Tuesday, October 05, 2021

Opening A Pandora's Box Inland: South Dakota Emerges As Most Popular Location (then there's Florida, Delaware, Texas and Nevada...)

Intro

Pandora papers reveal South Dakota’s role as $367bn tax haven

Some trusts held in midwestern state linked to individuals or companies previously accused of misconduct overseas

South Dakota image
Files suggest the US mid-western state now rivals other famous tax havens as a premier venue for the international rich seeking to protect their assets from local taxes or the authorities. Illustration: Guardian Design
Files suggest the US mid-western state now rivals other famous tax havens as a premier venue for the international rich seeking to protect their assets from local taxes or the authorities.
Illustration: Guardian Design

Last modified on Tue 5 Oct 2021 09.13 EDT

 
"South Dakota is sheltering billions of dollars in wealth, some linked to individuals and companies accused of financial crimes or serious wrongdoing, according to documents in the Pandora papers.
The files suggest the US midwestern state now rivals Switzerland, Panama, the Cayman Islands and other famous tax havens as a premier venue for the international rich seeking to protect their assets from local taxes or the authorities.

Wealthy foreign individuals and their families are moving millions of dollars to South Dakota trust funds, which enjoy some of the world’s most powerful legal protections from taxes, creditors and prying eyes.

The US has previously faced international criticism over the ease with which shell companies – which can be used to perpetrate tax fraud and financial crimes – can be incorporated in the state of Delaware.

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Has everyone named in the Pandora papers done something wrong?

No. Moving money offshore is not in or of itself illegal, and there are legitimate reasons why some people do it. Not everyone named in the Pandora papers is suspected of wrongdoing. Those who are may stand accused of a wide range of misbehaviour: from the morally questionable through to the potentially criminal. The Guardian is only publishing stories based on leaked documents after considering the public interest. That is a broad concept that may include furthering transparency by revealing the secret offshore owners of UK property, even where those owners have done nothing wrong. Other articles might illuminate issues of important public debate, raise moral questions, shed light on how the offshore industry operates, or help inform voters about politicians or donors in the interests of democratic accountability.

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But the Pandora papers – a leak of 11.9m files from 14 different offshore services providers around the world – reveal how the US is also emerging as a key location for trusts, which are typically used to shelter the personal wealth of super-rich individuals rather than multinationals.

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and the Washington Post said their analysis of the data had identified 28 trusts in the US tied to individuals or companies previously accused of misconduct overseas. . .

The papers were leaked to the ICIJ, a US-based journalism nonprofit, which shared access to them with the Guardian, the BBC, the Washington Post and other media partners around the world.

According to a 2020 state report, South Dakota’s burgeoning trust industry holds an estimated $367bn (£273bn) in assets, a sum approaching the annual economic output of the Republic of Ireland – up from $75.5bn in 2011. The phenomenal growth has been supercharged by the state’s aggressive drive to attract money by shielding trust owners’ assets from foreign governments, taxes and even former spouses.

South Dakota’s moves have inspired other states to “liberalise” their trust regulations, a phenomenon that helped the US overtake Switzerland in the Tax Justice Network’s 2020 global ranking of countries most complicit in helping individuals hide their finances from the rule of law.

More than 200 US trusts appear in the Pandora papers data, sheltering at least $1bn.

While South Dakota emerges from the leak as the most popular location, with 81 trusts, Florida, Delaware, Texas and Nevada account for dozens more. . .

In a statement to the ICIJ and the Washington Post, Bret Afdahl, the director of the South Dakota division of banking, which regulates financial services in the state, cited various measures his department could use in order to ensure compliance with state laws. He said trust company providers were vetted before they could begin operating.

Chuck Collins, the author of The Wealth Hoarders: How Billionaires Pay Millions to Hide Trillions and the director of the programme on inequality at the Institute for Policy Studies, said the situation with regard to South Dakota was “an embarrassment” for the US.

“We are the weak link. And South Dakota is in a race to the bottom to be the weakest link on trusts,” said Collins. “We have seen the hidden wealth apparatus but it is always considered offshore. The more we understand that it’s onshore, the US is a weak link and we are now the magnet for kleptocratic capital the better for national understanding and the greater the potential for national legislation.”

