The "Better News" thread

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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Fri Jan 31, 2014 1:20 am

Enough Is Enough: Fraud-ridden Banks Are Not California’s Only Option


Epic in scale, unprecedented in world history.” That is how William K. Black, professor of law and economics and former bank fraud investigator, describes the frauds in which JPMorgan Chase (JPM) has now been implicated. They involve more than a dozen felonies, including bid-rigging on municipal bond debt; colluding to rig interest rates on hundreds of trillions of dollars in mortgages, derivatives and other contracts; exposing investors to excessive risk; failing to disclose known risks, including those in the Bernie Madoff scandal; and engaging in multiple forms of mortgage fraud.

So why, asks Chicago Alderwoman Leslie Hairston, are we still doing business with them? She plans to introduce a city council ordinance deleting JPM from the city’s list of designated municipal depositories. As quoted in the January 14th Chicago Sun-Times:

The bank has violated the city code by making admissions of dishonesty and deceit in the way they dealt with their investors in the mortgage securities and Bernie Madoff Ponzi scandals. . . . We use this code against city contractors and all the small companies, why wouldn’t we use this against one of the largest banks in the world?

A similar move has been recommended for the City of Los Angeles by L.A. City Councilman Gil Cedillo. But in a January 19th editorial titled “There’s No Profit in L A. Bashing JPMorgan Chase,” the L.A. Times editorial board warned against pulling the city’s money out of JPM and other mega-banks – even though the city attorney is suing them for allegedly causing an epidemic of foreclosures in minority neighborhoods.

“L.A. relies on these banks,” says The Times, “for long-term financing to build bridges and restore lakes, and for short-term financing to pay the bills.” The editorial noted that a similar proposal brought in the fall of 2011 by then-Councilman Richard Alarcon, backed by Occupy L.A., was abandoned because it would have resulted in termination fees and higher interest payments by the city.

It seems we must bow to our oppressors because we have no viable alternative – or do we? What if there is an alternative that would not only save the city money but would be a safer place to deposit its funds than in Wall Street banks?

The Tiny State That Broke Free

There is a place where they don’t bow. Where they don’t park their assets on Wall Street and play the mega-bank game, and haven’t for almost 100 years. Where they escaped the 2008 banking crisis and have no government debt, the lowest foreclosure rate in the country, the lowest default rate on credit card debt, and the lowest unemployment rate. They also have the only publicly-owned bank.

The place is North Dakota, and their state-owned Bank of North Dakota (BND) is a model for Los Angeles and other cities, counties, and states.

Like the BND, a public bank of the City of Los Angeles would not be a commercial bank and would not compete with commercial banks. In fact, it would partner with them – using its tax revenue deposits to create credit for lending programs through the magical everyday banking practice of leveraging capital.

The BND is a major money-maker for North Dakota, returning about $30 million annually in dividends to the treasury – not bad for a state with a population that is less than one-fifth that of the City of Los Angeles. Every year since the 2008 banking crisis, the BND has reported a return on investment of 17-26%.

Like the BND, a Bank of the City of Los Angeles would provide credit for city projects – to build bridges, restore lakes, and pay bills – and this credit would essentially be interest-free, since the city would own the bank and get the interest back. Eliminating interest has been shown to reduce the cost of public projects by 35% or more.

Awesome Possibilities

Consider what that could mean for Los Angeles. According to the current fiscal budget, the LAX Modernization project is budgeted at $4.11 billion. That’s the sticker price. But what will it cost when you add interest on revenue bonds and other funding sources? The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge earthquake retrofit boondoggle was slated to cost about $6 billion. Interest and bank fees added another $6 billion. Funding through a public bank could have saved taxpayers $6 billion, or 50%.

If Los Angeles owned its own bank, it could also avoid costly “rainy day funds,” which are held by various agencies as surplus taxes. If the city had a low-cost credit line with its own bank, these funds could be released into the general fund, generating massive amounts of new revenue for the city.

The potential for the City and County of Los Angeles can be seen by examining their respective Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs). According to the latest CAFRs (2012), the City of Los Angeles has “cash, pooled and other investments” of $11 billion beyond what is in its pension fund (page 85), and the County of Los Angeles has $22 billion (page 66). To put these sums in perspective, the austerity crisis declared by the State of California in 2012 was the result of a declared state budget deficit of only $16 billion.

