Society's ChildS


Red Flag

Flashback Fmr NBC correspondent Ashleigh Banfield was 'banished' from media for telling press corps to cover Iraq War objectively

ashleigh banfield
Ashleigh Banfield
CourtTV's Ashleigh Banfield talks with mediabistro.com for our So What Do You Do? series. Part of it is excerpted below. TVNewser contributor Diane Clehane asked the former MSNBC anchor and NBC News correspondent about her undoing at the network:
In the months following 9/11 you were being touted as one of NBC's rising stars. The New York Post even mentioned you as possible successor to Katie Couric. Then, just as quickly, it seemed as if you dropped out of sight. What happened?

The Iraq war started to develop and I gave a very controversial speech at Kansas State [University] about the press's responsibility in covering international affairs. I sent out a cautionary note to all my colleagues covering this conflict and chastened the press corps not to wave the banner and cover warfare in a jingoistic way. It didn't sit well with my employers at NBC - who are no longer there. I think they overacted. I was banished. I sat in the outfield for a long time.

When did you officially leave NBC?

I left in 2004 - a few months after my contract expired. I was very much in the warehouse while my contract petered out.

Looking back on that time, what were the biggest lessons you learned?

On one hand you could say, "Keep your mouth shut while our nation is embroiled in war," but I don't think that was a responsible way to behave. If I have been fortunate enough to have risen to level in this business where people would actually listen to me, then I think I have a duty to convey all truths that I encounter. I felt it was my duty at the time. I was a war correspondent who had seen that the hearts and minds of the Arab world were not that easy to win.

Dollar

From Luxembourg to Seattle: How Amazon's tax avoidance schemes grew an empire

The retail giant's critics say contrived financial arrangements are at the heart of its success

Amazon Luxenbourg HQ
© Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty ImagesAmazon’s European headquarters in Luxembourg.
When Jeff Bezos was looking for a home for his fledgling online bookseller, amazon.com, in 1994, his first choice is said to have been a Native American reservation. The location would have presented generous tax breaks if the state of California had not intervened and halted the plan.

Next stop was Seattle, which Bezos said he selected because Washington state had - among other things - a smallish population. At the time only those retailers with a physical presence in a state paid sales taxes, so a home state with a small population meant the lowest possible sales tax burden. Sales made into other more populous states would not be taxed.

It was a strategic decision that would characterise Amazon's attitude towards paying tax over the next two decades. Its critics allege that it owes its position as the world's largest online retailer in part to its use of contrived and artificial tax arrangements that - while legal - endow it with competitive advantages no bricks-and-mortar retailer could ever hope to enjoy.

The company deployed the strategy in Luxembourg, the tiny European country that became, in the words of the Tax Justice Network, "the Death Star of financial secrecy" in a national bid to attract capital through tax competition.

Comment: See also:


Eye 2

Fmr boss of disgraced physician Larry Nassar faces charges he paid female students for nude medical exams

William Strampel
© Rebecca Cook / ReutersWilliam Strampel (L) is arraigned by video for 'Criminal Sexual Conduct' involving medical students, by Judge Richard D. Ball, in 54B District Court in East Lansing, Michigan, U.S., March 27, 2018
The former boss of disgraced USA gymnastics team physician Larry Nassar faces new allegations of sexual misconduct, after two women claimed they were paid money for modeling nude at medical practice exams.

Dr. William Strampel, who served as dean of Michigan State University's College of Osteopathic Medicine between 2002 and 2017, was arrested in March on allegations of molesting and harassing female students.

Five women had already accused Strampel of sexual assault, and two more came forward this week, claiming to have been sexually harassed by the ex-dean while serving as models during nude medical exams. The new allegations were indicated in a court motion filed Wednesday by Attorney General Bill Schuette's office.

Strampel "acted with a sexual intent as a motive when he demeaned, degraded, propositioned and assaulted the victims," the document states.

Flashlight

Tory minister's secretary caught by undercover reporter selling sex online and discussing minister - 'I know everything about him'

woman on laptop
© Elena Sikorskaya / Global Look Press
Housing Minister Dominic Raab has been thrust into the spotlight after a loose-lipped secretary was exposed by an undercover reporter for allegedly selling sex on a 'sugar-daddy' website.

The astonishing expose, revealed by the Daily Mirror, alleges that the 20-year-old diary secretary met with an undercover journalist, who was posing as a wealthy businessman. The woman allegedly boasted that she knew Raab's "every move" and joked about how she'd "love to get sacked" for having sex on her boss' desk.

Raab's bold staffer told the undercover reporter that she hoped to earn up to £5,000 ($6,950) a month from her rich clients, but promised discretion (yes, you read that right) by insisting that "everything is protected." She admitted that her civil service bosses would "have an issue" with her extra work, but said that she did not "see too much of a contrast between this and going on multiple Tinder dates."

Pirates

Student loan 'expert' Drew Cloud revealed as fake persona created by student-loan refinancing company

Drew Cloud, studen-loan debt
The fictional founder sprang from this website, which shares news about student loans.
Drew Cloud is everywhere. The self-described journalist who specializes in student-loan debt has been quoted in major news outlets, including The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, and CNBC, and is a fixture in the smaller, specialized blogosphere of student debt.

He's always got the new data, featuring irresistible twists:

One in five students use extra money from their student loans to buy digital currencies.

