Monday, February 28, 2011

Large crack opens in the earth

Puno: Large crack opens in the earth in southern Peru
The sudden appearance early in the morning of an enormous crack, measuring 100 meters wide and three kilometers long, caused confusion among residents of the Huacullani district in the Chucuito province, department of Puno.

The exact cause of the crack in the earth still unknown. Peru’s geophysical institute ruled out the occurrence of an earthquake in the region, but what is clear is that the ground opened up and large blocks of earth can be observed scattered throughout the area.

The event, recorded Wednesday morning, caused the collapse of one house located in the rural community of Llorohoco. Four people managed to escape, but the youngest in the family, five-year-old Jean Carlos Vilcanqui Acero, is missing.

Geological engineers from the regional committee for civil defense have arrived in the area to investigate the phenomenon and determine its causes, said Javier Pampamallco, Puno’s civil defense chief.
  • Source

  • The mysterious crack measures 100 meters wide and three kilometers long. (Photo: El Comercio)

    Investigating BP Can Be Hazardous to Your Health

    Hum! I remember some years ago when scientists went missing or found dead?

    Dead / Jailed Scientists Affiliated With The BP Oil Disaster
    Can so much tragedy be merely coincidence?
    LSU scientist Gregory Stone
    © Unknown
    February 17, 2011 - LSU scientist Gregory Stone, 54 - Unknown Illness

    BP Anthony Nicholas Tremonte
    © Unknown
    January 26, 2011 - Anthony Nicholas Tremonte, 31 - Mississippi Department of Marine Resources officer, from Ocean Springs arrested on child porn charge

    BP Thomas B. Manton
    © Unknown
    January 19, 2011 - Dr. Thomas B. Manton former President and CEO of the International Oil Spill Control Corporation - imprisonment and subsequent murder while jailed

    BP John P. Wheeler III
    © Unknown
    December 31, 2010 - John P. Wheeler III, a former Pentagon official and presidential aide and a defense consultant and expert on chemical and biological weapons - was beaten to death in an assault, body was discovered in a Wilmington landfill


    BP James Patrick Black
    © Unknown
    November 23, 2010 - James Patrick Black, an incident commander for BP's Gulf of Mexico oil spill response team, died Tuesday night near Destin, Florida in a small plane crash'

    BP Chitra Chaunhan
    © Unknown
    November 15, 2010 - Chitra Chaunhan, 33 - Chauhan worked in the USF Center for Biological Defense and Global Health Infectious Disease Research - Found dead in an apparent suicide by cyanide at a Temple Terrace hotel. She leaves behind a husband and a young child.

    BP Matthew Simmons
    © Unknown
    August 13, 2010 - Matthew Simmons, 67 - Simmons' body was found Sunday night in his hot tub, investigators said. An autopsy by the state medical examiner's office concluded Monday that he died from accidental drowning with heart disease as a contributing factor - "It was painful as can be" to be only insider willing to speak out against the "officials" during the BP Oil Disaster in the Gulf of Mexico

    BP Joseph Morrissey
    © Unknown
    April 6, 2010 - Scientist Joseph Morrissey, 46 - cell biologist and college professor, a near-native Floridian who chose to return to South Florida after studying at elite universities - was fatally shot during what police say was a home invasion robbery.
  • Source & Photos
  • Two planets found sharing one orbit

    Buried in the flood of data from the Kepler telescope is a planetary system unlike any seen before. Two of its apparent planets share the same orbit around their star. If the discovery is confirmed, it would bolster a theory that Earth once shared its orbit with a Mars-sized body that later crashed into it, resulting in the moon's formation.

    The two planets are part of a four-planet system dubbed KOI-730. They circle their sun-like parent star every 9.8 days at exactly the same orbital distance, one permanently about 60 degrees ahead of the other. In the night sky of one planet, the other world must appear as a constant, blazing light, never fading or brightening.

    Gravitational "sweet spots" make this possible. When one body (such as a planet) orbits a much more massive body (a star), there are two Lagrange points along the planet's orbit where a third body can orbit stably. These lie 60 degrees ahead of and 60 degrees behind the smaller object. For example, groups of asteroids called Trojans lie at these points along Jupiter's orbit.

    In theory, matter in a disc of material around a newborn star could coalesce into so-called "co-orbiting" planets, but no one had spotted evidence of this before. "Systems like this are not common, as this is the only one we have seen," says Jack Lissauer of NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California. Lissauer and colleagues describe the KOI-730 system in a paper submitted to the Astrophysical Journal (arxiv.org/abs/1102.0543).

    Richard Gott and Edward Belbruno at Princeton University say we may even have evidence of the phenomenon in our own cosmic backyard. The moon is thought to have formed about 50 million years after the birth of the solar system, from the debris of a collision between a Mars-sized body and Earth. Simulations suggest the impactor, dubbed Theia, must have come in at a low speed. According to Gott and Belbruno, this could only have happened if Theia had originated in a leading or trailing Lagrange point along Earth's orbit. The new finds "show the kind of thing we imagined can happen", Gott says.

    Will KOI-730's co-orbiting planets collide to form a moon someday? "That would be spectacular," says Gott. That may be so, but simulations by Bob Vanderbei at Princeton suggest the planets will continue to orbit in lockstep with each other for the next 2.22 million years at least.
  • Source
  • Saturday, February 26, 2011

    Julian Assange Boy oh Boy

    I have wonder of late about his ego and his being maybe conned by the glitz and glamor people but I wish him well

    Julian Assange has been “caged,” to use his own expression, since his initial arrest in London on an EU warrant alleging sexual misconduct in Sweden and remains caged today with bail conditions still applying while his inept team of glamour boy barristers and drunken solicitors determine how much more they can milk from his case. A gifted person with Assange’s social awareness should have known that (ALL) lawyers are the parasites of the modern age and should be avoided at all costs. Are you regretting now the personal and other REAL costs associated with your narcissistic (conditioned) need for notoriety, Julian? Silly boy!

    Assange, a self-confessed hacker, was fully cognisant of the hackers most powerful weapon outside his/her digital skills – A-N-O-N-Y-M-I-T-Y! He chose to break that code for the most trivial reason – all the material on WikiLeaks could have been revealed without anyone breaking the secrecy code, but Assange wanted to be a ‘Paris Hilton’ and was blinded by his now very apparent personality failings. Furthermore, he began to use the WikiLeaks material for personal attacks on his perceived enemies in a way identical to blackmail – so, it’s come to this!

    It is clearly time to separate the concept and purpose of WikiLeaks from the dysfunctional personality of Assange, he clearly was not personally ‘up to the task’ though his/the concept of WikiLeaks was indeed a very valuable contribution to society. He is not the first flawed personality to create something revolutionary but now WikiLeaks must, to maintain its INTEGRITY, dissociate itself from its founder and continue to do its valuable job for society.

    It’s over, Julian, you not only breached an inviolable hacker code but broke a critical rule of guerrilla warfare by allowing a stronger, slower opponent to apprehend you, stupid beyond belief!

    Let the Assange case be a cogent lesson for all digital warriors and other fighters for Truth, Freedom and Liberty.

    The Watergate material was all delivered anonymously and the real identity of the leaker was not revealed until his death.

    WE are Many – we are One -- we are ANONYMOUS. [You cannot stop what you cannot see!]

    Good luck Julian, you deeply flawed mamma's boy.

    When is this 'gifted' mamma's boy going to wake up to the FACT that he is opposing organised crime? "Justice" exists only in your deluded dreams, Julian. As for us, we ARE the ANONYMOUS underground, a FORMIDABLE, amorphous force. When you fight criminals you do NOT surrender yourself as an open target and then hope to prevail in THEIR domain-- you've lost it, dreamboat!
  • Source
  • Monsanto's Roundup causing animal deaths

    Boy this company is a monster, hellbent on killing the planet as well as animal live including human

    Roundup, GMOs linked to emergence of deadly new pathogen causing spontaneous abortions among animals
    by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor

    (NaturalNews) In a shocking warning letter to USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack, a highly experienced, ex-military pathogen researcher warns that the use of Roundup via GMO crops is resulting in the emergence of a deadly new pathogen -- previously unknown to science -- that's causing widespread spontaneous abortions among cattle. The pathogen appears in high concentrations among even non-GMO crops that are "managed" through the use of glyphosate (Roundup) for weed control.

    The letter is authored by COL (Retired) Don M. Huber, a former Emeritus Professor at Purdue University. Huber was also the coordinator at the American Phytopathological Society, an organization that studies plant diseases and pathogens. Huber also sat on the committee for Emerging Diseases and Pathogens, chaired by an Agriculture Research Service (USDA) employee from Fort Detrick, Maryland.

    Fort Detrick, you may remember, is also where the U.S. military conducts much of its biological warfare research through its United States Army Biological Warfare Laboratories (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._A...). A few years ago, deadly pathogens "went missing" from this lab (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...).

    Huber, in other words, is not just some ranting civilian. He's someone who has worked around pathogens for many decades and whose warnings about pathogenic threats must be taken seriously. In his letter, Huber warns about a new pathogen, unknown to science, "...that appears to significantly impact the health of plants, animals, and probably human beings. Based on a review of the data, it is widespread, very serious, and is in much higher concentrations in Roundup Ready (RR) soybeans and corn -- suggesting a link with the RR gene or more likely the presence of Roundup."

    This pathogen appears to be link to widespread spontaneous abortions among cattle. As Huber explains, "450 of 1,000 pregnant heifers ...experienced spontaneous abortions."

    That's a spontaneous abortion rate of 45 percent!
  • Finish reading at Source
  • India drops US$ trade with China

    Here is the start of the Chinese Yuan becoming the intermediary currency

    Bank of India becomes first to offer trade settlement in yuan
    BEIJING: Bank of India has become the first Indian bank to offer trade settlement facility between the rupee and the Chinese RMB from Hong Kong. This follows intense persuasion by the China Banking Regulatory Commission, which is trying to gain acceptance of the RMB as an international currency.

