Meg Whitman, Wall Street, ‘Billionaire Sociopaths’ and the Media ‘Substance Deficit’

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Guest blogged by Ernest A. Canning

“We now have the entitlement generation as CEOs. They just plain feel entitled to being wealthy as Croesus with no responsibility, no accountability. They have become literal sociopaths.” – William K. Black on Bill Moyers’ Journal

“When you’re rich, they think you really know!” – “If I Were a Rich Man,” from Fiddler on the Roof

Californians have been drawn within the cross-hairs of a propaganda blitz bought and paid for by Meg Whitman, the billionaire former CEO of eBay, who, since declaring her intent to run for governor in February, 2009, has already contributed $59 million of her own money to her “campaign” — a one-sided political phenomenon which has seen a stealth candidate, with disturbing connections to Goldman Sachs, soar to the top of the polls because the electoral process has been emasculated by the absence of mandatory debates and meaningful investigative journalism…

USC study exposes corporate media substance deficit

On March 11 the Norman Lear Center of the USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism published its analysis [PDF] of local television news coverage in Los Angeles. Their findings are vital to understanding how the corporate media both creates a substance deficit and facilitates the ability of the billionaire class to deceive the electorate into voting against their own interests.

The TV stations, the report notes, receive their licenses to broadcast over the public airwaves free of charge based on nothing more than a promise to serve “the public interest, convenience and necessity.” In practice the stations fail to come close to delivering the type of information that is vital to informed consent in a functioning democracy.

Where 68% of L.A. area citizens rely on local TV stations as their primary source of “news,” what they receive, when their attention is not being diverted by celebrity gossip, can in no sense be described as journalism.

According to the report, in a typical, 30 minute “news” segment…

Stories about government actions on topics like education, health care and law enforcement took up…1:12. The majority of this time (0:49) was devoted to government actions taking place at the federal level or in other states.

The study contains a graph reflecting that, on average, only 7 seconds out of every 30 minute broadcast is devoted to U.S. foreign policy as compared to 8 minutes 36 seconds devoted to paid-for commercials; another 2:10 devoted to “teasers” asking viewers to stay tuned for coverage to come. The bulk of the remaining time relates to sports, weather, crime and disasters.

Conflict of interest inherent in a corporate media profits and political ads

While the USC study revealed that nearly 29% of each 30 minute local TV “news” broadcast is devoted to commercial advertising, one should not lose sight of the fact that “news” programs provide only a small segment of local television which, while engaged in other forms of “entertainment,” relies heavily on commercials throughout all of its programming. State of the media.org reports that, in 2010, 91% of local station revenues were expected to come from advertising. While, like the rest of the economy, 2009 advertising revenues fell sharply, especially in the automotive sector, “political issue ads…may have doubled the total from the previous non-election year of 2007.”

The problem goes beyond the fact that paid political ads distort the political process by placing greater emphasis on the ability to pay for the 30 second propaganda slots. A station whose revenue is dependent on an especially wealthy candidate’s paid-for political ads will be less inclined to challenge their accuracy, especially when the ad runs in the middle of a “news” broadcast — ads which, in the case of Meg Whitman — present a carefully scripted, faux populist image of a successful businesswoman who benevolently intends to rescue economically distressed California, miraculously creating jobs and resolving the state’s fiscal crisis by cutting taxes and cutting state government spending.

“Step right in,” said the spider to the fly.

The power of a one-sided media pulpit

By evading reporters, ducking a debate with her chief Republican rival, state Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner, at the state Republican convention — she would later debate Poizner but only before a well heeled audience at the New Majority California, a Republican organization for deep-pocketed donors who pay a $10,000 annual membership fee — and by presenting only a carefully scripted image by way of television and radio ads, Whitman vaulted to an early commanding five to one lead over Poizner and a 3% lead over the likely Democratic Party nominee, CA Attorney General Jerry Brown.

Billionaire sociopaths

The first question any real journalist should ask is why a billionaire would be willing to invest an estimated $150 million of her own money in order to become the governor of California, a state which, at $1.8 trillion, has the world’s eighth largest economy?

The answer, I fear, may well be found in William K. Black’s The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One. The best way for Wall Street to pillage a state is to have one of their own installed as a governor.

