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    Sunday
    Apr172011

    The Maven is moving. Stay tuned.

    Some changes are in store for the mavenandmeddler blog. A new look and new format are in the offing, and I’ll be moving the whole shebang soon, but a bunch needs to be done in the way of packing up and getting ready.

    The Devil is in the ticky-tacky details - most of which I get totally confused about, mess up, get frustrated and end up paying to have somebody else straighten it all out. Sheesh. Yes, you’re right … this could take a while. But in the meantime, I’ll be taking a well-deserved rest from blogging.

    When it’s all ‘purty’ and ready, I’ll be blasting the news on FB and more.

    Thanks for your patience.

    -maven

    Wednesday
    Apr132011

    AB 336: Measly 4.5% Corporate Business Tax should be a no-brainer

    According to freshman Nevada Assemblywoman Teresa Benitez-Thompson, D-Reno, a bill calling for a mere 4.5 percent tax on companies that make a profit of $500,000 or more a year would enact a lower tax rate than that of surrounding states. She’s talking about Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce’s AB 336.

    Of course the ‘other side’ ( Assemblyman Pete Livermore, R-Carson City ) was quick to point out that any sort of leftysocialistantibusiness tax on business will kill an economic recovery and jobs, jobs, jobs! What they never follow this up with are any facts or figures to support how not having a corporate business tax in Nevada hasn’t managed to diversify or strengthen the Nevada economy up till now - thus avoiding the horrible fiscal mess we currently find ourselves in.

    It might also be prudent to note that even if Nevada were to impose a modest corporate income tax, given the number of convenient loopholes afforded the huge foreign mining companies operating in Nevada, they’ll have more than enough lobbying and Jones Vargas type tax attorney means to whittle their net down to that magic $500,000 and waltz right out of paying a damn dime.

    As with mining, it’s not the measly 5% tax rate in the Nevada Constitution that mining cares about - it’s those priceless deductions that enable them to pay zero … nada … zip … nothing. And so with any other business enterprise worth it’s Jones Vargas attorneys.

    You might want to get angry if you are a business that can’t afford lobbyists and fancy attorneys.

    This is a given. So let’s pass the tax. Small business probably won’t be the worse for it, and if, by chance, they end up having to pay some pittance, then the state won’t be in quite so much of a quagmire.

    -maven

    By the way, Assemblyman Pete Livermore, R-Carson City failed the Project Vote Smart political courage test for 2010. He sorta kinda didn’t want to answer queries on any substantive issues. Here are the Contributions and Expenses reports filed with the Nevada Secretary of State’s office for Mr. Livermore. He got plenty from the Chamber of Commerce.

    Unfortunately, Benitez-Thompson also failed the Project Vote Smart political courage test for 2010. Shame. Her C&E filings are shown here.

    Wednesday
    Apr132011

    Asleep at the tower in Reno, Nevada?

    It happened at Washington’s Reagan National Airport, and now it’s happened at Reno-Tahoe International Airport. Last night, apparently, the lone air traffic controller was getting some ZZZZZZZ and didn’t hear or respond to the call from an incoming air ambulance flight.

    “The medical flight pilot was in communication with the Northern California Terminal Radar Approach Control and landed safely,” according to a statement from the FAA. “The controller, who was out of communication for approximately 16 minutes, has been suspended while the FAA investigates.” according to a report in the Las Vegas Review Journal.

    This type of thing gets lots of attention around this aviation heavy household. Between all the years that Ron flew as a captain for Western Airlines and then Delta, he had many occasions to bring an airliner into Reno, as well as Regan-National. In our days flying for the Nevada Wing, Civil Air Patrol, we flew many Search and Rescue (SAR) and medical/organ transplant flights out of Reno-Tahoe International. Many of those flights were in the middle of the night.

    Here’s a couple things you need to keep in mind about this whole business:

    1- There’s a world of difference between the traffic in and out of Reno during the late night hours and a busy airport in the nation’s capital during those same hours.

    2- There are standard procedures in place for flight in and out of all airports when there is no ‘(control ) tower. Airplanes operate safely in and out of ‘uncontrolled airports’ or ‘non-towered’ airports thousands of times a day around the country using the UNICOM frequency ( usually 122.8 ) and landing the airplane. When taking off or landing at Stead, we use the UNICOM. Same with Carson City. Over and over. You call out your tail number, position and intentions to be heard by any other aircraft in the ‘traffic pattern’.

    In this instance, with a tower and a sleeping controller, the Pilot in Command (PIC), will try to raise the controller, but failing that, he/she will need to stay on the published ‘Tower Frequency’, because other aircraft in the area would be monitoring that. The pilot would keep trying for a reasonable amount of time, then check the ATIS or the wind sock/tetrahedrin, look for other aircraft/traffic and land - using the published traffic pattern for that airport. The pilot would then try again to raise the Tower on the aircraft radio, or even use a cell phone to call the tower.

    At no time was anybody in danger. This was not an ‘emergency’. Airliners regularly use these procedures in a lot of small airports around the country, as do light/general aviation aircraft such as the five-seat Piper Cheyenne that landed at Reno last night. It’s been discussed, over the years, whether or not it could be justified economically for Reno to have the tower open over night at all.

    That said, it’s not the optimal way our air traffic control system should be working. This is ridiculous penny-pinching, cost-cutting to prove that everybody is tightening their belts - rather than real cost effeciencies where they need to be.

    The bottom line savings from two controllers on duty overnight is miniscule. This Reno controller should be given some ‘time off’ and a letter in his file, but there are larger issues here that nobody is really willing to talk about - like where is it smart to cut and pennywise pound foolish to cut. And of course, nobody wants to talk about raising revenue to simply pay for what we absolutely need.

    -Maven

     

    Tuesday
    Apr122011

    Follow the conflicting headlines. If you can.

    Don’t you just love it when newspaper headlines seem to be completely at odds with each other? You have to wonder if anybody was really paying attention, or gave a rat’s ass.

    In this mornings Reno Gazette-Journal, on the Business page, there was this:

    Benefits perk up CEO pay packages. The article talks about the importance of giving CEO’s plenty of perks to sweeten their miserly pay packages. Things like use of the corporate jet, thousands of dollars for ‘financial planning’ (where to put those billions), the costs for home security at the various estates and mansions.

    According to the article, corporate compensation advisors are queasy talking about CEO perks right now, but gee … “It’s not like directors haven’t thought about getting rid of perks. They’re still a sticking point for a lot of executives. They feel it’s part of their compensation package. And it’s a stature thing”. Ain’t that grand?

    Below this article, the headline says:

    Product-safety database under multiple attacks. You have to actually read past the lead paragraph to get it, but apparently the sweeping product-safety law’s Consumer Product Safety Commission’s new complaint database isn’t roundly loved by all. Why, you ask? “Businesses say it’s overly burdensome.” More burdensome, say, than handing out all those tough CEO perks. But probably not as burdensome as the price of sweet red bell peppers. I was in Winco yesterday, and a ‘working class’ couple were trying to decide if they could afford to buy two peppers - for about 89 cents apiece. The man said, “You know, that’s almost two dollars there. Do you need them?

    Yes, she probably didn’t actually need those sweet peppers. Not any more than the $1.5 million Oracle CEO Larry Ellison got for home security, or the $526,391 Black & Decker CEO, Nolan Archibald, got for personal travel on the corporate jet, or the $391, 107 Occidental Petroleum’s Ray Irani received for ‘financial planning’ on top of $76.1 million in compensation.

