July 31, 2009

Corruption Arrests Shock American Jewish Community


The arrests of more than 40 prominent politicians and Jewish leaders in New Jersey and New York on corruption and money laundering charges have sent shockwaves through the close-knit Syrian Jewish community there.


Federal investigators in New Jersey announced Thursday they had arrested more than 40 people, including public officials charged with corruption. Charges against others included international money laundering, selling counterfeit goods, and the black-market sale of human organs. In addition to three mayors, officials arrested five influential rabbis from New Jersey and the New York borough of Brooklyn.

"They used purported charities, entities supposedly set up to do good works, as vehicles for laundering millions of dollars in illicit funds. The rings were international in scope, connected to the city of Deal, New Jersey, Brooklyn, New York, Israel and Switzerland," said Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra about the money-laundering scheme.


The rabbis are accused of using their congregations' charitable organizations to launder about $3 million by passing money from alleged illicit activity through their charities' bank accounts. The FBI said the rabbis then kept about 10 percent for themselves. All of the rabbis come from the close-knit and wealthy Sephardic Jewish communities of southern New Jersey and Brooklyn - and the arrests have put the spotlight on a usually quiet community.

One of the rabbis arrested, Saul Kassin, is considered the leading cleric of the U.S. Sephardic community, comprised of families that emigrated mostly from the Middle East, Syria in particular, following the formation of the state of Israel in 1948. Rabbi Kassin leads the largest Sephardic synagogue in the United States, Shaare Zion in Brooklyn, and has written books on Jewish law. Members of the community have expressed shock and disbelief over the allegations against Rabbi Kassin. Many have been reluctant to speak publicly. One member of Shaare Zion, Ezra Kassin, told reporters he did not believe the charges.


He's just a very honorable person. I can't believe it, I don't believe it. Whatever they want to say, it's hogwash," he said. Authorities said an FBI "cooperating witness" helped federal investigators gather evidence in the case. Media reports said he was arrested in 2006 for bank fraud. FBI agent Weysan Dun said the probe seeks to root out corruption in New Jersey, wherever it is found.


"This case is not about politics. It is certainly not about religion. It is about crime, corruption, arrogance. It is about a shocking betrayal of the public trust," he said. The FBI said the two-year probe is part of a wider investigation into political corruption and money laundering that started 10 years ago.

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Source:

http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-07-24-voa36.cfm

Tags:

Syrian Jews, American jews, FBI, Rabbi Kassin, Shaare Zion, Ezra Kassin, political corruption, money laundering, Global Development News, U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, 40 prominent politicians, Jewish leaders in New Jersey, New York, Sephardic synagogue,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 30, 2009

Bill Gates' Name Surfaces On Patent Applications


Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates was one of several names that surfaced last week on five patents filed by Searete, which is associated with a Bellevue, Wash. company called Intellectual Ventures formed by former Microsoft executives as a factory for new inventions.

Critics have complained that Intellectual Ventures will raise patent litigation costs, but the company claims to be working with more than 500 scientists and technicians in addition to universities, research labs and Fortune 500 companies.

Intellectual Ventures co-founder Nathan Myhrvold advised Gates for years as Microsoft's chief technology officer and in 1991 founded Microsoft Research. The idea behind some of these patents is to create equipment that would lower the force of hurricanes by cooling the water, altering its surface tension, and shifting it away from recreational areas.

They're not the only Searete patents attached to Gates. Since he stepped down last year as Microsoft's CEO, he has been freer to focus on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which aims to improve global health and education and reduce poverty, and pursue a variety of other interests.

Some of these interests are reflected in Searete's patents. Gates' name has been on patents for an electromagnetic engine and a method of delivering medication.

Gates and Myhrvold have also filed a series of patents for a temperature-controlled keg to store medicine -- and, separately, beer and wine -- at optimal temperatures. The keg would come with sensors and an electronic display that would allow people to monitor the liquids without having to open the container.

