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

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Are The Big Issues Only Faced When The Repercussions Are?


Mr. Brooks
Perusing yesterday, Why Hagel Was Picked, by David Brooks in The New York Times, seemed a reasonable source to have answer that question. Why was Chuck Hagel picked for The Pentagon position in the Cabinet? I'd avoided the manufacturing of the nomination into a news event, even though, of course, weekends are always cute watching South Carolina's Senator Lindsay Graham repeat political wisdom. But other than that, was there a point to knowing that this particular political round required a Chuck Hagel-ian nuanced extra-long, long-weekend of headlines?

So Mr. Brooks' essay was a pleasant, so to speak, surprise, to the point, summation. Beyond last week's soap opera headlines that the would-be nominee said something once, so it wasn't certain whether he'd be ruthless enough defending our friends. Seems there's a political itch to push us toward more cliffs to bring us back from the brink of, huh? Still, Mr. Brooks' straight-forward headline inclined me to indeed wonder, Why Hagel Was Picked.

capitolcommentary.com
Mr. Brooks begins - Americans don’t particularly like government, but they do want government to subsidize their health care. They believe that health care spending improves their lives more than any other public good. In a Quinnipiac poll, typical of many others, Americans opposed any cuts to Medicare by a margin of 70 percent to 25 percent.
politicallyillustrated.com


Which has what to do,  at least, surface-wise,  with why Chuck Hagel will eventually be the Cabinet member in charge of The Pentagon? Fine though, Mr. Brooks has our attention on the truth that, especially when political, tends to be roundabout. 

As Mr. Brooks points out, popular or not, Medicare will cause us to go broke. “No conceivable tax increases that can keep up with this spending rise,” according to Mr. Brooks who, while not discreet, nudges his reading public as if we're being prepared in a private underground parking garage to hear the secret name Chuck Hagel is the financial key to saving his country's money. 

zazzle.com
Mr. Brooks implies let's get on with it. 

Yet there's this awkward silly question to wonder. If a lot of public money is spent, where does it go? Money just doesn't disappear. Solving circulation, without sending everyone to jail, will fix the financial crisis.

Then Mr. Brooks makes his incision, bringing the dual topics of Chuck Hagel and Medicare  together, writing - Oswald Spengler was certainly correct when he told European leaders that they could either be global military powers or pay for their welfare states, but they couldn’t do both.

cartoosh.blogspot.com
Mr. Brooks explains how today Europe can't afford troop movements and we'll have to bite that bullet too and do the same thing. 

Find out how to be patriotic without being the most capable military power on the planet? Take our thumbs off the scales when measuring how many bombs are enough? Because really, we could never spend enough to keep everyone safe. 

So you have to love that snide conservativ-istic grin of Mr. Brooks beaming on national TV? Shown in print in The Times  sticking it to both parties' political game

Mr. Brooks - As the federal government becomes a health care state, there will have to be a generation of defense cuts that overwhelm anything in recent history. 

Bold, to the point. No one can say criminal terrorists will be trusted. But rational living must be defended from humans' tendency to be cruel. It's hardly worth noting as there's so much in the world worth fighting for, but violence is when things have gone too far. No? 
Another serious military issue requiring tranquilization for everyone's benefit. RT reports Flying towards war? Drone race signals escalation in Sino-Japanese tensions. An historical feud of grand proportions. How will the two countries ever work it out? 


RT prints - The development and acquisition of drones has become crucial to the ever-expanding arms race between China and Japan, as tensions over disputed islands in the East China Sea could soon reach boiling point. 

Sounds as if negotiation is a really difficult science.


Okay, still just about territory. For people or ruling elites?
militaryphotos.net
PEACE

Friday, August 18, 2023

Why Black Folks' Reparations Work For Everyone

Hello Great British Commonwealth? 

👆 White Folks Story 👆👆

2020 Essay Witch Hunts' Relevance

    Colonialism ruled the world and partitioned capital to work from the top efficiently enough, that the top winning the game exposes the underlying deceits involved in capitalism being used against ourselves. 

