December 2011

Japanese exports fell for the second straight month

December 20, 2011

The Japanese exports retreated for the second consecutive month as a result for the global-demand slowdown along with the on-going yen’s appreciation which threatening the nation’s recovery since …

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San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation Names Mark Cafferty as President & CEO

December 20, 2011

SAN DIEGO, CA–(Marketwire – Dec 20, 2011) – Following an extensive search process, Mark Cafferty, President & CEO of the San Diego Workforce Partnership, has been named the new President & CEO of the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation (EDC), according to EDC Board Chair Debra L. Reed.

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Buccaneer Energy Limited (ASX:BCC) Jack Up Rig Shipyard Update

December 20, 2011

http://www.abnnewswire.net/rss2/menafn/abn_menafn_en.asp Buccaneer Energy Limited (ASX:BCC) (“Buccaneer” or the “Company”) is pleased to advise that the Company’s 50 per cent owned subsidiary Kenai …

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China’s Jan-Nov logistics value jumps 12.5%

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) The China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP) said that in the January-November period, the value of the country’s logistics industry jumped 12.5 percent to USD23.04 trillion, …

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Philippines’ 2011 GDP expected to grow 3.7%: WB

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) The World Bank (WB) said that due to small public spending and weak global economy, Philippines economic growth would be expected to grow 3.7 percent, compared with earlier forecasts of 4.5 …

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Sweden’s CB slashes interest rate to 1.75%

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Sweden’s central bank said that due to growing uncertainty in the euro-zone, the bank slashed its key interest rate to 1.75 percent, reported Associated Press. The bank added that there …

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Segro, Moorfield to buy UK Logistics Fund for USD488m

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Segro Plc and Moorfield Real Estate Fund II will pay USD488 million in cash to acquire a UK fund that owns 14 warehouses, Bloomberg reported. Segro and Moorfield will establish a new …

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Canal Plus to buy 40% stake in Polish N-Vision

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Canal Plus said it will buy 40 percent stake in N-Vision BV for USD299 million, expected to close deal in the second half of next year, Bloomberg reported. The deal aims to merge Canal …

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Shell closes drilling rig following fluid leak

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Royal Dutch Shell said that following the leak of around 7,600 gallons of synthetic and biodegradable drilling fluid, the firm closed a drilling rig off the coast of Alabama, reported …

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US crime declines in 2011

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) — Violent crimes dropped sharply in the United States in the first six months of 2011, continuing a downward trend that has lasted more than four years, the Federal …

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UN resolution condemns rights abuses in North Korea

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) The U.N. General Assembly on Monday approved a resolution denouncing human-rights violations in North Korea ranging from public executions to severe restrictions on …

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Obama notified of Kim Jong death

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) US President Barack Obama was notified late Sunday of the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, the White House said in a statement. ‘We are closely monitoring …

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US condemns violent protests in western Kazakhstan

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)) The United States condemned late on Monday violent protests in western Kazakhstan and welcomed a thorough investigation into the causes of the violence. “The …

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UK’s BT files patent lawsuit against Google

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) UK’s telecoms firm BT said that it filed a claim with the US District Court of Delaware against Google over patent infringement, reported Emirates 24/7. The company added that the claim …

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Saab heads for scrapyard as long rescue quest fails

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Gulf Times) Workers at the Swedish car company Swedish Automobile leave the factory in Trollhattan, southwestern Sweden, yesterday, after being informed that the administrator in charge of …

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US stocks open higher; EU finance heads to meet

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) U.S. stocks rose in early trading Monday, even as news of North Korea ruler Kim Jong Il’s death unsettled world markets, according to AP. The Dow Jones industrial …

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Harley-Davidson plans to cut workforce by 26%

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Harley-Davidson’s spokeswoman, Maripat Blankenheim, said that the company would cut its workforce by around 26 percent through offering voluntary layoffs to hourly workers, reported …

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German IFO expected to show further softness yet still defying recession 

December 20, 2011

With the start of the new week, the countdown to the end of the year is starting and we can already see the glimpse of holiday trading evident on the market. Caution is seen and we can see that the …

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USDCAD: Candles Hint at Pullback Ahead

December 20, 2011

Strategy: Flat USDCAD put in a bearish Dark Cloud Cover candlestick pattern below resistance at 1.0411, the 76.4% Fibonacci retracement level, hinting a move lower is ahead. Entering long here …

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Italian police cuff Father Christmas robbers

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Police in Rome have arrested two men suspected of carrying out a string of armed robberies dressed as Father Christmas. At least six stores in the Appia neighbourhood south …

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Look, no hands! Italian driver caught on two phones

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) An Italian driver was stopped by astonished police in the southern city of Bari on Saturday when they saw him speaking on two phones with a handset in each hand and no …

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Greek protest dog goes global

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) An Athens stray dog who has become an unofficial mascot of city protests and an online sensation this week reaped another accolade by featuring in Time magazine’s ‘Person of …

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Two cited for shoplifting become crime victims

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Police in Utah say a vehicle was burglarised outside an Ogden store while its owners were being accused of shoplifting from the business. Police told the …

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PETA wants opossum drop custom curtailed

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) If a national animal rights group gets its way, people in a small mountain town in North Carolina will have to greet the new year without lowering a scrappy marsupial to the …

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Curfew-breaking teen gets stuck in chimney

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A California teenager has learned the hard way that he’s no Santa Claus. The Stockton Record reports 18-year-old George Herrera got stuck in a chimney while trying to sneak …

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Obama’s spin on Iraq War looks pathetic- By Linda Heard

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) Clearly one of the prerequisites to becoming president of the United States is to be a consummate actor. Prior to becoming “leader of the free world,” President Obama was a …

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Indian social activist Dr. Moopan passes away

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) Dr. Abdullah Moopan, who had worked 28 years in the Kingdom as a psychiatrist at King Fahd Hospital and a medical director and doctor for Al-Abeer Medical Group in Jeddah, …

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US AT&T drops USD39b bid to acquire Deutsche Telekom’s T-Mobile

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) AT&T, the US second-largest wireless carrier, said that as a result of an opposition from US Justice Department and Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the company had to drop its …

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EURUSD: Adding to Short Trade on Bounce

December 20, 2011

Strategy: Short at 1.3526, Targeting 1.2872 Floating Profit / Loss: +522 pips We initially sold EURUSD at 1.3526 and revised our stop-loss to the breakeven level after the pair met our first …

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GBPUSD: Congestion Seen Above 1.54 Level

