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Bestinshow's photo
Sun 06/09/13 10:39 AM


I





SS made this statement and nobody has addressed it.

The treason here is not on his part! It is on the part of those who committed these acts in the name of the American people!

Address the atrocities carried out by men taking orders from men higher up the ladder. People are being murdered in your names and mine on a daily basis. I say no to murder, what say you.



thats called an opinion, and it doesn't really matter... are you a lawyer that deals in war crimes? what makes you such an expert on what war crimes or not by looking at a 15 year old piece of footage, and you decide they are war crimes...

your looking at footage that you don't know if it has been edited or not, and then you make judgement calls... the treason was solely on him, and only him...

everything your saying is just your opinion, and means very little to the USMC, people that are experts on what is and what is not war crimes...
Dude you are so wrong and misinformed on so many levels its hardly worth the words. The Geneva convention and Terms of Nuremburg binds this country to certain standards and if it makes you feel better our entire government Dems amd repubs are both guilty as hell. Lets not leave out our so called media watchdogs, what a wretched joke this country has become.
amazing how you refuse to understand the difference between an opinion and fact



Men of conscience have opinions.


opinions are good, i never have a problem with anyone's opinion...it's when people don't realize the difference between opinion and fact that bothers me...
I am sure this topic assaults your reality, I remember when I was a kid and found out Santa Clause was a fraud.

Bestinshow's photo
Sun 06/09/13 10:36 AM
Clearly this student was not paying attention in Biology Class.

Revoke her diploma.

Bestinshow's photo
Sun 06/09/13 10:34 AM

:laughing: :laughing: :laughing:
That was always Common Knowledge!
Where have you been?Not paid attention,hmm? :laughing:
So you think its funny? How absurd.

Lets all sing together now.

Land of the free and the home of the brave.........

WORST National Anthem EVER.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3F7FeRhclM

Bestinshow's photo
Sun 06/09/13 08:02 AM
The government really is gathering all your information.

Hackers affiliated with the Anonymous collective have leaked a US Department of Defense memo relating to the PRISM program, revealing that the National Security Agency has secretly gathered intelligence on millions of Americans for years.

The hacktivists, who have long sought complete transparency online and elsewhere, published a total of thirteen documents, one of which outlines the US government’s “NetOps Strategic Vision” for monitoring the Internet.

The documents are mostly pulled from 2008, just after when the government reportedly began using PRISM to mine servers at technology companies including Microsoft and Yahoo. An NSA slideshow published Thursday by the Guardian and the Washington Post reveals the intelligence community first gained access to Google in January of 2009 and Facebook in June of the same year.

http://rt.com/usa/anonymous-leaks-prism-nsa-docs-395/

Bestinshow's photo
Fri 06/07/13 05:59 PM





SS made this statement and nobody has addressed it.

The treason here is not on his part! It is on the part of those who committed these acts in the name of the American people!

Address the atrocities carried out by men taking orders from men higher up the ladder. People are being murdered in your names and mine on a daily basis. I say no to murder, what say you.



thats called an opinion, and it doesn't really matter... are you a lawyer that deals in war crimes? what makes you such an expert on what war crimes or not by looking at a 15 year old piece of footage, and you decide they are war crimes...

your looking at footage that you don't know if it has been edited or not, and then you make judgement calls... the treason was solely on him, and only him...

everything your saying is just your opinion, and means very little to the USMC, people that are experts on what is and what is not war crimes...
Dude you are so wrong and misinformed on so many levels its hardly worth the words. The Geneva convention and Terms of Nuremburg binds this country to certain standards and if it makes you feel better our entire government Dems amd repubs are both guilty as hell. Lets not leave out our so called media watchdogs, what a wretched joke this country has become.
amazing how you refuse to understand the difference between an opinion and fact
Its a fact we signed at Nuremburg, its a fact we signed the Geneva conventions and its a fact the military operates under the Military code of Justice. Read them......

Bestinshow's photo
Fri 06/07/13 03:32 PM



SS made this statement and nobody has addressed it.

The treason here is not on his part! It is on the part of those who committed these acts in the name of the American people!

