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    Entries in public citizen (7)

    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

    Thursday
    Aug192010

    Public Citizen delivers petition urging selection of Elizabeth Warren

    Click here to read more about why Elizabeth Warren should head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

    Thursday
    Apr152010

    Fire Massey Energy's Blankenship, and send a message

    Union busting CEO’s like Don Blankenship are an unfortunate vestige of the tragic past that have to go. Please join Public Citizen in helping to make that happen - and send a message to management across the country that safety can’t be compromised on the backs of labor.

    The following is from Public Citizen:

    “It was a tragedy waiting to happen.

    When a corporate scofflaw operates coal mines without meaningful government supervision, regulatory oversight or a unionized workforce, the tragic result is shattered families in the coal fields of West Virginia.

    Last week, 29 miners lost their lives in Massey Energy Corporation’s Upper Big Branch mine. Massey CEO Don Blankenship must be held accountable.

    Sign the petition: Tell Massey’s board of directors to fire Don Blankenship at www.FireBlankenship.org.

    Click to read more ...

    Friday
    Feb192010

    Friday Fish Wrap: February 19, 2010  

    It’s been an awesome week of Olympics coverage, and it’s particularly great to be able to cheer for a ‘hometown’ girl - Julia Mancuso of Truckee, California. For those of you not from around these parts, that’s just about  30 minutes up the road from Reno, Nevada.

    Unlike past Winter Olympic years, the work schedule hasn’t allowed me to ski my brains out in support of the team effort. Yesterday and today, however, I did get in a fairly decent 10 mile bike ride - bundled up, course, since it’s not that warm at 0930. It’s ‘brisk’.

    Here’s a nice bit of news on the healthcare reform front: There’s been quite a bit of new steam behind the failed Public Option of late. Senator Christopher Dodd’s decision to call it a day bodes well for his being able to stand up for what the American people really want - which is a Public Option and a freaking healthcare reform bill.

    Just this afternoon, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid issued a statement that he would support not only the Public Option - which he’d always been in tacit approval of - but also the use of the reconciliation vote to get ‘er done.

    Click to read more ...

    Wednesday
    Feb102010

    Keep the petition going on Supreme Court decision

    I hope everybody that sees this will consider signing, and pass it along.

    From Robert Weissman at Public Citizen:

    Outside, Washington, D.C. is smothered in near-record amounts of snow. But inside - inside the halls of government, to be specific - things are heating up.

    What sparked the fire?

    The Supreme Court ruled last month that corporations can spend unlimited amounts of money in our elections.

    I’m asking you to do two things right now to join the fight to defend our democracy from a corporate takeover:

    1. Sign our petition at DontGetRolled.org for a constitutional amendment to counteract this radical ruling.

    Click to read more ...

    Tuesday
    Sep292009

    Help Public Citizen fight for Medicare for all

    After spending billions lobbying Congress, the health care industry is trying to take over the entire health care reform process to ensure maximum profits no matter the cost. And the cost is the 100 Americans who will die this very day because they lack basic health insurance.*

    How many more men, women and children must suffer and die before we say “Enough!” to the immoral corporate profits insurers reap by denying millions of Americans health insurance?

    Single-payer, Medicare-for-all reform is the only way to drive that number to zero. That’s why Public Citizen needs your help to fight the insurance industry lobbyists.

    Our Board of Directors has pledged $20,000 if 400 people join us in this fight by making a donation to Public Citizen by midnight tomorrow! Please join the 151 people who have already contributed. Your gift could earn us an additional $20,000!

    Click to read more ...

    Saturday
    Jun062009

    Dr. Sydney Wolfe on Single Payer Health Insurance

    Washington’s abuzz about health care, but why isn’t a single-payer plan an option on the table? Public Citizen’s Dr. Sidney Wolfe and Physicians for a National Health Program’s Dr. David Himmelstein on the political and logistical feasibility of health care reform.

    When, oh when will America get honest and serious about healthcare?

    Click to read more ...