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Showing posts with label Koch Industries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Koch Industries. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2011

BOYCOTT the below KOCH supermarket paper goods: Handy pocket list

@KatieAnnieOakly

KatieAnnieOakly March 15, 2011
BOYCOTT the below KOCH supermarket paper goods: When U buy THESE KOCH Paper Products, U FUND THE GOP #p2 #tloc
BOYCOTT the below KOCH supermarket paper goods: When U buy THESE KOCH Paper Products, U FUND THE GOP #p2 #tloc

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Koch Web of Inflluence Exposed


Koch's web of influence


  Koch Inc., headquartered in Wichita, Kan., spends tens of millions of dollars to lobby Congress and federal agencies on issues ranging from oil and gas to the estate tax.   Larry W. Smith/Associated Press
Koch Industries is spending tens of millions to influence every facet of government that could affect its global empire

By

Friday, August 5, 2011

The Koch Spider Web


Virginia Democratic Congressman Rick Boucher was defeated last fall by Republican Morgan Griffith with the help of campaign ads paid for by Americans for Prosperity, a group with strong financial backing by the Koch brothers. (Photo: joebeone)
Allison Kilkenny, Truthout | News Analysis
An election took place last fall in Virginia that didn't garner national attention, but it should have - not for the candidates or issues - but for the giant pile of corporate cash manipulating events behind the scenes.

Rick Boucher, a then-28-year incumbent Democratic Congressman from the Ninth District - the longest-serving Congressman in that district since the Civil War - was surprisingly defeated by Republican Morgan Griffith. The upset came as a shock to many, since an early October poll showed Boucher ahead by double digits, including one measure earlier in the month that put him ahead by 10 percentage points.