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Source:

http://www.informationweek.com/news/global-cio/legal/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=218500495&cid=RSSfeed_IWK_News

Tags:

Intellectual Ventures co-founder, Nathan Myhrvold, Microsoft's chief technology officer, Microsoft Research, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Searete, Fortune 500 companies, electromagnetic engine, a method of delivering medication, temperature-controlled keg to store medicine,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 29, 2009

Abu Dhabi Firm Buys Stake in Tesla Motors


Tesla Motors has yet to turn a profit, but that isn't stopping an Abu Dhabi investment firm from buying a stake in the electric car maker from Daimler, the latest sign of interest in the San Carlos startup.

Daimler sold part of its 10 percent stake in the electric-car manufacturer to Aabar Investments, bringing its largest shareholder into a venture to develop alternative powering systems.

Aabar, which will own almost 4 percent Tesla, bought the stake under an agreement to increase cooperation with Daimler after the investment company acquired stock in the German carmaker in March, the companies said today in a joint statement. They didn't disclose a price.

Daimler, the world's second-largest maker of luxury cars, bought just under 10 percent of Tesla for a "double-digit million-euro" sum in May. The Stuttgart, Germany,-based manufacturer reiterated today that it plans to install Tesla's lithium-ion battery packs and charging equipment in 1,000 electric-powered versions of its Smart car.

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Tags:

Tesla motors, Aabar Investments, Daimler-Benz, Smart car, Stuttgart Germany, Auto industry, Electric cars, electric car makers, Global Development News, Global Best Practice,

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/businessupdate/ci_12827600?source=email&nclick_check=1

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 28, 2009

China Launches Arabic TV Channel


China has launched a 24-hour Arabic-language television channel aimed at addressing "distorted" views of China in the Middle East and North Africa.


The satellite channel, launched on Saturday, is expected to reach about 300 million people in 22 countries. China Central Television (CCT already broadcasts foreign language channels in English, Spanish and French. Zhang Changming, deputy president of CCTV, said that through the Arabic channel "the world can know China and China can know the rest of the world even better". "Our principle is to be real, to be objective, to be accurate and transparent. CCTV will present the world with the real China," he said at the launch. The channel will mainly broadcast news, but Zhang promised it would also feature entertainment and educational programmes.

'Good journalism'

Ying Chan, the director of Hong Kong University's journalism and media studies centre, told Al Jazeera that China saw the channel as a way to counter "unfair" portrayls of China in the international media. "There's no question that the Middle East is a very strategic area and China wants its voice heard there," she said.

"They want to announce their policies more to the world, and they also felt that the international media, led by the Western media, has not been fair to China." China exerts a great deal of control over its media and often censors the reporting of sensitive topics. "It [CCTV] will face challenges in how much it will allow its own reporters to report news as it is, as it happened," Ying said. "I think CCTV, in order to gain influence, has to deliver good journalism."

Investment plans

CCTV has also said it plans to open more foreign bureaus. The Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post newspaper reported that Beijing was prepared to put 45 billion yuan ($6.6bn) into the development of its media, an amount which could not be confirmed by Chinese sources. China's Arabic language channel joins other foreign government media networks broadcasting in Arabic. The UK's BBC launched its Arabic channel last year and the US set up al-Hurra, an Arabic-language channel based in Virginia, in 2004.

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Source:

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2009/07/200972563026919452.html

Tags:

Chinese State, CCTV, China's Arabic language channel, BBC launched its Arabic channel, US set up al-Hurra, Global Development News, South China Morning Post , Hong Kong University, journalism and media studies centre, Al Jazeera,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 27, 2009

CIA's Secret Al Qaeda Program


The secret CIA program halted last month by Director Leon E. Panetta involved establishing elite paramilitary teams that could be inserted into Pakistan or other locations to capture or kill top leaders of the Al Qaeda terrorist network, according to former U.S. intelligence officials.



The program -- launched in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks -- was never operational. But officials said that as recently as a year ago CIA executives discussed plans to deploy teams to test basic capabilities, including whether they could enter hostile territory and maneuver undetected, as well as gather intelligence and track high-value targets.

The initiative evolved through multiple iterations, and was close to being scrapped several times as CIA officials struggled to find solutions to daunting logistical challenges. But even as the Predator drone emerged as a potent new weapon against Al Qaeda, CIA officials continued to pursue the secret program as an additional lethal option.