    To end this little rant, I want to mention a ‘fer instance’ on why we might need a consumer complaint advocacy.

    In February, Public Citizen got a hot tip about what was and was not being said at the annual webinar of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). It seems some attendees had some ethics and a conscience, and reported that one of the ASPS presidents advised members to avoid using the words ‘cancer’, ‘tumor’, ‘malignancy’ when talking about a type of cancer found in women with implants. He said it would be less frightening to use the word ‘condition’ … especially when talking to the media as well.

    Golly gee. You wouldn’t want to frighten the little ladies, now would you? And if you can get rid of the teeth in an consumer advocacy/regulatory agency, then you can kill the messenger too.

    Ain’t that grand?

    -maven

    Saturday
    Apr092011

    Support AB 314 for medically accurate sex ed in schools

    Hey, in case you hadn’t heard:

    Sound medically accurate, sex education in our schools has been one of society’s best weapons against unplanned and unintended pregnancy. That’s why I support Assemblyman David Bobzien’s bill, AB 314.

    Nevada has the second highest teen pregnancy rate in the nation. Hmmm. Why do you think? Perhaps a lack of really thorough sex ed … and access to birth control? Janine Hansen of the Eagle Forum thinks perhaps Facebook and the social media causes teen pregnancy. 

    I’m with the group that thinks ignorance, fear and lack of access to reproductive services and information causes teen/unplanned/unintended pregnancy.

    click to direct to originating site

    For more information on the costs of teen pregnancy specific to Nevada:

    THE NATIONAL CAMPAIGN TO PREVENT TEEN PREGNANCY
    www.teenpregnancy.org

    A new analysis from the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy shows that teen childbearing (teens 19 and younger) in Nevada cost taxpayers (federal, state, and local) at least $67 million in 2004.

    • Of the total 2004 teen childbearing costs in Nevada, 54% were federal costs and 46% were state and local costs.

    • Most of the costs of teen childbearing are associated with negative consequences for the children of teen mothers. In Nevada, in 2004, annual taxpayer costs associated with children born to teen mothers included: $7 million for public health care (Medicaid and SCHIP); $8 million for child welfare; $13 million for incarceration; and $25 million in lost tax revenue, due to decreased earnings and spending.*

    • The costs of childbearing are greatest for younger teens. In Nevada, the average annual cost associated with a child born to a mother 17 and younger is $3,040.

    • Between 1991 and 2004 there have been more than 48,900 teen births in Nevada, costing taxpayers a total of $0.9 billion over that period.

    • The teen birth rate in Nevada declined 31 percent between 1991 and 2004. The
    progress Nevada has made in reducing teen childbearing saved taxpayers an estimated $37 million in 2004 alone.

    • Nationally teen childbearing costs taxpayers at least $9.1 billion a year.

    • For more information, including a national report and state-by-state comparisons, please visit www.teenpregnancy.org/costs.

    Saturday
    Apr092011

    Decent person's urge to do the right thing dumbfounds other children at biennial Carson City band camp

    Normally, I would put this under the Impurely Maven page with the other re-posted stuff by other serious people. However, Hugh Jackson’s comments and observations regarding our efforts to make sense at the Nevada Assembly Taxation Committee hearing on AB 428 the other day deserves a wider audience - like everybody who is not getting a check from the mining industry.

    I sat there watching the glazed over looks of the Committee members as Hugh bravely soldiered on through chapter and verse of just what the foreign mining behemoths weren’t paying to the state of Nevada. They didn’t give a rats ass. The mining lobbyists in the room were busy checking their Blackberries and taking bathroom breaks. They didn’t give a rats ass either - they know that they’ve butter the right slices of bread and that they’re probably pretty safe.

    I’ve tried to make the point to one and all on ‘our side’ of this, that taking the facts straight to the electorate via the public media - even if we have to pay for it - might be the only way to get mining to pay something - anything! Silly me, I somehow remain naive enough to think that average people, once armed with the sad truth of how mining has stuck it up the backside of Nevada’s citizens, might get angry enough to insist on passage of AB 428 in addition to Ms. Pierce’s other bills to take mining out the Constitution and otherwise hold them accountable.

    You’d think that gaming might want to help push this trolley up the hill, since they’re actually paying a higher effective tax rate despite the fact that their revenues are down in the toilet due to the economy.

    Sign me ‘still hoping for a miracle’.

    -maven

    Post by Hugh Jackson, The Las Vegas Gleaner

    Decent person’s urge to do the right thing dumbfounds other children at biennial Carson City band camp

    A legislative committee held a hearing the other day on Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce’s bill to make mining pay some taxes for a change. After months of batting their big doe eyes at legislators during romantic dinners, pretending to be impressed with the intelligence and wit of lawmakers and otherwise softening up/wearing down your elected officials, mining lobbyists used the hearing to fill the air with artificial arguments and disingenuous diversions designed to lead the committee far off into the weeds and well away from any trenchant discussion. For the most part it worked, and questions asked of the industry’s lobbyists tended to range from the innocuous to the irrelevant.

    If Pierce’s bill is ever sent to the Assembly floor and legislators vote on it, people would find out: What do elected officials value more, wealthy investors around the world with huge financial interests in multinational mining corporations, or Nevada?

    Ha ha trick question. The answer is none of the above.

    Read the rest at Hugh’s website. The man’s trying to make a living while telling the actual truth. That deserves your support.

    Friday
    Apr082011

    Friday Fish Wrap: April 8. 2011

    Before you even continue reading this, I want you to go to the following website: ALERTID.

    Here’s what it’s about:

    AlertID uses the newest online technology to create instant, two-way communications between citizens and federal, state, and local authorities to provide immediate information on crime, terrorism or natural disasters that can threaten the safety of your family and community.

    Using the unique AlertID system, you are constantly connected to neighbors, local police and fire departments, as well as federal and state agencies to exchange critical information that can help keep your family and community safe, whether the threat is national, local, or personal such as a missing child.

    Take action now to make your home, your neighborhood and your country a safer place to live.

    And, I can tell you, it rocks big time. I signed both of us up, and took a look at their map which showed our home … and a home burglary just up the street that I never knew about. This is one of the ways the internet and cellphones can help keep us safer, and make our communities more responsive in the event of something of immediate concern.

    Now, back to what I was going to say.

    The ‘Shutdown’. Obama regrets the possibility of a shutdown. Unfortunately, that’s all he seems prepared to do. You’d think there was no alternatives to Obama’s lame, middle-center budget - which keeps the Bush tax cuts or the looming meat-axe and artless bludgeoning of America by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-WI. But there is another way. It’s the Peoples Budget, put forth by the Progressive Caucus.

    Here’s what it can accomplish:

    The CPC proposal:

    • Eliminates the deficits and creates a surplus by 2021
    • Puts America back to work with a “Make it in America” jobs program
    • Protects the social safety net
    • Ends the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
    • Is FAIR (Fixing America’s Inequality Responsibly)

    What the proposal accomplishes:

    • Primary budget balance by 2014.
    • Budget surplus by 2021.
    • Reduces public debt as a share of GDP to 64.4% by 2021, down 16.9 percentage points from
    a baseline fully adjusted for both the doc fix and the AMT patch.
    • Reduces deficits by $5.7 trillion over 2012-21
    • Both outlays and revenue equal 22.3% of GDP by 2021

    You can read more about this budget, what it hopes to do and how, by clicking here.

