IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Nordic » Tue May 24, 2011 2:54 pm

Canadian_watcher wrote:Translation of the above:

Poor Strauss-Kahn! Sexual Assault used to be fun! boo-hoo! Can't we go back to the good old days when rich brutalizers could run around and abuse low-wage workers without fear of losing their personal freedom??? Why him? Why now?



how can you possibly get that out of that article?????

methinks you're viewing just about everything these days with glasses of a unique color. what's the opposite of "rose color"?

btw, i am not lupercal. i admit i'm speculating. i think dhk was a lout and basically a very unfunny french version of austin "don't you want to shag me baby?" powers.

there's a saying in hollywood which paraphrased is basically "you're not anyone in hollywood unless there's somone, somewhere, that hates you".

this is the big leagues of the international gangster's circuit, and if you just take anything like this at face value, you're being naive!! and anyone who is a regular denizen of r.i. should be actely aware of this.

to assume there's absolutely nothing to this story beyond the face value version is as idiotic as having lupercal's or hmw's absolute conviction about certain things. a result in most cases of either severe prejudice or just really really wishing something was true.

bottom line is none of us know the truth one way or another. but there are a lot of fishy elements to this, pointed out by some of us, and now naomi wolf.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby DoYouEverWonder » Tue May 24, 2011 3:09 pm

Nordic wrote:
Canadian_watcher wrote:Translation of the above:

Poor Strauss-Kahn! Sexual Assault used to be fun! boo-hoo! Can't we go back to the good old days when rich brutalizers could run around and abuse low-wage workers without fear of losing their personal freedom??? Why him? Why now?



how can you possibly get that out of that article?????

methinks you're viewing just about everything these days with glasses of a unique color. what's the opposite of "rose color"?

btw, i am not lupercal. i admit i'm speculating. i think dhk was a lout and basically a very unfunny french version of austin "don't you want to shag me baby?" powers.

there's a saying in hollywood which paraphrased is basically "you're not anyone in hollywood unless there's somone, somewhere, that hates you".

this is the big leagues of the international gangster's circuit, and if you just take anything like this at face value, you're being naive!! and anyone who is a regular denizen of r.i. should be actely aware of this.

to assume there's absolutely nothing to this story beyond the face value version is as idiotic as having lupercal's or hmw's absolute conviction about certain things. a result in most cases of either severe prejudice or just really really wishing something was true.

bottom line is none of us know the truth one way or another. but there are a lot of fishy elements to this, pointed out by some of us, and now naomi wolf.

Obviously, you've never had to deal with fending off someone who doesn't want to take no for an answer. Some of the rich ones are so use to getting their way, they see nothing wrong with forcing themselves on someone, who really isn't interested. And when they have the physical advantage of being stronger than you, it can turn into a sickening and sometime violent experience.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 24, 2011 3:16 pm


http://counterpunch.org/weisbrot05232011.html

May 23, 2011
Less Than Meets the Eye
Strauss-Kahn's Legacy at the IMF


By MARK WEISBROT


Now that Dominique Strauss-Kahn has resigned from his position as Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), it is worth taking an objective look at his legacy there. Until his arrest last week on charges of attempted rape and sexual assault, he was widely praised as having changed the IMF, increased its influence, and moved it away from the policies that – according to the Fund's critics -- had caused so many problems for developing countries in the past. How much of this is true?

Strauss-Kahn took the helm of the IMF in November of 2007, when the IMF's influence was at a low point. Total outstanding loans at that time were just $10 billion, down from $91 billion only four years earlier. By the time he left this week, that number had bounced back to $84 billion, with agreed upon loans three times larger. The IMF's total capital had quadrupled, from about $250 billion to an unprecedented $1 trillion. Clearly the IMF had resources that it had never had before, mostly as a result of the financial crisis and world recession of 2008-2009.

However the details of these changes are important. First, the collapse of the IMF's influence in the decade prior to 2007 was one of the most important changes in the international financial system since the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates in 1971. Prior to the 2000's, the IMF headed up a powerful creditors' cartel which was able to tell many developing country governments what their most important economic policies would be, under the threat of being denied credit not only from the Fund but also from other, then-larger lenders such as the World Bank, regional lenders, and sometimes even the private sector. This made the Fund not only the most important avenue of influence of the U.S. government in low-and-middle income countries – from Rwanda to Russia – but also the most important promoter of neoliberal economic "reforms" that transformed the world economy from the mid-1970s onward. These reforms coincided with a sharp slowdown of economic growth in the vast majority of low-and-middle-income countries for more than twenty years, with consequently reduced progress on social indicators such as life expectancy, and infant and child mortality.

