The MooCow's New Blog
Saturday, March 19, 2005
You want chutney with those fries, sir?
:=8D
Don't ferget u can always e-mail the MooCow with cowments at MooCowMoo@aol.com!!!
Hope you all like Indian food, as that's where moost of America's jobs are bleeding into:
12 reasons why it's not in the Republican Party's best interest to stop the outsourcing of jobs.
Jobs are leaving America at an alarming rate. But rather than try to put a stop to the outsourcing, our current administration encourages it by giving tax incentives to companies that ship jobs to other countries - and Americans are left training the workers that will replace them.
Who are the worst, unpatriotic, un-American perpetrators? We bring you the GREEDY DOZEN - the twelve worst outsourcers in America. Take notice of where their campaign contributions are going...
THE GREEDY DOZEN
- 1 -
KEN "BANK ON OUTSOURCING" LEWIS AKA Ken "You Shouldn't Be Allowed to Have 'America' in the Name of Your Company" Lewis
Name: Kenneth D. LewisCompany: Bank of AmericaTitle: CEOCrime Against America: Bank of America has eliminated nearly 5,000 jobs, while outsourcing 1,250 jobs to India. In July 2004 the firm announced it will cut an additional 12,500 jobs in the next two years. As at several other firms, employees are given severance pay on the condition they help train their replacements. Meanwhile, the firm is set to open a new facility in the Indian city of Hyderabad that will handle support and transactions for most of the bank's major divisions.Partner in Crime: James H. Hance, Vice Chairman of Bank of America is a 2004 Bush Ranger (meaning he's raised at least $200,000 for the Bush campaign), has contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and has contributed the full $2,000 to Bush. Lewis himself has given the full $2,000 to the Bush campaign.
- 2 -
DARWIN "SURVIVAL OF THE RICHEST" DEASON
Name: Darwin DeasonCompany: Affiliated Computer ServicesTitle: Chairman and Company DirectorCrime Against America: Affiliated Computer Services provides business processing and information technology outsourcing services for commercial clients and government agencies around the world. The company has outsourced about 1,300 jobs to India over the past three years. The outsourced jobs have primarily been data processing and technical support positions.Partner in Crime: Darwin Deason is a $25,000 contributor to the Republican National Committee. The company's CEO, Jeffrey Rich, also contributed $25,000 to the RNC.
- 3 -
GEORGE "THE RANGER" DAVID
Name: George DavidCompany: United TechnologiesTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: United Technologies has software development centers in Pune and Bangalore, India. The company is also in the process of shipping 80 percent of its software application development and support to India. Partner in Crime: David is a 2004 Bush Ranger. He has contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign during the 2004 election cycle. Stephen Page, Former Vice Chairman and CFO (retired April 2004) is a $2,000 contributor to the Bush campaign.
- 4 -
JEFFREY IMMELT - THE FOUNDING FATHER OF OUTSOURCING
Name: Jeffrey R. ImmeltCompany: General ElectricTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: General Electric is widely recognized as one of the founders of the trend to outsource to India. The company employs 12,000 people in India who perform a variety of tasks, including answering calls about consumer credit cards, giving IT technical assistance, and handling network security Partners in Crime: Three leading executives of General Electric, Immelt, Dennis D. Dammerman, Vice Chairman and Benjamin W. Heineman, Senior V.P. General Counsel, have earned handsome compensations from the company and each have each maxed out with $2,000 donations to the Bush campaign.
- 5 -
DICK "OFF-SHORE SCORE" CHENEY
Name: Dick CheneyCompany: HaliburtonTitle: Former CEOCrime Against America: Not only does Halliburton have forty-four subsidiaries in offshore tax havens, but with Cheney in the CEO's seat, Halliburton, through its foreign subsidiaries, helped Iraq reconstruct its war-torn oil industry in the nineties with $73 million worth of equipment and services -- becoming Baghdad's biggest such supplier. Kinda nice how that worked out for the vice president, really: oversee the destruction of an industry, then profit from rebuilding it.Partner in Crime: Became VP of the United States of America. So Cheney is actually the main partner in crime to the Bush administration. And the perfect tie between business corruption and the Bush Administration. Became VP of the United States of America.
- 6 -
THOMAS "PIONEERING THE LOSS OF AMERICAN JOBS" RENYI
Name: Thomas RenyiCompany: Bank of New YorkTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: Bank of New York announced in March 2003 that it was sending an additional 250 computer software jobs to Mumbai, where it already employed 670 workers. The firm also announced plans in 2003 to open a software development center in the Philippines.Partner in Crime: Renyi is a Bush Pioneer and has raised over $100,000 for the Bush campaign.
