dieseltaylor Posted January 31, 2013 Share Posted January 31, 2013 I was always dubious about the correctness of financial companies who engineered a collapse of the mortgage market - or perhaps more correctly the people involved. So it is rather exciting to see that in America the law can be used for the benefit of society as a whole. Wyoming's HB 0126 http://openstates.org/nh/bills/2013/HB110/ is the perfect example of a direct link between an undercover investigation of a factory farm and the introduction of an Ag-Gag law. The bill was introduced mere weeks after nine factory workers at Wheatland-WY-based Wyoming Premium Farms, a supplier to Tyson Foods, were charged http://www.humanesociety.org animal cruelty following an undercover investigation by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). HSUS activists videotaped workers kicking live piglets, swinging them by their hind legs and beating and kicking mother pigs. Charges were filed in late December. In January, State Rep. Sue Wallis and Senator Ogden Driskill introduced Wyoming's Ag-Gag bill which would make it a criminal act to carry out investigations such as the one that exposed the cruelty at Wyoming Premium Farms. Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/038884_terrorism_animal_abuse_factory_farms.html#ixzz2JXWxtQta 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Affentitten Posted January 31, 2013 Share Posted January 31, 2013 Am I not getting something here with your subtle irony? They made a law to ban people being investigated. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dieseltaylor Posted February 2, 2013 Author Share Posted February 2, 2013 Yes. I suppose the idea that you get jailed for reporting illegal behaviour seems weird when you compare it to this sort of thing: MATT TAIBBI: Drug cartels in Colombia and Mexico. They laundered money for terrorist connected banks in the Middle East. Russian gangsters. Literally, you know, I talked to one prosecutor who's, like, "They broke basically every law in the book and they did business with every kind of criminal you can possibly imagine. And they got a complete and total walk." I mean, they had to pay a fine. BILL MOYERS: $1.9 billion, a lot of money. MATT TAIBBI: It's a lot of money. But it's five weeks of revenue for the bank, to put that in perspective. And no individual had to suffer any consequences at all. There were no criminal charges no individual fines, which was incredible. Incredible. ANd there is a lot more from here: http://www.alternet.org/corporate-accountability-and-workplace/bill-moyers-and-matt-taibbi-everyone-pays-if-banksters-dont? BILL MOYERS: Blowing the whistle. MATT TAIBBI: For blowing the whistle. But the SEC was later forced to pay a $750,000 wrongful termination suit to Aguirre in that case. But what's so interesting is that Aguirre's boss, the guy who killed that case went to work for Mary Jo White's firm nine months after the case died. And he got, you know, a multi-million dollar position. It's a classic example of how the revolving door works in Washington. You know, you have these regulators at the SEC. And they know that there's that job out there waiting for them. So how hard are they really going to regulate these companies when they know they can get that money? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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