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RELATED CONTENT ON THIS BLOG for the phrase "Pandora's Box" that was used by City Manager Chris on a number of occasions

28 July 2019

Timely Information Taxpayers Here In Mesa Can Use

Why post this now you might ask?
Simply because people who live here in Mesa - and more importantly taxpayers - really need to know that under the leadership of the Mesa's Chief Executive Officer, the guy with the smile shown in this opening image, City Manager Chris Brady has somehow managed to increase the public debt service obligations by a factor over 500% during his twelve years tenure inside City Hall from 2006-2018.
Another proposed $200-Million Dollar tax burden falls on your backs taking money out-of-your-pockets.
Sorry to drill down on this, but . . .  
YOU REALLY NEED TO
ASK MORE QUESTIONS
and
YOU REALLY NEED TO PAY MORE ATTENTION
Let's get to the real Nitty-Gritty right now:
There are not one or two but SIX Questions that are on the Ballot for the 2018 General Election, thanks to actions pushed through the Mesa City Council by the City Manager to re-package what taxpayers REJECTED two years ago. 
It's a 'Grab-Bag of Goodies' to get handed to millionaires as a 'Trick-or-Treat' for taxpayers, just after we celebrate Halloween unless YOU VOTE NO on all six questions.
This is the so-called Pandora's Box City Manager Chris Brady was afraid to get opened?  
It's now back to bite him
Don't get fooled again - there's too many cozy multi-million deals made by city officials on city-owned properties that they hope to get leveraged by hood-winking taxpayers into approving another $200,000,000 in public debt to create mor mult-millionaires whose pockets are already lined with cash standing on the sidelines in a wait-and-see scenario to self-capitalize on the backs of struggling taxpayers.

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18 March 2019

IMAGINE That! A Developer Trying To Influence An Election Here In Mesa

Wheeee! Let's spin another story! ....it's the latest Spoon-feed tidbit from just one more report by staff writer Jim Walsh in a front-page story published in The Time Media Group's East Valley Tribune Sunday Edition yesterday.
Some of those nearby Rabble-Rousers at Red Mountain Ranch living next to a 132-acre pending land auction by the City of Mesa are rightfully raising a ruckus. Walsh calls them and anyone with a brain "critics" of the deal - Citizens who are exercising their rights after Mesa City Manager Chris tried once again to fast-track one more real estate trick and got caught at a recent City Council meeting. . . .just another 'Pandora's Box' for Brady.
More likely it just opens another can of worms when Brady doesn't like to get caught - at least in public - frequently trying to squirm-out of the slippery consequences anyway he can after more than 12 years on-the-job as city manager.
> This time-around it's Jivin' John Giles [the mayor] who joins in struggling to salvage another potential wreck in their public relations campaigns
> This time around-and-around they got two more critics - at the city level Economic Development Director Bill Jabjiniak and one more in opposition, Corrine Nystrom, Falcon Field's airport director who stated development plans called for commercial development in the air corridor. 
> This time around-and-around-and-around: one more 2-part problem 
1. much higher than typical costs associated with the installation of water and sewer lines
2. an over optimistic projection on the land value, degraded by $10M now
What is missing in Walsh's slamming of the land auction is lost in the second paragraph when he relates its 'stormy history' without naming the developer company this time around.* (see below).
_________________________________________________________________________
However, Walsh tore into the public part and start of this contentious pending sale, more than two months ago when during a city council meeting, Mesa resident and former candidate Verl Farnsworth ripped officials’ plan to auction 132 acres of pristine desert. The move just didn’t sit well with Farnsworth – who accused the city of betraying a promise to residents that the property would become a park someday. . . According to the report, the city planned to post the land sale on its website on Jan. 16 and hold the auction March 7 - ten days ago.
The auction has been rescheduled for March 21st.
Mesa to auction prime piece of pristine desert
Here's the link for more details > http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/news 
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Another LACK OF TRANSPARENCY in this entire scheme is revealed in yesterday's report.
More jive-talk from Mayor John Giles and more double-speak from City Manager Chris Brady. We are indeed so blessed when the subject of unused city assets gets addressed by the mayor.  
Story image for mesa land auction from East Valley Tribune
East Valley Tribune-Mar 17, 2019
Critics question why there were no public hearings before the Mesa City Council decided to auction it after the city paid $4 million in 1998 and reserved it for a ...
Click-Bait > READ MORE USING THE ABOVE HYPERLINK
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Walsh does manage to extract some quotes from the two previous town managers,
Mike Hutchinson and Charles Luster, who thought that box was sealed for eternity 20 years ago. Instead it's opened a whole new can of worms over actions taken by the current City Manager - a joint defense agreement of some kind that's rekindled a stormy past.
________________________________________________________________________________
Here's something else rekindled with 'a smoke screen' added to by Mayor John Giles when he's quoted as saying at the end of the article,
"We'd love to pay off some bond debt** early, . . I am trying to be fiscally responsible"