Address the atrocities carried out by men taking orders from men higher up the ladder. People are being murdered in your names and mine on a daily basis. I say no to murder, what say you.



thats called an opinion, and it doesn't really matter... are you a lawyer that deals in war crimes? what makes you such an expert on what war crimes or not by looking at a 15 year old piece of footage, and you decide they are war crimes...

your looking at footage that you don't know if it has been edited or not, and then you make judgement calls... the treason was solely on him, and only him...

everything your saying is just your opinion, and means very little to the USMC, people that are experts on what is and what is not war crimes...
Dude you are so wrong and misinformed on so many levels its hardly worth the words. The Geneva convention and Terms of Nuremburg binds this country to certain standards and if it makes you feel better our entire government Dems amd repubs are both guilty as hell. Lets not leave out our so called media watchdogs, what a wretched joke this country has become.

Bestinshow's photo
Thu 06/06/13 06:26 PM




A legal duty to report war crimes

Manning is charged with crimes for sending hundreds of thousands of classified files, documents and videos, including the "Collateral Murder" video, the "Iraq War Logs," the "Afghan War Logs" and State Department cables to Wikileaks. Many of the things he transmitted contain evidence of war crimes.

The "Collateral Murder" video depicts a US Apache attack helicopter killing 12 civilians and wounding two children on the ground in Baghdad in 2007. The helicopter then fired on and killed the people trying to rescue the wounded. Finally, a US tank drove over one of the bodies, cutting the man in half. These acts constitute three separate war crimes.

Manning fulfilled his legal duty to report war crimes. He complied with his legal duty to obey lawful orders but also his legal duty to disobey unlawful orders. ...........................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://truth-out.org/news/item/16731-bradley-mannings-legal-duty-to-expose-war-crimes

Military code of justice....... He is innocent, we are guilty.


no, those facts are misrepresented a bit... the military always investigates these types of so called "war crimes" does what needs to be done internally. when documents like these get out, it compromises their investigation.

Bradley had a clearance, secret, i believe, and they do not hand those out easily. he knew not to do it, it doesn't matter why... they only way he might not get life is the liberals save him, but i think even the libs know how bad he screwed up.
BS on that we the american people would never had known of these atrocities had it not been for wiki leaks and nothing was done to the savages who committed the war crimes.




a little one sided, as usual... you don't know that any "war crimes" were ever even committed... i watched the real video of the helo shooting the 12, and the part wikileaks left out was one of them shoved a RPG launcher in the white van before the shooting. and the tape clearly shows the followed their orders, as they have to check in with the commander at the base before they fire. he ok'ed it... thats why these videos are surpressed to the public, because of hotheads like you that have it in for bush, anything about his presidency... 7 years after his legacy, you have yet to whine about the currant admin killing kids with drones and lying even worse than whatever you think bush did... you can stop the hate, bush is gone and not coming back..
That is a total fabrication I saw the video please post your link to your version love to see it..........

Bestinshow's photo
Thu 06/06/13 05:52 PM
Enshrined in the US Army Subject Schedule No. 27-1 is "the obligation to report all violations of the law of war." At his guilty plea hearing, Manning explained that he had gone to his chain of command and asked them to investigate the "Collateral Murder" video and other "war porn," but his superiors refused. "I was disturbed by the response to injured children," Manning stated. He was also bothered by the soldiers depicted in the video who "seemed to not value human life by referring to [their targets] as 'dead bastards.' "
http://truth-out.org/news/item/16731-bradley-mannings-legal-duty-to-expose-war-crimes
We need no further proof of our mainstream media being the propaganda arm of the "government".

Bestinshow's photo
Thu 06/06/13 05:48 PM


A legal duty to report war crimes

Manning is charged with crimes for sending hundreds of thousands of classified files, documents and videos, including the "Collateral Murder" video, the "Iraq War Logs," the "Afghan War Logs" and State Department cables to Wikileaks. Many of the things he transmitted contain evidence of war crimes.

The "Collateral Murder" video depicts a US Apache attack helicopter killing 12 civilians and wounding two children on the ground in Baghdad in 2007. The helicopter then fired on and killed the people trying to rescue the wounded. Finally, a US tank drove over one of the bodies, cutting the man in half. These acts constitute three separate war crimes.

Manning fulfilled his legal duty to report war crimes. He complied with his legal duty to obey lawful orders but also his legal duty to disobey unlawful orders. ...........................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://truth-out.org/news/item/16731-bradley-mannings-legal-duty-to-expose-war-crimes

Military code of justice....... He is innocent, we are guilty.


no, those facts are misrepresented a bit... the military always investigates these types of so called "war crimes" does what needs to be done internally. when documents like these get out, it compromises their investigation.

