Forget Zero Dark Thirty; ISIS Launches “The Clanging Of Swords” Propaganda Movie

Aerial shots, slow-motion explosions, scenes filmed through a rifle’s crosshairs… As France24 reports, you might think this is footage from a new summer blockbuster, but you would be wrong. It is, in fact, a new propaganda video produced by Sunni jihadists from the armed group the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The extremely violent hour-long film was published online just days before ISIS launched a massive offensive in northern Iraq. The film is called “The Clanging of the Swords IV" because it is part of a series much like other Hollywood blockbusters. Given their funding (via stealing Iraq's central bank's cash), and we pre-suppose from the ISIS annual report that they get generous tax breaks on the production, we await "The Clanging of the Swords V" next summer.

 

Via France24,

The film is called “The Clanging of the Swords IV”. The Roman numeral is there because, much like with Hollywood blockbusters, the film is part of a series. This one was first published on Internet forums heavily frequented by ISIS members, and was then reposted on the group’s official Twitter account on May 17, 2014.
 
The opening sequence pans in on a map of the fictitious geographic zone that the ISIS fighters call the “Islamic State in Iraq and Syria”, which encompasses Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine, and Iraq. This is followed by footage from a drone flying over Fallujah, an Iraqi city that ISIS has controlled since early 2014. Then, a rocket launch is heard, as if to mark the start of the “action”. (The full-length, original video can be viewed here).

A message for the Iraqi army

The three videos that came before “The Clanging of the Swords IV” primarily consisted of footage filmed by ISIS during its fighting in Syria. However, on May 17, the organisation aired this action-oriented montage of scenes filmed in Iraq, which includes real footage of, for instance, official Iraqi vehicles being machine-gunned full of holes, the execution of Iraqi soldiers and the destruction of tanks. This footage came as a warning, three weeks before the start of the ISIS offensive on the cities of Mosul, Tikrit, and Kirkuk.

On an Iraqi road, fighters shoot at vehicles that Iraqi officials are allegedly riding in.
[REMOVED]

The film, which includes many graphic images, has been taken off YouTube multiple times, but is each time uploaded anew by different users. It is hard to say how often it has been viewed and whether it has impacted the morale of Iraqi soldiers. Some Twitter online commenters predicted that “this video will cause 10 to 15% of [Iraqi] soldiers to desert.” And indeed, many Iraqi soldiers did not fight back when the jihadists arrived, opting instead to take off their uniforms and disappear into the crowds of fleeing civilians – even though in northern Iraq, soldiers outnumbered jihadists ten to one.

A tank explodes on a mine, as ISIS fighters cheer.

 

When reality looks like fiction

In this video, ISIS fighters shy away from the face-to-camera statements normally made by jihadist groups, instead focusing on action and combat. A CNN journalist even noticed similarities between certain parts of the montage and scenes from the US film “Zero Dark Thirty” on the search for Osama Bin Laden.
 

Even though the production style is reminiscent of Hollywood blockbusters, ISIS insists that everything depicted is real. To this end, the names of fighters appear on the screen when they come into view, as well as the names of fighters who died in combat. In the same way, the film points out the locations of much of the footage.
 
The cruelty of ISIS’s execution scenarios are chilling. At the 38 minute mark, men accused of having worked for the United States are filmed digging their own graves.
 

 

ISIS and Sunni civilians

By selecting these particular pieces of footage, ISIS aims to show that they are primarily attacking officers of the Iraqi army and those who collaborated with the United States or with the Iraqi government, which is controlled by the country’s Shiite majority. At the 27 minute mark, ISIS soldiers, dressed up in Iraqi army uniforms, film themselves standing at a fake army roadblock they’ve set up on a road in Iraq. The passenger of one cars, who believes he is addressing soldiers, informs them that he is a high-level Iraqi bureaucrat. He is promptly executed.

By focusing their propaganda on these targets, ISIS is letting Sunni civilians in northern Iraq know that they will be spared by the fighting. It is crucial for the jihadists to convince the residents of Sunni cities not to flee, because having them around allows the jihadists to conceal themselves behind a veritable human shield. However, these videos do not mention the fate that could befall civilians in the region’s Shiite areas.

