Blog

Demand a Say, A Big Say

July 15, 2004
Posted in

The widely televised indictment and arraignment of the hand-cuffed Enron CEO, Ken Lay — one of George W. Bush’s closest friends and funders — should not lull anyone into thinking that this is anything but a limited move against corporate crime in an ocean of still-at-large corporate criminals.With trillions of dollars stolen or drained away…

Tort Deform Bill

July 10, 2004
Posted in

Another tort deform bill — just one in a seemingly endless string of attacks on our civil justice system — has failed in the Senate this week. American consumers should be thankful that the so-called “Class Action Fairness Act” was mired in election year posturing by both parties. Some — mainly Republicans and corporations —…

Corporate UNPATRIOTIC BEHAVIOR

July 2, 2004
Posted in

Corporate UNPATRIOTIC BEHAVIOR.July 2, 2004 During this 4th of July weekend, why not assess the behavior of giant U.S. chartered multinational corporations by the yardsticks of patriotism to the supportive country of their birth? These standards for the corporate entities themselves are important for the moral, legal and political persuasion necessary to improve their patriotic…

Iraq Labor

June 25, 2004
Posted in

What is going on among Iraq’s working classes? We do not hear about those workers except for the high number of unemployed. Thanks to the Labor Party Press (www.thelaborparty.org) we learn that George W. Bush’s top representative in Iraq, Paul Bremer, continues to enforce Saddam Hussein’s decree banning unions using military force where necessary. Bush’s…

“Meet the ‘China Price'”

June 20, 2004
Posted in

“Meet the “China Price” or else.” Remember that phrase — “meet the China Price,” because you’ll be reading much more about what it means to this country, its working families and its communities. U.S. chartered corporations are telling their suppliers that if they do not meet the “China Price”, they can either lose business, cut…

Victor Reuther

June 11, 2004
Posted in

Two very different men in their early Nineties passed away last week. Both were active in their unions— Ronald Reagan in the Actorís Guild, Victor Reuther in the United Auto Workers (UAW). Then, needless to say, their paths diverged markedly. Ronald Reagan became the conservative politician with the dulcet speaking voice. Victor Reuther became the…

Resolution 202

June 4, 2004
Posted in

Unless cooler heads prevail, the American Medical Association is teetering on the brink of public ridicule, mockery and indignation. Resolution 202 has been introduced by Dr. J. Chris Hawk III from South Carolina to the AMA’s Committee B. It is aimed directly at trial lawyers as patients. This resolution sets a new record for loss…

The Laboratories of Democracy

May 28, 2004
Posted in

Listening to what passes these days for debates in the U. S House of Representatives and the U. S. Senate, it is easy to get the impression there are no new ideas left-certainly no new progressive ideas or suggestions that there might be solutions to the nation’s multitude of social and economic problems. At best,…

Corporatizing the Pentagon

May 7, 2004
Posted in

Remarkable what digital cameras can do. The photos of low level prisoners being abused and humiliated by both U.S. troops and private contractors in an Iraqi prison are the beginning of what Senator Lindsay Graham (R-SC) called “the worst is yet to come.” The Senator warned Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, at a Senate Hearing on…

Retrospective Commissions

May 2, 2004
Posted in

Big time middlemen merchants have a hard time avoiding conflicts of interests where they say they represent your interests as buyers while they are receiving kickbacks or, more politely, “retrospective commissions” from the sellers. Such situations undermine making deals on your behalf that are on the merits of the product or service instead of on…