- 7 -
CHARLES "PINKSLIP" BETTY
Name: Charles BettyCompany: EarthlinkTitle: Director and CEOCrime Against America: At the start of this year Earthlink was the country's third-largest Internet service provider, behind AOL and MSN, with about 5 million subscribers. The company off-shored approximately 1,300 jobs to the Philippines. These job cuts mostly affected people who worked billing questions, technical questions, or questions from people who want to upgrade to broadband. The job cuts affect workers in EarthLink's contact center operations in Atlanta, Harrisburg, Pa., and three locations in California: Roseville, San Jose and Pasadena.Partner in Crime: Betty has contributed $2,750 to the Bush campaign over the past two years and another $1,000 to the Republican National Committee.
- 8 -
JOHN "CALCUTTA OR BUST" CHAMBERS
Name: John ChambersCompany: Cisco SystemsTitle: President and CEOCrime Against America: TechsUnite is a project of the Communications Workers of America, the AFL-CIO, and several other groups concerned about the outsourcing of information technology jobs to India and other countries outside the U.S. This organization reported that Cisco has outsourced 2,300 software and web development jobs to India and other foreign locations over the course of the past few years.Partners in Crime: John Chambers is a $2,000 contributor to the Bush campaign and a $10,000 contributor to California Republican Party. The company's Senior Vice President of worldwide field operations, Richard Justice, also contributed $2,000 to the Bush campaign and $10,000 the California Republican Party, as did too Randy Pond, Cisco's senior vice president of operations, systems, and processes. Dennis Powell, company CFO, made a $20,000 donation to the California Republican Party.
- 9 -
DAVID "SHOWING THEM THE DOOR" DORMAN
Name: David DormanCompany: A T & T Title: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: The Communication Workers of America has reported that AT&T outsourced nearly 500 customer service jobs to India in 2003.Partner in Crime: Dorman has contributed $2,000 to the Bush campaign and $15,000 to the Republican National Committee. A T & T Wireless Services Chairman, President and CEO is not only a Bush contributor -- he's contributed to the lost of nearly 3,000 to India.
- 10 -
MICHAEL "DUDE, YOU GOT OUTSOURCED!" DELL
Name: Michael S. DellCompany: Dell ComputersTitle: Chairman and Former CEO (Chairman and CEO until July, 2004)Crime Against America: Dell's Bangalore and Hyderabad, India, facilities employ close to 3,000 people.Partner in Crime: Dell has contributed $3,000 to the Bush campaign in 2003 and 2004, plus an additional $25,000 the Republican National Committee, and $10,000 to the National Republican Congressional Committee. Dell CFO James M. Schneider is a $25,000 contributor to the RNC.
- 11 -
CHRISTOPHER "GALVANIZING PROFITS" GALVIN
Name: Christopher B. GalvinCompany: MotorolaTitle: Former CEOCrime Against America: Christopher Galvin is the recently departed CEO of the company. Motorola has outsourced design engineering and research and development jobs to India, resulting in a loss of approximately 1,000 U.S. jobs. Overall, Motorola has about 1,500 jobs in India.Partner in Crime: Galvin contributed $5,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign. Gregory Brown, a company executive vice president, contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign.
- 12 -
GARY "'CELL'-ING OUT AMERICA" FORSEE
Name: Gary D. ForseeCompany: SprintTitle: Chairman & CEOCrime Against America: 21,000 job cuts were made between late 2001 and 2003. While Sprint's outsourcing activities have been difficult to track jobs have without a doubt been sent overseas. In fact, at the same time that a company memo said that the plans to offshore would likely affect only "several hundred" jobs, a company memo to potential vendors that was leaked to the press. Partner in Crime: Forsee and Len J. Lauer, company President and COO, have both maxed out at the full $2,000 for the Bush campaign.
Who are the worst, unpatriotic, un-American perpetrators? We bring you the GREEDY DOZEN - the twelve worst outsourcers in America. Take notice of where their campaign contributions are going...
THE GREEDY DOZEN
- 1 -
KEN "BANK ON OUTSOURCING" LEWIS AKA Ken "You Shouldn't Be Allowed to Have 'America' in the Name of Your Company" Lewis
Name: Kenneth D. LewisCompany: Bank of AmericaTitle: CEOCrime Against America: Bank of America has eliminated nearly 5,000 jobs, while outsourcing 1,250 jobs to India. In July 2004 the firm announced it will cut an additional 12,500 jobs in the next two years. As at several other firms, employees are given severance pay on the condition they help train their replacements. Meanwhile, the firm is set to open a new facility in the Indian city of Hyderabad that will handle support and transactions for most of the bank's major divisions.Partner in Crime: James H. Hance, Vice Chairman of Bank of America is a 2004 Bush Ranger (meaning he's raised at least $200,000 for the Bush campaign), has contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and has contributed the full $2,000 to Bush. Lewis himself has given the full $2,000 to the Bush campaign.
