Finding the Truth:

A sad but strangely hilarious adventure in surfing the Environment


My travels began this morning (eons ago, it seems now), when I decided to add a page on the Environment to my web site. Specifically a page dedicated to the Global Warming question. Now, at 9:19 pm, my eyes are blurring, my brain is tired, my fingernails have been worn to the quick..but my will- and my funny bone- remain intact. So, on with the story...

I decided that for logic and truth to prevail I must of course look deeply at both sides of Global Warming; research proponents and detractors. I looked first at the detractors, finding sites on my favorite search engine that appeared dedicated to the debunking of Global Warming.

My first 'hit' on this subject was an article posted in the Investors Business Daily- June 14, 2000. The article was a sternly worded swat to the 'hysterical doomsayers' - researchers of the newly released government report: "Climate Change Impacts on the United States" for thier 'unfounded junk science' designed to 'frighten the uneducated' on the subject. A few positives were apparently also found in the report by the writer of the Investment Daily article, they are as follows:

"Favorable outcomes mentioned in the report included the fact that growing seasons in a warmer world might lengthen -- leading to higher crop yields. Also, winter nights in the frozen north might get slightly warmer."


Interesting. A writer that actually can find some positives to Global warming.. hmm. So, who or what is driving this writer to such pollyanna-ism? At the bottom of the article I found a source: Editorial, "The Uncritical Drumbeat", and a web page: http://www.ncpa.org which turned out to be a group called the

NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS..

The NCPA claims to be a 'non-profit public policy think tank'. How sweet! How heartwarming! A group of men dedicated to thinking for free, and above all, thinking for free for little ol' me. After all, I am the 'public' aren't I? I decided immediately to take a look at who was leading this fearless band of philanthropic philosophisers and clicked on "Board Members". What I found would perhaps surprise the truly naive, fortunately my 21st century cyniscm steeled my nerves against what could have been a crushing blow to my All American Ideology.

NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS

Board of Directors:

Thomas W. Smith, Managing Partner of Prescott Investors, Inc.

John C. Goodman, President, NCPA

Pete du Pont, Richards, Layton and Finger

James Cleo Thompson, Jr., Chairman of the Board, Thompson Petroleum Corp.

Jere W. Thompson, President, The Williamsburg Corporation

Dan W. Cook III, Senior Director of Goldman Sachs & Co.

Robert H. Dedman, Chairman of the Board, ClubCorp International

Virginia Gilder, Trustee, The Hickory Foundation

Charles Miller, Chairman of the Board, Meridian Advisors, Ltd.


Well I guess that answered that question. So I looked onward and upward searching for a real, unbiased, non-profit oriented study disproving the Global Warming Theory. A study which was not espoused nor paid for by Chairmen of any Petroleum Corporation, family members of Multinational Chemical Corporations, or any investment bankers, counselors or international brokers. Back to the old drawing board...err.. search engine, where I found

THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTE.

WOW! Now this must be a group that realy CARES, right? The Heartland Institute had this to say about Global Warming:


HEARTLAND INSTITUTE

Global Climate Change

"Common-sense environmentalists believe:

The threat of catastrophic global climate change is currently the most hyped and least scientifically defensible environmental threat propounded by the national environmental movement.

Most scientists do not believe we are dangerously interfering with the global climate; most believe a slight warming and rising levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) would be beneficial to human progress and wildlife.

Mandating reductions in CO2 emissions would have devastating economic consequences, especially for rural America, and produce an almost imperceptible impact on the global climate.

Continued pounding on the global warming drum threatens to discredit the entire environmental movement. It's time to move on to more important, better understood, environmental issues."


Hmm..interesting, again, opponents of the Global Warming research talking about not only drums, but how beneficial rising CO2 levels could be for the world. How lovely for us. Unfortunately they utterly failed to post one line of research from the 'common sense' environmentalists they have apparently been reading. Nor did they bother to post whom these 'Most scientists' are. Nor did they bother to mention exactly what the 'more important, better understood, environmental issues are. And what does that mean exactly- "Better understood"? Does this mean that if we do not understand what something is or what causes it, as this group proposes about global warming, then it is time to move on to something a bit 'easier' to understand? Hmm..I thought the whole purpose of research was to actually GAIN an understanding of underlying causes to a problem so that it could be solved. I had to of course take a look at who the proponents were of such a rosy future; who was so zealously guarding you and I against the poor, deluded 'non-common-sense environmentalists .

THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTE

directors:

Herbert J.Walberg, Chairman University of Illinois - Chicago

Joseph L. Bast, President and CEO The Heartland Institute

Robert Buford: Planned Realty Group

James Fitzgerald: BankNote Capital LLC

Dan Hales: Peterson & Ross

John Hosemann: American Farm Bureau Federation

James L. Johnston: Amoco Corporation (retired)

Roy E. Marden: Philip Morris Companies

David H. Padden: Padden & Co.

Frank Resnik: Medline Inc. (retired)

Leslie Rose: Fidelity Bank

Al St. Clair: Procter & Gamble

David Thornbury: General Motors Corporation

Lee H. Walker: New Coalition for Economic & Social Change


Whew, thats better. At least the Amoco guy was retired. Of course 'retired' only means 'now drawing a pension instead of pay'. And I am sure he invested heavily in his own parent corporation. Too bad I couldn't say the same about the General Motors honcho or Philip Morris rep. It would have made THE HEARTLAND INSTITUTEs' motives a little less obvious... by a hairsbreadth... maybe. Of course it's self- proclamation of its status as a 'non-profit public policy think tank' was by now a bit of a clue. I was to read that signature line many times before the day was over. So many times that the words began to gradually blur into 'non-profit (raking in billions) public policy (we will decide for you- just be quiet and don't ask too many questions) think tank (as we think up more and more ways to sway politicians while fooling the public that we are not only interested in the bottom line)


But being a bit pollyanna-ish myself, I followed the next horse in line to:

http://www.skepticism.net/global_warming/index.html

Ok, now this is great, I thought. A little web site put together obviously by some person who is only interested in the common good, being a common man himself. Obviously a person who has thought long and hard on the subject and has done a great deal of research. On the page were a great number of links. Yay! a goldmine of varied sources and stories.

Unfortunately one thing became even more obvious while scanning the list of editorials and stories denouncing and debunking recent global warming research, a lot of the same writers popped up time and time again. A notable one being a Mr. Patrick Michaels. Remember that name..more on him later.

One notable link from this site was to

THE COMPETITIVE ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE.

Of course I had to make a quick hop into this site to see who was the main proponent of the 'skeptics' site. One of the Directors of this little enterprise was a Mr. William Dunn, of Dunn Capital Management, Inc.

Doing a bit more research on Mr. Dunn, I discovered he had some very interesting views regarding his heavy portfolio in 'energy investment futures'(read; Petroleum, Coal and Gas) and thier co-existance with regulatory agencies.


Dunn: "Beneficial changes in the industry have been the opening of new global markets in financial and energy futures and new foreign exchanges. Detrimental changes have been the heavy hand of materialistic regulators."

Hmm...and this:

Dunn: "As a trader, coping with the loss of liquidity and diversification provided by the previously robust agricultural markets presents a great challenge. As a businessman, reducing the burdensome micro-management of the regulators is the greatest challenge. New entrants to the CTA community face serious impediments to survival because of the intimidating barrage of paperwork and regulation."


Now, could this be related to the same Dunn as Edgar Dunn and Company? Belonging to the CONSULTINGCLUB along with Diamond Technologies? (rhymes with Diamond Offshore Drilling by the way)

Regardless of speculation, one thing was becoming increasingly clear as the day wore on. That is that I had yet to read one independent study that debunked the recent Global Warming studies. I'll clarify that. I had yet to read one independent study NOT linked in any way to a petroleum, coal, chemical or natural gas producer or investment banker or broker in same that clearly and scientifically debunked Global Warming research. And no one else seemed the slightest bit interested in debunking the research at all.

Now, back to Mr. Patrick Michaels. Having witnessed him repeatedly vent his rather large spleen without ever saying or producing anything concrete to back up his virulence against the environmental researchers via the 'skeptics' site, I decided he deserved a closer look-see. A search of his name turned up a book titled "The Satanic Gases", which is NOT a joke, honestly... Here is a review of the book:

"The authors argue that the jury is already in on global warming, and the verdict is a modest heating over the 21st century-very similar to what occurred during the last third of the 20th century.