During his April 23 appearance on Bill Moyers Journal, Black, a former bank regulator, deconstructed the Republican-led deregulation of Wall Street as essentially nothing more than the decriminalization of fraud. He skewered Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s suggestion during Congressional testimony to the effect that the federal government was powerless to prevent it due to the repeal of Glass-Steagall, the Depression era legislation that separated commercial and investment banking, noting that it was the Fed which had “pushed for the repeal of Glass-Steagall”:

So this is a deliberately created regulatory black hole, created by the Fed. And then the Fed comes into the hearing, eight years later, and said, we were helpless. Helpless to do anything, because of a black hole we designed.

Black described both the ideology and symbiotic relationship between Wall Street and the politicians they control as “criminogenic” :

A criminogenic environment is a steal from pathology — a pathogenic environment [is] one that spreads disease. In this case, it’s an environment that spreads fraud…And this ideology that both parties are dominated by says “No, big corporations wouldn’t cheat. Fraud can’t happen. The market’s automatically excluded.” It’s insane.

Black blasted the nation’s business schools for churning out an irresponsible, unaccountable generation of CEOs who feel “entitled” to unlimited wealth; “literal sociopaths” who “take control and destroy massive enterprises and cause global economic crises.”

As if on cue, on April 24 The New York Times confirmed Black’s assessment by reporting:

In late 2007, as the mortgage crisis gained momentum and many banks were suffering losses, Goldman Sachs executives traded e-mail messages saying that they would make “some serious money” betting against the housing markets.

The pillage of Main Street

The looting of Main Street was by no means limited to unregulated derivatives in which risky mortgages were packaged, sold and resold. As Matt Taibbi revealed when interviewed on Democracy Now, big banks like J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs have employed a ranged of unregulated derivatives — “credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, interest rate swaps” — in order to extract billions of dollars from local communities by “persuading” them to refinance their debt.

In his Rolling Stone piece, Taibbi focused on a $250 million Birmingham sewer project that was converted into a $5 billion debt obligation to J.P. Morgan:

There was so much money to be made bilking these dizzy Southerners that banks like JP Morgan spent millions paying middlemen who bribed — yes, that’s right, bribed, criminally bribed — the county commissioners and their buddies just to keep their business. Hell, the money was so good, JP Morgan at one point even paid Goldman Sachs $3 million just to back the fuck off, so they could have the rubes of Jefferson County to fleece all for themselves…

Birmingham’s mayor was convicted of fraud and money-laundering for taking bribes funneled to him by Wall Street bankers…But those who greenlighted the bribes and profited most from the scam remain largely untouched. “It never gets back to JP Morgan”…

As revealed by the Los Angeles Times, in 1998 Goldman Sachs saddled Oakland, CA with an “interest rate swap” which is now costing the city $5 million per year. As explained by Mike Elk at the Huffington Post, the sharks at Goldman persuaded Oakland to exchange their variable rate debt on $187.5 million in bonds for a 5.62% fixed rate. Although the rate of Goldman’s payments “dropped down to 0.15 percent…Goldman Sachs is still forcing the taxpayers of Oakland to pay 5.68 percent, and pocketing the $5.2 million difference as profit” — a pure profit made possible because Goldman borrows money from the Fed at zero percent interest; then loans the money back to local government which then is saddled with a hefty interest obligation.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported, “Goldman is a major player in California state finance. It has been the underwriter of $78.9 billion in bonds issued by the state since 2006.” The paper also reported that Goldman sought to privatize the California Lottery and purchase the CA agency which insures student loans.

Meg the Wall Streeter

When the California Accountability Project (CAP) stripped away the adroit PR facade of a brilliant businesswoman who places the word “integrity” in bold letters on her web site, they revealed a picture of the less flattering traits that typify a rapacious class of 21st Century CEOs.

Against the backdrop of a supposedly selfless citizen willing to spend $150 million of her own money in order to rescue the good citizens of California from those evil tax and spend Democrats, CAP noted that for “most of her life, Whitman didn’t bother to even cast a vote in a number of important elections, let alone participate in shaping public policy.”

It’s not that Whitman was completely divorced from politics. As revealed by the San Francisco Chronicle, in “2008, during the heart of the financial crisis, Meg Whitman was advising Presidential candidate John McCain to support the federal bank bailout” — no doubt out of the same benevolent spirit that led to her decision to run for governor. I mean, who but a cynic would point to the “20 Goldman Sachs investment funds in which Meg Whitman is an investor or partner” including “more than $1 million each in two Goldman Sachs ‘distressed opportunity’ funds, or so-called ‘vulture funds,’ which swoop in on failing assets and recession-ravaged companies?”