- 2 -
DARWIN "SURVIVAL OF THE RICHEST" DEASON
Name: Darwin DeasonCompany: Affiliated Computer ServicesTitle: Chairman and Company DirectorCrime Against America: Affiliated Computer Services provides business processing and information technology outsourcing services for commercial clients and government agencies around the world. The company has outsourced about 1,300 jobs to India over the past three years. The outsourced jobs have primarily been data processing and technical support positions.Partner in Crime: Darwin Deason is a $25,000 contributor to the Republican National Committee. The company's CEO, Jeffrey Rich, also contributed $25,000 to the RNC.
- 3 -
GEORGE "THE RANGER" DAVID
Name: George DavidCompany: United TechnologiesTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: United Technologies has software development centers in Pune and Bangalore, India. The company is also in the process of shipping 80 percent of its software application development and support to India. Partner in Crime: David is a 2004 Bush Ranger. He has contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign during the 2004 election cycle. Stephen Page, Former Vice Chairman and CFO (retired April 2004) is a $2,000 contributor to the Bush campaign.
- 4 -
JEFFREY IMMELT - THE FOUNDING FATHER OF OUTSOURCING
Name: Jeffrey R. ImmeltCompany: General ElectricTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: General Electric is widely recognized as one of the founders of the trend to outsource to India. The company employs 12,000 people in India who perform a variety of tasks, including answering calls about consumer credit cards, giving IT technical assistance, and handling network security Partners in Crime: Three leading executives of General Electric, Immelt, Dennis D. Dammerman, Vice Chairman and Benjamin W. Heineman, Senior V.P. General Counsel, have earned handsome compensations from the company and each have each maxed out with $2,000 donations to the Bush campaign.
- 5 -
DICK "OFF-SHORE SCORE" CHENEY
Name: Dick CheneyCompany: HaliburtonTitle: Former CEOCrime Against America: Not only does Halliburton have forty-four subsidiaries in offshore tax havens, but with Cheney in the CEO's seat, Halliburton, through its foreign subsidiaries, helped Iraq reconstruct its war-torn oil industry in the nineties with $73 million worth of equipment and services -- becoming Baghdad's biggest such supplier. Kinda nice how that worked out for the vice president, really: oversee the destruction of an industry, then profit from rebuilding it.Partner in Crime: Became VP of the United States of America. So Cheney is actually the main partner in crime to the Bush administration. And the perfect tie between business corruption and the Bush Administration. Became VP of the United States of America.
- 6 -
THOMAS "PIONEERING THE LOSS OF AMERICAN JOBS" RENYI
Name: Thomas RenyiCompany: Bank of New YorkTitle: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: Bank of New York announced in March 2003 that it was sending an additional 250 computer software jobs to Mumbai, where it already employed 670 workers. The firm also announced plans in 2003 to open a software development center in the Philippines.Partner in Crime: Renyi is a Bush Pioneer and has raised over $100,000 for the Bush campaign.
- 7 -
CHARLES "PINKSLIP" BETTY
Name: Charles BettyCompany: EarthlinkTitle: Director and CEOCrime Against America: At the start of this year Earthlink was the country's third-largest Internet service provider, behind AOL and MSN, with about 5 million subscribers. The company off-shored approximately 1,300 jobs to the Philippines. These job cuts mostly affected people who worked billing questions, technical questions, or questions from people who want to upgrade to broadband. The job cuts affect workers in EarthLink's contact center operations in Atlanta, Harrisburg, Pa., and three locations in California: Roseville, San Jose and Pasadena.Partner in Crime: Betty has contributed $2,750 to the Bush campaign over the past two years and another $1,000 to the Republican National Committee.
- 8 -
JOHN "CALCUTTA OR BUST" CHAMBERS
Name: John ChambersCompany: Cisco SystemsTitle: President and CEOCrime Against America: TechsUnite is a project of the Communications Workers of America, the AFL-CIO, and several other groups concerned about the outsourcing of information technology jobs to India and other countries outside the U.S. This organization reported that Cisco has outsourced 2,300 software and web development jobs to India and other foreign locations over the course of the past few years.Partners in Crime: John Chambers is a $2,000 contributor to the Bush campaign and a $10,000 contributor to California Republican Party. The company's Senior Vice President of worldwide field operations, Richard Justice, also contributed $2,000 to the Bush campaign and $10,000 the California Republican Party, as did too Randy Pond, Cisco's senior vice president of operations, systems, and processes. Dennis Powell, company CFO, made a $20,000 donation to the California Republican Party.