The IMF's big comeback during the world recession did not bring the middle-income countries that had run away from it back to its orbit. Most of the middle-income countries of Asia, Russia, and Latin America stayed away, mostly by piling up sufficient reserves so that they did not have to borrow from the Fund, even during the crisis. As a result, even a low-income country like Bolivia, for example, was able to re-nationalize its hydrocarbons industry, increase social spending and public investment, and lower its retirement age from 65 to 58 – things that it could never do while it was continuously living under IMF agreements for twenty years prior. Most of the IMF's new influence and lending would land in Europe, which accounts for about 57 percent of its current outstanding loans.

As for changes in IMF policy, these have been relatively small. A review of 41 IMF agreements made during the world financial crisis and recession found that 31 of them contained "pro-cyclical" policies: that is, fiscal or monetary policies that would be expected to further slow the economy, or both. And in Europe, where the IMF has most of its lending, the policies attached to the loan agreements for Greece, Ireland, and Portugal are decidedly pro-cyclical and making it extremely difficult for these economies to get out of recession. The IMF's influence on Spain, which does not yet have a loan agreement, is similar. And in Latvia, the IMF presided over an Argentine-style recession that set a world historical record for the worst two-year loss of output (about 25 percent) – a complete disaster.

To be fair, some changes at the Fund during Strauss-Kahn's tenure were significant. For the first time ever, during the world recession of 2009, the IMF made available some $283 billion worth of reserves for all member countries, with no policy conditions attached. The Fund also made some limited credit available without conditions, although only to a few countries. The biggest changes were in the research department, where there was tolerance for more open debate. For example, there were IMF papers that endorsed the use of capital controls by developing countries under some circumstances, and questioning whether central banks were unnecessarily slowing growth with inflation targets [PDF] that may be too low.

But as can be seen from what is happening in the peripheral Eurozone countries, the IMF is still playing its traditional role of applying the medieval economic medicine of "bleeding the patient." To be fair to both Strauss-Kahn and the Fund, neither the Managing Director nor anyone else at the IMF is ultimately in charge of policy, especially with respect to countries that are important to the people who really run the institution. The IMF is run by its Governors and Executive Directors, of whom the overwhelmingly dominant authorities are the U.S. Treasury Department (which includes heavy representation from Goldman Sachs) and, secondarily, the European powers (except in Europe, where Treasury defers to the Europeans). Until decision-making at the IMF undergoes a dramatic change, we can expect only very small changes in IMF policy. This can be seen most clearly in the current case of Greece: Strauss-Kahn was aware that the fiscal tightening ordered by the European authorities and the IMF was preventing Greece from getting out of recession; but while he pushed for "softer" conditions, he was unable to change the lending conditions from punishment to actual help. That's ultimately because the European authorities (European Commission and European Central Bank), not the IMF, are calling the shots – although Strauss-Kahn had plenty of resistance within the Fund itself, too.

The voting shares of the IMF have changed only marginally, despite all the reforms of the last five years. The share of "emerging market and developing countries" – with the vast majority of the world's population -- has gone from 39.4 to 44.7 percent, while the G-7 countries have 41.2 percent, including 16.5 percent for the U.S. (down from 17.4 percent pre-reform).

But the voting and governance structure is not currently the main obstacle to changing IMF policy. At this point, the developing countries – and we should add in the victimized countries of the eurozone – are not using their potential influence within the Fund. Their representatives are mainly going along with the decisions of the G-7. If any sizeable bloc or blocs of these countries were to band together for change within the Fund, there could be some real reforms at the IMF.

This can be seen from the last decade of struggle within the World Trade Organization, where developing countries have often not accepted the G-7 consensus, and have successfully blocked the negotiation and implementation of rules that would hurt them – despite the fact that the WTO rules have been, from the outset, stacked against developing countries. It is true that the WTO operates by consensus rather than a quota-based voting structure, but that is not the key difference between it and the IMF. The key difference is in the role of developing countries and their representatives.