    In the socio-political-economic game of balls and strikes? A strike was thrown after the Civil War, and r(R)acists took the ball and continue portraying it okay the ordinary public's still left carting a deflated one. Congressional Health Care Plan For Everyone and why Congress was established TO REPRESENT PEOPLE. Not pretend to represent. Flaunting bs across your chests. Perpetually for generations
    Speaker, Absolute Failure, of the House of Representatives of the United States of America - 6/6/2023 "McCarthy Has a Superpower" by Ross Douthat for The New York Times
June 15, 2023 David Brooks, The New York Times Columnist, Still Pretends Conservative Values Are Life Preservers 
6/??/2023 My Republican Opposition's Presidential Candidates' Instability - Chris Christie Writ Large Small 

The African Americans - Many Rivers to Cross - with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. 


We’ve all heard the story of the “40 acres and a mule” promise to former slaves. It’s a staple of black history lessons, and it’s the name of Spike Lee’s film company. The promise was the first systematic attempt to provide a form of reparations to newly freed slaves, and it was astonishingly radical for its time, proto-socialist in its implications. In fact, such a policy would be radical in any country today: the federal government’s massive confiscation of private property — some 400,000 acres — formerly owned by Confederate land owners, and its methodical redistribution to former black slaves. What most of us haven’t heard is that the idea really was generated by black leaders themselves. 

It is difficult to stress adequately how revolutionary this idea was: As the historian Eric Foner puts it in his book, Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877, “Here in coastal South Carolina and Georgia, the prospect beckoned of a transformation of Southern society more radical even than the end of slavery.” Try to imagine how profoundly different the history of race relations in the United States would have been had this policy been implemented and enforced; had the former slaves actually had access to the ownership of land, of property; if they had had a chance to be self-sufficient economically, to build, accrue and pass on wealth. After all, one of the principal promises of America was the possibility of average people being able to own land, and all that such ownership entailed. As we know all too well, this promise was not to be realized for the overwhelming majority of the nation’s former slaves, who numbered about 3.9 million.

What Exactly Was Promised?

General William Tecumseh Sherman in May 1865. Portrait by Mathew Brady.

General William Tecumseh Sherman in May 1865. Portrait by Mathew Brady.

We have been taught in school that the source of the policy of “40 acres and a mule” was Union General William T. Sherman’s Special Field Order No. 15, issued on Jan. 16, 1865. (That account is half-right: Sherman prescribed the 40 acres in that Order, but not the mule. The mule would come later.) But what many accounts leave out is that this idea for massive land redistribution actually was the result of  a discussion that Sherman and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton held four days before Sherman issued the Order, with 20 leaders of the black community in Savannah, Ga., where Sherman was headquartered following his famous March to the Sea. The meeting was unprecedented in American history.

Today, we commonly use the phrase “40 acres and a mule,” but few of us have read the Order itself. Three of its parts are relevant here. Section one bears repeating in full: “The islands from Charleston, south, the abandoned rice fields along the rivers for thirty miles back from the sea, and the country bordering the St. Johns river, Florida, are reserved and set apart for the settlement of the negroes [sic] now made free by the acts of war and the proclamation of the President of the United States.”

Section two specifies that these new communities, moreover, would be governed entirely by black people themselves: ” … on the islands, and in the settlements hereafter to be established, no white person whatever, unless military officers and soldiers detailed for duty, will be permitted to reside; and the sole and exclusive management of affairs will be left to the freed people themselves … By the laws of war, and orders of the President of the United States, the negro [sic] is free and must be dealt with as such.”

Finally, section three specifies the allocation of land: ” … each family shall have a plot of not more than (40) acres of tillable ground, and when it borders on some water channel, with not more than 800 feet water front, in the possession of which land the military authorities will afford them protection, until such time as they can protect themselves, or until Congress shall regulate their title.”