"You always want to have capacity because you cannot predict opportunities," said a former senior U.S. intelligence official with extensive knowledge of the program. With the emergence of the Predator, the official said, "we still wanted to explore having that capacity, but there wasn't the same sense of urgency that may have existed before." That official and others spoke on condition of anonymity given the acute sensitivity of the issue. CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano declined to comment on the nature of the program.


The existence of the program, and the fact that it was kept secret from lawmakers for nearly eight years at the direction of former Vice President Dick Cheney, has fanned an already heated atmosphere in Washington over the Bush administration's intelligence programs. Current and former U.S. intelligence officials have said that in terminating the program, Panetta may have been more concerned about the fact that the initiative had been kept secret from Congress than he was about the merits of the program.


A U.S. intelligence official said Panetta has not ruled out reviving an effort to develop a similar close-range capability in closer collaboration with lawmakers. "If the United States ever needs something like this in the future, we'll find better ways to build it," the U.S. intelligence official said. "That includes briefing Congress earlier on. Panetta understands all that. He's an aggressive proponent of counter-terrorism, pushing tools and tactics that work and have the support to be sustainable. This one didn't."



Leading Democratic lawmakers have said it was illegal for the CIA not to disclose the program to intelligence committees, and called for an investigation. "Individuals who ordered that Congress be kept in the dark should be held accountable," Sen. Russell D. Feingold (D-Wis.), a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Monday. Feingold also said he had expressed "deep concerns about the program itself" in a classified letter to President Obama.


Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the former vice president may have broken the law by instructing the CIA to keep the program secret. But current and former U.S. intelligence officials said that Cheney's role has been mischaracterized, and that the agency was not obligated to disclose the program because it was never close to being operational.


The former officials said that Cheney was never involved in managing the program, and that his instruction not to brief Congress came shortly after the initiative was first proposed. "It was more like, before you go around and start talking about this, see if it is something you can make happen," said one of the former officials.



Legal authorities for the program were grounded in a comprehensive memorandum that President Bush signed just days after the Sept. 11 attacks, a 10-page document giving the agency powers to pursue Al Qaeda targets with lethal force.



A 1976 order signed by President Ford banned the CIA from carrying out assassinations. But that prohibition does not apply to killing enemies in war. Panetta ordered the program terminated immediately after learning of it last month, and called emergency meetings with the House and Senate intelligence committees the next day to brief them.



The U.S. intelligence official defended Panetta's decision to dismantle the program, saying that it "never fully took shape" and "was derailed repeatedly over the years by concerns about its feasibility. So killing it cost virtually nothing in operational terms."


The program was launched at a time when then-CIA Director George Tenet and other top agency officials were scrambling to sort out what the agency would do if it could determine the location of Osama bin Laden or other high-level Al Qaeda figures.



CIA officials quickly endorsed the idea of developing small paramilitary teams that could carry out "surgical" strikes on high-value targets. But the program repeatedly bogged down on basic operational and logistical questions. "Do you put them in Waziristan and sit there and wait?" said a second former U.S. intelligence official with knowledge of the program. "It's one of these things that makes a lot of sense until you start trying to make it work."


The official described internal debates over whether the teams should come out of the CIA's Special Activities Division -- its longtime paramilitary wing -- or whether they should be developed in partnership with U.S. military special operations forces.

The military was faulted after Sept. 11 for its tendency to require elaborate plans and large backup forces even for small-scale operations, a factor that had played into failures to capitalize on opportunities to catch or kill Bin Laden before 2001.

The former U.S. intelligence official said the program was designed to provide an option beyond guided bombs or Hellfire strikes from Predator aircraft. The initiative was also focused exclusively on the top figures in the Al Qaeda chain of command, the former official said, dismissing suggestions that the effort was aimed at assembling teams of assassins that would roam the world looking for lesser terrorist targets.

