Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Corruption. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Corruption. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Cuban Capitalism On Track To Protect Next Elite

     Fabulous, headlined, Former Cuban officials get prison terms for corruption, By Marc Frank, Reuters reports three former vice ministers in Cuba’s Basic Industry Ministry plus nine nickel industry executives have been sentenced to long prison terms for corruption, Cuban state media said on Tuesday. The officials and a former head of negotiations for Cubaniquel, the state-run nickel company, received sentences ranging from six to 12 years for “crimes associated with corruption during the negotiation, contracting and execution of the expansion of the Pedro Soto Alba (nickel) plant,” in eastern Cuba, according to the Communist Party newspaper Granma. The plant, the largest of three nickel processing plants in Holguin province, is a joint venture between the government and Canadian mining company, Sherritt International Corporation.
     There was no mention of Sherritt in the report and company officials were not immediately available for comment. How convenient. Cubaniquel and Sherritt are also partners in a Canadian refinery in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, where output from the Pedro Soto Alba plant is shipped for processing, then marketed by another joint venture between them.
     Meaning another set of books for the same business. Once again, on the surface no matter how corrupt the convicted are, they were trained to move finance around and, as happens in capitalist countries, could it possibly be someone with more Cuban financial pull wants their money too?
     The case, undertaken by President Raul Castro since he took over for his ailing brother Fidel in 2008, is one of a number of high level corruption probes, covering just about every sector of the Cuban economy. From street vendors to the already established elite, the capitalism that never was is being shaken and stirred for what benefit? Is the money that these newly minted convicts possibly stole going to filtrate through the economy now? Probably not. Capitalist Cuba always found a way to separate the elite from the population and will continue to play capitalists defending socialism, just as the world’s capitalists condemn that institution until as in the American Medical Insurance System, all the hands in the till have the doctors’ money.
     Several foreign companies doing business in Cuba have been shut down and their top executives detained or jailed in the campaign against corruption, which is so extensive on the island that Castro has termed it a threat to the socialist system. Entrepreneurial initiative will be judged corrupt until whose friends are in control? Well, at least Cuban power is learning the tricks of the game Cubans tried learning on their own without Big Brother’s help. And without the two party system in control bickering with each other enough that the general population can act on its’ own – when the people can get away with it.
     The Cuban nickel industry has been the subject of a number of investigations over the last few years as output declined, Reuters reports without diagnosing scapegoatism.
     Two years ago police dragged several officials involved in the scandal away in handcuffs from their offices in Havana, causing consternation among employees. Soon afterwards, police began arresting nickel executives in Moa, Holguin, heart of the nickel industry.
     The three vice ministers included Alfredo Rafael Zayas Lopez, who served in that capacity from 2004 to 2007, Ricardo Gonzalez Sanchez (2001-2004) and Antonio Orizon de Los Reyes Bermudez (1980-1999). Respectively, they received sentences of 12 years, 10 years and eight years. And judging by the years they reigned, whatever was going on was business as usual they now have to pay for while the judicial system no doubt has a few friends who could, maybe, quite possibly, start cleaning up from the scraps. What had always slipped through the cracks that government enforcement wants filled with – what? The next generation working at marginal rates decided by the government. Ha! No, the next guys will share and share alike for a time under sanctioned practices.
     Great Raul. Fine job once you get your commercialized prison system running well too, because no doubt that’s going to cost a bundle if you make the mistake of caring for the prisoners properly. But commercialized, the Americans might grow to love you as your rule becomes more like ours where the weak know their place. It’s all capitalism, Raul. All socialism. You know what your problem is? If the lawyers are paid well enough for all this law enforcement, you’re doomed. And the only thing that will work is the legal facade that was once called socialism, that face it, wasn’t really tried if doctors made close to nothing and you and your brother sat around smoking fat cigars which is how your legacy now reads no matter how much capitalist corruption is uncovered. Go get em Raul. Make the United States pay for defending mobsters’ right to exploit you. Teach the world what socialism never really was, capitalism as ran by two brothers sitting around comfortably smoking fat, smelly cigars. I’m being redundant? So are you.
     Because the Cubaniquel executive, Cristobal Saavedra Montero, was sentenced to six years in prison, when if the enterprise is under state direction why wasn’t it fixed before having to go through this. You’re not even running for office, Raul, and making scapegoats of an entire nation all over again. As the eight other executives received sentences of up to eight years, Granma said.
     That’ll teach them. What?
8/21/2012
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Cuban Capitalism On Track To Protect Next Elite
8/21/2012 concluded: Because the Cubaniquel executive, Cristobal Saavedra Montero, was sentenced to six years in prison, when if the enterprise is under state direction why wasn’t it fixed before having to go through this. You’re not even running for office, Raul, and making scapegoats of an entire nation all over again. As the eight other executives received sentences of up to eight years, Granma said.
     That’ll teach them. What?
Sept. 26 - Dec. 3, 2019
Truth-like
     It's somewhat surmise-able that however much system Cuba has, the leveraged decisions of personal relationships have control. The same difference between countries for the people and the autocratic ends that compromise the ideal of a thriving independence. How Cuba faces this, as usual, may, very well, depend upon whether the United States of America can. 
     Presently, racked by confusion, America's constant is its being overwhelmed by the political playbooks, from which analysis is chain-riddenly replicated, employing the tactic of exploiting facilitated ignorance, perhaps? Such that the claim to not play is the worst usage of all. 
     Imagine all the uses for which Public Relations is known, as vapid wastes of intellectual skill? When having a strategy is 99.9% of answering accusations. When admissions of truth are just parceled out numbed experiences. The best social manipulation money can buy can't possibly be the best of all possible world's reasoning? 