Following an astounding advance in the Sunni north, columns of ISIS fighters are allegedly less than 100 km away from Baghdad. This jihadist group, which is about ten thousand strong, aims to create a huge Sunni caliphate in the region.


An ISIS operation by ngiht.

*  *  *

It seems The US State Department has been made redundant since ISIS provides its own YouTube evidence of horrific violence.
Forgiven the somewhat comedic angle to this but it is simply incredible to us that this is occurring and markets everywhere are just ignoring it.

 




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All The Presidents’ Bankers: The Mid-1910s: Bankers Go To War

The following is an excerpt from ALL THE PRESIDENTS’ BANKERS: The Hidden Alliances that Drive American Power by Nomi Prins (on sale April 8, 2014).  Reprinted with permission from Nation Books. Nomi Prins is a former managing director at Goldman Sachs.

This excerpt from Nomi Prins’s recent book, ALL THE PRESIDENTS’ BANKERS, which discusses Woodrow Wilson and Jack Morgan’s collaboration to finance the Allies in the early days of the war.  Aside from its timeliness, it provides one of the strongest examples of the intimate cooperation between the presidency and the highest levels of banking to drive American interests

 

The Mid-1910s: Bankers Go to War

“The war should be a tremendous opportunity for America.”

—Jack Morgan, personal letter to President Woodrow Wilson, September 4, 1914

On June 28, 1914, a Slavic nationalist in Sarajevo murdered Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne. The battle lines were drawn. Austria positioned itself against Serbia. Russia announced support of Serbia against Austria, Germany backed Austria, and France backed Russia. Military mobilization orders traversed Europe. The national and private finances that had helped build up shipping and weapons arsenals in the last years of the nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth would spill into deadly battle.

Wilson knew exactly whose help he needed. He invited Jack Morgan to a luncheon at the White House. The media erupted with rumors about the encounter. Was this a sign of tighter ties to the money trust titans? Was Wilson closer to the bankers than he had appeared? With whispers of such queries hanging in the hot summer air, at 12:30 in the afternoon of July 2, 1914, Morgan emerged from the meeting to face a flock of buzzing reporters. Genetically predisposed to shun attention, he merely explained that the meeting was “cordial” and suggested that further questions be directed to the president.

At the follow-up press conference, Wilson was equally coy. “I have known Mr. Morgan for a good many years; and his visit was lengthened out chiefly by my provocation, I imagine. Just a general talk about things that were transpiring.” Though Wilson explained this did not signify the start of a series of talks with “men high in the world of finance,” rumors of a closer alliance between the president and Wall Street financiers persisted.

Wilson’s needs and Morgan’s intentions would soon become clear. For on July 28, Austria formally declared war against Serbia. The Central Powers (Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria) were at war with the Triple Entente (France, Britain, and Russia). While Wilson tried to juggle conveying America’s position of neutrality with the tragic death of his wife, domestic and foreign exchange markets were gripped by fear and paralysis. Another panic seemed a distinct possibility so soon after the Federal Reserve was established to prevent such outcomes in the midst of Wilson’s first term. The president had to assuage the markets and prepare the country’s finances for any outcome of the European battles.

Not wanting to leave war financing to chance, Wilson and Morgan kicked their power alliance into gear. At the request of high-ranking State Department officials, Morgan immediately immersed himself in war financing issues. On August 10, 1914, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan wrote Wilson that Morgan had asked whether there would be any objection if his bank made loans to the French government and the Rothschilds’ Bank (also intended for the French government). Bryan was concerned that approving such an extension of capital might detract from the neutrality position that Wilson had adopted and, worse, invite other requests for loans from nations less allied with the United States than France, such as Germany or Austria. The Morgan Bank was only interested in assisting the Allies.

Bryan was due to speak with Morgan senior partner Henry Davison later that day. Though Morgan had made it clear that any money his firm lent would be spent in the United States, Bryan worried that “if foreign loans absorb our loanable money it might affect our getting government loans if we need.” Thus, private banks’ lending decisions could affect not just the course of international governments’ participation in the war but also that of the US government’s financial health during the war. Not much had changed since the turn of the century, when government functions depended on the availability of private bank loans.