With this Order, 400,000 acres of land — “a strip of coastline stretching from Charleston, South Carolina, to the St. John’s River in Florida, including Georgia’s Sea Islands and the mainland thirty miles in from the coast,” as Barton Myers reports — would be redistributed to the newly freed slaves. The extent of this Order and its larger implications are mind-boggling, actually.

Who Came Up With the Idea?

Here’s how this radical proposal — which must have completely blown the minds of the rebel Confederates — actually came about. The abolitionists Charles Sumner and Thaddeus Stevens and other Radical Republicans had been actively advocating land redistribution “to break the back of Southern slaveholders’ power,” as Myers observed. But Sherman’s plan only took shape after the meeting that he and Stanton held with those black ministers, at 8:00 p.m., Jan. 12, on the second floor of Charles Green’s mansion on Savannah’s Macon Street. In its broadest strokes, “40 acres and a mule” was their idea.

Stanton, aware of the great historical significance of the meeting, presented Henry Ward Beecher (Harriet Beecher Stowe’s famous brother) a verbatim transcript of the discussion, which Beecher read to his congregation at New York’s Plymouth Church and which the New York Daily Tribune printed in full in its Feb. 13, 1865, edition. Stanton told Beecher that “for the first time in the history of this nation, the representatives of the government had gone to these poor debased people to ask them what they wanted for themselves.” Stanton had suggested to Sherman that they gather “the leaders of the local Negro community” and ask them something no one else had apparently thought to ask: “What do you want for your own people” following the war? And what they wanted astonishes us even today.

Who were these 20 thoughtful leaders who exhibited such foresight? They were all ministers, mostly Baptist and Methodist. Most curious of all to me is that 11 of the 20 had been born free in slave states, of which 10 had lived as free men in the Confederacy during the course of the Civil War. (The other one, a man named James Lynch, was born free in Maryland, a slave state, and had only moved to the South two years before.) The other nine ministers had been slaves in the South who became “contraband,” and hence free, only because of the Emancipation Proclamation, when Union forces liberated them.

Their chosen leader and spokesman was a Baptist minister named Garrison Frazier, aged 67, who had been born in Granville, N.C., and was a slave until 1857, “when he purchased freedom for himself and wife for $1000 in gold and silver,” as the New York Daily Tribune reported. Rev. Frazier had been “in the ministry for thirty-five years,” and it was he who bore the responsibility of answering the 12 questions that Sherman and Stanton put to the group. The stakes for the future of the Negro people were high.

And Frazier and his brothers did not disappoint. What did they tell Sherman and Stanton that the Negro most wanted? Land! “The way we can best take care of ourselves,” Rev. Frazier began his answer to the crucial third question, “is to have land, and turn it and till it by our own labor … and we can soon maintain ourselves and have something to spare … We want to be placed on land until we are able to buy it and make it our own.” And when asked next where the freed slaves “would rather live — whether scattered among the whites or in colonies by themselves,” without missing a beat, Brother Frazier (as the transcript calls him) replied that “I would prefer to live by ourselves, for there is a prejudice against us in the South that will take years to get over … ” When polled individually around the table, all but one — James Lynch, 26, the man who had moved south from Baltimore — said that they agreed with Frazier. Four days later, Sherman issued Special Field Order No. 15, after President Lincoln approved it.

What Became of the Land That Was Promised?

The response to the Order was immediate. When the transcript of the meeting was reprinted in the black publication Christian Recorder, an editorial note intoned that “From this it will be seen that the colored people down South are not so dumb as many suppose them to be,” reflecting North-South, slave-free black class tensions that continued well into the modern civil rights movement. The effect throughout the South was electric: As Eric Foner explains, “the freedmen hastened to take advantage of the Order.” Baptist minister Ulysses L. Houston, one of the group that had met with Sherman, led 1,000 blacks to Skidaway Island, Ga., where they established a self-governing community with Houston as the “black governor.” And by June, “40,000 freedmen had been settled on 400,000 acres of ‘Sherman Land.’ ” By the way, Sherman later ordered that the army could lend the new settlers mules; hence the phrase, “40 acres and a mule.”

