Obama Holds Up Warren Buffet’s Secretary As Example of Economic Injustice . . . She Makes Between $200,000 And $500,000 a Year…
This poor woman, how does she manage to survive? (Forbes) — Warren Buffet’s secretary, Debbie Bosanek, served as a stage prop for President Obama’s State of the Union speech. She was the President’s chief display of the alleged unfairness of our tax system – a little person paying a higher tax rate than her billionaire boss. Bosanek’s
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Obama Holds Up Warren Buffet’s Secretary As Example of Economic Injustice . . . She Makes Between $200,000 And $500,000 a Year…
Meet the Billionaire Who Wants to Help Gingrich Destroy Romney
Meet the Billionaire Who Wants to Help Gingrich Destroy Romney
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Meet the Billionaire Who Wants to Help Gingrich Destroy Romney
A Russian Awakening
It is tempting to think of Russia in terms of historical continuity, with a red thread of autocracy, coterminous with the grim flow of the centuries, extending from the Rurikids to the Romanovs, and from the Politburo to Putinism. Such a thread was firmly embedded in Russian historiography a century ago, when the influential lecturer Vasily Klyuchevsky, in his magisterial five-volume Course of Russian History , characterized Russian autocracy as the ineluctable consequence of climate, geopolitics, and the supposedly simple social structures of its vast populace. Generations of historians have plumbed the depths of Russia’s past, each searching for evidence of the inevitability of imperial absolutism. For some, like the nineteenth-century aristocrat Nikolay Karamzin, Moscow “owes it greatness to the khans.” For others, like the twentieth-century Byzantinist Romilly Jenkins, the modern Russian state “merely carries on the tradition of tsarist days,” which in turn was part of an “age-old structure… very recognizably [that of] the Byzantine Palace of the Third Rome.” Autocracy has thus been presented as a fundamental feature of the Russian landscape, as natural as the loamy black earth of the tillable steppes. It matters little, then, if the Russian people have paid a terrible price for this phenomenon, routinely subdivided as they have been into the three categories provided by the poet Aleksandr Pushkin: “tyrant, traitor, or in prison.” After all, it would seem altogether foolhardy to challenge the black letter laws of history. The seemingly static nature of the Russian experience — notwithstanding the endless succession of “Times of Troubles” and “Epochs of Executions,” peasant revolts and pretenders to the throne, ideological revolutions and civil wars — suggests an eerie stabilnost kladbishcha , a “stability of the graveyard,” one that is by all appearances gated shut. As a result, when tens of thousands of men, women, and children fill Moscow’s Bolotnaya Ploshchad (“Bog Square”) to protest the transparently fraudulent results of the December 4, 2011 Duma elections, skepticism regarding the prospects of a liberalizing sea change in the Russian Federation is understandably widespread. Perhaps Nikolai Yazykov was right to prophesy, on the eve of the 1825 Decembrist Revolt, that “Those age-old bonds will never slacken/ Around our homeland’s patient woe”? But perhaps, at long last, that patience is running thin, and genuine democratic reforms are within reach. Or perhaps Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, Russia’s once and likely future president, would rather follow in Ivan the Terrible’s footsteps, becoming (as Klyuchevsky put it) rather like “the blind knight in the Old Testament who collapses a building on top of himself in order to destroy the enemies who are sitting on the roof.” In any event, the contentious aftermath of the recent Duma elections, and the run-up to the March 2012 presidential election, will provide at least a partial answer to the question of “whither Russia?” To more effectively grapple with this pressing issue, it should be kept in mind that Russian society is not really the static monstrosity described by Karamzin, Klyuchevsky, and company. It is better thought of as a “sedimentary society,” a phrase used by Alfred Rieber to discuss a process by which “a successive series of social forms accumulated, each constituting a layer that covered all or most of society without altering the older forms lying under the surface.” Throughout Russian history, various estates, classes, and ethnies commingled with broader notions like narod (“nation”) and obshchestvennost (“educated, politically-aware society”). The peasantry, meanwhile, has been evocatively likened by Konstantin Kavelin to “Kaluga dough,” ” malleable enough in form but possessing its own weight, texture, mass and resistance, above all resistance,” a description suitable for the population as a whole. Not unlike in a geological context, the superimposed and shifting sedimentary strata of Russian society produced innumerable tensions — between liberalism and the Orthodox faith, Westernizers and