Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Jack Rabbit

(45,984 posts)
Thu Apr 14, 2016, 01:18 PM Apr 2016

The Real News (April 11): Americans Named in Panama Papers Leak

Jessica Devereaux interviews journalist Tim Johnson (McClatchy) on what can be ascertained up to this point about Americans named in the Panama Papers.

Two parts/approx runtime 16 minutes.
[center]




[/center]
11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Real News (April 11): Americans Named in Panama Papers Leak (Original Post) Jack Rabbit Apr 2016 OP
oooh, this I gotta see. Bookmarked for later thank you nt Rebkeh Apr 2016 #1
me2 tk2kewl Apr 2016 #2
Palm Oil Plantations in Colombia PeoViejo Apr 2016 #3
K & R AzDar Apr 2016 #4
Real News is right to be wary of a project funded by USAID (CIA) and... Peace Patriot Apr 2016 #5
+1. nt. polly7 Apr 2016 #7
About the US/Colombia Free Trade Agreement: seafan Apr 2016 #9
Seafan, this needs to be an OP! Duppers Apr 2016 #10
Kicking, But Will Have To Get Back Later... n/t ChiciB1 Apr 2016 #6
My, my. Citigroup Titan, Sandy 'Get Rid of Glass-Steagall' Weil & many more. Bookmarking! appalachiablue Apr 2016 #8
Kick glinda Apr 2016 #11
 

PeoViejo

(2,178 posts)
3. Palm Oil Plantations in Colombia
Thu Apr 14, 2016, 03:15 PM
Apr 2016

I wish I could remember where I read an article about Paramilitaries in Colombia clearing land of Local Colombians of African Descent to make way for Palm Oil Plantations.

I'll be back...

Peace Patriot

(24,010 posts)
5. Real News is right to be wary of a project funded by USAID (CIA) and...
Thu Apr 14, 2016, 03:35 PM
Apr 2016

...George Soros. The McClatchy reporter defends McClatchy's participation (which was large scale) and scoffs at any ulterior motives.

One item that stood out (to me) in this report was Blue Valley Agro Investment, involving the heirs to the Hyatt and Campbell's Soup fortunes. Blue Valley Agro runs palm oil plantations in Colombia. They defend this investment as "green" and as a job creator. But I happen to know that palm oil plantations are horrendously destructive of soils and of small farmer food production. I know someone who owns farm land in her native Honduras and she says she will NEVER give in to palm oil industry pressure because palm oil plantings are so destructive. And I have experience myself of the "green" bullshit of destructive industries which is a whole industry in itself ("green-washing" big corporations' activities).

The McClatchy reporter is just reporting what Blue Valley Agro told him. He seems to believe their "green" P.R. and doesn't seem to have investigated that claim. He also goes to great pains to say that not everyone mentioned in this enormous document dump is a crook.

The U.S./Colombia war machine has driven 50 million small farmers off their land--the biggest human displacement crisis on earth prior to the U.S. destabilization of Iraq, Libya and Syria. The purposes of this brutal displacement, in my opinion, were to rid the countryside of small farmers so big agricultural and extractive industries could move in, and to create a slave labor force of displaced people--an army of poor, desperate, inexperienced and often poorly educated people ripe for exploitation by the U.S./Colombia "free trade for the rich" corporations (including palm oil and other corporations--oil, gas, minerals--in rural areas, and manufacturers of retail goods, tourist and other corporations in urban areas).

Which brings me to Hillary Clinton--a major player, as Secretary of State, in the corrupt, murderous, failed U.S. "war on drugs" in Colombia (and here, and in other countries, notably Honduras) and in the U.S./Colombia "free trade for the rich" agreement. If I had investigative capabilities, I would look for Blue Valley Agro, and the names of the Hyatt and Campbell Soup heirs behind it, in Clinton Foundation and Clinton campaign donor lists.

The heirs' names: Liesel Pritzker Simmons (Hyatt heir) who is related to current Commerce secretary Penny Pritzger. The other heir is John Thompson Durant IV (Campbell Soup heir).

Clinton was pretty clearly involved in pay-to-play as Sec of State. This may be the reason she set up a private email server. Many corporations and foreign governments with deals before the Sec of State were contributing large amounts of money to the Clinton Foundation, an enormous Clinton slush parading as a charity.

Two other standout items in the report: Big pharma in Mexico and extractive corporations in the Congo.