And what happened to this astonishingly visionary program, which would have fundamentally altered the course of American race relations? Andrew Johnson, Lincoln’s successor and a sympathizer with the South, overturned the Order in the fall of 1865, and, as Barton Myers sadly concludes, “returned the land along the South Carolina, Georgia and Florida coasts to the planters who had originally owned it” — to the very people who had declared war on the United States of America.

Fifty of the 100 Amazing Facts will be published on The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross website. Read all 100 Facts on The Root. 

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    Uh huh. Honky tried. Write another one. Scale it up, scale down. Just generations of Barbara Bush-wipe Daddy Dearest Butt-licker claims that as a former president's rich wife? Her collecting Social Security was an emblem everyone should admire. GOD DAMN right bitch. Why her bastard is such a brilliant painter is they're DEPOSITING THEMSELVES IN THEIR OWN DUMP.

    Bezos' newspaper attacks Hillary Clinton for reiterating the truth about the fraudulent idiot's _ullshi_. Bezos' newspaper running straight story in February of the 2016 election year. Get it? Russians don't have to buy elections if Wall Street's satellite idiot Bezos owns the news. No one had to talk to Trump. They all know they're of the same idiot persuasion as where that's where their confidences LIE! LIE! LIE! 

The Los Angeles Times Convicts - Bush Family Values: War, Wealth, Oil  

The Bushes and the military-industrial complexGeorge H. Walker and Samuel Prescott Bush were the dynasty’s founding fathers during the years of and after World War I. Walker, a St. Louis financier, made his mark in corporate reorganizations and war contracts. By 1919, he was enlisted by railroad heir W. Averell Harriman to be president of Wall Street-based WA Harriman, which invested in oil, shipping, aviation and manganese, partly in Russia and Germany, during the 1920s. Sam Bush, the current president’s other great-grandfather, ran an Ohio company, Buckeye Steel Castings, that produced armaments. In 1917, he went to Washington to head the small arms, ammunition and ordnance section of the federal War Industries Board. Both men were present at the emergence of what became the U.S. military-industrial complex.

Prescott Bush, the Connecticut senator and grandfather of the current president, had some German corporate ties at the outbreak of World War II, but the better yardstick of his connections was his directorships of companies involved in U.S. war production. Dresser Industries, for example, produced the incendiary bombs dropped on Tokyo and made gaseous diffusion pumps for the atomic bomb project. George H.W. Bush later worked for Dresser’s oil-services businesses. Then, as CIA director, vice president and president, one of his priorities was the U.S. weapons trade and secret arms deals with Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the moujahedeen in Afghanistan.

In his 1961 farewell address, President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned about how “we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex.” That complex’s recent mega-leap to power came under George H.W. Bush and even more under George W. Bush -- with the post-9/11 expansion of the military and creation of the Department of Homeland Security. But armaments and arms deals seem to have been in the Bushes’ blood for nearly a century. 