    It never ceases to amaze me that anybody other than the far to the right TeaBagger fringe would even consider Paul Ryan’s budget - which will destroy many of the social safety net programs that have served generations of Americans very well indeed. It will get rid of Medicare and Medicaid, food stamps, child care and pretty much anything that benefits the working American - except for the military budget.

    Even Ryan is afraid to go after that sacred cow.

    But Ryan has no fear when it comes to thrusting older Americans back into the eager arms of a for-profit health insurance market. PPO’s and Medicare Advantage programs have been shown to increase health care costs for seniors. So why is Ryan proposing to hand them an entire generation of Americans? Is that the way to hold ballooning healthcare costs down?

    This is called ‘anything except a public option’. What nonsense.

    And the war on women is another nasty part of this showdown. Bending over and dropping trou to the far rightwing ideology about abortion - they figure that defunding and closing down Planned Parenthood will play well to that base. What they’re not telling them is that if fewer abortions are really the goal, shutting down family planning services provided by Planned Parenthood will have exactly the opposite effect. The problem is that this right-wing TeaBaggers are too damn stupid to connect the dots.

    Sheesh.

    The biggest part of the big dig out here is over. We now have a septic system and leach field that should last about 50 years longer than the two of us.

    All I have to do now, is figure out what to do with the lawn, and get the sprinkler system repaired. Monday, they will return to put in a new paver driveway over where the septic leach field had to go. Well, there went about $10K.

    If anybody out there has a suggestion on somebody to repair the sprinkler system lines and the sod, let me know about it.

    The way that I deal with stress from projects like this is riding my bike. The good news is that the weather is getting good enough - not perfect, mind you. It spit snow pellets all day today - that I can get at least two or three days in per week. It’s been really great to be back out there.

    Today’s Reno Gazette-Journal says that Gov. Brian Sandoval wants to be prepared for how the federal government shutdown might affect Nevada. This is a good thing to be doing, since his budget will essentially be a shutdown for the state - this will give him practice in running a state with the lights out and doors locked.

    The way things went down in Carson City at the Taxation Committee hearing on mining tax deductions yesterday didn’t give me much hope either.

    Like I said, it’s cycling weather. Get out there and relieve the stress of staying informed.

    Sheesh. Try and have a good weekend despite all of it.

    -maven

    Thursday
    Apr072011

    Doing Battle Against Mining Special Interests

    Here’s the takeaway from today’s hearing down in Carson City: Mining doesn’t want to be singled out and treated special - you know, taxed differently than other Nevada businesses. If that were true, then why hasn’t mining taken themselves OUT of the Nevada Constitution - uh, where they have been treated special and differently - by their own design - for 130 years?

    Today, I went down to the Nevada Legislature to offer my support to Bob Fulkerson and the folks from PLAN. I had a very short, concise statement that I wished to offer to the committee.

    I’ve gotta tell you, Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce took on Goliath with AB 428, the bill that would cut the outrageous collection of deductions mining has collected over the last 130 years, which essentially enable them to pay about one-half of one percent taxes on massive amounts of gold extracted from Nevada.

    The chamber was a sea of dark suits and sleek black spiked heels. White men in power suits, and youngish women in Manolo Blahniks, armed with laptops and self-assured, knowing smirks. They’d be easy to spot without all the trademarks of dress. Their blue nametags proclaim: PAID LOBBYIST.

    That makes you want to throw up your hands and run right there, but that’s probably what they’re counting on. As Sen. Bernie Sanders says, the only right we don’t have as citizens is the right to give up. I kept telling myself that.

    When citizens were invited to testify, first up was Hugh Jackson down in Las Vegas. Hugh - aka The Las Vegas Gleaner - has done the heavy lifting, putting together a damning set of numbers to show that, clearly, mining has been getting a free ride for many years. When times were good, nobody seemed to care that mining was treating Nevada like one of their Third World countries.

    Times are hard now, and if Nevada’s future means anything at all, it’s time to care. but I digress.

    Hugh began his remarks - citing chapter and verse. Then I saw how this was going to go. Assemblyman John Ellison, R- Elko, launched the first attack. In Mr. Ellison’s world, you couldn’t possibly know anything about mining or mining taxes unless you’ve actually worked in the mines - as he pointed out to Mr. Jackson.

    This is a favored refrain from the Rightwing, and PR flacks these days. Most recently, BP used this canard against a well-respected scientist who studied and analyzed the faulty oil well blowout preventer. How could he possibly have any knowledge unless he’s been an oil rig worker?

    Right here, I want you to bookmark a fascinating website I found the other night: The Denialist’s Deck of Cards. It’s a brilliantly straightforward playbook to Lobbyist Speak and Tactics. They were all on display during this mornings circus.

    But back to Ellison (see the Newmont and Barrick constributions on his campaign C&E here). He introduced a refrain that would be later picked up by his Nevada Mining Association cronies - mainly Tim Crowley - that there are other minerals being mined in Nevada besides those HUGE amounts of gold. True. But gold is kinda the 900 lb gorilla in the room:

    Newmont and Barrick produced more gold here in Nevada than in any other nation on earth. The combined net income of the two foreign mining behemoths are more than the governor’s proposed budget, dwarfing the insignificant effects of any mining tax increases.

    No matter what Mr. Jackson could offer in the way of actual facts, Mr. Ellison would not be satisfied. How many times has Mr. Jackson actually been out to a Nevada mine? Again, back to proximity necessarily equaling informed opinion. We couldn’t possibly know about the sun and it’s makeup since we haven’t been there either!

    Mr. Ellison went on with red herrings that would be brought up time and again: Rural Nevada counties would go broke if mining had to pay more taxes (the presumption that mining would leave), and that the sheer magnitude and complexity of mining investment and risks taken should somehow justify paying zip to the state.

    But here’s a question: How many other businesses get to deduct nearly 100% of their business costs as our Canadian friends Barrick and Newmont have been doing? Hmmmm.

    Finally, it was time for a few of us from the north to take to the microphone and voice our concerns. Since I knew most of the others would be talking about numbers - they had that part down pat - I thought I would talk briefly about who we’re doing business with - as in the corporate citizenship of Barrick and Newmont.

    Committee Chair, Marilyn Kirkpatrick (Click here for her campaign C&E, noting mining dollars) didn’t like that, interrupting me about 20 seconds into my remarks, asking what my remarks had to do specifically to mining tax deductions. If she had allowed me to continue for another minute, I could have made that connection. Alas, it was not to be. She also stepped on the Hispanic woman that followed me. I’ll put my complete remarks at the bottom of this post.

    Too bad she didn’t hold the mining industry lobbyists to the same standard. Maybe that’s the price we pay, as taxpayers, when our legislators are beholden to mining contributions.

    Most of the last hour was wasted debating just what the verbiage in the bill related to marketing’ meant - page 2, line 16 in AB428. Apparently ‘marketing’ in mining isn’t ‘marketing’ the way you and I and most other people think of it. It doesn’t mean advertising or promotion. It means transporting gold to the point of sale - Barbados in this case. Mining doesn’t think flying to Barbados should be tax deductible.

    Sigh. This is also covered under the Denialists Deck of Cards - The Fourth Hand: Spread Confusion.

