James Brown “Prisoner of Love” - 1966 Ed Sullivan

December 31, 2006

at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2990997451180760438&q=James+Brown&hl=en

The Story of a Oaxacan Movement Prisoner

December 28, 2006

I’m Going to Stay Right Here

By HILARIA CRUZ

at http://www.counterpunch.org/cruz12282006.html

Gateway to the Next Mexican Revolution?

A Year of Unprecedented Turmoil

By JOHN ROSS

at http://www.counterpunch.org/ross12282006.html

txs. to TPL

I do have to thank TPL for making me start a blog (setting me up on this site and flickster for pix) when I left Ottawa.  I now have three blogs running.  I will show ya the stats. for Dec. for the 3 blogs (I know TPL is a stats. kind of gal … if I could do a map that would be better but I lack the skills).

EDS -

DayHits
218
345
448
520
614
724
818
947
108
11880
1236
139
1422
1518
1630
DayHits
1730
1817
1916
2055
2130
2229
2331
2417
2540
2634
2728
2828
2920
3033
317

GW -

Referers

DayHits
2627
3325
4592
5699
630
7276
8530
9395
10297
11285
12471
13534
14505
15482
16251
DayHits
17314
18397
19463
2071
2125
2249
2374
2419
25212
2656
2792
2832
2935
3058
317

DD -

DayHits
419
57
61
71
935
10110
1136
131
1441
153
1611
1710
181
192
2044
DayHits
21104
2210
2317
2435
2511
264
2747
2823
2930
3015
3114

EDS was started when we left Ottawa in May.  GW (which is all gambling/problem gambling news/research) was started in Oct. 06.  DD (all mental health and addictions nes/research) was started in Dec. 06.  GW, in particular, has been very satisfying as it has received around 350 hits a day (when holidays are not occurring). 

So thanks a bunch TPL for turning me into a blogmistress!  Obviously, I would not be able to share as much information regarding addictions, including gambling, and mental health issues if I did not have these blogs.

my best book selection for 2006

I have always been a reader and this passion has helped in terms of the dislocation that is bound to occur in a move from Ottawa (city) to Squamish (town) - new home, new work, new environment.  Squamish has a very good library and that is really the only ‘group’ I have joined here so far, not wanting to commit myself to any long-term volunteer activities until I know the lay of the land (personalities, organizations, etc).  I am planning to take part in events related to sustaining the local bald eagle population … January is bald eagle month in Brackendale (part of Squamish).   All to say, since moving here in May I have read at least two books a week, sometimes more.  Some have been mysteries - I have now read most of Ian Rankin, Elizabeth George, Minette Walters and Tess Gerritsen.  I also went on a Maeve Binchey binge.  Ok - I also read a couple of John Grisham’s and really liked The Runaway Jury.  I know I read quite a few other mysteries but none are worth mentioning.

Books I stayed up way too late reading (and finished in a day) were The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, Marley and Me by John Grogan (I cried … ok, I have 15+ year old ella-dog), Stones from the River by Ursula Heigi (thanks LL for this suggestion). 

Other books I read that deserve mention are Charles de Lint’s The Riddle of the Wren (1984). Charles is an Ottawa fantasy/quasi-sci-fi writer and most prolific (geez, he has a wikipedia entry I see at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_de_Lint and his own webpage at http://www.sfsite.com/charlesdelint/).  Many of his stories are set in the Ottawa and Gatineau area so it satisfied my nostalgia for ‘home’ and he has such a lovely humanist sensibility.  I was very impressed by his writing and will try to read his most recent book this year.  I hung out with Charles when I was a teen and last winter realized that I had met his partner MaryAnn at her great second hand shop, Reclectica, on Bank Street (see sfsite.com/charlesdelint for details on MaryAnn and the store). 

Another Ottawa author I read for the first time was Elizabeth Hay.  Elizabeth is friends of friends and I have met her and her partner at social gatherings in Ottawa.  I also knew someone she interviewed for background details on New York City in the 1940s for her book A Student of the Weather, the book I read.  I will read more of her work in the coming year … she is very talented.

I also enjoyed Toronto writer Martha Baillie’s The Shape I Gave You more than her first book My Sister Esther

Another mention is Christine Aziz’s The Olive Readers (another first book … like Khaled Hosseini). 

On the non-fiction front, I enjoyed Margaret MacMillan’s Paris 1919 and am just starting The Corporation by Joel Bakan. 

I have read quite alot of work pertaining to addictions and mental health as well (such as Barbara Hodgson’s Opium: A portrait of the heavenly demon) but most titles are not worth highlighting unless one is particularly interested in this field of enquiry.  I did learn from Hodgson’s book that the word yen comes from the Chinese yen yen which means to desire opium!