There is talk now of replacing Strauss-Kahn with an open, merit-based process of selection, breaking with the 67-year tradition of reserving the position for a European (most often French). At the moment this change does not appear likely to happen. It would be a step forward, but it would be only a symbolic change, and the odds are good that the next Managing Director – of whatever nationality – will be to the right of Strauss-Kahn. Real change at the IMF is in the hands of the governments of most of the world – if they dare to organize it.


Mark Weisbrot is an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: the Phony Crisis.

This column was originally published by The Guardian.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Seamus OBlimey » Tue May 24, 2011 3:26 pm

Dominique Strauss-Kahn and the union maid

A little-reported fact of the Dominique Strauss-Kahn case is that his accuser is a union member – with rights the IMF opposes

One very important fact has been largely absent from the coverage of the sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and, until latterly, leading candidate to be the next president of France. The hotel housekeeper whom he allegedly assaulted was represented by a union.

The reason that this is an important part of the story is that it is likely that Strauss-Kahn's alleged victim might not have felt confident enough to pursue the issue with either her supervisors or law enforcement agencies, if she had not been protected by a union contract. The vast majority of hotel workers in the United States, like most workers in the private sector, do not enjoy this protection.

This matters because under the law in the United States, an employer can fire a worker at any time for almost any reason. It is illegal for an employer to fire a worker for reporting a sexual assault. If any worker can prove that this is the reason they were fired, they would get their job back and probably back pay. (The penalties tend to be trivial, so the back pay is, unfortunately, not a joke.)

However, it is completely legal for an employer to fire a worker who reports a sexual assault for having been late to work last Tuesday or any other transgression. Since employers know the law, they don't ever say that they are firing a worker for reporting a sexual assault. They might fire workers who report sexual assaults for other on-the-job failings, real or invented.

In this way, the United States stands out from most other wealthy countries. For example, all the countries of western Europe afford workers some measure of employment protection, where employers must give a reason for firing workers. Workers can contest their dismissal if they think the reason is not valid, unlike the United States where there is no recourse.

Imagine the situation of the hotel worker had she not been protected by a union contract. She is a young immigrant mother who needs this job to support her family. According to reports, she likely did not know Strauss-Kahn's identity at the time she reported the assault, but she undoubtedly understood that the person staying in the $3,000-a-night suite was a wealthy and important person. In these circumstances, how likely would it be that she would make an issue of a sexual assault to her supervisors?

Housekeepers are generally among the lowest-paid workers at hotels, often earning little more than the minimum wage. It is a high turnover job, meaning that any individual housekeeper is likely to be viewed as easily replaceable by the management. If this housekeeper did not enjoy the protection of a union contract, is it likely that she would have counted on her supervisors taking her side against an important guest at the hotel? Would she have been prepared to risk her job to pursue the case?

We can never know how this particular woman would have responded otherwise – as, fortunately, she did have the protection of a union. However, it is likely that many similar assaults go unreported because the victims do not feel they can risk their jobs to pursue the case. They simply have to accept sexual harassment and even sexual assault as "part of the job".

There is a special irony to this situation given Dominique Strauss-Kahn's prior position. The IMF, along with other pillars of the economic establishment, has long pushed for reducing the rights of workers at their workplace. Specifically, they have pushed countries around the world to adopt measures that weaken the power of unions. The IMF has also urged western European countries to eliminate or weaken laws that prevent employers from firing workers at will. These laws, along with unions, are seen as "labour market rigidities" that prevent labour markets from operating efficiently.

In the dream world of the economists' textbook policies, all employers would have the ability to fire employees at will. There would be no protective legislation and no unions to get in the way. In that economist's dream world, then, powerful executives could be fairly certain that they would have licence to molest hotel workers with impunity.

Guardian


Nice little Vid at the link :wink:
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Nordic » Tue May 24, 2011 3:37 pm

DoYouEverWonder wrote:
Nordic wrote:
Canadian_watcher wrote:Translation of the above:

Poor Strauss-Kahn! Sexual Assault used to be fun! boo-hoo! Can't we go back to the good old days when rich brutalizers could run around and abuse low-wage workers without fear of losing their personal freedom??? Why him? Why now?



how can you possibly get that out of that article?????

methinks you're viewing just about everything these days with glasses of a unique color. what's the opposite of "rose color"?

btw, i am not lupercal. i admit i'm speculating. i think dhk was a lout and basically a very unfunny french version of austin "don't you want to shag me baby?" powers.

there's a saying in hollywood which paraphrased is basically "you're not anyone in hollywood unless there's somone, somewhere, that hates you".

this is the big leagues of the international gangster's circuit, and if you just take anything like this at face value, you're being naive!! and anyone who is a regular denizen of r.i. should be actely aware of this.

to assume there's absolutely nothing to this story beyond the face value version is as idiotic as having lupercal's or hmw's absolute conviction about certain things. a result in most cases of either severe prejudice or just really really wishing something was true.

bottom line is none of us know the truth one way or another. but there are a lot of fishy elements to this, pointed out by some of us, and now naomi wolf.

