SMMRY.ai TL;D[R|W|L] Made Easy!

Category[Popular Information]

The true priorities of the global elite [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

T

• The World Economic Forum (WEF) is an annual event in Davos, Switzerland, founded by German economist Klaus Schwab, which brings together the global elite to discuss global issues and solutions.
• Critics of the WEF argue that it is a networking opportunity used by the powerful to maintain and expand their wealth and influence, and that documents like the “Davos Manifesto” are meant to mask the true nature of the event.
• The last two years have been an economic windfall for the ultra-wealthy, with the richest 1% capturing almost two-thirds of all new wealth.
• Extreme wealth inequality is a policy choice, with taxes for the highest incomes, capital gains, and inheritance having all plummeted in wealthy countries since 1980.
• Billionaires often use the “buy, borrow, die” strategy to avoid taxation, and Senator Ron Wyden proposed a 23.8% tax on the unrealized capital gains of billionaires, which would have raised $507 billion over 10 years.
• The proposal was abandoned due to opposition from Senators Manchin and Sinema, as well as every Republican Senator, and global corporate taxes have fallen from an average of 47.5% in 1980 to 24.9% today.
• President Biden proposed a modest increase in the corporate tax rate from 21% to 25%, which would have helped fund climate investments and benefits for working families, but Sinema opposed the increase.

Published January 18, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post The true priorities of the global elite

The GOP’s bogus war with corporate America [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

T

• Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives in January 2023, and Republicans have reportedly embraced populism and are at war with corporations.
• Fox News reported that McCarthy has refused to meet with representatives from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and House Republicans have proven to be hostile to corporate interests.
• On February 7, McCarthy will host a mega-fundraiser at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Washington, DC, with all proceeds benefiting McCarthy’s reelection campaign, McCarthy’s leadership committee, and the National Republican Congressional Committee.
• Jeff Miller, a member of McCarthy’s inner circle, is the host of the fundraiser and has raised millions for McCarthy’s Super PAC and affiliated non-profit organization.
• Miller is also the founder of Miller Strategies, a federal lobbying firm that represents more than four dozen major corporations, including many of the “”woke”” companies McCarthy is supposedly taking on.
• John Stipicevic, a former McCarthy deputy chief of staff and now Chief Advocacy Officer for CGCN, is a co-host of the fundraiser and is a registered lobbyist for Disney.
• Jim Richards and Ben Howard, both corporate lobbyists, are also co-hosts of the fundraiser.

Published January 17, 2023.

Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post The GOP’s bogus war with corporate America

How Walgreens manufactured a media frenzy about shoplifting [Tesnim Zekeria & Judd Legum, Popular Information]

H

• Walgreens has been claiming that shoplifting is an existential threat to their business, but recently their CFO admitted that they may have “cried too much” about the issue.
• Publicly available data contradicts the theft-wave narrative, with shoplifting offenses dropping 46% between 2019 and 2021.
• Walgreens has been closing stores in San Francisco due to alleged shoplifting, but police data revealed that the stores had fewer than two recorded shoplifting incidents a month on average since 2018.
• Walgreens’ claims were spread unchecked by major news organizations, with the New York Times publishing at least six stories warning readers of retail theft.
• The overblown claims in this media coverage have political consequences, with California Republican Chair Jessica Millan Patterson using the Walgreens closures as evidence that “Democratic policies have created a crime spike.”

Published January 12, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Tesnim Zekeria’s original post.

“Director of First Impressions”: How corporations use phony titles to dodge billions in overtime [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

&

• Corporations are giving workers in low-wage jobs fancy-sounding titles in order to evade the requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and deny them overtime pay, resulting in $4 billion in overtime payments avoided annually.
• To be exempt from overtime pay, an employee must pass three tests: the salary basis test, the salary test, and the duties test.
• Misclassifying workers to evade overtime pay laws is illegal but not uncommon, with a 485% increase in the usage of managerial titles for salaried employees just above the salary threshold set in the Federal Labor Standards Act.
• Major companies such as JPMorgan, Avis Budget Car Rental, and Walmart have been ordered to pay millions in back wages and damages for misclassifying employees and failing to pay them overtime.
• The companies with the highest percentage of “overtime avoiding positions” include Arby’s, Sonic Drive-In, Pizza Hut, Domino’s, Jiffy Lube, Burger King, GNC, H&R Block, Dairy Queen, Subway, Jimmy John’s, Little Caesars, Office Max, and KFC.

Published January 11, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post.

The right to compete [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

T
• The FTC has proposed a new rule that would ban noncompete clauses in the US, which would render all existing noncompete clauses null and void.
• Noncompete clauses are estimated to reduce worker earnings by $250 billion to $296 billion per year.
• Noncompete clauses are increasingly being used for low-wage workers, such as fast-food workers and manual laborers.
• The Chamber of Commerce is opposing the FTC’s proposed rule, claiming noncompete clauses “preserv[e] competition” and “foster innovation.”
• The FTC has also announced an enforcement action against several companies exploiting workers with noncompete clauses.

