Anonymous ID: 383e24 May 13, 2020, 8:08 a.m. No.9154277   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4288 >>4480 >>4731 >>4845 >>4899 >>4900

Watergate prosecutors' request to file opinion in Flynn case

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Sixteen former Watergate prosecutors this week asked to file a friend-of-the-court brief weighing in on the case of former national security adviser Michael Flynn. "The Watergate Prosecutors … are uniquely suited to help ensure a fair presentation of the issues raised by the government’s motion" to dismiss the case, the group's request states.

 

Flynn's attorneys oppose the request. The group's motion was temporarily denied by the judge, who will determine whether to grant a request by the Department of Justice to drop charges against Flynn. The former prosecutors plan to file their opinion on the schedule the judge allows.

 

https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/497512-read-watergate-prosecutors-request-to-file-opinion-in-flynn-case

Anonymous ID: 383e24 May 13, 2020, 8:24 a.m. No.9154451   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4544 >>4613

Is China Buying BlackRock?

 

You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you, Leon Trotsky is reputed to have said. The same is true of China, financial strategist David Goldman writes in a recent essay. China doesn’t want to rule you; it wants to assimilate you. It was, and remains, utterly ruthless. Its goal: to own the “control points” in every sphere of economic life. Goldman recounts dinner with a Communist Party of China cadre instructor whose daughter had just graduated from a top American university. “He asked if I could help her get a job on Wall Street.” China knows that Wall Street is the gateway to America’s central nervous system. Finance controls capital. Wall Street is the conduit of highly valuable information about all sectors of the economy. It has privileged access in the corridors of power in Washington, D.C. And Wall Street can be bought.

 

In their book “Red Capitalism,” about China’s banking system, authors Carl Walter and Fraser Howie write of the role of Wall Street and the privatization of China’s state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in selling billions of dollars of shares in initial public offerings that “went off like strings of fire crackers in the global capital markets. All of these companies were imagined up, created, and listed by American investment bankers.” The creation of the new SOEs out of the dross of the old SOEs is the work of Wall Street bankers who provided the “lipstick, the mascara, the pedicure, the hair weave” so that they closely resemble Western corporations and can be sold at high prices, handsomely profiting the party and its friends and, of course, Wall Street banks. As the Indian stockbroker Shankar Sharma has noted, in just one Chinese bank IPO, the government paid Wall Street $200 million. “Research reports by Wall Street banks have always been up for sale to the highest bidder, and nobody knows this better than the Chinese.” There has to be someone on the buy side to pay for all this Wall Street-minted SOE paper. Nearly 40% of the BlackRock-managed iShares Emerging Markets ETF is represented by this Chinese paper. How much of it is pure dross is hard to say, as U.S. regulators in the form of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, established by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, are prevented from overseeing audits of these companies. That has rung alarm bells with the SEC, which has oversight responsibility for the board. On May 4, SEC Chairman Jay Clayton warned about the consequences of the inability of U.S. regulators to inspect for compliance and enforce U.S. securities rules and regulations. Such investing entails “significant disclosure, financial reporting and other risks,” Clayton said — risks that Main Street investors should better understand.

 

When the lipstick comes off the pig, it’s not a pretty sight. That happened to two companies in BlackRock’s emerging markets ETF only last month. On April 2, China’s Luckin Coffee announced that some of its employees, including its chief operating officer, fabricated 2.2 billion yuan ($310 million) in sales from the second quarter to the fourth quarter of last year. The SEC has announced that it is launching a probe into the apparent fraud. Five days later, Tal Education Group, a K-12 tutoring provider, announced that it had uncovered that one of its employees had inflated sales by forging contracts. Reports suggest that the fraud could have been taking place as far back as 2016. “You need a trusted partner who is not only an expert on China but can apply their knowledge, expertise and judgement in creating portfolios that can deliver the best of Chinese markets to you,” America’s largest asset manager says on the “Why BlackRock for China” page of its website. Noticeably absent is any warning about the lack of oversight and enforcement of U.S. auditing standards that so worries the SEC. Instead, there’s a statement on how the Chinese authorities are making their capital markets “more squarely aligned with international standards.” Pull the other one.

 

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2020/05/13/is_china_buying_blackrock_143185.html

Anonymous ID: 383e24 May 13, 2020, 8:31 a.m. No.9154565   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9154434

 

>[Russia] narrative ALL FAKE?

 

Fake on the POTUS side, in that POTUS or his campaign had nothing to do with Russia. On the other hand, the Hillary side wanted to have that Russia Reset by any means possible..so cheat, lye, steal and point to POTUS and his team, whatever it takes.