- 9 -
DAVID "SHOWING THEM THE DOOR" DORMAN
Name: David DormanCompany: A T & T Title: Chairman and CEOCrime Against America: The Communication Workers of America has reported that AT&T outsourced nearly 500 customer service jobs to India in 2003.Partner in Crime: Dorman has contributed $2,000 to the Bush campaign and $15,000 to the Republican National Committee. A T & T Wireless Services Chairman, President and CEO is not only a Bush contributor -- he's contributed to the lost of nearly 3,000 to India.
- 10 -
MICHAEL "DUDE, YOU GOT OUTSOURCED!" DELL
Name: Michael S. DellCompany: Dell ComputersTitle: Chairman and Former CEO (Chairman and CEO until July, 2004)Crime Against America: Dell's Bangalore and Hyderabad, India, facilities employ close to 3,000 people.Partner in Crime: Dell has contributed $3,000 to the Bush campaign in 2003 and 2004, plus an additional $25,000 the Republican National Committee, and $10,000 to the National Republican Congressional Committee. Dell CFO James M. Schneider is a $25,000 contributor to the RNC.
- 11 -
CHRISTOPHER "GALVANIZING PROFITS" GALVIN
Name: Christopher B. GalvinCompany: MotorolaTitle: Former CEOCrime Against America: Christopher Galvin is the recently departed CEO of the company. Motorola has outsourced design engineering and research and development jobs to India, resulting in a loss of approximately 1,000 U.S. jobs. Overall, Motorola has about 1,500 jobs in India.Partner in Crime: Galvin contributed $5,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign. Gregory Brown, a company executive vice president, contributed $25,000 to the Republican National Committee and $2,000 to the Bush campaign.
- 12 -
GARY "'CELL'-ING OUT AMERICA" FORSEE
Name: Gary D. ForseeCompany: SprintTitle: Chairman & CEOCrime Against America: 21,000 job cuts were made between late 2001 and 2003. While Sprint's outsourcing activities have been difficult to track jobs have without a doubt been sent overseas. In fact, at the same time that a company memo said that the plans to offshore would likely affect only "several hundred" jobs, a company memo to potential vendors that was leaked to the press. Partner in Crime: Forsee and Len J. Lauer, company President and COO, have both maxed out at the full $2,000 for the Bush campaign.
Check out Arianna Huffington's website
You won't see this cow buying Dell, AT&T, Moterola, or any udder products from this shameful list.
;=8)
Wednesday, March 16, 2005
Been Gone A Whilem Not Much Changed... :=8/
:=8D
Don't ferget u can always e-mail the MooCow with cowments at MooCowMoo@aol.com!!!
Hmmm, its difficult to decide the worst news of the day, Neo-Republican asshole Paul Wolfowitz getting named chair of the World Bank, or that Baby Bush's administration finally managed to get the Alaskan wilderness opened to his Big Oil cronies, so they can spoil and exploit one of our last and greatest nature preserves. Here's the details on both sad events:
Paul Wolfowitz to Be Nominated as Next World Bank President
March 16 (Bloomberg) -- Paul D. Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, will be nominated to be the next head of the World Bank, a U.S. official said.
President George W. Bush will name Wolfowitz later today, the official said. He would replace James Wolfensohn, 71, who said in January that he would leave the institution when his term ends May 31.
Wolfowitz's nomination must be approved by all of the World Bank's member countries, which analysts said would be largely a formality. By tradition, the U.S. chooses the head of the World Bank, and European officials choose the managing director of the International Monetary Fund.
Treasury Department spokesman Rob Nichols declined to comment on the nomination.
Other candidates for the World Bank position included former Hewlett-Packard Co. Chief Executive Officer Carly Fiorina and Bush administration AIDS policy chief Randall Tobias.
Wolfowitz was a strong advocate of the Iraq war, advocating the toppling of Saddam Hussein and helping the administration craft its rationale for the invasion. The U.S. official said Wolfowitz is a proven leader, intellectually and operationally.
World Bank Scope
His management experience running the Pentagon, the largest government agency with nearly 700,000 civilian employees and 1.3 million in uniform will serve him well at the World Bank, the official said.
Responding to a report in the Financial Times earlier this month that Wolfowitz was a candidate for the World Bank, a Defense Department spokesman said he would remain at the Pentagon. ``Secretary Wolfowitz has been asked to stay on in an extremely important job, one that he likes doing very much,'' Defense Department spokesman Larry DiRita said March 1.
Under Wolfowitz, the Bush administration may now try to narrow the focus of the World Bank, returning the international lending institution to its roots of primarily financing large infrastructure projects and limiting the practice of handing out zero-interest loans, analysts such as Alan Meltzer, who led a 2000 congressional inquiry into the World Bank, said.
Management Goal
The lender, the largest financier of projects in developing nations, broadened its scope under Wolfensohn, who sought a more ``humanizing'' role for the bank, according to Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning professor at Columbia University and former chief economist of the World Bank.
