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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 07:59 PM Mar 2014

Weekend Economists Putin on the Ritz March 28-30, 2014

Here it is, another weekend already. I don't know where the time goes! Partly it was birthday frenzy (the Kid turns 31 on Monday). Partly it was Condo Frenzy (Board elections in May, 5 major projects coming to a boil...) And partly it was the unspeakable weather....



Vladimir Putin Cuddles With A Puppy Seen On www.coolpicturegallery.us
And yes, this is very real. Vladimir Putin was presented with a Bulgarian Shepherd puppy after he signed a deal with Bulgarian PM Boyko Borisov to provide Bulgaria with cheaper oil.


Let's consider the Russian President Vladimir Putin, since he has been featured in the news of late. Who is he? Where did he come from? Where does he want to go and will Russians follow? And if delving into whatever is known about Tovarisch Putin takes us to delving into Russian history, so much the better. All the demonization going on makes me a bit crazy. If it weren't for President Wilson, I might have been born Russian, too!

Prominent Russians: Vladimir Putin

Born October 7, 1952

At the stroke of the 21st century, Vladimir Putin became one of the worlds’ most well-known politicians. Today his name is associated worldwide with Russia’s rise from the ashes – both economically and politically. But the second Russian President’s career had a rather humble beginning. Vladimir Putin’s parents could hardly have imagined that their beloved son would one day take the helm of their vast country when he was born on 7 October 1952 in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg). His mother, Maria Ivanovna Shelomova, was a factory worker and his father, Vladimir Spiridonovich Putin, a conscript in the Soviet Navy, where he served in the submarine fleet in the early 1930s.

The family lived in a small communal apartment when 8-year old Vladimir started school number 193, just across the street from his home. Putin’s first teachers remember him as a rowdy pupil. By 5th grade he was the only one in his class not to be a member of the Pioneers movement (a popular youth movement of the Soviet era) – largely because young Putin often misbehaved. All this changed, however, when he reached 6th grade and began practicing sports – namely martial arts like judo. In his autobiography, “Ot Pervogo Litsa” (“In the First Person”), Vladimir Putin wrote that back then his main motivation for taking up martial arts was a wish to emulate the intelligence officers portrayed on Soviet screens by actors like Vyacheslav Tikhonov.

Having graduated from high school in 1970, Putin entered the International Law Branch of the Law Department of Leningrad State University. He became a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and got acquainted with the man who was destined to change his fate later on – Leningrad’s future mayor Anatoly Sobchak. After graduating from University, Putin decided to realize his childhood aspiration to work in the intelligence field. In 1975 he underwent training at the 401st KGB school in Okhta, Leningrad. He then went on to work in the Second Department (counter-intelligence) before he was transferred to the First Department, where his duties included monitoring foreigners and consular officials in Leningrad.

In 1985 his KGB career took a new twist – a fluent German speaker, Putin was sent to Dresden in East Germany, where Soviet troops were stationed at the time. He still remembers those years with special delight, which he confirmed in an interview on the on the anniversary of the troops’ pullout. After Soviet troops left East Germany, Putin returned to Leningrad where, in June 1991, he assumed the position of surveillance officer with the International Affairs section of Leningrad State University. But the stint was short-lived – Putin formally resigned from the state security services on 20 August 1991, during the KGB-supported coup d’etat against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. Nevertheless, his work at Leningrad State University got him re-acquainted with Anatoly Sobchak, then mayor of the city. It was Sobchak who brought Vladimir Putin into politics.

On 28 June 1991 Putin was appointed Head of the Committee for External Relations of the Saint Petersburg Mayor's Office. He was responsible for promoting international relations and foreign investments, as well as registering foreign business ventures in Saint Petersburg. Putin remained in this position until 1996. Nowadays, even his current political critics say that back then Putin was famed for his resistance to the temptation of corruption – self-exiled Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky is often cited by the media as saying, “Putin never took bribes during his time in the office.”

The future president’s career in St. Petersburg ended with that of his patron. In 1996 Sobchak lost a mayoral vote and Putin lost his job. But his talent didn’t go unnoticed and he was summoned to Moscow to work in President Boris Yeltsin’s Administration. Just a year later, in 1998, Yeltsin appointed Vladimir Putin to head the Russian security services – the FSB. Yet again, his career at this post lasted for only a year – on 9 August 1999 Vladimir Putin was appointed Russia’s prime minister. In those years of political uncertainty, he became the country’s 5th head of government in less than eighteen months. Few expected Putin, who was virtually unknown to the general public, to last any longer than his predecessors. Moreover, his first premiership came amid a worsening crisis in the North Caucasus, where militants from Chechnya had invaded the neighboring Dagestan Republic – that’s when Putin said his memorable phrase about his “firm intention to kill militants even when they’re in a toilet.”

The Chechen military campaign and Putin’s tough stance against it forged his image in – and outside – Russia, and despite hard-fought campaigns by other candidates for the presidency, Putin's hard-line politics, his law-and-order image and his unrelenting approach to the crisis in Chechnya soon propelled him to victory over all his rivals. Just hours before the clock marked the New Year in 2000, Boris Yeltsin unveiled a big sensation – in a televised address to the nation he announced his early retirement and recommended Vladimir Putin as his successor - another career change in less than a year. Putin was now a stand-in president of the Russian Federation – a status that changed to acting president after a presidential election in March 2000 that Putin won in the first round with 52.94 percent of the vote.

Vladimir Putin’s first chapter as Russia’s president could be better described as “an up-and-down period in modern Russian history.” Russia’s economy was booming and Putin implemented major changes to the country’s power structure. He also made sure that influential tycoons of the Yeltsin-era, sometimes called oligarchs, would no longer control politics in their favor. Such steps were greeted with support from Russians, most of whom blamed the wealthy businessmen – not always with legitimate backgrounds – for the severe economic crisis of the late 1990s. But amid a growth in the quality of living, Russia went through a difficult and violent time dealing with Chechen terrorists. On several occasions – like the Moscow theater siege, bombings of metro and apartment buildings in the Russian capital and the hostage taking in a Beslan school – the militants made it clear that they were willing to take the Chechen war beyond the republic’s borders. The whole country was gripped by fear. In these circumstances, Putin had to react with tough measures. His hard-line policies towards building security in the country were sometimes criticized by the Western media, but after the militant movement in the Northern Caucasus was suppressed and Chechnya finally saw peace, the Russian public openly declared their loyalty to Vladimir Putin. At the start of his second presidential term (which he again won in the first round with 71 percent of the vote), he enjoyed his all-time highest approval rating of more than 80 percent.

As the country continued its vast economic growth during Putin’s second term, which started in 2004, Russia’s foreign policy came into the spotlight. Despite being strongly criticized by the Western media during his second term for what it called “autocracy” and “strangling the freedom of the press,” Putin managed to mend the greatest drawback of the Yeltsin-era – Russia finally had its voice heard in the international arena and became an important player in the global decision-making processes. Putin was strongly critical of US foreign policies. In 2007 he gave a memorable speech during a security conference in Munich, where the Russian leader lashed out at Washington’s attempts to govern the whole planet and called for the creation of a democratic multi-polar world, with the rule of international law.