The L.A. CAFR funds are currently drawing only minimal interest. With some modest changes in regulations, they could be returned to the general fund for use in the city’s budget, or deposited or invested in the city’s own bank, to be leveraged into credit for local purposes.

Minimizing Risk

Beyond being a money-maker, a city-owned bank can minimize the risks of interest rate manipulation, excessive fees, and dishonest dealings.

Another risk that must now be added to the list is that of confiscation in the event of a “bail in.” Public funds are secured with collateral, but they take a back seat in bankruptcy to the “super priority” of Wall Street’s own derivative claims. A major derivatives fiasco of the sort seen in 2008 could wipe out even a mega-bank’s available collateral, leaving the city with empty coffers.

The city itself could be propelled into bankruptcy by speculative derivatives dealings with Wall Street banks. The dire results can be seen in Detroit, where the emergency manager, operating on behalf of the city’s creditors, put it into bankruptcy to force payment on its debts. First in line were UBS and Bank of America, claiming speculative winnings on their interest-rate swaps, which the emergency manager paid immediately before filing for bankruptcy. Critics say the swaps were improperly entered into and were what propelled the city into bankruptcy. Their propriety is now being investigated by the bankruptcy judge.

Not Too Big to Abandon

Mega-banks might be too big to fail. According to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, they might even be too big to prosecute. But they are not too big to abandon as depositories for government funds.

There may indeed be no profit in bashing JPMorgan Chase, but there would be profit in pulling deposits out and putting them in Los Angeles’ own public bank. Other major cities currently exploring that possibility include San Franciscoand Philadelphia.

If North Dakota can bypass Wall Street with its own bank and declare its financial independence, so can the City of Los Angeles. And so can the County. And so can the State of California.

Ellen Brown is an attorney, chairman of the Public Banking Institute, and author of 12 books including The Public Bank Solution. She is currently running for California state treasurer on the Green Party ticket.


Link ; http://www.globalresearch.ca/enough-is- ... on/5366715
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Sat Feb 01, 2014 2:18 am

Yet another US senator, Bill Nelson, comes out in support of ending cannabis prohibition





With both Colorado and Washington having recently made history by legalizing the sale of recreational cannabis, the race is on for the rest of the country to see which states will either follow in their footsteps and reap unprecedented economic rewards or flounder on the wrong side of history by continuing the disastrous and failed policy of prohibition.

Senator Bill Nelson of Florida is one of a growing number of U.S. politicians who are coming out in support of cannabis. He recently told the Tampa Bay Times during an interview that cannabis is a powerful medicine used by many people in desperate situations. In his view, the plant should be fully legalized everywhere and no longer treated as an illicit drug with no justifiable use.

"Marijuana used as a medical relief for people that are desperate, I agree that ought to be legal," stated Sen. Nelson, as quoted by Marijuana Majority.

Other legislators and politicians that have recently come forward to vocalize their support for ending cannabis prohibition include Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, Texas Governor Rick Perry, Federal Judge Richard Posner, Colorado Congressman Jared Polis, New Jersey Senator Cory Booker, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, among many others.

"I think it really absurd to be criminalizing possession or use or distribution of marijuana," stated Judge Posner during a recent speech at Elmhurst College in Illinois.

Putting an end to cannabis prohibition is duly supported by the United States Conference of Mayors (USCM), which believes federal law needs to be changed to stop criminalizing the possession, use and sale of cannabis. The group has also openly called on the President to rethink the categorization of cannabis as a controlled substance, a policy that has led to the needless arrest and incarceration of millions of people over the years.

"[E]nforcing the costly and ineffective prohibition on marijuana drains limited resources that could be better spent on programs that more effectively serve the public and keep our cities safe from serious and violent crime," reads an official resolution issued by USCM. "[T]he United States Conference of Mayors believes that federal laws, including the Controlled Substance Act, should be amended to explicitly allow states to set their own marijuana policies without federal interference."


Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/043726_canna ... z2s31fyAvd
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Sat Feb 01, 2014 3:43 pm

A group of nearly 60 prominent American Jewish leaders have strongly criticized New York's new mayor Bill de Blasio for pledging to be a loyal ally of the pro-Israel lobbying group, AIPAC.

Last week, de Blasio praised Israel at a speech for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the most powerful pro-Israel lobby group in the US, assuring its members that “part of my job description is to be a defender of Israel.”

The mayor asserted that strong support for Israel is “elemental to being an American, because there is no greater ally on earth, and that’s something we can say proudly.”

During the speech, de Blasio also promised “that City Hall will always be open to AIPAC, that when you need me to stand by you in Washington or anywhere, I will answer the call, and I’ll answer it happily, ’cause that’s my job.”

In an open letter sent to de Blasio on Wednesday, the Jewish public figures told the mayor that “your job is not to do AIPAC’s bidding when they call you to do so.”

“AIPAC speaks for Israel’s hard-line government and its right-wing supporters, and for them alone; it does not speak for us,” they wrote.

The letter’s 58 signatories include rabbis, academics, activists, and others.

De Blasio succeeded the pro-Israel billionaire Michael Bloomberg last year. His victory raised hopes among many US Jews of a shift away from Israeli influence in New York, but now with the new mayor's leaked speech it seems their hopes have been shattered.

De Blasio has been portrayed by the media as a “progressive” – favoring social reforms and new, liberal ideas – who ran his mayoral campaign on a pledge to end New York’s huge income inequality.

However, some experts dismiss the mayor as a so-called progressive for his support of stop-and frisk practices and other human rights violations.


http://www.presstv.com/detail/2014/01/3 ... ac-speech/

:scaredhide:
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Sun Feb 02, 2014 5:53 am

I guess this is a case of the glass just under half full, given that it applies to 24 of the 51 states.

It all also of course depends greatly on how these states vote. Ultimately I guess that the proof of this particular pudding will be in the labelling

More than two dozen states are considering GMO labeling


While the United States currently lacks federal regulation on labeling foods with genetically modified ingredients, about half of the states are taking matters in their own hands. More than two dozen GMO labeling bills are currently being reviewed by state governments, according to the Associated Press.

"I don't know if it's harmful or unhealthy, but it's something people have a right to know about," said Rep. Dennis Canario, a Democrat sponsoring such a bill in Rhode Island. He added that just as consumers are currently informed about the amount of calories and fat on the packaging, there is no reason why they shouldn't be informed of any GMO ingredients in their foods as well.

Results vary by state
Maine and Connecticut are the only two states that have already passed such laws, although they put a provision in place that the requirements won't be imposed until the other states pass their own bills. The provision was meant to prevent a patchwork of state regulations, which would be taxing on food producers. California and Washington have both rejected similar proposals, and New Hampshire killed a GMO labeling bill just this Wednesday.

Organic producers versus big foods
Despite the mixed results in local GMO labeling regulations so far, the National Organic Coalition and other critics of genetically engineered foods are still hopeful for positive outcomes in other states. Last week they wrote to President Barack Obama encouraging the labeling on a federal level. On the other end of the spectrum is the Grocery Manufacturers Association, which represents larger food corporations. GMA has been trying to push its own agenda with the FDA, asking for GMO foods to be labeled as "natural" in a letter last month.

Businesses adopt their own rules
While no labeling regulations are imposed by the FDA, many businesses pass their own rules on the matter. Within the next four years Whole Foods, for example, is planning to label any GMO containing foods it sells though its U.S. and Canadian stores.

Sources for this article include:

www.huffingtonpost.com

www.foxnews.com

About the author:
A science enthusiast with a keen interest in health nutrition, Antonia has been intensely researching various dieting routines for several years now, weighing their highs and their lows, to bring readers the most interesting info and news in the field. While she is very excited about a high raw diet, she likes to keep a fair and balanced approach towards non-raw methods of food preparation as well.



Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/043739_GMO_l ... z2s9j9zUei
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Tue Feb 04, 2014 11:10 am

Not much good news lately, but heres some interesting news to me at least....

BPH wrote....