     Because! What if controlled public dialogue's only how discontent's steered away from violence? Especially when legitimate protest shouldn't resort to that particular brand of contesting the state. Usually provocateurs of all stripes are the instigators when violence ensues. Volunteering martyrdom is an idea, when the actual fact's usually not compulsion but compelled
     Imagery. Yes, so much about the world to see is real. While humanity's found space within all our minds to have shared existences loosely defined as culture. And the pretending to be on top of all our expanding heritages is what haunts all our lives.

VOYAGE
     Capitalism's nothing without the oh so many aspects of life that are done for each other for free. Right down to accomplishments by those clearing millions an hour, minute, or day even. Perhaps seconds. Nor is capitalism not socialism's driving force. Because Economics is a much broader mechanism than politically portrayed. No one admitting it's convenience of thought that circumvents everyone from imagining anything's possible. There's no traction. Just the images of maintaining positions. When neither's absolutely true, everything's fabricated and hardly the method by which humanity faces the future by facing the past. 
     Juggernaut of rhetoric, no? 
Getting Away With It
     Despotic dalliances. Taunting denials. Theatrical political performance smudged across the, ongoing, current, political plain. Or, perhaps, as accurate to suggest, political plane. Because jet-set thought's substitution for substantiation on the playing fields of divided spoils seems just a foregone conclusion. The admit nothing Roy Cohn Code. Ba dump bump. 
     Heard a commentator, on that radical radio station, WBAI, (The Golden Age of Radio), mention the Kurds' territories had no significance to American interests when the president has no (at the moment) hotels in the vicinity.  If it looks like a skunk and any analogy is past use now. The public over-burdened by the political publicists pizzazz. 
     Stalin had Trotsky labelled "The Opportunist." I think however much either were, current contemporary history finds them both outdone. Unless, of course, as the plan seems to control historical thoughts imbalanced balance is the best we're going to get. I am not amused.  
Myopic world view for everybody. Good grief 
to conclude
Enjoyment of Spectacle  
     Spectacle more important than detail is what we're reduced to, or have been, for a very, very very, very long period of time.  
     So while riding over the bridge, to work, some minutes before the, above, picture, of the Bernie Sanders rally in Queensbridge Park, was taken by The New York Times photographer, I passed two huge humongous, exuberantly waved, flags from the lower level pedestrian/bike lane, in an immersively involved delirium. The radiating smile of the blonde flag holder bowled me over. Hence the title's lament that America's succumbed to spellbinding catastrophe. (Yeo, hope that's not how this ends.) Oh yeah, so you have to wonder what happened for the flag waivers to not appear in this picture. Strong arm convincing? Isn't there some type of free speech that's in violation? The sacredness of one's own martyrdom, perhaps? 
Still most upset about having to take a side. 

Thursday, June 27, 2013

COMRADE PUTIN CONQUERS CRIME?

How does anyone of President Putin's vision even have time to tackle something as profoundly elaborate and significant as crime? Because in The New York Times, Tuesday, June 25th's Putin Rules Out Extradition for Snowden in Russia Airport, it sounded a bit as if he's been in the gym. In addition, four days earlier, last Friday, June 21st, The New York Times ran Putin Puts Pensions at Risk in $43 Billion Bid to Jolt Economy, which stunned me with what could have just been lines of parody. Excepwhat if President Putin's announcement is true in scope, this plan could begin changing the criminal enterprise system all over the world? 

Quoting The New York TimesPresident Vladimir V. Putin announced a risky stimulus program, along with an amnesty plan for white-collar criminals intended to improve investor confidence.

Wow! Amnesty, technically for arbitrarily supervised white collar crime is absolutely fabulous. Then Russia's justice system may seem less the result of darts thrown at targets with no civil rights? 

