The Big Picture |
- Movement to Declassify 9/11 Information Gathers Momentum
- Welcome to the Laniakea Supercluster
- 10 Wednesday PM Reads
- Facebook Valuation Tops $200 Billion
- RIP Paul Macrae Montgomery, originator of Magazine Cover Indicator
- No Crimes? That’s The Biggest Lie of the New Century
- 10 Wednesday AM Reads
- Dilbert: Beating Earnings Estimates
- Apple iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus Videos
| Movement to Declassify 9/11 Information Gathers Momentum Posted: 10 Sep 2014 10:30 PM PDT 9/11 Commission Chairs, Congressmen and Intelligence Officers All Call for DeclassificationThe 9/11 Commission Co-Chairs – Lee Hamilton and Thomas Kean – have called for the 28-page section of the 9/11 Commission Report which is classified to be declassified. Kean said that 60-70% of what was classified shouldn't have been classified in the first place: Congressman Thomas Massie read the 28 classified pages of the Joint Intelligence Committee Inquiry into 9/11 (the joint Senate and House investigation into 9/11) and immediately called for them to be released to the public: A bipartisan bill – introduced by congressmen Walter B. Jones (Republican from North Carolina) and Stephen Lynch (Democrat from Massachusetts) – would declassify the 28 pages of the Joint Inquiry which implicate the Saudi government. Former Congressman Ron Paul is also demanding the 28 pages be declassified: The Co-Chair of the congressional investigation into 9/11 – Bob Graham - and 9/11 Commissioner and former Senator Bob Kerrey are calling for either a "permanent 9/11 commission" or a new 9/11 investigation to get to the bottom of it. Senator Graham has lobbied Obama for years to release the 28 pages and to reopen the investigation, but Obama has refused. The former Chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee and 9/11 investigator has even resorted to filing Freedom of Information requests to obtain information, but the Obama administration is still stonewalling:
And high-level former NSA official Thomas Drake provided testimony to the 9/11 investigations documenting that the "official story" of 9/11 makes little sense, as the intelligence agencies had all of the information they needed to stop it. Drake's testimony has – for no real reason – been classified. Drake is seeking to declassify his testimony to the 9/11 Commission:
Indeed, the 9/11 Commission admits that it never got all of the facts … and many officials are eager to spill the beans about what they know. Still Urgent TodayAncient history, you say? Graham notes:
As Graham told PBS:
Postscript: People may not remember now, but – at the time – the supposed Iraqi state sponsorship of 9/11 was at least as important a justification for the Iraq war as the alleged weapons of mass destruction. This claim that Iraq is linked to 9/11 has since been debunked by the 9/11 Commission, top government officials, and even – long after they alleged such a link – Bush and Cheney themselves. But 70% of the American public believed it at the time, and 85% of U.S. troops believed the U.S. mission in Iraq was "to retaliate for Saddam's role in the 9-11 attacks." Only last year, John Glaser noted:
Wilkerson is right. In other words, the failure to conduct a real 9/11 investigation contributed to the Iraq war, torture, and the failure to fix fundamental weaknesses in – and threats to – America's national security. Source: Washington’s Blog |
| Welcome to the Laniakea Supercluster Posted: 10 Sep 2014 05:00 PM PDT Superclusters – regions of space that are densely packed with galaxies – are the biggest structures in the Universe. But scientists have struggled to define exactly where one supercluster ends and another begins. Now, a team based in Hawaii has come up with a new technique that maps the Universe according to the flow of galaxies across space. Redrawing the boundaries of the cosmic map, they redefine our home supercluster and name it Laniakea, which means 'immeasurable heaven' in Hawaiian. Earth’s new address: ‘Solar System, Milky Way, Laniakea’ |
| Posted: 10 Sep 2014 01:30 PM PDT My afternoon train reads:
What are you reading?
Mortgage Lending Still on a Tight Leash
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| Facebook Valuation Tops $200 Billion Posted: 10 Sep 2014 12:00 PM PDT
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| RIP Paul Macrae Montgomery, originator of Magazine Cover Indicator Posted: 10 Sep 2014 10:30 AM PDT
Paul Macrae Montgomery, best known as the originator of the Time Magazine Cover Indicator, and for popularizing the Hemline Indicator of the stock market, died this weekend. He was 72. I was fortunate to have had several conversations with Mongomery over the years. He was humble and soft spoken but he took delight in puncturing the bad theories that pass for analysis on Wall Street. Long before behavioral economics became popular, he argued that standard economic theories "overlooked the human factor in markets."
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| No Crimes? That’s The Biggest Lie of the New Century Posted: 10 Sep 2014 07:30 AM PDT Yesterday, we looked at why bankers weren’t busted for crimes committed during the financial crisis. Political corruption, prosecutorial malfeasance, rewritten legislation and cowardice on the part of government officials were among the many reasons. But I saved the biggest reason so many financial felons escaped justice for today: They dumped the cost of their criminal activities on you, the shareholder (never mind the taxpayer). Corporate executives theoretically work for the owners of the company, namely, the shareholders. But there is an agency problem in that owners can’t closely manage and object to the actions of these executives. Collective owners, such as mutual funds, seem to have no interest in doing so. What we end up with is a management class that works for itself instead of on behalf of the owners of the publicly traded banks. Many of these executives committed crimes; got big bonuses for doing so; and paid huge fines using shareholder assets (i.e., company cash), helping them avoid prosecution. As for claims, like those of white-collar crime defense attorney Mark F. Pomerantz, that "the executives running companies like Bank of America, Citigroup and JP Morgan were not committing criminal acts," they simply implausible if not laughable. Consider a brief survey of some of the more egregious acts of wrongdoing:
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| Posted: 10 Sep 2014 04:30 AM PDT This morning’s expertly curated reads, now with Apple Pay:(continues here):
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| Dilbert: Beating Earnings Estimates Posted: 10 Sep 2014 04:00 AM PDT |
| Apple iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus Videos Posted: 10 Sep 2014 03:00 AM PDT All the videos from yesterday’s Apple event: |
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