    "We are the first Indian bank to offer real-time settlement facility in RMB to Indian exporters and importers. It will be save a lot of time because settlement in US dollars usually takes three working days," Arun Kumar Arora, BoI's chief executive in Hong Kong, said during a recent visit to meeting regulators in Beijing.

    Indian buyers are at present making payments in US dollars, and they often have to convert rupee into the US currency for the purpose. The US dollars will no more be the intermediary currency as the BOI is offering direct settlement between the rupee and the Chinese money.

    Chinese exporters want their money in the local currency, which is regarded as more stable compared to the US dollar. They are also in a position to have their way because Indian buyers do not have an alternative source of low-cost goods, sources said.

    The process has been facilitated by a recent memorandum of understanding signed between the Reserve Bank of India and the CBRC to enhance banking relationship between the two giant neighbors.

    BoI has opened a RMB with the Bank of China, which will provide real time settlement with buyers and sellers across all provinces of China. The move is part of a campaign by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, which has persuaded 100 foreign banks to enter into arrangements with Chinese banks for trade settlement in RMB.

    "We will sell RMB against the US dollar, and companies can buy as much as they want provided they have the right papers. For individuals, the limit of 20,000 RMB a day," Arora said. He expects settlements for an amount ranging between 200 million and 300 million in the first year.

    Hong Kong is the only offshore market for the Chinese currency. The past year saw $400 billion of Chinese yuan being traded in Hong Kong against other currencies.

    BoI is also awaiting permission from Chinese regulators to establish a branch in Beijing, where it has been running a representative office for the past four years. It has recently signed an MoU with the CBRC on converting the representative office into a branch. The bank has been running a branch in the boom city of Shenzhen for the past four years. The Shenzhen branch will also be involved in providing additional support for the trade settlement business.
  • Source
  • Thursday, February 24, 2011

    Libyan Revolution

    Just a gentle request to phone/email/fax/write your local pollies to request a world response to the slaughter of innocent lives on behalf of the world population, I still live in hope that we the people can change the world by peace and love

    Fascism

    Fascism Then and Now: A Special Report by Hereward Fenton Then and Now: A Special Report by Hereward Fenton

    Dead Dolphin Fetus GOM

    Still the aftermath from BP

    Baby dolphins, some barely three feet in length, are washing up along the Mississippi and Alabama coastlines at 10 times the normal rate of stillborn and infant deaths, researchers are finding.

    The Sun Herald has learned that 17 young dolphins, either aborted before they reached maturity or dead soon after birth, have been collected along the shorelines.

    The Institute of Marine Mammal Studies performed necropsies, animal autopsies, on two of the babies today.
  • Finish Story Here
  • Tuesday, February 22, 2011

    'Airspace over Libyan capital closed'

    Folks let us all pray together for the people in these countries fighting for their human rights. Call or write your politician to ask for help from the UN (HUM!!)

    The airspace over the Libyan capital, Tripoli, has been closed until further notice, a spokesman for the Austrian Defense Ministry said.


    "The airspace is closed until further notice. It was closed less than an hour ago," Michael Huber told AFP.

    The Austrian Army sought to evacuate European nationals from Libya on a military plane.

    Residents of the Libyan capital said on Monday that 'armed mercenaries' had gone on a shooting spree, carrying out a massacre in the city, a report says.
    http://www.presstv.ir/detail/166403.html
    HSH/MGH

    Sunday, February 20, 2011

    Egypt - Phase II

    By Jim Kirwan
    SURPRISE! Ordinary people have replaced the corrupted powers in Egypt, along with Mubarak. We have demonized the Arab world for over six decades, on direct instructions from Israel. If the Egyptians can do this: Then what the hell is wrong with us?
    The news from Egypt today was completely unexpected in most quarters because the cynics have warned all along that this "Uprising" would be short-lived, at best, and would most probably lead to just another reshuffle of corrupted-puppets taking the bribes while pretending to represent a real change.
    The Supreme Military Council had banned all demonstrations and strikes throughout the country: Yet today that Supreme Military-Councils' Orders were shattered; not by violence but by CELEBRATIONS inTahrir Square that rivaled those at the height of the Uprising.

    Egyptians are celebrating their eighteen-day-long Victory over Tyranny. In a footnote Suleiman, the Egyptian-traitor has also disappeared, perhaps to avoid explaining how this new and jubilant victory celebration could possibly have occurred.
    This was all enabled by the Liberation of Egypt that turns out to have been based upon actually obtaining the kind of real FREEDOM that has its roots firmly in-place in, this in-depth RESPONSIBILITY throughout the country, that will finally replace the tyranny the torture and the murder that was the face of the now dethroned-Mubarak-government.

    "Thousands of Egyptians have gathered for prayers for what has been billed as a "victory march" throughCairo's Tahrir Square to mark the overthrow of longtime leader Hosni Mubarak a week ago.

    The groups that sparked the 18-day revolt that led to (http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/spotlight/anger-in-egypt/) Mubarak's downfall are calling the day the "Friday of Victory and Continuation,'' a name that reflects both their pride in forcing a change in national leadership and their worries about the future.

    They planned to flood the centre of Cairo wearing white, while Mubarak supporters said they would march in black to "apologize" for his ousting and honor his achievements.

    The aim of the pro-democracy march was to keep the upbeat spirit of the earlier protests alive, and some flag-draped protesters in Cairo clapped or played musical instruments as they waited for the prayers to begin.

    For the first time since he was banned from leading weekly Friday prayers in Egypt 30 years ago, prominent Muslim scholar Yusuf al-Qaradawi lead thousands in the weekly prayers from Tahrir Square on Friday.

    The Coalition of the Revolution Youth, which groups pro-democracy movements that helped launch the revolt, called for the gathering to "remember the martyrs of freedom and dignity and justice". At least 365 people were killed and 5,500 more injured in the protests, according to Egypt's health ministry." (1)

    Many here have been pounding away at the Amerrikan non-response to any of the corruption and illegalities that have been routinely committed since 911; throughout the world. As one of those that has tried to get 'us' involved in this world-changing rebellion I have to say that this "Friday of Victory" is GREAT news indeed. This 'victory' is marred only by the fact that Amerrikans have still not-been-moved to do our part in cutting off the money that made all this tyranny in the Middle-East and beyond "possible."

    Here is one example of the depth of cynicism that has tried to cloud what is continuing in Egypt and beyond today.
    "The facts on the ground are that repression works to maintain elite order. When the disempowered come into power they too will use repression to maintain their new elite order. I do not expect these uprisings to bring democracy to the Middle East. I do not expect them to topple tradition."
    In fact, it would be fantastic if the Egyptians succeed in going beyond 'democracy' to obtain real freedom from the masses as well as from the false-security of corrupted governments everywhere else. "Democracy" itself is not a panacea but a virus that in reality merely enables the rise of the police-state. This is something too complex for most to grasp: but it is the only way to get back the basic freedoms that have been stolen in order to provide the shadow-governments' form of "state-security" which is actually the complete-opposite of real security; anywhere! (2)
    AIPAC and virtually the whole armada of 'official-feral agencies' that have centered themselves around another total-falsehood "HOMELAND Insecurity" have been the primary driving force here that not only support all of those puppet-state governments throughout the Arab World; but they have also been the largest players that have always been used by Zionistic-traitors throughout this government-that have been trying to keep the lid on this spreading and soon to be global-revolution from becoming firmly established in Egypt and beyond.
    It might be time to take a look at the scoreboard in the Middle-East, versus the one that most here believe that they are 'monitoring closely'. This Rolling Revolution has managed to do in just four weeks what we have spent the last hundred years trying to stop: Namely the global-overthrow of Police-States everywhere. Proof of our cowardice overflows from every issue that could lead Americans back to jobs, to personal security, and to something resembling any real choice about the kind of treason-laden-government we now have. Amerrikans it seems are a lost-cause, because they have too-often simply refused to "LOOK-UP." The USA represents only about 6.5% of the entire world. But United States Incorporated (USI) represents over ninety percent of the elites that are controlling not just the wealth of the planet; but the torture and death of millions worldwide.
    Thanks to John Kaminski, for remembering this quote from Eustace Mullins who lays out exactly how the Zionist Federal Reserve has contributed to the end of American Freedoms:

    " American history in the 20th century has recorded the amazing achievements of the Federal Reserve bankers. First, the outbreak of World War I, which was made possible by the funds available from the new central bank of the United States. Second, the Agricultural Depression of 1920. Third, the Black Friday Crash on Wall Street of October, 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression. Fourth, World War II. Fifth, the conversion of the assets of the United States and its citizens from real property to paper assets from 1945 to the present, transforming a victorious America and foremost world power in 1945 to the world's largest debtor nation in 1990. Today, this nation lies in economic ruins, devastated and destitute, in much the same dire straits in which Germany and Japan found themselves in 1945. Will Americans act to rebuild our nation, as Germany and Japan have done when they faced the identical conditions which we now face--or will we continue to be enslaved by the Babylonian debt money system which was set up by the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 to complete our total destruction? This is the only question which we have to answer, and we do not have much time left to answer it. - Eustace Mullins, 1991"

    Thanks to the courage of the Tunisians who lit this fire that Egypt began to fuel with its peaceful revolt against global-tyranny, less than a month ago: That fire has now spread across the Middle-East and has begun to afflict other flash-points around the planet where real-revolutions have been smoldering now for decades. The one thing that is certain in all of this is that neither Egypt nor any of the seriously undertaken uprisings, anywhere else, will ever be able to go back again: to that thinly veiled slavery and torture that led to Fascism and State-Controlled-Tyranny in so many of the world's smaller nations.

