting to limit itself to those functions endorsed by the Kochs, though such a government wouldn't deserve to be called "modern" anyway. However, one thing that might happen -- should the convention in fact remain limited in scope -- is that the Kochs would get exactly the opposite of what they're slavering for -- they might get an electorate that demands higher taxes on the wealthy and lower spending on the military-industrial and prison-industrial complexes. That would certainly be a rich irony.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

Lily O Lady's picture

@UntimelyRippd

not by the blade.

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

@UntimelyRippd @UntimelyRippd

I dunno, of course, but I suspect that the actual problem lies with the lawless corruption of those claiming to be 'above the law' themselves and running government in violation of the much-advertised Constitutional principles on which US law is to be based.

Be careful what you wish for.

http://billmoyers.com/story/alec-constitutional-convention/

ALEC Push for Constitutional Convention Hits a Roadblock of Infighting, Legal Questions

But the group continues to pursue a highly partisan, highly political agenda to rewrite the Constitution adding a fiscal austerity amendment to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

By Mary Bottari | August 3, 2017

With Republicans in control of 32 state legislatures, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) has been actively pushing the idea of a second Constitutional Convention to rewrite the US Constitution. The nation’s first and only Constitutional Convention took place in Philadelphia in 1787 with George Washington presiding.

ALEC has cheered on the idea of a “con con” for years, passing multiple resolutions calling for changes to the Constitution, hosting workshops and handbooks and even draft resolutions laying out proposed rules of procedure. Everything has been quite cordial and controlled. ...

...Because extreme Republican fiscal austerity advocates have not been able to get a “balanced budget” amendment through Congress, they have been pursuing the state-based avenue for several decades, with little success. ...

...Citizens for Self-Governance (CSG) is pushing the broadest of the three Article V applications, with a project called the “Convention of States.” Created in 2012 by Tea Party Patriots co-founder Mark Meckler and chaired by Wisconsin’s dark-money man Eric O’Keefe, CSG launched its ambitious effort to rewrite the Constitution in 2014. Its plan calls for a broad convention to propose multiple amendments to the Constitution that would give states the power to ignore federal laws and Supreme Court rulings they don’t like, slash federal spending and impose term limits. ALEC has adopted this idea as a model bill called the “Application for a Convention of the States Under Article V of the Constitution of the United States.” CSG’s budget more than tripled between 2011 and 2015 from $1.8 million in revenue to $5.7 million, and its proposal won passage in four states this year, for a total of 12 states. ...

...“CFA’s analysis flags important differences in the multiple versions of austerity resolutions passed by the states, and calls into serious question how close the Koch machine is to getting a crack at rewriting the Constitution,” said Arn Pearson, CMD’s general counsel. ...

http://www.ibtimes.com/political-capital/inside-alec-corporate-push-cons...

Inside ALEC And The Corporate Push For A Constitutional Convention
By Josh Keefe @thejoshkeefe On 07/27/17

...Taylor spoke to International Business Times this week about what she saw at the ALEC conference, how it compared to years past, and the group’s call for a constitutional convention to write new amendments that would limit the power and largesse of the federal government. ...

...The two of us started going because we saw so many bills that we had never heard of, that people weren’t asking for, and they were coming from ALEC. That’s what I discovered in the process and that’s why I kept going — to get a heads-up on what the right is doing next, but also to expose where these policies come from. People should know these policies should be coming from them. The public isn’t asking for these policies. These corporations are working with right-wing think tanks and the legislators are the foot soldiers. ...

...The energy people are super happy though. They see tons of opportunity under Trump. But the big push was to amend the federal constitution using an Article V constitutional convention. There is a very vocal segment in ALEC that has concluded that the whole government is corrupt, even Republicans. So a new constitutional convention is the only way to get what they want, which is really a rollback of regulations and taxes. They have not been successful in getting Congress to pull back the social safety net and Medicare, to repeal the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, they haven’t got rid of the EPA. I believe that the Article V constitutional convention is a way to get those done in really sneaky ways. They don’t say to the public, “We don’t want the EPA, we don’t want Medicare.” They say that at the ALEC conference, but the public isn’t at the ALEC conference.

They have a really hard time repealing Medicare, because they have constituents that at least some of them care about. This is really an end run around them, around democracy in some ways. Because they don’t have faith in elected officials to accomplish ALEC’s priorities. And those priorities center around limiting the federal government’s ability to make policy and spend money. So an Article V constitutional convention is how they see they can finally curtail the power of the federal government. ...

