Puppet Masters
"Forget naming rights to the stadium, or whatever," Maddow said, explaining that Koch "purchased hiring rights for the faculty at Florida State's economics department. And yes, Florida State has the word 'state' in it because it is a public university, and yes, it is objectively insane that the state of Florida allowed that to happen."
As the Tampa Bay Times reported in 2011, a foundation funded by Koch gave $1.5 million to the school's economics department in 2008, in exchange for Koch having the power to select members of an "advisory committee" that screens prospective new hires. A year later, Koch reportedly rejected 60 percent of job candidates suggested by FSU faculty.
"You can see why Mr. Koch would want to do that sort of thing, if he could find a state crazy enough to let him do it," Maddow said. "I mean, $1.5 million is nothing to him. He loses that into a hankerchief when he sneezes. But for that pittance, he gets to make sure his conservative billionaire economic ideas get taught and published and propagated under the brand name of something that is supposed to look like a university-level education."
Koch and his brother, David, reportedly donated more than $30 million between 2007 and 2011 to groups cutting deals with more than 200 universities around the country, including the Catholic University of America. That agreement led to a group of Catholic officials calling for the university to forfeit the donation in the name of academic independence.
"If you don't like what the facts say, then write your own facts," Maddow said. "If you don't like what independent scholarship looks like, then buy some."
The Kochs' influence, it turned out, was also felt in a May 2013 study that ranked Wisconsin - led by Koch ally Gov. Scott Walker (R) - 15th in the country in "economic outlook," when other reports had it ranked closer to last.
Koch Companies confirmed to Maddow's show that a charitable trust controlled by the two billionaire siblings donated $150,000 toward the group behind the report, while denying it was specifically earmarked for its publication. The author subsequently denied the Kochs influenced his findings, saying, "This is not rocket surgery."
"Indeed, this is not rocket surgery," Maddow concurred. "But that is a very eloquent way of saying something important about the quality of the scholarship that you get when you buy your own scholarship."
Watch Maddow's commentary here.
The Huffington Post on Monday named the anti-Iran senators, who introduced the bill last week. Nineteen Republican senators also cosponsored the legislation.
Under a nuclear agreement reached in Geneva last month, the United States should not impose fresh economic sanctions against Iran over the next six months.
Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) is leading the charge to pass legislation in January that would impose additional sanctions on Iran.
Other Democratic senators are Sen. Mark Begich (Alaska), Sen. Richard Blumenthal (Conn.), Sen. Cory Booker (N.J.), Sen. Ben Cardin (Md.), Sen. Bob Casey (Pa.), Sen. Chris Coons (Del.), Sen. Joe Donnelly (Ind.), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Sen. Kay Hagan (N.C.), Sen. Mary Landrieu (La.), Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.), Sen. Mark Pryor (Ark.), Sen. Charles Schumer (N.Y.) and Sen. Mark Warner (Va.).
Snowden was a cog in the very big machine of government defense contractors. Most Americans were not aware that the state intelligence apparatus has been privatized just like education, incarceration and nearly every other sector of society. There are more than 4 million people like Snowden. They have various levels of security clearances and they all have access to some parts of what ought to be private information regarding our lives.
The power of the National Security Agency (NSA) has grown by leaps and bounds ever since the terror attacks which took place on September 11, 2001. The Bush administration wasted no time in dismantling civil liberties and expanding government power through the Patriot Act. Every step he took was supported by both Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress and voices of dissent were too few and far between. Barack Obama made certain to not only keep those powers but to expand them beyond anything that Bush and Dick Cheney had imagined.
In the meantime, there's this: "Worse still is the continued employment of The Nation columnist Eric Alterman..."
Also, I have an ide for a new slogan for the ASA and the rest of the BDS mob: "BDS: More Palestinian than the Palestinians..."
Alter-reviews:
The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis put together a sixteen piece band to play songs you did not know were jazz--incluing "Jingle Bells" "Little Drummer Boy" and "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus." The songs were arranged by various members of the Orchestra and introduced with his unique aplomb and charm by Mr. Marsalis. The highlights all involved the appearance of 23-year-old 2010 Thelonious Monk Competition winning vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant, whose charms I do not believe were captured on her cd, and so I've resisted her but her versatility and pitch-perfect delivery --as the pr material says, her "ability to refract the styles of such iconic performers of that era as Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, and Valaida Snow with 21st century freshness, expressivity, and soulfulness"--really shook up the place and made it a most memorable, if somewhat brief performance. The schedule is here.
Comment: "The quality of democracy and the quality of journalism are deeply entwined." - Bill Moyers

Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (NYPD) Ray Kelly (R)
Kelly, the longest-serving commissioner in New York Police Department history, will become a visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), the organization said Monday in a statement. He will focus on "counterterrorism, cybersecurity, and other national security issues" while working at the organization's headquarters in Manhattan.