Russia's Government can't possibly expect to compensate all unjust fraud so the plan could just devolve into legalese that The State is kind to let anyone free. Victims may remain desirable statistics by reviving their business careers. While some entrepreneurs will disappear sloppily, unable to regain traction over tasks they'd conquered. Otherwise why bother confiscating their property at all? 

Why not wipe the full slate clean and forgive judges leveraged by  ruthless competition? Think about how deep forgiveness must reach for everyone to forgive? About how if this is just to calm investors, innocent Russians are once again betrayed by the absurdness of purity being a reason not to try. Not being a lawyer, I myself can only advise something unrealistically foolish. Buy out the corruption, President Putin. Early retirement for everybody. Because no court system in the world is large enough to alter the financing of corruption all by themselves.  
As President Putin can capably guess. Corruption won't be faced from behind a podium in front of cameras. Facing corruption is perhaps unrealistic, but still not a reason for half-hard-hearted zealous enforcement of law that should be altering crime's incentives rather than just perfecting the feeding at the trough.

So? Who will Boris Titov's miracle lawyer be, whose staff starts the untangling of the Great Stalinist Scapegoat, OpportunismOr is this breakthrough a Patronage Feast too?
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Supreme Court Strikes Down Key Part of Voting Rights Act in The New York Times by , June 25, 2013

Three Cheers For Summer Vacation

This decision could be thought of as nitpicking minutiae and hardly a political score. Because just because country clubs include all the right people now, doesn't mean the complete culture is included. So, no matter how cold this decision could be made to seem towards racial equality now, I hope the whole country takes the Supreme Court's challenge to prove them right when they're not completely wrong.
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Two 2012 Soapbox Views on George Zimmerman's Sanford, Fl. Trial 
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Congratulations 2013 Inductee, Tim Raines
My First Interview, 1976

Sunday, March 10, 2013

President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela Succumbed to Cancer, March 5, 2013




Leaving behind this pressing question whether his proudly worn label, "Socialist President," died with Hugo Chávez?


Leaders don't chain themselves to defending socialism. Hardly a peep from Scandinavian minds on cash flow, and there's a sort of general acceptance today that behind the smoke and mirrors, capitalism funds socialism. And, loosely put, socialism is just too expensive when capitalism can't function. 

Its hardly still worth it for Cuba to carry the laurel. Nor is parading Kim Jong-un's Socialist credentials necessary if North Korea's negative legacy remains an aristocracy shielding both their country and themselves from facing straight facts about commercial interaction?

Zapiro
Gleaned from an expert PBS News Hour summarization, and William Neuman's send off, Chávez Transformed the Way Venezuelans View Themselves, in The New York Times - is Chávez's sincere and earnest theatrics achieved less actual socialism than capitalist America. Cha-ching.
President Hugo ChavezNoam Chomsky
Because, as per usual, Venezuela's economic system is crippled from corruption, that could be a testament to Chávez's attempt to grow a corporate state socialism. But, or more accurately, naturally, especially in socialist states, corruption is capitalism and generally economic advantage is as corrupt as it has to be. 
America's own lunging attempt around profit's temptation vaulted Congress' solid six figure salaries that will still never compete with the lucrative free marketplace. 

Yet Congress' Health Care Plan, "the American people" can't afford for themselves, is so expensive that could be the worst joke ever. No?

Well, President Chávez had the theatricality down too. Taking a public stand and being dramatic about it. Even cool announcing the closing of two "bourgeois" golf country clubs. Using symbolism as a toy to bounce around for media consumption. Is there evidence kids are programmed against golf? Programas is a feature on the current Caracas Country Club website so trickle up, at least on the electronic surface, must not be totally dried up?

Chávez could no more eliminate corruption than capitalists can. So he beat his chest standing for fair play as Americans have from different frames of mind. We giggle when a Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerburg achieves infamous wealth while mere kids. And snicker Hugo Chávez built his political revolution at the same time. According to Wikipedia, he saw the poor weren't getting a fairer share of the country's worth and how really tough that is to get right.

Cubans have been sent to the United States for more advanced cancer treatment. Bet even Cuban doctors admit they're not state-of-the-art. What if Señor Chávez could have bought more time for his life's revolution in the United States? 

Get an ally, stat, and keep Machiavelli on hold. 
Maybe with time for reflection on the exploiter's soil, he might have conceded how little difference there is between successful socialism and capitalism. Because when either works correctly they're the same difference. You have to, or at least should, love Fire Departments as Social Enterprise. 


Already Nostalgic for an Era's 
Imagery?
Possibly Chávez on reflection would have used his personal charismatic magnetism to simmer down an already worn out economics debate?