As the Russian constitution didn’t allow the president to run for a third consecutive term, at the end of 2007 – several months ahead of the presidential vote – Vladimir Putin announced that he would support Dmitry Medvedev as his successor. Medvedev, in return, said that should he win the election, he would appoint Putin as prime minister. The result of the vote spoke for itself – having come practically out of the blue, Medvedev won in the first round as well with 70.28 percent of the vote, signaling the non-diminishing support for Putin’s way of controlling Russia’s policies. On 8 May 2008, Vladimir Putin began his second spell as Russia’s prime minister – a post he has successfully occupied ever since.

http://russiapedia.rt.com/prominent-russians/leaders/vladimir-putin/

52 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Weekend Economists Putin on the Ritz March 28-30, 2014 (Original Post) Demeter Mar 2014 OP
Looks like we will finish March without losing a bank to failure Demeter Mar 2014 #1
Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin Demeter Mar 2014 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author Demeter Mar 2014 #3
So Putin likes puppies? tclambert Mar 2014 #19
US government requests for Google user data jump 120% since 2009 Demeter Mar 2014 #4
The real millionaires of Wall Street: vain, bickering and powerful Demeter Mar 2014 #5
The ghosts of America's long-term unemployed Demeter Mar 2014 #6
Maybe Obama Ought to Take Lessons from Putin? Demeter Mar 2014 #7
Millions of Android app downloads infected with cryptocoin-mining code Demeter Mar 2014 #8
Is America's relationship with Saudi Arabia broken beyond repair? Demeter Mar 2014 #9
As God is my witness, I didn't know this even existed until 30 seconds ago! Demeter Mar 2014 #10
Did they sing "Super Pooper?" tclambert Mar 2014 #18
Great find, Demeter hamerfan Mar 2014 #30
Deadline Near, Health Signups Show Disparity Demeter Mar 2014 #11
Dinner time! See you in a bite.... Demeter Mar 2014 #12
dinner music Demeter Mar 2014 #13
Notable and Quotable! Demeter Mar 2014 #14
Unfortunately for Qaddafi, he was not a Vladimir Putin...Regime Changers From Libya to Ukraine Demeter Mar 2014 #15
Doctor Hitman Demeter Mar 2014 #16
When you're blue and you don't know where to go to . . . tclambert Mar 2014 #17
now this is a very interesting remix of the original Demeter Mar 2014 #27
MOODY'S REVIEWING RUSSIA BOND RATING FOR DOWNGRADE xchrom Mar 2014 #20
Thai protesters rally against PM ahead of Senate vote xchrom Mar 2014 #21
BMW to invest $1 billion to expand U.S. production by 50 percent xchrom Mar 2014 #22
EU antitrust chief seeks to insulate Gazprom probe from Crimea xchrom Mar 2014 #23
Chairman candidate says Telecom Italia must act as true public company xchrom Mar 2014 #24
Russia's buildup near Ukraine may reach 40,000 troops - U.S. sources xchrom Mar 2014 #25
These Are The States Most Dependent On The Federal Government xchrom Mar 2014 #26
Home evictions averaged 184 a day in Spain last year xchrom Mar 2014 #28
Brazilians scramble to uncover their Sephardic roots xchrom Mar 2014 #29
"Puttin on the Ritz": From the Broadway musical "Young Frankenstein" antigop Mar 2014 #31
Wow! they sure pulled out all the stops on that one Demeter Mar 2014 #32
yep. Saw it on Broadway. It was quite a number! nt antigop Mar 2014 #37
Greece ready to be transformed into a 1973 Chile Demeter Mar 2014 #33
Judge Rules Goldman Must Face Lawsuit Over Mortgage Securities Demeter Mar 2014 #34
America’s Taxation Tradition PAUL KRUGMAN Demeter Mar 2014 #35
I'm all for Insubordination... Demeter Mar 2014 #36
How Vladimir Putin became evil (Because now he refuses to play ball) by Tariq Ali Demeter Mar 2014 #38
PUTIN'S Ancestry, early life and education Demeter Mar 2014 #39
Some local music Demeter Mar 2014 #40
Far-right group seals appeal among discontented Hungarians xchrom Mar 2014 #41
Hollande braces for losses as turnout low in French mayoral vote xchrom Mar 2014 #42
Analysis - Russia sell-off spurs hunt for bargains xchrom Mar 2014 #43
Germany, China say renminbi hub in Frankfurt will boost trade xchrom Mar 2014 #44
Banking Union Time Bomb: Eurocrats Authorize Bailouts AND Bail-Ins xchrom Mar 2014 #45
TALK ABOUT YOUR EPIC FAILURE Demeter Mar 2014 #48
we went straight from winter to tornado weather. xchrom Mar 2014 #49
a tornado would at least be different Demeter Mar 2014 #51
New York Domino's Workers Get $448,000 Wage Theft Settlement xchrom Mar 2014 #46
Stressed: What Are They Trying To Tell Us? xchrom Mar 2014 #47
Seven Decades of Nazi Collaboration: America’s Dirty Little Ukraine Secret xchrom Mar 2014 #50
I'm wrapping it up for the Weekend Demeter Mar 2014 #52
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
1. Looks like we will finish March without losing a bank to failure
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:07 PM
Mar 2014

So, pat yourselves on the back, folks!

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
2. Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:15 PM
Mar 2014

"Vladimirovich" means "son of Vladimir", so he is named after his father...in Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Vladimirovich and the family name is Putin.

His name in Cyrillic alphabet: Влади́мир Влади́мирович Пу́тин

Born 7 October 1952, Putin has been the President of Russia since 7 May 2012. He previously served as President from 2000 to 2008, and as Prime Minister of Russia from 1999 to 2000 and again from 2008 to 2012. During that last term as Prime Minister, he was also the Chairman of the United Russia political party.

For 16 years Putin served as an officer in the KGB, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel before he retired to enter politics in his native Saint Petersburg in 1991. He moved to Moscow in 1996 and joined President Boris Yeltsin's administration where he rose quickly, becoming Acting President on 31 December 1999 when Yeltsin resigned unexpectedly. Putin won the subsequent 2000 presidential election and was re-elected in 2004. Because of constitutionally mandated term limits, Putin was ineligible to run for a third consecutive presidential term in 2008. Dmitry Medvedev won the 2008 presidential election and appointed Putin as Prime Minister, beginning a period of so-called "tandemocracy". In September 2011, following a change in the law extending the presidential term from four years to six, Putin announced that he would seek a third, non-consecutive term as President in the 2012 presidential election, an announcement which led to large-scale protests in many Russian cities. He won the election in March 2012 and is serving a six-year term.

Many of Putin's actions are regarded by the domestic opposition and foreign observers as undemocratic. The 2011 Democracy Index stated that Russia was in "a long process of regression that culminated in a move from a hybrid to an authoritarian regime" in view of Putin's candidacy and flawed parliamentary elections. In 2014 Russia was excluded from the G8 group as a result of what the group called Putin's "illegal" invasion and annexation of Crimea.

During Putin's first premiership and presidency (1999–2008), real incomes increased by a factor of 2.5, real wages more than tripled; unemployment and poverty more than halved, and the Russians' self-assessed life satisfaction rose significantly.

Putin's first presidency was marked by high economic growth: the Russian economy grew for eight straight years, seeing GDP increase by 72% in PPP (sixfold in nominal).

As Russia's president, Putin and the Federal Assembly passed into law a flat income tax of 13%, a reduced profits tax, and new land and legal codes. As Prime Minister, Putin oversaw large scale military and police reform. His energy policy has affirmed Russia's position as an energy superpower. Putin supported high-tech industries such as the nuclear and defence industries. A rise in foreign investment contributed to a boom in such sectors as the automotive industry. Putin has cultivated a "he-man" and "super hero" image and is a pop cultural icon in Russia with many commercial products named after him. He is currently ranked as the world's most powerful person according to Forbes.


---https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Putin

He's also very photogenic....



Response to Demeter (Reply #2)

tclambert

(11,087 posts)
19. So Putin likes puppies?
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 12:29 AM
Mar 2014

JUST LIKE HITLER!






(OK, perhaps the puppy thing leads to a false analogy. But how does Putin feel about the music of Wagner?)

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
4. US government requests for Google user data jump 120% since 2009
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:21 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/mar/27/us-government-requests-google-user-data?CMP=ema_565



Transparency report shows US made over 10,000 data requests in last six months of 2013 – more than any other country...Requests from the US government for information about Google customers have increased by about 120% since the company first began publishing the numbers in 2009, the tech company said Thursday.

Google’s latest transparency report looks at requests by government agencies worldwide in criminal cases in the last six months of 2013. Google published a separate report in February about orders made during US national security investigations.