The San Francisco Chronicle went on to report:

From 1998 to 2002, while she was CEO of eBay, Whitman helped steer millions of dollars of her company’s investment banking business to Goldman….

In 2001, Goldman put Whitman on its corporate board, paying her an estimated $475,000 for little more than a year of part-time service. The company also gave her insider access to the initial public offerings of hot stocks worth millions…

According to Salon’s Lance Williams, Whitman received the $475,000 for attending perhaps a half dozen Goldman Sachs board meetings over the span of 15 months, though her stint at Goldman did include service on the board’s compensation committee which twice signed off on lucrative bonuses for then Goldman Sachs CEO Henry Paulson. Williams reviewed records which showed that “Paulson’s 2001 bonus package was $11.5 million, more than 19 times his salary,” before he left the firm to become George W. Bush’s Treasury Secretary.

As Bush’s fox guarding the hen house, Paulson, in 2008, led the movement to saddle U.S. taxpayers with the massive debt run up courtesy of the Wall Street casino, otherwise known as the derivatives market in mortgage-backed securities — an event which Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel prize winning economist described as “the Great American Bank Robbery.”

While it can at least be said that Goldman Sachs was raking it in at the same time Paulson received his bonuses, the same cannot be said of Whitman, whose annual compensation package, as reported by Eric Jackson of The Street.com, spiked during her last two years at eBay, “even as eBay’s stock price continued to decline. Peaking at $58 at the start of 2005, eBay’s stock price dropped 43% over the next three years. Over that same period, Whitman’s total annual compensation almost quintupled to $13.9 million from $2.9 million.”

Where Witman touts her own success at eBay, a Brad Stone New York Times piece noted that eBay’s growth hinged on the eventually unsustainable practice of raising seller fees, and that Whitman’s 2005 decision to purchase Skype, an internet phone and video service, based on the mistaken assumption that sellers and buyers would want to speak with one another before closing deals, ultimately forced eBay to write off “more than half of the $2.6 billion purchase price.”

Whitman’s tenure on the Goldman Sachs board ended abruptly after she was identified by Rep. Michael Oxley (R-OH) as one of 21 business executives to receive lucrative IPOs from Goldman Sachs, engaging in a practice known as “spinning.”

In “Meg Whitman has her own definition of the ‘right thing,’” Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times explains:

In spinning, executives would typically get shares in coveted initial public stock offerings, which they would “spin,” or resell, into a soaring market, usually within days and sometimes within hours. Their quick and almost entirely risk-free profits were effectively gifts, and the investment banks the givers.

Where Whitman denied in her book, The Power of Money (2010), that there was so much as a “conflict of interest,” let alone a quid pro quo between the lucrative IPOs she and other eBay executives received and the eBay investment banking business they steered to Goldman, a Delaware judge, in denying the executives’ motion to dismiss a shareholder suit, found otherwise, noting that Whitman and her fellow executives “‘were not free to accept this consideration from a company’ that arguably hoped to induce them to keep funneling business its way. Whitman and the other executives eventually settled the lawsuit by giving up their profits.”

The damage wrought by unchallenged propaganda

In “Pew Research Center Shows Elites Have Destroyed America’s Middle-Class,” Hiram Lee observed:

Wide layers of the population, who have seen trillions of dollars funneled from the public treasury into the coffers of Wall Street executives while their own living standards have been assaulted, their jobs slashed, their children’s schools closed, and vital social programs such as Medicare cut by billions of dollars, have no faith in the US government to secure their most basic social needs.

What has become painfully obvious is that many within these “wide layers of the population” simply do not realize that the source of the middle class demise lies not in government per se but in the carefully thought out, decades long effort of the hard-right to “starve the beast” by massive tax cuts for those who already have too much in order to, in the words of Grover Norquist, reduce government to the point it could be “drown in a bathtub” and in order to privatize the commons so that the privileged few can be enriched beyond the wildest imagination of ordinary citizens.

An American Political Science Association study, cited by Bill Moyers in Moyers on America (2004) referred to a “radical political elite who have…inequality as its mission and has organized ‘a fanatical drive to dismantle the political institutions, the legal and statutory cannons, and the intellectual and cultural framework that have shaped public responsibility from social harms arising from the excesses of private powers.'”