Related article:

http://globaldevelopmentnews.blogspot.com/2009/06/cia-adopting-web-20-tools-despite.html

Source:

http://www.latimes.com/news/la-na-cia-cheney14-2009jul14,0,5131198.story?track=rss

Tags:

Waziristan, U.S. intelligence, Hellfire strikes, Predator aircraft, Bin Laden, CIA's Special Activities Division, surgical strikes on high-value targets, George Tenet, Director Leon E. Panetta, President Ford,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 26, 2009

United Future World Currency


Russian President Dmitry Medvedev illustrated his call for a supranational currency to replace the dollar by pulling from his pocket a sample coin of a “united future world currency.”

“Here it is,” Medvedev told reporters today in L’Aquila, Italy, after a summit of the Group of Eight nations. “You can see it and touch it.” The coin, which bears the words “unity in diversity,” was minted in Belgium and presented to the heads of G-8 delegations, Medvedev said.

The question of a supranational currency “concerns everyone now, even the mints,” Medvedev said. The test coin “means they’re getting ready. I think it’s a good sign that we understand how interdependent we are.”

Medvedev has repeatedly called for creating a mix of regional reserve currencies as part of the drive to address the global financial crisis, while questioning the U.S. dollar’s future as a global reserve currency. Russia’s proposals for the G-20 meeting in London in April included the creation of a supranational currency.

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Source:

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aeFVNYQpByU4

http://www.futureworldcurrency.com/

Tags:

United Future World Currency, Dmitry Medvedev, G8, Russian President, Unity in Diversity, Laquila Italy, Supranational currency, G20, Global Economic News, coin, hard currency, Belgian mints, SDR’s,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 25, 2009

Blogger Sentenced For Leaking G N'R Album


A blogger who admitted to leaking part of the Guns N' Roses album "Chinese Democracy" was sentenced to a year of probation.

U.S. District Magistrate Judge Paul L. Abrams also ordered Kevin Cogill to serve two months of home confinement, subject his computers to government scrutiny and record a public service announcement for the RIAA.

Cogill pleaded guilty earlier this year to one misdemeanor count of copyright infringement for posting nine tracks from the long-awaited Guns 'N Roses album last year. Cogill apologized for his actions in court Tuesday and said he didn't mean any harm by posting the tracks online.

"I never intended to hurt the artist," Cogill told Abrams. "I intended to promote the artist because I'm a fan." Abrams noted that Cogill is an artist, and should have known better.

A federal prosecutor pushed for a short prison term to act as a deterrent to others. "This is the type of case where I believe the court needs to send a strong message," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Missakian. Too many people think of posting copyrighted work online as a "victimless crime," he said.

Cogill's attorney argued against a prison term, saying his client realized his wrongdoing and had suffered serious repercussions already. "He did lose his job as a result of this case," defense attorney David Kaloyanides said.

Missakian said after the hearing that while prosecutors hoped Cogill would be incarcerated, the case should serve as a warning to others that the government takes copyright infringement violations seriously. Abrams said he thought Cogill had learned his lesson, and did not think he would repeat his mistake.

As part of his plea deal, Cogill will have to allow authorities to search or seize his computers. He will not have to pay any fines or restitution, although authorities at one point calculated the losses from his actions at more than $371,000.

Kaloyanides said after the hearing that arriving at any damage amount was difficult and that sending Cogill to prison could have created a backlash. "It doesn't help to educate the public of the importance of respecting copyright law when you become too heavy-handed with punishment," Kaloyanides said.

Cogill will have some input into the public service announcement he records for the RIAA, which has used lawsuits to pursue people it suspects of illegally downloading music. Kaloyanides said he hoped the ads would target fans who upload and download copyrighted works by explaining to them that they're really hurting their favorite bands.

"You need to reach the fans," he said. "He (Cogill) speaks their language."

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Source:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090714/ap_on_re_us/us_blogger_arrested

Tags:

RIAA, Guns N' Roses album "Chinese Democracy", Kevin Cogill, Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Missakian, Global Best Practice, David Kaloyanides, blogs, blogger, blogging, copyright, intellectual property,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 24, 2009

Merger of Middle East Real Estate Giants


The deal is so big and so unprecedented; none of the parties involved knows the estimated value of the transaction at this date. One thing they do know is that the debt load of the combined entities will be huge - about $3.65 billion, U.S. (13.4 billion dirhams)


Emaar Properties, one of the world's largest commercial real estate companies, wants to merge with three real estate units of Dubai Holdings -- Sama, Tatweer and Dubai Properties. Dubai Holdings is a 100 percent state-controlled entity, while the government of Dubai owns a 32 percent stake in Emaar.