"Ray Kelly spearheaded the modernization of the New York Police Department," CFR President Richard Haass said in the statement. "The result is that crime is down and the NYPD's counter terrorism capabilities are second to none. We are excited and proud to have his experience, expertise, and judgment at the Council."
The CFR is considered the most influential foreign policy think-tank in the United States. Many top American politicians, officials from presidential administrations, bankers, lawyers, media personalities and others are counted as members. Some top board members include the group's co-chairman Robert Rubin, former US Secretary of Treasury and co-chair of Goldman Sachs; former Secretaries of State Madeleine Albright and Colin Powell; and the longest-serving CENTCOM commander, Gen. John Abizaid.
In addition to the CFR post, Kelly signed a contract earlier this month to give lucrative speeches with Greater Talent Network.
The chief military prosecutor for Judea and Samaria (the West Bank), Lt. Col. Morris Hirsch claims that it would take 307 working days, each comprising 12 hours, or a total of 3,685 hours, to check the 6,700 relevant files. The president of the Ofer military court, Lt. Col. Menachem Lieberman believes that the entire checking process would take less than 60 hours.
This disagreement is but one more chapter in a war waged by the Israeli military prosecution against Nariman Tamimi, a Palestinian from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh.
Comment: Israeli Defense Forces:
"...in accordance with the military prosecution's policy, which is based on high professional and ethical standards."
Yet another example of how the IDF targets Palestinians - and of Israel's continuously looping hypocrisy in motion.
The White House said on Friday that it would be keeping the NSA and the Pentagon's cyberwarfare directorate under the command of a single military leader. The current "dual-hatted" head of NSA and Cyber Command, Gen. Keith Alexander, has been at the center of the furor over NSA surveillance. But Alexander plans to step down in 2014, which raised the possibility several weeks ago of Obama changing the rules for Alexander's successor - or successors, as civil liberties advocates had hoped.
Obama's own intelligence panel evidently sympathizes with the idea. In a section of Wednesday's report headlined "Organizational Reform," the committee of insiders urged the president to give serious consideration to making the next Director of NSA a civilian. NSA should be clearly designated as a foreign intelligence organization. ... The head of the military unit, US Cyber Command, and the Director of NSA should not be a single official.
The answer depends on whose purposes we are talking about. For the banks, the Fed has served quite well. For the laboring masses whose populist movement prompted it, not much has changed in a century.
Thwarting Populist Demands
The Federal Reserve Act was passed in 1913 in response to a wave of bank crises, which had hit on average every six years over a period of 80 years. The resulting economic depressions triggered a populist movement for monetary reform in the 1890s. Mary Ellen Lease, an early populist leader, said in a fiery speech that could have been written today:
Wall Street owns the country. It is no longer a government of the people, by the people, and for the people, but a government of Wall Street, by Wall Street, and for Wall Street. The great common people of this country are slaves, and monopoly is the master. . . . Money rules . . . .Our laws are the output of a system which clothes rascals in robes and honesty in rags. The parties lie to us and the political speakers mislead us. . . .
We want money, land and transportation. We want the abolition of the National Banks, and we want the power to make loans direct from the government. We want the foreclosure system wiped out.
The Coalition has been accused of breaking an election promise by announcing it will send an aircraft, rather than a ship, to monitor Japanese whaling activity in the Southern Ocean.
The environment minister, Greg Hunt, said on Sunday an A319 aircraft, co-ordinated and staffed by Customs personnel, would be deployed for the monitoring from January to March. The Greens have called on Hunt to resign over the decision, which they describe as "weak" and a clear breach of an election promise.
Hunt has come under pressure to move quickly to fulfil an election pledge to monitor the Japanese fleet, which is closing in on Antarctic waters claimed by Australia.
Hunt said the aircraft would monitor activities by "all groups in the Southern Ocean", a reference to a trio of Sea Shepherd anti-whaling vessels already dispatched to the Southern Ocean to confront the Japanese.
But he made no mention of how vessels illegally fishing in Australian waters would be intercepted or turned around, nor how a plane would react to prevent loss of life in the event of a violent clash between whalers and Sea Shepherd activists.
"It shows that the Obamacare insurance products aren't selling so, at the last minute, the administration is holding a fire sale on a failed launch," says Grace-Marie Turner of the Galen Institute, a health-care advocacy group. "Just think how you must feel if you were one of the people who spent the last two months fighting their way through HealthCare.gov to buy a policy that will be thousands of dollars more expensive than this catastrophic insurance!"
Of course, like every other exemption from Obamacare the latest fix is supposed to last only a year, raising the prospect that people will be kicked off their catastrophic coverage as soon as the 2014 election is safely in the political rear-view mirror.














Comment: The rules seem pretty simple and clear:
Rule Number 1: The rules apply to everybody BUT Israel and the U.S. ( unless they say so).
Rule Number 2: Everybody ( except for Israel and the U.S.) must obey the rules, unless Israel and the U.S. say so.