From July to December last year, US authorities made 10,574 requests for information about 18,254 accounts, the most of any country. France made the second most requests, with 2,750 requests for information about 3,378 accounts.

The report revealed that:

• Germany made 2,660 requests for information about 3,255 accounts

• India made 2,513 requests or information about 4,401 accounts

• United Kingdom made 1,397 requests for information about 3,142 accounts

• Brazil made 1,085 requests for information about 1,471 accounts

“While we’ve always known how important transparency is when it comes to government requests, the events of the past year have underscored just how urgent the issue is,” Richard Salgado, the legal director of law enforcement and information security wrote in a blogpost.

“Though our number of users has grown throughout the time period, we’re also seeing more and more governments start to exercise their authority to make requests,” he wrote.

“We consistently push back against overly broad requests for your personal information, but it’s also important for laws to explicitly protect you from government overreach. That’s why we’re working alongside eight other companies to push for surveillance reform, including more transparency.”
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
5. The real millionaires of Wall Street: vain, bickering and powerful
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:24 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.theguardian.com/money/us-money-blog/2014/mar/27/real-millionaires-wall-street-finance-stars?CMP=ema_565



A good investing record can be an excuse for bad behaviour, but financial stars have huge influence despite their reality TV antics...

"I'm tired of cleaning up your shit."


Words straight from the mouth of a rebellious teenage boy? Sadly not.

They were levied by 55-year-old Mohammed El-Erian, CEO of noted Pimco, the noted California bond investment firm. El-Erian's target: “Bond king” Bill Gross, the company’s 69-year-old co-founder, who had transformed Pimco into a $1.9tn mutual fund and investment behemoth. Their spat was described in a horrifying and hilarious chronicle published in the Wall Street Journal.

But, because there were billions of dollars at stake, this more than just office sniping. Both the bond market and Gross’s own investment bets weren’t doing all that well; El-Erian's attempts to move Pimco into stocks added to create friction. Most significantly, the Total Return Fund – Pimco’s flagship – lost 2% in 2013, lagging 94% behind of all its rivals, in what was otherwise a great year for financial markets. In the 12 months before February 28, Pimco had lost a net $58bn, while the Total Return Fund alone had seen investors flee as if from the bubonic plague.

That would have been bad enough.

But then there’s the now-public trash-talking, which culminated in the very public departure of El-Erian from the firm he was supposed to lead when Gross retired. "I have a 41-year track record of investing excellence,” the Wall Street Journal records Gross as chiding El-Erian in front of two witnesses. “What do you have?"

Alas for Pimco, what both men have is an outsized public profile – so when they argue, it indicates deeper trouble...


WALL ST. TYCOON REALITY TV ANTICS? SEE WHAT I MISS BE AVOIDING CABLE?
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
6. The ghosts of America's long-term unemployed
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:28 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.theguardian.com/money/us-money-blog/2014/mar/27/us-long-term-unemployed-ghosts-economy-jobs?CMP=ema_565

The government stops tracking jobless Americans after six months, though they face a future of sporadic, part-time work...America is filled with millions of ghosts: living, breathing human beings, who, for economic purposes, are completely unaccounted for and totally invisible.

A new report suggests that the long-term unemployed – those who have been out of a job for six months or more – are having no effect on the labor market, either good or bad. Their unfortunate unemployment situation “exerts little pressure on wage growth or inflation”, reports the Brookings Institute.

That's an enormous number of people without any kind of financial footprint. The number of those who have been out of work at least six months is currently 3.8 million, according to the US Department of Labor. That’s about one million less than last year, but still higher than is historically normal. There's no easy way out, either. When Brookings checked in with those who had been unemployed for more than six months, now 15 months after their initial bout of unemployment, a third weren’t working and had given up their search. Another 30% were still looking. Only one in 10 of those out of a job for longer than six months found full-time employment, found Brookings. For another 11% of the long-term unemployed, employment was sporadic.

If the long-term unemployed are not having an impact on major economic markers, it makes it less likely that Washington will feel any urge to create new policy responses. Republicans in Congress already oppose extending unemployment benefits to those who have been out of work for a long time. That means the long-term unemployed will find that their troubles are unlikely to go away after they find a new job – which are often temporary, sporadic and part-time. In fact, only one in 10 is likely to find stable employment down the road...
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
7. Maybe Obama Ought to Take Lessons from Putin?
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:28 PM
Mar 2014

He could put Jamie in jail, and Blankfein, too, for starters...then get a real jobs program and universal single payer....

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
8. Millions of Android app downloads infected with cryptocoin-mining code
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:33 PM
Mar 2014


http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/mar/27/android-bitcoin-dogecoin-mining-malware?CMP=ema_565

Researchers have found apps in the Google Play store which are secretly hijacking mobiles to mine cryptocoins...More than a million Android smartphones are mining cryptocoins without the owners' knowledge, via apps downloaded from Google Play which stealthily incorporate 'hashing' software.

Researchers at security company Trend Micro say they have found at least two apps on the Google Play store, Songs and "Prized", which contain code to join any phone that has them to a cryptocoin-mining "pool". Each app has had between 1m and 5m downloads, meaning that up to 10m phones might be affected. Songs was still available at the time of publication. An email to the developer had not been answered by time of publication.

The subverted apps seem to include a request to run the mining software within their terms and conditions - meaning that once the user clicks "OK" they have in effect given it permission to steal their processing time. Trend Micro criticised "the murky language and vague terminology" of the terms and conditions.

The company also discovered bitcoin-mining code hidden in repackaged versions of Football Manager Handheld and TuneIn Radio outside Google Play. There is no suggestion that the ones on the official store are affected...

...As the blog post points out, mining for cryptocoins in the background when a device is connected to the internet (i.e. throughout the day) saps its battery life, while charging it more often will wear it down in the long term.

"Users with phones and tablets that are suddenly charging slowly, running hot, or quickly running out of batteries may want to consider if they have been exposed to this or similar threats," suggested the company.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
9. Is America's relationship with Saudi Arabia broken beyond repair?
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 08:36 PM
Mar 2014

WE SHOULD BE SO LUCKY...

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/28/barack-obama-saudi-arabia-syria-iran?CMP=ema_565



Barack Obama arrives in Riyadh seeking rapprochement with an aggrieved Arab ally whose interests are increasingly at odds with its key western backer.

The president's flying visit – no more than an evening in the Saudi King's palace – is his first since the ousting of Hosni Mubarak, which drove an initial wedge between both capitals.

Ever since, relations have tangibly soured, with US outreach to Iran and ambivalence on Syria, particularly irking Saudi leaders who believe arch-foe Tehran has been empowered at their expense.

So bothered has Riyadh become by what it sees as naive appeasement of Iran, that it now seems ready to project itself regionally without US cover....

GOOD IDEA, SAUDS. GET YOUR OWN BACKSIDES SHOT OFF, FOR ONCE...

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
10. As God is my witness, I didn't know this even existed until 30 seconds ago!
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 09:00 PM
Mar 2014





They keep singing "Harry Cooper" because someone was translating confused.... cognate words in Russian that begin with "G", are usually pronounced with an "H" in English.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
11. Deadline Near, Health Signups Show Disparity
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 09:17 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/28/us/politics/deadline-near-health-signups-show-disparity.html

The online insurance marketplace in Oregon is such a technological mess that residents have been signing up for health coverage by hand. In Texas, political opposition to President Obama’s health law is so strong that some residents believe, erroneously, that the program is banned in their state.

But in Connecticut, a smoothly functioning website, run by competent managers, has successfully enrolled so many patients that officials are offering to sell their expertise to states like Maryland, which is struggling to sign people up for coverage.

The disparities reveal a stark truth about the Affordable Care Act: With the first open enrollment period set to end Monday, six months after its troubled online exchanges opened for business, the program widely known as Obamacare looks less like a sweeping federal overhaul than a collection of individual ventures playing out unevenly, state to state, in the laboratories of democracy.