The parties expect to complete the deal valuation by August 2009. The Economic Times of Dubai reports the merger is expected to take about four months and could be completed in October 2009, pending the approval of shareholders and regulators.


The entities' total assets will be 194 billion dirhams, Emaar said in a statement to the Dubai Financial Market. The total debt is about 7 cent of the company's total assets. As of March 2009, Emaar's own external debt obligation was 10 billion dirhams, the newspaper reports. The real estate major had about 68 billion dirhams in book value of assets.


"As for Dubai Holdings, we believe the 126 billion dirhams in assets quoted in the press release consists mostly of land, which could be potentially valued much lower given the current market conditions," according to an Emaar spokesperson.


"We currently have no idea as to what Dubai Holdings' cash position is and what is owed to its contractors and suppliers," the Emaar spokesperson told the Dubai Financial Market.

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http://globalblognetwork.blogspot.com/2009/05/misreading-map.html

http://globalblognetwork.blogspot.com/2009/05/opec-set-to-leave-output-unchanged.html

http://globalblognetwork.blogspot.com/2009/05/dangers-of.html


Tags:

Dubai Holdings, Emaar Properties, world's largest commercial real estate companies, dirhams, Sama, Tatweer, Dubai Financial Market, Global Best Practice,

Source:

http://www.realestatechannel.com/international-markets/residential-real-estate/emaar-properties-dubai-holdings-sama-tatweer-dubai-properties-middle-east-commercial-real-estate-giants-alex-finkelstein-1012.php


July 23, 2009

Budget Deficit Tops $1Trillion For First Time


Nine months into the fiscal year, the federal deficit has topped $1 trillion for the first time.

The imbalance is intensifying fears about higher interest rates and inflation, and already pressuring the value of the dollar. There's also concern about trying to reverse the deficit — by reducing government spending or raising taxes — in the midst of a harsh recession.

The Treasury Department said Monday that the deficit in June totaled $94.3 billion, pushing the total since the budget year started in October to nearly $1.1 trillion. The deficit has been propelled by the huge sum the government has spent to combat the recession and financial crisis, combined with a sharp decline in tax revenues. Paying for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan also is a major factor.

The country's soaring deficits are making Chinese and other foreign buyers of U.S. debt nervous, which could make them reluctant lenders down the road. It could force the Treasury Department to pay higher interest rates to make U.S. debt attractive longer-term.

"These are mind boggling numbers," said Sung Won Sohn, an economist at the Smith School of Business at California State University. "Our foreign investors from China and elsewhere are starting to have concerns about not only the value of the dollar but how safe their investments will be in the long run."

Government spending is on the rise to address the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and an unemployment rate that has climbed to 9.5 percent. Congress already approved a $700 billion financial bailout and a $787 billion economic stimulus package to try and jump-start a recovery, and there is growing talk among some Obama administration officials that a second round of stimulus may be necessary.

This has many Republicans and deficit hawks worried that the U.S. could be setting itself up for more financial pain down the road if interest rates and inflation surge. They also are raising alarms about additional spending the administration is proposing, including its plan to reform health care.

President Barack Obama and other administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, have said the U.S. is committed to bringing down the deficits once the country has emerged from the current recession and financial crisis.

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Source:

http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_12827891?source=email

Tags:

Treasury Department, Great Depression, Barack Obama, Timothy Geithner, Treasury Secretary, Government spending, Smith School of Business, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Global Economic News,

Posted via email from Global Business News

July 22, 2009

Schwarzenegger For Open Source Digital Textbooks


The Calif. Gov. Wants to Save Money by Dumping Printed Books for Online Texts; Is it Feasible?

