Wednesday, March 30, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Bess Levin | Orgies, Beheadings, Jewish Space Lasers: Everything Kevin McCarthy Had to "Speak" to GOP Lawmakers About

 

 

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30 March 22

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Kevin McCarthy addresses reporters during a news conference July 1. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty)
FOCUS: Bess Levin | Orgies, Beheadings, Jewish Space Lasers: Everything Kevin McCarthy Had to "Speak" to GOP Lawmakers About
Bess Levin, Vanity Fair
Levin writes: "Madison Cawthorn is the latest to be pulled aside."

Madison Cawthorn is the latest to be pulled aside.


When he’s not blaming Joe Biden for the latest global crisis, it appears that most of House minority leader Kevin McCarthy’s job these days revolves around giving stern but meaningless talks to members of his own caucus for the ridiculous, crazy, racist, and/or violent things they do and say. Who’s the latest to get pulled aside for one such chat? No real surprise here: It’s Madison Cawthorn, the 26-year-old North Carolina Republican who once had Adolf Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest on his vacation bucket list, and recently called Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “thug.”

Those things, though, apparently didn’t necessitate a chat with the GOP leader; in this case, the two will be having a conversation because Cawthorn claimed on a podcast last week that people he’s “looked up to” in Washington regularly invite him to orgies and use cocaine in his presence, which didn’t go over great with his colleagues.

Earlier today, Politico reported that during a close-door Republican meeting on Tuesday, GOP members of the House “stood up to air their anger and frustration over Cawthorn portraying his own colleagues as bacchanalian and sexual deviants.” Arkansas representative Steve Womack, for one, reportedly said that though he rarely speaks out during these weekly sessions, he couldn’t in good conscience let this one slide, now that he’s personally received questions about these alleged cocaine-fueled orgies. (Womack added, per Politico, that “many lawmakers go to bed at 9 p.m. and still use fax machines and flip phones.”) Others “wondered if [Cawthorn] made the comments consciously in a bid to portray himself above such acts,” given that the North Carolina representative has previously been accused of sexual misconduct. (Cawthorn has denied such allegations and claimed during his campaign, “I have never done anything sexually inappropriate in my life.”)

Anyway, McCarthy’s response was that he plans to speak with Cawthorn about the claims, which is what McCarthy says every time one of his members does something ridiculous, racist, or violent. So we thought it was time to start a list of all the things McCarthy has had to pull a lawmaker aside for:

  • The time Representative Paul Gosar made and disseminated a video depicting him swinging a sword at Joe Biden’s head and decapitating Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (McCarthy told CNN he spoke to Gosar, without condemning Gosar’s behavior)

  • The time Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene called for Nancy Pelosi to be executed for treason, harassed a school-shooting survivor on the street, blamed the California wildfires on Jewish laser beams, and espoused the ideas of QAnon (McCarthy refused to discipline the congresswoman and claimed that, during a private conversation, she “recognized” that she needed to hold herself to a higher standard)

  • The time Greene spoke at a white nationalist conference (McCarthy admitted this was bad but, following a conversation with Greene, declined to hold her accountable, saying, “my conversations with my members are exactly that.”)

  • The time Representative Lauren Boebert made Islamophobic comments about Representative Ilhan Omar (McCarthy obviously refused to condemn her but, rest assured, they had a chat!)

Naturally, McCarthy does not appear to have had any of these performative talks with members of his party over their attempt to help Donald Trump overturn the last election, as that’s the kind of behavior he welcomes.

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RSN: FOCUS: More Than 4 Million Have Fled Russia's 'Senseless' War on Ukraine, Says UN

 


 

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30 March 22

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People, mainly women and children, arrive at Przemyśl train station in Poland on Wednesday after traveling from Ukraine. (photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
FOCUS: More Than 4 Million Have Fled Russia's 'Senseless' War on Ukraine, Says UN
Jon Henley, Guardian UK
Henley writes: "More than 4 million people have fled Russia's 'utterly senseless' war on Ukraine, the United Nations has said, as the Kremlin played down hopes of an early breakthrough a day after peace talks between the two sides."

Speed and scale of refugee crisis unprecedented in Europe since WW2, says UN refugees commissioner

More than 4 million people have fled Russia’s “utterly senseless” war on Ukraine, the United Nations has said, as the Kremlin played down hopes of an early breakthrough a day after peace talks between the two sides.

“We cannot state that there was anything too promising or any breakthroughs,” the Kremlin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said on Wednesday. He said it was “positive” that Kyiv had outlined its demands but there was “a lot of work to be done”.

Ukraine and its western allies dismissed a promised Russian military pullback from near Kyiv as a strategic ploy after heavy losses, and Moscow’s bombardment of cities from Chernihiv in the north to Mariupol in the south continued unabated.

The UN refugee agency said 4,019,287 people had fled abroad since the start of Russia’s invasion on 24 February, surpassing its initial estimate that the war would create up to 4 million refugees. More than 90% are women and children.