December 20, 2011

Strategy: Flat GBPUSD put in a Spinning Top candlestick above support at a rising trend line set from late September, hinting a bounce ahead, but bullish momentum has failed to materialize thus …

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USDJPY: Break Above 79.00 Marks Reversal

December 20, 2011

Strategy: Pending Long Looking past choppy short-term trade, USDJPY weekly chart suggest a reversal may be starting to take shape. Prices have been carving out a bullish Falling Wedge chart …

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USDJPY: Break Above 79.00 Marks Reversal

December 20, 2011

Strategy: Pending Long Looking past choppy short-term trade, USDJPY weekly chart suggest a reversal may be starting to take shape. Prices have been carving out a bullish Falling Wedge chart …

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Nokia enhances N9 features with upgrade

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) Nokia has announced the release of the latest updates for its N9 handsets. Version 1.1 of the handset’s software provides users with diverse new features and upgrades, including …

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Ethiopian carrier joins Star Alliance

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) The Ethiopian Airlines has joined the Star Alliance family. The alliance’s Chief Executive Board (CBE) and the airline’s executive management recently attended a signing …

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EU misses its USD260b IMF loan target

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Luxembourg’s Prime Minister, Jean-Claude Juncker, said that the EU finance ministers failed to reach their target of providing the International Monetary Fund (IMF) with a USD260 billion …

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S&P, Fitch see no immediate rating impact from Kim death

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Arab News) Standard & Poor’s said there would be no immediate impact on South Korea’s A rating following the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, echoing similar comments from Fitch …

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N. Korea, US May Delay Bilateral Talks following Kim’s Death

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) North Korea and the United States are highly likely to delay bilateral nuclear talks set for this week in Beijing, following the report of North Korean leader Kim …

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North Korean Leader Kim Jong-il Dies

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has died, the Korean state media announced this morning. The official KCNA news agency said Kim, aged 69, suffered a heart attack on …

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Kodak, Apple Smartphone Suit Hits Snag

December 19, 2011

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — A U.S. arbiter for trade disputes is delaying a ruling on Eastman Kodak Co.’s high-stakes patent-infringement claim against smartphone makers Apple Inc. and Research in Motion Ltd. The embattled photography pioneer is trying to negotiate a licensing deal it estimates could be worth up to $1 billion. An administrative judge overseeing the two-year dispute at the U.S. International Trade Commission set a new target date of Sept. 21, 2012. The commission in Washington, D.C., had previously expected to issue a final decision by Dec. 30. A favorable ruling would be a boon to Kodak. Pummeled by Wall Street over its dwindling cash reserves – and its stumbling attempts to reinvent itself as a profitable player in digital imaging and printing – the Rochester, N.Y., company warned last month it could run out of cash in a year if it doesn’t raise new financing or sell assets. Since July, Kodak has been hawking 1,100 digital-imaging patents that many financial analysts think might fetch $2 billion to $3 billion. The Wall Street Journal, quoting unidentified people familiar with the matter, reported Monday that Kodak is running into hurdles selling those patents and borrowing more money. Would-be buyers are nervous about buying assets from a company at risk of filing for bankruptcy protection, and hedge funds are offering less than the $900 million in financing Kodak initially expected, the newspaper said. Kodak shares sank 16 cents, or 19.9 percent, to close at 67 cents Monday. Shares are down 88 percent in 2011. Still, Kodak maintains it’s making progress on both fronts. “We have received several financing proposals, including from second-lien bondholders, and we have a very active and robust bidding process for the IP (intellectual property) portfolio,” spokesman Gerard Meuchner said Monday. Meanwhile, the nine-month extension in the ITC patent case will allow Judge Thomas Pender to examine new expert testimony from RIM about how its BlackBerry products don’t infringe on Kodak patents and address legal issues raised by Kodak. Calls to RIM, of Waterloo, Canada, and iPhone maker Apple, of Cupertino, Calif., were not immediately returned. Kodak said the extension was “an appropriate amount of time.” After failed negotiations, Kodak filed a complaint with the commission in January 2010, saying Apple and RIM’s smartphone camera features infringe on image-preview technology it patented in 2001. Patent cases can take years to resolve, and agreements over licensing and royalty payments often emerge. The commission, seen as a fast-track mediator that typically resolves disputes in 18 months, can order Customs to block imports of products made with contested technology. Kodak’s cash reserves shrank 10 percent to $862 million in the third quarter. In November, it set a year-end cash target of $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion that excludes any intellectual-property licensing deals, down from a previous forecast of $1.6 billion to $1.7 billion.

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Bernie Bulkin: About Leadership: Speaking From a Text

December 19, 2011

‘But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground.’ ‘That government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.’ — Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. It might appear that nothing is easier than having a speech all typed out in front of you, and getting up to read it. In fact, it is probably the most difficult way to give an effective speech. The written word and the spoken word are very different. Just try listening to a talking book read by a professional reader, especially a non-fiction work, and think about how you concentrate on that compared to listening to a really good speaker. The difference is clear. When we are giving a good speech, we use rhetoric. Churchill and Lincoln were great practitioners of this. Just listen to some of their speeches and you will see how effectively they hook you in. But if you read this stuff in a book you would think it phony and over-inflated. By contrast, there are people who write speeches as if they were student essays, with complex sentences that could be followed by a reader but are incomprehensible to a listener. So when you sit down to write a speech, you have to be writing for speaking, not writing for reading. You have to hear it in your own voice. We are each of us different in how we speak, how loud or how soft, how comfortable we are with flourishes and alliteration, what words or phrases we like, what makes us cringe. And this needs to be at very front of mind when writing a speech. Now we come to a little problem. Executives often don’t write their own speeches. In many companies there are individuals whose job it is to at least get the first draft, or even the final version of a speech ready. So how can you get the voice right in that situation? Well, it is easy to see when it goes wrong. I rather see this with speeches given by Ministers in the UK Government. Ministers give a lot of speeches, and accept a lot of speaking engagements, especially in London. I have heard many speeches which have all the right points and sentiments in them, but they were written for the minister by a civil servant, and because of the press of time only looked at in the car going over from the office to the speaking location. The result: A flat delivery, sounding every bit like what it is, someone else’s words being read out with insufficient preparation. This approach can never be made to work; I don’t care how talented you are. Here is what does work for a speech written by someone else: First, sit down with the speech writer a couple of weeks in advance. Talk through the points together, so that she can hear them from you in your own words. If the writer is any good, they will come prepared with ideas for talking points, and the discussion of those will sharpen what is going to be said. Step two is to read through a draft, say a week in advance, and as you read it make changes to put in or eliminate phrases. As you are doing this, think about saying the words yourself, just as I have discussed in the essay, Speaking from Notes. Then move to a final draft. And finally you need to make time to read through the whole thing before giving the speech, again making changes in the final draft. The whole process is one of getting it more and more into your own voice. I keep making changes to speeches I have written myself right up until the last few minutes before I have to go up to the podium. Indeed, I am often surprised about how frequently awkward wording creeps into the written speech. While I am reading through, my pen is putting in prominent commas and other punctuation to help me with my phrasing, timing and breathing. Now for the delivery. A good speech needs to be delivered with emotion, with passion, like you actually believe what you are talking about. And I hope that you do! Otherwise it is junk, it will sound like junk, and the audience will put it in that place in their brain where they store other junk. About Leadership : About Leadership is a series of 52 columns on corporate leadership — essential skills, leading teams, managing your career, the strategic and business practices to make a company and its leader distinctive from competitors. These columns will be of interest to people leading small and medium sized companies today, many of whom have not had much formal training in management skills and techniques; for the many people in big companies who aspire to senior management; and for anyone who thinks: Give me a hint, how can I do this better?