Four years before the housing bubble burst, Moyers observed that in “creating the greatest economic inequality in the advanced world, they have saddled our nation, our states, and our cities…with structural deficits…systematically stripping government of its capacity…to do little more than reward the rich and wage war.” More recently, in Capitalism: A Love Story (trailer below), Michael Moore touched upon the harsh reality their cynical ideology produced.

If the public airwaves and digital cable TV were not monopolized by a corrupt corporate media which is complicit in the pillage, these misguided masses (aka Tea Baggers) would understand that the answer lies not in destroying their government’s control of vital “public functions” — police, fire, education, parks, health care, environmental protection, access to clean and affordable housing, water, wholesome food and electricity.

In our vice-into-virtue, greed-is-good capitalist society a bevy of snake oil salesmen have convinced the uninformed that a harsh winner-take-all society that places the greed of the fortunate few above the needs of many and even above the ability to maintain a sustainable planet is a good thing; that democratic socialism, a system that extols positive human traits — empathy, compassion, community, a recognition that we’re all in this together — is to be feared and despised.

The choice before the citizens of California is not simply whether to accept or reject Meg Whitman as their next governor. It is a choice between democracy and what Chalmers Johnson described on the cover of Naomi Klein’s The Shock Doctrine as “our headlong flight back to feudalism under the guise of social science and ‘freedom.'”

* * *

Trailer for Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story follows…

* * *

Ernest A. Canning has been an active member of the California state bar since 1977. Mr. Canning has received both undergraduate and graduate degrees in political science as well as a juris doctor. He is also a Vietnam vet (4th Infantry, Central Highlands 1968).

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38 Comments on “Meg Whitman, Wall Street, ‘Billionaire Sociopaths’ and the Media ‘Substance Deficit’

  1. Not being a rocket scientist myself, I often ponder why people otherwise more competent and intelligent than me would let themselves get so nakedly and obviously fleeced. Maybe the answer lies in studying cults which often attract well-to-do educated individuals to find an understanding of the cult psychology that is on a smaller scale than the sociopathic cults controlling present day media and society as a whole. I guess the answer to why intelligent people with good jobs and education would be so passive in the face of such outrages is that every facet of modern life is controlled by government-subsidized corporate entities from the very beginning of their lives. Government is primarily a means of subsidizing such destructive interests while anything serving the public interest is vilified and blamed for society’s ills. Does multinational corporate presence in our lives begin with baby formula?

  2. The best way for Wall Street to pillage a state is to have one of their own installed as a governor.

    Can’t argue with that logic. Very thorough and thought-provoking piece.

  3. Wow Ernest, I believe that’s called knocking them out of the park! I’m emailing this immediately to my friends in California.
    And yeah Adam, that’s just about what the beautiful beast looks like.

  4. But Adam, we still have the ability to grow our own food and breastfeed. Do it for COMMUNITY! 🙂

  5. Mr. Canning, thank you again for another excellent article on the nuts and bolts aspects of the way in which America’s treasure has, and continues to be, pillaged by the top 1% of the population. The explanation of Whitman’s participation was more complete than I have read elsewhere. I hope the connection between her and GS gets wide play in California, her business model is not one that needs to be applied to a State that is having budget problems.

    Adam Fluffed #1 “Government is primarily a means of subsidizing such destructive interests while anything serving the public interest is vilified and blamed for society’s ills.”

    Ernest A. Canning: “…if you consider the ramifications of ‘Food, Inc.’…”
    —–

    One of the things about the subsidies to the ‘destructive’ interests which include favorable tax breaks, incentives to move jobs and corporate HQ’s off shore, diminished regulation and yes, the eternal corn subsidy [which has allowed corn to sell below the cost of production and become the new foundation of our food chain, food/meat production, diminished food-worker’s rights and a coming tide of the generally fatal and expensive disease, Diabetes] are not new subsidies.

    These are old programs that once in place have been manipulated and tailored to benefit an increasingly small minority of people and corporations that are now international players. They have no allegiance to country or philosophy beyond ‘more’ and ‘mine’. Sociopath is the perfect description of them. Yet, much of the Federal Government is set up to protect them and enable this vast transfer of wealth and protect these powerful interests.