The UN high commissioner for refugees, Filippo Grandi, said on Twitter he had just arrived in Ukraine and was beginning discussions with authorities, the UN and other partners on “ways to increase our support to people affected and displaced by this senseless war”.

The agency has said the speed and scale of the displacement was unprecedented in Europe since the second world war. The UN’s International Organization for Migration said that as of mid-March, 6.48 million people were also internally displaced.

“They need urgent, life-saving aid,” the organisation said on Wednesday. Before the war, Ukraine had a population of 37 million in the regions under government control, excluding Crimea and the Russian-controlled regions in the east.

At the talks in Istanbul on Tuesday, Ukraine proposed a framework for peace under which it would remain neutral, with its security guaranteed by third-party countries through a treaty similar to Nato’s article 5 mutual defence commitment.

The proposals, intended to come into force only in the event of a complete ceasefire, also included a 15-year consultation period on the status of the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow seized from Ukraine and annexed in 2014.

Moscow described the talks as “meaningful” and “constructive” and subsequently pledged to “radically reduce” its military activity in northern Ukraine as a goodwill gesture to “to increase mutual trust” in the peace negotiations.

But Peskov said on Wednesday that Crimea was part of Russia and the Russian constitution precluded discussing the fate of any Russian region with anyone else. He also said Moscow wanted the substance of discussions to remain private.

Western analysts and diplomats noted that Russia’s offer to partially pull back came after its advance, thwarted by stiff resistance and supply problems, had all but stalled, and that Moscow had already said it was refocusing its military goals on expanding the territory held by pro-Russia separatists in the eastern Donbas regions.

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, made clear he took nothing Moscow said at face value. “Ukrainians are not naive people,” he said. “Ukrainians have already learned … that the only thing they can trust is a concrete result.”

The UN on Wednesday also named three human rights experts, led by a Norwegian judge, Erik Møse, to investigate possible war crimes in Ukraine, where Russia’s armed forces are accused of killing and inflicting suffering on civilians.

More than 4.3m refugees have fled the war in Ukraine

The UN’s human rights body agreed in a historic vote this month to set up the highest-level investigation possible into Russia’s actions since the start of the invasion, including the bombing and shelling of residential areas. Moscow denies targeting civilians.

While western sanctions have cut Russia out of much of world trade, the country remains a major supplier of oil and gas to Europe with EU governments deeply divided over how fast their economies can be weaned off Russian energy.

Germany, Russia’s biggest gas customer, on Wednesday announced an “early warning” of a possible emergency if Russia cuts off supplies, a move that could lead to the government rationing power. Its economy minister, Robert Habeck, urged consumers and companies to reduce consumption, saying “every kilowatt-hour counts”.

Isolated diplomatically as well as economically, meanwhile, Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, insisted on a visit to Beijing that Russia would move “together with China and our sympathisers … towards a multipolar, just, democratic world order”.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said Moscow and Beijing would continue their efforts in “advancing global multipolarity and the democratisation of international relations”, adding: “Our striving for peace has no limits, our upholding of security has no limits, our opposition towards hegemony has no limits.”


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Without Registering as Stock Exchanges, Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial Account for More Stock Trading than the New York Stock Exchange

 


Without Registering as Stock Exchanges, Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial Account for More Stock Trading than the New York Stock Exchange


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: March 29, 2022 ~

Robert J. Jackson Jr., NYU Law Professor and Former SEC Commissioner

Robert J. Jackson Jr., NYU Law Professor and Former SEC Commissioner

The above headline regarding Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial comes from a report authored by John Detrixhe that was published at Quartz in February of last year. The report found that as of December 2020 the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) had a 19.9 percent share of stock market trading versus 13.4 for Citadel Securities and 9.4 percent for Virtu Financial. This gave Citadel Securities and Virtu a combined stock market trading share of 22.8 percent versus 19.9 for the NYSE.

The big problem with this picture is that neither Citadel Securities or Virtu Financial are registered as stock exchanges and neither are regulated by the SEC as stock exchanges. Citadel Securities is a broker-dealer that pays for order flow from at least nine online brokerage firms and has a dubious history of regulatory fines and abusive behavior. Virtu Financial is a market maker and high frequency trading firm that bragged in its IPO prospectus that it had only one losing day in 1,238 days of trading.

Tomorrow at 2 p.m., a Subcommittee of the House Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing on “Oversight of America’s Stock Exchanges: Examining Their Role in Our Economy.” The Subcommittee has released a revealing Memorandum that looks at the myriad problems afflicting stock trading in the U.S. and undermining trust in U.S. markets as the standard for markets around the world. Consider the following paragraph from the Memorandum which focuses on market concentration:

“There are a total of 24 stock exchanges in the U.S. registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as NSEs [National Stock Exchanges] under section 6(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1933. Among these 24 exchanges, 17 are owned by three companies: the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), Nasdaq,Inc.; and CBOE Global Markets, Inc.”