The White House said on Thursday that more than six million people have signed up for private plans, a significant political milestone for the Obama administration. Independent analysts estimate that an additional 3.5 million Americans are newly insured under Medicaid — figures the law’s backers hail as a success...

YAWN....GET BACK TO ME WHEN YOU HAVE THE INSURANCE COMPANIES TELLING YOU HOW MANY ARE REALLY ENROLLED....GOVERNMENT STATISTICS ARE UNRELIABLE AT BEST.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
14. Notable and Quotable!
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 09:23 PM
Mar 2014

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." - William Casey -, CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)

"It also gives us a very special, secret pleasure to see how unaware the people around us are of what is really happening to them." -Adolph Hitler

"Claim everything, explain nothing, deny everything" - Senator Prescott Bush - 1966 interview for Columbia University's oral history project on the Eisenhower administration.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
15. Unfortunately for Qaddafi, he was not a Vladimir Putin...Regime Changers From Libya to Ukraine
Fri Mar 28, 2014, 09:30 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/03/27/from-libya-to-ukraine/

On the off-chance you have not been paying attention for the last couple of weeks, the US State Department, led by Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, embarked on and succeeded in an overthrow of the legitimately elected government in Ukraine....In considering the US State Department’s participation in the Ukrainian coup, it might have surprised some Americans to realize how deeply embedded the State Department was as a behind-the-scenes player, thoroughly invested in creating a “spontaneous” rebellion. So now, the paying-attention segment of the American public has realized that the State Department, the supposed-diplomatic arm of the US government, has been doing less diplomacy and negotiation and more organizing a team of hooligans to disrupt-and-destabilize as it gives a well-timed thumbs-up to the CIA or whoever it is who accomplishes their evil deeds.

Keeping the State Department’s Ukrainian role in mind, you might wonder what neo-con favorite Hilary Clinton was doing during her four years as Secretary when she traveled to 112 countries, met with 1700 world leaders and racked up 956,733 miles to the kudos of the American press as the most traveled Secretary of State in history. Well, that’s a lot of …diplomacy. Some how I don’t think she was brushing up on her conversational French or appreciating Hungarian palascinta or learning new dance steps in South Africa. Having visited an average of 425 leaders a year is some serious sightseeing …so what exactly was she talking about to1700 world leaders?

A review of Clinton’s Official State Department Travel Schedule as Secretary is worth more than a quick scrutiny especially when a series of ambiguous meetings in 2011 with the Libyan Contact Group (LCG) jumps off the page. Perhaps the LCG were a rag tag group of well-meaning Libyans caught up in the Arab Spring phenomena – but no, they were anything but. In a nutshell, the LCG was a US sponsored UN-like organization (but without the UN’s democratic principles) to provide the necessary political cover and create the illusion of international acceptance for the US illegal designs on Libya by fomenting a ‘rebellion’ to oust Muammar Qaddafi. Formed on March 19 in London, the original Libya Contact Group consisted of two dozen self-appointed countries lacking the international authority to make decisions and take action regarding the sovereignty of another country. The LCG had no legal standing, acted outside the standards of international law and was not accountable to anyone. It is politically noteworthy that the BRICS countries (Brazil, India, Russia, China and South Africa) all either refused to participate or only sent occasional observers.

From piecing together her meetings with the LCG (according to her official travel schedule), it is obvious that Secretary Clinton was the senior coordinator that brought all the loose ends together, the Superstar that made the illegal ouster of Qaddafi possible and destroyed the country of Libya....

AND OH, YES, IT GETS WORSE...


... Unfortunately for Qaddafi, he was not a Vladimir Putin – he proved to be more easily outfoxed and overwhelmed by American influence and not particularly politically sophisticated....

ARTICLE AUTHOR Renee Parsons was a staffer in the U.S. House of Representatives and a lobbyist on nuclear energy issues with Friends of the Earth. in 2005, she was elected to the Durango City Council and served as Councilor and Mayor. Currently, she is a member of the Treasure Coast ACLU Board.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
27. now this is a very interesting remix of the original
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 09:05 AM
Mar 2014





but nothing compares to Fred Astair, not even himself!





The original 1930 movie footage of Irving Berlin's world-famous song, sung by Harry Richman, from the film of the same name.






Would you believe....Clark Gable?!!


AND HERE HE IS...THE INCOMPARABLE, ORIGINAL!

http://vimeo.com/6971656

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
20. MOODY'S REVIEWING RUSSIA BOND RATING FOR DOWNGRADE
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 07:43 AM
Mar 2014
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MOODYS_RUSSIA?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2014-03-28-18-44-15

Moody's Investors Services is considering whether to downgrade Russia's government bond rating, citing a weaker economy and greater risk amid the uncertainty caused by the conflict with Ukraine.

The ratings agency said Friday it placed Russia's "Baa1" government bond rating under review for a downgrade.

During the process, Moody's will try to gain a better sense of how the Russian-Ukraine conflict is likely to exacerbate Russia's growth challenges, public finances and other factors.

Moody's says that, should its review lead to a downgrade, the most likely outcome would be to lower the rating one notch, which would still be investment grade.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
21. Thai protesters rally against PM ahead of Senate vote
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:20 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/29/uk-thailand-protest-idUKBREA2S04620140329

(Reuters) - Tens of thousands of Thai anti-government protesters rallied across Bangkok on Saturday in their latest bid to topple Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, a day before a crucial vote to elect a new Senate.

Waving flags and blowing whistles, protesters marched from Lumpini Park in the business district of Bangkok, where protesters retreated to earlier this month, toward the city's old quarter after a brief hiatus in anti-government rallies.

"The rally has been largely peaceful and very disciplined. Protesters are now heading back to their base in the park after a series of symbolic ceremonies," Paradorn Pattanathabutr, a security adviser to the prime minister, told Reuters.

"We expected the crowd to be around 50,000-strong but the number of protesters doesn't look like it will exceed 30,000."

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
22. BMW to invest $1 billion to expand U.S. production by 50 percent
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:22 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/28/uk-autos-bmw-spartanburg-idUKBREA2R1NP20140328

(Reuters) - BMW (BMWG.DE) will expand production capacity in the United States by 50 percent and introduce another new offroad model, the German luxury carmaker said on Friday, in what amounts to a $1 billion (600 million pounds) bet on sport utility vehicles (SUVs).

BMW said that as well as the new X4 SUV, its U.S. factory would make a new X7 SUV. Ramping up production capacity at Spartanburg, South Carolina to 450,000 cars by 2016 will make it BMW's largest factory, the company said.

The red X7, which was rolled out from a cloud of white smoke before a crowd of workers and dignitaries including U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, is part of a strategy to help the German automaker cut its dependence on fragile European markets, which accounted for 44 percent of group sales in 2013.

Raising U.S. production with new models and greater manufacturing capacity increases BMW's bet on the U.S., a market which is fast recovering to levels seen before the 2007 financial crisis, helped by the popularity of SUVs.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
23. EU antitrust chief seeks to insulate Gazprom probe from Crimea
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:24 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/28/uk-eu-gazprom-almunia-idUKBREA2R1O120140328

(Reuters) - The European Union is seeking to insulate its probe of Russia's gas export monopoly, Gazprom (GAZP.MM), which is suspected of anti-competitive behaviour, from larger concerns about Russia's seizure of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula, Europe's top antitrust enforcer said on Friday.

Gazprom, the world's top gas producer and supplier of around 30 percent of Europe's gas needs, has been under EU investigation since September 2012 for suspected anti-competitive behaviour, including overcharging customers and blocking rival suppliers.

Russia ships around half of its gas to Europe through Ukraine.

European Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia, speaking in English, said he wanted to see antitrust issues separated from other disputes but he acknowledged the difficulty inherent in accomplishing that given Russia's controversial move into Crimea.

"These days are not the most adequate ones to have a quiet discussion on the question related with Russian gas and how the Russian gas arrives to the territory and to the markets of the EU," Almunia told reporters in Washington. &quot But) antitrust investigations should be protected from any kind of external influences."