My friend DH went back and read Doris Lessing again this year (DH is a few years older than moi but I will follow her lead as I enjoyed her work when I read it in my 20s).

Other reading suggestions would be appreciated as Squamish is a small town with a good library! 

Crime - (Corporate) cheaters often prosper

 

Perp-walks, prison spells, crusading politicians or a whole new raft Of Rules — What’s It Going To Take To Curb Corporate Crime?

The ones who didn’t get away: from left, Jeff Skilling, John Rigas of Adelphia, Enron’s Andrew Fastow, Tyco’s Dennis Kozlowski and World Com’s Bernard Ebbers.

Chris Sorensen, Financial Post, Saturday, December 30, 2006

Jeffrey Skilling will need some time to get used to his new digs. The former Enron CEO, who once lived in a US$4.7-million Houston mansion, will soon be bunking in a converted college dorm room on the outskirts of Waseca, Minn., 120 kilometres south of Minneapolis.

For would-be white collar criminals, Skilling’s punishment punctuated a rising wave of intolerance for corporate malfeasance in the wake of several high profile U.S. scandals. For investors and the general public, the event had a more visceral meaning: It seemed to prove that the Armani-clad Fortune 500 set lives under the same set of rules as the rest of us.

Aside from offering a sense of retribution, however, it’s unclear whether the get-tough approach will deter anyone from crime. New rules and regulations have boosted compliance requirements for U.S. and, to a lesser extent, Canadian companies, but those who follow the issue closely say what’s really needed is a fundamental shift in the culture of big business — a goal that remains elusive despite the popularity of talking about the need for ethics in the boardroom.

Indeed, some observers argue that piling on more rules and regulations will serve only to make future corporate crime more complicated and more difficult to detect.

"If somebody is motivated to cheat, they’re likely going to be bright enough and have smart enough attorneys and accountants to help them do it," says Joe Des Jardins, the director of the Society for Business Ethics and a philosophy professor at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University in Minnesota.

"As corny as it sounds, I think the change has to come from within."

Skilling’s sentence provided a sense of closure to the string of corporate scandals, beginning with Enron, that shook the public’s confidence in Corporate America in recent years.

While other white collar criminals have received harsh sentences — Edmonton- born World Com founder Bernard Ebbers received 25 years, former Tyco chairman Dennis Kozlowski got eight to 25 and John Rigas of Adelphia received a 15-year sentence — Skilling’s was the most-watched because Enron was the poster child of corporate greed. When the Houston-based energy trader collapsed in bankruptcy in 2001, it wiped out 5,000 jobs, US$2-billion of employee retirement funds and US$30- billion in investors’ money. Moreover, it had the dubious distinction of taking out what was once considered one of the world’s premier accounting firms, Arthur Anderson.

"The actions of the Enron people destroyed the retirement savings of thousands of employees," said Thomas Hurka, a philosophy professor at the University of Toronto. "They just lost everything. I mean, if somebody stole that amount of money in a bank robbery, they would get a huge amount of time in jail."

For many the harsh sentences handed down to Skilling and others were necessary to convince people that corporate crime was at last being taking seriously.

But while many argue that the high profile trials and convictions of Skilling and others prove the criminal justice and regulatory systems are working, it’s certainly not the first time authorities have pledged to crack down on white collar criminals.

Similar pledges were made in the wake of the savings and loan scandals of the 1980s, as well as following the trial of Michael Milken, "The Junk Bond King" who served a fraction of his 10- year prison sentence and remains on Forbes magazine’s richest people list with a net worth of US$2-billion.

"When I was writing a newspaper column in the early 1990s everybody was talking about the 1980s as being the decade of greed and, thankfully, that’s all behind us no w," Mr. Hurka says. "Then all of this chicanery happened in the 1990s."

So, has anything really changed?

The official U.S. response to Enron, World Com and other scandals came in the form of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed in 2002. SOX aims to shore up firms’ accounting and reporting practices and help restore investor confidence in capital markets.

The new rules included a requirement for companies to set up independent audit committees and whistle-blower programs, as well as having their CEOs and CFOs sign off on financial statements, among other things.

Many in the business world have mocked the concept of more regulations, arguing companies are wasting a substantial amount of time and money on compliance, but there is little dispute that oversight of executives and employees has increased substantially as a result.

But a more effective tool in the arsenal of regulators may ultimately prove to be a handful of crusading politicians, including Eliot Spitzer, the attorney general for the state of New York, who effectively made it his mission to put Corporate America on notice. (He was elected governor in November.)