    The New World Order is just NOT CAPABLE of containing this international-yearning for the basic-freedoms that so many globally, are now seriously beginning to DEMAND!

    If "Amerrikans" do not soon return to being Americans, instead of the cowards we've become: Then we shall indeed be part of the collateral-damage that will be swept out with the rest of the "Road Kill" that this new wave will produce around the planet. 'This time' we shall not have the luxury of "remaining on the fence" because the whole world KNOWS that what is being defeated in Egypt, is and was our creation, just as that has always been true in Palestine, and Lebanon, Syria, Libya, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and on and on around the world. Together with Zionista's everywhere USI must be deconstructed and all of its "insiders" must face global-justice for the hundreds of years in which they have plotted this theft of the entire planet!

    Cut this government in half, and return it to the Republic that it once had the chance to be. Dump the bullshit rules and regulations that were put-in-place to capture us with lies and deception in the name of "protections" (like TSA & DHS) that have shielded only the guilty, from all of us that would have investigated, tried, and executed those responsible for 911. This plus the imperative need, to slash all funding, of every N.W.O. directive that is still funding this treason, as part of their attempted global-takeover which continues to FAIL further with every passing minute of every day and night.

    The New World Order convinced Amerrikans that they must have guides for everything "we" do in life: Their premise being; that no one is capable of ever thinking or acting in their own best interest. That is just garbage. "LAWS" do not need to be so complex that they take "experts" to even remotely begin to understand what they might-mean. The 'laws' are complex only to hide those that actually will benefit from what they will do to the vast majority: The TAX ­CUTS in a time of war, are a perfect example of WAR-profiteering-made-quasi-legal and yet no one has even attempted to sound that alarm!

    Since 911 this entire nation has become nothing but just another outlaw-haven for the privateers and profiteers that like the vultures they are: Have been feeding on the corpse of this Republic until they are now too heavy to fly. So now is the time too kill them on the ground where they have feasted overlong upon their unprotected prey! We need public trials for treason and more; for all of them: Right after we cut the purse-strings of the elite-cabal that is using what was ours to enslave us all forever-if we do not begin to act like the free people we were born to be!

    kirwanstudios@sbcglobal.net

    1) Victory March Fills Cairo Square ­ videohttp://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2011/02/20112189124268649.html

    2) Republic versus Democracy
    http://www.garymcleod.org/republic.htm

    BACKGROUND
    Phase II, Egypt Awakens, Strkes Begin
    http://www.kirwanesque.com/politics/articles/2011/art36.htm

    Massacre in Bahrain

    MIDEAST TO MIDWEST – Global Uprising, Or NWO Orchestrated Protests?

    Bahrain uses UK-supplied weapons in protest crackdown

    The Bahraini military has opened machinegun fire on protesters who were trying to reach hospital, injuring hundreds, in what appears to be an attempted massacre, medics say.

    The Army has prevented ambulances and medics from reaching those wounded amid massive pro-democracy protests in Bahrain, Dr. Ghasam, a resident at Salmaniyeh hospital in Manama, told Press TV on Friday.

    He said that the protesters were marching to hospital in silence to visit those wounded in the previous rallies, when they were ambushed by troops waiting near the hospital.

    “They did not even chant anti-government slogans, they wanted to visit those injured on Thursday,” Dr. Ghasem said.

    He maintained that the massacre was planned in advance.

    “We need help! Our staff is entirely overwhelmed. They are shooting at people’s heads. Not at the legs. People are having their brains blown out,” Dr. Ghasam said.

    He also compared the situation at the hospital to a war zone.

    Bahraini lawmaker Ali al-Aswad, who was at the hospital at the time of incident, also told Press TV that the army has prevented the medical staff from reaching those injured and urged the Bahraini authorities to stop killing their own people.

    According to the Bahraini lawmaker, nearly 700 army troops are stationed near the hospital.

    Following the violence, Bahrain’s crown prince Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa promised to start a national dialogue, once calm returns.

    The Friday shooting came after a funeral procession held for those killed on Thursday turned into pro-democracy protests with a turnout of tens of thousands, which is unprecedented over the past few weeks.

    Four pro-democracy protesters were killed and 231 others wounded after riot police raided the protest camp in the early hours of Thursday, when most of the demonstrators were sleeping, in an attempt to clear capital’s main square from demonstrators.

    The funeral procession of the victims was held after the Friday Prayers.
    HM/MMN
    http://www.presstv.ir/

    Saturday, February 19, 2011

    Why Isn't Wall Street in Jail?

    From my favorite media source since I was a teenager (long ago)

    Financial crooks brought down the world's economy — but the feds are doing more to protect them than to prosecute them.
    Over drinks at a bar on a dreary, snowy night in Washington this past month, a former Senate investigator laughed as he polished off his beer.

    "Everything's fucked up, and nobody goes to jail," he said. "That's your whole story right there. Hell, you don't even have to write the rest of it. Just write that."

    I put down my notebook. "Just that?"

    "That's right," he said, signaling to the waitress for the check. "Everything's fucked up, and nobody goes to jail. You can end the piece right there."

    Nobody goes to jail. This is the mantra of the financial-crisis era, one that saw virtually every major bank and financial company on Wall Street embroiled in obscene criminal scandals that impoverished millions and collectively destroyed hundreds of billions, in fact, trillions of dollars of the world's wealth — and nobody went to jail. Nobody, that is, except Bernie Madoff, a flamboyant and pathological celebrity con artist, whose victims happened to be other rich and famous people.

    This article appears in the March 3, 2011 issue of Rolling Stone. The issue is available now on newsstands and will appear in the online archive February 18.

    The rest of them, all of them, got off. Not a single executive who ran the companies that cooked up and cashed in on the phony financial boom — an industrywide scam that involved the mass sale of mismarked, fraudulent mortgage-backed securities — has ever been convicted. Their names by now are familiar to even the most casual Middle American news consumer: companies like AIG, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley. Most of these firms were directly involved in elaborate fraud and theft. Lehman Brothers hid billions in loans from its investors. Bank of America lied about billions in bonuses. Goldman Sachs failed to tell clients how it put together the born-to-lose toxic mortgage deals it was selling. What's more, many of these companies had corporate chieftains whose actions cost investors billions — from AIG derivatives chief Joe Cassano, who assured investors they would not lose even "one dollar" just months before his unit imploded, to the $263 million in compensation that former Lehman chief Dick "The Gorilla" Fuld conveniently failed to disclose. Yet not one of them has faced time behind bars.

    Invasion of the Home Snatchers

    Instead, federal regulators and prosecutors have let the banks and finance companies that tried to burn the world economy to the ground get off with carefully orchestrated settlements — whitewash jobs that involve the firms paying pathetically small fines without even being required to admit wrongdoing. To add insult to injury, the people who actually committed the crimes almost never pay the fines themselves; banks caught defrauding their shareholders often use shareholder money to foot the tab of justice. "If the allegations in these settlements are true," says Jed Rakoff, a federal judge in the Southern District of New York, "it's management buying its way off cheap, from the pockets of their victims."

    Taibblog: Commentary on politics and the economy by Matt Taibbi

    To understand the significance of this, one has to think carefully about the efficacy of fines as a punishment for a defendant pool that includes the richest people on earth — people who simply get their companies to pay their fines for them. Conversely, one has to consider the powerful deterrent to further wrongdoing that the state is missing by not introducing this particular class of people to the experience of incarceration. "You put Lloyd Blankfein in pound-me-in-the-ass prison for one six-month term, and all this bullshit would stop, all over Wall Street," says a former congressional aide. "That's all it would take. Just once."

    But that hasn't happened. Because the entire system set up to monitor and regulate Wall Street is fucked up.

    Just ask the people who tried to do the right thing.

    Wall Street's Naked Swindle

    Here's how regulation of Wall Street is supposed to work. To begin with, there's a semigigantic list of public and quasi-public agencies ostensibly keeping their eyes on the economy, a dense alphabet soup of banking, insurance, S&L, securities and commodities regulators like the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), as well as supposedly "self-regulating organizations" like the New York Stock Exchange. All of these outfits, by law, can at least begin the process of catching and investigating financial criminals, though none of them has prosecutorial power.

    The major federal agency on the Wall Street beat is the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC watches for violations like insider trading, and also deals with so-called "disclosure violations" — i.e., making sure that all the financial information that publicly traded companies are required to make public actually jibes with reality. But the SEC doesn't have prosecutorial power either, so in practice, when it looks like someone needs to go to jail, they refer the case to the Justice Department. And since the vast majority of crimes in the financial services industry take place in Lower Manhattan, cases referred by the SEC often end up in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. Thus, the two top cops on Wall Street are generally considered to be that U.S. attorney — a job that has been held by thunderous prosecutorial personae like Robert Morgenthau and Rudy Giuliani — and the SEC's director of enforcement.

    The relationship between the SEC and the DOJ is necessarily close, even symbiotic. Since financial crime-fighting requires a high degree of financial expertise — and since the typical drug-and-terrorism-obsessed FBI agent can't balance his own checkbook, let alone tell a synthetic CDO from a credit default swap — the Justice Department ends up leaning heavily on the SEC's army of 1,100 number-crunching investigators to make their cases. In theory, it's a well-oiled, tag-team affair: Billionaire Wall Street Asshole commits fraud, the NYSE catches on and tips off the SEC, the SEC works the case and delivers it to Justice, and Justice perp-walks the Asshole out of Nobu, into a Crown Victoria and off to 36 months of push-ups, license-plate making and Salisbury steak.