The vast majority of warming will take place in the winter, and within that season, the coldest, deadliest air masses will show the greatest change.

But, the authors argue, such distortions in science are always temporary, and inevitably the scientific community will concede that earlier forecasts dramatically exaggerated the threat of global warming."

The book review linked directly to

THE CATO INSTITUTE

who apparently is also the publisher of The Satanic Gases.

Here is what THE CATO INSTITUTE has to say for itself beside the fact that it is a (heavy sigh)'non-profit public policy think tank':

Since its founding in 1977 by Edward H. Crane, the Institute has grown to be an internationally recognized institution of research and policy analysis. Its 1999 budget is $13 million, and it has approximately 75 employees, 55 adjunct scholars, and 14 fellows, many of whom are among the country's leading advocates of free markets and limited government".

Here is a little example I found on the CATO site debunking Global Warming:

By: Gordon C. Jacoby, Rosanne D'Arrigo, Tsevegyn Davaajarnts

"The United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) claims that historic temperature data suggests a discernible human influence on global climate. The IPCC points to the global climate warming by 0.3 degrees Celsius to 0.6 degrees Celsius over the past 100 years. BUT, according to renowned climatologist Dr. Fred Singer:

"Most of this warming (up to 0.5 degrees Celsius) occurred between 1910 and 1940. And it has been during the last 50 years that about 80 percent of greenhouse gases have been added to the atmosphere."

The IPCC's own data shows essentially no warming over the last 25 years. Now, with a little help from the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, trees have a story to tell as well. And it doesn't jibe with the IPCC claim.

Tree rings indicate tree growth. Each ring represents one year of growth. The wider a ring, the more growth that occurred that year. Jacoby et al. measured tree rings in 500-year old trees in Mongolia. Because the sampling location was that of a typical tree-line site where temperature should be the factor that limits tree growth, Jacoby et al. concluded that the wider tree ring widths were due to the warming of the global climate.

Specifically, Jacoby et al. found that: On average, tree ring widths have been getting wider (and the global climate warmer) since the mid-1800s, before significantaccumulation of greenhouse gases. Tree ring widths peaked in the 1960s, indicating no increased growth (and no increased global warming) since then.

Will the IPCC (and their junk environmental scientists) be had by the very trees they hug? What irony!"


WOW! If the Mongolian Academy of Sciences says it is true..why then.. it must be!


But then here is another little tidbit by a CATO alum:

Why So Hot? Don't Blame Man, Blame the Sun

By Sallie Baliunas

August 5, 1999

"Last month's heat wave has prompted by-now-predictable warnings about, as Time magazine's cover puts it this week, "New Concerns on Global Warming." Computer simulations say the "greenhouse effect" should have raised the temperature globally by about one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) in the past 100 years. But actual temperatures have not cooperated with the computer models. Temperature records show a rise of 0.5 degree Celsius over the century, peaking before 1940. The average surface temperature then decreased until the 1970s (when the doomsayers were warning of an impending ice age) and has since risen a modest 0.2 degree Celsius. Because more than 80% of the manmade carbon dioxide has entered the air since the '40s, the early-century warming of 0.5 degree must be natural. One reason for the failure of the models is that they overlook an important natural factor that probably influences temperatures: the changing sun. In 1610 Galileo began the telescopic observations of sunspots that make up our modern view of the sun. Sunspots are cooler, darker areas of strong magnetic fields. The number of sunspots peaks and the direction of the field changes every 11 years or so, making a 22-year magnetic cycle. In the 1980s NASA satellites collected data that showed the sun was brightest during peak sunspot periods. The length of the magnetic cycle is closely related to its amplitude; thus the sun should be brightest when the sunspot cycle is short."


Sunspots Sallie? Are we maybe reaching a little here? Well, a bit farther than Mongolia anyway. Oddly enough Ms. Baliunas does admit that it is getting hotter. (Does this mean that the Academy of Mongolian Science is WRONG? God forbid.) She has certainly found a more, um, plausible(?) excuse than cow gas. Actually this article aggravated me a bit as I have been watching weather and temperature patterns world wide for some time now, and Sallie dearest tends to stretch the truth just a tad- as you will see later on.

Of course when we take a harder look at who her bosses are, perhaps we will become enlightened regading her 'pie in the sky' outlook on Global Warming.