Read more:

http://globalitnews.blogspot.com/2009/07/schwarzenegger-for-open-source-digital.html


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Tags: open source, open source textbooks, California budget crisis, governor Schwarzenegger, McGraw-Hill Education, Global Best Practice, OpenContent.org, education, k-12, David Wiley, Brigham Young University, Neeru Khosla,

Posted via email from Global Business News

Big Pharma: Big Lobby, Big Money


The pharmaceutical and health products industry has long been the top dog on K Street. Since 1998, the industry has spent more than $1.6 billion on federal lobbying. Last year alone, it spent more than $234 million — a sum that translates into roughly $125,000 every hour that Congress was actually in session. Furthermore, in the first three months of 2009, it spent more than $66.5 million on these politicking efforts — or about $1.2 million a day that Congress has been open for business. And these figures are just a portion of their overall expenditures. They also spend big on advertising, research, polling and other efforts that don't get classified as lobbying.

Within this industry, the trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) leads the way on lobbying activities, spending more than $20.2 million last year, or $10,750 an hour that Congress was in session. Only six other companies in all sectors combined spent more on lobbying last year. Three other drug companies spent more than $10 million on lobbying in 2008: Eli Lilly, Pfizer and Amgen. Two-dozen others spent between $1 million and $7 million. (Download a list of the top 30 pharmaceutical lobbying clients in 2008 here: *pharma_2008top30.xls Note: If you do use this data, pleasebe sure to credit CRP.)

Time-crunched lawmakers can only hear from so many constituents and interest groups before deciding on pressing issues. To compete in this marketplace of ideas and help promote their policy positions, pharmaceutical companies employ a legion of lobbyists. In 2008 alone, they employed some 1,814 lobbyists — and 1,309 are on their payrolls through March. That is, 12 percent of all lobbyists perform work on behalf of pharmaceutical and health product companies.

Moreover, one in five lobbyists employed by the pharmaceutical industry have morphed from public servant to private lobbyist through Washington's "revolving door." Thus, not only do these individuals bring with them strong advocacy skills, but many also boast thick Rolodexes, filled with connections from previous employment in the chambers of government itself. Former chiefs of staff, legislative directors, counsels, aides and even members of Congress often make compelling cases to government officials with whom they have relationships. And these relationships can also be crucial in obtaining a slice of a policymaker's precious time to begin with.

According to CRP's analysis, pharmaceutical and health product companies currently employ nearly three-dozen former members of Congress.

This year the industry is advocating "reform" that doesn't cut too deeply into its revenues. PhRMA, for one, opposes a federally administered public health care option. Instead, it is backing the expansion of private health insurance and increased federal incentives — including subsidies — for patients to enroll in existing programs like Medicare, Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), with as much emphasis on private health insurance plans as possible. The drug companies also want to keep intact incentives for innovation, research and intellectual property right protections, which some say inhibits access to generic drugs.

"I do not believe that policymakers have yet arrived at a full and complete diagnosis of what's wrong and what's right with U.S. health care," John C. Lechleiter, the head of Eli Lilly and Co, declared last month in a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. "I am very concerned that some of the proposed policies — the treatments, to continue my metaphor — will have unintended side-effects that make our situation worse."

In the past, the industry has used its clout to position itself for legislative wins that have brought in billions of dollars. For instance, since President Reagan signed the Hatch-Waxman Act in 1984, generic drugs have made their way into the pharmaceutical market with more ease. But pharmaceutical giants regularly fight to delay competition with generics. In 2002, some U.S. senators sought to change that, in the face of nearly $130 million in lobbying expenditures by pharmaceutical and health product companies. Known as the Greater Access to Affordable Pharmaceuticals Act, the proposal would have limited drug companies to one 30-month extension of the right to exclusive sales of brand name drugs if the Food & Drug Administration approved a competitor's generic drug patent. TheBiotechnology Industry Organization decried the measure as "a broadside attack on the U.S. patent system." While the Senate voted 78-21 to pass the legislation, the House never passed the bill out of committee.

In another example, in the summer of 2003, then-Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) sponsored legislation to extend prescription drug coverage to Medicare patients, under a new feature known as "Medicare Part D." Some consumer groups and politicians criticized the bill for being too friendly to pharmaceutical and health insurance industries. Among the criticisms: It required senior citizens to pay the full amount for drugs between the initial coverage limit and the amount at which catastrophic coverage kicks in — commonly referred to as the "donut hole." It also barred the government from negotiating with drug companies for lower prices.

