Monsanto Claims Patents On Bacon, Steak, and Fish

From GM Watch:

Meat claimed as invention by Monsanto
Wednesday, 28 April 2010 11:22

Meat claimed as invention by multinational company of Monsanto
No Patents on Seeds, Press release, 27 April 2010
http://www.no-patents-on-seeds.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogcategory&id=3&Itemid=28

*Stop patenting the food chain!

Multinational seed corporations are following a consequent strategy to gain control over basic resources for food production. As recent research shows not only genetically engineered plants, but more and more the conventional breeding of plants gets into the focus of patent monopolies: International patent applications in this sector are skyrocking, having doubled since 2007 till end of 2009. Continue reading

Barrick Gold Threatens Vancouver Publisher

CBC News in Canada reports that bankster-associated gold miner Barrick Gold is shutting down critical writing on the Canadian mining industry.  (Thanks to Chris Cook).

An excerpt:

“The threat of legal action from mining giant Barrick Gold has forced Vancouver-based Talonbooks to postpone publication of a book about the Canadian mining industry.

Publisher Karl Siegler calls it a clear case of “libel chill” by one of Canada’s largest mining companies.

The book, Imperial Canada Inc.: Legal Haven of Choice for the World’s Mining Industries, was to be published in spring 2010, but in February, the publisher and everyone else involved with the book got a threatening letter from Barrick lawyers. Continue reading

Where In The World Is Iraq’s Gold?

A thought occurred to me late at night. Do you remember these stories from the Iraq war?

WASHINGTON (CNN) –For the second time in a week, U.S. troops have discovered what appears to be a cache of gold bars hidden in a truck, which could be worth just less than a quarter of a billion dollars, according to a Pentagon official. Continue reading

Vote Against Dodd Bill, Corker-Merkley Provision

Fed Privately Audits Senate to Kill Audit; What You Can Do
Mish Shedlock, May 4, 2010

A bill sponsored by Ron Paul and Alan Grayson to thoroughly audit the Fed, passed the House. However in a brazen move that ought to offend the sensibilities of every citizen, the Fed is lobbying Senate members to water down the bill so that it is meaningless. Continue reading

Leveraged Buy-Outs Make Come Back In Private Equity Market

The report I’ve posted below illustrates why most regulatory efforts are completely counterproductive.

By the time enough bureaucrats are convinced there’s a problem, by the time enough of the public has been educated…or miseducated about it..so there’s enough public pressure to call for hearings, by the time the SEC and the DOJ have been able to gather enough evidence to cobble together charges, the swindles move onto some other part of the system, the crooks cover over their tracks, reinvent themselves, put old wine in new bottles and new wine in old, and, in general, outpace the local flatfoots about 100-1, so that they’re nearly always playing catch-up and dissecting history, rather than actually safeguarding the public from the current perils of the market.

Goldman Sachs is the outrage du jour. But much of the really bad stuff Goldman’s been involved in over several decades has nothing to do with the technicality on which it’s being grilled now, a deal that’s no different from hundreds done on Wall Street by every other bank. Meanwhile, what about the dirty laundry of the hedge-funds, of private equity, of sovereign wealth funds – to take just the private sector? And what of the government’s own culpability in financial wrong-doing? And worse yet, its blunders in financial “right-doing”? Don’t count on the SEC to look at all that.

That’s the intrinsic problem of a statist solution…it’s always a day late and a dollar short.

Thus the LA Times reports on where the action is in the financial world, as evidenced in the glee of some participants at the Milken Institute’s Global Conference [that’s Michael Milken, former convicted junk bond financier turned philanthropist and alleged master mind of global market manipulation}:

“Unemployment is high and the housing market remains weak. But in Beverly Hills on Tuesday, private equity players could hardly be more upbeat.
A panel of private equity fund managers at the Milken Institute’s annual Global Conference celebrated the comeback of highly leveraged deals — which had ground almost to a halt during the financial crisis.
“What a difference a year makes,” enthused Leon Black, head of Apollo Management in New York.
Black and the other buyout honchos attributed the return of debt-financed acquisitions to the recovery in the credit markets and the overall economy.
“The high-yield market is probably better today than it ever has been,” said Scott Sperling, co-president of Thomas H. Lee Partners in Boston, referring to the junk bonds that finance many private equity transactions.
A new problem faces private equity investors now: The prices of target companies have shot up faster than fund managers have been able to scoop up bargains.
“A lot of the low-hanging fruit, frankly, is gone,” Black said. “The snapback has been unbelievably dramatic.”
Not surprisingly, the managers bemoaned what Black termed the “populist wave” helping to fuel the Obama administration’s effort to boost oversight of the financial industry.
“You’re seeing some wacky regulation, which makes running our business a lot more difficult,” said Ted Virtue, chief executive of MidOcean Partners, which buys midsize companies.
Still, the private equity business has largely escaped the scrutiny aimed at other areas of Wall Street. “I’m glad I’m not Goldman Sachs today,” Black said with a wide smile.”