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
24. Chairman candidate says Telecom Italia must act as true public company
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:26 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/28/uk-telecom-chairman-idUKBREA2R1NY20140328

(Reuters) - Giuseppe Recchi, the frontrunner to become chairman of Telecom Italia, said Italy's largest telecoms group by market value must act as a true public company and as chairman he would represent all shareholders equally.

In his first interview since he became a candidate for the post, Recchi, who will leave his job as chairman of oil major Eni if elected by Telecom Italia shareholders on April 16, said he would ensure good corporate governance practices.

The board of Telecom Italia, which has competitor Telefonica and three Italian financial institutions as its core shareholders, has been accused by investors of not caring for the interest of smaller shareholders.

"Telecom has to behave and act as a public company, because of the challenges in the industry and relevance for financial investors, in Italy and abroad," Recchi told Reuters.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
25. Russia's buildup near Ukraine may reach 40,000 troops - U.S. sources
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:28 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/29/uk-ukraine-crisis-usa-military-idUKBREA2R1VC20140329

(Reuters) - Russia's reinforcement of troops near Ukraine has brought the total forces there to as many as 40,000, U.S. officials estimated on Friday, as the United States voiced anxiety over the buildup and called on Moscow to pull back its military.

The U.S. estimates of as many as 35,000 to around 40,000 troops are higher than the more than 30,000 total deployments reported earlier this week by U.S. and European sources familiar with official reporting.

Some European sources remain cautious of increasing the estimates beyond 30,000.

The military buildup is adding to concerns that Russia may again be readying an incursion into Ukraine following its annexation of Crimea, which has triggered the worst stand-off with the West since the Cold War.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
26. These Are The States Most Dependent On The Federal Government
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 08:45 AM
Mar 2014
http://www.businessinsider.com/states-dependent-federal-government-2014-3

Interestingly, new research shows that red states, so designated because they are deemed to be politically conservative and tend to vote Republican in national elections, receive more federal government funding than blue states, which tend to vote Democratic in national elections. The researchers say that blue states typically receive less government funding in general than red states, when funds are calculated as a percentage of total revenue, according to a recent report from Wallet Hub, an online personal finance site.

Researchers from the site looked into tax returns, state revenue and the number of federal employees per capita to determine how dependent certain states were on the federal government.

“The idea of the American freeloader burst into the public consciousness when #47percent started trending on Twitter,” the report said. “While the notion is senselessly insulting to millions of hardworking Americans, it is true that some states receive a far higher return on their federal income tax investment than others."

In first place is Alaska, for which government money accounts for only 20 percent of total revenue. Mississippi, where federal funds represent 45.84 percent of the state's revenue, came in last place.



Read more: http://www.ibtimes.com/which-states-depend-most-us-federal-government-1564360#ixzz2xM5Xppdi

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
28. Home evictions averaged 184 a day in Spain last year
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 09:13 AM
Mar 2014
http://elpais.com/elpais/2014/03/28/inenglish/1396009521_697828.html

The number of court-ordered home evictions for non-payment of mortgages, rent or other legal reasons reached 67,189 last year, according to judicial statistics released on Friday.

The number of open cases – pending eviction requests – stood at 82,860, which is 9.8 percent fewer than the previous year, said the General Council of Judiciary (CGPJ) legal watchdog in its annual report.

Of the total number, 38 percent were due to non-payment of mortgages while 57 percent were for non-payment of rent. Another four percent were for other causes. The figures reflect an average of around 184 evictions per day in 2013.

A breakdown by regions shows that Catalonia had the most evictions last year (23.8 percent) followed by Valencia, Andalusia and Madrid.

In January, the Bank of Spain for the first time released its own figures based on stricter calculations of the number of evictions that took place in the first half of 2013. From January to June, 35,098 families were evicted from their homes for failing to pay their mortgages, the central bank said.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
29. Brazilians scramble to uncover their Sephardic roots
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 09:16 AM
Mar 2014
http://elpais.com/elpais/2014/03/27/inenglish/1395933648_379075.html

The phrase is heard all over Brazil these days, with only slight variations: “I never thought this would ever happen, but I’m going to try to obtain Spanish citizenship!”

Take the Spanish government’s proposal to grant nationality to people who can prove their Hispanic-Jewish roots, add a (phony) list of more than 5,200 allegedly Sephardic surnames, including very common ones in Brazil such as Oliveira and Silva, and shake the whole thing up with the power of Facebook. The result is a huge rumor that not only reveals the Jewish community’s interest in Spain’s attempt at redressing a historical wrong, but also underscores many Brazilians’ desire to obtain European citizenship.

The list of surnames allegedly proving that families are descended from Jews expelled from Spain and Portugal in 1492 has spread like wildfire around several Latin American countries, and even though the Spanish Justice Ministry has issued a statement denying its authenticity, it keeps cropping up on the social networks as though it were bona fide. Meanwhile, rabbis and Jewish associations have been flooded with hundreds of requests for information by potential applicants.

A spokesperson for the Jewish-Brazilian Archive admitted it lacked the resources to deal with this sudden interest in people’s Jewish roots. “This story is ruining our research. In two days we have received 20 requests involving genealogy. We don’t have the capacity to cover that kind of demand.”

antigop

(12,778 posts)
31. "Puttin on the Ritz": From the Broadway musical "Young Frankenstein"
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 06:11 PM
Mar 2014

The Original Broadway Cast of Young Frankenstein performs Puttin' On the Ritz. This run was in Seattle *before Broadway) during the previews.



Song begins around the 2:30 mark.

Ensemble tap sequence begins around the 7:20 mark.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
32. Wow! they sure pulled out all the stops on that one
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 07:03 PM
Mar 2014

Things I might never have known without these Weekenders...

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
33. Greece ready to be transformed into a 1973 Chile
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 07:15 PM
Mar 2014
http://failedevolution.blogspot.gr/2014/03/greece-ready-to-be-transformed-into.html



Another omnibus bill will be passed tomorrow by the Greek parliament as imposed by the Troika lenders to remove the last barriers against multinational cartels. Despite the intense objections by some government MPs and the Opposition, the government is expected to pass the bill by all means, even with a tenuous majority, as also some Golden Dawn MPs are now in prison and have no right to vote.

Democracy and parliamentary processes in Greece are conducted through blackmail terms, as Troika blackmails government and government blackmails its own MPs to vote every neoliberal IMF-type policy that the Troika dictates. Troika also impose huge omnibus bills every time, just before the next lending package to Greece in order to force government MPs to vote for a numerous matters without the necessary time to examine each matter separately. The latest bill contains also some changes that are in favor of the private banking sector who will gain more at the expense of the Greek Public. The government, however, already starts counting further losses, as Maximos Charakopoulos, Deputy Minister of Rural Development and Food, one of the first government officials who expressed intense objections against the "fresh milk" case, resigned today.

As Greece's economy is based mainly on small-medium businesses in every sector, especially agriculture, the bill aims to eliminate the last small-medium businesses and open the domination of a few multinational corporations. The last pretexts and hypocrisy of the government are totally revealed as many governmental executives were claiming all this time that they will act to reinforce small-medium businesses and create new jobs. They now claim that the prices will fall in many goods due to competition and that new jobs will be created, but the truth is that the exact opposite will happen, as the few multinationals will build monopoly cartels, as happened in Chile under the "Chicago Boys" advice, and hire only a few people with salaries of 400 euros or less.

The last barrier will be to destroy the minimum wage limit and impose such levels of salaries. Under such conditions, someone in Greece will marginally be able to survive in the next years.

But Greece is not the issue here, of course. The global neoliberal dictatorship will try to transform the whole Europe into a 1973 Chile.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
34. Judge Rules Goldman Must Face Lawsuit Over Mortgage Securities
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 07:20 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.nbcnews.com/business/business-news/judge-rules-goldman-must-face-lawsuit-over-mortgage-securities-n65726

A proposed class action by a Detroit pension fund accusing Goldman Sachs of misleading investors about mortgage-backed securities can go forward, a federal judge has ruled. Filed in 2010 by Detroit's police and fire retirement system, the lawsuit accused Goldman of misrepresenting the standards used to qualify borrowers for mortgage loans that were pooled into securities and bought by the fund.