Florida English teacher pushing book bans is openly racist and homophobic, students allege [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

F

• Vicki Baggett, an English teacher at Northview High School in Florida, is pushing for the Escambia County School District to remove nearly 150 books from school libraries, claiming they could make white students “feel uncomfortable.”
• Former and current students allege Baggett openly promoted racist and homophobic beliefs in class, including opposing interracial marriage and questioning why black people get tattoos in black ink.
• Baggett is also a member of the Daughters of the Confederacy and defended posting an image of the Confederate Flag to her Facebook page.
• Baggett has challenged books with LGBTQ themes, claiming they promote the “LGBTQ agenda.”
• A Northview parent emailed the principal in 2019 objecting to Baggett’s classroom conduct, including her comments that homosexuals are “DUMB/STUPID” and that men and women should “Know Their Role.”
• A current student in Baggett’s 12th grade English class alleges Baggett played an audio version of A Good Man Is Hard to Find that included the unredacted racial slur.
• The Escambia County School District condemned any form of discriminatory speech but did not answer questions about Baggett’s behavior.

Published January 9, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post.

The NFL’s moral collapse [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

T

• Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffered a severe injury during a Monday night game against the Cincinnati Bengals, prompting an hour-long suspension of the game.
• NFL football is the most dangerous of major sports, with a higher rate of injuries and concussions than other leagues.
• Players often suffer long-term consequences of injuries, such as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), after they retire.
• NFL players do not have guaranteed contracts, which incentivizes them to play injured and puts them at greater risk.
• The NFL has made over 50 rule changes to reduce the risk of injuries, but a 2020 study found that these changes have been too weak to make the game safer.

Published January 4, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post.

“Don’t Say Gay”: Florida schools purge library books with LGBTQ characters [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

&

• Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) signed the Parental Rights in Education Act in March 2022, which critics dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill.
• Despite DeSantis’ claims that the bill only prohibits “sexual instruction” directed at young students, several Florida schools have already removed books with LGBTQ characters from their libraries, citing the Parental Rights in Education Act.
• The Florida Department of Education is currently in the process of developing a training for school librarians regarding the selection of library materials, which encourages librarians to remove books with LGBTQ themes from elementary school libraries by conflating the standards for instructional materials and library books.
• A group of LGBTQ students and their parents have filed a lawsuit in federal court, alleging that the law violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.

Published January 5, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post.

$858,000,000,000 [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

$

• The United States military budget is set to exceed $1 trillion annually, with over half of the budget going to private contractors.
• Congress routinely approves large increases in military spending without public criticism, and the budget is often financed with deficit spending.
• The budget includes $800 million in support for Ukraine, and $452 billion for private contractors.
• The Pentagon has failed to pass an audit five times since 2017, despite spending $1 billion per year on auditors.

Published January 3, 2023. Visit Popular Information to read Judd Legum’s original post.

The year in Popular Information [Judd Legum, Tesnim Zekeria, Rebecca Crosby, Popular Information]

T
  • Accountability for right-wing billionaire Charles Koch.
  • Document obtained by Popular Information cited in class action lawsuit against DeSantis.
  • Breaking the news about Disney’s support of the politicians behind “Don’t Say Gay.”
  • Fake environmental group ends six-figure ad campaign.
  • College Board parts ways with top executive pushing to limit instruction on race and history in classrooms.
  • Tinder and Match end donations to Republican Attorneys General.
  • Major cinema chain exposed for distributing discredited film about 2020 voter fraud.
  • Reporting on corporate donations to anti-LGBTQ lawmakers inspires action.
  • Top PR firm apologizes for telling companies to stay quiet on abortion rights.
  • Revealing Toyota’s hypocrisy on election deniers.
  • Holding DeSantis accountable for lying about math textbooks.
  • Exposing right-wing activists fighting to ban thousands of books.
  • Republican Attorneys General Association returns illegal contribution from anti-vax group.
  • Uncovering a purge of left-leaning tenured faculty by a former Koch Industries executive.
  • Pulling back the curtain on Wells Fargo’s corporate PAC.

Click HERE for original. Published December 26, 2022

SMMRY.ai TL;D[R|W|L] Made Easy!
Please Signup
    Strength: Very Weak
     
    Powered by ARMember
      (Unlicensed)

    Follow SMMRY.AI on Twitter


    All Tags

    Advertising AI Amazon Antitrust Apple Art Arts & Culture Asia Autobiography Biden Big Tech Budget Deficit Celebrities ChatGPT China Chips Christmas Climate Change Community Congress Covid Crime Criminal Justice Crypto Culture Wars DEI Democrats Demographics DeSantis Economic Development Education (College/University) Education (K-12) Elections Elon Musk Energy Environment Espionage Europe Federal Reserve Florida Free Speech Gender Geopolitics Germany Global Economics Globalization Google Government Health History Housing Market Immigration India Inequality Inflation Infrastructure Innovation Intel Labor Market Law Legal LGBTQ Macroeconomics Media Medicine Mental Health Meta Microsoft Military Movies & TV Music News Roundup NFL Oceans OpenAI Parenting Pregnancy Psychology Public Health Race Recession Religion Renewables Republicans Research Russia Science Social Media Software Space Sports State law Supreme Court Trump Twitter Ukraine US Business US Economy US Politics US Taxes