    That's the way it's supposed to work. But a veritable mountain of evidence indicates that when it comes to Wall Street, the justice system not only sucks at punishing financial criminals, it has actually evolved into a highly effective mechanism for protecting financial criminals. This institutional reality has absolutely nothing to do with politics or ideology — it takes place no matter who's in office or which party's in power. To understand how the machinery functions, you have to start back at least a decade ago, as case after case of financial malfeasance was pursued too slowly or not at all, fumbled by a government bureaucracy that too often is on a first-name basis with its targets. Indeed, the shocking pattern of nonenforcement with regard to Wall Street is so deeply ingrained in Washington that it raises a profound and difficult question about the very nature of our society: whether we have created a class of people whose misdeeds are no longer perceived as crimes, almost no matter what those misdeeds are. The SEC and the Justice Department have evolved into a bizarre species of social surgeon serving this nonjailable class, expert not at administering punishment and justice, but at finding and removing criminal responsibility from the bodies of the accused.

    The systematic lack of regulation has left even the country's top regulators frustrated. Lynn Turner, a former chief accountant for the SEC, laughs darkly at the idea that the criminal justice system is broken when it comes to Wall Street. "I think you've got a wrong assumption — that we even have a law-enforcement agency when it comes to Wall Street," he says.

    In the hierarchy of the SEC, the chief accountant plays a major role in working to pursue misleading and phony financial disclosures. Turner held the post a decade ago, when one of the most significant cases was swallowed up by the SEC bureaucracy. In the late 1990s, the agency had an open-and-shut case against the Rite Aid drugstore chain, which was using diabolical accounting tricks to cook their books. But instead of moving swiftly to crack down on such scams, the SEC shoved the case into the "deal with it later" file. "The Philadelphia office literally did nothing with the case for a year," Turner recalls. "Very much like the New York office with Madoff." The Rite Aid case dragged on for years — and by the time it was finished, similar accounting fiascoes at Enron and WorldCom had exploded into a full-blown financial crisis. The same was true for another SEC case that presaged the Enron disaster. The agency knew that appliance-maker Sunbeam was using the same kind of accounting scams to systematically hide losses from its investors. But in the end, the SEC's punishment for Sunbeam's CEO, Al "Chainsaw" Dunlap — widely regarded as one of the biggest assholes in the history of American finance — was a fine of $500,000. Dunlap's net worth at the time was an estimated $100 million. The SEC also barred Dunlap from ever running a public company again — forcing him to retire with a mere $99.5 million. Dunlap passed the time collecting royalties from his self-congratulatory memoir. Its title: Mean Business.

    The pattern of inaction toward shady deals on Wall Street grew worse and worse after Turner left, with one slam-dunk case after another either languishing for years or disappearing altogether. Perhaps the most notorious example involved Gary Aguirre, an SEC investigator who was literally fired after he questioned the agency's failure to pursue an insider-trading case against John Mack, now the chairman of Morgan Stanley and one of America's most powerful bankers.

    Aguirre joined the SEC in September 2004. Two days into his career as a financial investigator, he was asked to look into an insider-trading complaint against a hedge-fund megastar named Art Samberg. One day, with no advance research or discussion, Samberg had suddenly started buying up huge quantities of shares in a firm called Heller Financial. "It was as if Art Samberg woke up one morning and a voice from the heavens told him to start buying Heller," Aguirre recalls. "And he wasn't just buying shares — there were some days when he was trying to buy three times as many shares as were being traded that day." A few weeks later, Heller was bought by General Electric — and Samberg pocketed $18 million.

    After some digging, Aguirre found himself focusing on one suspect as the likely source who had tipped Samberg off: John Mack, a close friend of Samberg's who had just stepped down as president of Morgan Stanley. At the time, Mack had been on Samberg's case to cut him into a deal involving a spinoff of the tech company Lucent — an investment that stood to make Mack a lot of money. "Mack is busting my chops" to give him a piece of the action, Samberg told an employee in an e-mail.

    A week later, Mack flew to Switzerland to interview for a top job at Credit Suisse First Boston. Among the investment bank's clients, as it happened, was a firm called Heller Financial. We don't know for sure what Mack learned on his Swiss trip; years later, Mack would claim that he had thrown away his notes about the meetings. But we do know that as soon as Mack returned from the trip, on a Friday, he called up his buddy Samberg. The very next morning, Mack was cut into the Lucent deal — a favor that netted him more than $10 million. And as soon as the market reopened after the weekend, Samberg started buying every Heller share in sight, right before it was snapped up by GE — a suspiciously timed move that earned him the equivalent of Derek Jeter's annual salary for just a few minutes of work.

    The deal looked like a classic case of insider trading. But in the summer of 2005, when Aguirre told his boss he planned to interview Mack, things started getting weird. His boss told him the case wasn't likely to fly, explaining that Mack had "powerful political connections." (The investment banker had been a fundraising "Ranger" for George Bush in 2004, and would go on to be a key backer of Hillary Clinton in 2008.)

    Aguirre also started to feel pressure from Morgan Stanley, which was in the process of trying to rehire Mack as CEO. At first, Aguirre was contacted by the bank's regulatory liaison, Eric Dinallo, a former top aide to Eliot Spitzer. But it didn't take long for Morgan Stanley to work its way up the SEC chain of command. Within three days, another of the firm's lawyers, Mary Jo White, was on the phone with the SEC's director of enforcement. In a shocking move that was later singled out by Senate investigators, the director actually appeared to reassure White, dismissing the case against Mack as "smoke" rather than "fire." White, incidentally, was herself the former U.S. attorney of the Southern District of New York — one of the top cops on Wall Street.

    Pause for a minute to take this in. Aguirre, an SEC foot soldier, is trying to interview a major Wall Street executive — not handcuff the guy or impound his yacht, mind you, just talk to him. In the course of doing so, he finds out that his target's firm is being represented not only by Eliot Spitzer's former top aide, but by the former U.S. attorney overseeing Wall Street, who is going four levels over his head to speak directly to the chief of the SEC's enforcement division — not Aguirre's boss, but his boss's boss's boss's boss. Mack himself, meanwhile, was being represented by Gary Lynch, a former SEC director of enforcement.

    Aguirre didn't stand a chance. A month after he complained to his supervisors that he was being blocked from interviewing Mack, he was summarily fired, without notice. The case against Mack was immediately dropped: all depositions canceled, no further subpoenas issued. "It all happened so fast, I needed a seat belt," recalls Aguirre, who had just received a stellar performance review from his bosses. The SEC eventually paid Aguirre a settlement of $755,000 for wrongful dismissal.

    Rather than going after Mack, the SEC started looking for someone else to blame for tipping off Samberg. (It was, Aguirre quips, "O.J.'s search for the real killers.") It wasn't until a year later that the agency finally got around to interviewing Mack, who denied any wrongdoing. The four-hour deposition took place on August 1st, 2006 — just days after the five-year statute of limitations on insider trading had expired in the case.

    "At best, the picture shows extraordinarily lax enforcement by the SEC," Senate investigators would later conclude. "At worse, the picture is colored with overtones of a possible cover-up."

    Episodes like this help explain why so many Wall Street executives felt emboldened to push the regulatory envelope during the mid-2000s. Over and over, even the most obvious cases of fraud and insider dealing got gummed up in the works, and high-ranking executives were almost never prosecuted for their crimes. In 2003, Freddie Mac coughed up $125 million after it was caught misreporting its earnings by $5 billion; nobody went to jail. In 2006, Fannie Mae was fined $400 million, but executives who had overseen phony accounting techniques to jack up their bonuses faced no criminal charges. That same year, AIG paid $1.6 billion after it was caught in a major accounting scandal that would indirectly lead to its collapse two years later, but no executives at the insurance giant were prosecuted.

    All of this behavior set the stage for the crash of 2008, when Wall Street exploded in a raging Dresden of fraud and criminality. Yet the SEC and the Justice Department have shown almost no inclination to prosecute those most responsible for the catastrophe — even though they had insiders from the two firms whose implosions triggered the crisis, Lehman Brothers and AIG, who were more than willing to supply evidence against top executives.

    In the case of Lehman Brothers, the SEC had a chance six months before the crash to move against Dick Fuld, a man recently named the worst CEO of all time by Portfolio magazine. A decade before the crash, a Lehman lawyer named Oliver Budde was going through the bank's proxy statements and noticed that it was using a loophole involving Restricted Stock Units to hide tens of millions of dollars of Fuld's compensation. Budde told his bosses that Lehman's use of RSUs was dicey at best, but they blew him off. "We're sorry about your concerns," they told him, "but we're doing it." Disturbed by such shady practices, the lawyer quit the firm in 2006.

    Then, only a few months after Budde left Lehman, the SEC changed its rules to force companies to disclose exactly how much compensation in RSUs executives had coming to them. "The SEC was basically like, 'We're sick and tired of you people fucking around — we want a picture of what you're holding,'" Budde says. But instead of coming clean about eight separate RSUs that Fuld had hidden from investors, Lehman filed a proxy statement that was a masterpiece of cynical lawyering. On one page, a chart indicated that Fuld had been awarded $146 million in RSUs. But two pages later, a note in the fine print essentially stated that the chart did not contain the real number — which, it failed to mention, was actually $263 million more than the chart indicated. "They fucked around even more than they did before," Budde says. (The law firm that helped craft the fine print, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, would later receive a lucrative federal contract to serve as legal adviser to the TARP bailout.)

    Budde decided to come forward. In April 2008, he wrote a detailed memo to the SEC about Lehman's history of hidden stocks. Shortly thereafter, he got a letter back that began, "Dear Sir or Madam." It was an automated e-response.

    "They blew me off," Budde says.

    Over the course of that summer, Budde tried to contact the SEC several more times, and was ignored each time. Finally, in the fateful week of September 15th, 2008, when Lehman Brothers cracked under the weight of its reckless bets on the subprime market and went into its final death spiral, Budde became seriously concerned. If the government tried to arrange for Lehman to be pawned off on another Wall Street firm, as it had done with Bear Stearns, the U.S. taxpayer might wind up footing the bill for a company with hundreds of millions of dollars in concealed compensation. So Budde again called the SEC, right in the middle of the crisis. "Look," he told regulators. "I gave you huge stuff. You really want to take a look at this."

