Saturday, September 13, 2014

CA Supremes Remove Citizens United from Nov Ballot

Why shouldn't California voters get to weigh in on  

Citizens United?
Proposition 49 should have stayed on the ballot until the court reaches a final answer
Got an opinion about the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission? Feel free to weigh in, just not on the November ballot.
The California Supreme Court has lodged a preemptive strike against one method of fighting that decision by ruling that Proposition 49 should not be placed 
on the 2014 general election ballot. Proposition 49 is an advisory measure that 
would urge Congress to propose a constitutional amendment to overturn the 
Citizens United decision.
What's Citizens United? In 201, the U.S. 
Supreme Court ruled in that case that 
corporations (and other “artificial entities”) 
have a 1st Amendment right to spend
unlimited sums of money to support or 
oppose political candidates. The court found 
that corporations must be treated the same as
 living, breathing humans for purposes of 
making campaign expenditures that are independent of candidates and political 
parties; the only government interest sufficient to uphold limits on spending is 
corruption, defined narrowly as quid pro quo corruption; and independent 
expenditures cannot, as a matter of law, give rise to quid pro quo corruption.
Many people, myself included, thought Citizens United was flawed for many 
reasons. It has without doubt ushered in an era of big spending by outside groups
seeking to influence the outcome of campaigns. Artificial entities are free to raise 
and spend boundless amounts of money to elect or defeat candidates.
Proposition 49 would have asked Californians whether Congress should propose, and the Legislature should ratify, a constitutional amendment overturning Citizens United. The Legislature voted to place this nonbinding, advisory opinion proposition on the ballot. The Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., a powerful anti-tax group, sued to remove it, arguing that the Legislature lacks the authority to put advisory measures on the ballot. 
It is entirely fair to ask whether the electoral ballot should be used for advisory measures. It can lead to crowded ballots, voter confusion (what is mere advice and
 what makes law?) and frustration (“I voted to overturn Citizens United, why didn't 
it happen?”), and the expenditure of time and resources. The ballot isn't for public interest polls, huffed a spokesman for the Jarvis group. He may be right.
On the other hand, there is an argument that using the ballot for symbolic purposes is, at times, desirable. The results of ballot measures give all of us — voters, politicians 
and lawmakers — important information about the public's sentiment.
But regardless of how that question is ultimately decided, Proposition 49 should 
have stayed on the ballot until the court reaches a final answer.
A five-member majority of the California Supreme Court disagreed. The court relied on a 1984 opinion in which it had removed an advisory initiative from the ballot. Initiatives get on the ballot as a result of gathering signatures from the voters. Proposition 49 was placed on the ballot by the Legislature and, thus, isn't an initiative. Hence the court's 1984 case does not necessarily dictate the outcome of this case.
Using that decision, the court concluded that the harm of allowing Proposition 49 on the ballot as its merits are being decided outweighs the benefits of allowing people to vote on it. The court said the Legislature could simply direct the placement of a version of Proposition 49 on a future ballot, if such measures are held to be valid.
But as Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye wrote in the lone dissent, the majority 
incorrectly weighed the benefits and burdens here. The state Supreme Court has
typically held that constitutional and other challenges to ballot measures should be resolved after, not before, elections. Indeed, California courts typically lean in favor 
of allowing ballot measures to go forward and then ruling on their validity afterward. Doing otherwise could, as the court ruled in a 1982 case, “disrupt the electoral process by preventing the exercise of the people's franchise.”
And, really, what is the great harm caused by allowing Proposition 49 to remain on
 the ballot? As the chief justice pointed out, it seems unlikely that voters would be particularly befuddled by the advisory nature of Proposition 49. Nor would the
 short measure lead to overcrowding of the ballot. If the court later concludes that 
advisory measures are improper, it would be easy enough to preclude the 
Legislature from using Proposition 49 for any purpose. This is not complicated.
However, taking Proposition 49 off the ballot could cause some damage. Voters 
will not be able to weigh in, at least on the ballot, on the propriety of a 
Constitutional amendment overturning Citizens United.
For now, if you object to Citizens United and want to call for a constitutional 
amendment to overturn it, use the phone, you're not allowed to use the ballot.
Jessica A. Levinson is an associate clinical professor at Loyola Law School in 
Los Angeles and vice president of the Los Angeles Ethics Commission. She 
blogs at PoLawTics.lls.edu; Twitter: @LevinsonJessica

