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Showing posts with label WARREN BUFFETT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WARREN BUFFETT. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2022

RSN: FOCUS | Bernie Sanders: Pay Your Workers Better. Warren Buffett: That's Not My Job

 

 

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03 January 22

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Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks to reporters after a meeting with White House officials at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 27, 2021. (photo: Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)
FOCUS | Bernie Sanders: Pay Your Workers Better. Warren Buffett: That's Not My Job
Chris Isidore, CNN
Isidore writes: "Warren Buffett, the ninth-richest person on the planet, says it's not up to him to settle a strike by 450 steelworkers at a company he owns."

Warren Buffett, the ninth-richest person on the planet, says it's not up to him to settle a strike by 450 steelworkers at a company he owns.

Sen. Bernie Sanders wrote a letter to the Berkshire Hathaway CEO, requesting that he intervene in a United Steelworkers union strike at the Special Metals plant in Huntington, West Virginia. They've been on strike for three months. Special Metals is a unit of Precision Castparts, which is owned by Buffett's Berkshire.

"At a time when this company and Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA) are both doing very well, there is no reason why workers employed by you should be worrying about whether they will be able to feed their children or have health care," Sanders wrote. "There is no reason why the standard of living of these hard working Americans should decline. I know that you and Berkshire Hathaway can do better than that,"

His letter said employees were offered a contract with no pay raise the first year, only a $2,000 signing bonus, and then pay increases of 1% the second year and 2% a year the following three years. It said the company wants to raise the cost of health coverage for workers from $275 a month to $1,000. And it reduced vacation time they have already accrued.

Sanders called the offer "outrageous and insulting."

But Buffett responded with a letter quoting Berkshire's annual financial filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which tells investors that the management of its different companies is left up to the executives at each subsidiary -- not Berkshire itself (or Buffett).

"Our companies deal individually with their own labor and personnel decisions (except for the selection of the CEO)," he said in his response to Sanders, which was released by Sanders' office. "I'm passing along your letter to the CEO of Precision Castparts, but making no recommendations to him as to any action. He is responsible for his business."

Unlike many other of the nation's richest people, Buffett has positioned himself as someone concerned workers and income inequality. He has called for higher taxes on the rich and pledged to give away most of his fortune, which now stands at just over $100 billion according to a real time billionaire tracker by Forbes. Buffett doesn't have the anti-union reputation of many other billionaires, such as Amazon (AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos or Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk, who have both battled with union organizing efforts.

Buffett's letter to Sanders cites several examples of unionized subsidiaries of his company, incuding NetJets and See's Candy. And Sanders letter plays on an appeal to Buffett to live up to his expressed concerns about income inequality.

"Mr. Buffett: You have spoken out eloquently on the crisis our country now faces in terms of growing income and wealth inequality. You have correctly pointed out that, while working families struggle, the top one percent is doing extremely well," Sanders wrote.

The Special Metals strike

Special Metals makes nickel alloy metals essential to space crafts and airplanes. Berkshire purchased Precision Castparts in 2016 for $37.2 billion. Berkshire reported that Precision Castparts reported revenue of $1.6 billion in the third quarter, and that its third quarter profit was up $217 million from the third quarter of 2020, although it did not state how much its profit in the quarter came to. Berkshire reported that its overall income of $10.3 billion in the quarter and $50.1 billion in the first nine months of the year.

A video posted on the United Steelworkers union web site quoted strikers as saying that Special Metals has continued to operate, though it doesn't say whether it is using temporary workers, permanent replacement workers or salaried staff to man the factory.

"If I were a customer out there, I wouldn't want something I know a bunch of scabs produced, because they don't know what's going on," said union member Steve Brumfield in the union video.

The number of strikes have been increasing in recent months as unions and rank and file members have been unwilling to accept the concession contracts they sometimes accepted in the past, especially in light of a record number of job openings in the labor market, and the difficulty many employers are having finding skilled workers to fill job openings.

The communications department for Precision Castparts issued a statement saying its "desire is to achieve a respectful and productive relationship with our employees, and we have ultimately achieved that goal in previous contract negotiations over many years." It said it has and "will continue to bargain in good faith" with the union. It did not answer questions about the reported offer to the union or how it has been able to operate, and plans to keep operating, if the strike continues.