AHA! NOW I SEE WHY DETROIT WAS FORCED INTO BANKRUPTCY IN THIS DECADE, AND NOT ANYTIME PREVIOUSLY IN THE PAST 40 YEARS....

The lawsuit is one of thousands filed against Goldman and other banks over mortgage securities that collapsed in value in the wake of the 2007-2008 financial crisis. Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally declined comment.

According to court documents, the pension fund purchased about $1.8 million of the securities from a mortgage loan trust created by Goldman in 2007. Goldman issued over $790 million of securities through the trust, the documents said. Offering documents for the securities said lenders reviewed whether borrowers would be able to meet their monthly payments, when in reality mortgages were issued without regard to borrowers' ability to pay, the lawsuit said. The lawsuit also said that lenders inflated borrowers' incomes and that appraisers submitted falsely inflated property appraisals.

In a ruling on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Miriam Cedarbaum said that the offering documents were "affirmatively misleading" and denied Goldman's bid to have the lawsuit dismissed. Goldman had argued that the underwriting policies were only guidelines and lenders had the discretion to deviate from them. However, Cedarbaum ruled that exceptions to underwriting standards were not the same as a wholesale abandonment of them.

OOOH! A COMEDIAN ON THE BENCH! THAT'S GOT TO HURT!
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
35. America’s Taxation Tradition PAUL KRUGMAN
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 07:33 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/28/opinion/krugman-americas-taxation-tradition.html?_r=0

As inequality has become an increasingly prominent issue in American discourse, there has been furious pushback from the right. Some conservatives argue that focusing on inequality is unwise, that taxing high incomes will cripple economic growth. Some argue that it’s unfair, that people should be allowed to keep what they earn. And some argue that it’s un-American — that we’ve always celebrated those who achieve wealth, and that it violates our national tradition to suggest that some people control too large a share of the wealth.

And they’re right. No true American would say this: “The absence of effective State, and, especially, national, restraint upon unfair money-getting has tended to create a small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful men, whose chief object is to hold and increase their power,” and follow that statement with a call for “a graduated inheritance tax on big fortunes ... increasing rapidly in amount with the size of the estate.”

Who was this left-winger? Theodore Roosevelt, in his famous 1910 New Nationalism speech.


The truth is that, in the early 20th century, many leading Americans warned about the dangers of extreme wealth concentration, and urged that tax policy be used to limit the growth of great fortunes. Here’s another example: In 1919, the great economist Irving Fisher — whose theory of “debt deflation,” by the way, is essential in understanding our current economic troubles — devoted his presidential address to the American Economic Association largely to warning against the effects of “an undemocratic distribution of wealth.” And he spoke favorably of proposals to limit inherited wealth through heavy taxation of estates. Nor was the notion of limiting the concentration of wealth, especially inherited wealth, just talk. In his landmark book, “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” the economist Thomas Piketty points out that America, which introduced an income tax in 1913 and an inheritance tax in 1916, led the way in the rise of progressive taxation, that it was “far out in front” of Europe. Mr. Piketty goes so far as to say that “confiscatory taxation of excessive incomes” — that is, taxation whose goal was to reduce income and wealth disparities, rather than to raise money — was an “American invention.”

And this invention had deep historical roots in the Jeffersonian vision of an egalitarian society of small farmers. Back when Teddy Roosevelt gave his speech, many thoughtful Americans realized not just that extreme inequality was making nonsense of that vision, but that America was in danger of turning into a society dominated by hereditary wealth — that the New World was at risk of turning into Old Europe. And they were forthright in arguing that public policy should seek to limit inequality for political as well as economic reasons, that great wealth posed a danger to democracy.

So how did such views not only get pushed out of the mainstream, but come to be considered illegitimate? Consider how inequality and taxes on top incomes were treated in the 2012 election. Republicans pushed the line that President Obama was hostile to the rich. “If one’s priority is to punish highly successful people, then vote for the Democrats,” said Mitt Romney. Democrats vehemently (and truthfully) denied the charge. Yet Mr. Romney was in effect accusing Mr. Obama of thinking like Teddy Roosevelt. How did that become an unforgivable political sin? You sometimes hear the argument that concentrated wealth is no longer an important issue, because the big winners in today’s economy are self-made men who owe their position at the top of the ladder to earned income, not inheritance. But that view is a generation out of date. New work by the economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman finds that the share of wealth held at the very top — the richest 0.1 percent of the population — has doubled since the 1980s, and is now as high as it was when Teddy Roosevelt and Irving Fisher issued their warnings.

We don’t know how much of that wealth is inherited. But it’s interesting to look at the Forbes list of the wealthiest Americans. By my rough count, about a third of the top 50 inherited large fortunes. Another third are 65 or older, so they will probably be leaving large fortunes to their heirs. We aren’t yet a society with a hereditary aristocracy of wealth, but, if nothing changes, we’ll become that kind of society over the next couple of decades. In short, the demonization of anyone who talks about the dangers of concentrated wealth is based on a misreading of both the past and the present. Such talk isn’t un-American; it’s very much in the American tradition. And it’s not at all irrelevant to the modern world. So who will be this generation’s Teddy Roosevelt?
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
38. How Vladimir Putin became evil (Because now he refuses to play ball) by Tariq Ali
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 09:49 PM
Mar 2014
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/mar/28/why-putin-crimea-strategy-west-villain

Tariq Ali has been a leading figure of the international left since the 60s. He has been writing for the Guardian since the 70s. He is a long-standing editor of the New Left Review and a political commentator published on every continent. His books include The Duel: Pakistan on the Flightpath of American Power, and The Obama Syndrome


Once again, it seems that Russia and the United States are finding it difficult to agree on how to deal with their respective ambitions. This clash of interests is highlighted by the Ukrainian crisis. The provocation in this particular instance, as the leaked recording of a US diplomat, Victoria Nuland, saying "Fuck the EU" suggests, came from Washington.

Several decades ago, at the height of the cold war, George Kennan, a leading American foreign policy strategist invited to give the Reith Lectures, informed his audience: "There is, let me assure you, nothing in nature more egocentric than embattled democracy. It soon becomes the victim of its own propaganda. It then tends to attach to its own cause an absolute value which distorts its own vision … Its enemy becomes the embodiment of all evil. Its own side is the centre of all virtue."

And so it continues. Washington knows that Ukraine has always been a delicate issue for Moscow. The ultra-nationalists who fought with the Third Reich during the second world war killed 30,000 Russian soldiers and communists. They were still conducting a covert war with CIA backing as late as 1951. Pavel Sudoplatov, a Soviet intelligence chief, wrote in 1994: "The origins of the cold war are closely interwoven with western support for nationalist unrest in the Baltic areas and western Ukraine."

When Gorbachev agreed the deal on German reunification, the cornerstone of which was that united Germany could remain in Nato, US secretary of state Baker assured him that "there would be no extension of Nato's jurisdiction one inch to the east". Gorbachev repeated: "Any extension of the zone of Nato is unacceptable." Baker's response: "I agree." One reason Gorbachev has publicly supported Putin on the Crimea is that his trust in the west was so cruelly betrayed....The Crimean affair led to barely any loss of life, and the population clearly wanted to be part of Russia. The White House's reaction has been the opposite of its reaction to Chechnya. Why? Because Putin, unlike Yeltsin, is refusing to play ball any more on the things that matter such as Nato expansion, sanctions on Iran, Syria etc. As a result, he has become evil incarnate. And all this because he has decided to contest US hegemony by using the methods often deployed by the west. (France's repeated incursions in Africa are but one example.)...MORE


NATO's Eastward Expansion: Did the West Break Its Promise to Moscow?


http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/nato-s-eastward-expansion-did-the-west-break-its-promise-to-moscow-a-663315.html



Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has accused the West of breaking promises made after the fall of the Iron Curtain, saying that NATO's expansion into Eastern Europe violated commitments made during the negotiations over German reunification. Newly discovered documents from Western archives support the Russian position....
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
39. PUTIN'S Ancestry, early life and education
Sat Mar 29, 2014, 09:59 PM
Mar 2014

Putin was born on 7 October 1952, in Leningrad, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (modern day Saint Petersburg, Russia), to parents Vladimir Spiridonovich Putin (1911–1999) and Maria Ivanovna Putina (née Shelomova; 1911–1998).