Since taking over in 1995, Wolfensohn cut by 40 percent financing for dams, bridges and infrastructure projects, and shifted that money to programs promoting climate change and development.
The U.S. is seeking to scale back some of Wolfensohn's projects, overhaul the bank's $20 billion a year lending operation and more effectively manage more than 10,000 employees scattered in 109 nations, Meltzer said.
Bush named Wolfowitz, 61, as deputy to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in February 2001. Then dean of Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, Wolfowitz was a veteran of both the State and Defense Departments.
State, Defense Veteran
He served as undersecretary for policy for Vice President Dick Cheney when Cheney headed the Pentagon during the administration of former President George Bush, the current president's father.
From 1986 to 1989, Wolfowitz was the U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, and assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs from 1982 to 1986. He worked on arms control and disarmament issues in federal agencies in the 1970s.
Wolfowitz was a critic of former President Bill Clinton's approach toward China and Russia, and urged tougher stances on those countries' missile transfers to Iran. He also supported providing international financial assistance to Indonesia during the Asian financial crisis, testifying before Congress that it served U.S. interests.
From 1995 to 2001, Wolfowitz was a director of toy maker Hasbro Inc. He received a Masters degree in administration and a Doctorate in political science and economics from University of Chicago.
Great, the world now get right-wing Toy Boy to cut off the flow of low-zero interest loans to third world counties, thus making sure they stay in the crapper, & ensure they will provide an endless supply of towel-headed, self-exploding jihadists.
Here's the udder gem in the news:
Senate Votes to Open Alaskan Oil Drilling
WASHINGTON - A closely divided Senate voted Wednesday to approve oil drilling in an Alaska wildlife refuge, a major victory for President Bush and a stinging defeat for environmentalists who have fought the idea for decades.
By a 51-49 vote, the Senate put a refuge drilling provision in next year's budget, depriving opponents of the chance to use a filibuster to try to block it. Filibusters, which require 60 votes to overcome, have been used to defeat drilling proposals in the past.
"This project will keep our economy growing by creating jobs and ensuring that businesses can expand," Bush said in a statement. "And it will make America less dependent on foreign sources of energy, eventually by up to a million barrels of oil a day."
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, who has fought for 24 years to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil companies, acknowledged it still could be "a long process" before a final drilling measure clears Congress. Lawmakers must agree on the final budget, something they failed to do last year, or Wednesday's vote would have been for naught.
Also, the House did not include an Arctic refuge measure in its budget, a difference that will have to be worked out in future negotiations.
Nevertheless, the Senate made clear by Wednesday's vote that a majority now supports tapping what is believed to be 10.4 billions or more of barrels of oil within the refuge's 1.5 million-acre coastal plain, said Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska. Two years ago, a similar attempt to use the budget process to open the refuge failed by three votes.
But that was before Republicans last November expanded their majority, adding a number of GOP senators who favor drilling. Only seven Republicans, all moderates, bucked their party Wednesday and voted with most Democrats against opening the refuge.
Environmentalists said while the vote was disappointing, they haven't given up the fight. "It only strengthens our resolve to protect America's most pristine national wildlife refuge for our children's future," said Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation.
"The battle is far from over," said Lexi Keogh of the Alaska Wilderness League. She said environmentalists will push to keep the ANWR provision out of a final budget document.
The oil industry has sought for more than two decades to get access to the oil. In 1980, Congress said the oil could be developed, but only if lawmakers specifically authorized the Interior Department to sell oil leases. Repeatedly Congress has failed to do so.
Environmentalists for years have fought such development, contending it would lead to a spider web of drilling platforms, pipelines and roads that would adversely impact the calving grounds of caribou, polar bears and millions of migratory birds that use the refuge's coastal plain.
"The fact is it's going to be destructive," Sen. John Kerry, Mass., said during debate on an amendment that would have stripped the drilling language from the budget measure. Democrats fell two votes short of the 51 needed.
Kerry and other drilling opponents argued that more oil would be saved than ANWR could produce if Congress enacted an energy policy focusing on conservation, more efficient cars and trucks and increased reliance on renewable fuels.
Drilling supporters countered that the refuge's oil can be pumped while still protecting the environment and wildlife. (oh yeah, excuse me while I barf over your bald-face lie...)
Modern technology, drilling techniques and environmental restrictions would dramatically limit the industrial footprint that would be left on the tundra and protect wildlife, said Murkowski. "We know we've got to do it right. ... It's a fragile environment."
One GOP senator after another argued that with foreign imports accounting for more than half of the oil the country uses, every available barrel should be pursued. The Alaska refuge represents the largest potential onshore oil find in the country, they said.
But drilling opponents rejected the suggestion that ANWR's oil would have much impact on global markets, today's high oil and gasoline prices, or the continued U.S. reliance on foreign producers.