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Senators Turn Up Heat On Google Antitrust Probe

December 19, 2011

Google’s high-stakes antitrust hearing in September seems to have raised more questions than it answered — and lawmakers are asking regulators to take a closer look at the search giant’s operations. The leaders of the Senate antitrust subcommittee that held a hearing on Google’s business practices are urging the Federal Trade Commission to investigate whether the company is guilty of antitrust abuses. In a letter to the chairman of the FTC, Senators Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), chairman and ranking member of the Judiciary Antitrust Subcommittee, respectively, argued that “a number of concerns” raised at the Google antitrust hearing “merit serious scrutiny by the FTC.” Google confirmed in June that the FTC was reviewing the company, though stated it was “still unclear exactly what the FTC’s concerns are.” Among other “concerns” the Senators listed in their letter to the FTC, Kohl and Lee highlighted testimony by the CEOs of Yelp and Nextag that Google had stolen traffic from their sites by preferencing its own products; cited Google executive Marissa Mayer’s 2007 admission that the search giant has intentionally ranked its own services ahead of other sites’; and pointed out that Google’s lone competitor, Microsoft’s Bing, has been hemorrhaging around $2 billion a year. The Senators cited statistics indicating Google claims 65 to 70 percent of the Internet search market and powers “at least” 95 percent of queries performed on mobile devices. They also wrote that Google’s business model has “changed dramatically in recent years” as the company “now seeks not only to link users to relevant websites, but also to answer user queries, provide a variety of related services, and direct customers to additional information on its own secondary web pages.” Kohl and Lee noted that when Google chairman Eric Schmidt was asked in the antitrust hearing whether Google was a monopolist in the online search market, Schmidt conceded, “I would agree, Senator, that we’re in that area.” The former Google CEO also denied that Google had “cooked” its search results to favor its services ahead of other sites’ offerings. “Senator, may I simply say that I can assure you we’ve not cooked anything,” Schmidt told Lee during the hearing. “We believe these allegations regarding Google’s search engine practices raise important competition issues,” Kohl and Lee wrote. “We are committed to ensuring that consumers benefit from robust competition in online search and that the Internet remains the source of much free-market innovation.” In a written response to questions posed by the Senate antitrust subcommittee , Schmidt attempted to position Apple’s Siri technology, which allows for voice-controlled search, as a “competitive threat” to Google. The Senators seem unconvinced: their letter made no mention of Siri and stated that Google “faces competition from only one general search engine, Bing ” Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Homeless In New York Highlighted In Aftermath Of Occupy Wall Street Zuccotti Eviction

December 19, 2011

NEW YORK — When Occupy Wall Street protesters took over a park in Lower Manhattan this fall, they drew attention, perhaps inadvertently, to a problem playing out on the very lowest end of the economic spectrum: Homelessness. Their cardboard signs demanded all sorts of political and economic reforms — increased financial regulation, taxes on the rich — but perhaps the starkest and most complicated indication of the economic problems they drew attention to was a scene unfolding in the park itself, where many people had come to avail themselves of shelter, food and clothing that they could not find or preferred not to seek elsewhere. Reports spread that some homeless people gathering at the Zuccotti camp were causing problems , both for the protesters and for the surrounding area. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said he had to clear out the encampment over “safety concerns,” such as reports of EMTs responding to homeless people with mental illness. But some people saw these issues as indicative of a failure on Bloomberg’s part to provide the city’s homeless population with the resources it need. And now advocates for the homeless and lawmakers are taking aim at Bloomberg’s policies. The Bloomberg administration is contending with a lawsuit from the City Council over new regulations that would require single people wishing to enter a shelter to prove they have no where else to stay — such as a friend’s or relative’s home. The councilmembers argue Bloomberg did not follow proper procedure in making the change. Democratic councilmember Brad Lander said the city has an obligation to provide shelter during the extended economic slump. Instead, Lander said, “what [the Bloomberg administration] want[s] to do is bar the door. What an awful time to be a Grinch.” Patrick Markee, senior policy analyst for the Coalition for the Homeless, said he was glad the Council is suing Bloomberg over the homeless policy at a time when they’re seeing record numbers of families in shelters. “Instead of responding to this crisis by providing affordable housing assistance and embracing proven solutions to the problem of homelessness,” Markee said, “Mayor Bloomberg has proposed punitive rules that will close the shelter door to thousands of vulnerable people, including homeless adults living with mental illness.” Frank Barry, an aide to Bloomberg, said the city’s policy will provide better outcomes for homeless people in New York. “The public policy goal here is to make sure that people have shelter,” Barry said. “If there is the possibility of having shelter and staying out of the shelter system — keeping them connected to family and friends — it’s a better outcome for the individual and for the city.” But Wayne Starks, a board member of VOCAL-NY, a homeless and HIV-patients advocate group that has supported Occupy Wall Street on some demonstrations, said Bloomberg’s policies are making it impossible to get out of the cycle of being homeless. VOCAL assisted in Occupy Wall Street’s protest targeting foreclosure on Dec. 6, during which protesters occupied a home that had been vacant for three years in Brooklyn. According to VOCAL, family homelessness has increased by about 45 percent since Bloomberg took office. “The rate of homelessness in New York City is way way lower in what it is probably in any other major city,” Barry said when asked about that statistic. Nearly 29,000 homeless families slept in New York shelters last year, and there’s currently 41,000 people in the New York shelter system, according to data from the Coalition for the Homeless. But New York City has 53,187 homeless people, according to the latest information from the U.S. Department of Urban Housing and Development, far outnumbering the available beds in shelters. Sean Barry, the executive director of VOCAL, said homeless people were certainly present at Zuccotti Park prior to the eviction, but he argued they were integral to the camp rather than being “hangers on,” as many of the media reports described the homeless population in Zuccotti at the time. Now, he said, they have nowhere to go. “The homeless population in New York is really disproportionally LGBT youth,” said Sean Barry, no relation to Bloomberg’s aide Frank Barry. Many face employment discrimination or get kicked out by their parents, VOCAL’s Berry continued. Since the eviction, the OWS Housing Committee has reported having trouble finding shelter for all sorts of former occupiers, including that some pregnant women have been turned away from staying at churches. This is not the first time this year that advocates for the homeless have criticized Bloomberg’s policies. In the spring, the city ended its Advantage program, which offered rent subsidies to newly-employed homeless citizens, in response to New York state budget cuts. Advocates argued it is cheaper to subsidize rent than to admit the same number of people into the shelter system. According to the Mayor’s Management Report, it costs near $38,000 to house a homeless family for a year in a shelter, versus spending up to $1,000 a month per person in the Advantage program. Yet Bloomberg insisted that phasing out the program without replacing it with a federal program would not increase homelessness in the city. But the homeless population and average length of stay in shelters are both up in New York City since May, according to the Coalition for the Homeless. People don’t turn towards shelters and housing assistance unless they truly have no other choice, VOCAL’s Sean Barry said. “Lives [of the homeless] are some of the most extreme examples of 99 percent.”