Obama's Speech Falls Short

 Last night the nation waited to hear how President Obama planned to defeat ISIS.
  Instead of a message of hope, he gave what might be the most discouraging sentencespoken by a president since George "The Moron" Bush was in the White House.
“This strategy of taking out terrorists who threaten us, while supporting partners on the front lines, is one that we have successfully pursued in Yemen and Somalia for years.”
Yemen and Somalia? Good Gawd!
 If Yemen and Somalia are Obama's measures for success, two essentially failed states, then Lawd help us, because this isn't going to end well.
 “The question I have is, If the Obama administration is confident that its strategy in Yemen is correct, then why is Al Qaeda growing in Yemen and why is the group still capable of forcing the United States to shut down embassies in more than a dozen countries?” Gregory D. Johnsen, a scholar and journalist who has written extensively about AQAP asked last year.
“We continue to assess that AQAP remains the al-Qa‘ida affiliate most likely to attempt transnational attacks against the United States,” National Counterterrorism Center Deputy Director Nicholas Rasmussen told the Senate just today. In contrast, he said, ISIS’ “ability to carry out complex, significant attacks in the West is currently limited.”
 Yemen wasn't a good model to emulate last year when Gregory Johnsen was talking about it. It was an even worse model to emulate when Obama referenced it this July (just days after Obama's statement the State Department told all Americans to flee Yemen for security reasons).
   And Yemen has gotten much worse in just the past few weeks. Just yesterday Amnesty International warned of 'full-blown conflict' in the streets of Sana’a, Yemen's capital, whileSaudi Arabia pulled out their diplomats.
  In southern Yemen AQAP has set up an an islamic emirate.
   But that's not the worst part by a long shot.
 Between the number of threatened coups and the government opening fire on unarmed protesters, Yemen is hardly a model that any country should aspire towards.
 It's not just sad that President Obama couldn't find a better example to use than Yemen. It's downright scary.
   If this is the model to aspire to, then what does Obama's definition of failure look like? What does it say that three years ago President Obama was calling Libya a recipe for success? Libya is now a failed state that France calls a 'terrorist hub'.
  Let's not forget Somalia, probably the most brutalized people on the face of the Earth even before we started bombing them.
 As for Somalia, the United States has been facing off there against al-Shabaab, a group that has plagued the region since 2006 now. In an example of just how hard it is to destroy a group like Shabaab, the United States recently launched a secret mission to kill Ahmed Godane, the head of the terrorist group. The mission was a success. But rather than discouraging the remaining members, the group instead named a new leader and renewed its allegiance to al Qaeda. If these are the countries that are being held up as success stories, the fight against ISIS is going to be even more of a slog than originally assumed.
Like Iraq, there was no significant al-Qaeda presence in Somalia before Bush The Moron decided to start funding Somali warlords (and later Ethiopia's invasion), but that's all water under the bridge now (along with tens of thousands of dead civilians).
 I'm guessing that President Obama used the examples of Yemen and Somalia because so few Americans were even aware that we were bombing those countries. Which speaks of the ignorance of Americans, not of policy success.
 Something else we should take away from that discouraging sentence is who are these "partners" that we will be working with in Iraq and Syria? A year ago this month President Obama made the effort to clarify that question.
 President Obama waived a provision of federal law designed to prevent the supply of arms to terrorist groups to clear the way for the U.S. to provide military assistance to “vetted” opposition groups fighting Syrian dictator Bashar Assad.
It's a good thing he did so, because just the other day it was proven that those weapons given to "vetted" partners wound up in the hands of ISIS.
   You know, the guys we just went to war with.
  The real tragedy is that the president and the media never seem to get around to examining how effective/ineffective our bombing is to winning this so-called War on Some Terror.
   Has anyone looked at Afghanistan recently?
   How about Pakistan?
  Those are two other nations, besides Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and Libya that we've been bombing.
What do all of those nations have in common?
  They are all worse off than before we started dropping high explosives on them. (except maybe Somalia, which simply couldn't get any worse off)
  Maybe the solution to winning the War on Some Terror isn't to blow up wedding parties.
  Finally, let's consider President Obama's plan for this being primarily a bombing campaign.Rachel Maddow does a good job of cutting through the crap.
 "It may be very convenient to say you support airstrikes, but not combat, or to say you support airstrikes, but not boots on the ground," Maddow said. "But there already are more than 1100 US personnel in Iraq to support the airstrikes that are already happening. God forbid, if American aircraft start to get shot down by this militant group with their anti-aircraft artillery, then you better believe there are going to be boots on the ground and very quickly."
 What do you think the reaction will be the first time ISIS shows a captured American pilot with a knife to his neck on TV?
  One thing Rachel Maddow is wrong about, the number of US troops in Iraq is now over 1,600.
9:48 AM PT: Bombing ISIS will have a very limited impact.
  That's the overwhelming consensus of analysts and senior Pentagon planning officersand Pentagon director of operations.