To put that another way, 70.8 percent of the registered exchanges are owned by just three companies – all of which are now for-profit, publicly-traded companies rather than non-profit, utility-type businesses operating in the public’s interest – the prior U.S. model for stock exchanges that built the United States’ reputation for running the most respected stock trading structure in the world.

Accentuating the fact that stock trading in the U.S. has moved from stock exchanges charged with creating a level playing field for all participants, regardless of the size of their bank account, to a concentrated cabal of dubious actors was the announcement on May 5, 2020 that the SEC had approved an application to become a stock exchange by the Members Exchange (MEMX).

Investors in MEMX include both Citadel and Virtu along with 5-count felon JPMorganserially-charged Citigroup, as well as Morgan Stanley, UBS, and Goldman Sachs. (The latter three were intimately involved in providing the obscene leverage that blew up the Archegos Capital Management family office hedge fund last March, generating over $10 billion in losses to global banks.) Other investors in MEMX include TD Ameritrade, Bank of America Securities, BlackRock, Charles Schwab, Fidelity Investments, FlowTraders, Jane Street, Manikay Partners, Wells Fargo, and Williams Trading.

Dark Pools owned by JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, UBS, Goldman Sachs, and Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch have already taken substantial trading away from lit and regulated stock exchanges and moved it into their unlit and largely unregulated trading platforms known as Dark Pools.

The SEC’s rubber-stamping of this cabal to further concentrate their power over trading on Wall Street by forming a joint stock exchange is effectively endorsing a robber baron structure for stock trading in the U.S.

No congressional hearings were ever held as to whether Members Exchange represented violations of anti-trust law. It is likely instructive to know that the SEC approval for the Members Exchange came while Jay Clayton was serving as SEC Chair in the Trump administration. Clayton had previously represented 8 of the 10 largest Wall Street banks at Big Law firm Sullivan & Cromwell in the three years prior to taking his SEC seat.

After the stock market crash of 1929 and onset of the Great Depression, the U.S. Senate Banking Committee conducted three years of hearings into the self-dealing and rigged trading by the major Wall Street banks that had led to the historic economic downturn. The hearings generated front page headlines and galvanized public pressure, which forced Congress to pass the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which created the Securities and Exchange Commission and empowered it to register, regulate and oversee brokerage firms, clearing agencies, and stock exchanges.

The 34 Act, as it’s known on Wall Street, specifically cited the national interest in explaining why stock exchanges had to be Federally regulated. The legislation makes the following critical points on how manipulated trading can negatively impact the U.S. economy:

“Frequently the prices of securities on such exchanges and markets are susceptible to manipulation and control, and the dissemination of such prices gives rise to excessive speculation, resulting in sudden and unreasonable fluctuations in the prices of securities which (a) cause alternately unreasonable expansion and unreasonable contraction of the volume of credit available for trade, transportation, and industry in interstate commerce, (b) hinder the proper appraisal of the value of securities and thus prevent a fair calculation of taxes owing to the United States and to the several States by owners, buyers, and sellers of securities, and (c) prevent the fair valuation of collateral for bank loans and/or obstruct the effective operation of the national banking system and Federal Reserve System.

“National emergencies, which produce widespread unemployment and the dislocation of trade, transportation, and industry, and which burden interstate commerce and adversely affect the general welfare, are precipitated, intensified, and prolonged by manipulation and sudden and unreasonable fluctuations of security prices and by excessive speculation on such exchanges and markets, and to meet such emergencies the Federal Government is put to such great expense as to burden the national credit.”

The financial crisis of 2008, which left millions of Americans in foreclosure and jobless and the U.S. economy in the worst shape since the Great Depression, was a direct result of failure to regulate the Wall Street cabal.

And yet, here we are 14 years later with the same cabal allowed to operate their own Dark Pools in which they trade the shares of their own Wall Street bank stocks along with thousands of other companies, and then get swift approval from the SEC to team up and run their own stock exchange.

And on top of the lax response from Congress to reform this dangerous stock trading structure, the hearing tomorrow has decided to call industry cronies to testify. There will be a witness from SIFMA, Wall Street’s trade association which has over 60 lobbyists whispering in the ear of Congress and another witness from the World Federation of Exchanges, which calls itself the “global industry group for exchanges and clearing houses.”

Another witness scheduled to testify on Wednesday is Michael S. Piwowar, who likes to highlight his credentials as a former SEC Commissioner and one-time acting Chair of the SEC but failed last year to highlight the fact that he was also being paid as a Senior Advisor to a Wall Street trading firm called GTS. Republicans are apparently enthralled with calling Piwowar to testify, despite his conflicts.

A breath of fresh air in the witness lineup is Robert J. Jackson Jr., a law professor at New York University School of Law and former SEC Commissioner. For what you can likely expect to hear from Professor Jackson on Wednesday on the litany of conflicts of interest at stock exchanges and trading platforms in the U.S., you can read the speech he delivered at George Mason University in 2018.

Related Article:

Seven Years after Michael Lewis Described on National TV How the U.S. Stock Market Is Rigged, SEC Chair Gensler Says He’s Going to Tackle Market Structure




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