Obviously, you've never had to deal with fending off someone who doesn't want to take no for an answer. Some of the rich ones are so use to getting their way, they see nothing wrong with forcing themselves on someone, who really isn't interested. And when they have the physical advantage of being stronger than you, it can turn into a sickening and sometime violent experience.



Thanks for helping me make my point. What you said addresses absolutely nothing about this case, but reveals a prejudice on your own part, a willingness to believe a story.

I'M NOT SAYING THE STORY IS FALSE. I'm saying that anything presented to the public at this level of international gangsterism should be taken with a large grain of salt.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Pele'sDaughter » Tue May 24, 2011 3:41 pm

In the dream world of the economists' textbook policies, all employers would have the ability to fire employees at will. There would be no protective legislation and no unions to get in the way. In that economist's dream world, then, powerful executives could be fairly certain that they would have licence to molest hotel workers with impunity.


Obviously, if they can't f*ck you one way, they'll f*ck you another. They're all about the f*cking, aren't they.
Don't believe anything they say.
And at the same time,
Don't believe that they say anything without a reason.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Canadian_watcher » Tue May 24, 2011 4:03 pm

Nordic wrote:
Canadian_watcher wrote:Translation of the above:

Poor Strauss-Kahn! Sexual Assault used to be fun! boo-hoo! Can't we go back to the good old days when rich brutalizers could run around and abuse low-wage workers without fear of losing their personal freedom??? Why him? Why now?



how can you possibly get that out of that article?????


This is how:

Naomi Wolf wrote: New York City has abruptly become the scene of two very different official approaches to investigating sex-crime cases, one traditional and one new. The new approach so far appears to be reserved for Strauss-Kahn alone.

Consider the first case: ... the charges and trial have followed an often-seen pattern: the men’s supporters have vociferously defended their innocence (the presumption of which has been scrupulously upheld in the press); the victim’s pink bra has been the subject of salacious speculation, and her intoxication has been used to undermine her credibility. As the wheels of justice grind unglamorously forward, Mayor Michael Bloomberg has made no public statement supporting the victim’s side.

...
Then there is the Strauss-Kahn approach. ...the suspect was immediately tracked down, escorted off a plane just before its departure, and arrested. High-ranking detectives, not lowly officers, were dispatched to the crime scene. The DNA evidence was sequenced within hours, not the normal eight or nine days. By the end of the day’s news cycle, New York City police spokespeople had made uncharacteristic and shockingly premature statements supporting the credibility of the victim’s narrative — before an investigation was complete.

... the way in which this case is being processed is profoundly worrisome.[color=red] [b]In 23 years of covering sex crime — and in a city where domestic workers are raped by the score every month, often by powerful men — I have never seen the New York Police Department snap into action like this on any victim’s behalf.

...

So what is happening here?

...

a caller to a New York radio talk show, who identified herself as a domestic worker in a New York luxury hotel, reported that “every week” a man in a towel accosts her, seeking sex.

Are these men disgusting predators soliciting desperate, underpaid women? Yes. Is knowing about this economy relevant to the charges against Strauss-Kahn? Maybe.



How can you not get that message?

Not to mention - STOP selectively reading me. I have stated twice on this thread that I believe there are fishy elements to this. However, the article above is lamenting the fact that the police are finally doing their job WRT sexual assault charges rather than brushing them off and blaming the victim. I find that disgusting.

And Naomi Wolf turned coat on women years ago.
Last edited by Canadian_watcher on Tue May 24, 2011 4:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Nordic » Tue May 24, 2011 4:07 pm

So you think it's a mere coincidence that the NYPD is "finally doing their job" with this particular case?

Really?
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby vanlose kid » Tue May 24, 2011 4:11 pm

Nordic wrote:So you think it's a mere coincidence that the NYPD is "finally doing their job" with this particular case?