...ALEC is known as a group that allows corporations to distribute model legislation to state lawmakers. Did you see that?

Absolutely. Just look at Article V. The first rollout of that, when there was really a push for it was my first ALEC conference in 2013. And sitting a few rows in front of me was Chris Kapenga. (Republican Wisconsin state Sen. Kapenga recently sponsored a resolution in the Wisconsin legislature calling for a constitutional convention to introduce a balanced budget amendment. It passed the assembly.) We were told that we needed an Article V convention and we were told to bring this back to our states. I said to myself at the time, “We are definitely going to see this in Wisconsin.” This was in August 2013. By January 2014, he introduced a balanced budget amendment. He didn’t get that idea out of the sky. ...

http://billmoyers.com/story/kochs-to-rewrite-constitution/

Koch Brothers Bankroll Move to Rewrite the Constitution

A constitutional convention, something thought impossible not long ago, is looking increasingly likely.

By Alex Kotch | March 27, 2017

...There are two major legislative pushes for a convention at the state level. One would attempt to engineer a convention for a balanced budget amendment only, and the other tries to secure an open convention for the purpose of limiting the power and jurisdiction of the federal government. But once a convention is underway, all bets are off. The convention can write its own rules, resulting in a wide-open or “runaway” convention that can make major changes to the constitution and, some argue, even change the number of states required to ratify those changes.

If America gets saddled with a runaway convention, the Koch coterie of funders will be to blame. Most of the groups pushing the convention idea are being underwritten by one or more institutions tied to billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch.

Attempts to Limit Topic of the Convention Likely to Fail ...

...The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities explains why any convention call, no matter how narrowly written, is likely to result in a “runaway” convention. A convention is empowered to write its own rules, including how delegates are chosen, how many delegates attend and whether a supermajority is required to approve amendments.

Nothing in the Constitution prevents a convention, once convened, from setting its own agenda, influenced by powerful special interests like the Koch groups. A convention could even choose an entirely new ratification process. “The 1787 convention ignored the ratification process under which it was established and created a new one, reducing the number of states needed to approve the new Constitution and removing Congress from the approval process,” writes CBPP. ...

Edit: lol, should have guessed that I'd have been multiply ninja'd, including by the person I replied to, but will leave the articles for any 'drive-by' readers who might be interested in why this has to be fought tooth and nail.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Lily O Lady's picture

@Ellen North

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

@Ellen North

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

@UntimelyRippd

Others faster and more skillful than I got there first (and, as usual, said what I wanted to, better, lol) without my realizing - actually long before I actually even got on the page, as could have been anticipated, although one never knows. They/you were literary ninja's!

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

@Ellen North
i was afraid i'd done something rude.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

Steven D's picture

We benefit from your investigative work a great deal. I know I do. I did not know how bad the asset forfeiture racket had become, nor the info on making US banks the new Switzerland.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

wendy davis's picture

and thanks. i confess it was such an enigmatic broad brush paint stroke that i poke about and found the authors who'd prodded Herr Hair to issue the order.

"WASHINGTON (senate.gov newsroom) – U.S. Senators Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and John McCain (R-Ariz.), Chairman of the Armed Services Committee, authors of the Global Magnitsky Human Rights and Accountability Act (P.L. 114-328), have written to President Trump requesting that his Administration vet and determine whether 20 individuals and entities from across the globe meet the criteria to be sanctioned in accordance with the Global Magnitsky Act.

The Global Magnitsky Human Rights and Accountability Act, which became law with passage of the Fiscal Year 2017 National Defense Authorization Act last December, authorizes the President to impose visa and asset sanctions on foreign individuals responsible for gross violations of human rights against rights defenders and government officials or their associates who have engaged in significant acts of corruption. The Global Magnitsky Act also requires the submission of reports to Congress with relevant updates to the list of sanctioned individuals and entities, as well as responses to Congressional requests for specific sanctions investigations.

“Congress has provided the Administration with a list of some of the most egregious human rights and corruption cases in the world for review. Now the President must act quickly to delegate authority to the Secretary of the Treasury or the Secretary of State to lead the investigations into these cases,” said Senator Cardin. “Working together, we can ensure that gross violators of human rights and those who engage in significant acts of corruption do not escape the consequences of their actions even when their home country fails to act.”