    Finally, the discussion centered around ‘what are microscopic flecks of gold in the ground really worth? The premise being that they are essentially worthless until mined, processed and sold - for this mining brought in the big gun tax attorney from Jones, Vargas in Las Vegas. Instead of paying taxes to the state to save us from financial ruin, they’ve invested in high-priced lobbyists and tax attorneys.

    His bottom line was that gold is simply potentially valuable. It’s all just dirt that we’re trying to tax them on. Nevada’s mining tax is simply a property tax - on the dirt.

    Let me know how it works out when you have to make your next property tax payment, and tell the county that your home is unrealized potential and just dirt - and that you’ve had a lot of expenses that you’ll take deductions on dollar for dollar. Tell the assessor that you won’t be paying any property tax this year.

    Let me know how that works out. It does for mining.

    -maven

    Oh, you should know how to work the handy dandy C&E (Contributions and Expenses) Financial Disclosure Report Search database on all the Nevada legislators at the Nevada Secretary of States office. It’s nifty - just plug in the name and pull up the report. Scan carefully on the badly handwritten ones, so you don’t miss the mining money. I noted that Ms. Kirkpatrick also took a lot from the NRA so don’t expect her to be completely impartial when it comes to gun related issues.

    And for even more fun with data, check out all that Barrick, Newmont et al have given:

    Click on the image to open original source

    Here are the members of today’s Nevada Assembly Taxation Committee:

     

    Here is the statement that I would have made, had I been allowed to:

    A few years ago, I was prominently involved in searching for a missing multi-millionaire aviator in the rugged Nevada wilderness.

    After it was all said and done, a lot of us wondered if we were given the whole story.

    Today, I’m joining thousands of fellow Nevadans searching for a little justice … from multi-billion dollar foreign mining corporations that are removing non-renewable resources at record rates and historic prices, and apparently paying almost nothing to state in return.

    Looking at how much mining pays to other states, such as Wyoming, I’m wondering if we’ve been getting the whole story from mining.

    During the good times, when tourists were streaming into Nevada, and the housing boom was in full swing, apparently Nevada was just fine being treated like a third world country by Foreign Mining Concerns  - happy to just ask for a modest 5%.

    Yet,  Peru is talking about raising royalties beyond their current  1 to 3 %, and Chili has already introduced amendments to increase mining royalties from 5 to 14% .

    You might feel some sympathy for mining, but according to MiningWatch Canada, they will continue to effectively loot countries like the Congo, for example.

    Canada’s Barrick Gold is the world’s largest producer of gold. In a 2005 Human Rights Watch report entitled The Curse of Gold, Barrick Gold and other mining companies are accused of making mining agreements in 2002 with two eastern DRC militias that had control of the mines.

    Both militias were also in the midst of murdering hundreds of civilians. In return for the gold mines, the militias were given housing and trucks, and more. Incredibly, as highlighted by independent journalist and Congo-expert Keith Harmon Snow, Barrick’s and one its partners, Anglo-Ashanti, even sent in lawyers to help represent leaders of the militias after some were apprehended by the DRC government.

    Yes. That’s mining. Always looking out for the little people.

    Unfortunately, Barrick has had tax evasion issues in other African countries – Tanzania, for example. Tanzania is now trying to raise its minerals severance tax to a modest 10%.

    Barricks’  net revenues in Africa still continue to climb anyway.

    These are the kind of people we want to encourage and foster closer economic relationships with right here in Nevada.

    A report obtained by MiningWatch Canada reveals that Canadian mining companies are implicated in four times as many violations of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) as mining companies from other countries. The report was commissioned by the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) in 2009 but was never released to the public.

    Yes.

    As the Canadian government introduced stricter regulations for mining companies operating within Canada – their mining companies simply went on to pillage on a global scale.

    They’ve found an excellent home in Nevada.

    They can treat Nevada like any other third world, developing country – with impunity- and since times were good all over, it didn’t seem to matter so much.

    Yet, there is only ONE Carlin Trend. It is unique in all the world. Mining has looked worldwide for other analogies and have found none.

    Times have changed in Nevada. Things are tough all over.

    We can continue to sit and wring our hands, and scrap our education systems … the DRC gets by without an educational system, after all.

    Or we can act like a world leader and insist that since we’re all in a belt tightening mood, that Foreign Mining Concerns operating in Nevada pay their share -  lest we start looking at them as global corporate criminals and treat them accordingly.

    It’s time to say YES to AB428.

    Thank you.

    Wednesday
    Apr062011

    Can You Help Nathan and Elisa in Their Battle Against Cancer?

    This story tore at my heart. As a survivor of Stage III breast cancer, I can imagine her struggle. But for her husband to have been diagnosed with a serious cancer just nine days earlier, that’s more than I can get my head wrapped around. Then there’s their beautiful 18-month-old daughter, Sadie.

    I know how much the insurance companies don’t cover. It can be staggering for aggressive advanced cancer treatment. Times two, in this case.

    When I saw Nathan and Elisa’s story, I came right in and donated a modest amount. The price of a movie night for my husband and I. It’s the least I can do. What about you?

    Tuesday
    Apr052011

    New Neighbor. Old Wrong Ideas.

    A new neighbor moved in across the street the other day. We’re thrilled. The folks that lived there were wonderful, but you always wonder, when a property sells, what you might get. Druggies? Loud parties?  He drives an NHP vehicle. That probably means no monkey business over there, and a bit of righteous authority in the neighborhood.

    Ron went over and introduced himself yesterday and he got talking with the husband about the sorry plight of the public employee, budget cuts and hard times.

    Husband - buff, cleancut, square jawed -  nods his head sympathetically, agreeing. He then proceeded to tell Ron that it was such a shame that “those welfare people” are bankrupting the system. Sigh.

    Yup. The poor and uneducated have historically had such political clout that they can always bend the system to their will and mis-use it.

    Jeeze, when will people just stop and examine at their own assumptions - and quit being pawns for the rightwing propaganda machine?

    Sigh.

    -maven

     

    Tuesday
    Apr052011

    Time to Hold Mining Accountable: SJR 15, SB 493, SB 492, AB 428  

    It’s time to agitate.

    It’s time to set the mining industry straight about paying their share as the rest of us do.

    It’s time to show up and be counted at the Nevada Legislature on Thursday morning.

    Here’s what Erin Neff of ProgressNow Nevada had to say on their Facebook Page:

    Erin NeffApril 5, 2011 at 5:18pm

    Subject: Let’s pack Thursday’s hearing…

    This afternoon, I testified before the Senate Revenue Committee in support of SJR15 and SB493. The first will put a measure on the ballot to take mining’s protected tax status out of the Constitution. The second would create a Mining Oversight Commission to make sure the industry respects tax and environmental rules and laws.
    While both of these measures are critically needed, neither does anything about the current deficit.
    That’s why we must stand strongly in support of AB428 on Thursday at the Assembly Taxation Committee.
    We need at least 100 people to show up to fill the room.
    So please tell your friends and bring as many people as you can. The mining industry will put up a large fight to this bill (all of it, deductible, of course) and we’ve got to stand up to these corporate interests.
    The meeting starts at 8 a.m. Even if you can’t stay, please come and sign in for the record before you head off to work or school.

    SJR 15ย  Will amend the Nevada Constitution to remove mining and it’s separate tax rates

    AB 428 Will made adjustments to the deductions mining may claim against their tax liability

    SB 493 Creates the Mining Oversight and Accountability Commission

    SB 492 Revises the payments on mining claims

    The following article is by Anjeanette Damon from the Las Vegas Sun, March 28:

    As promised, legislative Democrats didnโ€™t let the opportunity pass to attempt to extract more tax revenue from the mining industry.