    How do we end these subsidies (in their many and various guise’s) when even the first step of re-regulation of Wall Street is iffy? I used to think that America was running out of time to do what is necessary to break the class-based hold on our wealth and way of life but I’m thinking now that we have passed that point. I now think we are living in a new feudalism and I really don’t know if a new Magna Carta is possible.

  6. … Ancient said on 4/27/2010 @ 3:49 pm PT…

    But Adam, we still have the ability to grow our own food and breastfeed. Do it for COMMUNITY!

    We do have those options, and there is an increasing number of people choosing them.
    My wife and I have a newborn child. As is standard here in Canada, a public nurse came to visit us, weigh the baby, and give pointers to my wife on breastfeeding. The public nurse brought up the subject of formula and said that formula-fed had higher rates of cancer (namely leukemia), diabetes, and behavioral problems later in life than breast-fed babies (LOTS of money for the ddd industry there)

    We live in a condo, so growing our own food might be challenging (maybe a balcony garden?). We do grow our own sprouts, though (all you need is big pickle jars for that).

    In the past, there were some pretty nice societal structures in which a grain mill and bakery would be the center of activity and people eat locally grown foods. Modern encroachments, multinational crap, and whatnot have decimated some very viable systems.

  7. Adam, there are more and more communities designating space for organic community gardens, sorta like park space. It’s great! You get to meet other concerned folks of all kinds in your community that in these isolation societies you may never have met and work side by side together. 🙂

  8. To Adam Fulford & Ancient:

    Both “community gardens” and “grow-your-own” are excellent alternatives to the tyranny of the corporate factory farm system. But these are not the only options. You can always look into local farmer’s markets.

    Two excellent sources for acquiring wholesome food outside the big-ag corporate food chain are eat wild and local harvest.

    To Lora & Lottakatz: Thank you for your kind words.

  9. Ernest, I support my local farmers market, but when trying to sell my wild Alaskan fish from the oldest fishing cooperative (in other words wild not farm raised fish) in the country there I was told I would be competing with the supermarkets and that I had to manipulate the product some way in order to qualify. Well, my license is as a wholesaler so I am not allowed to manipulate my product in any way. A bit of a catch 22 for me. 🙁 In the future I might set up my own smoking facility, but I gotta get done with nursing school first…at which I’m kicking ass at.:-)

  10. Excellent article – an arrow to the heart of the beast.
    For the most part, the faceless executives that ran the financial ship onto the rocks hide behind their corporate “person” eschewing any personal responsibility. But, they have, in fact, committed fraud or participated in a fraudulent conspiracy.
    Unless these criminals are brought to account by the justice system the Congressional reforms are just Kabuki theater.

  11. An just one more oh yeah, how come when applying for a VA internship I gotta be a 4-year program person and not a 2 year person (school) when there is such GREAT NEED?

  12. Well, Meg’s just coming in to finish off the brilliant job the Governator signed on to get going during that governatorial coup a bit ago. Hey, I looked into moving my money to a local, ‘community’ bank. Guess what! They are handing out some brochure issued by our pals at the Department of Homeland Security. (Gee, I always feel so GERMAN when I type those words?!) Go see The Money Fix (online), read Agenda for a New Economy, and anything by John Perkins, Economic Hitman. Then read up on a guy named Jensen (No Exit) and David Icke. Good luck all. As I’ve been saying, it’s gonna be a bit of a bumpy ride. We’re in active freefall now. The Kabuki artists in Congress are sure offering an amusing performance, aren’t they? Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain! Move along, nothing to see here…

  13. I dun no Sophia, put up a windmill/solar panels, put in a hot tub, and grow a garden…and lets make sure the smart grid is a 50/50 deal with the public.

  14. i don’t think people understand just how good hydrotherapy is for people with all kind of problems.

  15. And they would be hypertension drugs I believe…among others. But I’ll have to double check on that. Oh crap more homework.

  16. Holy crap, I just heard bp asking for anyones help over their spill. Well I was fishing in Alaska when exon valdez went off and from stratagizing over that I’d say…get a strengthened material similiar to the swiffer stuff stretched out and towed just under the surface (10 ft down or sumpin) and start dragging back against the current coming to the surface. GET ENOUGH BOATS TO PARTICIPATE AND YOU JUST MIGHT DO ER.

  17. Hey, after dinner with my engineer partner and suggesting crushing the leak with something really big… I was told that’s basically what they plan with a siphon in place and a big dome to contain the original spill. Just my up date.

