Forum for discussing local and world politics and issues. All views are welcomed. Let your opinions be heard on current news and politics.
All standard guidelines apply to this board, No Flaming, No Taunting, No Foul Language,No sexual innuendos,etc..
As politics can be a volatile subject, please consider how you would feel if your comment were directed toward yourself.
Any post deemed to be in violation of guidelines will be deleted or edited without warning or notification. Any continued misbehavior will result in a ban or hidden status, so please play nice!!!
*"Moderators are here for a reason. If a moderator (or Global Moderator or Fencer) requests that a discussion on a certain subject to cease - for whatever reason - please respect these wishes. Failure to do so may result in being hidden, or banned."
Список форумов
Вам не разрешено писать сообщения на этом форуме. Минимальный статус, требуемый для того, чтобы писать на этом форуме - Мозговая Пешка.
MissDelish: Exactly. And if there is any doubt then don't buy. Signing on with credit card companies is especially bad, because until you get it all paid off they 'own' you.
The Justice Department’s criminal investigation into the manipulation of LIBOR and EURIBOR by other financial institutions and individuals is ongoing. The agreement requires Barclays to continue cooperating with the department in its ongoing investigation.
“LIBOR and EURIBOR are critically important benchmark interest rates,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “Because mortgages, student loans, financial derivatives, and other financial products rely on LIBOR and EURIBOR as reference rates, the manipulation of submissions used to calculate those rates can have significant negative effects on consumers and financial markets worldwide. For years, traders at Barclays encouraged the manipulation of LIBOR and EURIBOR submissions in order to benefit their financial positions; and, in the midst of the financial crisis, Barclays management directed that U.S. Dollar LIBOR submissions be artificially lowered. For this illegal conduct, Barclays is paying a significant price. To the bank’s credit, Barclays also took a significant step toward accepting responsibility for its conduct by being the first institution to provide extensive and meaningful cooperation to the government. Its efforts have substantially assisted the Criminal Division in our ongoing investigation of individuals and other financial institutions in this matter.”
""Senior managers at Barclays have warned staff in an internal memo that the Libor scandal will envelop other banks.
The memo circulated on Friday said that revelations about its rivals would "put in perspective" Barclays' culpability.....
.....According to the Barclays' memo to staff: "As other banks settle with authorities, and their details become public, and various governments' inquiries shed more light, our situation will eventually be put in perspective."
The memo, from Mr Agius and other senior executives, admitted that customers, shareholders and regulators "all have a right to feel let down" by the bank after it admitted to manipulating Libor, and incurred a £290m ($450m) fine from UK and US regulators.
Several banks are currently being investigated, both in the UK and the US, for allegedly manipulating Libor.
On Friday it emerged that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York - which is responsible for overseeing banks in the US city - discussed concerns about the way Libor was being set as early as May 2008.
"""A US regulator has fined the credit card provider Capital One Financial for misleading millions of customers into buying unnecessary products. Capital One has agreed to pay $210m (£134m) to settle the case and refund two million customers.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) said "deceptive marketing tactics" had been used. Consumers had to pay for extras such as payment protection and credit monitoring when they took out a card. CFPB director Richard Cordray said: "Customers were pressured or misled into buying credit card products they didn't understand, didn't want, or in some cases, couldn't even use."
"We are putting companies on notice that these deceptive practices are against the law and will not be tolerated," he added.
Capital One, on of the US's biggest issuers of credit cards, said it will refund customers $150m, pay a $25m fine to the CFPB and an additional $35m to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency"""
... $150,000,000 in refunds going.. Are YOU owed??
Homeland Security lets states access immigration database to aid voter purge
July 18, 2012
The Department of Homeland Security is opening up its immigration database to several battleground states that want to identify and kick off non-citizens from their voter registration rolls, NPR reported.
Homeland Security initially denied Florida's request to access the database, arguing it would violate voting rights laws, before a federal judge sided with Florida and forced DHS to open the database. Florida, Colorado, Nevada and other battleground states may soon start using the data to purge legal immigrants who have not yet become citizens from the rolls.
Florida notified 2,700 people--60 percent of them Hispanic--that their voter registration would be automatically revoked if they didn't prove their citizenship. The Florida officials relied on a state database that had out-of-date citizenship information, and most of the people contacted by reporters on the list have proven or stated their citizenship, according to the Miami Herald. Voting rights groups have criticized the purge for happening so close to the election, which gives people removed in error little time to re-register. Some Democrats argue the purges and voter ID laws intentionally discourage minority voters who tend to vote Democratic, but supporters argue that they're a necessary way to prevent voter fraud.
Conservatives need the Liberals in America so they can carry on being conservative without fear of the rest of the world seeing the US as an aggressive state who supplies weapons of death (WOD's) to as many warzones as possible.
N' as a country who keeps interfering with other country's.
The Col: Well like I said it depends on what YOU mean by right wing extremists. Using the definition I have in mine I'd say no. They don't love America. They love their screwed up ideology.
Carrying this further: Does Obama love America? No. He wants to fundamentally change American from what it is to what it is not. He can find that in Venezuela.
The Col: Depends on who you mean. I know some right wingers that are the same. They want freedom for themselves but not so much for others. But if you mean the tea party, they are patriots. They want to restore the US to what we are Constitutionally. But some extreme groups just want their ideology to command regardless of laws or Constitution principles.
The Col: No I don't. Moderates maybe but not the progressives. They love their ideology and want only what's best for their screwed up view of the world. They want to fundamentally change America. They should move to Cuba. There's a fundamental change for ya.
rod03801: Liberals are good at running things into the ground. They won't be satisfied until they've demolished everything. Then they will still blame everyone else for what they themselves have created. They are the party of blame.
(V): "Mcdonalds has a lot to answer for regarding the obesity problem."