    The Senate Revenue Committee today introduced a measure, Senate Joint Resolution 15, that would begin the process of repealing the constitutional protection the industry enjoys on its net proceeds tax.

    Because the measure seeks to amend the constitution, the Legislature would have to pass it twice before it would go to voters for a final ratification.

    Currently, the mining industry pays a 5 percent property tax on its mineral resources, but is allowed to deduct the cost of extracting and processing the minerals. The deductions have significantly reduced the industryโ€™s tax bill to the state.

    Because the tax is enshrined in the constitution, lawmakers are unable to change the rate and are prohibited from assessing any other tax on minerals.

    The measure introduced today completely removes the mining tax from the state constitution. That would allow lawmakers to impose a completely different tax or fiddle with the rate.

    Because the entire process would take five years, the change would not help lawmakers as they seek more revenue to offset the budget cuts proposed by Gov. Brian Sandoval.

    Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce, D-Las Vegas, has introduced a bill that would reduce the industryโ€™s allowable deductions by 60 percent. That measure, which has gained some traction with legislative leadership, would net the state tax revenue much more quickly than the constitutional amendment.

    A second measure introduced by the Revenue Committee today would create a new Mining Oversight and Accountability Commission. The new commission would be responsible for writing the tax regulations, taking that duty away from the Nevada Tax Commission.

    Senate Majority Leader Steven Horsford, D-North Las Vegas, has criticized the tax commission for passing regulations that he believes expands the mining industryโ€™s deductions beyond what is allowed in statute.

    The new commission would also oversee environmental and safety regulations.

    Nevada Mining Tax Report 2011

    Tuesday
    Apr052011

    UNR Get's Cuts. AB 449 Get's Sandoval's Undying Love and Support

    Let me see if I get this right. The Governor’s draconian budget cuts have finally gotten the quiet UNR President Milton Glick to finally step onto the front page of today’s RGJ and kindly refer to the $59 million cuts as a “game changer”. (The full text of his comments are below).

    Just below that headline, there is another story about an “ambitious economic development bill (AB449)” that was introduced, which Governor Sandoval says will cure damn near everything wrong with the state.

    WTF? How many economic development canards has this state seen in the last 40 years? And here, they’re trying to sell us another one! Gee, if it creates jobs, it must be good? Right? Ask instead, does it create sustainable jobs, and better yet, sustainable communities.

    Here’s some heresy: A new job doesn’t always create a better balance sheet for communities.

    If economic development councils worked so damn well, why are we in the pickle we’re in right now? And, furthermore, how is our deluded Governorship going to convince business and industry to come to Nevada when the state can only boast one of the worst K-12 and higher education systems in the nation?

    The FactCheckers at the Reno Gazette-Journal could do us all a huge favor and expose the lie that is ‘Economic Development’ councils/commissions/study groups. Talking about auditing the mining industry, how about auditing these black holes for tax dollars to ensure they produce what they promise.

    It always sounds so good. ‘We’re gonna take a real look at our economic development efforts … blah, blah, blah and bring in new businesses to our state… blah, blah and create jobs!’ During times of financial stress - like now - I think you could sell Nevadans anything to promises to create jobs and pulls us out of the hole we’re in.

    But please tell me how that will work with a wrecked and broken educational system. I’m sorry, but this is putting the cart before the horse. Worse, there are Democrats in Nevada who step up to support this - like John Oceguera, D-Las Vegas.

    Here’s why I believe the Monkey See-Monkey Do of ‘Economic Development’ should get a hard second look:

    Economic Development efforts relieve local and state officials from having to the do the hard work of creating real cities and towns - communities with that often intangible ‘something’ to offer that draws investment from our neighbors.

    Constantly at the top of that list of ‘something’ is a first rate educational environment. Placing close behind that are liveable communities, richly textured with less suburban sprawl, more arts and entertainment, diverse options for shopping, housing and mobility. The oldย  economic drivers of safety, leadership and services are more often led today by aesthetics in communities that are not dominated by the car-centered culture of the 1950’s-1990’s.

    Successful communities - like Portland, Oregon - happen more organically, with a focus less upon buying ‘off the shelf’ packaged ‘solutions’ to their problems and more taking hard, honest looks at who they want to be and working within that. Nevada’s leaders have bought into the fantasy that they can spend their way back from the fiscal brink by offering ever more ‘incentives’ to bring business in - with the hope that another new industry/factory/distribution center would somehow create that ideal city where people just want to be.

    This sort of old-thinking belies the real reasons people live where they live, and how economic growth flows from that (rather than the other way around!).

    Knight Soul of the Community 2010 - National from Knight Foundation on Vimeo.

    ย 

    Governor Sandoval, we’ve run out of things to give away. We’re fresh out of ‘incentives’. Will you please quit selling the same-old, same-old Ponzi Scheme of Economic Development? How do you plan to commercialize research from broken university systems?

    Jobs and growth are the results of good economic and community planning, not a proxy for that.

    Take a look at the Strategic Plan for Los Angeles County. Where do you see further tax breaks mentioned as an incentive to bring business in?

    The overwhelming number of businesses in the United States have 10 employees or less. Visionary communities aren’t just seeking the next BIG industry or company to bring in from the outside, but rather how to nurture and grow from the inside outward, their own native talent - bright entreprenuers who live here because it’s the best place to live … not here just on account of the tax breaks. Tax breaks are only as good as the underlying economy. As soon as your neighbor offers a better one, those relying on that alone will be gone in a heartbeat.

    Again, livable communities with solid educational credentials provide that rich soil for entreprenuerial growth and resulting economic prowess. Not more ‘Economic Development’ committees seeking to further cannabalize the picked clean bones of what’s left of a shattered economy, or steal from their neighbors.

    The most sought after industries are the creative/knowledge economy. The Kaufman Foundation has published a report which outlines where the states stand right now (Nevada is number 30) in their attempts to develop economically through this recession, and how those states who will be successful might actually do it. Again, the same old cannabalistic economic development programs aren’t going to be models for new thinking.

    Sprawl repair could put a lot of Nevadans back to work. Urban sprawl - particularly in places where land has been historically cheap and under-utilized such as Nevada - is contributing to negative perceptions of our state. Probably far more than the occasional whore house.

    GenY want’s to walk. They’re willing to pay a premium for it. These are your entreprenurial, knowledge/creative businesses of the future. They don’t want to live out in BFE … or Spanish Springs, or Silver Springs, or Fernley and commute. That’s so 1960’s. Their grandparents day.ย  Where do you see the great bulk of foreclosures? Out in the sprawl. This doesn’t even account for the millions of boomers who want to age in place.

    Do this hard work to repair sprawl, and the good businesses will come flocking.

    So, at the end of the day, all AB449 says to me is ‘more old thinking’ and hanging desperately to what seemed to work in the past. Keep doing things the way you’ve always done them, the old Incident Command instructor told us, you’ll keep on getting the results you’ve always gotten. Except when it comes to ‘Economic Development’ we don’t actually know how well it’s worked - especially during the tough times. We’re guessing. We can’t afford to guess anymore.

    It’s time to repair the educational system in Nevada, and quit with the magical thinking of ‘Economic Development’. These type of initiatives merely serve to obscure what really needs to be done to improve our states communities and make them the real drivers for sustainable growth and progress.