. . . for that he earns another Pinocchio!
[who's counting. Hehe]
_________________________________________________________________________
** BOND DEBT Last time it was AZ State Senator Bob Worsley who got a $100M give-away for real estate speculation here in downtown whose future private wealth-creation was riding on taxpayer-funding for new construction of an ASU building. With Mesa taxpayer-approval for another debt bond obligation in the 2018 General Election, Worsley could leverage his own private $20M "gamble" while at the same time holding public elected office

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INDEPENDENT INSPECTOR GENERAL REVIEW: Whether Fed Officials' Trades Violated Ethics Rules

Intro

Inspector General Will Review Whether Fed Officials' Trades Violated Ethics Rules

Topline
The Federal Reserve said Monday there will be an independent review by the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Reserve Board over whether the transactions made by top Federal Reserve officials last year followed ethics standards and the law.

Key Facts

The Federal Reserve said in a statement it “began discussions” last week with the OIG to “initiate an independent review.”

The agency also said it “welcomes” the review and “will accept and take appropriate actions” based on its findings.

The OIG said it “agreed” to conduct an independent review requested by Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

The statement comes a few hours after Warren sent a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) urging them to investigate what she described as “ethically questionable” transactions by Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida and former presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks in Boston and Dallas, Eric Rosengren and Robert Kaplan.

Key Background

Lawmakers on capitol hill scrutinized the large financial transactions Clarida, Rosengren and Kaplan made last year, with many voicing concerns that the officials traded on non-public information amid the pandemic.

The incidents in question include Clarida’s action to move up to $5 million into stocks and out of a bond fund one day prior to an announcement by the federal chair that the central bank could take policy action to help the economy, as well as  multi-million-dollar stock trades made by Rosengren and Kaplan.

> Both Rosengren and Kaplan resigned from their positions last week following public uproar over their transactions. The transactions also raised the question about trade rules for federal officials and specifically what they knew about the markets as the Federal Reserve responded to the pandemic. So far, Powell has said there would be changes to existing guidance.

Further Reading

Elizabeth Warren Calls On SEC To Investigate Fed Officials’ ‘Ethically Questionable’ Trades (Forbes)

Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan Resigns Amid Scrutiny Over Trading — Hours After Boston Colleague Steps Down (Forbes)

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Washington Post:

Fed says trading activity by top officials under independent review

Fed leaders have said the trading activities of its top leaders complied with existing, albeit insufficient guidelines. But the Fed’s latest statement reflected a more concerted focus on the trades themselves

> "...“As part of our comprehensive review, we began discussions last week with the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Reserve Board to initiate an independent review of whether trading activity by certain senior officials was in compliance with both the relevant ethics rules and the law,” the Fed said in a statement Monday evening. “We welcome this review and will accept and take appropriate actions based on its findings.”

> A spokesperson for the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Reserve Board said Powell “has requested that we conduct an independent review of these matters. We have agreed to do so and have no further comment at this time.”

> Kaplan and Rosengren’s financial activities fixed attention on trading by some of the country’s top economic policymakers at a time when they were actively shaping the Fed’s response to the coronavirus crisis.

Kaplan traded millions of dollars in individual stocks. And while Rosengren’s trades were on a smaller scale, they nevertheless drew scrutiny, with stakes in four separate real estate investment trusts. Last year, Rosengren’s public speeches and remarks highlighted his concerns for the commercial real estate sector as the economy weathered the coronavirus recession.

During testimony on Capitol Hill last week, Powell said the trading activity of two regional bank presidents, Eric Rosengren and Robert Kaplan, appeared to comply with the current guidelines, even if “the appearance is just obviously unacceptable.”