Wilson wasn’t going to deny Morgan’s request. He approved the $100 million loan to finance the French Republic’s war needs. The decision reflected the past, but it also had implications for the future of political-financial alliances and their applications to wars. During the Franco-German war of 1870, Jack’s grandfather, J. S. Morgan, had raised $50 million of French bonds through his London office after the French government failed to sell its securities to London bankers to raise funds. Not only was the transaction profitable; it also endeared Morgan and his firm to the French government.

Private banking notwithstanding, on August 19, 1914, President Wilson urged Americans to remain neutral regarding the combat. But Morgan and his partners never embraced the policy of impartiality. As Morgan partner Thomas Lamont wrote later, “From the very start, we did everything we could to contribute to the cause of the Allies.”

Aside from Jack Morgan’s personal views against Germany and the legacy of his grandfather’s decisions, the Morgan Bank enjoyed close relations with the British and French governments by virtue of its sister firms—Morgan, Grenfell & Company, the prestigious merchant bank in London; and Morgan, Harjes & Company in Paris. The bank, like a country, followed the war along the lines of its past financial alliances, even to the point of antagonizing firms that desired to participate in French loans during periods of bitter fighting.

Two weeks after Wilson’s August 19 speech, armed with more leverage because of the war, Jack Morgan took it upon himself to approach Wilson about his domestic concerns. “This war . . . has thrown a tremendous and sudden strain on American money markets,” Morgan wrote. “It has increased the already pronounced tendency of European holders of American securities to sell them for whatever prices they could obtain for them, and the American investor has got to relieve the European investors of these securities by degrees and as he can.” Market tensions were exacerbated by the fact that European investors were selling securities to raise money. That was a problem whose only solution required the provision of more loans. But there was something else, with more lasting domestic repercussions echoing the trustbusting of the Morgan interest in US Steel.

Morgan argued that rather than encouraging investors to feel safe, the government’s Interstate Commerce Commission, formed to regulate national industry in 1887, was doing the opposite by restricting eastern railroad freight rates and investigating railroad companies. In Morgan’s mind, war was definitely not a time for enhanced regulations against business. And if railroad securities fell in value relative to the loans secured by them, banks would not be able to lend enough to make up the difference. The whole credit system could freeze.

As Morgan further warned, “Great depreciation in the value of these securities” would “throw back to the bank loans secured by them” and lead to a “great tieing up of bank funds, which will interfere with the starting of the new Federal Reserve System, and produce panic conditions.” He concluded that the war “should be a tremendous opportunity for America,” but not “as long as the business of the country is under the impression of fear in which it now labors.” Levying such serious threats, Morgan became the first banker to reveal that credit, the Federal Reserve, the big banks, the US economy, and the war were inextricably linked. Wilson knew this too.

Morgan was especially concerned about the Clayton Antitrust Act, which Congress was considering to strengthen the restrictions against monopolies and anticompetitive practices laid out in the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act. Having passed the Senate, the bill was headed to a conference committee. Should it pass in its current form, libertarian Morgan believed, it would demonstrate that “the United States Government does not propose to allow enterprises to conduct normal business without interference.”

Wilson took Morgan’s concerns seriously. He knew the last thing the United States needed was a credit meltdown. To avoid such a crisis and placate the bankers, he was already rewriting the Clayton Antitrust Act, but he didn’t admit it to Morgan. Wilson calculated that there had to remain some areas of negotiation to better one’s hand. Though the two argued over interpretation of the bill, a white flag flew between Wall Street and Washington for the time being. Such periods of strife called for allied, not adversarial, relationships between the president and the bankers, and friendly relations would also promote the global power positioning of both parties.

In general, the war meant that the goodwill extended to bankers and business from the president continued, lending protocols included. An October 15, 1914, news report proclaimed, “American Bankers May Make Loans to War Nations.” It was a government decision pushed by the banking contingent that would reverberate throughout the war and afterward, drawing clearer lines of competition among the various Wall Street powerhouses. Though the pro-Allies Morgan Bank sought cooperation with the British, for instance, National City Bank set up international branches around Europe and Russia to compete for future financial power, causing a rift between two of the three biggest New York banks that financed the war. Partly, that rift had to do with the change of leadership at these firms.