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Peter S. Goodman: Apocalyptic Tendencies: North Korea’s Succession Will Not End Nuclear Blackmail

December 19, 2011

North Korea long ago mastered the art of brandishing the most potent weapon at its disposal: its credible impersonation of a country that might just be loony enough to start a nuclear war. Its leaders have proven adept at striking fear and harvesting concessions by exploiting the power of uncertainty. North Korea is stocked with incendiary weapons, but no one really knows how many, or what might cause them to start flying toward, say, South Korea or Honolulu. Worse, no one knows who possesses ultimate authority to shape events inside a nation that — not for nothing — is often described as a hermit kingdom. That last unknown has always been unsettling. How do you pursue policies aimed at avoiding nuclear catastrophe when you don’t know who is calling the shots? The uncertainty just got more troubling with the death of North Korea’s supreme leader Kim Jong Il, triggering the ascension of Kim’s little-known son, Kim Jong Un. For a world pondering the enduring flashpoint that is the Korean peninsula, the questions have become more abundant than ever, while the answers remain disturbingly scarce. Does the younger Kim possess the full backing of the military? Will he feel inclined to prove his nationalist credentials to the generals, perhaps with an incursion into South Korea, or a rain of missiles into the Sea of Japan? As the third Kim to rule in linear succession, will he continue his family’s hallmark tradition of employing nuclear blackmail as its form of engagement with the outside world, ratcheting up conflict to extract sustenance and short-term security? Or will he break from that mold and transform North Korea from a pariah state into a responsible member of the global community? In Washington, these questions are being picked over by intelligence agents sifting through the often-belligerent pronouncements of North Korea’s official channels, plus whatever visuals can be gleaned by satellites peering down on troop movements. Across Northeast Asia, such questions come tinged with the special anxiety of proximity. As any resident of Tokyo or Seoul will tell you, a misunderstanding or military feint gone wrong could result in missiles arcing their way from North Korea and arriving in less than an hour. All of which means that the abrupt interruption of the status quo inside North Korea seems certain to reinforce the status quo outside its borders. New variables emanating from North Korea always heighten the possibility of war, so Japan will embrace more than ever the continued presence of American military forces on its soil. Japan will also continue boosting its own naval power (much to the consternation of the rest of Asia, where the mention of Japanese military action provokes bitter memories of World War II.) Because events to the north are suddenly open to a range of fresh interpretations, South Korea will likewise lean as heavily as ever on American military might, while girding its own forces for conflict. In China, where the government is already contending with a slowdown in economic growth and worries that a real estate bubble could burst into financial conflagration, the unexpected change of leadership next door presents an additional problem to manage. In the immediate term, China will likely handle this relationship according to prevailing tradition, supporting North Korea as a counterweight to the American forces on the southern half of the Korean peninsula. As North Korea’s ossified state industries have deteriorated, leaving millions of people in a desperate state of hunger, the leadership has derived much of its sustenance — food and fuel — from China. This flow will surely continue, if for no other reason than Beijing’s intense interest in avoiding another sort of flow: an exodus of North Koreans across the border, adding to the strains in China’s impoverished northeastern provinces. Still, death has a way of revising the historical narrative. Not until China’s revolutionary leader Mao Tse-tung died in 1976 was the ground set for the eventual market-embracing reforms championed by Deng Xiaoping. Chiang Kai-Shek, the Chinese Nationalist leader routed by the communists, took refuge on the island of Taiwan, where he presided over an authoritarian Chinese government in exile. His son, Chiang Ching-kuo, eventually lifted martial law and ushered in democracy. So little is known about Kim Jong Un that it would be folly to speculate what his rule will bring, whether he will maintain North Korea’s status as a hermetically-sealed state, or perhaps experiment with some form of greater openness. From thousands of miles away, the best course may seem obvious. He ought to pursue prosperity through the same path forged by leaders throughout Asia, joining the global economy and generating wealth through trade. But from inside the little-understood corridors of power in Pyongyang, global integration is likely to seem laden with grave risk, inviting condemnation — and perhaps intervention — from revolutionary-spirited generals. It would also entail renouncing North Korea’s deeply entrenched mode of foreign policy. In the financial sphere, insolvent banks secure public rescue by becoming Too Big To Fail. In the realm of global security, North Korea and the Kim clan have repeatedly cajoled outside powers to hand over sustenance by presenting themselves as Too Insane To Ignore. Kim Il Sung, North Korea’ paramount leader for almost half a century, launched the game of perpetual brinkmanship in the 1990s, when he began developing a plutonium-based nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, in contravention of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. That posture eventually garnered a deal with the Clinton administration, which agreed to a package of aid in exchange for North Korea’s promises that it would ice the program. The deal was signed in the fall of 1994, just after Kim died, putting his son, Kim Jong Il, in power. The new leader proved a worthy practitioner of the family craft. He burnished his image as a hell-bent warrior with proclivities that, to the American eye, made him seem unhinged — a bouffant hairdo and bombastic sunglasses, a willingness to kidnap South Korean film stars and legendary stories about his playboy tendencies. He seemed like a farcical version of a dictator who would indeed press on all the way to thermonuclear showdown. A succession of American presidents promised not to reward North Korea’s nuclear blackmail, only to do just that. The Clinton deal soon proved worthless, as North Korea began developing a uranium-based nuclear program. George W. Bush took office and promptly branded North Korea a member of his “Axis of Evil,” while pledging not to reward its threats. But as Kim escalated confrontation throughout 2002 and into 2003 — reinvigorating the Yongbyon plant, evicting international inspectors and finally testing missiles — Bush assented to multilateral talks that eventually promised fuel in exchange for an end to the program. The Obama administration has repeatedly sought to reengage North Korea at the bargaining table, with nothing to show for it. The outside world has bent to North Korea’s threats for the simple reason that there are no better options on the menu. North Korea now possesses some form of nuclear capability, having detonated devices in 2006 and 2009, and its missiles sit within easy range of Asian cities that are home to tens of millions of people. A preemptive strike on its arsenal would risk a response that could kill hundreds of thousands of people, making that course a non-starter. The rest of the world could simply allow North Korea to keep doing what it has been doing, refining its nuclear capability and potentially exporting weapons of mass destruction to other rogue states. In other words, that doesn’t work either. The third option is the one every leader reluctantly reaches eventually: talk, pursue a deal, and hope that this time it turns out better. In Washington and other capitals, hopes endure that China will solve the North Korea crisis. If Beijing were to threaten to end the flow flow of food and fuel into North Korea, it could force its neighbor to behave. But that logic ignores the fact that China has little desire to serve as handmaiden to American foreign policy, less desire to court a rupture with a regional ally and zero interest in destabilizing North Korea, thus risking an influx of economic refugees into its depressed northeastern provinces. Which means that the latest iteration of Kim family leadership starts out likely to proceed much as the last two ended. North Korea confronts a moribund economy, a hungry population and almost complete isolation. It has little to work with save for a proven ability to convince the world that it will not blink in the face of extreme confrontation. That old strategy could bring Pyongyang enough food to avert famine, and enough energy to keep the lights on. The hope is that Kim Jong Un aims for a legacy beyond that of his father and his grandfather: bringing his people into the modern world.