    But the feds once again blew him off. A young staff attorney contacted Budde, who once more provided the SEC with copies of all his memos. He never heard from the agency again.

    "This was like a mini-Madoff," Budde says. "They had six solid months of warnings. They could have done something."

    Three weeks later, Budde was shocked to see Fuld testifying before the House Government Oversight Committee and whining about how poor he was. "I got no severance, no golden parachute," Fuld moaned. When Rep. Henry Waxman, the committee's chairman, mentioned that he thought Fuld had earned more than $480 million, Fuld corrected him and said he believed it was only $310 million.

    The true number, Budde calculated, was $529 million. He contacted a Senate investigator to talk about how Fuld had misled Congress, but he never got any response. Meanwhile, in a demonstration of the government's priorities, the Justice Department is proceeding full force with a prosecution of retired baseball player Roger Clemens for lying to Congress about getting a shot of steroids in his ass. "At least Roger didn't screw over the world," Budde says, shaking his head.

    Fuld has denied any wrongdoing, but his hidden compensation was only a ripple in Lehman's raging tsunami of misdeeds. The investment bank used an absurd accounting trick called "Repo 105" transactions to conceal $50 billion in loans on the firm's balance sheet. (That's $50 billion, not million.) But more than a year after the use of the Repo 105s came to light, there have still been no indictments in the affair. While it's possible that charges may yet be filed, there are now rumors that the SEC and the Justice Department may take no action against Lehman. If that's true, and there's no prosecution in a case where there's such overwhelming evidence — and where the company is already dead, meaning it can't dump further losses on investors or taxpayers — then it might be time to assume the game is up. Failing to prosecute Fuld and Lehman would be tantamount to the state marching into Wall Street and waving the green flag on a new stealing season.

    The most amazing noncase in the entire crash — the one that truly defies the most basic notion of justice when it comes to Wall Street supervillains — is the one involving AIG and Joe Cassano, the nebbishy Patient Zero of the financial crisis. As chief of AIGFP, the firm's financial products subsidiary, Cassano repeatedly made public statements in 2007 claiming that his portfolio of mortgage derivatives would suffer "no dollar of loss" — an almost comically obvious misrepresentation. "God couldn't manage a $60 billion real estate portfolio without a single dollar of loss," says Turner, the agency's former chief accountant. "If the SEC can't make a disclosure case against AIG, then they might as well close up shop."

    As in the Lehman case, federal prosecutors not only had plenty of evidence against AIG — they also had an eyewitness to Cassano's actions who was prepared to tell all. As an accountant at AIGFP, Joseph St. Denis had a number of run-ins with Cassano during the summer of 2007. At the time, Cassano had already made nearly $500 billion worth of derivative bets that would ultimately blow up, destroy the world's largest insurance company, and trigger the largest government bailout of a single company in U.S. history. He made many fatal mistakes, but chief among them was engaging in contracts that required AIG to post billions of dollars in collateral if there was any downgrade to its credit rating.

    St. Denis didn't know about those clauses in Cassano's contracts, since they had been written before he joined the firm. What he did know was that Cassano freaked out when St. Denis spoke with an accountant at the parent company, which was only just finding out about the time bomb Cassano had set. After St. Denis finished a conference call with the executive, Cassano suddenly burst into the room and began screaming at him for talking to the New York office. He then announced that St. Denis had been "deliberately excluded" from any valuations of the most toxic elements of the derivatives portfolio — thus preventing the accountant from doing his job. What St. Denis represented was transparency — and the last thing Cassano needed was transparency.

    Another clue that something was amiss with AIGFP's portfolio came when Goldman Sachs demanded that the firm pay billions in collateral, per the terms of Cassano's deadly contracts. Such "collateral calls" happen all the time on Wall Street, but seldom against a seemingly solvent and friendly business partner like AIG. And when they do happen, they are rarely paid without a fight. So St. Denis was shocked when AIGFP agreed to fork over gobs of money to Goldman Sachs, even while it was still contesting the payments — an indication that something was seriously wrong at AIG. "When I found out about the collateral call, I literally had to sit down," St. Denis recalls. "I had to go home for the day."

    After Cassano barred him from valuating the derivative deals, St. Denis had no choice but to resign. He got another job, and thought he was done with AIG. But a few months later, he learned that Cassano had held a conference call with investors in December 2007. During the call, AIGFP failed to disclose that it had posted $2 billion to Goldman Sachs following the collateral calls.

    "Investors therefore did not know," the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission would later conclude, "that AIG's earnings were overstated by $3.6 billion."

    "I remember thinking, 'Wow, they're just not telling people,'" St. Denis says. "I knew. I had been there. I knew they'd posted collateral."

    A year later, after the crash, St. Denis wrote a letter about his experiences to the House Government Oversight Committee, which was looking into the AIG collapse. He also met with investigators for the government, which was preparing a criminal case against Cassano. But the case never went to court. Last May, the Justice Department confirmed that it would not file charges against executives at AIGFP. Cassano, who has denied any wrongdoing, was reportedly told he was no longer a target.

    Shortly after that, Cassano strolled into Washington to testify before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. It was his first public appearance since the crash. He has not had to pay back a single cent out of the hundreds of millions of dollars he earned selling his insane pseudo-insurance policies on subprime mortgage deals. Now, out from under prosecution, he appeared before the FCIC and had the enormous balls to compliment his own business acumen, saying his atom-bomb swaps portfolio was, in retrospect, not that badly constructed. "I think the portfolios are withstanding the test of time," he said.

    "They offered him an excellent opportunity to redeem himself," St. Denis jokes.

    In the end, of course, it wasn't just the executives of Lehman and AIGFP who got passes. Virtually every one of the major players on Wall Street was similarly embroiled in scandal, yet their executives skated off into the sunset, uncharged and unfined. Goldman Sachs paid $550 million last year when it was caught defrauding investors with crappy mortgages, but no executive has been fined or jailed — not even Fabrice "Fabulous Fab" Tourre, Goldman's outrageous Euro-douche who gleefully e-mailed a pal about the "surreal" transactions in the middle of a meeting with the firm's victims. In a similar case, a sales executive at the German powerhouse Deutsche Bank got off on charges of insider trading; its general counsel at the time of the questionable deals, Robert Khuzami, now serves as director of enforcement for the SEC.

    Another major firm, Bank of America, was caught hiding $5.8 billion in bonuses from shareholders as part of its takeover of Merrill Lynch. The SEC tried to let the bank off with a settlement of only $33 million, but Judge Jed Rakoff rejected the action as a "facade of enforcement." So the SEC quintupled the settlement — but it didn't require either Merrill or Bank of America to admit to wrongdoing. Unlike criminal trials, in which the facts of the crime are put on record for all to see, these Wall Street settlements almost never require the banks to make any factual disclosures, effectively burying the stories forever. "All this is done at the expense not only of the shareholders, but also of the truth," says Rakoff. Goldman, Deutsche, Merrill, Lehman, Bank of America ... who did we leave out? Oh, there's Citigroup, nailed for hiding some $40 billion in liabilities from investors. Last July, the SEC settled with Citi for $75 million. In a rare move, it also fined two Citi executives, former CFO Gary Crittenden and investor-relations chief Arthur Tildesley Jr. Their penalties, combined, came to a whopping $180,000.

    Throughout the entire crisis, in fact, the government has taken exactly one serious swing of the bat against executives from a major bank, charging two guys from Bear Stearns with criminal fraud over a pair of toxic subprime hedge funds that blew up in 2007, destroying the company and robbing investors of $1.6 billion. Jurors had an e-mail between the defendants admitting that "there is simply no way for us to make money — ever" just three days before assuring investors that "there's no basis for thinking this is one big disaster." Yet the case still somehow ended in acquittal — and the Justice Department hasn't taken any of the big banks to court since.

    All of which raises an obvious question: Why the hell not?

    Gary Aguirre, the SEC investigator who lost his job when he drew the ire of Morgan Stanley, thinks he knows the answer.

    Last year, Aguirre noticed that a conference on financial law enforcement was scheduled to be held at the Hilton in New York on November 12th. The list of attendees included 1,500 or so of the country's leading lawyers who represent Wall Street, as well as some of the government's top cops from both the SEC and the Justice Department.

    Criminal justice, as it pertains to the Goldmans and Morgan Stanleys of the world, is not adversarial combat, with cops and crooks duking it out in interrogation rooms and courthouses. Instead, it's a cocktail party between friends and colleagues who from month to month and year to year are constantly switching sides and trading hats. At the Hilton conference, regulators and banker-lawyers rubbed elbows during a series of speeches and panel discussions, away from the rabble. "They were chummier in that environment," says Aguirre, who plunked down $2,200 to attend the conference.

    Aguirre saw a lot of familiar faces at the conference, for a simple reason: Many of the SEC regulators he had worked with during his failed attempt to investigate John Mack had made a million-dollar pass through the Revolving Door, going to work for the very same firms they used to police. Aguirre didn't see Paul Berger, an associate director of enforcement who had rebuffed his attempts to interview Mack — maybe because Berger was tied up at his lucrative new job at Debevoise & Plimpton, the same law firm that Morgan Stanley employed to intervene in the Mack case. But he did see Mary Jo White, the former U.S. attorney, who was still at Debevoise & Plimpton. He also saw Linda Thomsen, the former SEC director of enforcement who had been so helpful to White. Thomsen had gone on to represent Wall Street as a partner at the prestigious firm of Davis Polk & Wardwell.

    Two of the government's top cops were there as well: Preet Bharara, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, and Robert Khuzami, the SEC's current director of enforcement. Bharara had been recommended for his post by Chuck Schumer, Wall Street's favorite senator. And both he and Khuzami had served with Mary Jo White at the U.S. attorney's office, before Mary Jo went on to become a partner at Debevoise. What's more, when Khuzami had served as general counsel for Deutsche Bank, he had been hired by none other than Dick Walker, who had been enforcement director at the SEC when it slow-rolled the pivotal fraud case against Rite Aid.