Bradley had a clearance, secret, i believe, and they do not hand those out easily. he knew not to do it, it doesn't matter why... they only way he might not get life is the liberals save him, but i think even the libs know how bad he screwed up.
BS on that we the american people would never had known of these atrocities had it not been for wiki leaks and nothing was done to the savages who committed the war crimes.


Bestinshow's photo
Thu 06/06/13 05:08 PM
Enough evidence exists to raise questions without the shameless charge of "conspiracy theorists"

Bestinshow's photo
Thu 06/06/13 05:04 PM
A legal duty to report war crimes

Manning is charged with crimes for sending hundreds of thousands of classified files, documents and videos, including the "Collateral Murder" video, the "Iraq War Logs," the "Afghan War Logs" and State Department cables to Wikileaks. Many of the things he transmitted contain evidence of war crimes.

The "Collateral Murder" video depicts a US Apache attack helicopter killing 12 civilians and wounding two children on the ground in Baghdad in 2007. The helicopter then fired on and killed the people trying to rescue the wounded. Finally, a US tank drove over one of the bodies, cutting the man in half. These acts constitute three separate war crimes.

Manning fulfilled his legal duty to report war crimes. He complied with his legal duty to obey lawful orders but also his legal duty to disobey unlawful orders. ...........................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://truth-out.org/news/item/16731-bradley-mannings-legal-duty-to-expose-war-crimes

Military code of justice....... He is innocent, we are guilty.

Bestinshow's photo
Wed 06/05/13 07:27 PM
Bradley Manning Is Guilty of “Aiding the Enemy”—If the Enemy Is Democracy.


Of all the charges against Bradley Manning, the most pernicious—and revealing—is “aiding the enemy.”Pfc. Bradley Manning (Portrait by Robert Shetterly)

A blogger at The New Yorker, Amy Davidson, raised a pair of big questions that now loom over the courtroom at Fort Meade and over the entire country:

* “Would it aid the enemy, for example, to expose war crimes committed by American forces or lies told by the American government?”

* “In that case, who is aiding the enemy—the whistleblower or the perpetrators themselves?”

When the deceptive operation of the warfare state can’t stand the light of day, truth-tellers are a constant hazard. And culpability must stay turned on its head.

That’s why accountability was upside-down when the U.S. Army prosecutor laid out the government’s case against Bradley Manning in an opening statement: “This is a case about a soldier who systematically harvested hundreds of thousands of classified documents and dumped them onto the Internet, into the hands of the enemy—material he knew, based on his training, would put the lives of fellow soldiers at risk.”

If so, those fellow soldiers have all been notably lucky; the Pentagon has admitted that none died as a result of Manning’s leaks in 2010. But many of his fellow soldiers lost their limbs or their lives in U.S. warfare made possible by the kind of lies that the U.S. government is now prosecuting Bradley Manning for exposing.

In the real world, as Glenn Greenwald has pointed out, prosecution for leaks is extremely slanted. “Let’s apply the government's theory in the Manning case to one of the most revered journalists in Washington: Bob Woodward, who has become one of America’s richest reporters, if not the richest, by obtaining and publishing classified information far more sensitive than anything WikiLeaks has ever published,” Greenwald wrote in January.

He noted that “one of Woodward's most enthusiastic readers was Osama bin Laden,” as a 2011 video from al-Qaeda made clear. And Greenwald added that “the same Bob Woodward book [Obama’s Wars] that Osama bin Laden obviously read and urged everyone else to read disclosed numerous vital national security secrets far more sensitive than anything Bradley Manning is accused of leaking. Doesn't that necessarily mean that top-level government officials who served as Woodward’s sources, and the author himself, aided and abetted al-Qaida?”

While pick-and-choose secrecy is serving Washington’s top war-makers, the treatment of U.S. citizens is akin to the classic description of how to propagate mushrooms: keeping them in the dark and feeding them ********.

But the prosecution of Manning is about carefully limiting the information that reaches the governed. Officials who run U.S. foreign policy choose exactly what classified info to dole out to the public. They leak like self-serving sieves to mainline journalists such as Woodward, who has divulged plenty of “Top Secret” information—a category of classification higher than anything Bradley Manning is accused of leaking.

While pick-and-choose secrecy is serving Washington’s top war-makers, the treatment of U.S. citizens is akin to the classic description of how to propagate mushrooms: keeping them in the dark and feeding them ********.

In effect, for top managers of the warfare state, “the enemy” is democracy.