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Apple Wins Legal Battle Against iPhone Competitor

December 19, 2011

‪ ‬ By Ina Fried, Trade Body Says HTC Is Violating Apple Patent, Bans Some Imports via All Things D In a closely watched case, the U.S. International Trade Commission on Monday ruled that Taiwanese cell phone maker HTC is violating an Apple patent and ordered an import ban on some of the company products. The organization found that HTC devices infringed on two claims related to an Apple patent. However, the ban will not take effect until April, the ITC said in a ruling, giving time for carriers to make transition plans and for HTC to demonstrate ways it has avoided infringement (by working around the patent, dropping infringing features or other means). “Notice is hereby given that the U.S. International Trade Commission has found a violation of section 337 in this investigation and has issued a limited exclusion order prohibiting importation of infringing personal data and mobile communications devices and related software,” the agency said. “The Commission has determined that exclusion of articles subject to this order shall commence on April 19, 2012.” HTC will be able to import some refurbished products to satisfy repair claims on already sold products, but will not be able to bring new products into the country after April 19, unless the ruling is reversed or it can show its products no longer infringe the patent in question. The ruling had been delayed several times. HTC said in a statement it was pleased the commission reversed a ruling that HTC infringed on another of Apple’s patents and that it narrowed the ruling on the patent in which it did find infringement. “While disappointed that a finding of violation was still found on two claims of the ’647 patent, we are well prepared for this decision, and our designers have created alternate solutions for the Œ647 patent,” HTC said in a statement. See the ruling here. Trade Body Says HTC Is Violating Apple Patent, Bans Some Imports via All Things D More From All Things D: AT&T Dropping Its T-Mobile Bid, Owes Billions to Deutsche Telekom Beyond Tablets: The Next Five Computing Form Factors IBM Predicts Home Electricity From Your Bike, Mind-Reading Computers Facebook’s Social Ad Strategy Suffers Legal Blow

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Predatory Payday Lenders Compare Themselves To Civil Rights Marchers

December 19, 2011

Payday lending companies are combining their money in order to form a corporate front group to fight for the right to charge interest rates of 445 percent and more in the state of Missouri.

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OCCUPY CALIFORNIA: UC Riverside Report Finds 150 Different Occupy Groups in CA

December 19, 2011

As the frontrunner for the American Dialect Society’s 2011 Word of the Year , “Occupy” seems to be just about everywhere you look. And, from Occupy the Rose Bowl to Occupy the Ports to.. even an Occupy Holiday Song , California is no exception. A recent study, titled “Diffusion of the Occupy Movement in California,” by UC Riverside (UCR) researchers has identified nearly 150 occupy groups in the state, equally divided between Northern and Southern California. The researchers used social media sites Facebook and Twitter to track the movement’s growth within the state. According to UCR’s press release , a survey of 482 towns and cities in California found that 143 of them, nearly 30 percent, had Facebook Occupy pages. They also found that, while occupations in larger cities were the first to sprout up in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street, smaller California cities didn’t take long to follow suit. One of the researchers, graduate student Michaela Curran-Strange, reflected, “When you think about the fact that Occupy Wall Street states on their website that they began on September 17th, that’s pretty impressive that West Coast towns — some of them medium and small — picked up on it almost immediately.” For example, according to UCR’s press release, Petaluma Occupiers created a Facebook page on Sept. 27; South Lake Tahoe and Arcata on Sept. 28; the Coachella Valley on Oct. 2; and Half Moon Bay on Oct. 5. With Occupy movements in small towns like Barstow, Weaverville, Temecula, Idyllwild, Coachella, Calistoga, El Centro and many others, Curran-Strange added that these groups are focusing on local issues as well as the anti-bank, tax-the-rich Occupy Wall Street issues. The press release gives a few examples of local causes California Occupiers have taken on: A Yreka man who lost his home to foreclosure organized an Occupy group in the small Northern California town. Occupy Riverside activists helped an ex-Marine reoccupy the home that he and his family were evicted from as a result of foreclosure. Occupy Petaluma protestors successfully petitioned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to suspend evictions during the holidays. Ojai organizers urged participants to move their savings from accounts from large banks such as Wells Fargo and Bank of America to local banks and credit unions. Occupy Redding is supporting postal workers who are protesting job cuts. Another of the UCR researchers, sociology professor Christopher Chase-Dunn, told KPCC that, because of the diversity of issues behind Occupy movements, he predicts future Occupy groups will be created around specific causes. And, with the anti-foreclosure movement Occupy Our Homes and pro-immigrant movement Occupy ICE, this is already happening. Just on Saturday night, as LA Weekly reports , an Occupy ICE protest in downtown Los Angeles resulted in seven arrests of demonstrators attempting to hang banners on the fence around City Hall lawn. UCR researchers wrote in their report that the spread of Occupy movements throughout California, “emerg[ing] in seemingly unlikely places,” speaks loudly, “demonstrating the depth of frustration that people feel about the recession and the austerity measures that have been taken by authorities.” Click here to see if your city is on the list of California cities with a social media Occupy pages.

