Elizabeth Warren: Banks threaten to ‘own our democracy’

WASHINGTON — Loretta Lynch has been at the top of the Justice Department for less than two weeks, but she’s already getting some tough advice from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA).

Warren, a crusader against easy money policies on Wall Street and a major thorn in the side of some of the biggest bankers in the world, took Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission to task on Tuesday night for letting banks enter into agreements that allow them to pay fines without admitting guilt.

“It is time for the Justice Department and the SEC to get serious about enforcing our laws about financial fraud,” Warren said at a swanky dinner here for the Institute for New Economic Thinking.

Lynch’s predecessor, Eric Holder, had a mixed record in policing banks. Though he extracted record fines — with Bank of America paying the largest ever fine for a single company of $17 billion — he didn’t charge a single executive.

Those multibillion dollar agreements have “transformed into a get-out-of-jail-free card for the biggest corporations in the world” and let them dictate some of the terms of their punishment, Warren said.

The call against regulators isn’t new for Warren, who — despite being a darling of progressives — hasn’t hesitated to call out those agencies she thinks are asleep at the switch.

The lawmaker even suggested that William Dudley, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, was in danger of losing his job if he didn’t put some distance between himself and the bankers he’s supposed to police.

“If the big banks keep calling the shots, they will own both our economy and our democracy,” she said Tuesday

Wednesday Wire: On Improvisation

Posted: May 6, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

SALEM, Ore. (AP) — An Oregon bill expanding background checks to encompass nearly all gun sales in the state made it through the Legislature on Monday, overcoming obstacles that stymied two previous attempts to pass similar laws.

The measure now heads to Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, who has indicated support. Her signature would make Oregon the eighth state to require screening before firearms could be transferred between private, unrelated owners. No other states have passed such legislation this year, advocates said.

Oregon’s effort is the latest after the long-running debate over gun rights intensified following the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012. Last year, Washington state passed a ballot initiative requiring background checks on all gun sales and transfers, and Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the group has the signatures for a similar ballot initiative in Nevada.

Supporters have tried twice before to expand background checks in Oregon, saying it closes a loophole that allows people to purchase firearms online without a review. Neither attempt made it past a Senate vote, but Democrats managed to increase their majorities in both chambers after last year’s election, partially because key candidates in the Senate were backed by billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s gun control group, Everytown for Gun Safety.

The bill that passed the state House on a 32-28 vote Monday requires background checks on most private sales and transfers, except those between close family members such as spouses or siblings. There are some exceptions, such as sharing a gun while hunting or handing over a firearm for use at a shooting range. Three Democrats joined all 25 Republicans in opposition.

Once the measure takes effect, private sales would need to happen in front of a licensed gun dealer who would run the check through Oregon State Police.

There is an exception for gun sellers and buyers who live more than 40 miles from each other. In that case, the seller could send the firearm to a dealer near the buyer, who would then run the check and hand over the gun to the buyer if they’re cleared.

The bill has borne intense opposition from gun rights supporters, and every legislative Republican has voted against it. Many cited law enforcement officials in their districts who said they wouldn’t enforce the law or that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to enforce.

Senate Bill 941, worse than doing nothing, gives false hope, because it represents to people that felons are not going to get guns. And colleagues, I think we all know that’s not true. They are going to get them one way or another,” House Republican Leader Mike McLane said.

Others argued the bill would trample Second Amendment rights or would make criminals of gun owners who choose not to get a background check every time they hand over a gun to a friend or neighbor.

The seller of a gun would face a misdemeanor for a first offense, punishable by up to a year in jail and a $6,250 fine. A second offense would be a felony, with a potential sentence of up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Under current law, anyone purchasing a gun from a licensed dealer has to pass a background check to ensure the buyer isn’t prohibited from owning a gun because of convictions for felonies or violent behavior. Oregon goes further than federal law by also requiring background checks at gun shows under an initiative voters approved in 2000.

“This bill is not about stopping all gun violence in Oregon, and it’s not about taking guns of the hands of law-abiding citizens,” said Rep. Jennifer Williamson, a Portland Democrat. “It’s about keeping guns out of the hands of domestic abusers, those suffering from mental health crises, and convicted felons.”

Bloomberg and his minions just keep checking off states on their list one by one-Nevada’s next.

I’ve posted many times about this-as have a lot of others,apparently no one’s listening,because every state on Bloomberg’s list is going down one after the other-and he’s going to keep checking off states on his list because no one’s paying attention.

Maybe when he buys enough votes in Nevada-people will wake up.

Richard* had a long drive ahead of him. About an hour earlier, at 5:30 AM, his wife Lisa* had phoned.

“The house is filled up,” she said in a calm but audibly tense voice. Richard, having just woken up and now trying to make sense of the call, thought there must have been another water leak in the basement.

Instead, his wife told him, the house was full of FBI agents and they wanted to talk to Richard.