I blame McDonnalds for my weight problem. I never go there, but it's all their fault... I blame Bush too.
"The use of sweat shops, child labour deaths?"
So in other words, you support sweat shops that contribute to child labour deaths because you don't make your own clothes?
"Asbestos? The NHBC 10 year guarantee being worthless??"
You choose to live in substandard housing..
"...internet easiness was invented by someone working at CERN. IE a government paid scientist."
And today he single handedly runs all the businesses involved in making internet access available to you.
Did some kid build a computer in his garage and then give it to you?
"No I built it."
And you built all the parts and components from scratch, from rocks and dirt. And from tree branches and twigs you hand carved using a knife you made from raw iron ore heated by a fire you made from rubbing two sticks together. No evil business made anything you used to build your own computer. You even built a running wheel to generate your own electricity.
HSBC provided a conduit for "drug kingpins and rogue nations", according to a US Senate committee investigating money laundering claims at the bank. Its report said suspicious funds from countries including Mexico, Iran and Syria had passed through the bank.
The committee is hearing from HSBC officials, one of whom said he found it "painful and embarrassing" to talk about the bank's shortcomings. HSBC's head of group compliance, David Bagley, stepped down at the hearing.
Mr Bagley told the committee that the bank had "fallen short of our own and regulators' expectations but that a major overhaul of the bank's compliance activities was underway and that HSBC had "learned a lot of valuable lessons".
He said despite being head of compliance he had not had full authority to act over all parts of the bank.
The bank said it was in the process of closing 20,000 accounts in the Cayman Islands as a result of the investigation.
Senator Carl Levin said HSBC's lack of controls at its US and overseas units had been "a recipe for trouble". Mr Levin is chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which is looking into HSBC's activities between 2006 and 2010.
Its report also says that some HSBC bank affiliates got round US government rules prohibiting financial transactions with Iran and certain other countries, in some cases assisting terrorism.
We can blame them therefore for supporting terrorists and drug barons??
... That was one thing about the 2012 Olympics .. the two biggest supporters are the two biggest suppliers into the food chain of products that are bad for your health.
(V): "I'm still waiting for a list from a conservative on this board on what we can blame on businesses."
You can blame them for the food you eat. You can blame them for the clothes you wear. You can blame them for the materials and labor that went into making your home. You can blame them for your computer and for easy access to the internet. (I blame them for that)
Those are just a few examples. There's plenty of blame to go around, and no end to the products and services we can complain about.
By the way, do you grow your own food and make your own clothes? Did you build your own home and do you generate your own electricity? Did some kid build a computer in his garage and then give it to you?
LG Display has agreed to pay $380m (£246m) to settle an LCD panel price-fixing case in the US.
The company denied doing anything wrong, but said it had agreed to a settlement to avoid "the expense and burden of protracted litigation".
It was the largest amount paid by any of the 10 companies that have settled the case, including Toshiba, Samsung, Sharp and Hitachi.
They were accused of fixing the prices of LCD panels between 1996 and 2006.
The money will go to US consumers and state governments. The alleged price fixing would have increased the prices of devices using LCD displays such as televisions and laptop computers.
Samsung paid $240m to settle the case in December, while Toshiba is to pay $21m and AU Optronics is to pay $170m.
>>>>>>> But it's ok, they make money. As money makers they are allowed to rip people off.
After today’s decision by the Federal Reserve to maintain the target fed funds rate at zero to 25 basis points, Swiss Re’s Chief Economist, Kurt Karl, commented: “Weak economic activity, moderating inflation and fiscal tightening will keep the Fed on hold through mid-2013, perhaps longer.”
Karl added: “Since last summer, the US economic prospects have proved to be resilient to the euro debt crisis. Growth continues, though still at a fairly moderate pace. Headline consumer price inflation has eased from 3.9% year-over-year in September to 3.0% in December. Fiscal stimulus will be weaker this year than in 2011, so growth is unlikely to accelerate substantially this year. Nevertheless, vehicle sales and residential construction, particularly of multi-family homes, will support growth this year. The euro debt crisis, coupled with Operation Twist, has bolstered demand for long-term Treasuries. In addition, the new set of forecasts from the FOMC members should help calm markets and provide guidance on expected future Fed policies. As a consequence, we have lowered our forecast of yields on the 10-year Treasury note to 2% - 2.5% by end-2012."
He continued: “In Europe, further steps continue to be taken to contain the crisis and stabilize the situation. This has been, encouragingly, sufficient to lower yields on Italian and Spanish government bonds from recent peaks. However, the problems are far from solved and it will take more time to implement needed structural and fiscal reforms. Despite some improvements, the Euro Area is most likely currently in recession. In the UK, fiscal policies continue to restrain growth and a mild recession now looks likely. On the other hand, Japan’s economy is recovering from the tsumani, so will support the global economy this year with real GDP growth of 2.2%. China's recent shift to expansionary monetary policy may have already begun to pay off, with Q4 growth a bit stronger than expected. Growth this year is expected to be 8.5%, lower than last year, but still robust.”
Субъект: Re: I didn't have to, but since you are so fond of ragging on and on against big business and greed and such, I thought I'd get in on the 'act' too.
Субъект: Re: I didn't have to, but since you are so fond of ragging on and on against big business and greed and such, I thought I'd get in on the 'act' too.
Субъект: Re: I didn't have to, but since you are so fond of ragging on and on against big business and greed and such, I thought I'd get in on the 'act' too.
Субъект: Re: I didn't have to, but since you are so fond of ragging on and on against big business and greed and such, I thought I'd get in on the 'act' too.
Artful Dodger: "someone is very clever!"
Oh, you mean the painting of a kid looking up at a "spaceship"! I thought it was clever too. It's in the same style as the old Norman Rockwell paintings.