Alexander Hamilton: Nemesis Of The Productive

In sum, then, the primary development of republicanism in America, for the most part under direction of Alexander Hamilton, effectively safeguarded the monopolist, the capitalist, and the speculator. Its institutions embraced the interests of these three groups and opened the way for their harmonious progress in association. The only interest which it left open to free exploitation was that of the producer. Except insofar as the producer might incidentally and partially bear the character of monopolist, capitalist, and speculator, his interest was unconsidered.

—  Albert J. Nock.

Larry Summers: Cashing Out Big Time

From our friend Barry Dyke’s new blog, Economicwarrior.com:

“Larry Summers, dear reader, is part of the problem. There is always an undeniable connection between banking, the elite world of ivory tower Ivy League academia, the government and Wall Street. Summers, who was president of Harvard University until 2006, is former Treasury Secretary of the United States under Bill Clinton, where he worked with now regulators Gary Gensler, Timothy Geithner and Robert Rubin. The last year at Harvard Summers got a $1,000,000 interest only mortgage from Harvard, on top of a $580 thousand salary, which included $30 thousand for benefits and $143 thousand in expense reimbursements–whatever those are…over $11K a month. While at Harvard, he oversaw their endowment, recommending interest rate swap derivatives. Pushed endowment money into a toxic hedge fund Old Lane Partners from Rubin’s Citigroup…Harvard ultimately lost $9.9 billion from its endowment, and at Summers urging, Harvard invested its cash in its exotic investments…losing another $1.8 billion. Continue reading

Massachusetts Moves Millions Out Of Big Banks

The Washington Post reports:

“Massachusetts officials on Wednesday announced plans to move millions of dollars in state investments out of some of the nation’s biggest banks to protest credit card interest rates.

State Treasurer Timothy Cahill said the state has removed Bank of America, Citi and Wells Fargo from a list of institutions approved for new state investments. Massachusetts, which is the only state to make such a move, is also beginning to divest $243 million in funds held at those banks, though the process could take up to six months.

“We want to bring some fairness into the issue,” said Cahill, who is running for governor. “I don’t think what we’re asking is . . . out of line.”

Word Government Alert: UN Spends Haiti Money On Expanding Its Personnel

Next time there’s a natural disaster and you think the government should “do its share,” “help out” or be compassionate, remember this:

“The United Nations has quietly upped this year’s peacekeeping budget for earthquake-shattered Haiti to $732.4 million, with two-thirds of that amount going for the salary, perks and upkeep of its own personnel, not residents of the devastated island.

The world organization plans to spend the money

on an expanded force of some 12,675 soldiers and police, plus some 479 international staffers, 669 international contract personnel, and 1,300 local workers, just for the 12 months ending June 30, 2010.

Some $495.8 million goes for salaries, benefits, hazard pay, mandatory R&R allowances and upkeep for the peacekeepers and their international staff support. Only about $33.9 million, or 4.6 percent, of that salary total is going to what the U.N. calls “national staff” attached to the peacekeeping effort.”

Welfare Kings: The Case Of Charles Schwab

From Brad Blog (“Food Incorporated”):

“When they were first introduced during the early days of the New Deal, farm subsidies were intended to stabilize prices in order to offset the extraordinary low prices brought on by over-production and by the Great Depression; to keep farmers on their farms and in their homes.

Today, it would be fair to say that farm subsidies, like Wall Street bailouts, flow to those who need them the least.

In Thieves in High Places, Jim Hightower provides the classic example — billionaire stockbroker Charles R. Schwab; the proud owner of Casa de Patos, “1,500 acres of picturesque wetlands in Northern California.” Schwab grows rice on the land, not for harvesting purposes but because the rice attracts ducks. Schwab is one of those rich folks who likes to invite friends and clients to go duck hunting. (Careful you don’t invite Dick Cheney, Mr. Schwab.)

So Schwab has no intent to harvest the rice, but that doesn’t prevent this man with an estimated $4.7 billion net worth from collecting $500,000/year in federal farm subsidies because he does not market the rice.

Hightower laments, “Sadly, it’s legal, and it’s a fine upstanding example of what George [W. Bush] and his base like to call ‘entrepreneurship.'”