“Okay, I’m on my way,” Richard said. He threw on some clothes, grabbed his laptop and phone as requested by the FBI, and stepped out into the night. The interstate drive from Milwaukee, where he was working as a software engineer, back to his home in Indianapolis would take a good five hours, more than enough time to figure out what this was all about.

It was something to do with computers, Lisa had said. The only thing Richard thought may be linked to that was his Tor exit node.

The Tor network—originally a project fund​ed by the US Navy—is a collection of servers, some big, some smaller, spread across the world. When a user connects to the network, her internet traffic is randomly pinged between at least three of these servers, all the while covered in layers of encryption, making it near impossible for anyone monitoring the traffic to determine who is sending it or where it is going to.

It allows dissidents to communicate anonymously, citizens to bypass government censorship, and criminals to sell drugs or distribute child pornography. Tor also facilitates special sites called “hidden services,” part of the so-called dark web. These allow the owners of websites and their users to remain largely anonymous.

The final set of servers that Tor uses in this process are called “exit nodes,” because they are the points at which a user’s traffic exits the Tor network and joins the normal web that we use everyday.

Rather than being run by one company, most of these exits are set up by volunteers, or “operators.” A few organizations maintain the larger exits, a number of universities have their own, and individual activists run some too. Edward Snowden rep​ortedly had one.

Richard was one of these operators.

Richard’s exit could have been implicated in just about anything

Although Richard, 57, assumed the call was related to his exit, he still didn’t know what specifically the FBI was investigating as he started the drive home.

“A child porn ring had been busted? Or a hacking attack? Or a bomb threat called in? I had no idea what it was,” Richard later told me over the phone.

When someone uses Tor, his IP address is that of the exit node he has been randomly assigned. This means that if someone emails a death threat, or sends a barrage of spam, it is the exit node’s IP that appears when the authorities start investigating the digital fingerprints of the crime. Richard’s exit could have been implicated in just about anything.

However, Kurt Opsahl, the deput​y general counsel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), believes that running a Tor exit is legal, at least under US law.

But if an operator runs an exit from his or her home, and on their own internet connection, “they may be confused with being the source of the traffic, instead of an exit node of the traffic,” Opsahl told me. To anyone looking at activity flowing from the exit—whether that’s child abuse material, or an attempt to hack a website—it looks one and the same as the operator’s own personal usage. This could lead to a raid on the operator’s house, even though running an exit is arguably legal.

For this reason, and ​others listed on the Tor Project website, operators are strongly advised to only run their exits remotely, by renting out server space.

This is what Richard did. Through a St. Louis-based company, his Tor exit had been whirring away in a German data centre for 18 months. But it appears that wasn’t enough to stop a raid on his house.

A section of the search warrant obtained by Motherboard, showing that the FBI were searching for malware, computer forensics programs and other pieces of evidence.

Back in suburbia, the FBI agents questioned Lisa. Why did the family rent so many cars? Why was Richard renting so many computers? Lisa, a salesperson for the computer networking firm 3Com Corporation, breezed through the more technical questions from the agents.

The raid had started before dawn. After turning up in eight unmarked law enforcement vehicles, the FBI agents pounded on the door and swarmed the house, automatic weapons drawn. They didn’t even let Richard’s sister-in-law turn on the coffee pot until the area was declared “secure.” A team of computer experts entered the property after the initial FBI squad. According to the search warrant obtained by Motherboard, they were looking for evidence of unauthorized access of a computer, theft of trade secrets, or conspiracy to do the same.

The experts seized the household server and a personal desktop computer, both running Linux. Noticeably, they left the other two Windows machines. After taking the computers, the agents conducted a more thorough search. One agent even looked behind a painting to see if anything was hidden. Although the rest of the house was left in a tidy state, Richard’s office had been torn apart, he told me after he had seen the effect of the raid.

This wasn’t the first time an operator had received a visit from law enforcement.

In 2013, police raided the home of William Weber, an Austrian IT administrator, and confiscated 20 computers, gaming consoles and other devices because child pornography had been transmitted across one of his many exits.

Read the rest @ http://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-operators?trk_source=popular

Liberals make excuses for Baltimore riots

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

The apologetics began almost as soon as the fires were lit in Baltimore yesterday, heralding a night of violence and looting that would leave 24 police officers injured and 19 buildings torched, including a $16 million senior center providing affordable housing and a CVS drugstore providing crucial medications for elderly customers.

Society “refuses to help [young blacks] in a serious fashion,” Michael Eric Dyson announced on MSNBC. “We’re only there when they riot.” Mika Brzezinski observed on “Morning Joe”: “This was an extremely, desperately poor city. This was bound to happen.”

We were seeing an “uprising of young people against the police,” the result of a “combination of anger and disparity,” said professional talking head Wes Moore.

Neill Franklin, a former Baltimore police officer and member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, blamed the drug laws.