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Sunday, January 2, 2022

Trump's central Jan 6 claim thoroughly debunked

 


Today's Top Stories:

photo
Reporter from insurrection thoroughly debunks Trump's claim that his supporters weren't behind attack

I was standing amid thousands of Trump supporters on the lawn rising up to the Washington Monument, says NPR's Tom Bowman. "Then Trump came on stage to raucous applause."


Many surprise medical bills just became illegal
Consumers can breathe a sigh of relief because, in many scenarios, they should no longer face unexpected charges from doctors who are not in their insurance networks.



photo
Joe Manchin pulls bombshell holiday stunt

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Unreal.


AOC rips "creepy weirdo" Trump adviser for fixating on boyfriend's feet
Pro-tip: Any time you've tweeted about the feet of the significant other of a Member of Congress, you've already lost.


Jan. 6 committee prepares to go public as findings mount
The House panel investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection is planning televised hearings and a series of reports in the coming months to present its findings and bring its private interviews out into the open



GOP's House Judiciary Committee members, led by Rep. Jim Jordan, tweet that booster shots don't work
They have made a calculation that the political advantage of lying about public health is worth killing their own supporters for the simple reason that they are garbage human beings.


New Manhattan DA takes over Trump case
Cyrus Vance Jr. passed the decision on whether to bring criminal charges against Trump to his successor, Alvin Bragg, a former federal prosecutor.


photo
Jim Jordan's betrayal of the American people finally coming back to haunt him

United Rural Democrats: The extremists in Congress are taking their districts for granted while delivering nothing for them. United Rural Democrats are organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


Bernie Sanders: Pay your workers better. Warren Buffett: That's not my job
Steelworkers are getting royally screwed by a company Buffett owns, but he insists it's out of his control.


Biden extends U.S. support for International Space Station through 2030
The administration wants to continue research being conducted in the orbiting laboratory with international partners, including Russia.



Trump's plan to hold a news conference on the Capitol riot anniversary shows he is getting "terrible" advice, ex-aide says
Debatable. When has the disgraced ex-president ever listened to good advice.


Buttigieg, FAA ask AT&T, Verizon to delay their 5G launches
Request comes amid concern the new services' wireless signals could disrupt cockpit instruments.


Crises collide...

Hope...


Sunday Funnies

Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny
Sunday Funny





Top News: Planet's Natural World Facing Largest Mass Extinction Event Since Dinosaurs

 




December 30, 2021
Top News



Hotez Bottazzi
Texas Team Applauded for Giving What Big Pharma Refuses: A Patent-Free Vaccine to the World
"We're not trying to make money. We just want to see people get vaccinated."
by Brett Wilkins



Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks to striking workers
'That's Just Wrong': Sanders Slams Buffett for Refusing to Side With Striking Steelworkers
The Vermont senator said a company owned by the mega-billionaire's massive holding conglomerate "should not be demanding wage cuts."
by Jake Johnson



Polar bear
Within Decade, Planet's Natural World Facing Largest Mass Extinction Event Since Dinosaurs
Latest analysis by World Wildlife Fund warns humanity—possible "victim of it own lifestyle"—might ultimately be added to list of threatened species.
by Julia Conley



Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks at a press conference
DeSantis Accused of Going 'Missing in Action' as Florida Faces Omicron Explosion
"Our residents, all Florida residents, should be outraged, and they should ask the question, 'Where is our state? Where is our governor? Where is Ron DeSantis now?'" said Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings.
by Jake Johnson
Opinion



vaccine_inequality
Vaccine Apartheid Shows Global Injustice Is Very Bad for Public Health
While people in many parts of the world have begun receiving booster shots against COVID-19, millions of residents in low-income countries are still waiting for their first dose. Unless the protectionist policies that promote this vaccine inequity change, the virus will continue to mutate and spread, prolonging the pandemic.
by Safura Abdool Karim



killer_robots
Humanity's Final Arms Race: UN Fails to Agree on 'Killer Robot' Ban
The world should not repeat the catastrophic mistakes of the nuclear arms race. It should not sleepwalk into dystopia.
by James Dawes



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Wednesday, July 7, 2021

How we can save local news

 

How we can save local news


Originaly fire photo by Ricardo Gomez Angel on Unsplash
Instead of complaining about what’s been lost … it’s much healthier for those of us who care about local journalism to build–to go do what we think needs to get done and see if that works.” –Ken Doctor, founder of Lookout Santa Cruz, a full-scale online newspaper launched last fall
If Hollywood wanted to make a gritty movie about the work of dig-it-out newspaper reporters who uncover big local stories of government doings and corporate misdeeds, it couldn’t have chosen a more picture-perfect location than the boisterous newsroom of New York’s Daily News. Once the largest-circulation paper in America, the Daily News embodied the rich history of brawny tabloid journalism, even serving as the model for DC Comics’ The Daily Planet, workplace of Clark Kent and Lois Lane in Superman.