    "It wasn't just one rotation of the revolving door," says Aguirre. "It just kept spinning. Every single person had rotated in and out of government and private service."

    The Revolving Door isn't just a footnote in financial law enforcement; over the past decade, more than a dozen high-ranking SEC officials have gone on to lucrative jobs at Wall Street banks or white-shoe law firms, where partnerships are worth millions. That makes SEC officials like Paul Berger and Linda Thomsen the equivalent of college basketball stars waiting for their first NBA contract. Are you really going to give up a shot at the Knicks or the Lakers just to find out whether a Wall Street big shot like John Mack was guilty of insider trading? "You take one of these jobs," says Turner, the former chief accountant for the SEC, "and you're fit for life."

    Fit — and happy. The banter between the speakers at the New York conference says everything you need to know about the level of chumminess and mutual admiration that exists between these supposed adversaries of the justice system. At one point in the conference, Mary Jo White introduced Bharara, her old pal from the U.S. attorney's office.

    "I want to first say how pleased I am to be here," Bharara responded. Then, addressing White, he added, "You've spawned all of us. It's almost 11 years ago to the day that Mary Jo White called me and asked me if I would become an assistant U.S. attorney. So thank you, Dr. Frankenstein."

    Next, addressing the crowd of high-priced lawyers from Wall Street, Bharara made an interesting joke. "I also want to take a moment to applaud the entire staff of the SEC for the really amazing things they have done over the past year," he said. "They've done a real service to the country, to the financial community, and not to mention a lot of your law practices."

    Haw! The line drew snickers from the conference of millionaire lawyers. But the real fireworks came when Khuzami, the SEC's director of enforcement, talked about a new "cooperation initiative" the agency had recently unveiled, in which executives are being offered incentives to report fraud they have witnessed or committed. From now on, Khuzami said, when corporate lawyers like the ones he was addressing want to know if their Wall Street clients are going to be charged by the Justice Department before deciding whether to come forward, all they have to do is ask the SEC.

    "We are going to try to get those individuals answers," Khuzami announced, as to "whether or not there is criminal interest in the case — so that defense counsel can have as much information as possible in deciding whether or not to choose to sign up their client."

    Aguirre, listening in the crowd, couldn't believe Khuzami's brazenness. The SEC's enforcement director was saying, in essence, that firms like Goldman Sachs and AIG and Lehman Brothers will henceforth be able to get the SEC to act as a middleman between them and the Justice Department, negotiating fines as a way out of jail time. Khuzami was basically outlining a four-step system for banks and their executives to buy their way out of prison. "First, the SEC and Wall Street player make an agreement on a fine that the player will pay to the SEC," Aguirre says. "Then the Justice Department commits itself to pass, so that the player knows he's 'safe.' Third, the player pays the SEC — and fourth, the player gets a pass from the Justice Department."

    When I ask a former federal prosecutor about the propriety of a sitting SEC director of enforcement talking out loud about helping corporate defendants "get answers" regarding the status of their criminal cases, he initially doesn't believe it. Then I send him a transcript of the comment. "I am very, very surprised by Khuzami's statement, which does seem to me to be contrary to past practice — and not a good thing," the former prosecutor says.

    Earlier this month, when Sen. Chuck Grassley found out about Khuzami's comments, he sent the SEC a letter noting that the agency's own enforcement manual not only prohibits such "answer getting," it even bars the SEC from giving defendants the Justice Department's phone number. "Should counsel or the individual ask which criminal authorities they should contact," the manual reads, "staff should decline to answer, unless authorized by the relevant criminal authorities." Both the SEC and the Justice Department deny there is anything improper in their new policy of cooperation. "We collaborate with the SEC, but they do not consult with us when they resolve their cases," Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer assured Congress in January. "They do that independently."

    Around the same time that Breuer was testifying, however, a story broke that prior to the pathetically small settlement of $75 million that the SEC had arranged with Citigroup, Khuzami had ordered his staff to pursue lighter charges against the megabank's executives. According to a letter that was sent to Sen. Grassley's office, Khuzami had a "secret conversation, without telling the staff, with a prominent defense lawyer who is a good friend" of his and "who was counsel for the company." The unsigned letter, which appears to have come from an SEC investigator on the case, prompted the inspector general to launch an investigation into the charge.

    All of this paints a disturbing picture of a closed and corrupt system, a timeless circle of friends that virtually guarantees a collegial approach to the policing of high finance. Even before the corruption starts, the state is crippled by economic reality: Since law enforcement on Wall Street requires serious intellectual firepower, the banks seize a huge advantage from the start by hiring away the top talent. Budde, the former Lehman lawyer, says it's well known that all the best legal minds go to the big corporate law firms, while the "bottom 20 percent go to the SEC." Which makes it tough for the agency to track devious legal machinations, like the scheme to hide $263 million of Dick Fuld's compensation.

    "It's such a mismatch, it's not even funny," Budde says.

    But even beyond that, the system is skewed by the irrepressible pull of riches and power. If talent rises in the SEC or the Justice Department, it sooner or later jumps ship for those fat NBA contracts. Or, conversely, graduates of the big corporate firms take sabbaticals from their rich lifestyles to slum it in government service for a year or two. Many of those appointments are inevitably hand-picked by lifelong stooges for Wall Street like Chuck Schumer, who has accepted $14.6 million in campaign contributions from Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other major players in the finance industry, along with their corporate lawyers.

    As for President Obama, what is there to be said? Goldman Sachs was his number-one private campaign contributor. He put a Citigroup executive in charge of his economic transition team, and he just named an executive of JP Morgan Chase, the proud owner of $7.7 million in Chase stock, his new chief of staff. "The betrayal that this represents by Obama to everybody is just — we're not ready to believe it," says Budde, a classmate of the president from their Columbia days. "He's really fucking us over like that? Really? That's really a JP Morgan guy, really?"

    Which is not to say that the Obama era has meant an end to law enforcement. On the contrary: In the past few years, the administration has allocated massive amounts of federal resources to catching wrongdoers — of a certain type. Last year, the government deported 393,000 people, at a cost of $5 billion. Since 2007, felony immigration prosecutions along the Mexican border have surged 77 percent; nonfelony prosecutions by 259 percent. In Ohio last month, a single mother was caught lying about where she lived to put her kids into a better school district; the judge in the case tried to sentence her to 10 days in jail for fraud, declaring that letting her go free would "demean the seriousness" of the offenses.

    So there you have it. Illegal immigrants: 393,000. Lying moms: one. Bankers: zero. The math makes sense only because the politics are so obvious. You want to win elections, you bang on the jailable class. You build prisons and fill them with people for selling dime bags and stealing CD players. But for stealing a billion dollars? For fraud that puts a million people into foreclosure? Pass. It's not a crime. Prison is too harsh. Get them to say they're sorry, and move on. Oh, wait — let's not even make them say they're sorry. That's too mean; let's just give them a piece of paper with a government stamp on it, officially clearing them of the need to apologize, and make them pay a fine instead. But don't make them pay it out of their own pockets, and don't ask them to give back the money they stole. In fact, let them profit from their collective crimes, to the tune of a record $135 billion in pay and benefits last year. What's next? Taxpayer-funded massages for every Wall Street executive guilty of fraud?

    The mental stumbling block, for most Americans, is that financial crimes don't feel real; you don't see the culprits waving guns in liquor stores or dragging coeds into bushes. But these frauds are worse than common robberies. They're crimes of intellectual choice, made by people who are already rich and who have every conceivable social advantage, acting on a simple, cynical calculation: Let's steal whatever we can, then dare the victims to find the juice to reclaim their money through a captive bureaucracy. They're attacking the very definition of property — which, after all, depends in part on a legal system that defends everyone's claims of ownership equally. When that definition becomes tenuous or conditional — when the state simply gives up on the notion of justice — this whole American Dream thing recedes even further from reality.
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  • 24 protesters killed in Libya

    I just wish this protests could happen without deaths.
    At least 24 protesters have been killed and hundreds wounded in Libya during anti-government demonstrations, demanding the ouster of Muammar Gaddafi, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says.


    Thousands of anti-government demonstrators have flooded the streets of Libya's eastern city of Benghazi, as the wave of protests spread across North Africa and the Middle East.

    Clashes have been reported between security forces and protesters. In the nearby eastern town of Benghazi al-Baida, people were bringing tents to camp out on the streets, Reuters reported on Friday.

    Some pro-government activists have also been reported on the streets shouting slogans in support of Gaddafi.

    In defiance to warnings by government forces against demonstrations, thousands of protesters took to streets of Benghazi and al-Baida on Thursday. At least six people were killed and more than forty were reported injured.

    The protesters, inspired by the recent revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt that unseated two long-time authoritarian rulers, have been demanding the ouster of the despotic rule of Gaddafi.

    HRW has issued a statement on the recent violence in Libya, saying "Libyans should not have to risk their lives to make a stand for their rights as human beings."

    Meanwhile, human rights group Amnesty International has also urged the Libyan government to stop its crackdown on peaceful demonstrations.

    Britain and the European Union have urged the Libyan government to avoid violence and demanded that it allow “free expression.”

    Gaddafi came to power 41 years ago in a military coup. Sources say he has held emergency meetings with the country's top officials over fears that the massive protests there might lead to his overthrow.