The National Republican Congressional Committee spent around $600,000 in ads, and the media framed the defeat as a Blue Dog, Boucher losing due to his support for cap-and-trade policies.
Except, there was more to the story. A Democratic Party official from Virginia, who asked to remain anonymous because he is still serving in an official capacity, says the "Boucher is an enemy of coal" narrative is a lie and that actually far more sinister actions are at play in Virginia.
In fact, Boucher is the type of moderate Democrat that Progressives loathe. He is indeed a great friend of coal and went out of his way to preserve coals jobs in his district. Boucher did vote for cap and trade, but only because he feared the alternative was to leave regulation to the Environmental Protection Agency(EPA), which he said would be devastating for companies that rely on coal and their employees. The United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) actually praised Boucher for his commitment "to protect coal miners and the coal industry."
Griffith nonetheless seized upon the "Boucher is bad for coal" narrative and added it to his existing arsenal, accusing Boucher of being too cozy with President Obama (Boucher voted against both versions of the House health care bill, but refused to repeal the law).
These kinds of campaign smears aren't unusual, save for the fact that the "Boucher Betrayed Coal" ads that played in Virginia and that were so effective they eventually cost Boucher his seat, were paid for by the Americans for Prosperity, a special-interest group founded with the support of David H. Koch and Charles G. Koch of Koch Industries, and the same group that was so instrumental during the now infamous health care town hall debacles.
Boucher survived the Republican Revolution of 1994, but he could not survive propaganda funded by two of the wealthiest men in the world.
That wouldn't be the last time Virginia heard from the Kochs.
In January, a special election was held to fill the vacated seat of now-Congressman Griffith in the House of Delegates. The Republicans ran the former Chair of the Salem Democratic Committee, Greg Habeeb.
The Democratic nominee was Ginger Mumpower of Roanoke. Before the election, Mumpower held a press conference in December in front of a state-owned liquor store to publicize her opposition to Governor McDonnell's ill-fated plan to privatize such stores. The public was against the plan and the opposition was gaining momentum. That same day, Habeeb quicklyreversed, leaving him vulnerable to the most-dreaded political accusation: being a "flip-flopper."
The Roanoke Free Press called it a "holiday hallelujah" moment for the Mumpower campaign, and Habeeb's swift reversal seemed like a gift that would help Mumpower secure victory.
Then, my source received a voicemail from Paige Winfield Cunningham, a reporter with virginia.watchdog.org and also a contributor for The Washington Times, as did the Mumpower campaign. Before returning the call, the official briefly viewed the web site and quickly dismissed it as a "right-wing misinformation site." He didn't return Cunningham's phone call.
Later in the week, Cunningham left another message on the official's voicemail, which he also didn't return.
Soon after, the official visited virginia.watchdog.org and saw that Cunningham had run a story in which she stated the country club to which Mumpower used to belong stated that she had not paid her past dues and that her home had been sold in a foreclosure auction. Obviously, the story caused a lot of embarrassment for Mumpower during an already chaotic political season.
Meanwhile, Habeeb raised over $138,000 for his campaign, more than five times what the Mumpowercamp had in their reserves, and he secured the tentative support of the Roanoke Tea Party, though they did express concern that perhaps the anti-choice, anti-gay marriage, pro-gun Habeeb wasn't conservative enough.
Ultimately, he won 64 percent of the vote, defeating Mumford.
The whole experience left my source feeling uneasy. Who had fed the reporter that information and what was the deal with that web site?
As it turns out, the [insert your state here].watchdog.org web sites are a franchise. Tailor the brand with a state, though not all states are represented, and a whole list of anti-union, anti-regulation, right-wing misinformation articles springs up in one's browser.
Plug in "newjersey.watchdog.org" and the web site will regale one with tales of greedy pensioners and the evils of the EPA. Type "washington.watchdog.org," and anti-union propaganda, helpfully tailored for the state of Washington, pop up.
According to the hub web site, watchdog.org is the brainchild of the Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity, a 5o1(c)3 non-profit organization "dedicated to promoting new media journalism."
However, those "journalism" credentials have been called into question by groups like the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, which rates watchdog.org as being "highly ideological" and "somewhat transparent." The site has one editor, Steven Allen Adams, a stringer for Reuters and a contributor to a West Virginia entertainment news web site called Kanawha Valley Live that, sadly, closed operations in April.
The Franklin Center has well-established ties to right-wing groups, including the Sam Adams Alliance (SAA), which originally funded the organization. In addition to running partisan web sites, Franklin Center also funds partisan polls.
SAA, a non-profit organization based in Chicago, also has a litany of tries to the Kochs to the extent that the two groups function with a singular purpose. CEO Eric O'Keefe helped create American Majority, a Tea Party-candidate training organization. O'Keefe has attempted to take credit for being the architect of the entire Tea Party movement, and he once worked for Citizens for Congressional Reform, a project of David Koch's Citizens for a Sound Economy.
The group has always been wary of publicly displaying connections to their wealthy donors and even went so far as to scrub an internship recruitment page that originally connected it to Koch Industries:
"Interested parties can apply for a Sam Adams Alliance internship through the Charles G. Koch Summer Fellow Program administered by the Institute for Humane Studies and the State Policy Network."
The internship is still posted. Charles Koch is still funding it. However, the Koch reference is now suspiciously absent from the redesigned SAA web site.
Examined from above, the range of the Koch brother spider web is enormously impressive. Here, we have a gigantic cash machine disseminating funding to a litany of Astroturf groups and nonprofits (doesn't that always sound so innocent?) that then splinter off to fund other nonprofits, which set up openly partisan web sites staffed with an army of hack reporters charged with destroying the credibility of Democratic candidates.
Truly, it's a wonder to behold.
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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Smart ALEC: Why Are Corporations Writing State Law?

Thanks to ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange Council), corporations like EXXON and Koch Industries can buy the ability to co-author state laws in their favor. So THIS is the cost of democracy. But who ultimately pays the highest price? Keith gets shocking detail from The Nation's John Nichols, who's been covering ALEC extensively.

Related Links:

The Nation: ALEC Exposed


NPR: ALEC responds to The Nation articles


Bloomberg: Koch, Exxon Mobil Among Corporations Helping Write State Laws

About John Nichols

via Keith Olbermann
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FBI Targets 12 In Koch Industries Online Assault