Extra!, January/February 1998

Media Moguls on Board

Murdoch, Malone and the Cato Institute

By Norman Solomon

"Last fall, when News Corporation owner Rupert Murdoch joined the board of directors at the Cato Institute, the announcement went unreported in major media." (Odd, as they sure scream loudly enough about 'tree huggers, drumming, and the proverbial 'junk science'.) "Perhaps it seemed routine for one of the world's most powerful media moguls to take a leadership post at one of the most influential think tanks in Washington.

At future meetings, Murdoch can count on rubbing elbows with his fellow media titan, John C. Malone--president and CEO of Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI), the largest U.S. cable operator--who has been on the Cato board since 1995. The two men are well acquainted, and their companies have long been intertwined in media deals involving satellite television, cable TV, program distribution and other big telecommunications ventures. Now the heads of both firms are formally helping to run a think tank which boasts that it has "actively promoted the deregulation of the television and telephone industries."

In recent years, the Cato Institute has neared the top tier of think tanks in the United States?on Capitol Hill and in the nation's news media. In the 1996 book No Mercy: How Conservative Think Tanks and Foundations Changed America's Social Agenda, Jean Stefancic and Richard Delgado write that the Cato Institute "played a key role in forming the ideas and policies of the new Republican majority in Congress." These days, "congressional committee chairmen increasingly look to Cato scholars for testimony."

Interesting word, scholars.

"FAIR's search of major newspaper and broadcast media in the Nexis computer database found that Cato was one of four think tanks with more than 1,000 citations in 1995 and again in 1996 (see Extra!, 7?8/97). The Brookings Institution and Heritage Foundation were in a virtual tie for first place; Cato followed closely behind third-place American Enterprise Institute.

By the time the Cato Institute celebrated its 20th anniversary at a Washington Hilton bash with 2,000 guests last spring, the Washington Post (5/2/97) was declaring that "Cato is now the hot policy shop." The Post quoted one of the enthusiastic guests, ABC News correspondent John Stossel: "I have no official political affiliation, but I sure seem to be agreeing with them on a lot of things." (A year earlier, Stossel had been the keynote speaker at a Cato "City Seminar" in New York.) For corporations eager to stoke the pro-privatization and anti-regulation fervor of the Cato Institute, it's clearly a good investment.

Government beneficiaries

Broadcasters like Murdoch benefit greatly from federal giveaways. Holding frequency licenses worth fortunes, they're now receiving free slices of a digital spectrum valued at up to $70 billion. Likewise, cable TV conglomerates?with Malone's TCI in the lead?continue to expand under the protection of federal regulations that place severe limits on the power of municipalities to charge franchise fees for the use of public rights-of-way. While lauding the "free market," Murdoch and Malone rely on the federal government's aid in their quest for media monopolization. The contradiction doesn't seem to bother the Cato Institute at all.

While it has criticized "corporate welfare," Cato is much more intent on eliminating government programs for the poor. (See p. 22.) The annual report for 1996 trumpets a statement by Cato's director of health and welfare studies, Michael Tanner, that "welfare has failed and cannot be reformed. It is time to end it. In its place, the civil society would rely on a reinvigorated network of private charity." One of Cato's luminaries is Jos� Pi�era, co-chair of its Project on Social Security Privatization. According to Cato's latest annual report, "the project's work was cited by nearly every major newspaper in the United States, including the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal." The report says that Pi�era, a former minister of labor and welfare in Chile, "oversaw the privatization of Chile's pension system in the early 1980s"-- but does not mention that at the time the Chilean government was under the dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Cato's concern about intrusive government evidently does not extend to torture and murder. In terms of commitment to human rights, Cato has found a kindred spirit in Rupert Murdoch, who is fond of floating lofty rhetoric about his Star TV satellite network. "Satellite broadcasting makes it possible for information-hungry residents of many closed societies to bypass state-controlled television," said Murdoch, who touted new media technology as a "threat to totalitarian regimes everywhere." But Murdoch quickly kowtowed to China's totalitarian regime when Beijing objected to Star TV transmissions of BBC News reports about Chinese human rights abuses. In 1994, Murdoch's network dropped the BBC from its broadcasts to Asia. "The BBC was driving them nuts," Murdoch said (New Yorker, 11/13/95). "It's not worth it."

