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Review of Politics, Economics, Constitution, Law and World Affairs by Attorney and Doctor Orly Taitz


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The articles posted represent only the opinion of the writers and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Dr. Taitz, Esq., who has no means of checking the veracity of all the claims and allegations in the articles.
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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny.
When the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

During times of universal deceit, telling the truth
becomes a revolutionary act.
 -- George Orwell

First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they
fight you, then you win.
 -- Mahatma Gandhi


over 44,000 saw an official Colbert video, probably 10 times more saw the reprints- and all this happened in 1 day

Posted on | July 30, 2009 | 5 Comments

Comments

5 Responses to “over 44,000 saw an official Colbert video, probably 10 times more saw the reprints- and all this happened in 1 day”

  1. Michelle
    July 30th, 2009 @ 12:21 pm

    Dear Dr. Orly and others please see JagHunter blog this cartoonist captured everything in 3 sentences. A Robert Hefner image. I think everyone will get a kick out of it. I found Orly and Stephens video on Hulu could not get on youtube I don’t know why.

  2. Bacsi
    July 30th, 2009 @ 2:54 pm

    Jaghunter has gone out of his way to call Orly a ‘Fool’ and ‘Stupid’ regarding the Cook case. I left him a comment about it and deleted his bookmark. I wouldn’t waste my time with him regardless of what he might have to say now. He reminds me of a lot of folks I’ve known who sound pretty good until that one drink too many.

  3. Michelle
    July 30th, 2009 @ 9:10 pm

    Dear Dr. Orly-I read this article earlier in the week. There will be a lot of news re: executive bonus pay from the taxpayer bailouts. It is not going to be pretty from the taxpayer point of view. Chumped again. Anyway I know you have a lot of very smart readers. Does anyone know of a web-site that steers you away from these greedy CEO’s? I want to do business with moral type people who pay their employees fairly, don’t go to Federal Government when they screw up (I’m to big to fail-not cute), repay their investors fairly not skim 90 per cent off the top and throw the crumbs to everyone else. This is part of straightening out this out of control, corrupt government. No wonder they cover for each other.
    I can see why people are losing sight of our democratic form of government, these guys decided they are the aristocracy. I believe that way of thinking went out with the French Revolution, that wasn’t pretty either.
    8 lifestyles of the rich and incompetent
    Posted Jul 20 2009, 07:17 AM by
    Take a look at Minyanville’s collection of eight lifestyles of the rich and incompetent…
    A couple of years ago, a study called “Where Are the Shareholders’ Estates?” by Arizona State University professor Crocker Liu and New York University professor David Yermack, asserted: “Future company performance deteriorates when CEOs acquire extremely large or costly mansions and estates.”
    The researchers’ sources of information included property deeds, tax records, online databases such as Zillow.com and Reply.com, Google searches, employment contracts and voter registration data.
    Their findings certainly show a privileged class:
    The median home was valued at $2.7 million — more than 10 times the median sales price for all U.S. homes in 2004.
    It included 11 rooms plus 4.5 bathrooms, with a floor area of more than 5,600 square feet and a median land area of 1.25 acres.
    12% of CEOs’ homes are situated on waterfronts; 8.5% are next to or on the grounds of golf courses.
    The median CEO lives 12.5 miles away from corporate headquarters, though 6% of those in the study lived more than 250 miles or more away — meaning it takes a plane ride to get to the office.
    CEOs often buy new homes the year they get the “big” job, with a total of 164 S&P 500 executives doing so in this survey. To finance their purchases, the authors found that 44% used mortgages, almost evenly split between adjustable-rate and fixed-rate loans.
    More interesting is that about one-third of CEOs appear to have exercised stock options and sold shares in the 12 months before they made a home purchase. The shares peaked right before the home was bought.
    That doesn’t mean that they necessarily sold those shares and then used the proceeds to buy their homes. The authors felt the timing of those equity moves was more than just coincidence, however, because the companies’ share prices began to fall after that peak.
    The study’s authors found that a CEO who acquires an extremely large property generally exhibits inferior stock performance, as does a CEO who sold his or her firm’s shares and options within 12 months prior to the purchase. A CEO who does not sell any shares to finance their house shows better stock performance.
    “The stock charts show that some CEOs might be very motivated sellers who are rolling money into a home,” Yermack said. “Home purchases could be a ruse. If you are going to dump stock, you can buy a house to cover your tracks.”
    Those living really large are the 12% of S&P 500 CEOs with homes topping 10,000 square feet, or on a minimum of 10 acres.
    But occupying the biggest house on the block doesn’t make you a winner on Wall Street. Their companies’ stocks lagged the S&P 500 by about 25% over the three years after the CEOs’ home purchases. In contrast, those buying more modestly saw their companies’ stocks beat the market benchmark by about the same amount.
    Does their thesis hold up? Minyanville took a look at snapshots of actual CEO homes versus their company’s performance to find out — and found some serious lifestyles of the rich and incompetent.
    Eight lifestyles of the rich and incompetent
    Top Stocks blogging partner Todd Harrison is founder & CEO of Minyanville.com. This post was written by Minyanville Contributor Justin Rohrlich.
    America – we make some of the best crooks on the planet.

  4. Liberty Mann
    July 30th, 2009 @ 9:25 pm

    Jaghunter claimed that efforts short of filing CRIMINAL complaints of TREASON are foolish because they are bound to fail. Follow his blog to track the charges of treason filed by individuals. Well, Orly’s suit has made progress while the involved attorneys general have yet to act.

    I would, and do, stay tuned.

  5. speedy
    July 31st, 2009 @ 8:34 am

    Yes, there should be hundreds or thousands of criminal complaints of treason against the usurper. He needs to pay for his crimes against humanity. We need a good leader who will punish the criminals and not be a criminal himself. We need a decent person. I don’t care what color they are. I just want to see a good, honest, decent person representing us as or president and also not one who was governed by UK at birth.