Let’s pursue the inquiry put forward by columnist Amy Davidson early this year. If it is aiding the enemy “to expose war crimes committed by American forces or lies told by the American government,” then in reality “who is aiding the enemy—the whistleblower or the perpetrators themselves?”

Candid answers to such questions are not only inadmissible in the military courtroom where Bradley Manning is on trial. Candor is also excluded from the national venues where the warfare state preens itself as virtue’s paragon.

Yet ongoing actions of the U.S. government have hugely boosted the propaganda impact and recruiting momentum of forces that Washington publicly describes as “the enemy.” Policies under the Bush and Obama administrations—in Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen and beyond, with hovering drones, missile strikes and night raids, at prisons such as Abu Ghraib, Bagram, Guantanamo and secret rendition torture sites—have “aided the enemy” on a scale so enormous that it makes the alleged (and fictitious) aid to named enemies from Manning’s leaks infinitesimal in comparison.

Blaming the humanist PFC messenger for “aiding the enemy” is an exercise in self-exculpation by an administration that cannot face up to its own vast war crimes.

While prosecuting Bradley Manning, the prosecution may name al-Qaeda, indigenous Iraqi forces, the Taliban or whoever. But the unnamed “enemy”—the real adversary that the Pentagon and the Obama White House are so eager to quash—is the incessant striving for democracy that requires informed consent of the governed.

The forces that top U.S. officials routinely denounce as “the enemy” will never threaten the power of the USA’s dominant corporate-military elites. But the unnamed “enemy” aided by Bradley Manning’s courageous actions—the people at the grassroots who can bring democracy to life beyond rhetoric—are a real potential threat to that power.

Accusations of aid and comfort to the enemy were profuse after Martin Luther King Jr. moved forward to expose the Johnson administration’s deceptions and the U.S. military’s atrocities. Most profoundly, with his courageous stand against the war in Vietnam, King earned his Nobel Peace Prize during the years after he won it in 1964.

Bradley Manning may never win the Nobel Peace Prize, but he surely deserves it. Close to 60,000 people have already signed a petition urging the Norwegian Nobel Committee to award the prize to Manning. To become a signer, click here.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/06/05

Bestinshow's photo
Tue 06/04/13 05:10 PM


The 9/11 conspiracy theorist who changed his mind
Charlie Veitch was once one of Britain’s leading conspiracy theorists, a friend of David Icke and Alex Jones and a 9/11 'truther'. But when he had a change of heart, the threats began. He talks to Will Storr.

'The poster boy for a mad movement': Charlie Veitch Photo: Will Storr
By Will Storr7:00AM BST 29 May 201359 Comments
On a June afternoon in the middle of New York’s Times Square, Charlie Veitch took out his phone, turned on the camera and began recording a statement about the 2001 destruction of the World Trade Center.
“I was a real firm believer in the conspiracy that it was a controlled demolition,” he started. “That it was not in any way as the official story explained. But, this universe is truly one of smoke screens, illusions and wrong paths. If you are presented with new evidence, take it on, even if it contradicts what you or your group want to believe. You have to give the truth the greatest respect, and I do.”
To most people, it doesn’t sound like a particularly outrageous statement to make. In fact, the rest of the video was almost banal in its observations; that the destruction of the towers may actually have been caused by the two 767 passenger jets that flew into them. But to those who subscribed to Veitch’s YouTube channel, a channel he set up to promulgate conspiracy theories like the one he was now rejecting, it was tantamount to heresy.
“You sell out piece of s---. Rot in hell, Veitch,” ran one comment beneath the video. “This man is a pawn,” said another. “Your [sic] a f---ing pathetic slave,” shrilled a third. “What got ya? Money?” So runs what passes for debate on the internet. Veitch had expected a few spiteful comments from the so-called “Truth Movement”. What he had not expected was the size or the sheer force of the attack.
In the days after he uploaded his video, entitled No Emotional Attachment to 9/11 Theories, Veitch was disowned by his friends, issued with death threats and falsely accused of child abuse in an email sent to 15,000 of his followers. “I went from being Jesus to the devil,” he says now. “Or maybe Judas. I thought the term ‘Truth Movement’ meant that there’d be some search for truth. I was wrong. I was the new Stalin. The poster boy for a mad movement.”
Related Articles


What did he expect? He deserts the cult of stupidity and gets maligned as a heretic for it. I, for one, applaud his newly found reasoning skills, but I'd expect no less from his former acolytes. Truthers aren't interested in the truth, they are merely a mob led by charlatans who use ridiculous hypotheses to justify their own irrational prejudices. It is heartening to see someone actually examine the evidence and come to a rational conclusion, as it is all too rare these days.
I would have been pleased to hear the truth from Bush and Cheneye both who refused to go under oath to the 911 commission.....