    These are the people saying socialism can't modify capitalism so they save their own Stalinist vision of resenting wealth ruining the world. And had better than a Congressional Health Plan! That does not cover souls either in case Legislatures around the world are curious. MODI you misrepresenting INDIA, ignorant stand, on a theme in ruining inclusion with prejudice JUST LIKE THE GOD DAMNED West. GOD DAMNED WEST everyone's trained to hate for the spies elite GOD DAMNED peasant heads of idolizing just their own petty abominations. 
    NO ELECTRIC CHARGE AT EVERY FILLING STATION? Fooling anyone  should no longer happen if we can get realistic. Yet car commercials promise futures of illusory not not enough. ALL WHILE the world's smothered in gas engines that should be electric. 
    Because NEW TECHNOLOGY should really have been added all along to decrease dependency on ruining our ECONOMIES and planet claiming money runs on just tanks of gas. Societal relationships based on the desires of  people floating the world's responsibilities on their huge amounts of withheld for their own sake - cash. Burning Bushes and sycophants who never cared about the rest of us? Not quite.Children of ruthless framed visibly see their earthly reward constructed deserving just from the score. When blood money's blood money. Imagine Africa's score? 
    These idiots, De Santis etc.s idols of republican mirth in their entire Court Fool Orchestra attire, and waiting for mommy Bush-buttlicker to tie their shoes. Not how children participate incasing themselves adulthood. Everything's Parenting. ...
    These screamers of higher pricing illusion. From the rafters and throughout their bought out halls of commerce like WallMartandUber where labors subsidized by the public dole. China's bottom layer stagnates. America too. While not illegal perhaps, after a fashion. Unethical this OH NO! NOW we admit money's disappearing we disappear. Gone! Gone now, when shredded for generations? 
    Because BIG-OIL's just pollution unaddressed, in whatever its misuse has gotten for us. A regime in Nigeria that kills Ken Saro-Wiwa from the convenience the world relies on forgiving themselves for killing and it's just a GOD DAMNED MESS. OH HELL. There you ... and so it goes ...
    Why not the next PLATFORM IDEA, for when the time's upon us. That when Kamala Harris occupies the US Democratic Party  Presidential Candidacywith good enough Cornell West Cabinet Post proposalt. Not Biden stepping aside. But relieved of the necessity to just stand up against the Republican National Party Idiots, designated at history's plate, as the throw comes home,
    $10,000 for every Black Person in the United States of America. There are many Africans here now relegated again to the lower economic sphere and this is necessary to not deny the cyclical nature of both our problems and our outright GOD damned sins. 
    Professor Cornell West, who's running for United States President, is very specific ... 
    So my idea in the $10,000, is it is a business loan. A business loan from which dedicated advisors are assigned to advise. Those whose $10,000 investment disappears, are eligible for another $10,000. At least the money's diffusing in society some before hovered to the top as Uncle Ronnie failed to admit to the country is their inherent problem exposed as so GOD damned bad they had to pay each other a lot of money to hide from the fact, AMERICANS ARE NOT GOD DAMNED READING and taking responsibility to know what they're actually voting for in all this imagery that hits them like flyswatters when all that's necessary is ignore a bunch of gnats. Most designed retiring home in diseased ease.
*** June 18, 2023 S.... YOU Rupert Murdoch etc. On Behalf of Australia etc. + July 4, 1776 - ...? RENT-TO-OWN (essay-draft) - - - America's Proven Capitalist Worth and Exploitation Ideal of American Unrest 
June 11, 2023 Senate Responsible For Not Reversing United States Senate IMPEACHMENT Verdict 
    So? Here we are where those of us responsible for the nonsense are running around still paying each other dreamily to scheme for the right to dig out the world because they like forgiving themselves for ruining the world so it's utter nonsense. Congestion Pricing an issue when the PUBLIC needs it understood what's wrong was ruined over a century and needs reversing. Bad people made sure your Florida vacations are not luxurious, but full of the foible about where to put the car and the deep resentmentnowinstilled in Americans for what liars profess none of us can be responsible for. But known generations. I made films etc. Professors write. And idiots want science not even understood and you know cheated near enough like the Bushes Roger Stone Peacock Parade to become President of our country and biggest mistake ever there's no doubt. Though history's full of the vagaries at how everyone ws involved using each other. JEWS not allowed in before, during or after World War twoo was an abomination and remains as the world's confused thinking racial resentment's an answer when just a fuse of a clue to our improvements. Amen.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Crime Still Refuge For Those Actual Labor Is Beneath