Confidential affidavit details probe of attack on GOP benefactors


JULY 26--As part of its multi-front assault on “Anonymous,” the FBI has identified 12 “targets” it alleges participated in coordinated online assaults earlier this year against business web sites operated by Koch Industries, the Kansas-based conglomerate owned by billionaire brothers--and leading Republican benefactors--Charles and David Koch, The Smoking Gun has learned.
Details of the ongoing criminal investigation are contained in a confidential FBI affidavit obtained by TSG. That document, excerpted here, includes the names, addresses, and IP numbers of a dozen U.S. residents who are subjects of the federal probe of a series of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on Koch Industries web sites in February and March.
FBI agents last week raided the homes of individuals suspected of engaging in the Koch Industries DDoS campaign. The bureau’s target list appears to be a mix of actual DDoS participants as well as individuals whose names appear on the accounts from which attacks were launched.
So while the list includes the names of a college student studying computer science and a systems administrator/blogger who has written negatively about the Koch brothers's views on global warming, other targets appear to be the parents or relatives of DDoS participants, like the Ohio university administrator with two sons or the 51-year-old Iowa woman who works as a project manager for an insurance company or the 83-year-old Florida grandmother. Perhaps some targets simply never bothered to password protect their wireless Internet router, in the process giving others free access to their IP address.
Since the FBI affidavit likely includes the names of individuals who had nothing to do with the Koch Industries blitz, TSG has obscured the 12 names. A review of federal court records indicates that none of the targets listed in the affidavit have been charged in connection with the illegal DDoS campaign.
The FBI identified the targets with the aid of “firewall logs” provided by Koch Industries. These records reportedly revealed the IP addresses from which “a large number of connections” were directed at one or more of the company’s web sites. According to the FBI affidavit, such a traffic bombardment was “consistent with a denial of service attack.”
For example, Koch Industries records showed that one blogger accessed the firm’s Angel Soft toilet paper web site nearly 16,000 times during one nine-minute period in March. The DDoS attacks, according to the affidavit, also involved the Koch Industries web site (kochind.com) and a web site for Quilted Northern, another of the firm’s toilet paper brands.
A DDoS attack attempts to flood a site with so many requests that it leaves the site unavailable for legitimate visitors. Such a swamping of a site is often done via the “firing” of a tool known as a Low Orbit Ion Cannon. Originally developed as an open source method to test network vulnerabilities, the LOIC “can be modified to DDoS a target website by overwhelming that websites’ servers with a high volume of repeated requests until the site becomes inoperable,” according to the FBI affidavit.
Last week, the FBI arrested 14 individuals who were indicted for allegedly participating in a DDoS attack against PayPal in retaliation for the company suspending the account of Wikileaks. The 12 individuals suspected of involvement in the Koch Industries attack are being investigated for an identical federal violation, knowingly causing the transmission of “a program, information, code, or command” that intentionally causes damage to a “protected computer.”
The FBI probe of the online assault on Koch Industries began after the company contacted the bureau’s Kansas City office on February 27 to report that its Quilted Northern site was under siege. Agent Richard Thompson was assigned to the case, which quickly grew to include DDoS efforts directed at the two other Koch Industries web sites.
The affidavit reveals that three days before the first DDoS attack was launched, Koch Industries received an e-mail warning that “Anonymous” was plotting an attack on several of the company’s web properties.  Sent to kochind.com from the account “boxoftrial@gmail.com,” the message carried the subject line, “URGENT: Cyberattack Planned on Koch Web Properties.” The identity of the e-mail’s author is not disclosed in the FBI affidavit, nor is it clear whether agents even know who gave the company a heads-up about the plans of “Anonymous.”
The online confederation of hackers and activists targeted the Koch brothers in connection with the pair’s support of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who earlier this year launched a crackdown on public employees unions that included the elimination of collective bargaining rights for state workers. In retaliation, “Anonymous” launched Operation Wisconsin, an effort aimed at exploiting “online loopholes and vulnerabilities into the systems and servers related to” the Koch brothers and Walker.
Charles (left) and David Koch are pictured above.
The FBI alleges that “Anonymous” publicized and organized the DDoS attacks via several Internet Real Chat (IRC) channels, including “#opkochblock” and “#opeternalruin.” Additionally, “Anonymous” members referred to postings on 4chan.org’s /b/ board which sought individuals willing to participate in the Koch Industries attack. One IRC message referred to an attempt to recruit 4channers: “need to be ready, cause im gearing up to bring /b/ over here for some brunch DDos.”
At the outset of the Koch Industries assault, an IRC poster asked if the Quilted Northern web site was being targeted. The response, the FBI noted, was, “yes we need moar loic gunhands, please target: quiltednorthern.com.” Subsequent advice included, “if you need more cannons, you have to spread the word of the attack” and “spam /b/.” (8 pages)

Thursday, July 21, 2011

18 current articles on ALEC

Koch, Exxon Mobil Among Corporations Helping Write State Laws

Bloomberg - Alison Fitzgerald - ‎6 hours ago‎
The corporations, both ALEC members, took a seat at the legislative drafting table beside elected officials and policy analysts by paying a fee between $3000 and $10000, according to documents obtained by Bloomberg News. ...

Pro-Business Group Drafts "Model" Contracting Bills for State Legislatures

Project on Government Oversight (blog) - Neil Gordon - ‎14 hours ago‎
POGO has found several contracting measures among the cache of bills posted by the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) on its ALEC Exposed website. CMD created a stir last week when it posted the full text of more than 800 model bills ...

