Monthly Archives: July 2012

A Message from Seamus Romney

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Quote of the Day

“I love my friend Anderson and remain immensely proud of him.  And I’m honored, truly, that he considers me a friend.  But, I just want him to be careful.  Of course, he wouldn’t be doing his job if he really were being careful.  And he wouldn’t be who he is.”

– Comedian Kathy Griffin expressing concern for CNN’s Anderson Cooper who just admitted openly he’s gay.

In other Earth-shattering news, scientists reveal the sky is blue and the Pacific Ocean is really, really deep.

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Picture of the Day

José Luis Rodriguez is a world renowned wildlife photographer whose photo of a leaping Iberian wolf won the 2009 Veolia Environment Wildlife Photographer of the Year award.  In this photo, European bee-eaters cram together along a single branch; thus giving the appearance of a caterpillar.  Photograph courtesy of Wild Wonders of Europe and fellow blogger Spencer Angel.

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Whistleblowers Welcome

Berrett-Koehler Publishers has no qualms publishing books that many would consider controversial at best.  They’re not the cheesy, reality-TV types we’ve come to expect in this 24/7 news world.  Such tomes as John Perkins’ Confessions of an Economic Hitman expose the dirty side of real criminals and criminal enterprises.  Perkins tells of his personal journey from a “willing servant of empire to impassioned advocate for the rights of oppressed people.”  Under the direction of the National Security Agency and on the payroll of a major consulting firm, Perkins travelled to developing countries to implement policies that promoted U.S. financial interests, while professing to alleviate the poverty that saddles those same countries with extraordinary inequality.  Those policies, claims Perkins, only created more poverty and instilled anti-American sentiments that, in part, led to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.  It’s a harsh accusation, but Perkins has the credentials to back up his assessments.

In The Corporate Whistleblower’s Survival Guide, which Berrett-Koehler published in conjunction with the Government Accountability Project (GAP), Tom Devine and Tarek Maassarini present a detailed guide on how potential whistleblowers can achieve their goal of exposing corruption and what repercussions to expect.  Topics include: advising employees of their rights, with references to legal education for their counsel; legal campaign strategies essential to supplement lawsuits; key survival tips; typical retaliatory tactics; benefits for corporate leaders wise enough to listen to their messengers instead of silencing them; lessons for effective partnerships between whistleblowers and citizen activists, politicians and the media; and available resources and help groups.

In Confessions of a Microfinance Heretic, Hugh Sinclair exposes the world of “microlending,” the latest trend to help the poor in developing countries.  Also known as microfinancing, the practice grants small loans to individuals to help them start a business.  Women are among the typical recipients.  Its purpose is noble on the surface, Sinclair states, but the ultimate goal is merely to enrich financial institutions.  Most microfinance loans were going to consumption, not venture creation, and there’s no evidence they reduced poverty in the places where they were implemented.

Berrett-Koehler’s editorial director Neal Maillet invests a great deal of time and energy cultivating these types of publications and both expects and invites the criticism that comes with them.  Berrett-Koehler isn’t satisfied with the gripes of disgruntled former employees, however; they demand facts and hard data to substantiate those claims.  They obviously want people who are passionate about exposing the truth.  Poverty and social injustices have always been catalysts for revolution.  We see that happening in Latin America and the Middle East right now.  As someone who’s spent several years in the corporate world, I understand the concerns of average people; wondering if executives held themselves accountable to the same ethics rules they created.  It’s not a pretty picture.  But, the truth about business rarely is.

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Increasingly across the Americas, the indigenous peoples are no longer tolerating disrespect and disenfranchisement. They’re fighting back and letting their voices be heard. Blood may be shed, but freedom is never easily won.

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28 June 2012

Dario Kenner, La Paz

Updates on Bolivia: https://twitter.com/dariokenner

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BoliviaDiary

For the second time in 8 months a march by representatives of indigenous movements arrived in La Paz to demand a road does not cut through the TIPNIS indigenous territory and national park. There were definitely fewer people yesterday compared to when the first march got here in October but there were still thousands of people lining the streets to welcome the marchers who covered 600km since they left Trinidad in Bolivia´s Amazon in April. The indigenous leaders of the march have said they will not leave La Paz until they have guarantees a road will not go through the TIPNIS. It remains to be seen if they will be as successful as last time when they pressured the Evo Morales government to pass a law banning any road through the TIPNIS. The Bolivian government is determined…

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I can’t believe the hypocrisy of some government officials. Indeed, they don’t want government interference in their own lives, but they have no qualms injecting their viewpoints into the lives of others and telling them what to do.

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July 2 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Folk singer Tom Springfield (Springfields) is 78.

 

Actress Polly Holliday (Alice, Flo, Private Benjamin, Gremlins) is 75.

 

Auto racer Richard Petty (7-time winner of Daytona 500 [1964, 1966, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1979, 1981]; 1st to win a million-dollar stock car race) is 75.

 

Luci Baines Johnson, daughter of 36th U.S. President Lyndon and Ladybird Johnson, is 65.

 

Guitarist – saxophone player Johnny Colla (Soundhole, Huey Lewis & The News) is 60.

 

Actor Jimmy McNichol (The Fitzpatricks, California Fever, Escape from El Diablo) is 51.

 

Professional baseball player Jose Canseco (Oakland Athletics [1986 Rookie of the Year; all-star 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992; 1st player to hit 40 or more home runs and steal 40 or more bases in same season]; Texas Rangers; Boston Red Sox) is 48.

 

Actress Kathryn Erbe (Oz, Chicken Soup, Dragonfly, Law & Order: Criminal Intent) is 46.

 

Actress Yancy Butler (Hard Target, Law & Order, South Beach, Brooklyn South, The Witness Files) is 42.

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On July 2…

1776 – The Second Continental Congress, assembled in Philadelphia, formally adopted a resolution for independence from Great Britain.

 

1809 – Shawnee Chief Tecumseh called on all Native Americans to unite and resist further encroachment by Whites on their lands.

 

1867 – New York City’s first elevated railroad officially opened for business.  Commuters soon called the mode of transportation the El.

 

1881 – Only 4 months into office, President James A. Garfield was shot as he walked through a railroad waiting room in Washington, D.C.  Vice President Chester A. Arthur served as acting president until Garfield died on September 19, 1881.

 

1900 – Count Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin demonstrated the world’s first rigid airship over Germany’s Lake Constance.

 

1908 – Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, 1967 – 1991, was born in Baltimore, MD.

 

1921 – The first prize fight offering a million-dollar gate was broadcast on radio.  Jack Dempsey knocked out Georges Carpentier in the fourth round of the bout in Jersey City, NJ.

Dempsey

Carpentier

 

1937 – Aviator Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were reported missing near Howland Island in the North – Central Pacific Ocean.

 

1964 – President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law, making against the law to discriminate against people because of their race.

 

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Cartoon of the Day

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The Truth is the Truth

Even for those in a state of denial – like the entire Republican Party.  Image source.

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