But there’d be a problem with filming at the Daily News now: Its owners have eliminated the newsroom, leaving reporters, editors, photographers, et al. with no shared workplace. Yes, today, it’s a newspaper without a newsroom.

This once proud publication is now owned and run by Alden Global Capital, a multibillion-dollar hedge fund with a long record of buying papers on the cheap, selling off their assets, and slashing pay and jobs. Media watchers have labeled these vulture capitalists the “ruthless corporate strip-miners” of local journalism. And sure enough, in the past couple of years Alden’s profiteers have steadily plundered the paper, eliminating half of its newsroom staff. Then, last August, they told the remaining journalists they would no longer have a physical place to work.

To be clear, this closure was not a temporary measure to protect staff from Covid-19. Nor was the newsroom abandoned in favor of relocation to a less expensive office (an increasingly common cost-saving decision). Indeed, real newspaper publishers realize that the collective hive vitality of a newsroom, with its camaraderie and reportorial cross-fertilization enrich the journalism.

But Alden is in the business of making money, not journalism. The Wall Street bosses emailed staff that they weren’t selling the offices–just leasing them to other businesses, creating a new revenue stream for fattening the profits of the fund’s investors.

Unfortunately, such crass corporate calculations are typical of the new model of a nationalized, conglomeratized, and financialized “local” journalism that has already taken over thousands of papers in big cities, suburbs, and rural areas across America.

The scale and speed of that transformation have been breathtaking:

  • Alden’s high-flying hedge funders have amalgamated the second biggest newspaper conglomerate in the country, having swallowed up more than 200 papers, including metro dailies in Baltimore, Boston, Boulder, Chicago, Denver, Hartford, Norfolk, Orange County, Orlando, San Jose, and St. Paul.
  • Last August, in one blow, the 30 papers owned by the venerable McClatchy family fell to yet another multibillion-dollar hedge fund, Chatham Asset Management (led by a former Wall Street junk-bond dealer). With this buyout, Chatham’s clique of global speculators grabbed the major dailies in Charlotte, Fort Worth, Kansas City, Lexington, Miami, Sacramento, and Seattle.
  • Then there’s the colossal Gannett conglomerate, now owned by Japan’s SoftBank Group. It runs USA Today, as well as more than1,000 local papers across the US, including the main dailies in Austin; Burlington (VT), Cincinnati, Detroit, Des Moines, Indianapolis, Louisville, Milwaukee, Nashville, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Providence, Reno, and Springfield (MO).

The operational mandate of newspaper hedge funds is absolute: Sacrifice local newsgathering and community interest to squeeze out every bit ot profit and siphon it off to unknown investors in WhoKnowsWhereLand. The papers Alden acquired were reportedly profitable, with annual margins of around 10%. But the hedge fund sharpies demanded that all their papers deliver 20% or more–a level at which the squeeze becomes deadly to quality journalism.

Community life cannot thrive without community news, which in turn depends on reporters and editors who are of the community and have the know-how, time, and resources to investigate, educate, expose, inform, entertain, and generally enlighten the citizenry. But what does some obscure, aloof, money manipulator know or care about your community or its democratic vitality? Zilch, that’s what.

A SHOT IN THE DARK

I live in a city with one of these dailies (Gannett owns the Austin American-Statesman) and in my travels I’ve read dozens of similar outlets and talked to their readers. Money managers have reduced most to mere remnants of real journalism. They have slashed reporting staff and consolidated even the editing, layout, printing, and other basic production work in remote, centralized hubs. Thus, most of the flavor and timeliness of the “local” paper is lost, replaced by chopped-up national material, two-day-old sports stories, product promotions, and other filler.