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U.S. Income Inequality Higher Than Roman Empire’s Levels: Study

December 19, 2011

Many tout the U.S. as the Roman empire of the modern world. But as it turns out, that comparison may not be all good. Income inequality in America is at levels even higher than those in ancient Rome , according to a recent study from two historians, Walter Schiedel and Steven Friesen, cited by Per Square Mile. After analyzing papyri ledgers, biblical passages and other previous scholarly estimates, the researchers found that the top one percent of earners in Ancient Rome controlled 16 percent of the society’s wealth. By comparison, the top one percent of American earners control 40 percent of the country’s wealth , according to Vanity Fair . (h/t ThinkProgress) The findings add to the growing chorus of studies and criticisms indicating that the wealth gap is hitting truly remarkable levels. The top one percent saw their incomes rise by 275 percent between 1979 and 2007, according to the Congressional Budget Office, while the bottom fifth of earners only saw their incomes grow by 20 percent during that same period. In addition, the total net worth of the bottom 60 percent of Americans is less than that of the Forbes 400 richest Americans . Perhaps even more shocking, the six heirs to the retail giant Walmart had the same net worth in 2007 as the bottom 30 percent of Americans . And the phenomenon isn’t just limited to the U.S. — income inequality is on the rise in most of the world’s major economies , according to the Organisation of Economic Development and Cooperation. The high levels of income inequality may help explain why both Rome and America wield so much power. Large wealth gaps actually helped early societies spread , according to an October study. That’s because unequal societies crowded out more egalitarian populations, the study found. Still, the income gap may hurt the U.S. in other ways. A September report from the International Monetary Fund found that greater income equality positively correlates with stronger economic growth . Not only that, but it’s also unpopular; nearly three-quarters of the respondents to an October pol l from The Hill said they think income inequality is a problem for the United States. In addition, it’s been one of the main rallying cries of Occupy Wall Street .

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Mortgage Modification Blunders Bedevil U.S. Housing Recovery

December 19, 2011

WASHINGTON (Aruna Viswanatha) – Shirley Burnell, a community activist from Oakland, California, has been trying to get her subprime loan restructured since 2007. She never missed a payment, but the adjustable rate mortgage she got in 2004 shot up to a monthly payment she could no longer afford. First she provided documents without getting any response, then she was denied in April by her servicer, Bank of America, for not providing documents it never actually asked for. As one part of the bank appealed that decision and approved her for a trial modification, another part denied her again – twice – providing two new reasons in part based on inaccurate calculations, according to documents reviewed by Reuters. When asked about Burnell’s case, a bank spokesman said she was unable to qualify under “imminent default provisions,” a third reason that Burnell said she had never been given. At one point, Burnell even received notice the bank would accelerate foreclosure proceedings, despite her perfect payment record and the letter itself saying the bank owed her $281.01. “They gave you a funky loan in the first place, and now they’re refusing to work with people to get it worked out,” Burnell said. “It just keeps you upset all the time.” Bank of America is “committed to keeping customers in their homes whenever the homeowner has the financial wherewithal to make reasonable payments and the desire to keep the home,” a spokesman for the bank said. Three years after the foreclosure crisis began, the process to apply for a loan modification remains a bureaucratic nightmare that is complicating the housing recovery and could dull the impact of any Obama administration initiatives in the works. The administration’s biggest foreclosure-prevention effort, the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), targeted to help 3 million to 4 million homeowners, has reached only about a quarter of that since its 2009 inception. The program pushed mortgage servicers to cut interest, extend terms, or defer parts of a loan in an effort to reduce monthly payments and keep borrowers in their homes. But servicers have dragged their feet on providing wide-scale modifications. They continue to lose documents, use inaccurate numbers to issue denials, or both approve and deny applications at the same time, according to housing advocates. “It delays resolution of the problem of defaulting loans and it is adding uncertainty to the market,” said Susan Wachter, a housing expert at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Around one in every 12 mortgages in the country is delinquent, and only a fraction of them have received modifications. “Somehow the borrower is unreachable, or the servicer hasn’t found the right way to reach the borrower, but the fact is, we see (modifications) piercing maybe 10 to 25 percent of the potential population,” said Diane Westerback, a managing director of global surveillance analytics at Standard & Poor’s. Banks have stepped up efforts to deal with the foreclosure crisis since 2009. Chase, for example, set up 82 centers around the country specifically to deal with struggling homeowners. Wells Fargo hosts one-day fairs for homeowners to bring in all of their paperwork and potentially get approved for a modification on the spot. Bank of America says it has completed almost 1 million modifications since 2008, and Wells Fargo says it initiated or completed more than two modifications for every one foreclosure of owner-occupied homes in the past two years. But the majority of homeowners, advocates say, still get stuck in byzantine mazes, with no real enforcement mechanism to pursue under HAMP. “If you get a minor traffic ticket, you get a right to an impartial hearing, but if you are applying for federal home saving assistance, the bank is judge, jury, and executioner,” said Joseph Sant, a lawyer at Staten Island Legal Services who helps defend homeowners facing foreclosure. ‘GOING IN CIRCLES’ It took nearly one year for Hakan Tale to convince his servicer, Chase, that it overvalued his house by more than $100,000 in rejecting a modification. Once he was able to convince Chase of that mistake, it rejected him again, dropping his monthly income by almost $4,000 and determining he didn’t make enough money to qualify, even though his actual income had not changed. In November, more than two years after Tale first sought a modification, Chase asked him to submit an entirely new application. “Maybe they don’t want me to be an example for other people,” said Tale, who lives with his wife and three children in Staten Island, New York. “Any excuse they find, they deny it.” “We have worked with the customer and reviewed his application multiple times, and have been involved in multiple mediation meetings,” a Chase spokesman said. Another Staten Island resident, 77-year-old Hamson McPherson, was first denied a modification two years ago by his servicer, Wells Fargo, after it miscalculated his income. The bank then served him with a foreclosure summons and complaint, which in New York can lead to court-supervised settlement conference. But it stalled on moving forward for so long that McPherson triggered the proceedings himself in August 2011 to try to negotiate an alternative to foreclosure. In October, more than two years after he first applied for a modification, the bank told him there was an investor restriction on the loan, which meant it couldn’t modify it. That investor agreement was public, Wells Fargo told him. But after confronting the bank with that agreement, which did not include any such restriction, the bank told him there was a previously undisclosed secret document that included the restriction. “It’s a nightmare,” McPherson said, “when you have these things, you don’t get proper sleep at all.” In an ironic twist, the hold music played when he called Wells Fargo once was a song called, “Going in Circles.” “I listened to it for five minutes and then hung up because I was so upset,” he said. A Wells Fargo spokesman said the bank has “worked for some time to find payment assistance within the investor guidelines of the loan.” “We continue to work with him to find alternatives to foreclosure,” the spokesman said. ‘NOT DOING THEIR JOB’ Even with staff additions — Chase, for example, added some 10,000 employees to deal with defaults, and Bank of America increased its 5,000 employees to 40,000 — individual negotiators can still have hundreds, or even thousands of cases open, according to housing advocates. Employees can be so overwhelmed that applications languish for months. Banks consider financial documents “stale” within two or three months, forcing homeowners to provide updated documents all over again. While housing counselors have seen some improvements in the past few years, many borrowers are still not even able to email applications in; they have to fax them in, thus creating no real paper trail. Carlos Cespedes, an advocate with the Neighborhood of Affordable Housing in Boston, said his files include 25 faxes of the same document, provided over and over to a servicer that said it never received it or lost it. One of his clients traveled to Central America to obtain her deported husband’s signature on a document renouncing his interest in the property, but had to send that same document six times to her servicer who kept losing it. “These are institutions that have taken a huge amount of bailout money. There should be a level of responsibility to communities,” said Josh Zinner, an advocate with the Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project in New York. “HAMP is far from perfect, but the biggest problem is servicers not doing their job.” (Reporting by Aruna Viswanatha; Editing by Xavier Briand) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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GOP Candidate’s Firm Profited While Jobs Disappeared From Key Primary State