Bestinshow's photo
Mon 05/27/13 06:15 PM

Using that logic, all those years I studied Greco-Roman History, Politics, Economics and Society at a university level are a waste owing to the fact that I didn't live there, or at that time. University History Departments all around the world are invalid because of that oversight.

What a load of crap!

laugh
I do not believe your self proclaimed education level.


Bestinshow's photo
Thu 05/23/13 12:33 PM


Ah yes the Australian and the Man from Zurich two experts on american media and politics. Why do you two have such an interest?
wouldn't YOU like to know!laugh pitchfork
Well what I do know is you cannot be an expert on american history, politics and media as you do not live here.

Bestinshow's photo
Wed 05/22/13 05:55 PM
Ah yes the Australian and the Man from Zurich two experts on american media and politics. Why do you two have such an interest?

Bestinshow's photo
Wed 05/22/13 01:19 PM




O






"Yes, we all know about Gehlen"

Do you mean we Europeans, you and I?

We are the only ones on this thread.
How about Rick and Magnus Pym?


What are their usernames?


slaphead


OMG. I don't believe you fell for that. You Sir have made my day.


Well, judging by the quality of your threads, it wasn't much of a stretch.


Judging by the quality of your slaphead replies you are a major contributer to that quality.


It's only a response to the naïve content displayed on this, and your other bigoted diatribes that masquerade as 'Current Affairs and Politics', there is no need to get so upset. Let's face it, your contention in the OP is rather tendentious and ill-informed to say the least.

drinker You could be more optimistic.
It is far closer to reality than the corporate state propaganda many except as truth.
still in that Black Hole of CT?laugh laugh laugh
Still in denial? :wink:

Bestinshow's photo
Sun 05/19/13 04:53 PM


O






"Yes, we all know about Gehlen"

Do you mean we Europeans, you and I?

We are the only ones on this thread.
How about Rick and Magnus Pym?


What are their usernames?


slaphead


OMG. I don't believe you fell for that. You Sir have made my day.


Well, judging by the quality of your threads, it wasn't much of a stretch.


Judging by the quality of your slaphead replies you are a major contributer to that quality.


It's only a response to the naïve content displayed on this, and your other bigoted diatribes that masquerade as 'Current Affairs and Politics', there is no need to get so upset. Let's face it, your contention in the OP is rather tendentious and ill-informed to say the least.

drinker You could be more optimistic.
It is far closer to reality than the corporate state propaganda many except as truth.

Bestinshow's photo
Sun 05/19/13 03:29 PM



If we want to understand why US-led wars of aggression, covert
and overt, are plaguing the planet, from Iraq, Afghanistan, to
Libya, Syria and Iran, we can gain much insight into today’s
problems by going back to events at the end of the Second World
War.


http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/05/11/302975/us-driven-by-nazi-war-machine/
Excellent !

Bestinshow's photo
Mon 05/13/13 05:50 PM
Ayn Rand's novel "Atlas Shrugged" fantasizes a world in which anti-government citizens reject taxes and regulations, and "stop the motor" by withdrawing themselves from the system of production. In a perverse twist on the writer's theme the prediction is coming true. But instead of productive people rejecting taxes, rejected taxes are shutting down productive people.

Perhaps Ayn Rand never anticipated the impact of unregulated greed on a productive middle class. Perhaps she never understood the fairness of tax money for public research and infrastructure and security, all of which have contributed to the success of big business. She must have known about the inequality of the pre-Depression years. But she couldn't have foreseen the concurrent rise in technology and globalization that allowed inequality to surge again, more quickly, in a manner that threatens to put the greediest offenders out of our reach.

Ayn Rand's philosophy suggests that average working people are 'takers.' In reality, those in the best position to make money take all they can get, with no scruples about their working class victims, because taking, in the minds of the rich, serves as a model for success. The strategy involves tax avoidance, in numerous forms.

Corporations Stopped Paying

In the past twenty years, corporate profits have quadrupled while the corporate tax percent has dropped by half. The payroll tax, paid by workers, has doubled.