US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel says “military option is not the option that’s going to end the conflict”.
9:58 AM PT:  Top CIA officials say that drone strikes INCREASE terrorism.
  Don't want to believe CIA officials (I don't blame you), then how about the actual peoplebeing effected.
 Sudarsan Raghavan of the Washington Post reports — after interviews with tribal leaders, victims’ relatives, human rights activists and officials from four provinces in southern Yemen — that "unintended consequence of the attacks has been a marked radicalization of the local population."

    Raghavan notes that since Barack Obama ordered the first air strike in Yemen in 2009,the number of core AQAP members in Yemen have more than doubled from 300 to at least 700.

    Yemen expert Gregory Johnsen of Princeton University told the BCC that the number is closer to 1,000 and the "more the US bombs, the more they grow," noting that al-Qaeda is adept at using the deaths of women and children to recruit people for revenge...

   "That one bombing radicalized the entire area," Abdul Gh ani al-Iryani, a Yemeni political analyst, said. "All the men and boys from those families and tribes will have joined [al-Qaeda] to fight."
 Is there any evidence of this? Look at this chart of terrorist attacks in the world since 2004.
In particular, look at the charts of terrorist attacks in Asia and the Middle East, our theaters of action in the War on Some Terror.
attribution: None Specified

ORIGINALLY POSTED TO GJOHNSIT ON THU SEP 11, 2014 AT 09:17 AM PDT.

ALSO REPUBLISHED BY ADALAH — A JUST MIDDLE EAST.

Chinese Bank Pays $550 Million for Fraud

HSBC to Pay $550m in US to Settle Mortgage Mis-Selling suit

Deal comes three weeks before a trial was due to begin in New York, where HSBC could have faced $1.6bn in damages
[Editor: HSBC = Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank]
HSBC
HSBC has denied the allegations, and did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement. Photograph: Nick Ansell/PA
HSBC Holdings will pay $550m (£340m) to resolve a US regulator's claims that the British bank made false representations in selling mortgage bonds to the Federal mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the financial crisis.
The settlement announced on Friday between the bank's US unit and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), the regulator of the two government-controlled finance companies, came less than three weeks before a trial due to begin on 29 September in New York, where HSBC has said it could have faced up to $1.6 Billion in damages.
The deal is the latest arising from 18 lawsuits that the FHFA filed in 2011 to recoup losses on $200bn in mortgage-backed securities sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which the US government took control of amid the 2008 economic crisis.
The lawsuit accused HSBC of falsely representing to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that loans underlying $6.2bn of mortgage-backed securities sold from 2005 to 2007 met underwriting guidelines and standards.
HSBC has denied the allegations, and did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement.
The bank stopped issuing residential mortgage-backed securities in 2007.
"We are pleased to have resolved this matter," Stuart Alderoty, the general counsel for HSBC North America, said in a statement.
Under the settlement HSBC will pay $374m to Freddie Mac and $176m to Fannie Mae, the FHFA said.
Along with settlements with other banks including Bank of America, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley, the FHFA has recovered nearly $17.9 Billion to date.
Last month, Goldman Sachs Group Inc agreed to a settlement that the FHFA valued at $1.2bn.
Lawsuits remain pending against Nomura Holdings, and Royal Bank of Scotland Group.
The FHFA said it "remains committed to satisfactory resolution of these actions."
Many of the Banks settled after Denise Cote, the US district Judge who has overseen most of the FHFA litigation, issued several rulings making it harder to mount defenses.