His mother was a factory worker, and his father was a conscript in the Soviet Navy, where he served in the submarine fleet in the early 1930s, and later served on the front lines in the demolition battalion of the NKVD during World War II and was severely wounded in 1942.

Two elder brothers were born in the mid-1930s; one died within a few months of birth, while the second succumbed to diphtheria during the siege of Leningrad in World War II.

Vladimir Putin's paternal grandfather, Spiridon Ivanovich Putin (1879–1965), was a chef who at one time or another cooked for Vladimir Lenin, Lenin's wife Nadezhda Krupskaya, and on several occasions for Joseph Stalin. Putin's maternal grandmother was killed by the German occupiers of Tver region in 1941, and his maternal uncles disappeared at the war front.

The ancestry of Vladimir Putin has been described as a mystery with no records surviving of any ancestors of any people with the surname "Putin" beyond his grandfather Spiridon Ivanovich. His autobiography, Ot Pervogo Litsa (English: In the First Person), which is based on Putin's interviews, speaks of humble beginnings, including early years in a communal apartment, shared by several families, in Leningrad.

On 1 September 1960, he started at School No. 193 at Baskov Lane, just across from his house. By fifth grade he was one of a few in a class of more than 45 pupils who was not yet a member of the Pioneers, largely because of his rowdy behavior. In sixth grade he started taking sport seriously in the form of sambo and then judo. In his youth, Putin was eager to emulate the intelligence officer characters played on the Soviet screen by actors such as Vyacheslav Tikhonov and Georgiy Zhzhonov.

Putin graduated from the International Law branch of the Law Department of the Leningrad State University in 1975, writing his final thesis on international law. His thesis was titled "The Most Favored Nation Trading Principle in International Law". While at university he had to join the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and remained a member until the party was dissolved in December 1991. Also at the University he met Anatoly Sobchak who later played an important role in Putin's career. Anatoly Sobchak was at the time an Assistant Professor and lectured Putin's class on Business Law (khozyaystvennoye pravo).

KGB career


Putin joined the KGB in 1975 upon graduation, and underwent a year's training at the 401st KGB school in Okhta, Leningrad. He then went on to work briefly in the Second Chief Directorate (counter-intelligence) before he was transferred to the First Chief Directorate, where among his duties was the monitoring of foreigners and consular officials in Leningrad.

From 1985 to 1990, the KGB stationed Putin in Dresden, East Germany. During that time, Putin was assigned to Directorate S, the illegal intelligence-gathering unit (the KGB's classification for agents who used falsified identities) where he was given cover as a translator and interpreter. One of Putin's jobs was to coordinate efforts with the Stasi to track down and recruit foreigners in Dresden, usually those who were enrolled at the Dresden University of Technology, in the hopes of sending them undercover in the United States. Despite this, Putin biographer Masha Gessen disputes the "KGB Spymaster" image that has been built around him and instead says that Dresden was essentially a backwater job that Putin himself resented:

Putin and his colleagues were reduced mainly to collecting press clippings, thus contributing to the mountains of useless information produced by the KGB. Former agents estimate they spent three-quarters of their time writing reports. Putin's biggest success in his stay in Dresden appears to have been in...contacting a U.S. Army Sergeant, who sold them an unclassified Manual for 800 marks.


Following the collapse of the communist East German government, Putin was recalled to the Soviet Union and returned to Leningrad, where in June 1991 he assumed a position with the International Affairs section of Leningrad State University, reporting to Vice-Rector Yuriy Molchanov. In his new position, Putin maintained surveillance on the student body and kept an eye out for recruits. It was during his stint at the university that Putin grew reacquainted with his former professor Anatoly Sobchak, then mayor of Leningrad.

Putin resigned from the active state security services with the rank of lieutenant colonel on 20 August 1991 (with some attempts to resign made earlier), on the second day of the KGB-supported abortive putsch against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. Putin later explained his decision: "As soon as the coup began, I immediately decided which side I was on", though he also noted that the choice was hard because he had spent the best part of his life with "the organs"


xchrom

(108,903 posts)
41. Far-right group seals appeal among discontented Hungarians
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 07:52 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/30/uk-hungary-vote-farright-idUKBREA2T04620140330

(Reuters) - To launch its campaign for Hungary's parliamentary election, the far-right Jobbik party, accused by critics of anti-Semitism, chose as its venue a former synagogue with a plaque on the wall commemorating 500 local Jews killed in the Holocaust.

The reaction was unsurprising: opponents turned up outside the synagogue in the city of Esztergom to protest at Jobbik's presence, they heckled party leader Gabor Vona as he arrived, and the confrontation was broadcast on the evening news.

It was seen as another publicity coup for Jobbik on its path to entrenching itself on Europe's political landscape, and for not much more than the $50 hourly cost of renting the former synagogue, now a municipal community centre.

When Jobbik shocked Europe four years ago by coming third in Hungary's parliamentary election, many of its opponents predicted the party would soon implode.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
42. Hollande braces for losses as turnout low in French mayoral vote
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 07:59 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/30/uk-france-elections-idUKBREA2T04920140330

(Reuters) - Early turnout was low in France's mayoral elections on Sunday with President Francois Hollande's Socialists bracing for losses in hundreds of towns and the far-right National Front poised to win a handful of cities for the first time since 1995.

The runoff round of voting comes at the end of a week that saw French unemployment surge to a new record, making a reverse of first-round losses by the Socialists unlikely and a cabinet reshuffle by Hollande possible as soon as Monday.

Some 80 percent of the French want him to dismiss Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, according to a Harris Interactive poll this week, and ambitious and tough-talking Interior Minister Manuel Valls is their favourite to replace him.

"I can't see how (Ayrault) could stay, unless we save about 30 towns, something nobody really believes," a Socialist Party source said.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
43. Analysis - Russia sell-off spurs hunt for bargains
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 08:01 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/30/uk-emergingmarkets-russia-investing-anal-idUKBREA2T03B20140330

(Reuters) - Rising tension between Russia and the West has rattled the country's stock and bond markets, but some big money managers see the turbulence as an opportunity.

Russia's equity market has plummeted 18 percent so far this year. Foreigners dumped the country's stocks, bonds and the rouble following the early March invasion of Crimea, a territory of Ukraine. It now faces economic sanctions that could worsen if the crisis escalates.

Investors have reacted with their feet. The rouble is down nearly 9 percent on the year, and investors have pulled about $4.4 billion from stocks and $4.1 billion from bonds between September 2013 to the middle of March, according to the latest data from EPFR Global.

"Russia's stock market right now is one of the cheapest in the world, and probably one of the most hated," said investor and commodities guru Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, in Singapore. "This is the time to buy Russia."

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
44. Germany, China say renminbi hub in Frankfurt will boost trade
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 08:02 AM
Mar 2014
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/03/29/uk-germany-china-idUKBREA2S0M320140329

(Reuters) - A decision by Germany and China to make Frankfurt a European hub for financial transactions in the Chinese currency will give new momentum to trade between the two economic powers, Chinese President Xi Jinping and a German minister said on Saturday.

In a speech to politicians and business leaders in the city of Duesseldorf, Xi said setting up the hub for the renminbi in Germany "represents an important step on the road of the internationalisation of our currency," according to a translation.

The Bundesbank and the People's Bank of China signed an agreement on Friday to facilitate transactions in the Chinese currency in Frankfurt and to cooperate more closely in clearing and settlement arrangements of renminbi payments.