Announcing that Murdoch had joined its board, a Cato news release (9/22/97) praised him as "a strong advocate of the free market" and quoted his stirring words: "I start from a simple principle: In every area of economic activity in which competition is attainable, it is much to be preferred to monopoly." (This from someone with 70 percent penetration of the newspaper market in Australia.)

Smoking hired guns

Murdoch sits on the board of directors of Philip Morris, the tobacco giant recently inducted into INFACT's Hall of Shame "for exerting undue influence over public policy-making" with the help of 240 registered federal and state lobbyists?spending as much as $2 million per month to lobby federal officials. Murdoch publications such as TV Guide reap enormous profits from cigarette ads. And Murdoch's Fox Broadcasting is cozy with Philip Morris subsidiary Miller Brewing Co., which recently boosted its advertising account with Fox to about $75 million per year for sports and primetime programs (Advertising Age, 6/16/97).

But Murdoch is just one of many Cato links to Big Tobacco. Although news reporting and media commentaries often include the Cato Institute's assessments of tobacco-related issues, Cato's direct ties to tobacco rarely get mentioned. For years, the list of Cato's large contributors has included Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds.

As it happens, Cato is a fierce tiger when it comes to advocating for oppressed tobacco firms. Last summer, a Cato "Policy Analysis" by senior fellow Robert A. Levy denounced state lawsuits against tobacco companies to recover Medicaid costs for treating people with smoking-related diseases. He claimed that anti-tobacco politicians were "willing to deny due process to a single industry selected for its deep pockets and public image rather than its legal culpability."

A month later, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee (7/16/97), Levy sounded a similar theme, calling a proposed tobacco settlement "a shameful document, extorted by public officials who have perverted the rule of law to tap the deep pockets of a feckless and friendless industry." For good measure, Levy excoriated newly proposed restrictions on tobacco advertising as "draconian." And he went ballistic over the idea that tobacco firms should provide funds for the health care of children without insurance: "To hold a single industry financially liable is no more than a bald transfer of wealth from a disfavored to a favored group."

Such pronouncements from the lips of tobacco company lawyers are likely to be taken with outsized grains of salt by the public. But Levy has consistently received respectful media coverage?without reference to the links between the tobacco industry he defends and the think tank that employs him.

So, in a news article that appeared a week before Levy testified on Capitol Hill, the Chicago Tribune (7/10/97) devoted several paragraphs to Levy's views, quoting his claims that federal efforts to regulate tobacco have been counterproductive. The article identified the Cato Institute only as "a libertarian think tank in the capital"?though it could have just as accurately been described as an advocacy group paid by the tobacco industry.

The next month, when the San Diego Union-Tribune published a 1,100-word op-ed article by Levy under the headline "Rule of Law Is a Loser in Tobacco War" (8/31/97), the identifying blurb mentioned Levy's post at Cato?but not Cato's relationship with tobacco companies. In that piece, Levy ("a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute") lambasted "an $11 billion settlement of Florida's war against the tobacco industry." He called the settlement "shameful" because "it strips a currently unfashionable industry of basic protections the rest of us take for granted." Ten days later, in USA Today (9/10/97), Levy surfaced again as a concerned legal scholar writing an opinion piece that decried the persecution of tobacco firms and blasted "our pervasive regulatory state."

"Funny funding"

Major media outlets have routinely turned a blind eye to the corporate financial backing for Cato and other large think tanks in Washington. Few reporters or pundits focus on the conflicts of interest involved.

A report by Public Citizen illuminated the industry money behind the major think tanks campaigning to strip regulatory authority from the Food and Drug Administration: "Seven think tanks?the American Enterprise Institute, the Cato Institute, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Heritage Foun-dation, the Hudson Institute, the Progress and Freedom Foundation and the Washington Legal Foundation--received at least $3.5 million between 1992 and 1995 from drug, medical device, biotechnology and tobacco manufacturers and their corporate foundations." But mainstream journalists paid scant attention to who was paying the piper. "Some of the country's most renowned think tanks, frequently cited by the American media, are carrying water for the drug, medical device, biotechnology and tobacco industries," the public interest group reported (Public Citizen, Fall/96).