"The United States must send a clear message: if you violate the human rights of others or engage in significant acts of corruption, you will be held accountable," said Senator McCain. "It's critical the administration use the tools at its disposal to fully investigate these cases and ensure human rights offenders and corrupt officials from around the world are brought to justice." (and more)

Smells pretty fishy, lol.

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@wendy davis what gives US the right to judiciate in foreign countries? Congress has no authority over Australia's internal legal processes. Fiat.

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The Aspie Corner's picture

have been an exercise in organized theft by the Robber Barons. Trickle Down never trickles down. It only moves the goal posts and balances the budget on the poor and middle class in order to keep coddling the inherited aristocracy.

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Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.

Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.

Polls have shown 80 percent of Americans oppose the practice.

OK I can see some proportion of the 1% being in favor, but what about the remaining 19%? These people are a danger to the rest of us.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

snoopydawg's picture

@Timmethy2.0

And you will find those 20%. I see so many comments stating that rich people should be allowed to keep more of their money because they are the job creators. And that they pay most of the taxes in this country already. Almost everyone that comments on my local news website are in favor of the tax bill because they think that they'll be keeping more of their money. And there are even more redder states than Utah.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Mark from Queens's picture

It's hard to believe this is America 2017. Shantytowns, like the Great Depression.

These stories are not being told/shown by the MSM. For if they were, it would rile up indignation by regular good-hearted folks who would be shocked and wouldn't stand for this. Many just don't really have a clue to how bad it really is (It's not on the "news").

Played a show in Colorado a few years ago and went through Denver. Saw a huge line of folks snaked around the block of a building. Asked someone out of the window of our car what the line was for. They said it was soup kitchen.

It's like this all over the country.

If they don't want to put this on primetime MSM then activists should do things like set up projectors with film clips like these outside of big, 1&%, red carpet events that roll footage like this onto the front of the building.

It can be done. Like this:

I'm so sick of these greedy bastards.

If their MSM lapdogs won't do it, need to start broadcasting the truth to the masses.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

snoopydawg's picture

I agree that this should be shown on the national news nonstop, but we know why it isn't. This is happening all over the country and the problem is just going to get worse. There are already years long waiting lists for public housing and in the Bay Area and surrounding areas, wait lists are up to 8 years for section 8 housing or private vouchers. This was made much worse when the fires burned over 5,000. (h/t eyo)

Cities are passing laws that say feeding the homeless is illegal or any other type of help that doesn't come from the states. In no sane world should feeding the homeless be illegal. Cops get off going through homeless camps and destroying people's belongings. What type of person gets off doing something that cruel?

I watched a video of Detroit's foreclosure sales. It has one of the highest property tax in the country and people can't keep up with the rising taxes. The city sells blocks of foreclosed homes and people bid on them. Some homes go for $500 and the people who buy them are making tons of money renting them at ridiculously high prices. The video didn't say if the new buyers had to pay the thousands in back taxes, but if they didn't, then why couldn't the city work with the current homeowners?

off topic, I reread your Another pissed off liberal diary that you wrote last year. Excellent diary.

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snoopydawg's picture

The video I mentioned above is in this article and it's worth watching. A group of people is shown how they decide what houses they want to bid on and for how much.

DETROIT’S HOUSING CRISIS IS THE WORK OF ITS OWN GOVERNMENT

DETROIT — Jennine Spencer had always wanted to own the house next door. When she was a little girl, the owner kept the beautiful Victorian immaculate. So when it went into mortgage foreclosure in 2010 and two years later came up for sale for just $1,500, she dipped into her modest savings and paid cash.

The house had sat vacant as the recession rolled through Detroit, and scrappers had stripped it down to the doorknobs. It had no furnace, no water heater — even the sinks and toilets were gone. Spencer had to spend $10,000 just to make it habitable. And the house came with another problem, bigger than missing appliances: The previous owner had left $16,000 in unpaid city property taxes, a debt that Spencer now owed.

I'd like to know why the person who sold the house to the woman didn't tell her about the back property taxes she would have to pay if she bought the house.

I've read numerous articles about how people did this after the economy melted down and they made a ton of money. Financial companies did the same thing except that they got a heads up on what houses were coming up for bidding on and they were able to buy them before anyone else even knew they were available. They buy up as many houses that they can and they jack rents way up and then they take off for parts unknown. They become absent slum landlords and their renters are unable to get ahold of them when things break. Young couples are trying to find an affordable first home to buy, but the pickings are few.

Welcome to the Companied America!

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