This legislation originally passed in the House by just one vote, 216-215. And when it came time to vote on it again after working out differences between the House version and the Senate version, the vote in the House was conducted in the wee hours of the morning. Republican leaders even held open the voting process for a record three hours to garner enough votes to pass the measure. President Bush ultimately signed the bill into law in December.

That year, pharmaceutical and health product companies spent more than $126 million on lobbying. And during the entire 2004 election cycle, the pharmaceutical manufacturers contributed nearly $10 million to federal candidates, with 70 percent going to Republicans. The top recipient: President Bush, who received more than half a million dollars.

Later, legislators attempted to pass measures that would allow the government to negotiate with the drug companies. The Senate rejected such bills twice in 2005. By January 2007, the new Democrat-controlled House passed such a bill, but the Senate failed to overcome a cloture motion to move forward with the proposal as scores of companies lobbied regarding the plan.

Similarly, in 2007, in the wake of the outrage — and litigation — following the numerous strokes and heart attacks caused by painkiller Vioxx, the Senate took up a measure to increase the FDA's regulatory powers. That year, pharmaceutical and health product companies spent more than $224 million on lobbying, and campaign contributions from the industry began to flow more evenly to both Democrats and Republicans. By the end of the 2008 election cycle, the sector contributed $29 million, with 50 percent going to Republicans — down from two-thirds or more in other recent cycles.

The industry succeeded in removing language from the proposal that would have increased the FDA's authority to ban TV ads, tightened rules regarding conflicts of interest and call for the disclosure of all clinical studies related to a drug's risks. The legislation also included language that would have eased individuals' abilities to import prescription drugs from Canada. But before passage, the Senate voted 49-40 on a pharmaceutical industry-backed amendment to add more restrictions to the importation process. After these votes, the bill eventually passed on a 93-1 vote — and was signed by the president later that fall.

The bill's lone dissenting vote in the Senate came from Vermont independent Bernie Sanders. Sanders, who caucuses with the Democrats, lamented the triumph of special interests and told media at the time that he could not vote for the watered down bill. "A safe drug doesn't mean anything to somebody who can't afford it," he said. "Big money has significant influence. Big money gains you access, access gives you the time to influence people."

Pharmaceutical companies have long thwarted legislative attempts to allow the importation of prescription drugs from Canada. PhRMA even hired former U.S. ambassador to CanadaGordon Giffin for six years to lobby the Canadian government against easing rules governing Americans' importation of Canadian drugs. But after more than a decade, the industry's influence on this particular issue may be waning.

After Democrats took control of Congress in 2007, House Republicans led an unsuccessful effort to continue enforcement of the ban. By December, President Bush signed a budget bill that included a provision disallowing U.S. Customs & Border Protections from preventing Americans from importing up to three-months worth of Canadian prescription drugs. Three months later, the Senate passed a non-binding resolution in support of legalizing such importation.

The Obama administration itself is hoping to overcome the pull of the powerful industry to enact an overhaul of the health care system that dramatically reforms it brings down costs and grants affordable coverage to all Americans. "Fixing this broken system will be enormously difficult," Obama recently wrote in an e-mail to supporters. "Our opposition will be fierce, and they have been down this road before. To prevail, we must once more build a coast-to-coast operation ready to knock on doors, deploy volunteers, get out the facts, and show the world how real change happens in America."

Whatever operation the Obama team crafts will indeed face challenges, including the persuasive force of $1.2 million a day in lobbying expenditures.

Source: http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2009/06/will-12-million-a-day-convince.html

Tags: Obama, K Street, PHRMA, Medicare, Medicaid, the State Children's Health Insurance Program, SCHIP, Medicare Part D, FDA, Vioxx, Hatch-Waxman Act, Greater Access to Affordable Pharmaceuticals Act, Global Best Practice,

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July 21, 2009

Asia To Witness 21st Century’s Longest Eclipse



The longest solar eclipse of the 21st century created near darkness in daytime, along a swath that stretched from India to China and the South Pacific.


Read more here:

http://globalblognetwork.blogspot.com/2009/07/asia-to-witness-21st-centurys-longest.html

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