NationStates Jolt Archive


The Way It Is

The Nazz
30-09-2005, 16:10
No, this is not a thread about lyrics from Bruce Hornsby and the Range--not too many of you around here old enough to remember that, but I think I've still got the LP somewhere in a box. No, that's the title of Paul Krugman's latest column in the New York Times, which normally, I would link to and excerpt, but a couple of weeks ago, the Times put their columnists behind a subscriber wall, and I'll be damned if I'm paying $50 a year for the likes of Brooks and Tierney, no matter if you get the Times archives thrown in on the deal.

But Krugman is dealing with a topic today that Eutrusca started a thread on a couple of weeks ago, so this serves as an update of sorts. He's talking about fraud and cronyism and putting unqualified people in important posts. I'm breaking a fair use rule here and posting it in full.

Bill Frist, the Senate majority leader, is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission. He sold all his stock in HCA, which his father helped found, just days before the stock plunged. Two years ago, Mr. Frist claimed that he did not even know if he owned HCA stock.

According to a new U.S. government index, the effect of greenhouse gases is up 20 percent since 1990.

Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a 33-year-old Wall Street insider with little experience in regulation but close ties to drug firms, was made a deputy commissioner at the F.D.A. in July. (This story, picked up by Time magazine, was originally reported by Alicia Mundy of The Seattle Times.)

The Arctic ice cap is shrinking at an alarming rate.

Two of the three senior positions at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration are vacant. The third is held by Jonathan Snare, a former lobbyist. Texans for Public Justice, a watchdog group, reports that he worked on efforts to keep ephedra, a dietary supplement that was banned by the F.D.A., legal.

According to France's finance minister, Alan Greenspan told him that the United States had ''lost control'' of its budget deficit.

David Safavian is a former associate of Jack Abramoff, the recently indicted lobbyist. Mr. Safavian oversaw U.S. government procurement policy at the White House Office of Management and Budget until his recent arrest.

When Senator James Inhofe, who has called scientific research on global warming ''a gigantic hoax,'' called a hearing to attack that research, his star witness was Michael Crichton, the novelist.

Mr. Safavian is charged with misrepresenting his connections with lobbyists -- specifically, Mr. Abramoff -- while working at the General Services Administration. A key event was a lavish golfing trip to Scotland in 2002, mostly paid for by a charity Mr. Abramoff controlled. Among those who went on the trip was Representative Bob Ney of Ohio.

It's not possible to attribute any one weather event to global warming. But climate models show that global warming will lead to increased hurricane intensity, and some research indicates that this is already occurring.

Tyco paid $2 million, most going to firms controlled by Mr. Abramoff, as part of its successful effort to preserve tax advantages it got from shifting its legal home to Bermuda. Timothy Flanigan, a general counsel at Tyco, has been nominated for the second-ranking Justice Department post.

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans is awash in soldiers and police. Nonetheless, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has hired Blackwater USA, a private security firm with strong political connections, to provide armed guards.

Mr. Abramoff was indicted last month on charges of fraud relating to his purchase of SunCruz, a casino boat operation. Mr. Ney inserted comments in the Congressional Record attacking SunCruz's original owner, Konstantinos ''Gus'' Boulis, placing pressure on him to sell to Mr. Abramoff and his partner, Adam Kidan, and praised Mr. Kidan's character.

James Schmitz, who resigned as the Pentagon's inspector general amid questions about his performance, has been hired as Blackwater's chief operating officer.

Last week three men were arrested in connection with the gangland-style murder of Mr. Boulis. SunCruz, after it was controlled by Mr. Kidan and Mr. Abramoff, paid a company controlled by one of the men arrested, Anthony ''Big Tony'' Moscatiello, and his daughter $145,000 for catering and other work. In court documents, questions are raised about whether food and drink were ever provided. SunCruz paid $95,000 to a company in which one of the other men arrested, Anthony ''Little Tony'' Ferrari, is a principal.

Iraq's oil production remains below prewar levels. The Los Angeles Times reports that mistakes by U.S. officials and a Halliburton subsidiary, which was given large no-bid reconstruction contracts, may have permanently damaged Iraq's oilfields.

Tom DeLay, who stepped down as House majority leader after his indictment, once called Mr. Abramoff ''one of my closest and dearest friends.'' Mr. Abramoff funneled funds from clients to conservative institutions and causes. The Washington Post reported that associates of Mr. DeLay claim that he severed the relationship after Mr. Boulis's murder.

Public health experts warn that the U.S. would be dangerously unprepared for an avian flu pandemic.

As Walter Cronkite used to say, That's the way it is.
And that, my friends, is the benefit of having access to a university library and knowing how to use their electronic resources to get around subscriber walls. :D
Balipo
30-09-2005, 16:22
Disturbing to say the least, but surprising, not in the least.

Thanks though, I know alot of people who will benefit from reading what you quoted (Eutrusca comes to mind).
Cannot think of a name
30-09-2005, 16:27
Seriously-non partisan, there has to be a way to insist that these cats put in these positions deserve to be there. Isn't there some sort of filter or check and balance? Or is it the congress so when legislative and executive are lined up it's 'anything goes?'


All that aside, this-
Konstantinos ''Gus'' Boulis
is the coolest name I've heard in a long ass time.
The Nazz
30-09-2005, 16:43
Seriously-non partisan, there has to be a way to insist that these cats put in these positions deserve to be there. Isn't there some sort of filter or check and balance? Or is it the congress so when legislative and executive are lined up it's 'anything goes?'
It's Congress in a lot of cases--the Senate has the duty to "advise and consent" on a lot of appointments--but there's a lot of deference given to the POTUS in many of these choices, mostly because there are so many to make that the Senate doesn't want to be bothered with it. For instance, when Brownie was appointed head of FEMA, his confirmation hearing was 45 minutes long and consisted of something like 3 Senators "questioning" him. And even though they gave him a pass, I'll give them this much credit--at least they showed up for the damn meeting, which is more than can be said for the others on that committee. So the approval issue is one in which both parties deserve to be bitched out and around for not doing their jobs.

The nomination issue, however--well, there's only one group to blame for that. :D