  • Source
  • Friday, February 18, 2011

    END OF HOMEOPATHIC REMEDIES IN BRITAIN

    I know there are some UK readers so how about protesting to help, remember homeopathy was around before medicine. I bet if the old Queen Mum was still around she would have a say!
    This is urgent. TOP PRIORITY!!! The deadline is the 18th of February. The practice of homeopathy by lay homeopaths is at stake, and if the MHRA changes the wording to the document mentioned below, we will not be allowed to practice any longer. This will take effect immediately. The new wording which is being suggested by sense against science, and is being considered by the MHRA will effectively put us in catch 22 so that we can no longer give out remedies - basically, it is about the difference between dispensing and prescribing. all homeopaths dispense remedies as a normal part of daily practice. the new rules will mean that it will be illegal to dispense without a license, and only a qualified doctor can make a prescription. without the ability to dispense, all we can do is sit and listen to people's problems, but can do nothing else about it. this will also have an affect on the homeopathic pharmacies, who will only be allowed to dispense licensed remedies (currently, only arnica and possibly one or two others are licensed) unless prescribed by a physician, and this means the potential loss of thousands of remedies. The key words in the version we want, which help keep homeopathy going are "...use within the homeopathic tradition". This avoids the need to prove the science behind prescribing of remedies and allows us to practise as normal.

    Could you please send this template to EVERYONE and inundate Ms Farmer with requests to keep the wording as shown below, so that homeopaths can continue to practise homeopathy legally.

    Message below from Jennifer Dooley, formerly of the H:MC21 campaign. Please personalise the template below and send a letter/email to Ms. Andrea Farmer at the MHRA. We only have a few days now to inundate them with our views. Many thanks.

    Please contact everyone on your database, if you are a homeopath, please send it in yourself and contact all your patients to do the same. We can counteract sense about science with numbers. We just proved we have greater numbers than they do, and that when we mobilise, we can beat them at their own game.last week, they started a poll against homeopathy in an irish newspaper, the journal and inundated it with votes against. It was 435 against 67 for. we started a campaign on facebook, and within 24 hours, we shifted the balance of power to what you see here in the link - 67% for 27% against. they gave up and went away with their tails between their legs, and we showed them that people don't want what they have to offer. Please help us to do this again. Many people don't realise this new risk we are facing. it only takes a minute to copy and paste the below template and email it. I'm afraid this is so urgent, that I will be spending the week spamming anyone and everyone to remind them this needs doing within the next few days. Apologies in advance if you have acted on this immediately, my intention for sending this every day until the deadline is to catch all the people who may have missed it or forgotten about it.



    Thank you to everyone in advance - I know if we all work together, we can beat this.

    Andrea Farmer can be contacted at: andrea.farmer@mhra.gsi.gov.uk

    or by post:

    Ms Andrea Farmer

    MHRA, Area 5M

    151 Buckingham Palace Road

    Victoria, London SW1W 9SZ

    Dear Ms Farmer,

    I am writing to you about the MHRA consultation document entitled; Review of Medicines Act 1968: informal consultation on issues relating to the PLR regime and homeopathy. As a member of the public who chooses to use homeopathy and benefits from its application/practicing homeopath (delete as applicable), I am deeply concerned by the current orchestrated campaign against homeopathy, which is led by a self-appointed pressure group, Sense About Science, and a number of bloggers.

    I consider it to be a fundamental right of any citizen living in a country which purports to be a democracy, to have ready access to the healthcare option of their choice. This includes homeopathy, which as you know is included in the original NHS charter.

    I find your statement below acceptable for the new registration labels, and can see no reason to change this statement:

    "A homeopathic medicinal product licensed only on the basis of safety, quality and use within the homeopathic tradition"

    China becomes world's second biggest economy

    China overtakes Japan to become world's second biggest economy
    CLIFFORD COONAN in Beijing

    Tue, Feb 15, 2011

    CHINA’S REMARKABLE rise over the past 30 years was underlined yesterday when fresh data from Tokyo confirmed what figures have been showing for several months, that China overtook Japan as the world’s second largest economy in 2010.

    The data marks a seismic shift in terms of economic muscle and political influence in the world’s fastest growing region.

    Japan was the world’s second-biggest economy after the United States for 42 years, and this development will bring pressure on prime minister Naoto Kan to halt further slippage.

    The figures are significant because, while China’s economy has on several occasions overtaken Japan’s based on quarterly data for the two countries, this is the first time that China has done so on a full-year basis – the yardstick for the global rankings.

    Gross domestic product (GDP) in Japan contracted 1.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of last year, although the full-year figure is a much healthier 3.9 per cent expansion.

    The fourth quarter figures were affected by the strength of the yen, which hit exports while car sales fell due to the end of subsidies and a new tobacco tax exerted pressure on cigarette sales.

    Despite falling behind China, the figures put Japan at the head of the major developed economies in terms of economic growth last year – Germany grew by 3.6 per cent, the United States by 2.9 per cent and Britain by 1.4 per cent.

    However, the outlook for Japan is less than optimistic as it struggles with debt and deflation.

    China, meanwhile, continues to accelerate with GDP rising sharply in the last quarter of 2010 to expand 10.3 per cent for the year, although the economy is struggling with inflationary pressures.

    There are worries that China will tighten monetary policy to control inflation, which may bring about a “hard landing” this year.

    If Beijing is forced to slow growth aggressively this could put the squeeze on domestic demand, something that is helping buoy the global economy, including Japan.

    However, most analysts are confident there will only be marginal tightening.

    Ultimately, Chinese expansion is good for the region, and along with the recovery in the US, is expected to help Japan’s economy recover in the first quarter.

    “We are pleased to see China’s economy rapidly developing,” Japan’s economy minister Kaoru Yosano said.

    “We are not engaging in economic activities to vie for ranking but to enhance people’s lives. From that point of view, we welcome China’s economic advancement as a neighbouring country,” Mr Yosano added.

    © 2011 The Irish Times

    Iran request passage through the Suez Canal

    Iranian warships sailing through Suez poses prickly decision for Egypt
    By Moni Basu, CNN
    (CNN) -- Iran has submitted an official request for two of its warships to sail through the Suez Canal, an Egyptian official told CNN Thursday, in a move that puts Egypt's new military regime in a prickly position with Israel.

    The post-Hosni Mubarak caretaker government must decide whether to give a green light to the Iranian warships, believed to be the first that would sail through the Suez since the Islamic republic's 1979 revolution.

    The Egyptian official told CNN that permission will likely be granted. But Egypt might find itself in muddy water over the Suez.

    The canal is an internal body of water and as such, Egypt has sovereignty over it. But Egypt also is bound by the 1976 Camp David Accords, which guaranteed the right of free passage by ships belonging to Israel and all other nations on the basis of the Constantinople Convention of 1888. Before that, Egypt did not allow Israeli ships to sail through the canal.

    Last week, Egypt's military government said it would honor all its international treaties. That would include Camp David.

    Now it finds itself in the position of allowing ships belonging to the sworn enemy of their peace treaty partner to sail through.

    "This is awkward -- at a minimum," said David Schenker, director of the Program on Arab Politics at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

    Schenker said the Iranian want a frigate -- the Alvand -- and a military supply ship -- the Kharg -- to cross into the Mediterranean. Both are armed with missiles, he said. Their passage would create more uncertainty in the region.

    "It's destabilizing. It raises tension, particularly in this time of transition in Egypt," Schenker said. "This is typical of Syrian-Iranian opportunism."

    Schenker predicted the Egyptians will let the Iranians through. Former President Hosni Mubarak might have done otherwise, given Hezbollah's calls a while back for his ouster. But "There is not a war between Iran and Egypt," he said.

    Some maritime analysts privately said Washington could pressure Egypt's new military caretaker government to say no to the Iran. Washington agreed to a $13 billion, 10-year military aid package to Egypt in 2007.

    Egypt's decision, the analysts, could serve as a barometer for the direction the military caretakers intend to take the Arab world's most populous nation.

    "It does raise an unwelcome political issue that has to be resolved," said Cmdr. James Kraska of the U.S. Naval War College in Rhode Island.

    Ahmed El-Manakhly, the transit director of the Suez Canal Authority, had said earlier Thursday that no official request from Iran had been received. Warships planning to cross the canal must ask permission of Egypt's defense and foreign ministries, El-Manakhly said.

    The canal authority's website states that ships intending to sail northbound must be in place by 6 a.m. No Iranian ships were there Thursday, but Iran's state-run Press TV reported the warships were making their way from the Red Sea into the Mediterranean.

    Iran said earlier that the flotilla was on a yearlong intelligence-gathering and training mission to prepare young cadets to defend Iran's cargo ships and oil tankers, according to the semi-official Fars News Agency.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said the two Iranian military vessels had been expected to sail Wednesday night through the Suez on their way to Syria.

    "This is a provocation that proves that the self-confidence and insolence of the Iranians is growing from day to day," he said Wednesday. "This happens after the Iranian president's visit to south Lebanon and his aggressive declarations there towards Israel."

    Liberman did not mention Egypt by name but said Israel's allies should pay close attention to the situation.

    "We expect the international community to act speedily with determination against the Iranian provocations, designed to deteriorate the situation in the area, and put the Iranians in their place," he said.

    The Israeli Defense Ministry said Israel was monitoring the movement of the Iranian ships and alerted its allies.

    At the U.S. State Department, spokesman P.J. Crowley said Wednesday the United States is also watching the situation.

    Reports of the Iranian passage also sent jitters through the global market and oil prices spiked for a time on Wednesday.

    The Suez Canal serves as a key waterway for international trade, allowing ships to navigate between Europe and Asia without having to go all the way around the vast African continent. Millions of barrels of oil move through the Suez every day on the way to both Europe and North America.