    -maven

    If you’re concerned - as you should be - here is the full text of President Glick’s comments:

    AT A GLANCE

    Click to read more ...

    Monday
    Apr042011

    Get Out And Agitate! Mining Needs to Pay Fair Share

    This is from Bob Fulkerson over at PLAN. I’ve got some heavy equipment on my plate, but hope to make it down there on Thursday if not tomorrow:

    Let’s demand new revenues with the same passion as we denounce the cuts!
    Attend two hearings in Carson City and Las Vegas

    Tuesday, April 5, at 1 pm, Senate Revenue Committee, Room 2134 and the Sawyer Building in Las Vegas
    Support SB 493 to create a Mining Commission to conduct tax and environmental oversight of the industry, and SJR 15 to end mining’s sweetheart tax loopholes by completely eliminating the mining tax section from the Nevada Constitution. If passed by the Legislature, it would require two votes of the people in 2012 and 2014.

    Thursday, April 7, 8 am, Assembly Taxation Committee in room 3100 of the Nevada Legislature and the Sawyer building in Carson City and the Sawyer Building in Las Vegas.
    Support AB 428 to limit the tax deductions mining enjoys to keep shelter it from meaningful taxation. Over a 10-year period, on 111 occasions, one mine or another did not pay a dime of mining taxes on $4.3 billion in gold produced. It’s time to end the loopholes.

    For more information, please see www.planevada.org or
    http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/forget-audits-mining-exploits-nevada-through-tax-loopholes-118321069.html?ref=069

    Monday
    Apr042011

    Monday Musings: April 4. 2011

    I’ve spent the day avoiding writing this. Having noted fellow blogger, Blue Lyon’s comment on Facebook ( Carissa Snedeker “Is tired of bad news”) I understood what was bothering me, and keeping away from the keyboard.

    I’m tired of bad news, too.

    I’m also tired of ‘camping out’ at home. We’ve been on some serious water/flushing rationing for about 10 days now. The big dig finally started this morning ( three days to figure it out and a week to get the permit), and I’ve been assured that I’ll be back in business for the most part by end of day tomorrow.

    Here’s what we’re facing.

    Boy, we’re having fun now. The 40 year old leach field failed, and the new one needs to go underneath our concrete driveway. Wheee! At least the concrete was horrible and it really needed to go away to be replaced by pavers. But selfish me, I’d like a vacation this year, too … not having had one for about four years now.

    Then came the notice for jury duty.

    But you can’t let this stuff get you down (she said, teeth gritted). How many other places can you live where it’s tempting to go skiing, but you opt to go for a lovely 12 mile bike ride instead? I did finally get the road bike out and am starting this season at 3200 miles on the odometer. I reckon to get about 800 to 1,000 miles more by fall.

    As I tell everybody, biking is good for what ails you.

    So is pie. Everybody should have a neighbor that makes a great pie. Since we’ve been caging dinners from all our friends - so as not to have to use water for dishes, and avail ourselves of their potties and laundry facilities - we’ve had some nifty meals.

    Isn’t this the purtiest lattice pie crust you’ve ever seen? This is why I rarely attempt pie. It’s best left to those who do it the best, and that’s Peg O’Malley. This beauty is chock full of her own pie cherries from last summer. Oooooooh.

    Pie is another thing that can cure the blues.

    If you haven’t already, you must read the article by Diedre Pike on Gov. Brian Sandoval’s delusional smoke and mirrors attempt at creating the illusion that everything’s gonna be all right in Nevada - as soon as he brings in some of those BIG businesses that are looking to pay no taxes.

    The operative question of the day for Nevada: How far can you spread them legs apart - with still no ‘takers’ - before you get a clue?

    When we ask nothing of any of our large businesses that are already here, how can you offer ‘incentives’ without robbing the already broken cities, counties, schools and the rest? The robbing Peter to pay Paul approach hasn’t worked, yet they keep trying to sell it!

    A while back I was talking about the National Priorities Project website and one of my readers sent me a link to some interesting numbers - federal dollars that are no longer coming to Nevadans who need it the most. Help to low income persons for any sort of energy assistance is being slashed. Yup. There’s always plenty to give away to corporations though.

    As Pike says: It’s the education system, stupid.

    True to form, when things get tight budgetwise, the usual Republicorp suspects start chiming in for a ‘balanced budget amendment’. Sen. Orrin Hatch and John Cornyn are leading the charge of the fool’s brigade this time around.

    “Millions of working families across the country balance their checks every year; their government should do the same,” they wrote in a letter to colleagues.

    This is pure political theatre, based on nothing. It certainly isn’t about fiscal responsibility. The odds of it coming to fruition are between nil and none, but the GOP will keep dangling this current ‘fresh meat’ for the Teabagger Nation, in their continuing attempt to distract voters from the realities that aren’t being addressed. Even conservative observers are appalled.

    “It is about the most irresponsible action imaginable,” said Norman Ornstein, a resident scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. “It would virtually ensure that an economic downturn would end up as a deep depression, by erasing any real ability of the government to pursue countercyclical fiscal policies and in fact demanding the opposite, at the worst possible time.”

    Duh. Balanced budgets in government are a cruel joke left over from the Reagan era - he who never submitted one, BTW.  It’s a gimmick to enable Congress to avoid the odious task of doing the hard, miserable work of raising revenues in addition to cutting spending. It wastes time with the un-doable. In these days of super-charged partisan politics, getting the needed majorities to pass a Constitutional amendment would happen after hell froze over. It just ain’t that easy. Even that nitwit Paul Ryan’s awful Roadmap for America can’t make the budget balance until about 2063. The Great Depression proved that running a balanced budget is actually a bad idea during hard times. The GOP insisted that FDR move into balanced budget/deficit reduction mode and essentially prolonged the misery. Finally, the myth that states do a balanced budget all time ignores that states - unlike the federal government - have operating budget which can be balanced and then capital budgets to fund things like infrastructure.

    As usual, the GOP thinks that saying something inaccurate often enough will just magically make it true.

    On that note, we’re on our way over to friends who are feeding us tonight. Tomorrow I go forth to try and cut better deals on pavers. A thousand here, and a thousand there … and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.

    Cheers. Check in occasionally.

    -maven

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Saturday
    Apr022011

    Bernie Sanders: A Scandal - Top Ten Tax Avoiders

    And, even better, Bernie’s appearance on Real Time with Bill Maher -

    Vermont is poised to have a Medicare for All health care system!

     

    1)      Exxon Mobil made $19 billion in profits in 2009.  Exxon not only paid no federal income taxes, it actually received a $156 million rebate from the IRS, according to its SEC filings.

    2)      Bank of America received a $1.9 billion tax refund from the IRS last year, although it made $4.4 billion in profits and received a bailout from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department of nearly $1 trillion.

    3)      Over the past five years, while General Electric made $26 billion in profits in the United States, it received a $4.1 billion refund from the IRS.

    4)      Chevron received a $19 million refund from the IRS last year after it made $10 billion in profits in 2009.

    5)      Boeing, which received a $30 billion contract from the Pentagon to build 179 airborne tankers, got a $124 million refund from the IRS last year.

    6)      Valero Energy, the 25th largest company in America with $68 billion in sales last year received a $157 million tax refund check from the IRS and, over the past three years, it received a $134 million tax break from the oil and gas manufacturing tax deduction.