Slavophiles, European and Eurasian strategic objectives, capitalism and socialism, “Russia for the Russians” and federalist multinationalism, and so on — all of which have resulted in a collection of internal contradictions that can serve either to make or to break the Russian state. It is hardly surprising that Russia, simultaneously blessed and cursed by a body politic such as this, would tend towards political sultanism. Today’s Russian Federation, however, is as diverse as it has ever been. As Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, has recently written, ” Russia’s sociopolitical spectrum is as wide as the country itself, ” with ” socialists, liberals, and conservatives; big, medium, and small businesses; major urban centers, small towns, and the countryside; ethnic Russian and non-Russian regions, including the very special case of the North Caucasus, ” all of whose ” demands are very diverse and are sometimes hard to reconcile. ” With ” many people more affluent than ever before in the entire history of Russia,” Trenin continued, “the level of popular tolerance has changed.” The obshchestvennost , in other words, is in the ascendant. A similar development occurred in the latter half of the nineteenth century, as mass-circulation newspapers and journals sprouted up across the empire. The historian Geoffrey Hosking has noted that “the ever denser web of information, ideas, comment and discussion” gradually created a “new kind of public,” one “able to discover information independent of the regime, absorb it evaluate it and remould it as part of a view of the world.” The czarist regime’s monopoly of police powers, its ability and willingness to arrest and to suppress those who expressed “dangerous” ideas, would prove a small consolation to the imperial establishment. Thanks to new modes of communication enabled by Facebook, Twitter, and LiveJournal, a similar evolution is taking place in the Russian public square, as evidenced by the ongoing opposition protests in Moscow and elsewhere. The Russian autocracy — czarist, Soviet, or post-Soviet — has proven predictably resistant to the sorts of democratic reforms envisioned by the obshchestvennost . One exception to the rule was the liberal Czar Alexander II, who on the morning of March 13, 1881 affirmatively initialed a proposal enhancing the role of elected representation in the State Council, not knowing that in a matter of hours he would be felled by an assassin’s bomb. But when his second son and successor, the utterly illiberal Alexander III, took up the matter of institutional reform, it was the counsel of the reactionary Ober Procurator of the Holy Synod, Konstantin Pobedonostsev that held sway. The procurator, rejecting the “foreign falsehood” of a parliamentary “talking-shop,” maintained that “Russia has been strong thanks to the autocracy, thanks to the limitless mutual trust and the close tie between the people and its czar.” It was a revealing answer, providing a template for Russian absolutists of all stripes. The attitude that absolutism was vital to Russian greatness, and that any attempts at reform are related to nefarious foreign machinations, is certainly on display in today’s Russia. On December 15, 2011,Vladimir Putin appeared on state television four nearly five hours in order to deliver broadside after broadside aimed at his opposition. The protests, remarked Putin, are merely part of a ” well-tested scheme to destabilize society,” executed by “pawns in the hands of foreign agents,” “people with Russian passports but who work in the interests of foreign states.” It could not be otherwise, in Putin’s mind, for he claims to have a finger firmly on the pulse of the Russian people, and has promised to leave power “within a day” if he felt he had lost the Russian equivalent of the Mandate of Heaven. For both Pobedonostsev and Putin, then, the need to maintain l egitimacy both at home and abroad, the need to tighten the “close tie” between the autocrat and the people while fending off foreign interference (perceived or otherwise), is crucial to keeping a steady grip on the reins of state. When the horse begins to evade the bit, of course, the matter of legitimacy becomes all the more important. Vladimir Putin, always eager to “separate the flies from the cutlet,” as he likes to put it, casts his critics as the former and true patriots as the latter, but there are indications that this self-serving dichotomy is less and less tenable. For Maria Lipman, the analogy is not that of flies and cutlets, but rather a government and people living ” under an informal, nonintrusive pact, or a divorce contract: the government made the decisions and the people minded their own business. As long as the government would not intrude, people accepted that they did not make a difference and engaged in their pursuits.” The December 2011 Duma election, Lipman has suggested, “brought the ‘divorcees’ — the state and the people — back closer together, forcing a vote of allegiance to the government that many had come to detest.”