  Work compensated anywhere near minimum wage levels is considered too tedious and, more often than not, not rewarding enough. So just as your normal every day average criminal tries getting over with a little bit of tension, excitement, and finesse to acquire or maintain the financially secure good life, so can the down on their luck legitimate businessman. In the 1970s in the high-profile John DeLorean case, law enforcement offered to walk him through a drug deal he was obviously never equipped to carry out himself so he had to be entrapped. 
  Today’s economic downturn, just as those in the past and the others upcoming, created the same incentive for opportunistic greed. Titled Europe’s Downturn Creates Unlikely SmugglersThe New York Times’ reporters STEPHEN CASTLE and DOREEN CARVAJAL describe former legitimate businessmen struggling so they entered the cigarette smuggling business undermining the carefully calculated tax structure in place to supplement taxpayers already squeezed financing of government. Gettin’ over to get paid anyway they can. But what’s new is not the crime but how these types of events are now being reported as desperate actions by former legitimate people who’re losing their wealth to the financial tragedy rather than the harbingers of immoral destruction their headlines used to read whenever anyone defied the government. 
  Crime is not new and in fact researchers know why it happens inside and out. Desperation has been the wellspring of bad behaviour as long as the criminal enterprise system has existed. Think the desperate Mexican drug cartels kill for territory just because they’re ruthless? Or has society just not countered the need for shortcuts to greater wealth? No? Maybe not, but theoretically we tolerate rich criminality more than those without good opportunity who are thought of as the lazy poor.
  As the Times article unfolds, what’s shown is cigarette companies seem a little less offended by cigarette smuggling’s revenue manipulation of their dwindling business than the governments who’ve ironically made their case publically that they’re proudly in the business of protecting the citizenry from cigarettes. As government usually has the power to enforce their claims, a real loser cited is, Benny Gilsenan, a shopkeeper in Dublin, whose cigarette sales declined 40 percent in the past four years. He advocates higher penalties for smugglers because illegal cigarettes sell at less than half the market price. Benny did his own personal research when Ireland’s economy started to founder in 2008 and noticed the regulars were dwindling from his store, Benny’s, a 40-year fixture in the neighborhood. When he confronted a former customer, whom he could see smoking just a few hundred yards away, the man explained the math to him. Mr. Gilsenan said, “I sell a pack for 9.20 euros while they can get one for 3.20,” about $7.30 less. His sales declined 40 percent in the last four years and resulted in his laying off two employees. Since then, he and other shopkeepers have formed a group called Retailers Against Smuggling that is pressing for higher penalties for smugglers.
  The case that prompted the Times attention included containers crammed with more than 20 million illicit cigarettes smuggled by an unlikely ring that included a recruitment consultant, a scaffolding company owner and millionaire Dubai businessman in plastics recycling who’d fallen on hard times during Europe’s economic downturn. A lawyer in open court, earlier this year, said, “He borrowed money and took the wrong route,” apologizing for the gang’s ringleader, Paul O’Meara, 48, of Suffolk, England, adding he “lived the good life,” but lost it all. Then risked his reputation “as a result, really, of the financial collapse.”
  A judge in England, in May, scolded Terry Nolan, a blind man from Yorkshire, who was convicted after investigators found him stashing more than 200,000 contraband cigarettes, some behind a false wall in his garden shed. Mr. Nolan refused to reveal their source, claiming fear of reprisals. He was given a five-month suspended sentence after pleading guilty to evading more than $150,000 in excise taxes. “You are 61 years old, and apart from a sentence in your youth for cannabis possession, you have remained law-abiding for the last 40 years,” Judge David Tremberg lectured him in court, issuing a curfew and a fine of about $1,000. “At a time when the public purse is at breaking point, this business robs the country of much-needed finances.” A blind guy.
  Indeed, the impact of lost tax revenues is enormous, especially since the European Union is partly financed by customs duties, 75 percent of which are passed to the bloc by its member nations. “The damage,” according to Jens Geier, a German member of the European Parliament, “is 1 billion euros missing in the E.U. budget and up to 9 billion euros missing in the member states.” He worries that the volume of smuggled cigarettes hints at serious organized crime structures behind these illicit, everyman retailers.
  In annual surveys, financed by cigarette companies, researchers in 27 European nations collect crumpled cigarette packs from the garbage. Those packs are analyzed by laboratories to determine how many are bought across the counter and how many are counterfeit. Some boxes are so meticulously produced in China, Dubai or Eastern Europe that they have bogus tax stamps for different nations. The latest results of the garbage scavenging shows black market competition has increased to record levels. Last year in Spain illicit sales soared 300 percent to more than 4.6 billion cigarettes. In the struggling region of Andalusia contraband cigarettes command 20 percent of the market.
  Smugglers in Ireland are robust competitors with legal cigarettes, reaching more than 17 percent. Over all black market cigarettes have climbed steadily for the fifth straight year, topping 10 percent of consumption or 65 billion cigarettes, according to KPMG for Philip Morris International. Smuggling has flourished where the price of a pack of cigarettes has edged past $10. “In times of economic crisis people have less disposable income and are particularly interested in cheaper products,” said Simeon Djankov, deputy prime minister and finance minister of Bulgaria where smuggled cigarettes more than doubled between 2008 and 2010.
  Prosecutors called Mr. O’Meara’s turtle toy smuggling case, a “massive international smuggling operation.” Among the seven men, sentenced earlier this year, none had previous records for smuggling, according to Paul Barton, assistant director of criminal investigations at Britain’s HM Revenue and Customs. According to investigators and court records, the turtle plot began sometime in 2009 when Mr. O’Meara was struggling with debts and began work on setting up a haulage business called Vincent Logistics, which prosecutors described as a front company. He received financial help from another member of the smuggling ring, Robert Doran, 47, a Dubai millionaire. The potential tax loss was more than $5 million for the British government. According to Mr. Barton the plot had taken around four to five months to prepare and was so well-organized plotters marketed the cigarettes with glossy brochures. In the end costing them prison sentences, ranging from two years to four and a half years.
  But as expected, despite the emergence of middle-class smugglers, investigators believe criminal organizations are behind them because it is after all their criminal territory that they’ll usually kill to maintain control over. Contraband tobacco is less lucrative than narcotics, but it is still attractive because of much shorter prison terms for those caught. And while governments fret over lost revenue, law enforcement officers are concerned about how smuggling profits are reinvested in other criminal activities. Austin Rowan, head of the unit responsible for cigarette smuggling at OLAF, the European Union’s Anti-Fraud Office, said, “A lot of people perceive this as a ‘Robin Hood’ type of fraud and that the ordinary person in the street, who has a lot less money these days, is gaining the benefit. But this trade is financing organizations that are involved in other activities including drugs smuggling.” The too profitable to shut down, Criminal Enterprise System.
7/12/2012
---------------------------------------------------------------
Crime Still Refuge For Those Actual Labor Is Beneath
7/12/2012 ended: Austin Rowan, head of the unit responsible for cigarette smuggling at OLAF, the European Union’s Anti-Fraud Office, said, “A lot of people perceive this as a ‘Robin Hood’ type of fraud and that the ordinary person in the street, who has a lot less money these days, is gaining the benefit. But this trade is financing organizations that are involved in other activities including drugs smuggling.” The too profitable to shut down, Criminal Enterprise System.