"We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. It is "foolish to say oil development and a wildlife refuge can coexist."
Cantwell and other Democrats accused Republicans of trying "an end run" by attaching the refuge provisions to the budget, saying the question of drilling in an ecologically pristine refuge — a "special place" as many environmentalists called it — should be debated as separate legislation or as part of a broad energy bill.
"It's the only way around the filibuster," countered Stevens, defending the use of the budget process. He said that approach is justified for issues that have special importance such as getting at ANWR's oil, something he characterized as a matter of "national security."
Environmentalists said while the vote was disappointing, they haven't given up the fight. "It only strengthens our resolve to protect America's most pristine national wildlife refuge for our children's future," said Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation.
"The battle is far from over," said Lexi Keogh of the Alaska Wilderness League. She said environmentalists will push to keep the ANWR provision out of a final budget document.
The oil industry has sought for more than two decades to get access to the oil. In 1980, Congress said the oil could be developed, but only if lawmakers specifically authorized the Interior Department to sell oil leases. Repeatedly Congress has failed to do so.
Environmentalists for years have fought such development, contending it would lead to a spider web of drilling platforms, pipelines and roads that would adversely impact the calving grounds of caribou, polar bears and millions of migratory birds that use the refuge's coastal plain.
"The fact is it's going to be destructive," Sen. John Kerry, Mass., said during debate on an amendment that would have stripped the drilling language from the budget measure. Democrats fell two votes short of the 51 needed.
Kerry and other drilling opponents argued that more oil would be saved than ANWR could produce if Congress enacted an energy policy focusing on conservation, more efficient cars and trucks and increased reliance on renewable fuels.
Drilling supporters countered that the refuge's oil can be pumped while still protecting the environment and wildlife. (oh yeah, excuse me while I barf over your bald-face lie...)
Modern technology, drilling techniques and environmental restrictions would dramatically limit the industrial footprint that would be left on the tundra and protect wildlife, said Murkowski. "We know we've got to do it right. ... It's a fragile environment."
One GOP senator after another argued that with foreign imports accounting for more than half of the oil the country uses, every available barrel should be pursued. The Alaska refuge represents the largest potential onshore oil find in the country, they said.
But drilling opponents rejected the suggestion that ANWR's oil would have much impact on global markets, today's high oil and gasoline prices, or the continued U.S. reliance on foreign producers.
"We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. It is "foolish to say oil development and a wildlife refuge can coexist."
Cantwell and other Democrats accused Republicans of trying "an end run" by attaching the refuge provisions to the budget, saying the question of drilling in an ecologically pristine refuge — a "special place" as many environmentalists called it — should be debated as separate legislation or as part of a broad energy bill.
"It's the only way around the filibuster," countered Stevens, defending the use of the budget process. He said that approach is justified for issues that have special importance such as getting at ANWR's oil, something he characterized as a matter of "national security."
Oh, here we go again, suddenly EVERYTHING is National Security, or at least everything the Republican Nazis would like to ram down our throats is suddenly designated so. It's all about money, folks, huge, stinking, piles of it, not for you or me, but for the corrupt right-wingers in Congress & their greedy special-interest cronies. As long as they make another payment on their grandchildren's 10 million dollar mansions, they won't care how many endagered species croak. Here's the MooCow tip, folks - guarenteed, within the first year of drilling, stock in cruise ship lines that go to Alaska will plummet - who wants to see a bunch of dead, floating seals in a sea of oozy, oily muck?
:=8/
Been Gone A Whilem Not Much Changed... :=8/
:=8D
Don't ferget u can always e-mail the MooCow with cowments at MooCowMoo@aol.com!!!
Hmmm, its difficult to decide the worst news of the day, Neo-Republican asshole Paul Wolfowitz getting named chair of the World Bank, or that Baby Bush's administration finally managed to get the Alaskan wilderness opened to his Big Oil cronies, so they can spoil and exploit one of our last and greatest nature preserves. Here's the details on both sad events:
Paul Wolfowitz to Be Nominated as Next World Bank President
March 16 (Bloomberg) -- Paul D. Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, will be nominated to be the next head of the World Bank, a U.S. official said.
President George W. Bush will name Wolfowitz later today, the official said. He would replace James Wolfensohn, 71, who said in January that he would leave the institution when his term ends May 31.
Wolfowitz's nomination must be approved by all of the World Bank's member countries, which analysts said would be largely a formality. By tradition, the U.S. chooses the head of the World Bank, and European officials choose the managing director of the International Monetary Fund.
Treasury Department spokesman Rob Nichols declined to comment on the nomination.
Other candidates for the World Bank position included former Hewlett-Packard Co. Chief Executive Officer Carly Fiorina and Bush administration AIDS policy chief Randall Tobias.