Putin’s Personal Piggy Banks
The rumors of Vladimir Putin’s vast fortune held in secret bank accounts in Western banks have been around for years. Such stories titillated the foreign press and the denizens of cocktail parties of Moscow, but nothing solid was uncovered. Even the expatriate oligarchs now living in the West with their billions had remained carefully silent in spite of — or because of — their animosity toward Putin. This has all changed. The Russian public recently began to sense there was greater weight to these rumors of their muscular leader’s business interests, and they were right. The first detailed account of private financial connections with ties to Putin was made public by a former St. Petersburg banker, Sergei Kolesnikov, who fled to Turkey and eventually to the United States. Britain’s Financial Times joined with Kolesnikov to put together an analysis of his information after he shared his briefcase of documents with Turkish, British and American security officials — and the obligatory brief interview with the Washington Post . The business and intelligence world in and outside Russia has been buzzing with the intricacies of the “wheeling and dealing” of Vlad, his family and friends ever since. The bottom line — and that’s a particularly appropriate term to use — is that two men with insider relationships with Bank Rossiya in St. Petersburg bought shares in this bank with money funneled to them from offshore companies through a phony order to buy equipment for that city’s hospitals. One of these men, Dmitry Gorelov, was a former KGB colonel, reportedly a trusted acquaintance of Putin . From this point further investments from similar offshore companies were transferred under cover of Bank Rossiya to purchase assets from the gas giant, Gazprom, of which Dmitry Medvedev, a corporate lawyer, was chairman before he became Putin’s chief of staff. Added to this mix at a later date was Mikhail Shelomov, a grandson of Putin’s uncle, who owned Aktsept, a firm that already had a 4.5% stake in Bank Rossiya. Shares were bought by Aktsept with money borrowed from a convenient Panamanian trading company to obtain a 13.5% ownership of Sogaz, Gazprom’s insurance subsidiary. And just to make things even more intriguing, another of Putin’s cousins is also a Bank Rossiya shareholder. Medvedev and Shelomov appear to be the key cutouts in Vladimir Putin’s financial involvement in the growth of Bank Rossiya and the subsequent linking of Gazprom, Gazprom Bank, Sogaz and eventually a major Black Sea resort complex and a “palace” of 4,000 square meters for Putin. This massive mansion was built by construction teams of the presidential guard service. The word of the new facility for Putin could not be hidden and one Nikolai Shamalov had his name placed on the title when it was sold to another businessman. Shamalov was the original partner with ex-KGB Colonel Gorelov in the hospital equipment funds scam and co-founder with one Yury Kovalchuk and Vladimir Putin in a lakeside dacha enclave outside St. Petersburg in the 1990s. Kovalchuk and Shamalov are now two of the largest shareholders in Bank Rossiya. This complicated financial networking is indicative of the type of activity now seeing the light of day as the expected easy transition of Putin back into the presidency in March has stumbled. The recent parliamentary polls show Putin’s party, United Russia, with a slim majority of 238 seats won out of a total of 450 seats in the Duma. The vaunted dominance of Putin’s party has been severely eroded. And the increased public recognition of the reincarnation of a new financial oligarchy under Putin has been a strong factor. When Mayor Yuri Luzhkov was dismissed from office by President Dmitry Medvedev last year, Luzhkov and his billionaire wife, Yelena Baturina, vowed to get even. Medvedev had made an issue of the history of graft and corruption of Moscow’s city government under Luzhkov. The back-story here is that the Bank of Moscow head, Andrei Borodin, now living outside Russia, was charged with providing a 13 billion ruble (approx. $450 million US) unsecured loan to Luzhkov’s wife’s construction company. The Moscow bank was then bought out by the majority state-owned bank, VTB. For the former mayor this was another Putin & Company slick takeover maneuver and a personal attack on him and his wife. Medvedev was right, of course, but he underestimated the ability of Moscow’s former leadership to practice the Russian version of “payback.” The police in Moscow played right into the hands of an opposition that had coalesced from disparate groups in the past few weeks around the anti-Putin national opposition party, “A Just Russia.” Luzhkov still has some assets left, according to Moscow news sources, and he arranged to have his former “neighborhood youth” street enforcers of his earlier days join with the growing crowd of protesters against the “illegal” parliamentary voting process. Effectively Luzhkov gained respectability by aiding those demonstrating against the Putin plan for continued political dominance. Luzhkov of course knew all about the connections of Putin with Bank Rossiya and the other deals and remains livid over the hypocrisy of Medvedev/Putin in kicking him out. The publicizing of the Putin financial network has brought into the open what many Russians had already suspected: That the pattern of Putin behind-the-scenes financial deal making is no longer speculation. Putin’s personal wealth development is marked by a return of the Yeltsin-era commercial oligarch system under new approved tycoons. It seems that the Putin-Medvedev business conglomerate thrives even as their political magic wanes.
Mittens Has More Billionaire Donors than Any Opponent
Mittens Has More Billionaire Donors than Any Opponent
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Mittens Has More Billionaire Donors than Any Opponent