Those remarks came before Bloomberg News reported on the financial activities of Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida, who moved between $1 million and $5 million out of a broad-based bond fund to broad-based stock funds on Feb. 27, 2020, according to his disclosure forms. The Fed has said Clarida’s actions were part of a preplanned rebalancing of his portfolio and were similar to activity he disclosed in April 2019. . .

>

The revelations have raised questions about trading rules for Fed officials — and specifically what regulators at the Fed knew about the markets and financial system as the central bank turbocharged its pandemic-era policy response. Some Fed critics have alleged that such trades also erode public trust in the central bank and, at the very least, distract from its heady responsibility of navigating the economy through a slowing recovery.

Earlier on Monday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren called for an investigation of whether the financial trading activities of top Federal Reserve officials violated insider-trading rules, heightening scrutiny over ethics issues at the central bank.

During a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Sept. 28, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called Jerome H. Powell "a dangerous man to head up the Fed." (Reuters)

In a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday, Warren (D-Mass.) highlighted transactions made by two regional Fed bank presidents, Kaplan and Rosengren, who left their posts last week after revelations of their financial behavior became public. On Friday, Bloomberg News also reported on February 2020 trades made by Clarida that came the day before the Fed issued a rare statement saying it would “act as appropriate to support the economy” as the pandemic tightened its grip on public health and the economy.

“The reports of this financial activity by Fed officials raise serious questions about possible conflicts of interest and a reveal a disregard for the public trust,” Warren wrote to SEC Chair Gary Gensler. “They also reflect atrocious judgment by these officials, and an attitude that personal profiteering is more important than the American people’s confidence in the Fed.”

Monday, October 04, 2021

VOCABULARY BUILDING: Mormon Soaking/Hump Jumping (Know Your Meme)

SENSITIVE CONTENT
Sensitive Content
Warning: This page contains material that may be considered not safe for work.
 
On September 5th, 2021, TikToker and alleged Mormon @funeralpotatoslut posted a video sharing the Urban Dictionary definition of soaking, gaining over 77,000 views in three weeks (shown below, left). On September 6th, she posted a lip dub video about someone Googling "soaking," gaining over 400,000 views in a similar span of time (shown below, right).
Status:
Submission
Year:
Unknown
Origin
Mormonism          
Mormon Soaking / Jump Humping tiktok example depicting a woman about to jump on a sleeping person in bed.

Sensitive

Sensitive Content
Warning: This page contains material that may be considered not safe for work.

Mormon Soaking / Jump Humping

Meme
Status:
submission
This submission is currently being researched and evaluated.
You can help confirm this entry by contributing facts, media, and other evidence of notability and mutation.
Origin: Mormonism
Year: unknown
 

Added 7 days ago by Phillip Hamilton.

Updated about 7 hours ago by Zach.

Read Edit History
Featured Episode

About

Mormon Soaking refers to a sexual act practiced by Mormons where the male inserts his penis into the female's vagina and stays completely still for an extended period of time. Soaking is used as a loophole to get around rules in the Mormon faith against having premarital sex. Sometimes soaking is accompanied by jump humping, which involves a third party, the hump jumper, jumping up and down on the bed in order to simulate thrusting for the couple. The practice allegedly became popular at the Mormon institute Brigham Young University (BYU) and has been documented online since as early as 2009. Soaking is also sometimes known as "floating."

Origin

One of the earliest mentions of "soaking" online was posted to the Newschoolers[1] forum in 2009 by user breck-love, who describes it as a "great bonding experience" that still allows Mormons to go to heaven. On October 15th of that year, an Urban Dictionary[2] user defined the term under the name "dick soak," gaining over 600 likes in 12 years. Another Urban Dictionary[3] user defined the term using the name "soaking" on July 14th, 2011.

Soaking is allegedly popular at Brigham Young University, which insists its students follow the Mormon faith. Soaking was discussed in a post to Reddit's /r/exmormon[4] board on September 19th, 2012, by a user wondering if it's real, with commenters specifically mentioning its popularity at BYU. On July 18th, 2017, MEL Magazine[5] published a piece on soaking where they interviewed a Mormon who claimed to have soaked before.