Wolfowitz was a strong advocate of the Iraq war, advocating the toppling of Saddam Hussein and helping the administration craft its rationale for the invasion. The U.S. official said Wolfowitz is a proven leader, intellectually and operationally.
World Bank Scope
His management experience running the Pentagon, the largest government agency with nearly 700,000 civilian employees and 1.3 million in uniform will serve him well at the World Bank, the official said.
Responding to a report in the Financial Times earlier this month that Wolfowitz was a candidate for the World Bank, a Defense Department spokesman said he would remain at the Pentagon. ``Secretary Wolfowitz has been asked to stay on in an extremely important job, one that he likes doing very much,'' Defense Department spokesman Larry DiRita said March 1.
Under Wolfowitz, the Bush administration may now try to narrow the focus of the World Bank, returning the international lending institution to its roots of primarily financing large infrastructure projects and limiting the practice of handing out zero-interest loans, analysts such as Alan Meltzer, who led a 2000 congressional inquiry into the World Bank, said.
Management Goal
The lender, the largest financier of projects in developing nations, broadened its scope under Wolfensohn, who sought a more ``humanizing'' role for the bank, according to Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning professor at Columbia University and former chief economist of the World Bank.
Since taking over in 1995, Wolfensohn cut by 40 percent financing for dams, bridges and infrastructure projects, and shifted that money to programs promoting climate change and development.
The U.S. is seeking to scale back some of Wolfensohn's projects, overhaul the bank's $20 billion a year lending operation and more effectively manage more than 10,000 employees scattered in 109 nations, Meltzer said.
Bush named Wolfowitz, 61, as deputy to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in February 2001. Then dean of Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, Wolfowitz was a veteran of both the State and Defense Departments.
State, Defense Veteran
He served as undersecretary for policy for Vice President Dick Cheney when Cheney headed the Pentagon during the administration of former President George Bush, the current president's father.
From 1986 to 1989, Wolfowitz was the U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, and assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs from 1982 to 1986. He worked on arms control and disarmament issues in federal agencies in the 1970s.
Wolfowitz was a critic of former President Bill Clinton's approach toward China and Russia, and urged tougher stances on those countries' missile transfers to Iran. He also supported providing international financial assistance to Indonesia during the Asian financial crisis, testifying before Congress that it served U.S. interests.
From 1995 to 2001, Wolfowitz was a director of toy maker Hasbro Inc. He received a Masters degree in administration and a Doctorate in political science and economics from University of Chicago.
Great, the world now get right-wing Toy Boy to cut off the flow of low-zero interest loans to third world counties, thus making sure they stay in the crapper, & ensure they will provide an endless supply of towel-headed, self-exploding jihadists.
Here's the udder gem in the news:
Senate Votes to Open Alaskan Oil Drilling
WASHINGTON - A closely divided Senate voted Wednesday to approve oil drilling in an Alaska wildlife refuge, a major victory for President Bush and a stinging defeat for environmentalists who have fought the idea for decades.
By a 51-49 vote, the Senate put a refuge drilling provision in next year's budget, depriving opponents of the chance to use a filibuster to try to block it. Filibusters, which require 60 votes to overcome, have been used to defeat drilling proposals in the past.
"This project will keep our economy growing by creating jobs and ensuring that businesses can expand," Bush said in a statement. "And it will make America less dependent on foreign sources of energy, eventually by up to a million barrels of oil a day."
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, who has fought for 24 years to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil companies, acknowledged it still could be "a long process" before a final drilling measure clears Congress. Lawmakers must agree on the final budget, something they failed to do last year, or Wednesday's vote would have been for naught.
Also, the House did not include an Arctic refuge measure in its budget, a difference that will have to be worked out in future negotiations.
Nevertheless, the Senate made clear by Wednesday's vote that a majority now supports tapping what is believed to be 10.4 billions or more of barrels of oil within the refuge's 1.5 million-acre coastal plain, said Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska. Two years ago, a similar attempt to use the budget process to open the refuge failed by three votes.
But that was before Republicans last November expanded their majority, adding a number of GOP senators who favor drilling. Only seven Republicans, all moderates, bucked their party Wednesday and voted with most Democrats against opening the refuge.
Environmentalists said while the vote was disappointing, they haven't given up the fight. "It only strengthens our resolve to protect America's most pristine national wildlife refuge for our children's future," said Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation.
"The battle is far from over," said Lexi Keogh of the Alaska Wilderness League. She said environmentalists will push to keep the ANWR provision out of a final budget document.
The oil industry has sought for more than two decades to get access to the oil. In 1980, Congress said the oil could be developed, but only if lawmakers specifically authorized the Interior Department to sell oil leases. Repeatedly Congress has failed to do so.