  18. Oh yeah, he all he can say is Drill Baby Drill. Satire for yous who don’t know me.

  19. (If this doesn’t come out right, -km having that text-doesn’t wrap problem again. Forgive typos, duplicates, whatever!) Figure I oughta re-watch the Mad Max series to study up. Oh, and Waterworld… Hey, Ancient! You seem quite a handy feller-optimistic, upbeat, a problem solver… Nice to know a few of you are hanging around. We’re gonna need folk like you pretty damn quick I do believe! 🙂

  20. COMMENT #22 … Ancient: When that shit sinks it turns into asphalt on the bottom killing everything.

    —-
    POISONOUS asphalt- it just keeps on leaching poisonous hydrocarbons into the water. Not too kool if one of your premier industries is bottom fishing or snorkeling/diving. I’m one of those folks that err on the side of caution; even if some food fish or crustaceans can manage to live in/on it (as well as all the other chemicals that are flushed into the Gulf) I don’t want to eat it secondhand. Jumbo Gulf shrimp just won’t be on my menu for years if ever because that stuff takes decades to break down completely.

    I’ve read that if you dig into the gravel where the Exxon Valdez broke up you still, 20 years later, come up with oil sludge coated rocks. I don’t know if that’s true but it’s just the kind of statement that makes me look for fish products from Iceland. It may be an over-reaction on my part but…

  21. Hey, ancient: my whoops. Summa my best friend engineer types are womenfolk. Pleez forgive my sexist bent. It catches me on lazy mornings more often than I’d like to admit! So anyway, stay handy – we’re all gonna need those skills. I’m remembering how to sew. Ciao! Back to my nap!!

  22. First off, no sweat Sophia. I’m a napper too, and I hope you get my playful tone. Ya know, some of my best dreaming happenens when I nap! 🙂
    And Lotta, this is what I posted over at Raw when…
    I found myself unable to respond here:

    GOD DAMMIT, I’M BEING CENSORED. I swear every other site but the one I post the most on is available to me and just when I was in the middle of a conversation about the oil spill, being that I was in Alaska at the time of the exxon spill fishing. WELL HOPEFULLY RAW WILL POST THIS IT GOES WITH THE CONVERSATION ON BRADBLOG the MEG WHITMAN ARTICLE…

    Hey there Lotta, I got my info from an expert who had come in to try to help during our spill and was a veteran of this spill http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amoco_Cadiz . He was a good guy truly concerned for us (the fishing fleet) …but when their experts were not acting fast enough…the fisherman jumped in helping to contain the shit. Unfortunately, I’m not seeing that same kinda “gotta get it done” being employed now. If I were a fisherman down there now I’d be demanding any and everything! They ought to connect with exon era fisherfolk from AK.

    Well then, its pretty close to what I wrote originally and I do understand it was pretty off topic…but it was a cogent comment.
    I mean shit Brad, I was about to call the ACLU thinking my isp provider was censoring me! Anyway after talking to a mutual friend of ours here in PA, instead of emailing you first like I told her I was thinking of doing…I realized that I did receive a message that I was being moderated, and I figure its best to just put the whole thing front and center, cuz it had never happened to me before here. Welcome back Bro.

  23. And as a follow up to my whole train of thought that evening…why don’t we take the waste and excess of our defensive strategy and turn bombs into waterways for everyone! I’ve even broached the subject with my engineer partner. 🙂

  24. Just FYI, Ancient. Not sure why that post got moderated. Sometimes a word or phrase will kick the spam filter in for some reason, but I try to get it unmodded ASAP whenever possible. It was probably something in that one post.

    And thanks for the welcome back!

  25. Thanks for responding Brad. I eggmit I forgot about that possiblity, and to be honest I didn’t think it was the blog because of your integrity in protecting our freedom of speech. So again, sincerely welcome back!

  26. So what can one say when one has their own personal administrator (controls edits) on Wikipedia?

    Is it a conflict of interest when said administrator worked for eBay at a high level position, and apparently now is entrusted with keeping a Wikipedia record squeaky clean and probably just the way she likes it.

    In case you don’t understand how Wikipedia works, history can be made and or revised based upon whether edits are allowed to stand or are undone by administrators.

    I have seen it and have serious reservations about that source. Conflict of interest is irrelevant.

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