Really?


minor point but still: the fact that the NYPD were given the go-head to nab a high-class collar for once does not entail that he was set up either. and if you read it, nothing in Wolf's post plays on that scenario. it's about the treatment he's receiving after the "fact", not about the "facts". the title says: A Tale of Two Rapes".

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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Canadian_watcher » Tue May 24, 2011 4:14 pm

Nordic wrote:So you think it's a mere coincidence that the NYPD is "finally doing their job" with this particular case?

Really?


I give up.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Nordic » Tue May 24, 2011 4:17 pm

Are you saying that even if greater forces are FORCING the NYPD to do its job, for once, that it's a good thing? That as grand political theater, and part of a plot to take this guy down, if he is in fact a rapist, that it's a good thing?

That I could at least understand.
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby Canadian_watcher » Tue May 24, 2011 4:23 pm

Nordic wrote:Are you saying that even if greater forces are FORCING the NYPD to do its job, for once, that it's a good thing? That as grand political theater, and part of a plot to take this guy down, if he is in fact a rapist, that it's a good thing?

That I could at least understand.


pretty close. If we leave Strauss-Kahn out of it and replace him with serial pervert Joe Lunchpail, wouldn't you think it was REALLY odd that a supposed 'feminist' was out there writing pieces that decried justice being vigorously sought?
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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby JackRiddler » Tue May 24, 2011 4:34 pm

.

The often differential treatment of rich and poor (or of cop and civilian) and the frequent trivialization of rape are not ironclad laws! There have been VIPs who got the common felon treatment, despite the relatively low frequency of such cases, and sometimes cops take a rape very seriously, especially if they think they have a case they can close successfully. It very much depends on highly particular circumstances of a case, perhaps as simple as which cops answer a call. Keep in mind the woman supposedly didn't even know who Strauss-Kahn was. Maybe the cops who set his arrest in motion also weren't certain just what fish they were nabbing, or that this would be an immediate international case. ("IMF, what's that, some kind of bank?") If it's true that DSK threw himself at a couple of Sofitel employees before going after the maid, maybe the hotel management was ready to believe and back the maid's charges. As it's developing, this doesn't look like "he said, she said"; it looks more like what several people at a fancy hotel and a surveillance tape say vs. what DSK says.

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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby vanlose kid » Tue May 24, 2011 4:35 pm

Nordic wrote:Are you saying that even if greater forces are FORCING the NYPD to do its job, for once, that it's a good thing? That as grand political theater, and part of a plot to take this guy down, if he is in fact a rapist, that it's a good thing?

That I could at least understand.


that's what i think i'm saying, yeah.

the fact that the NYPD were given the go-ahead could be attributed to plain internal/departmental politics. as in, "here go make us look good". now, for the conscientious cops, this would be like christmas. in that they for once get the opportunity to do their job. who green-lighted it is a question of course. but a scenario that is just a plausible is this: 1) DSK did in fact commit the crime; 2) he's a "frog" and has already stepped on some toes somewhere up there; 3) he's been hung to dry on the basis of something he did actually get caught doing; 4) that he did do this sets up the possibility of milking it for all it's worth; 5) the one's who benefit from it merely gave the go ahead after the fact, in that there was no preplanned set up; 6) at most there might have been a contingency plan related to the day DSK finally shot himself in the foot, as in either we cover it up or pass over it lightly or make as much as we can from it; 6) the IMF, among others such as the justice system, Amerika, etc., can actually, if the post-facto theatre (as you call it) bit is done right, benefit from it immensely. in prestige and from the diversionary hullabaloo.

make sense?

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Re: IMF managing director arrested, accused of sexual attack

Postby barracuda » Tue May 24, 2011 4:45 pm

I'd say if he's guilty, than yeah, it's a good thing. I mean, even accepting lupercal's idea that DSK was a selfless, heroic socialist, fighting to bring economic justice to the oppressed working peoples of the world by demanding fair and equitable wealth redistribution as the price of the aid of the IMF, with just the minor downside that he also possibly happens to be a serial rapist - is that who you want to support in this battle? So the bad guys win by kneecapping the Caped Crusader of French Economic Equality, while the IMF continues on their rampage of usurous destruction across the globe, and we celebrate the small victory on behalf of victims of rape.

On the other hand, maybe DSK just pissed off some of the hotel security with his "don't you realise who I am" bullshit, and they'd been talking for days about wishing they could cuff his ass with the local beat cops on their smoke breaks.
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