Holy fuckerballs! That's one of the downsides of putting people on ignore. I just scanned the op. I guess Slim, even with nearly 9 years experience here, didn't realize that starting a thread so generically titled as The better news thread with an article with the possibility of starting another endless go round on the thimerasol/autism carousel might not be the best idea if the intent really was to create a thread to index whatever "better news" there is in the world. I guess I underestimated him. but he's free to do as he pleases, of course.


In the spirit of which I tried the ignore function and can still see both the title of the thread and the author

Did I underestimate myself and miss something?
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby semper occultus » Tue Feb 04, 2014 2:31 pm

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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Tue Feb 04, 2014 2:55 pm



Well to me, thats certainly interesting news as opposed to "better news".

"Not surprising" news perhaps?

Nah.

Interesting news. Now theres a thread.

Meanwhile, back to the "better news"

Im gonna throw this one out there, with the added caveat that any breakdown into National states, is followed as quickly as is humanly possible by breakdown into regional. We might progress successfully I suspect from there

Rise of Eurosceptic parties could put peace in Europe at risk, German foreign minister claims

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... laims.html
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby semper occultus » Tue Feb 04, 2014 3:00 pm

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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby slimmouse » Tue Feb 04, 2014 3:10 pm

I might have the above marked down as " Relevant News"
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby stefano » Tue Feb 04, 2014 3:55 pm

slimmouse » Tue Feb 04, 2014 8:55 pm wrote:Im gonna throw this one out there, with the added caveat that any breakdown into National states, is followed as quickly as is humanly possible by breakdown into regional. We might progress successfully I suspect from there l

I don't know, hey. While I have deep problems with the new world order, I believe some kind of international political holon is a good thing. We've been through the whole world of competing nation-states vibe (and before that regional duchies and what not), and it tended to result in utter devastation every few decades. War is how national units sort out their problems if there isn't an overarching legal framework in place.

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Sorry, not great news I suppose. News from Tunisia's been pretty good, especially considering the time they've had over the last three years:

Tunisia signs new constitution into law

Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki and the head of the National Assembly have signed the country's new constitution, officially adopting a charter that is one of the last steps to full democracy after a 2011 uprising.
...
The new constitution, seen as one of the most progressive in the region, guarantees equal rights for men and women.

It also demands that the state protect the environment and tackle corruption.

Executive power is divided between the prime minister, who will have the dominant role, and the president, who retains important prerogatives, notably in defence and foreign affairs.

Islam is not mentioned as a source of legislation, although it is recognised as the nation's religion and the state is committed to "prohibiting any attacks on the sacred", while freedom of conscience is guaranteed.
...
One of the most secular countries in the Arab World, Tunisia struggled after its 2011 revolt with divisions over the role of Islam and the rise of ultra-conservative Salafists, who secularists feared would try to roll back liberal rights.
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby Iamwhomiam » Tue Feb 04, 2014 11:40 pm

Maine police investigating screams find happy pig
Updated 4:13 pm, Tuesday, February 4, 2014

CHINA, Maine (AP) — Police responding to reports of screaming coming from a home in Maine didn't find a victim of domestic violence as they feared. Instead, they found an amorous pig.

State police say a woman called last week after hearing what she believed to be a fight coming from a neighbor's home in the town of China. The caller said she heard screaming and thought there was a domestic assault.

The Morning Sentinel (http://bit.ly/1jafexV ) reports that four state troopers responded and talked to the neighbor.

The neighbor explained that she raises pigs and the screaming was coming from an overjoyed male pig that had been placed in a pen with five sows in heat.

Police say there was no assault and no disturbance "other than the screaming male pig."

___

Information from: Morning Sentinel, http://www.onlinesentinel.com/
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby Luther Blissett » Fri Nov 21, 2014 5:25 pm

Took awhile to find this thread.

'If We Left, They Wouldn't Have Nobody'

When an assisted living home in California shut down last fall, many of its residents were left behind, with nowhere to go.

The staff at the Valley Springs Manor left when they stopped getting paid — except for cook Maurice Rowland and Miguel Alvarez, the janitor.

"There was about 16 residents left behind, and we had a conversation in the kitchen, 'What are we going to do?' " Rowland says.