Jack Morgan’s friend James Stillman, head of National City Bank, had ideas about the war that closely reflected Morgan’s own: though the war presented numerous expansion opportunities, old ties to the British and French banks had to be respected in the process, their countries supported unequivocally. Stillman’s number-two man—midwestern-born Frank Vanderlip, who harbored a grudge against the eastern banking establishment and Wilson for cold-shouldering him during his presidential campaign—didn’t share the same loyalties. He was less concerned than his upper-crust boss and the Morgan partners about the war’s outcome and openly opposed American intervention until 1916, by which point German-American relations were more obviously battered. Nor did he support British demands that National City Bank terminate dealings with German banks, to which Stillman had responded that in victory the British would remember the banks that helped them.

Thus, at the end of 1914, it was National City Bank that opened a $5 million credit line for Russia in return for the designation of Russian purchasing agent for war supplies in the United States. The Morgan Bank remained true to its pro-Allies position and chose not to be involved in such dealings, while Vanderlip was more detached and sought to strengthen National City’s position for whatever the postwar world would bring.

Stillman was less interested in war-related financing than Vanderlip, who believed it would augment the bank’s position as well as America’s global status. To him, it was important to forge ahead in Latin America and other underdeveloped countries while the European financial powers were busy with their war. That Stillman took some of this advice to heart enabled National City Bank to cover much ground postwar, not just relative to the European banks but also to the Morgan Bank. As Vanderlip wrote Stillman in December 1915, “We are really becoming a world bank in a very broad sense, and I am perfectly confident that the way is open to us to become the most powerful, the most far-reaching world financial institution that there has ever been.” Vanderlip’s views ruffled Stillman’s feathers because of Stillman’s past collaboration agreements with the Morgan Bank. But they also ruffled the feathers of Morgan and Lamont in a way that would have huge repercussion for postwar peace.




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Walmart Fact Checks The New York Times, River Of Red Ink Ensues

2014 has not been kind to Walmart: as we have covered every earnings release this year, the largest corporate entity in the world by employees (second only to the US Dept of Defense and the Chinese army) has had to find repeated excuses why its revenues and earnings have consistently missed, and and why its traffic keeps declining, most recently in “Walmart Misses Across The Board, Guides Lower: Blames It On Weather, Obamacare And Taxes.” Actually, 2013 wasn’t Walmart’s year either: recall when early last year Wal-Mart revealed that “February Sales “Total Disaster”, Worst Monthly Start Since 2006” only to see its operations drift lower as the company was once again impacted by both the change in US tax policy and a modest reduction in welfare handouts.

Some could say Walmart is fighting to stay relevant in a world in which only retail outlets that cater to the uber-wealthy are outperforming, while all those whose bottom line depends on the welfare of the non-1%, are suddenly finding themselves scrambling to agree with all the “recovery” propaganda,

But while the company is doing what it can to make sure the billions in shareholder wealth of the Walton family isn’t impacted due to its over-reliance on cheap Chinese imports and the disappearing disposable income of the US lower/middle classes (or, as Germany would put it, leave it in the “safe hands” of the Federal Reserve) it is happy to engage in a tete-a-tete with its liberal arch nemesis, the New York Times, and specifically an article written last week by Tim Egan titled “The Corporate Daddy” in which it slams WMT’s minimum wage policy.

Well, after taking endless abuse from the NYT not just here but in many other opinion pieces in the recent past, WMT decided to finally “slam” back, releasing its own fact-check of the NYT op-ed, in which it finds that most of the assertions used by the NYT are, how should one say, lacking.

In the end of the day, it is difficult to say who is right: the liberal media outlet or its arch-nemesis, and the symbol of all that the left hates about corporate America, Walmart.

Either way, now that Walmart, and its billions in fungible funding – is finally fighting back against the largely cash strapped NYT, things are about to get interesting.

From Walmart’s blog:

We saw this article in The New York Times and couldn’t overlook how wildly inaccurate it is, so we had some fun with it. I hope you will too.

Here are the links we mentioned in our edits:

1. Associate story re: public assistance: http://ift.tt/1rrAJv2
2. Ed Schultz on Polifact.com re: public assistance: http://ift.tt/1m6UOla…
3. Jason Furman on Walmart and the economy: http://ift.tt/1m6UOlg…




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Kiss My Shiny Metal—SUSPEND TRAIN SERVICE!

i'll build my own train service, with blackjack, and hookersA child’s abandoned school
project led the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) to suspend
service on Metro-North, a commuter rail line that serves New York
and Connecticut, for part of early Friday morning. The middle
school student fashioned a cardboard box to look like head of
Bender, a character in the animated series Futurama. The
child said he accidentally left the project near the Unquowa Road
bridge in Fairfield, Connecticut and meant to pick it up later.