Environmentalists for years have fought such development, contending it would lead to a spider web of drilling platforms, pipelines and roads that would adversely impact the calving grounds of caribou, polar bears and millions of migratory birds that use the refuge's coastal plain.
"The fact is it's going to be destructive," Sen. John Kerry, Mass., said during debate on an amendment that would have stripped the drilling language from the budget measure. Democrats fell two votes short of the 51 needed.
Kerry and other drilling opponents argued that more oil would be saved than ANWR could produce if Congress enacted an energy policy focusing on conservation, more efficient cars and trucks and increased reliance on renewable fuels.
Drilling supporters countered that the refuge's oil can be pumped while still protecting the environment and wildlife. (oh yeah, excuse me while I barf over your bald-face lie...)
Modern technology, drilling techniques and environmental restrictions would dramatically limit the industrial footprint that would be left on the tundra and protect wildlife, said Murkowski. "We know we've got to do it right. ... It's a fragile environment."
One GOP senator after another argued that with foreign imports accounting for more than half of the oil the country uses, every available barrel should be pursued. The Alaska refuge represents the largest potential onshore oil find in the country, they said.
But drilling opponents rejected the suggestion that ANWR's oil would have much impact on global markets, today's high oil and gasoline prices, or the continued U.S. reliance on foreign producers.
"We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. It is "foolish to say oil development and a wildlife refuge can coexist."
Cantwell and other Democrats accused Republicans of trying "an end run" by attaching the refuge provisions to the budget, saying the question of drilling in an ecologically pristine refuge — a "special place" as many environmentalists called it — should be debated as separate legislation or as part of a broad energy bill.
"It's the only way around the filibuster," countered Stevens, defending the use of the budget process. He said that approach is justified for issues that have special importance such as getting at ANWR's oil, something he characterized as a matter of "national security."
Environmentalists said while the vote was disappointing, they haven't given up the fight. "It only strengthens our resolve to protect America's most pristine national wildlife refuge for our children's future," said Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation.
"The battle is far from over," said Lexi Keogh of the Alaska Wilderness League. She said environmentalists will push to keep the ANWR provision out of a final budget document.
The oil industry has sought for more than two decades to get access to the oil. In 1980, Congress said the oil could be developed, but only if lawmakers specifically authorized the Interior Department to sell oil leases. Repeatedly Congress has failed to do so.
Environmentalists for years have fought such development, contending it would lead to a spider web of drilling platforms, pipelines and roads that would adversely impact the calving grounds of caribou, polar bears and millions of migratory birds that use the refuge's coastal plain.
"The fact is it's going to be destructive," Sen. John Kerry, Mass., said during debate on an amendment that would have stripped the drilling language from the budget measure. Democrats fell two votes short of the 51 needed.
Kerry and other drilling opponents argued that more oil would be saved than ANWR could produce if Congress enacted an energy policy focusing on conservation, more efficient cars and trucks and increased reliance on renewable fuels.
Drilling supporters countered that the refuge's oil can be pumped while still protecting the environment and wildlife. (oh yeah, excuse me while I barf over your bald-face lie...)
Modern technology, drilling techniques and environmental restrictions would dramatically limit the industrial footprint that would be left on the tundra and protect wildlife, said Murkowski. "We know we've got to do it right. ... It's a fragile environment."
One GOP senator after another argued that with foreign imports accounting for more than half of the oil the country uses, every available barrel should be pursued. The Alaska refuge represents the largest potential onshore oil find in the country, they said.
But drilling opponents rejected the suggestion that ANWR's oil would have much impact on global markets, today's high oil and gasoline prices, or the continued U.S. reliance on foreign producers.
"We won't see this oil for 10 years. It will have minimal impact," argued Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. It is "foolish to say oil development and a wildlife refuge can coexist."
Cantwell and other Democrats accused Republicans of trying "an end run" by attaching the refuge provisions to the budget, saying the question of drilling in an ecologically pristine refuge — a "special place" as many environmentalists called it — should be debated as separate legislation or as part of a broad energy bill.
"It's the only way around the filibuster," countered Stevens, defending the use of the budget process. He said that approach is justified for issues that have special importance such as getting at ANWR's oil, something he characterized as a matter of "national security."
Oh, here we go again, suddenly EVERYTHING is National Security, or at least everything the Republican Nazis would like to ram down our throats is suddenly designated so. It's all about money, folks, huge, stinking, piles of it, not for you or me, but for the corrupt right-wingers in Congress & their greedy special-interest cronies. As long as they make another payment on their grandchildren's 10 million dollar mansions, they won't care how many endagered species croak. Here's the MooCow tip, folks - guarenteed, within the first year of drilling, stock in cruise ship lines that go to Alaska will plummet - who wants to see a bunch of dead, floating seals in a sea of oozy, oily muck?
:=8/