July 19, August 8 - 21, 2017
Life's Being Knocked Around
  This past weekend's cultivated cultural catastrophe in Charlottesville, Virginia sets another benchmark for platitudes. Through condemnations that aren't acknowledging how disgraceful racism still is. It's not just the roles of the confused who're due judgement. But the witches brew of stewing resentments reaching pinnacles in niche nirvanas. Don't be anyone's sycophant is more than a slogan.  
  The subtlety's not lost. Eventually words are made to fit in the world of public relations. While the reality is the Alabama faction of the Federal Government is shoring up the incredulous Criminal Enterprise System, leaving un-faced that hypocritical racists set up the drug war for their own satisfaction. Morality is a question of ethics. 
  With all the technological and social advancements the world is aware of and with the United States capability, there's no reason the concept of poverty has to interfere with how people's chemically consumed lives relate with each other. For instance one celebrity noted for never using chemicals, has quite amply demonstrated the exaggerated capabilities of the ones already in us. By the way he's for keeping up the charade. Perhaps owing a lot to the frame of mind that's brought about such    ruthlessness patterns of control all over the world. 
  Careful. Reading to not be maneuvered into other ways to think, and remaining shrewd to defined malignancies, means convincing arguments have no point. At least the one political group could pretend to be as smart as David Brooks(@). 
  But as narrowly imaginable as the state of political culture is in the United States, Hysterical Factionalism commercializing everything, rules. Or at least enough, that such a proclivity infests the world is no excuse. Really bad that such solid power's required that there's no in-between.  None. Nada. Neach-yavo. 
  Independence's become enemy, in the theoretically most citizenly independent country in the world. Nothing's perfect. But things are supposed to naturally get better. How we've evolved this way. Not burden-ly insane. 
  Considering all the problems, flaring tempers, short fuses, how the heck were our ancestors propelled this far? Civilized despite themselves. 
     No matter. Much of what's become of us mirrors mirroring. The present National Health Policy can't be about why wasn't the system modified and made better for ... eight years because the labelling wasn't correct? A supposedly fractured Congress ineptitude-naly stands for principle. Folks. Private Enterprise fires managers for that. 
  Fact is insurance was designed and always for the relatively rich. So the system was lubricated with mis-pricing that didn't exist for a complete marketplace. Legal chicanery gypped the Medical Profession generations ago. Hard fought commercial success no doubt. Water under the bridge. But why the cluelessness to how pricing can't be fixed unless someone's punished? A vested interest unwillingness to describe our problems to ourselves. Civilization's explanation for falling short of civilized. 
  Would have been nice if Senator McCain came back from his medical break, along with his decisive vote, saying, "Of course all Americans deserve the same coverage as their representatives. Isn't that what our offices mean?"
  Good luck everybody. 
     ...
Lincoln spoke in
The Great Hall of Cooper Union on the way to the White House. 
Next for me is 40 minutes in Historic Sanford Memorial Stadium
Notice I've demonstrated there's nott much of a Central Florida consensus to apologize for a ruthless unethical Southern heritage. Whitewash yes. Face no. 
Some memories are exclamation points.
Please. Have a look, Mr. President.