Socialism may not be ripe for nation-states to bet their farms. But there's certainly room for more celebrity stars despite, or in spite of our historical scars.
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July 28, 1954 - March 5, 2013

in VICE Magazine by Greg Palast
HUGO CHAVEZ AND THE GLOBAL POVERTY CONSPIRACY
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The Bright and Sunshiny Reform Agenda?

State Capitalism Is Opportunity, Duh? 
Was also featured on a related note in Sunday, March 3rd's REUTERS. In Luxury villas, designer labels: jailed Mexico union boss' U.S. oasis, by Marty Graham, there's an overview deconstruction of the alleged corruption of Mexico's teachers' union boss, Elba Esther Gordillo, whose fantasy defense probably includes how expensive it is competing at every political level, and most notably, national ones.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

What's Old Is New Again, When It Comes To News, A/K/A History Repeats Itself

Ruth Fremson for The New York Times
The News Of The Day, is, was of course that hurricane. I personally don't care if anything is evidence of global warming. Not even this aberration that never happened before in the northeastern United States. 
Michael Kirby Smith for The New York Times
There's no excuse weather evolved this far, regardless. It is not a centuries in the future issue, but happening now for the last two centuries. I've watched hurricanes my whole life and see this one wasn't different. Hurricanes go where led by the environment. The lure was the, usually much colder, higher ocean temperatures off the coast of the United States. Doing what no hurricane has ever done before is what we should have stopped. 
 Michael Appleton for The New York Times
Now what? Just keep calling it a global warming industry competing with hurricane clean-up for how many billions can be spent? Circulate more money for everyone, I don't care. But. The fault is not that the electric automobile didn't come sooner, but our own. 
Washington, AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski
From the New York Observer and DEMOTIX's Julie Reinhart's coverageRT, Russia Today reported a less than complete government response inNowhere to run: Homeless offered little aid in wake of Hurricane Sandy. But concludes, charities attempt to take up the slack. Or vice-versa? Give, if you can, we're all in the path of the hur-ri-can(e), vagrancy, when opportunity reaches an end, my friend, whether we knew better, or not.


Ramin Talaie/European Pressphoto Agency

On a lighter matter in The Times, producers and Julie Taymor are still in court banging out how to divvy up Spiderman: The Musical money. While an editorial goes for the heart of how money is made in Greece Arrests the Messenger, discussing how - Mainstream Greek politicians have been shamefully quick to strip basic social services from the country’s poorest and most vulnerable citizens. And shamefully slow at probing possible tax evasion by the rich and well connected.

Suddenly Greece is home to corruption? Hardly. What's obvious is corruption is uncovered and everyone knows only fools don't take the money. But the editorial is correct that the journalist, as messenger, shouldn't be scapegoated for bureaucrats getting caught. Power Corrupts Absolutely.

But corruption isn't funny and my drawing similar comparisons between legality and criminality, isn't realistic? But the idea the world is as full of criminals as it is criminal behavior is a farce. The Fine Society a charade. The rule of law is a noble pursuit when the intent is not just punishment but good law that's not hard to follow. Difficult to enforce speed limits rise. People can drink themselves blind and delirious and only suffer repercussions as a result of a stupid act they were too impaired to think through properly. Both situations are ruled by realistic enforcement that does not apply across the board to societies determining scapegoats are to blame things aren't perfect. We're not, therefore some level of tolerance needs to be found not only for corrupt politicians but the very bottom dwellers feeding off addicts' addictions to deteriorating drugs.  
So what does the drug nightmare possibly have to do with how offensive corrupt politicians are? Because the comparison demonstrates our shallowness. Corrupt politicians dress nice. The finest champagnes don't leave needle marks up their arms that lead to the devastated feeling there's not much to live for, while politicians can always strike a deal. Which we can accept as a picture perfect image deserving tolerance. But for others, tough love is all we afford. Being an addict sucks, but they're still human beings. The drug war persists because it's financially successful for the corrupt and self-righteous in league pursing their own versions of the good life for themselves. Drug-free is the absence of alcohol so it's as if toys are made of people's heads to keep the mind game afloat. 
angola3news.blogspot.com

Clean up the streets. Keep drugs out of kids' hands.  Follow the rhetoric and don't just let liberty apply to those in a financial position to fight state control of their lives. Seriously, our courts are full of the un-impowered filling the system referable to as, the criminal industrial warehouse complex. It's not drugs that put most people in prison, it's the power that was never theirs as some can afford a better equality and others not enough.

Oh well, sidetracked by an issue that's not in the news today. Nor is it a hurricane's fault the criminal enterprise system isn't an issue every day.

But the best advertisement I saw, ever so briefly, in Reuters, today was this ad on a conference's appeal to end repeating OUR worst history.