In other words, the looters and arsonists were pushed to the breaking point by racism, poverty and police brutality, the latter exemplified by the death of Freddie Gray in police custody. The rioters’ means may have been regrettable, but they were engaged in a profound, if fiery, cri de coeur against the social injustice in which we all play a part.

Bunk. What happened last evening in Baltimore was simply a larger and better-covered version of the flash mobs that have beset American cities for the last half-decade, in which black youths gather via social media to steal from stores and assault whites.

Read the rest @ http://nypost.com/2015/05/03/liberals-make-excuses-for-baltimore-riots/

Working on Gardens

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

I’ve been working on the gardens yesterday,and will be finishing up part 1 of the spring garden prep work today-the part the neighbors hate-spreading composted chicken manure.

I’ll let that sit on top of dirt for the next few weeks,then till it into soil Memorial day weekend.

Here in NE Ohio,I don’t put any plants in the ground,or plant any seeds before then because I lost all my plants a few years ago when we had a hard frost on May 31st.

I’ll post some pics later-if  I remember to take them.

Silencing skeptics, conservatives and free speech

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

A look Inside the Minds of the Left…

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

The comments say it all about the left in this country…

http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2015/05/02/403865824/texas-governor-deploys-national-guard-to-stave-off-obama-takeover#commentBlock

Need Any Last Minute Seeds For Your Garden?

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized
There’s still time to plant a lot of things in your garden,zucchini,green and wax beans,corn,herbs for cooking,broccoli and cauliflower can be planted mid to late summer for mid to late fall harvest-there’s been years when we picked fresh broccoli for thanksgiving dinner.
There’s several reasons for buying your seed from Jebadiah Fisher Garden Seed 
First of all they’re a Patriot owned small business,second-they only have heirloom seed, no hybrid one year only seed. With heirloom seed-you can save the seed from whatever veggie it is and plant it next year and it will grow-and produce veggies,unlike a lot of the seed sold at the big box stores,discount stores,feed stores ,etc. that is hybrid seed.
Hybrid seeds can not be saved-they usually produce sterile plants-if any of the seeds even grow.
As Jebadiah Fisher garden Seed says on their site-(some of which I’ve copied and pasted here)-their pries are very reasonable-I’ve checked their prices,and they’re in line with other stores and catalogs that sell seeds-again we run into the hybrid seed issue-sure the salt and pepper corn tastes good-but it’s a hybrid-two varieties crossed to produce the white and yellow kernels-it’sgood,but you can’t save the seed,and get a decent corn crop the next year-if any ears even grow-they’ll be small,with few kernels on the cobs.
What happens if all the plants in your garden are hybrids-and there’s a long term SHTF event?
What are you gonna eat the next year? Where are you gonna get seed?
That’s why you need to only plant heirloom seed-you an save the seed,and have a good crop the next year-that’s why it’s called heirloom seed-just like any other family heirloom-seeds were passed down from one generation to the next.
Try Jebadiah Fisher seed the next time you need seeds-every single person I know who’s used their seed has had outstanding to unfuckinbelievable results.
Here’s a little bit about Jebadiah Fisher Garden Seed…

Jebadiah Fisher Garden Seed

 Heirloom Garden Seeds

Welcome to our new and returning gardeners. Whether you’re planning your garden for the 2015 growing season or making long-term plans to ensure sustainable food production in uncertain times, we have what you need.

Customize your seed selection for heirloom veggies, melons and herbs. Our selections are filled with family favorites. If you’re stocking a Seed Bank to invest in the security of your family’s future, check out our Specialty Seed Packages.

It’s Not Just Gardening – It’s a Lifestyle
You make gardening decisions and food choices that are in keeping with your family’s lifestyle. You made a commitment to putting healthy, wholesome food on your family’s table. Let us help you honor that commitment.

 Jebadiah Fisher Garden Seed is relatively new to the gardening landscape of heirloom seed suppliers. We came for a reason. We came with a mission. Offer great value at great prices. It’s that simple.

Our small family comes from a long tradition of farmers and home growers. We consider ourselves good people from earthy stock. For us, families matter. Relationships matter. We’ve been growing our own gardens for generations and ordering garden seeds for decades. Finally, we said enough with predatory pricing for a pinhead of seed.

Sure, we encourage you to visit other sites. We don’t mind being compared to the competition. Our favorite phrase around here: “What competition!” Go ahead and do some pricing comparisons. Count the heirloom seeds you get for the prices others are charging. We’ll be here when you get back.

Ready for a new Pricing Paradigm? Fancy phrase for a simple notion, really. Treat folks with respect. Engage in responsible pricing. That means no price gouging.

Need a New Mailbox?

Posted: May 3, 2015 by gamegetterII in Uncategorized

YouYou know you want one of these…

Available from http://billscustomwoodproducts.blogspot.com/