Instead, it was spotted by a Department of Public Works employee
who called police. Cops agreed the object was suspicious and called
the MTA and a bomb squad from the state police. MTA then suspended
service or, as Connecticut News put it, “the box forced
Metro-North to suspend service.”  The paper didn’t seem to
understand why not everyone
would blame the box
:

While Metro-North didn’t have anything to do with the box, some
commuters still blamed the railroad.

“I don’t defend Metro-North any more,” Joe Clyne, a Fairfield
commuter for 16 years, said as he sat on the steps of Tomlinson
Middle School overlooking the chaotic scene on the Unquowa Road
bridge. “I used to say that Metro-North was better than the Long
Island Railroad – not anymore.”

Service was suspended for two hours while the cardboard box was
checked out. Land of the free, home of the brave.

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Ira Stoll Warns That the Obama Presidency Is Far From Over

ObamaNBC chief
White House correspondent and political director Chuck Todd
recently declared, about President Obama, “the public is saying,
hey buddy, your presidency is over.”

The pronouncement was met with a banner headline on the Drudge
Report. Senator Rubio, Republican of Florida, ratified the
sentiment by telling Sean Hannity on Fox News, “I saw a commentator
say that these polls, what they reflect, is that the Obama
presidency is over, and I agree with that. I think it is, in
general.”

Alas, with all respect to Senator Rubio and Mr. Todd, and even
more respect to Matt Drudge’s shrewd news judgment, warns Ira
Stoll, Yogi Berra had it right when he said “it ain’t over till
it’s over.”

View this article.

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Drone-Killing Memo Released, EPA Gets Gassy, Hard Look at Lerner’s Hard Drive: P.M. Links

  • David BarronA previously secret
    Justice Department memo
    justifying the drone assassination of
    U.S. citizen Anwar Al-Awlaki
    was released today by a federal appeals court
    . The document
    argues that neither the law nor the Constitution prevented the
    president from ordering the killing. Its author, David Barron,
    recently won confirmation as a federal judge. Hmmm…Wonder whether
    he would have released the memo…
  • Fresh from claiming she and Bill were “dead broke” when they
    left the White House, Hillary Clinton
    now boasts
    that she pays taxes “unlike a lot of people who are
    truly well off.” If she likes it so much, she can pay mine,
    too.
  • Despite trimming the Environmental Protection Agency’s claims
    of authority just a tad, the Supreme Court largely
    let stand the EPA’s efforts to regulate the emission
    of
    “greenhouse gases.” So watch that spicy food.
  • Syria’s government claims it has
    surrendered the last of its chemical weapons
    . Uh huh.
  • An island on Titan, a moon of Saturn,
    mysteriously disappeared
    over the course of just a few days.
    Astronomers say they hope J. J. Abrams has nothing to do with the
    explanation.
  • The
    odd fate of former IRS official Lois Lerner’s hard drive
    , which
    reportedly crashed and ate two years worth of email, has taken on a
    life of its own in the investigation of the tax agency’s treatment
    of small-government groups.

Follow Reason and Reason 24/7 on
Twitter, and like us on Facebook. You
can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up
here
.

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Markets Forget The Weekend Is Over In Preparation For Turbo Tuesday

Overnight exuberance on China PMI (which was entirely opposite China's Beige Book results) sent stocks to record-er highs but Europe's dismal PMIs corrected that into the US open. Better-than-expected US data (which under the surface looked anything but) did absolutely nothing to spur exuberance in stocks and aside from a little weakness early, it appeared stocks and bonds forgot the weekend was over as they traded in extremely narrow ranges all day. Trannies were weak (biggest drop in 10 days). The USD ended down 0.15% (with modest JPY strength and AUD gains). Treasury yields closed +1-2bps (in a 3bps range). VIX rose for the 2nd day (back to 11). Gold and silver flatlined as copper popped and oil slipped. Of course, why waste a perfectly good Tuesday by closing green today…

 

Stocks were dead… (aside from Trannies which dropped the most in 10 days). From the moment Europe closed (and POMO ended) – stocks went nowhere…

 

With AUDJPY in charge…

 

Bonds were dead…

 

FX was quiet with overnight AUD strength post China PMI the big news…

 

 

Precious metals were dead (but oil slipped despite bnews of the Baiji refinery being overrun and copper popped on China PMI)…

 

VIX did decouple a little… but they tried to slam it to ramp stocks into the close once again!!

