The Koch Brothers, architects of the Tea Party and bankrollers of climate-change denial, have recently set up shop to lobby the Alberta government, according to the Edmonton Journal.
Video mash-up lampoons Israeli army response to Gaza flotilla
A new video by an anonymous group of users called "Minor Demographic Threat" parodies the Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio Star" and features a mash-up of clips released by the Israeli army and activists who were on board the Mavi Marmara captured by Israeli military on May 31st.
A coup for lobbyists at the White House
Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, ousted in the middle of the night just over a month ago, enjoys global support for his return, with the exception of the Obama White House. Though Barack Obama first called the Honduran military's removal of Zelaya a coup, his administration has backpedaled. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called Zelaya's attempt to cross the Nicaraguan border into Honduras "reckless." Could well-placed lobbyists in Washington be forging U.S. foreign policy?
Has Brian stopped talking yet?
Schadenfreude gets a bad rap. The feeling of "pleasure derived from the misfortunes of others," especially from the fall of the high and mighty, was mentioned often during the trial (and trials) of Conrad Black, but was oddly absent during those of Brian Mulroney. I don't think schadenfreude is just about nastiness or pettiness; it's about recognizing a shared, flawed humanity. It's built on a desire to know that the powerful are more like the rest of us than a race apart. That's what's satisfying in it, not mere spite.
Relentless secrecy on payments
If it had just been that former prime minister Brian Mulroney took hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash payments in hotel rooms and failed to report the income for six years, it would be quite a story.
But what makes this saga truly stunning and of vital importance is the fact that the payments were made by the notorious lobbyist Karlheinz Schreiber, wanted in Germany on charges of corruption, who was paid $20 million by European consortium Airbus to lobby the Mulroney government to buy its jets.
These facts inevitably raise the question of whether the cash payments in hotel rooms are in any way linked to the $1.8 billion airplane deal Schreiber was able to win from Air Canada, then a crown corporation, in 1988.