"If we left, they wouldn't have nobody," the 34-year-old Alvarez says.

Their roles quickly transformed for the elderly residents, who needed round-the-clock care.

"I would only go home for one hour, take a shower, get dressed, then be there for 24-hour days," says Alvarez.

Rowland, 35, remembers passing out medications during those long days. He says he didn't want to leave the residents — some coping with dementia — to fend for themselves.

"I just couldn't see myself going home — next thing you know, they're in the kitchen trying to cook their own food and burn the place down," Rowland says. "Even though they wasn't our family, they were kind of like our family for this short period of time."

For Alvarez, the situation brought back memories from his childhood.

"My parents, when they were younger, they left me abandoned," he says. "Knowing how they are going to feel, I didn't want them to go through that."

Alvarez and Rowland spent several days caring for the elderly residents of Valley Springs Manor until the fire department and sheriff took over.

The incident led to legislation in California known as the Residential Care for the Elderly Reform Act of 2014.

"If I would've left, I think that would have been on my conscience for a very long time," says Rowland.

Audio produced for Morning Edition by Jud Esty-Kendall.
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Re: The "Better News" thread

Postby Harvey » Tue Apr 19, 2016 4:34 am

SumOfUs

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We JUST got incredible news that Newmont Mining is indefinitely delaying the environmentally-destructive Conga gold and copper mine in Peru.

This was a difficult and dangerous 5-year battle, led by Máxima Acuña, a woman who the SumOfUs community is so proud to have stood by for the last year. Thanks to her and her friends, the sources for five rivers, four mountain lakes, and hundreds of hectares of wetlands will be safe -- and members of the community won’t lose their homes.

Máxima faced harassment and threats on her life to stop the mine and now she is being recognized for her work. To top off the victory, today Máxima will be awarded the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize for her tireless work standing up to Newmont. The Goldman Prize, known also as the ‘Green Nobel Prize’, honours ordinary citizens who’ve taken great personal risks to safeguard the environment and their communities -- and Máxima’s tireless work is no exception.

I had the privilege to finally meet Máxima on Saturday, and I was excited to congratulate her for her stunning victory in person.

But our fight isn’t over -- Newmont is still planning lawsuits against Máxima and as of last week, her family continues to be harassed by security contractors.

Will you send a personal message congratulating Máxima for winning the Goldman Prize and stopping the Conga mine, and tell her you'll stand by her through future fights against big mining interests?

Support from the SumOfUs community has been critical in helping Máxima's fight. We chipped in tens of thousands of dollars to her legal defense and we helped her friends to travel from Peru to the U.S. to speak out against the security forces harassing Máxima.

Our support has meant the world to Máxima. When her friends told her about the 160,000 of us who had signed a petition to support her, Máxima teared up and said:

"I would like to thank everyone from around the world who signed the petition in support of my case. In truth, I am fighting with my family for something just, to defend my land, whatever it has cost me. For this, I thank you because your support has given me the strength to continue fighting."

Thanks to all these efforts, Newmont’s CEO said that Newmont would not build Conga Mine if the community does not consent.

And he held to his word -- Newmont is now putting the mine on hold indefinitely.

Will you congratulate her by signing our thank you card to Máxima? We will send your messages directly to Máxima.

Máxima has been through so much to stop this project, and we know that her fight isn’t yet over. A legal fight continues to play out in the Peruvian Supreme Court, with more appeals and lawsuits a near certainty. The harassment and threats to her life continue -- even after the company announced that it will pull out of the mine.

This fight isn’t not over.

Not until the legal threats are dropped, and security forces leave her alone. This is why her receiving the Goldman prize is so important -- she will now get international coverage and support to continue her fight against huge corporate mining interests.

Let’s make sure that Máxima knows that the SumOfUs community will continue to have her back until the end.

Click here to send Máxima a message congratulating her for stopping the Conga mine and winning the prestigious Goldman Prize.

Thank you so much for supporting Máxima in the last year. We are living proof that people power works -- and together we can make the world a better place.

Thanks for all that you do,

Taren, Angus, Emma, Rosa, Jon and the team at SumOfUs
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