Up to now, transactions in China's currency, the renminbi or yuan, have been impractical for all but very large European companies that are able to involve China's central bank in a deal, because the renminbi is not freely convertible.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
45. Banking Union Time Bomb: Eurocrats Authorize Bailouts AND Bail-Ins
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 08:07 AM
Mar 2014
https://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/03/29-4

On March 20, 2014, European Union officials reached an historic agreement to create a single agency to handle failing banks. Media attention has focused on the agreement involving the single resolution mechanism (SRM), a uniform system for closing failed banks. But the real story for taxpayers and depositors is the heightened threat to their pocketbooks of a deal that now authorizes both bailouts and “bail-ins” – the confiscation of depositor funds. The deal involves multiple concessions to different countries and may be illegal under the rules of the EU Parliament; but it is being rushed through to lock taxpayer and depositor liability into place before the dire state of Eurozone banks is exposed.

The bail-in provisions were agreed to last summer. According to Bruno Waterfield, writing in the UK Telegraph in June 2013:

Under the deal, after 2018 bank shareholders will be first in line for assuming the losses of a failed bank before bondholders and certain large depositors. Insured deposits under £85,000 (€100,000) are exempt and, with specific exemptions, uninsured deposits of individuals and small companies are given preferred status in the bail-in pecking order for taking losses . . . Under the deal all unsecured bondholders must be hit for losses before a bank can be eligible to receive capital injections directly from the ESM, with no retrospective use of the fund before 2018.

As noted in my earlier articles, the ESM (European Stability Mechanism) imposes an open-ended debt on EU member governments, putting taxpayers on the hook for whatever the Eurocrats (EU officials) demand. And it’s not just the EU that has bail-in plans for their troubled too-big-to-fail banks. It is also the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and other G20 nations. Recall that a depositor is an unsecured creditor of a bank. When you deposit money in a bank, the bank “owns” the money and you have an IOU or promise to pay.

Under the new EU banking union, before the taxpayer-financed single resolution fund can be deployed, shareholders and depositors will be “bailed in” for a significant portion of the losses. The bankers thus win both ways: they can tap up the taxpayers’ money and the depositors’ money.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
48. TALK ABOUT YOUR EPIC FAILURE
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:11 AM
Mar 2014

good morning, X! Didn't mean to shout....it's cold! 30F, 24F Windchlll. I'm down to 2 layers, and no boots, but it's April!

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
49. we went straight from winter to tornado weather.
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:17 AM
Mar 2014

today it's cold, windy, rain and threats of more severe weather. BAH!

 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
51. a tornado would at least be different
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:21 AM
Mar 2014

and I could probably ditch the parka. For a day, at least!

I want winter to end so I can clean and mend my winter garb (or throw it out and burn it...at this point, I don't care which).

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
46. New York Domino's Workers Get $448,000 Wage Theft Settlement
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:01 AM
Mar 2014
http://www.businessinsider.com/dominos-wage-theft-2014-3

Just over a week after a nearly $500,000 wage theft settlement was announced for McDonald's workers in New York City, state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced a $448,000 wage theft settlement for Domino's Pizza workers at 23 New York restaurants:

Schneiderman's office says it uncovered a raft of labor law violations that occurred between 2007 and 2013 at the stores, which are owned by six franchisees. Those include delivery workers being paid below the $5.65 tipped minimum wage they were entitled to, workers not being paid for overtime worked beyond 40 hours, and delivery drivers not being fully reimbursed for their auto expenses.

The $448,000 restitution fund will be divvied up among 750 current and former Domino's workers, most of whom will get between $200 and $2,000.

Aggressively pursuing businesses that break labor laws and don't pay workers the money they've legally earned is a good way not just to get some back pay for the workers directly affected, but to discourage employers from breaking the law in the first place. Though it would be nice to see penalties more in line with what the workers would face if they stole equivalent amounts of money from their employers.



Read more: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/03/27/1287845/-New-York-Domino-s-workers-to-get-448-000-wage-theft-settlement#ixzz2xS06g3hc

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
47. Stressed: What Are They Trying To Tell Us?
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:10 AM
Mar 2014

Stressed: What Are They Trying To Tell Us?

https://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/03/30



New York, New York: Ok, I have to admit it, I feel as my faith in economic justice is being tested with these stress tests. Truth is, I am becoming more stressed than ever.

The reason: despite all the “regulations” in the Dodd Frank Financial “reform” and the Volcker Rule and The Fed’s “oversight:’ the banks seems to have free reign to do what they will despite the financial crisis, and the pathetic “recovery.”

There have been fines and settlements but nothing is settled. None of them have or will go to jail.

Economic conditions continue to stress out millions even as the Fed announces “stress tests” that appear on the surface to be a way of insuring that big banks won’t need more bailouts.

Sad to say, it’s more of the charade. Partially that’s because the banks dominate the Federal Reserve, a private, not public, institution.

xchrom

(108,903 posts)
50. Seven Decades of Nazi Collaboration: America’s Dirty Little Ukraine Secret
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 09:19 AM
Mar 2014
http://www.thenation.com/blog/179057/seven-decades-nazi-collaboration-americas-dirty-little-ukraine-secret

This article is a joint publication of TheNation.com and Foreign Policy In Focus.

As the Ukrainian crisis has unfolded over the past few weeks, it’s hard for Americans not to see Vladimir Putin as the big villain. But the history of the region is a history of competing villains vying against one another; and one school of villains—the Nazis—have a long history of engagement with the United States, mostly below the radar, but occasionally exposed, as they were by Russ Bellant in his book Old Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party (South End Press, 1991). Bellant's exposure of émigré Nazi leaders from Germany's World War II allies in the 1988 Bush presidential campaign was the driving force in the announced resignation of nine individuals, two of them from Ukraine, which is why he was the logical choice to illuminate the scattered mentions of Nazi and fascist elements among the Ukrainian nationalists, which somehow never seems to warrant further comment or explanation. Of course most Ukrainians aren’t Nazis or fascists—all the more reason to illuminate those who would hide their true natures in the shadows…or even behind the momentary glare of the spotlight.

Your book, Old Nazis, the New Right, and the Republican Party, exposed the deep involvement in the Republican Party of Nazi elements from Central and Eastern Europe, including Ukrainians, dating back to World War II and even before. As the Ukrainian crisis unfolded in the last few weeks, there have been scattered mentions of a fascist or neo-fascist element, but somehow that never seems to warrant further comment or explanation. I can’t think of anyone better to shed light on what’s not being said about that element. The danger of Russian belligerence is increasingly obvious, but this unexamined fascist element poses dangers of its own. What can you tell us about this element and those dangers?

The element has a long history, of a long record that speaks for itself, when that record is actually known and elaborated on. The key organization in the coup that took place here recently was the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists [OUN], or a specific branch of it known as the Banderas [OUN-B]. They’re the group behind the Svoboda party, which got a number of key positions in the new interim regime. The OUN goes back to the 1920s, when they split off from other groups, and, especially in the 1930s, began a campaign of assassinating and otherwise terrorizing people who didn’t agree with them.

As World War II approached, they made an alliance with the Nazi powers. They formed several military formations, so that when Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, they had several battalions that went into the main city at the time, where their base was, Lvov, or Lwow, it has a variety of spellings [Lviv today]. They went in, and there’s a documented history of them participating in the identification and rounding up Jews in that city, and assisting in executing several thousand citizens almost immediately. They were also involved in liquidating Polish group populations in other parts of Ukraine during the war.
 

Demeter

(85,373 posts)
52. I'm wrapping it up for the Weekend
Sun Mar 30, 2014, 02:42 PM
Mar 2014

I do hope that this thread has offered an alternative to the official US demonization of Putin. Our captive M$M is great for dispensing government written and sanctioned propaganda at the State's request...facts are much thinner on the ground here.

At least, ask who is doing the smear job. Looks like a GS special, from all I've seen...

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