VOICES: Statehouse Inc.

Facing South - Phil Mattera - ‎20 hours ago‎
The blame for this rests in no small part with a shadowy organization called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Thanks to a WikiLeaks-like initiative by the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), we now know a lot more about the way that ...

Website Exposes Big Business' Influence Over NH Legislation

Public News Service - ‎Jul 20, 2011‎
The site, ALECexposed.org, targets ALEC, the American Legislative Exchange Council, a powerful group funded by lawmakers and at least 300 corporations. The new website shows hundreds of "model" bills, which served as blueprints for such legislation as ...

Save Democracy: Tell Corporations to Dump ALEC

AlterNet - Mary Bottari - ‎Jul 19, 2011‎
The Center for Media and Democracy discovered ALEC is behind corporate political control, and now is the time to fight against the sale of our democracy. Sign up to stay up to date on the latest Civil Liberties headlines via email. ...

ALEC Exposed: Milton Friedman's Little Shop of Horrors

Huffington Post (blog) - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
(ALEC) This week the Center for Media and Democracy made available to the public over 800 ALEC "model" bills and resolutions on a new website, ALECexposed.org. We display the documents, crafted by corporations, and right-wing state legislators behind ...

Commentary: Vos and model legislation from corporations

Journal Times - ‎Jul 19, 2011‎
As ALEC's model legislation is reviewed, a pattern emerged that until now was only suspected. The similarity of legislation proposed and passed in states like Ohio, Florida, Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin could not be accidental - all have obvious ...

Protests Planned for ALEC Annual Meeting in New Orleans August 5th

Death and Taxes - Dj Pangburn - ‎Jul 19, 2011‎
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)—a club for corporations and right-wing state legislators and governors—is holding its annual meeting in New Orleans August 1-6th. Protests are planned for August 5th ...

Why Anarchists Should Protest the ALEC Conference in New Orleans, August 5th

Infoshop News - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is coming to town! They are a bunch of nasty fuckers who bring corporations together with state legislators so corporate lawyers can hand pre-written bills to the politicians, who then try to get the ...

ALEC Exposed: Business Domination Inc.

The Nation. - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
In the world according to ALEC, competing firms in free markets are the only real source of social efficiency and wealth. Government contributes nothing but security. Outside of this function, it should be demonized, starved or privatized. ...

Can US Hold Corporations Accountable Anymore?

Care2.com - Dave Johnson - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
“On July 13, 2011, the Center for Media and Democracy unveiled a set of over 800 "model" bills and resolutions secretly voted on by corporations and politicians through the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). ...

At last! But what inspired media heat on ALEC?

Milwaukee Labor Press - Dominique Paul Noth - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
It's all fascinating to many of us who wrote about ALEC before this new wave of investigative reporting. But we would all be remiss to not remember the nonpartisan warning shot that started it all. It came from a pointed but mildly inquisitive blog by ...

Exposé: How Corporations and the Wealthy Write and Pass Bills at the State Level

Uprising - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
The Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) published an expose of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) this week. ALEC is an organization that brings together corporations and conservative state lawmakers with the stated purpose “to conduct a ...

Media reports focus on ALEC, corporate ties

Lawrence Journal World (blog) - Scott Rothschild - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
The Kansas Legislature has worked on several ALEC-inspired bills, including a resolution criticizing the EPA for greenhouse gas regulations, calling the regulations "EPA's regulatory train wreck." ALEC also advocates for the repeal of federal health ...

ALEC Exposed Website Reveals the Corporate Influence in State Legislation

Death and Taxes - Dj Pangburn - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
The Center for Media and Democracy has launched a website called ALEC Exposed, which details the various “model bills” championed by corporations and currently moving through Republican-led state governments. ...

Koch Brothers' ALEC Tentacles Creep Into Your State

truthout - Allison Kilkenny - ‎Jul 18, 2011‎
Thanks to the work from the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), investigative journalists like Beau Hodai and The Nation's exposé, we now know that ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange Council), a front group for major corporations, ...

Wisconsin Bills Connected to Koch Bros/ ALEC

ShortNews.com - ‎Jul 17, 2011‎
The Center for Media and Democracy has obtained files from a whistleblower who worked at ALECALEC ( American Legislative Exchange Council) Is funded by Koch Bros. ALEC has around 800 Bills and Resolutions they have given Conservative lawmakers. ...