Spread

Soaking became a particular topic of increasing interest in 2019. On November 17th, 2019, Barstool Sports posted a video to YouTube[13] investigating soaking, speaking with someone who claims to have soaked, gaining over 274,000 views in two years (shown below). In the video, the interviewee claims that soaking has been allowed in the church for decades and that former BYU player Brandon Davies, who was expelled from the school and kicked off the basketball team in 2011 for having premarital sex,[14] was soaking, which is why he was not excommunicated from the Mormon faith. At the 8:30 mark in the video, an interviewed student mentions the act of jump humping, although not by name.


On March 9th, 2021, TikToker[11] @exmolex posted a video responding to a comment asking what soaking is, where she describes the act of soaking, gaining over 5 million views in six months (shown below).

Reference : https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/mormon-soaking-jump-humping 

 
 

The Mysterious History of Cinnamon

GOSH JOSH : The Inconsistent Culture Warrior Face of The New Insurrectionists

SPOILER ALERT: "The "consistency" for Hawley is that he has to keep attacking "big tech" or the headlines among the Trumpist populists will continue to go to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis or Texas Governor Greg Abbott, and that might make them the front runners for the 2024 Republican nomination instead of Josh Hawley."
 
Mike Masnick: "Last year, Josh Hawley introduced one of his many, many pathetic attempts at changing Section 230.
That bill, the "Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act" would create a private right of action allowing individuals to sue any social media company if they were unhappy that some of their content was removed, and to seek a payout.
The obvious implication, as with a ton of bad faith claims by populists who pretend to be "conservative" is that websites shouldn't do any moderation at all.
However, this week, Hawley introduced another bill to attack Facebook and to create another private right of action against basically any website -- except this time the private right of action is for anyone who feels their "mental health" was harmed by content on that website.
Contrary to what Hawley-loving propagandist rag "The Daily Caller" falsely claims, this bill doesn't actually "amend" Section 230, it simply uses the definition of an interactive computer service from 230, and introduces a weird new liability regime that is in total conflict with 230 (and with Hawley's previous bill -- but when you're culture warrioring and trying to be the face of the new insurrectionists, who has time for little things like consistency?). The Federal Big Tech Tort Act is a bunch of silly performative nonsense.
It used to be that Republicans were the party that was dead set against opening up new private rights of action and giving tort lawyers new ways to drag people and companies into court.
No longer, I guess. Amusingly, Hawley's bill shares its DNA with Senator Amy Klobuchar's equally silly bill to hold social media companies liable for misinformation.
The key part in the Hawley bill:

PRIVATE RIGHT OF ACTION.—An individual who suffers bodily injury or harm to mental health that is attributable, in whole or in part, to the individual’s use of a covered interactive computer service provided by a social media company as described in subsection (b) may bring a civil action against the social media company in an appropriate district court of the United States or a State court of competent jurisdiction

The bill says that the liability applies to individuals who use social media when they are "less than 16 years of age."

> So, if someone on social media, like Josh Hawley, contributes to your young teenager's depression by doing incredible dangerous things (like encouraging an insurrection at the Capitol to block the results of a free and fair election), you can now... sue Facebook for the damage to your kid's mental health? Because that makes sense.

Again, this is clearly (1) ridiculous, (2) unconstitutional, (3) completely at odds with Republican philosophy for the past half century, and just (4) an attack on the basic frameworks of how liability works. But none of that matters.

The "consistency" for Hawley is that he has to keep attacking "big tech" or the headlines among the Trumpist populists will continue to go to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis or Texas Governor Greg Abbott, and that might make them the front runners for the 2024 Republican nomination instead of Josh Hawley.

Filed Under: content moderation, federal big tech tort act, intermediary liability, josh hawley, liability, mental health, section 230, tort reform
Companies: Facebook

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Reminder: Our Techdirt Tech Policy Greenhouse Live Workshop Is Happening This Wednesday!

from the register-now dept

Over the last few weeks we've been running pieces for our latest Techdirt Greenhouse discussion on questions around content moderation at the infrastructure layer. This time we're also doing a live workshop event to go with it, in which some of the authors of the pieces will present, leading into "table discussions" from attendees to explore some of the tradeoffs and challenges regarding content moderation. This will be happening this Wednesday, October 6th, from 9am PT to 12pm PT. If you're interested in taking part, please register to attend.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Filed Under: content moderation, events, greenhouse, infrastructure

Coldplay - Viva La Vida (Live In São Paulo)

Fed Is in 'No Man's Land' Right Now, Citadel's Griffin Says

Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...