"These guys are very able and don’t have to do a lot of consulting before they launch their lawsuits," said Len Brooks, the executive director of the Clarkson Centre for Business Ethics and Board Effectiveness at U of T’s Rotman School of Management. "It’s one thing to be dealing with a national regulator in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, but you are also dealing with these folks that are incredible aggressive and gifted litigators. You know that it’s going to cost you a ton of money even if they don’t get you."

Mr. Brooks believes U.S. executives are now less likely to commit fraud simply because they fear being subjected to the humiliation of a "perp-walk," as the parade of hand-cuffed executives into U.S. courthouses came to be known.

In Canada, however, it’s a different story. "The level of fines is dramatically less than in the U.S., never mind the fact that very few people go to jail," he says.

Mr. Brooks thinks the Ontario Securities Commission, the country’s largest securities regulator, has been much less aggressive than the SEC when it comes to pursuing corporate criminals.

It may be that Canadians will have to live vicariously through the U.S. legal system as Patrick Fitzgerald, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, attempts to prosecute Conrad Black, the former Hollinger International Inc. chairman, who is accused of looting his company. The trial is set to begin in March.

Corporate crime is notoriously difficult to detect, let alone prosecute — regardless of how much regulatory oversight has been put in place.

In the case of Enron, it took investigators months to unravel the company’s convoluted business structure. Even then, the case against Enron’s executives was far from being a certainty since

many of the things they were accused of doing — fancy accounting manoeuvres such as off-balance sheet transactions, for example–aren’t necessarily illegal. But are more rules the answer?

Ethics professor Mr. Des Jardins argues that most MBA students are taught that business is a high-stakes game that occurs within set rules, but that the rules can be bent and stretched with few meaningful consequences. "It’s all no harm, no foul. It’s just a big game that we all play to win."

A better approach, he says, is to focus on creating a culture of ethics at universities.

After teaching the subject for nearly 25 years, Mr. Des Jardins says he’s pleased to at last see the field be taken seriously by students and educators, with more courses being offered and more ethics content being added to existing class materials.

That said, Mr. Des Jardins says there will always be a need to vigorously prosecute and punish offenders such as Enron’s Skilling and others. "I mean, these kids want ethics, but they are also skeptical. And if those guys walked, then the skepticism would have won."

csorensen@nationalpost.com

© National Post 2006

© 2006 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications Inc.

Ed. This is article is very appropo for me as I just started reading "The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power" written by Joel Bakan and first published in hardcover in Canada in 2004.  The book is an extended look at the corporation and follows the same themes discussed in the documentary "The Corporation" (which I have seen). For a general discussion of the book and documentary see the Wikipedia entry at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Corporation

December 30, 2006

Stawamus Chief

 
  
 
   
   
   

at http://www.flickr.com/photos/41039231@N00/77603903/

Squamish River Estuary(2)
 
  
 
   
   
   

by Alpine Climber at

http://www.flickr.com/photos/41039231@N00/77603905/in/photostream/

Squamish River Estuary(1)
 
  
 
   
   
   

by Alpine Climber at

http://www.flickr.com/photos/41039231@N00/77603904/in/photostream/

IFCO’s 15TH Anniversary Party - Jan. 15/07

This looks like lots of fun … boo hoo, I can’t go!  


The Independent Filmmaker’s Co-operative of Ottawa (IFCO) invites all of you out to celebrate 15 years of "reel" filmmaking in the Nation’s Capital. On Monday, January 15th, 2007 IFCO’s going to blow the roof off Barrymore’s Music Hall with a night of film, music and dance. You won’t want to miss one of the Capital’s premiere parties of the year!

This is going to be one of IFCO’s major fundraising events, so we invite everyone to join in, as we pay tribute to the awe of filmmaking and to the spirit of independent filmmakers.

15 years – over 150 films and we’re still going strong!

Check below for details:

LOCATION: BARRYMORE’S MUSIC HALL (323 BANK STREET)
DATE: MONDAY, JANUARY 15TH, 2007
DOORS OPEN: 8:00PM
ADMISSION:$10 - Tickets on sale at IFCO (Ste #140-#2 Daly Avenue), Arts Court front desk (#2 Daly Avenue) & online at
http://www.barrymores.on.ca/

Master of Ceremonies: THE MANY FACES OF JOSH GRACE

Listen to the electric grooves of ANTIZARIO:
http://www.antizario.com/index.html

Enjoy the mesmerizing moves of dancers from THEATRE FLAMENCO: http://www.theatreflamenco.ca/pages/ottawa1.html

Delicious eats ‘n’ bites provided by Oz Kafé (361 ELGIN STREET)

Pump your fists & Stomp your feet to the pulsating beats of DJ LANCE BAPTISTE