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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Forget CDS; Corporations Are Now Taking Out Life Insurance Policies On Employees

At the heart of the last financial crisis, some compared CDS to buying home insurance on a neighbor’s home and burning it down; it appears the USA has come a long way in the last few years. As NDTV reports, employees at The Orange County Register received a rather unusual request from their employer – Freedom Communications – writing to request workers’ consent to take out life insurance policies on them…. But the beneficiary of each policy would not be the survivors or estate of the insured employee, but the Freedom Communications pension plan. Because such life insurance policies receive generous tax breaks, they are ideal investment vehicles for companies looking to set aside money to pay for pension plans. But in many cases, companies and banks can use the tax-free gains for whatever they choose, “Companies don’t promise regulators they will use it for any specific purpose.” Of course, it is the banks that are the biggest utilizers of this. Forget buybacks, just unleash some anthrax to really juice EPS this quarter?

 

As NDTV reports,

Employees at The Orange County Register received an unsettling email from corporate headquarters this year. The owner of the newspaper, Freedom Communications, was writing to request workers’ consent to take out life insurance policies on them.

 

But the beneficiary of each policy would not be the survivors or estate of the insured employee, but the Freedom Communications pension plan. Reporters and editors resisted, uncomfortable with the notion that the company might profit from their deaths.

 

After an intensive lobbying campaign by Freedom Communications management, a modified plan was ultimately put in place. Yet Register employees were left shaken.

This is not a one-off situation…

Because company-owned life insurance offers employers generous tax breaks, the market is enormous; hundreds of corporations have taken out policies on thousands of employees. Banks are especially fond of the practice.

 

“Companies are holding this humongous amount of coverage on the lives of human beings,” said Michael D. Myers, a lawyer in Houston who has brought class-action lawsuits against several companies with such policies.

 

“Life insurance is one of the ways of strengthening the long-term health of the pension plan and ensuring its ability to pay benefits,” Freedom Communications’ chief executive, Aaron Kushner, said in an interview.

 

And because such life insurance policies receive generous tax breaks – the company-paid premiums are tax-free, as are any investment returns on the policies and the death benefits eventually received – they are ideal investment vehicles for companies looking to set aside money to pay for pension plans. Companies argue that if they had to finance such obligations with investments taxed at a normal rate, they would incur losses and would not be able to offer the benefits to employees.

 

But in many cases, companies and banks can use the tax-free gains for whatever they choose. “If you want to take that money and go build a new bank branch, fine,” said Joseph E. Yesutis, a partner at the law firm Alston & Bird who specializes in banking regulation. “Companies don’t promise regulators they will use it for any specific purpose.”

 

Hundreds of billions of dollars of such policies are in place, providing companies with a steady stream of income as current and former employees die, even decades after they have retired or left the company.

And it’s very unclear just how much of it is going on…

But determining the exact size of the market for corporate- and bank-owned life insurance is impossible. With the exception of banks, companies do not have to report their insurance holdings.

“There is no reliable reporting of the use of who’s buying life insurance, of what they’re buying it for,” said Steven N. Weisbart, chief economist of the Insurance Information Institute.

But the banks are major players in this somewhat ethically challenged ‘investment vehicle’…

Bank of America’s policies have a cash surrender value of at least $17.6 billion.

 

If Wells Fargo had to redeem its policies tomorrow, it would reap at least $12.7 billion.

 

JPMorgan Chase would collect at least $5 billion, according to filings with the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council.

Forget buybacks, just unleash some anthrax to really juice EPS this quarter? (or encourage a few more suicides?)




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DOJ’s Defense of Drone-Killing American Alleged Terrorist Without Trial: Because War

Anwar al-AwlakiToday, in response to lawsuits filed by the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and The New York
Times
, the Obama administration has finally released an
important memo written by the Department of Justice explaining the
legal authority to use drones to sometimes kill Americans without
the benefit of a trial first. Anwar Al-Awlaki was an American
citizen and also allegedly a terrorist organizer for Al Qaeda,
killed in a drone strike in 2011 in Yemen.

