OF THE
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"A memo went out from the chief of staff a year ago to White House employees and the intelligence agencies that told people to freeze and retain any e-mail, and presumably phone logs, of communications with me," Sanger said. As a result, longtime sources no longer talk to him. "They tell me: 'David, I love you, but don't e-mail me. Let's don't chat until this blows over.' "
Sanger, who has worked for the Times in Washington for two decades, said, "This is most closed, control-freak administration I've ever covered." Many leak investigations include lie-detector tests for government officials with access to the information at issue. "Reporters are interviewing sources through intermediaries now," Barr told me, "so the sources can truthfully answer on polygraphs that they didn't talk to reporters."
The investigations have been "a kind of slap in the face" for reporters and their sources, said Smith of the Center for Public Integrity. "It means you have to use extraordinary measures for contacts with officials speaking without authorization."
"[M]any economists still [do] not understand that a combination of circumstances in the 1980s made it very easy to loot a [bank] with little risk of prosecution. Once this is clear, it becomes obvious that high-risk strategies that would pay off only in some states of the world were only for the timid. Why abuse the system to pursue a gamble that might pay off when you can exploit a sure thing with little risk of prosecution?" (Akerlof & Romer 1993: 4-5).The result of these perverse incentives is the epidemics of accounting control fraud that drive our recurrent, intensifying financial crises. In the savings and loan debacle, for example:
"The typical large failure [grew] at an extremely rapid rate, achieving high concentrations of assets in risky ventures.... [E]very accounting trick available was used.... Evidence of fraud was invariably present as was the ability of the operators to 'milk' the organization" (NCFIRRE 1993).The large Enron-era frauds were all accounting control frauds.
"[D]ishonest dealings tend to drive honest dealings out of the market. The cost of dishonesty, therefore, lies not only in the amount by which the purchaser is cheated; the cost also must include the loss incurred from driving legitimate business out of existence."Akerlof was not the first expert to understand the dynamic.
"The Lilliputians look upon fraud as a greater crime than theft. For, they allege, care and vigilance, with a very common understanding, can protect a man's goods from thieves, but honesty hath no fence against superior cunning. . . where fraud is permitted or connived at, or hath no law to punish it, the honest dealer is always undone, and the knave gets the advantage" (Swift, J. Gulliver's Travels: 1726).
"Last night around 11 p.m., five civilians aged between 12 and 20 carrying air guns wanted to go hunting birds some eight kilometers (five miles) from the center of the city of Jalalabad. They were targeted and killed by a foreign forces airstrike," said provincial police spokesman, Hazrat Hussain Mashreqiwal.A NATO spokesman has confirmed the airstrike without referring to the casualties.
Comment: The US wants to choose which terrorists to support and which to go after. They are happy to arm and fund al-qaeda terrorists in Syria while going after other patsy terrorists elsewhere whose usefulness for the empire has expired.
The financial terrorists of Wall Street are of course protected as they line the coffers of the elite, while destroying the lives of billions.