December 19, 2011

GAFFNEY, S.C. — More than two decades ago, Mitt Romney’s business venture came to town with a bounty of highly anticipated manufacturing jobs. The new plant, just past the gas station off Interstate 85, needed skilled workers to churn out thousands of photo albums. Four years later, the Holson Burns Group Inc. – the company controlled by Romney’s Bain Capital LLC – closed the factory and laid off about 150 workers. Some jobs were sent north, where months later many of those were also eliminated. Other operations went overseas. But Bain walked away with millions in profits. A review by The Associated Press of financial and regulatory documents in the case of Holson Burnes contrasts with statements Romney has made during his presidential campaign about his success creating jobs in the private sector. It shows how Bain, then headed by Romney, wrung profits out of the company by slashing costs and trimming its work force. By coincidence, the economic fallout from Bain’s decisions struck hardest in South Carolina and New Hampshire, early primary states that will shape the Republican race and Romney’s White House prospects. Romney knows President Barack Obama – not to mention the other Republican hopefuls – will be picking apart his record at Bain. “He’s going to go after me and say, you know, in businesses that you’ve invested in, they didn’t all succeed,” Romney said at last week’s Republican debate. “Some failed. Some laid people off. And he’ll be absolutely right.” Yet Romney said that, overall, his investments produced tens of thousands of jobs. “In the real world, some things don’t make it,” Romney added. Under Romney, Bain Capital earned a reputation for turning around struggling companies and establishing well-known brands such as Domino’s Pizza and the Staples office supply retailer. But the little-known story of Holson Burnes shows the human toll in this town of about 12,000 people touched by Bain’s pursuit of profit. For Bain, the plan was a financial success: Holson Burnes raised $24 million from its initial public offering on the over-the-counter trading market, with Bain executives retaining the majority of the company’s shares. Bain, in the end, reaped more than double the return on its initial investment. But workers were left jobless just as the local economy began to slump. ___ LURING INVESTORS In 1987, Bain Capital pounced on a golden opportunity: It set its sights on Hallmark’s Burnes of Boston, having bought the Holson Co. the year before. Executives organized the companies under the Holson Burnes Group, which by 1992 was one of the nation’s largest makers of photo albums and picture frames. Company executives quickly went to work growing their new venture. They foresaw “significant growth” for their products in the South, a local newspaper reported, so South Carolina officials lured the company to Gaffney with more than $5 million in industrial bonds. Officials in Cherokee County, about 60 miles from Charlotte, N.C., pushed for $200,000 in utility upgrades. Within months, Holson Burnes opened its 114,000-square-foot factory, using land on the outskirts of Gaffney once owned by a farm-supply company. By April 1988, about 100 workers were fastening together photo albums for the growing business. “It was a new, state-of-the-art plant with lots of people,” recalled Robert Weaver, who worked there in the late 1980s and later became a county official. But in time, the red ink grew. Although Holson Burnes’ sales nearly doubled from 1987 to 1991 – to more than $110 million_ it posted consecutive operating losses, reports stated. Executives blamed the recession and a shift in consumer habits. To stem the losses, Holson Burnes closed the plant and sold the property in July 1992 for $2.8 million, county records show. The company paid off its mortgage and transferred a small number of remaining jobs to New Hampshire. Undoubtedly, Bain executives had their eye on the bottom line as they were preparing to close the Gaffney plant. Just six months before, the company touted “improved efficiencies” and “stronger cost controls” in its regulatory filings, just as it reported losses in early 1992. The cost-cutting worked, just as the company prepared its initial public offering. By 1993, Holson Burnes brought in more than $3 million in after-tax profit, a stark turnaround from its $12.4 million loss the year before. ___ JOB CUTS A PATTERN Holson Burnes had brought new jobs to Gaffney amid a downtrodden economy. It was no surprise when county development officials worked quickly to find a surrogate after Bain closed up shop. The local plant manager formed a small spinoff company and rehired about 20 to 30 workers. In the end, Holson Burnes saved millions of dollars. Yet its squeeze on Gaffney was hardly unique. Just as executives closed down operations here and sold its South Carolina factory to the Bic Corp., residents 900 miles away in Claremont, N.H., were preparing for the new jobs. The company said in spring 1992 that the expansion in Claremont “will allow us to focus our attention on our rapidly growing base” of products. But the prospect of new jobs – similar to expectations in Gaffney – was short lived. Within seven months, Holson Burnes began issuing furloughs to half its Claremont employees. Even if things looked up, the company told its workers, it would not rehire most of its clerical or managerial staff. Exact numbers of layoffs were never announced. Some workers estimated that 85 to 100 employees were affected, telling the local Claremont Eagle Times that entire departments had been “decimated.” The cost-cutting continued at Holson Burnes. By 1992, the company manufactured nearly 75 percent of its photo frames overseas, according to documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. One of the company’s clock-making divisions also shipped work overseas from a Rhode Island plant. But the business decisions didn’t come without risk or public scrutiny. Two clockmakers sued Holson Burnes in U.S. District Court in August 1992, claiming executives convinced them to hold off on demanding $1.9 million in IOU payments so that Holson Burnes could pull its Cuckoo Clock Manufacturing Co. out of a financial tailspin. A judge dismissed the case three years later. ___ TENDING A `GOLDEN GOOSE’ Since announcing his candidacy for the White House, Romney has touted his business experience to convince voters that he’s a better alternative to Obama as the country grapples with a weak economy. “This president doesn’t know how the economy works,” Romney said last week. “I believe to create jobs, it helps to have created jobs.” After working as a top official for Bain & Co., Romney founded Bain Capital, where he largely made his personal fortune of $190 million to $250 million. He headed Bain Capital for more than 15 years before leaving to run the Salt Lake Olympic organizing committee. Under Romney, Bain Capital invested millions of dollars into dozens of private-equity ventures. Some produced staggering profitability – one company showed a return rate greater than 1,000 percent – and by the late 1990s Bain targeted tech firms that specialized in software and telecommunications. Romney insists now that he was never about “buying things, taking them apart, closing them down,” as he told “Fox News Sunday.” “My business was associated with trying to make enterprises more successful. Not always was I able to succeed. But in each case, we tried to grow an enterprise, and in doing so, hopefully provide a better future for those associated with that enterprise.” Holson Burnes was one of Romney’s lesser-known investments. In 1986, just as it bought smaller companies to form the Holson Burnes Group, Bain sank roughly $10 million in its new project under Romney’s leadership. By 1992, Holson Burnes’ photography products lined the shelves in major American department stores. Bain eventually earned roughly $22 million from its initial investment – an average rate of return that a Deutsche Bank financial prospectus said surpassed 20 percent. Indeed, it was Bain’s investment in Holson Burnes and other ventures that made Romney undoubtedly wary about leaving the company he founded – it now manages about $66 billion in assets – to organize the 2002 Winter Olympics. “How could I walk away from the golden goose,” Romney wrote in his 2004 book, “especially now that it was laying even more golden eggs?” ___ ___ Contact the Washington investigative team at DCInvestigations(at)ap.org