One especially revealing measure of hedge-fund journalism’s commitment to its dual responsibility of informing the public and inspiring civic action is failure to report on themselves. Their takeovers are done in the dark. BANG! Suddenly your local news is controlled by distant profit seekers who’ve never been to your town. What deal was struck? By whom? At what price? To whom do they answer? What say will you have in their coverage? These are basic questions that any investigative reporter worth their salt would ask of any transaction of such consequence to the community. But local reporters, mayors, community groups, et al. are not even given the names of–much less access to–the financial chieftains who secretly directed the buyout, control operations, and pocket the profits. And it would be worth their jobs if they tried. The most taboo topic in corporate journalism is corporate ownership.

The damage caused by impatient hedge fund speculators is especially harsh for small cities and rural areas. Forget the demand for profits north of 20%; even a 10% return is a stretch in markets with fewer than 100,000 people. So, with no personal ties to these communities and even less commitment to the civic mission of local journalism, the predators often just cash out the physical assets, pull the plug, and skip town.

Thus, hundreds of smaller papers have been shuttered in the last decade–some 300 in the last two years alone–and this winnowing has created “news deserts” (counties with no local news outlets at all) across large swaths of America. As for remaining corporate media, a new Pew survey found that 57% of folks in rural areas say that their “local” news media mostly cover some other area.

THE ORACLE SPEAKS

Playing the billionaires’ news game, mega-investor Warren Buffett once held a portfolio of 31 dailies and 49 weeklies, including such major city papers as the Buffalo News and the Omaha World Herald. He specialized in squeezing out competitors. Once he’d created monopoly papers, Buffett chopped staff and content to glean annual profit margins above 30%. Then along came the internet, allowing people to root around–for free!–to find local information missing from Buffett’s hollowed-out papers. Unsurprisingly, his newspapers soon began losing readers, advertisers, and profits, and, in 2020, Buffett bailed, selling off his entire portfolio. Rather than concede that maybe his slash-and-burn, profit-maximization approach had produced inferior products, “The Oracle of Omaha,” as Wall Street hails him, blasted the whole idea of local newspapers as dinosaurs, a doomed species beyond anyone’s ability to save them. They’re “toast,” he proclaimed.

Not so fast, your Oracleness.

Day by day, when they’re done right, timely local publications both chronicle and help shape a community’s story. And that’s a social benefit that is as valuable–and as marketable–as ever. It’s not that people have given up on local news, but that most of today’s papers are not really local, not very newsy, and not of, by, and for the workaday people in our multifaceted communities.

For example, nearly every corporate daily publishes a business section, chock-a-block with corporate press releases, meaningless syndicated filler (“CEOs optimistic about growth”), and puff pieces about yet another high-tech start-up. Does even 1% of the population read that stuff? Meanwhile, how about economic news of interest to the great majority of locals: workers? Where’s the regular section that digs into the area’s wages, job losses and openings, workplace conditions, commuting advice, affordable housing, worker safety, job discrimination, child care availability, abuse hotlines, unionizing efforts, and the myriad of other real-life issues that confront this majority on a daily basis? As I’ve long maintained, the relevant indicator of the wellbeing of nearly every American family is not the Dow Jones Average (which newspapers cover obsessively), but the Doug Jones Average. How are Doug and Donna doing? That’s news that would sell papers.

A PHOENIX RISES!

While investment syndicates aggressively merge, purge, shrink, and loot traditional businesses in my town and yours, a phoenix is rising in the spaces they’ve left behind. We don’t need to surrender to the local-papers-are-toast narrative, for imagination and grit are loose on the land. From big cities to rural counties, hundreds of determined efforts, often led by people of color, are underway to revive local newspaper journalism.

Take just one aspect with both a substantive and symbolic impact: The newsroom itself. Sparked by populist creativity, scrappy new community papers are moving into friendlier, more central, street-level newsrooms–set in public libraries, journalism schools, etc.–so that regular people can see and directly access them. The Ferndale (CA) Enterprise works from an old Victorian home and rents rooms to vacationers for additional income. The editor of the Sahan Journal in Minneapolis moves his weekly editorial meeting to the offices of various grassroots groups so their members can have input. And in Marfa, Texas, the new owners of the Big Bend Sentinel are truly serving the public, not only with a good weekly, but also with The Sentinel–a combo coffee shop, cozy bar, cafe, event space, and hangout for locals to meet and greet.

It was not so very long ago that dozens of scrappy, independent newsweeklies sprang up in city after city, town after town. By creating a viable alternative model of free tabloids, they outflanked the monopoly dailies in their markets, dramatically increasing coverage of ignored community issues and voices. Now come “paperless” city papers like Lookout (Santa Cruz), Billy Penn (Philadelphia), and DigBoston; special topic news sites like Daily Yonder (rural) and Circle of Blue (water); and hundreds of hardscrabble community papers like Flint Beat and Iowa’s Storm Lake Times.