The administration had been fighting the memo’s release and
losing. Today a redacted version of the memo was released. The ACLU
has it posted
here
(the memo actually begins on page 67, following a lengthy
court ruling). The “too long; didn’t read” version: The
Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF) that gave us wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan gave the administration permission to pursue
and capture or kill members of Al Qaeda; Al-Awlaki was a member of
Al Qaeda; therefore, killing was legal.

Al-Awlaki’s Fourth Amendment right to due process is brought up
toward the end. The Justice Department argues here that capturing
Al-Awlaki was infeasible, yet he presented a threat to the United
States as “continued” and “imminent,” therefore lethal force was
justified.

What sort of continued and imminent threat did Al-Awlaki present
from Yemen? Don’t know. That part is all redacted. The
justification of why the CIA pursued this course of action is also
almost entirely redacted. Even with the memo, we actually don’t
learn anything new from a leak of a similar memo NBC published

last year
. We don’t know why Al-Awlaki was considered to be an
imminent threat and why this drone strike was the only way the
Obama administration believed it needed to deal with him.

Also note that the memo is entirely only about the execution of
Al-Awlaki. The United States has killed four Americans abroad with
drone strikes, including Al-Awlaki’s teenage son. The son was not
purposefully targeted, but was killed two weeks after his father’s
death after running off to Yemen. He had no known connections to
terrorism himself.

The ACLU, in a release, said it would
push for more information
to be made public:

“We will continue to press for the release of other documents
relating to the targeted-killing program, including other legal
memos and documents relating to civilian casualties.” [ACLU Deputy
Legal Director Jameel] Jaffer said.

“The drone program has been responsible for the deaths of
thousands of people, including countless innocent bystanders, but
the American public knows scandalously little about who is being
killed and why.”

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Sotomayor Praises Affirmative Action and Legacy Admissions, Doesn’t Realize Those Things Are Awful

Sonia SotomayorThough the public has steadily turned against
affirmative action schemes—and courts continue to limit their
use—Associate Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor remains a
steadfast defender of race-based college admissions.

In an interview with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos on
Sunday, Sotomayor offered an interesting glimpse into her mindset
on the issue. She maintained that race-based affirmative action was
the only reliable way to ensure campus diversity.

Stephanopoulos asked her whether it made more sense for
admissions offices to consider regional or economic background
instead of race. Her
answer was definitive
:

Well, the problem with that answer is that it doesn’t
work. It’s not that I don’t believe it works, I don’t think the
statistics show that it works. It just doesn’t.

But perhaps more shocking was that she defended affirmative
action by likening it to legacy admission—a practice that
virtually everyone who knows about it hates (some 75 percent of
Americans, according
to The New York Times
), except Sotomayor,
apparently:

Look, we have legacy admissions. If your parents or your
grandparents have been to that school, they’re going to give you an
advantage in getting into the school again. Legacy admission is a
wonderful thing because it means even if you’re not as qualified as
others you’re going to get that slight advantage.

Is it “wonderful” that the scions of politically and financially
well-connected families get to be judged on their last names,
rather than on their academic merit? It seems like Sotomayor thinks
legacy admissions are somehow helping the disadvantaged, when in
reality they do the opposite.

This isn’t abstract, theoretical, or even disputable. In
2009, Princeton accepted 40 percent of applicants whose parents
were alumni,
according to Inside Higher Ed.
That was 4.5 times
higher than the rate of admission for non-legacy applicants. People
who didn’t have famous parents got penalized when they applied to
Princeton, plain and simple. That’s the system Sotomayor just said
was “wonderful.”

Why should admittance to elite colleges be inherited like an
aristocratic title? And why on earth would a Supreme Court justice
whose ostensible concern is fostering diversity and assisting
disadvantaged minorities be in favor of such a system?

Foes of inequality who criticize race-based affirmative action
should demand the end of legacy admissions with equal fervor. It
boggles the mind to think they would have Sotomayor against them in
this fight, too.

Read Reason‘s Shikha Dalmia on why legacy preferences
are the “original
sin”
of admissions policies.

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