Not all media outlets have given short shrift to those realities. Under the headline "FDA's Detractors Get Funny Funding," the Tennessean newspaper editorialized (7/29/96): "The think tanks named in the report, including the Cato Institute, the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute, have produced a steady stream of anti-FDA sentiment, including op-ed pieces and reports over the last several years." The newspaper noted "a tremendous difference between an independent think tank, which does legitimate research, and a quasi-academic mouthpiece financed by a regulated industry." (I wonder if they have found that editor in the trunk of a car yet?)

Clearly, the Cato Institute falls in the latter category. The Institute's yearly funding has climbed above $8 million, more than twice what it was in 1992. The organization's most recent annual report exults: "We've moved into a beautiful new $13.7 million headquarters at 1000 Massachusetts Avenue and have only $1 million in debt remaining on it as we enter 1997." Dozens of huge corporations, eager to roll back government regulatory powers, are among Cato's largest donors.

In their book No Mercy, University of Colorado Law School scholars Stefancic and Delgado describe a shift in Cato's patron base over the years. Cato's main philanthropic backing has come from the right-wing Koch, Lambe and Sarah Scaife foundations. But today, Cato "receives most of its financial support from entrepreneurs, securities and commodities traders, and corporations such as oil and gas companies, Federal Express, and Philip Morris that abhor government regulation."

Financial firms now kicking in big checks to Cato include American Express, Chase Manhattan Bank, Chemical Bank, Citicorp/Citibank, Commonwealth Fund, Prudential Securities and Salomon Brothers. Energy conglomerates include: Chevron Companies, Exxon Company, Shell Oil Company and Tenneco Gas, as well as the American Petroleum Institute, Amoco Foundation and Atlantic Richfield Foundation. Cato's pharmaceutical donors include Eli Lilly & Company, Merck & Company and Pfizer, Inc.

Friends in the media

While serving on Cato's board and making personal donations, TCI's John Malone is among many other media and telecommunications heavies behind Cato. Big donors include Bell Atlantic Network Services, BellSouth Corporation, Digital Equipment Corporation, GTE Corporation, Microsoft Corp- oration, Netscape Communications Corporation, NYNEX Corporation, Sun Microsystems and Viacom Interna-tional. It's understandable that Cato's news releases?while constantly urging privatization of the Internet and other communications systems?do not mention where Cato money is coming from. But it's inexcusable that media coverage seldom includes such information.

Even when Malone makes a public appearance for the Cato Institute, reporters seem uninclined to shed light on the array of corporate funding that makes Cato possible. When Malone spoke on "Telecommunications in the 21st Century" at a Cato seminar luncheon in Denver, a pair of articles in the next day's Denver Post (11/15/96) gave extensive coverage to Malone's comments--and identified Cato only as "a libertarian think tank."

Cato's newest board member, Rupert Murdoch, is a global media giant whose U.S. possessions include the Fox television network, TV Guide, the tabloid New York Post, HarperCollins book publishers and the Twentieth Century Fox movie studios. Along the way, lax federal regulation has swelled the profits of Murdoch's News Corp., now a $28 billion conglomerate. As a 1997 New York Times article noted (3/31/97), his 10-year-old Fox TV network "could never have succeeded if it had not received generous treatment at the Federal Communications Commission."

Naturally, turning such big governmental wheels requires lots of political grease. In 1996, Murdoch donated $1 million to the California Republican Party, while News Corp. gave another $654,700 in "soft money" to the national GOP. In Murdoch's native Australia, News Corp. dominates the mass media. In Britain, Murdoch controls more than a third of daily newspaper circulation along with much of cable and satellite television. While using his media outlets to push for the slashing of government social services, Murdoch was a pioneer in union-busting within the newspaper industry.

Murdoch is likely to have a long and harmonious presence on the Cato Institute's board of directors."


Okay. So now we understand what a 'non-profit public policy think tank' is. Apparently anything less than an income of say, 13.5 million is a 'non-profit' enterprise. It's version of 'public policy' includes the wholesale buy-out of the Republican Party and most of the media influence in the world. And it seems to 'think' that torture, corporate welfare, and the destruction of the environment, not to mention lies, dishonesty and underhandedness in hiding it's true motives is 'ok' as long as it increases the portfolio, bank accounts, and country club memberships.

Well, I was beginning to 'think' that we had been had. More to come- there IS a punch-line to all this. So y'all come back now ya hear!
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