    CNN's Kevin Flower, Saad Abedine, Fionnuala Sweeney and Zain Verjee contributed to this report.
  • Source
  • Thursday, February 17, 2011

    Anonymous As You

    Join the ranks of the freedom fighters

    World News and Truth

    Please take the time to watch these videos, they talk of America but the problems are world wide. We need to take back our world

    Zbigniew Brzezinski is "Deeply Troubled"


    Who Destroyed America? - America's Top Sellouts


    How To Take Our Country Back (full video)

    GULF OIL SPILL STILL SPILLS

    This is the WORST CATASTROPHE IN HUMAN HISTORY BP should be SHUT DOWN!
    They hit a Strata vein that was so big they think 4 million gallons of oil is spilling out each day. No one has ever gone this deep before i don't think people really understand how big this is.
    Nowhere and i mean NO WHERE does any media article or video or media source state anywhere what the pressure is.
    It's that immense they can't tell how hard its spilling out.
    That's nothing, don't worry about the general oil damage from this spill there is something worst that is spilling out of that oil well that is going to blow your mind.
    Hydrogen Sulphur is being pushed out of the Gulf Oil Strata that was hit by BP.
    You know what these means? Highly volatile organic compounds being breathed in by human beings its IN THE AIR!!
    EPA knows about it. There not doing anything about it. That's why people are going to the hospitals and they don't know why there sick.
    Humans will be dropping dead in area's like Mississippi and where ever in proximity of the spill it will effect the USA for the next 10-15 years.
    Anyone near the gulf spill should MOVE wait until the prevailing winds come more people will get sick!
    This should cause mass panic.
    The gov is covering it up. No one is talking about this wake up!
    Benzine is coming out this well yes we have a very crazy situation here.
    The only solution is to diagional drill the well which will take around 3-4 months then they use a nuclear bomb to seal it.
    Apparently they can't stop it and the above is a maybe solution.
    The oil is the only think that is being talked about.
    Wake up people you are inhaling toxic fumes all for the sake to fill our cars to drive to work each day.
    Our kids continue to die in the middle east for the fight for oil. Oil prices will go through the roof and they expect it to go to $6-$8 a gallon.
    We have free energy it is available we should use it!
    Project Nsearch show videos of energy solutions we should embrace them and use them.
    Yes we can "wake up"
  • Source
  • US politicians introduce law to prosecute Wikileaks

    Boy oh Boy
    New legislation in the US Congress targets WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for espionage prosecution.

    Representative Peter King, a New York Republican, introduced the Securing Human Intelligence and Enforcing Lawful Dissemination, or SHIELD, Act on Tuesday. The bill would clarify US law by saying that it is an act of espionage to publish the protected names of American intelligence sources who collaborate with the military or intelligence agencies.

    King introduced similar legislation in 2010. Senators John Ensign, Joe Lieberman and Scott Brown, introduced similar legislation in the Senate last week.

    King has called on US Attorney General Eric Holder to prosecute Assange for espionage. The new bill would give the US Department of Justice greater authority for prosecuting intelligence leaks, King said in a news release.

    "Julian Assange and his associates who have operated and supported WikiLeaks not only damaged US national security with their releases of classified documents, but also placed at risk countless lives, including those of our nation’s intelligence sources around the world," King said in a statement.

    Some WikiLeaks associates are planning a new website called OpenLeaks, "dedicated to the same dangerous conduct," King added. "These organisations are a clear and present danger to the national security of the United States. Julian Assange and his compatriots are enemies of the US and should be prosecuted ..."

    Critics of the SHIELD Act have said it appears to be aimed at publishers, not leakers.

    http://www.cfoworld.co.uk/news/risk/3261263/us-politicians-introduce-law-to-prosecute-wikileaks/

    Wednesday, February 16, 2011

    Revolution Protests

    Protests: Feb 12: Algeria, Feb 14: Iran & Bahrain, Feb 17: Libya, Feb 18: Saudi Arabia, Feb 19: Algeria, Feb 20: Morocco, Feb 21: Gabon, Feb 23: Cameroon, Feb 25: Iraq, Mar 8: Kuwait Global WikiLeaks support rallies: Feb 12: London, Minsk, Valencia, Washington | Feb 13: Key Biscayne, Madrid | Feb 16: Houston | Feb 19: Boston, Charlotte, Minneapolis, Seattle, Oxford City |Mar 16: Sydney | Feb 19: Copenhagen | Feb 26: Santiago de Comspotela, Utrecht | Feb 26: Hartford | Feb 28: Sevilla | March 4: Athina | Mar 5: Newcastle Upon Tyne |April 7: New York City | May 14: Bristol

    Keeping an eye on the silent war
    Yemen
    Thousands of pro-democracy protesters have taken to the streets in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, to demand an end to the 32-year autocratic rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
    Hundreds of students poured out from Sanaa University for the fourth straight day and marched towards the presidential palace in the city center on Tuesday, AFP reported.
    "The people want to oust the regime," chanted the protesters.
    A heavy police force, along with about 2,000 pro-government supporters, are reported to be waiting for the protesters in the city center.
    Police have used tear gas and batons to disperse the pro-democracy demonstrators.
    Clashes between police and thousands of protesters broke out on Monday in the city of Taez, south of Sanaa, leaving eight people injured, witnesses said.
    At least 17 protesters sustained injuries and up to 165 others were arrested during clashes in Sanaa and Taez on Monday.
    Inspired by the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia, massive groups of Yemeni protesters took to the streets recently in Sanaa and other major cities, demanding the ouster of their president.

    Bahrain
    The United Nations human rights chief has slammed Bahrain's use of "disproportionate force" against peaceful demonstrators, urging an immediate end to any violent crackdown.
    "I urge the authorities to immediately cease the use of disproportionate force against peaceful protestors and to release all peaceful demonstrators who have been arrested," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.
    On Tuesday, large crowds of Bahraini protesters poured into the streets of the capital, demanding a regime change in the Persian Gulf kingdom.
    The call inspired by the recent revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia came after two protesters were killed in clashes with police.
    Fadel Salman Matrouk was gunned down in front of a hospital on Tuesday where mourners assembled for the funeral of the 20-year-old Ali Msheymah, who died of his wounds after police resorted to violence to disperse a protest in a village east of Manama the day before.
    Pillay noted that both victims were killed by members of Bahrain's security forces.
    “Too many peaceful protestors have recently been killed across the Middle East and North Africa,” the UN rights chief regretted.
    "Authorities everywhere must scrupulously avoid excessive use of force, which is strictly forbidden in international law," said Pillay, calling for “prompt, impartial and transparent investigations where there have been breaches of this obligation."
  • Source
  • Reports say Mubarak's health gravely deteriorated

    Ousted Egyptian president is reported to be in serious condition and suffering from depression, some reports indicate he fell into a coma on Saturday.
    By Avi Issacharoff
    *

    * Published 10:18 15.02.11
    * Latest update 10:18 15.02.11

    Reports say Mubarak's health gravely deteriorated since stepping down
    Ousted Egyptian president is reported to be in serious condition and suffering from depression, some reports indicate he fell into a coma on Saturday.
    By Avi Issacharoff Tags: Israel news Egypt Hosni Mubarak

    According to recent reports in the Arab media, ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's medical condition has seriously deteriorated and the 82-year-old has been rumored to be in a coma or even close to death.

    On Sunday, the Egyptian daily al-Masry al-Youm reported that Mubarak fell into a coma on Saturday, following his final speech in which he handed over his authority to former Vice-President Omar Suleiman.
    On Tuesday morning, the London-based pan Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat reported that Mubarak is in very grave medical condition.

    A senior Egyptian official close to the ruling military council told the newspaper that he will "not be surprised if an announcement of Mubarak's death will come soon." According to the official, Mubarak is refusing to receive the appropriate medical treatment and also decided against travelling abroad for treatments.

    Two days ago, the Egyptian ambassador to the United States Sameh Shoukry said that as far as he knows, Mubarak's condition is serious. Even though Shoukry did not specify details, it is the first official report from an Egyptian official regarding Mubarak's condition.

    Other newspapers in Egypt such as Akhbar Al-Youm and A-Shuruk also reported that the ousted president's condition is deteriorating, saying that he refuses to take medicine and is suffering from depression.

    Mubarak, who has pancreatic cancer, is currently staying in his Sharm el-Sheikh estate after being ousted from power in the wake of Egypt uprisings.
  • Source
  • Tuesday, February 15, 2011

    OperationBuckstorm

    No reason why this operation should be US dollar only - come on people of the world

    Inspired by #OperationPaperstorm.

    How to make an AnonDollar:
    1. Edit George’s face on a dollar bill by adding a mask. Clear sticker printer paper works extra awesome for this, or printerpaper/glue. Or you can just draw black bars on George or give him another new face.

    2. Write your favorite Anonymous website
    (ie anonnews.org, anonops.ru, anonleaks.ru operationbuckstorm.blogspot.com) or slogan on the bill margins. Write tiny, and on the borders of the bill. This leaves them intact as legal tender and is very important.

    3. You now have an AnonDollar!

    4. Spend/tip with/donate/leave on the street!
    Protips: wear gloves, only spend one at a time, do not
    damage currency in any way, if asked you either found
    it on the street or got it as change (where was that?),
    ALL MONEY IN ALL COUNTRIES CAN PARTICIPATE.

    We are Anonymous.
    Expect us.

    BP Oil is still in the GOM

    Have a look at this

    WAKE UP AMERICA YOU ARE BEING LIED TO!
    I took a walk along the beach Feb. 09, 2011. I had seen the many ads placed on your TV and news outlets all over the world paid for by BP proclaiming“The oil is gone and our beaches are clean”. The one that really gets me is how safe the seafood can be when this is what our beaches look like.

    I have visited the locations seen here many times during the BP crisis and seen it in various conditions. This last trip was as bad as it was in July during the height of the disaster at sea. The real disaster has just begun I am afraid.

    It is my sincere belief that this is only the beginning of years of BP dispersed oil episodes on our beaches and in the food we eat.
    It isn't hard to walk along the beach and see that things are not well. Despite constant cleaning, the beaches are still covered with dispersed oil balls 10 months later.

  • Source