Sunday, December 5, 2010

"Fake News" for Mary Bottari Who Works for the New Opportunist Party

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/40518224#40518224

MSNBC uses "fake news." Call Mary Bottari and tell her to stop flogging books by PR men from CIGNA which was the insurance carrier for Air France America.

Tell her to look at "fake news" on MSNBC about how the FBI thinks Barbie Dolls can be used as a secret weapon. Robert K. Wittman is the FBI's art critic, not the clown they had on NBC.

Mary Bottari runs a nonprofit called PR Watch but won't publish any bad news about banking law even if one of her former colleagues at George Washington University Law School is a banking law expert who litigated an important case and was on the Diane Rehm show. Call Bottari in Madison, Wisconsin, and ask her about MSNBC's "fake news" and about what her former colleague thinks about the politics behind "banking reform" and I can tell you how banking law has always operated on looking for loopholes and how Paul Volcker believed in increasing bank powers to do what the American Bankers Association wanted and how Eugene Ludwig, former head of Bankers’ Trust in Boston and of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency under Bill Clinton, tells the American Banker newspaper how you can derail a National Bank examiner if you use the services of his consulting firm, Promontory Financial Group, and how he has billed himself as a supporter of Paul Volcker's high interest policies which in my experience in the seventies and early eighties, hurt the person with few assets and low income much more than the rich whose investments can only go up in value, and how The Washington Post's advertising Department’s IT is screwed up, because their management is bad and how American Express helped me with that once. And how through favoritism certain people in the Post who process credit card orders for advertising write dunning letters to ruin the credit of people who have had refunds made to them by labeling them deadbeats  and how it  takes more than 24 hours for that Washington Post credit card taker who is called a “manager,” who should be called a clerk, to clear the matter up while someone who has financial transactions with the Post suffers before an important business meeting, shocked by that kind of irresponsible letter, and how that kind of issue, and not the Post’s management of the news, is relevant to a shareholder's meeting, no matter what Lally Weymouth’s little girl Katharine says, and how no one could have sold anyone's stock if the individual holds the stock certificate in a safe deposit box except through simple fraud and identity theft and how the Washington Post's business dealings are so abysmally run that they have opened themselves up to a shareholder's derivative action, most likely, and how Bob Woodward got very rich because he was very lucky and no woman in her right mind should go out with anyone who was ever been played by Jack Nicholson in the movies.

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