One other item in this report was about yachts. One owned by former Citigroup chair Sanford Weill, a 200 ft yacht named "April Fool." And another owned by David Geffen (the Hollywood magnate), a yacht named "Pelorus" worth $214 million, in the Cayman Islands.

The second vid in the OP is blocked. I can't play it. And, as the McClatchy reporter mentions, the document leak is truly enormous--46 times bigger than Wikileaks', he says. So the above items scarcely scratch the surface of the Panama tax scofflaw scandal. And it's really impossible to tell, at this point, if anyone mentioned in this brief report is a tax scofflaw or crooked in some other way.

All I know for certain is that palm oil production is one the biggest "green" scams in the world, and the jobs that it creates (by displacing small family food farms) are low wage, brutal jobs with no labor union. (And in Colombia it is extremely dangerous to be a union leader--many have been murdered by rightwing death squads in the employ of U.S. corporations such as Chiquita and Drummond Coal). I don't know for sure that Blue Valley Agro is destroying soils and food farms and exploiting workers, but it's a fairly good bet that they are. (It would be unusual if they weren't--environmental destruction and worker exploitation is the clear pattern of U.S. corps in Colombia and other places.)

seafan

(9,387 posts)
9. About the US/Colombia Free Trade Agreement:
Thu Apr 14, 2016, 05:06 PM
Apr 2016

Very informative and insightful post, by the way, Peace Patriot.



It is very telling that Hillary Clinton has insisted for years that she opposed to the US/Colombia Free Trade Agreement, yet this deceit is exposed in the email dump in February:

On the eve of South Carolina’s Democratic presidential primary, the U.S. State Department released 1,500 pages of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton’s emails from her tenure as secretary of state. Included in the 881 emails published Friday night are messages highlighting Clinton lobbying for a controversial Colombian trade deal she previously pledged to oppose.

During her 2008 presidential run, Clinton said she opposed the deal because “I am very concerned about the history of violence against trade unionists in Colombia.” She later declared, “I oppose the deal. I have spoken out against the deal, I will vote against the deal, and I will do everything I can to urge the Congress to reject the Colombia Free Trade Agreement.”

But newly released emails show that as secretary of state, Clinton was personally lobbying Democratic members of Congress to support the deal, even promising one senior lawmaker that the deal would extend labor protections to Colombian workers that would be as good or better than those enjoyed by many workers in the United States.

One of the 2011 emails from Clinton to U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and Clinton aide Robert Hormats has a subject line “Sandy Levin” — a reference to the Democratic congressman who serves on the House Ways and Means Committee, which oversees U.S. trade policy. In the email detailing her call with Levin, she said the Michigan lawmaker “appreciates the changes that have been made, the national security arguments and Santos's reforms” -- the latter presumably a reference to Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos. [font color=red]She concludes the message about the call with Levin by saying, “I told him that at the rate we were going, Columbian (sic) workers were going to end up w the same or better rights than workers in Wisconsin and Indiana and, maybe even, Michigan.”[/font]

Froman — a former Citigroup executive who as trade representative was lobbying for passage of the deal — responded by thanking Clinton for her "help and support.” Hormats, a former vice chairman of Goldman Sachs who subsequently was hired by Clinton at the State Department, later chimed in, telling her “terrific job” and “GREAT line on Columbian (sic) workers!!!!!”



via IBT, Getty Images

Yeah, great line... just sickeningly bizarre.


Would those "rights" for workers in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan also include being crushed by corruption, Mrs. Clinton? That is a fair question, and others are also asking it:

Democracy Now!'s Juan González: Hillary Clinton's policy was a Latin American crime story, April 12, 2016

Hillary Clinton displayed a sweeping grasp of federal policy at the Daily News Editorial Board on Saturday.

Touting her plan to rebuild America’s infrastructure, Clinton said:

“Look, I’m excited about this stuff. I’m kind of a wonky person.”

But I kept thinking of the big gap between Clinton’s words and actions that her own emails reveal — especially toward Latin America.

When my turn came for a question, I asked about her role as secretary of state during the 2009 military coup in Honduras — a country from which so many children and mothers have fled to the U.S. of late to escape massive political and gang violence.


.....

But it’s not just Honduras. There’s also Colombia.