Nearly 8 percent of students would move to North Korea to free themselves of their debt.

Twenty-seven percent would contract the Zika virus to live debt-free.

All of those surveys came from Cloud's website, The Student Loan Report.

Drew Cloud's story was simple: He founded the website, an "independent, authoritative news outlet" covering all things student loans, "after he had difficulty finding the most recent student loan news and information all in one place."

He became ubiquitous on that topic. But he's a fiction, the invention of a student-loan refinancing company.

Vader

As if Iraq wasn't enough, now the West is lying about Syria to push a new war

syria bombing destruction
© Agence France-PresseWe’re being lied to about the need to bomb what’s left of that war-ravaged country, just like we were hoodwinked over Iraq 15 years ago.
The US and its allies have not only learned nothing from their disastrous invasion of Iraq, they're using the same kind of lies to justify the same mistakes they're making all over again, this time in Syria

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," the old and oft-repeated aphorism goes.

Well, in this age of unreason, we remember the past all right, but we're completely cavalier about repeating the mistakes of history. Learning lessons is for wimps in the new world order.

A textbook case of this is what's happening right now in Syria. We're being lied to about the need to bomb what's left of that war-ravaged country, just like we were hoodwinked over Iraq 15 years ago.

Last week self-appointed global sheriff the United States and deputy dawgs Britain and France showered more than 100 missiles upon Syria, telling the world they were making our planet safer by punishing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for gassing his own people with chemical weapons.

USA

Double-standards: Judge rules NYC bar can refuse service to Trump supporters

maga hat
© Reuters
A Manhattan judge ruled Wednesday that kicking a Trump supporter out of a bar does not violate the law - because the law does not protect against political discrimination.

Greg Piatek of Philadelphia claims he was refused service and eventually removed from a New York City bar in January 2017 for wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat, in a lawsuit against the establishment.

"Anyone who supports Trump - or believes in what you believe - is not welcome here! And you need to leave right now because we won't serve you!" Piatek claims the staff of The Happiest Hour told him.

Piatek claimed the incident "offended his sense of being an American," The New York Post reported.

The lawyer representing The Happiest Hour, Elizabeth Conway, argued that he was not discriminated against because only religious, not political, beliefs are protected under state and city discrimination law.


Comment: So we suppose NYC would have no problem with a Christian bakery refusing to bake cakes for gay weddings...


"Supporting Trump is not a religion," Conway argued.

Megaphone

Mass protests continue to grip Armenian capital despite PM Sargsyan's resignation

rally Yerevan, Armenia
© Gleb Garanich / ReutersA rally in Yerevan, Armenia, April 25, 2018
Massive opposition rallies continue to grip the Armenian capital of Yerevan despite Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan, who was president for several consecutive years, giving in to protesters' demands and stepping down this week.

The protests continued into the second week in Yerevan, with smaller rallies taking place in Gyumri, the country's second-largest city. On Wednesday, multiple demonstrators flooded downtown Yerevan and disrupted traffic around the government quarters.

Protesters directed their anger at Serzh Sargsyan, who already served as the prime minister of Armenia twice and was the third president of Armenia. He was again elected as prime minister in April 2018. The opposition accused him of a "power grab" and demanded that he step down.

Comment: Further reading:


Network

Media declares 'end of internet as we know it' after net-neutrality regulations repealed

Ajit Varadaraj Pai net neutrality FCC
© Reuters/Aaron P. BernsteinChairman Ajit Pai speaks ahead of the vote on the repeal of so called net neutrality rules at the Federal Communications Commission in Washington, U.S., December 14, 2017.
Media outlets have raised the alarm about the repeal of net neutrality, which took effect on Monday.

Federal Communications Commission chairman Ajit Pai initially introduced the Restoring Internet Freedom Order, which repeals the Obama-era Open Internet Order net-neutrality rules. It was passed by a vote of the FCC in December.

The "internet as we know it may not exist," CNET said on Monday as the repeal took effect.

"Net neutrality is officially dead today, but the fight to revive it lives on, " TechCrunch declared.

The "end of the Internet as we know it," read the main headline on CNN.com after December's vote.

Comment: Free speech could become very expensive, if smaller or more contentious websites are placed in slower data streams and customers charged more to access them. Censorship by any other name is still censorship.


Bizarro Earth

Danish immigration minister Stojberg hits out at migrants - they 'cheat, lie and abuse trust'

denmark refugees
© Claus Fisker / Agence France-Presse
Denmark's immigration minister, known for her hardline stance on migration, has drawn ire from people on social media after she said that in order to pass language tests, asylum seekers cheat and abuse the trust of authorities.

Minister Inger Stojberg of the ruling center-right Venstre party, cited a Facebook group that provides answers to Danish language and culture tests, which all migrants have to take in the Nordic country. "A significant group" of refugees who have come to Denmark "cheats, lies and abuses our trust," she wrote in an editorial in BT, a Danish tabloid newspaper.

Another problem that Stojberg highlighted is the age of so-called minors among migrants, many of whom are believed to be grown men posing as adolescents. "We also see young people under the age of 18 who cheat their way into getting better treatment and more benefits," she stated, stressing that an unaccompanied minor costs over 500,000 kroner ($80,000) per year for the state. "In fact, two thirds of those whom we later age-tested proved to be older than they originally stated," she added.

Comment: The minister may have a point.