In ways big and small, dedicated local journos are experimenting with funding, structures, staffing, etc., to produce the news that democracy requires:

  • Foundations are seeding local projects and journalist positions. Take, for example, the Local News Lab–a project of the Democracy Fund. The Lab reports on the many new “experiments in journalism” and provides resources for anyone who wants to get started. localnewslab.org
  • LION Publishers (Local Independent Online News)–with more than 275 members–provides resources and community to independent news entrepreneurs as they try to build sustainable local businesses. lionpublishers.com
  • The Institute for Nonprofit News connects more than 300 independent news organizations dedicated to the radical proposition that “everyone deserves access to trustworthy sources of news.” inn.org
  • Assorted community media consortiums in several states and cities gather local news outlets and grassroots groups to share business strategies, fundraising, staff training, tech info, story ideas, etc. These include the Chicago Independent Media Alliance (more than 40 news sources), Colorado Community Media Project (24 local papers), and New Jersey Civic Info Consortium (state-funded support for a network of local news).

Note to hedgefunders: These projects aren’t intended to “scale,” since–as Josh Stearns of the Democracy Fund says–it was corporate ambitions to cut costs by consolidating and “scaling” that got us into this mess. Instead, by sharing ideas, learning, and resources, these local projects help each other succeed. And unlike the hedge-fund papers, their success is not measured simply by financial return, but also by community benefit–how they help keep citizens informed and engaged.

MEANWHILE…

  • Unionization is sweeping into dozens of hedge fund papers, so journalists themselves gain clout to report on and unify against corporate cuts, banality, and plundering.
  • More city governments are mandating that a fair portion of their advertising budgets go to local community pubs, rather than remote chains.
  • And Ralph Nader, always the creative thinker and doer, has launched Reporters Alert, a digital publication pointing out important topics that news outlets should be covering.

These and so many more examples are glimmers of real journalistic hope across our land. Committed community journalists are determined democracy fighters, butting their heads against the money wall to bang out honest news for local residents, not windfalls for profiteers. Instead of bemoaning the decline of the free press, let’s join with these gutsy journalists and activists who’re actually working to “free” it! Subscribe, donate, volunteer, spread the word … and generate your own ways of helping them help us.


Hello Wall Street, Pottstown Calling

The callous shriveling of local people’s news coverage by Wall Streeters is sacrilege to hard-nosed newshounds like Evan Brandt, a proud 23-year veteran of The Mercury in Pottstown, PA, some 40 miles northwest of Philly. Until it was sold in 1998 to the Journal Register Company (known for gutting its newsrooms), The Mercury had a full-fledged staff covering Pottstown and surrounds. In 2011, though, Alden Global Capital swept in to grab The Mercury off the bargain table. Instead of investing in the paper’s potential, the hedge fund milked it for profits: It pocketed the subscription and ad revenue while making round after round of cuts to staff and coverage.

By 2019, Brandt was the only one left, serving as both editor and sole reporter for a publication responsible for covering vital local doings–from government action to corporate shenanigans, sports to elections, weather to protests. Impossible. Alden even sold off The Mercury‘s downtown office building, so Brandt’s “newsroom” is attic space in his home. And then last year, Alden pulled a whopping 30% profit from its Philadelphia- area properties, including the Pottstown paper. Brandt says that this “grilled my onions.” So, the portly, 55-year-old journalistic maverick did the unthinkable: He drove his Toyota Corolla 240 miles to New York so he could put a question to his boss–not the boss of Alden’s newspaper division, but the Big Boss, a guy named Heath Freeman, president of Alden Global Capital.

Heath lives in a waterfront mansion in Montauk, Long Island, one of the Wall Street power elites’ tony seaside villages. The rumpled reporter, in a black T-shirt proclaiming “#NEWS MATTERS,” went right up and knocked on Freeman’s door. As he later told the New York Times, when the door was opened onto the mansion’s foyer, Brandt caught a glimpse of the 40ish tycoon of vulture capitalism standing upstairs. The encounter lasted only a few seconds, but Brandt seized the moment, locking eyes with Freeman, and pointedly asking: “What value do you place on local news?”

The vulture just shook his head and fluttered away.

LINK





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