During the 2008 presidential race, both Clinton and Barack Obama vowed to block the Colombia Free Trade agreement President George W. Bush had negotiated.

They specifically condemned Colombia’s notorious history of repressing trade unionists.

But Clinton emails released this year show that in 2011, she quietly lobbied members of Congress to approve the Colombia pact.

In one email, she boasted of telling a key lawmaker from Michigan that “at the rate we were going, Colombian workers were going to end up (with) the same or better rights than workers in Wisconsin and Indiana and, maybe even Michigan.”

Last year, the AFL-CIO reported 2,000 incidents of violence and threats against Colombian trade union leaders — including 105 killings — during the trade agreement’s first four years.

Not exactly Michigan’s labor climate.

Hand it to Hillary, though. She sure is wonky.



"She's Baldly Lying": Dana Frank Responds to Hillary Clinton's Defense of Her Role in Honduras Coup, April 13, 2016

Hear Hillary Clinton Defend Her Role in Honduras Coup When Questioned by Juan González, April 13, 2016

The Clinton Email Bernie Sanders Should Bring Up in Sunday’s Debate, March 4, 2016

 Sanders should ask Clinton about her relentless advocacy of free-trade treaties, and in particular about one 2011 email (to which David Sirota and Sarah Berger called attention in a piece last week) where she wrote, in pushing for the now ratified free-trade agreement with Colombia: “at the rate we were going, Columbian [sic] workers were going to end up w the same or better rights than workers in Wisconsin and Indiana and, maybe even, Michigan.”

The effect of Bill Clinton’s NAFTA and Hillary Clinton’s Colombian Free Trade Agreement has been devastating to Michigan and most of the rest of the country, and accounts for the appeal of Donald Trump.

As to the “better rights” Colombian workers have, vis-á-vis Michigan, Wisconsin, and Indiana, here’s what that looks like:

According to Colombia’s respected Escuela Nacional Sindical, as of April 2015, 105 union activists had been executed in the four years since Clinton’s free-trade treaty went into effect. That’s just trade unionists. More broadly, Colombia continues to be one of the most dangerous places in the world for activists of all stripes.
Threats of death and physical violence against workers—teachers, peasants, mine and oil laborers, and so on—are uncountable. They are an everyday fact of life for any Colombian who hopes to have some say over terms of labor.
Beyond physical repression and threats of physical repression, the “rights” of labor in Colombia are practically nonexistent for vast numbers of workers. Routine are “illegal forms of hiring, the use of collective pacts by companies to thwart union organizing, and the problem of impunity for anti-union activity.”
Also see this report by David Sirota: “as union leaders and human rights activists conveyed…harrowing reports of violence to then-Secretary of State Clinton in late 2011, urging her to pressure the Colombian government to protect labor organizers, she responded first with silence” and then public praise for “Colombia’s progress on human rights, thereby permitting hundreds of millions of dollars in US aid to flow to the same Colombian military that labor activists say helped intimidate workers.”


Considering that Clinton said in that email that Colombian “workers were going to end up w the same or better rights than workers in Wisconsin and Indiana and, maybe even, Michigan,” here’s the question Sanders should ask her: Did she mean that she hoped to raise Colombia up to US standards, or lower the United States’ to Colombia’s?



Hillary Clinton's trail through Latin America deserves much more public scrutiny. It is a harbinger of policies she would pursue in the White House.

It is time to end the Clinton Era and to hold Hillary and Bill Clinton accountable for their actions.










Duppers

(28,125 posts)
10. Seafan, this needs to be an OP!
Fri Apr 15, 2016, 07:16 AM
Apr 2016

Please considering posting it.

Too important and could be overlooked here.

Good job, so thanks.

appalachiablue

(41,146 posts)
8. My, my. Citigroup Titan, Sandy 'Get Rid of Glass-Steagall' Weil & many more. Bookmarking!
Thu Apr 14, 2016, 04:17 PM
Apr 2016

Last edited Thu Apr 14, 2016, 04:47 PM - Edit history (1)



A little something for you Citibank, for almost getting away with fraud, by trying to charge us $460 in late penalties when were out of down and your rep. claimed the payment we made before departing bounced at BOA. Later a Citi supervisor straightened it out and removed the 'charges'. She said it was false and was quite concerned. IOW it was a total lie and scam. Thieves.
Latest Discussions»Retired Forums»Video & Multimedia»The Real News (April 11):...