    7)      Goldman Sachs in 2008 only paid 1.1 percent of its income in taxes even though it earned a profit of $2.3 billion and received an almost $800 billion from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury Department.

    8)      Citigroup last year made more than $4 billion in profits but paid no federal income taxes. It received a $2.5 trillion bailout from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury.

    9)      ConocoPhillips, the fifth largest oil company in the United States, made $16 billion in profits from 2007 through 2009, but received $451 million in tax breaks through the oil and gas manufacturing deduction.

    10)  Over the past five years, Carnival Cruise Lines made more than $11 billion in profits, but its federal income tax rate during those years was just 1.1 percent.

    1) Exxon Mobil made $19 billion in profits in 2009. Exxon not only paid no federal income taxes, it actually received a $156 million rebate from the IRS, according to its SEC filings.

    2) Bank of America received a $1.9 billion tax refund from the IRS last year, although it made $4.4 billion in profits and received a bailout from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department of nearly $1 trillion.

    3) Over the past five years, while General Electric made $26 billion in profits in the United States, it received a $4.1 billion refund from the IRS.

    4) Chevron received a $19 million refund from the IRS last year after it made $10 billion in profits in 2009.

    5) Boeing, which received a $30 billion contract from the Pentagon to build 179 airborne tankers, got a $124 million refund from the IRS last year.

    6) Valero Energy, the 25th largest company in America with $68 billion in sales last year received a $157 million tax refund check from the IRS and, over the past three years, it received a $134 million tax break from the oil and gas manufacturing tax deduction.

    7) Goldman Sachs in 2008 only paid 1.1 percent of its income in taxes even though it earned a profit of $2.3 billion and received an almost $800 billion from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury Department.

    8) Citigroup last year made more than $4 billion in profits but paid no federal income taxes. It received a $2.5 trillion bailout from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury.

    9) ConocoPhillips, the fifth largest oil company in the United States, made $16 billion in profits from 2007 through 2009, but received $451 million in tax breaks through the oil and gas manufacturing deduction.

    10) Over the past five years, Carnival Cruise Lines made more than $11 billion in profits, but its federal income tax rate during those years was just 1.1 percent.

    1) Exxon Mobil made $19 billion in profits in 2009. Exxon not only paid no federal income taxes, it actually received a $156 million rebate from the IRS, according to its SEC filings.

    2) Bank of America received a $1.9 billion tax refund from the IRS last year, although it made $4.4 billion in profits and received a bailout from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department of nearly $1 trillion.

    3) Over the past five years, while General Electric made $26 billion in profits in the United States, it received a $4.1 billion refund from the IRS.

    4) Chevron received a $19 million refund from the IRS last year after it made $10 billion in profits in 2009.

    5) Boeing, which received a $30 billion contract from the Pentagon to build 179 airborne tankers, got a $124 million refund from the IRS last year.

    6) Valero Energy, the 25th largest company in America with $68 billion in sales last year received a $157 million tax refund check from the IRS and, over the past three years, it received a $134 million tax break from the oil and gas manufacturing tax deduction.

    7) Goldman Sachs in 2008 only paid 1.1 percent of its income in taxes even though it earned a profit of $2.3 billion and received an almost $800 billion from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury Department.

    8) Citigroup last year made more than $4 billion in profits but paid no federal income taxes. It received a $2.5 trillion bailout from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury.

    9) ConocoPhillips, the fifth largest oil company in the United States, made $16 billion in profits from 2007 through 2009, but received $451 million in tax breaks through the oil and gas manufacturing deduction.

    10) Over the past five years, Carnival Cruise Lines made more than $11 billion in profits, but its federal income tax rate during those years was just 1.1 percent.

    1) Exxon Mobil made $19 billion in profits in 2009. Exxon not only paid no federal income taxes, it actually received a $156 million rebate from the IRS, according to its SEC filings.

    2) Bank of America received a $1.9 billion tax refund from the IRS last year, although it made $4.4 billion in profits and received a bailout from the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department of nearly $1 trillion.

    3) Over the past five years, while General Electric made $26 billion in profits in the United States, it received a $4.1 billion refund from the IRS.

    4) Chevron received a $19 million refund from the IRS last year after it made $10 billion in profits in 2009.

    5) Boeing, which received a $30 billion contract from the Pentagon to build 179 airborne tankers, got a $124 million refund from the IRS last year.

    6) Valero Energy, the 25th largest company in America with $68 billion in sales last year received a $157 million tax refund check from the IRS and, over the past three years, it received a $134 million tax break from the oil and gas manufacturing tax deduction.

    7) Goldman Sachs in 2008 only paid 1.1 percent of its income in taxes even though it earned a profit of $2.3 billion and received an almost $800 billion from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury Department.

    8) Citigroup last year made more than $4 billion in profits but paid no federal income taxes. It received a $2.5 trillion bailout from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury.

    9) ConocoPhillips, the fifth largest oil company in the United States, made $16 billion in profits from 2007 through 2009, but received $451 million in tax breaks through the oil and gas manufacturing deduction.

    10) Over the past five years, Carnival Cruise Lines made more than $11 billion in profits, but its federal income tax rate during those years was just 1.1 percent.

    Saturday
    Apr022011

    Monday, April 4: We are One, Respect Our Rights

    Carson City, NV

    April 4, 2011 04:30PM to 06:00PM

    Hosted by Gail Tuzzolo

    Event Description:

    Nevada labor, community partners, students, and parents are joining together to raise public awareness that the Governor’s drastic budget cuts will dismantle education. And, the Republican Legislators’ solution to the budget crisis is an assault on workers. Eliminating collective bargaining, pensions, health benefits, and prevailing wage is a misguided attempt to take away worker rights. Join the “We are One, Respect our Rights” action to demand a reasonable solution to the state budget crisis.

    Click Here to Get Cool Resources for the Rally

    Sponsored by:
    State Federation
    Local Nevada

    Location: Western Nevada College, Carson City, NV, 89703
    Directions: 2201 W. College Parkway
    Friday
    Apr012011

    Friday Fish Wrap: April 1. 2011

    You just can’t get too much of a good thing, especially when it’s yourself.

    Chidi Ogbuta, 35, decided to order a rather unusual wedding cake for her special day - a five-foot-tall replica of the person she admires the most. Herself.

    “I searched for months to find someone who’d make my dream come true,” she said.  “Originally the plan was for two cakes — one of me and one of [my husband] Innocent.

    If I had a husband named Innocent, I’d have opted for a five-foot-tall bottle of Jim Beam.

    Vote for Weiner, He’ll be Frank!

    WASHINGTON—Expressing a reaction similar to millions of other dismayed Americans, Newt Gingrich admitted Monday that he too was feeling “pretty bummed out” about the prospect of a Newt Gingrich presidential campaign.

    While confirming his ardent desire to be president, the former Speaker of the House told reporters the mere fact that American voters were seriously considering Newt Gingrich to be a viable Republican candidate in 2012 was a fairly distressing development that made him question the direction the country was moving in.

    “Even when I see my name on a list of potential candidates, I think, you gotta be kidding me—Newt Gingrich?” said Gingrich, frowning and shaking his head in disbelief. “People are actually getting excited about the guy who engineered the 1995 government shutdown? I’m sorry, but that’s just sad.”

    “It’s 2011, for God’s sake,” Gingrich added. “Can’t we get a fresher name to represent the Republican Party in the 21st century than Newt Gingrich?”