  Now this, Mr. President. I don't know. Understanding Roy Cohn is far from a present day commercial tif you could periodically have with our next guest, whose appearance is as an ad promoting a future essay. The subtlety I'm afraid is not within your realm of appreciation. Some learn. Some can't give up what they've learned. Feels like objective's about to shatter against subjective's rocks. Something not to fear as the mirage of historical distortion was planted long ago. So now it's practically all marketing. History. Science. We've niched to death and conglomerates just replace conglomerates and everyone has their own special campaign brand for change. Even the worship of propaganda, is, once again, center stage. And so -
For Hearts Players - 
The Queen of Spades
  The original 7/12/12 Soapbox View began - Work compensated anywhere near minimum wage levels is considered too tedious and, more often than not, not rewarding enough. Shrewdly leaving trails of dispassion in its' wake. Ending with the description of the cycle of turmoil we're glued to, Criminal Enterprise System.
  Realizing I'm repeating myself doesn't help that the problem is as well. 
  ...
  Yes, Mr. President, I imagine everyone is rather tired. Kim Jong-un needs some good healthy conversation to get himself out from under. Dennis Rodman, Robert Reich, Jerry Brown or Bill Moyers, and Bob Dole should sit down with Kim Jong-un for an in-depth facilitation of something of substance for the authoritarian to get out from under North Korea's non-participatory economic burden. The palace intrigue is a mockery of what government that serves the people should be.
     Anything against suggesting Bob Dole?