In effect, corporations have decided to let middle-class workers pay for national investments that have largely benefited businesses over the years. The greater part of basic research, especially for technology and health care, has been conducted with government money. Even today 60% of university research is government-supported. Corporations use highways and shipping lanes and airports to ship their products, the FAA and TSA and Coast Guard and Department of Transportation to safeguard them, a nationwide energy grid to power their factories, and communications towers and satellites to conduct online business.

In effect, corporations have decided to let middle-class workers pay for national investments that have largely benefited businesses over the years.

Yet as corporate profits surge and taxes plummet, our infrastructure is deteriorating. The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that $3.63 trillion is needed over the next seven years to make the necessary repairs.

Turning Taxes Into Thin Air

Corporations have used numerous and creative means to avoid their tax responsibilities. They have about a year's worth of profits stashed untaxed overseas. According to the Wall Street Journal, about 60% of their cash is offshore. Yet these corporate 'persons' enjoy a foreign earned income exclusion that real U.S. persons don't get.

Corporate tax haven ploys are legendary, with almost 19,000 companies claiming home office space in one building in the low-tax Cayman Islands. But they don't want to give up their U.S. benefits. Tech companies in 19 tax haven jurisdictions received $18.7 billion in 2011 federal contracts. A lot of smaller companies are legally exempt from taxes. As of 2008, according to IRS data, fully 69% of U.S. corporations were organized as nontaxable businesses.

There's much more. Companies call their CEO bonuses "performance pay" to get a lower rate. Private equity firms call fees "capital gains" to get a lower rate. Fast food companies call their lunch menus "intellectual property" to get a lower rate.

Prisons and casinos have stooped to the level of calling themselves "real estate investment trusts" (REITs) to gain tax exemptions. Stooping lower yet, Disney and others have added cows and sheep to their greenspace to get a farmland exemption.

The Richest Individuals Stopped Paying

The IRS estimated that 17 percent of taxes owed were not paid in 2006, leaving an underpayment of $450 billion. The revenue loss from tax havens approaches $450 billion. Subsidies from special deductions, exemptions, exclusions, credits, capital gains, and loopholes are estimated at over $1 trillion. Expenditures overwhelmingly benefit the richest taxpayers.

In keeping with Ayn Rand's assurance that "Money is the barometer of a society's virtue," the super-rich are relentless in their quest to make more money by eliminating taxes. Instead of calling their income 'income,' they call it "carried interest" or "performance-based earnings" or "deferred pay." And when they cash in their stock options, they might look up last year's lowest price, write that in as a purchase date, cash in the concocted profits, and take advantage of the lower capital gains tax rate.

So Who Has To Pay?

Middle-class families. The $2 trillion in tax losses from underpayments, expenditures, and tax havens costs every middle-class family about $20,000 in community benefits, including health care and education and food and housing.

Schoolkids, too. A study of 265 large companies by Citizens for Tax Justice (CTJ) determined that about $14 billion per year in state income taxes was unpaid over three years. That's approximately equal to the loss of 2012-13 education funding due to budget cuts.

And the lowest-income taxpayers make up the difference, based on new data that shows that the Earned Income Tax Credit is the single biggest compliance problem cited by the IRS. The average sentence for cheating with secret offshore financial accounts, according to the Wall Street Journal, is about half as long as in some other types of tax cases.

Atlas Can't Be Found Among the Rich

Only 3 percent of the CEOs, upper management, and financial professionals were entrepreneurs in 2005, even though they made up about 60 percent of the richest .1% of Americans. A recent study found that less than 1 percent of all entrepreneurs came from very rich or very poor backgrounds. Job creators come from the middle class.

So if the super-rich are not holding the world on their shoulders, what do they do with their money? According to both Marketwatch and economist Edward Wolff, over 90 percent of the assets owned by millionaires are held in a combination of low-risk investments (bonds and cash), personal business accounts, the stock market, and real estate.

Ayn Rand's hero John Galt said, "We are on strike against those who believe that one man must exist for the sake of another." In his world, Atlas has it easy, with only himself to think about.
Paul Buchheit

Paul Buchheit is a college teacher, an active member of US Uncut Chicago, founder and developer of social justice and educational websites (UsAgainstGreed.org, PayUpNow.org, RappingHistory.org), and the editor and main author of "American Wars: Illusions and Realities" (Clarity Press). He can be reached at paul@UsAgainstGreed.org.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/05/13-1