    Though he acknowledged a Gingrich candidacy would definitely fire up certain segments of the conservative base, and likely build up a fair amount of momentum on name- recognition alone, Gingrich said that knowing we lived in a world where these kinds of political realities existed at all was a rather grim and sobering thought.


    American Dream Declared Dead As Final Believer Gives Up

    WASHINGTON—At a press conference Monday, visibly embarrassed leaders of the Republican National Committee acknowledged that their nonstop, effusive praise of Ronald Reagan has been wholly unintentional, admitting they somehow managed to confuse him with Dwight D. Eisenhower for years.

    The GOP’s humiliating blunder was discovered last weekend by RNC chairman Reince Priebus, who realized his party had been extolling “completely the wrong guy” after he watched the History Channel special Eisenhower: An American Portrait.

    “When I heard about Eisenhower’s presidential accomplishments—holding down the national debt, keeping inflation in check, and fighting for balanced budgets—it hit me that we’d clearly gotten their names mixed up at some point,” Priebus told reporters. “I couldn’t believe we’d been associating terms like ‘visionary,’ ‘principled,’ and ‘bold’ with President Reagan. That wasn’t him at all—that was Ike.”

     

    “We’re fighting three wars now. Imagine how many we’d be fighting if President Obama hadn’t won the Nobel Peace Prize.” —Jay Leno


    “There’s wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and now Libya. You’ve heard the expression ‘theater of war’? This is a multiplex.” —David Letterman

     

     

    Lewis Black thinks Donald Trump has what it takes to be the crazy third-world dictator that America needs.

    Alright. I couldn’t help myself. It’s April Fools Day.

    -maven

    Thursday
    Mar312011

    Maven's Movie Pik: The Great Debaters

    When I saw the preview of this movie, I turned to Ron, saying “no brainer. Gotta watch that one.”

    I debated throughout high school, and then with a scholarship in college. Debate and the rigors of forensic speech shaped my love for critical thinking and reasoning - and prepared me for a somewhat successful career as a Public Information Officer and communicator.

    Additionally, having grown up in the Jim Crow South, this movie had all the authentic historical elements that move me. Great true story. Great actors. Great heart.

    Not a single car chase, special effect, vampire or alien.

    This will make a superb family movie night selection - with the proviso that kids should be about 12 and up. There is one scene - a lynching - that younger children might find disturbing. You should be ready, as a parent and educator, to discuss race relations in the early 20th century and how far we’ve come.

    Thursday
    Mar312011

    Sen. Bernie Sanders Hits Homerun on Diane Rehms Show

    Wow! Ron and I were transfixed. As in, “Schuss. Let the answering machine pickup!” This is why I’ve been sending money to Bernie for the last couple of years, and will continue to do so. He’s my hero.

    Click here to listen to the broadcast.

    The economy, the federal budget, and the growing national deficit are touchstone issues defining politics in Washington today. Lawmakers are proposing cuts to programs that benefit middle class and working families. In December, President Obama signed into law an extension of tax cuts — including cuts for the very wealthiest Americans. One Independent senator delivered an eight-hour speech on the Senate floor decrying the tax deal and what he believed it symbolized: corporate greed and the collapse of the middle class. U. S Senator Bernie Sanders talks about his appeal for a fundamental change in national priorities.

    Wednesday
    Mar302011

    Wal-Mart Too Big to Sue? 

    Reading this, I thought ‘the more things change, the more they stay the same’. Back in the early 70’s, I was party of one of the early class-action lawsuits alleging gender bias and discrimination. In this case, we were women working in a very male dominated world of newspaper printing backshops. The work was interesting and satisfying. The abuse was hideous, demeaning, demoralizing and permanently scarring.

    I watched women literally destroyed by it. I got out by the skin of my teeth, and moved on. Older, wiser, more wary and very cynical.

    Class action lawsuits were the only way women in America made progress out of the abyss at all. Going it alone was never an option. The idea was and still is ludicrous, even when we were fighting just one publisher of two daily newspapers.

    This is the kind of suit that the current corporate-toady SCOTUS was created to defeat. But when it happens, women won’t be the only victims. The unions will be next. Minorities will come later. And, at some point … white males will be in the crosshairs.

    I weep for these women. I’ve been there.

    -maven

    By Al Norman, Founder, Sprawl Busters. Author of The Case Against WalMart

    You have your answer now, in case there was any doubt.

    When the U.S. Supreme Court votes in late June to decertify the class of low-income women who are suing Wal-Mart for sex discrimination, here is what the public will conclude from the media headlines:

    1. Wal-Mart has been found not guilty of unfair treatment of its women workers — when in fact the case was on the issue of “standing” of a class of plaintiffs, not really the merits of the evidence.
    2. The case dragged these low-income women through the courts for ten years, and in the end the Big Corporation beat them.
    3. Wal-Mart can now continue to pay women lower wages with impunity, because the “Janie Q’s” — as Wal-Mart calls its female employees — are going to get nowhere pursing their cases individually. These women will become legal untouchables once this class action is shattered.
    4. Wal-Mart politically is too big to sue, and all the other corporate giants that filed amicus briefs in support of Wal-Mart are also too big to sue.

    After the first day of oral arguments, the media concluded that Wal-Mart had won. NPR, for example, said the Justices had created a “wall of doubt” about the plaintiffs’ claims of discrimination, and that the Dukes plaintiffs had been “bombarded” with tough questions by the justices. According to one Forbes op-ed piece, the plaintiffs’ lawyer was “roasted.”

    In a press release last month, the plaintiffs argued that Wal-Mart had “a corporate culture that is rife with gender stereotypes,” with “highly subjective policies enforced on a daily basis by its Home Office to ensure consistency in results.” This tension between subjectivity and consistency seemed to trouble the Supreme Court. “Well, which is it?” Judge Antonin Scalia asked the plaintiffs. Either individual managers are on their own, “or else a strong corporate culture tells them what to do.” The United Food & Commercial Workers have urged Scalia to step down, since his son works for a prominent Wal-Mart law firm that deals with employment issues.

    Justice Samuel Alito seemed to suggest that Wal-Mart’s employment profile was “absolutely typical of the entire American workforce,” so if Wal-Mart was in violation of gender discrimination laws, then so was the entire retail industry. Even if that were true, does that mean that the workers at Wal-Mart have lost their right to litigate for gender equity? If every employer is wrong, does that make discrimination in this case right?

    Analysts in the media are suggesting that this large class of women does not have enough legal glue to be bound together as a class. They are suggesting that even though the lower courts found enough “commonality” in these women’s situations to certify them as a class, that the Supreme Court will not, and Wal-Mart will be able to walk away from their “associates” claiming that it was local renegade managers who wronged them, not the company. Wal-Mart wants the public to believe that managers ‘do their own thing’ and that this multi-billion corporation is run like a large unruly family where Father Knows Nothing. We used to call such a portrayal corporate deniability.

    Some observers will no doubt want to wait a couple of months to see how the Bush-dominated court rules in this case. But based on what I’ve seen from the justices already, the writing is on the Wal.

    This is perhaps the strongest argument why Wal-Mart needs to have a union. With collective bargaining in place, these 1.5 million ‘associates’ would have been able to tell their local managers that the sexual pay and promotion discrimination had to end. It’s the only way to balance out the enormous power managers clearly have over the workers who were forced to sue them to get their attention.

    Al Norman is the author of The Case Against Wal-Mart, and is the founder of Sprawl-Busters.