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Bipartisan Group Casts Bizarre Pro-Porn Vote

December 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — On Thursday, a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers directed the federal government to deploy radical new powers to enforce and protect copyrights on pornography. By a vote of 9 to 18, the House Judiciary Committee rejected an amendment offered by Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.), which would have barred the Department of Justice from using the new tactics envisioned by an anti-piracy bill to protect “obsecene and pornographic works.” Members of both parties came together to defeat the anti-pornography initiative, with Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas), ranking member John Conyers (D-Mich.), and even hardcore social conservative Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) all against Polis’ amendment, and in effect, standing up to protect the porn industry. The vote came during a hearing to modify the text Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA, a bill which gives filmmakers and the federal government the ability to shutdown entire websites that they claim are involved in piracy — without a trial or even a traditional hearing. And while the legislation is being pushed most aggressively by Hollywood movie studio and major record labels, the sweeping enforcement powers envisioned by the bill could be deployed by adult film auteurs, as well. Yet a spokesperson for King explained his vote by arguing the Polis amendment would have actually led to more porn online. By enforcing the intellectual property rights of porn producers, King’s office argued, the DOJ would be able to take down many websites that post porn illegally. Polis is one of a handful of outspoken SOPA opponents on the Judiciary Committee, whose position is embraced by several major Silicon Valley companies alongside the ACLU, Internet experts and academics. Web programmers warn that the primary anti-piracy tactics envisioned by the bill would weaken online security measures and crack the very foundation of the Internet. The ACLU and other First Amendment advocates blast the destruction of entire websites without a trial — rather than the removal of infringing material — as a major free speech violation. By introducing his porn rider, Polis forced SOPA supporters into casting an awkward vote. Determining whether a site takedown would protect pornographers would require the Justice Department to conduct additional reviews and open up takedowns to a new category of legal challenges. And that might make the process of website annihilation slower for Hollywood studios seeking to crackdown on pirated mainstream movies. Hollywood has repeatedly cast SOPA as job-creating legislation, with Motion Picture Association of America Chairman Chris Dodd celebrating the bill as a way to protect actors and technicians alike. Economists say it’s unlikely that the bill will actually create any jobs, warning that it’s tactics are particularly problematic for legitimate tech start-ups , but film-friendly lawmakers have been happy to parrot the MPAA talking points. To date, however, no members of Congress have celebrated SOPA’s potential to create more porn stars. Several lawmakers ducked the vote by simply not attending. In fact, of the 10 amendments that received roll call votes on Thursday, Polis’ porn amendment received the fewest total votes, with just 27, compared to as many as 34 on other amendments. Reps. Ben Quayle (R-Ariz.) and Howard Berman (D-Calif.) curiously were able to vote on both the amendments offered before and after the porn amendment, but disappeared for the porn vote. A spokesman for Polis insists that the amendment was not simply a humorous effort to put SOPA supporters in a difficult position. “It makes a serious point,” Polis spokesman Chris Fitzgerald told HuffPost. “You’re basically going to have the Justice Department policing all of this, and if we’re going to be extending those resources, we shouldn’t be prioritizing the property rights of pornographers over others.” Polis’ unusual allies supporting his amendment also included members on both sides of the aisle, with SOPA opponents Reps. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) and Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) joining strident social conservative Reps. Louis Gohmert (R-Texas) and Jim Jordan (R-Ohio).

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