Category: Corporate

  • Republicans are warning that the prosecution of Donald Trump could lead to prosecutions of other politicians – especially Democrats – in the future. But is that such a bad thing? Also, Bernie Sanders hammered former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz in a hearing last week – and Sanders may have gotten Schultz to actually lie under […]

    The post GOP Uses Trump Prosecution As Scare Tactic & Starbucks CEO Lies To Congress appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

  • The corporate media is LYING to you about legislation that could change how news is shared on social media. Plus, the family of the recently-arrested FTX founder is now under scrutiny for their roles in the business. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any […]

    The post News Giants Attempt Social Media Takeover & Family Of FTX Founder Linked To Crypto Collapse appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Medical debt is trapping families in poverty – and big banks are cashing in on it. Also, Julian Assange is still facing extradition and charges of violating the Espionage Act for exposing the US military’s war crimes. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any […]

    The post Major Banks Cash In On YOUR Medical Debt & Feds Are Trying To Make Journalism A Crime appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Drug companies tried desperately to get Twitter to block users who wanted poor countries to have access to the COVID vaccine. Plus, politicians in Iowa are actually trying to loosen child labor laws – we might be headed back to the days of children working in the mines. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was […]

    The post Big Pharma’s Deadly Twitter Censorship & Politicians Trying To Roll Back Child Labor Laws appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • The DOJ has launched an investigation into Abbott over contaminated baby formula that killed two infants. And, cities in Puerto Rico have filed a major racketeering lawsuit against fossil fuel companies for covering up the dangers of climate change. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please […]

    The post Abbott Investigated Over Deadly Baby Formula & Puerto Rico Is Taking Fossil Fuel Giants To Court appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Politicians are experiencing an increase in theft from their campaign funds, with cyber criminals targeting these massive campaign accounts. Plus, the US government has filed a lawsuit to stop Microsoft from becoming an even bigger monopoly. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. […]

    The post Hackers Target Political Super PAC Money & Microsoft Blocked From Mega-Merger appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • States and cities across the country continue to give massive handouts to wealthy corporations. These handouts come in many different forms, but politicians on both the Left and Right are willing to fork over cash the billion-dollar industries because those industries promise jobs. Unfortunately, those jobs that are promised rarely become a reality. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss […]

    The post Corporate America Loves Stupid Local Politicians appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • America’s Lawyer E61: A new poll shows that Kamala Harris is now the least popular Vice President at this point in her career, and that could be a major problem for Biden in next year’s election. The federal government is covered in agencies that are supposed to monitor misinformation and propaganda, but all they appear […]

    The post Kamala Will Be Biden’s Downfall appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • We’re finally getting more information about just how badly President Bush screwed up the warnings about 9/11 before it happened. Also, Exxon’s internal documents are being made public, showing how the company has spent 50 years lying about climate change. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so […]

    The post War Criminal Bush Embraced As “Lovable Doofus” & Exxon Spent Years Creating Fake Climate Science appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • By Aki Ito

    See original post here.

    Over the past three years, the American workplace has undergone all kinds of changes as a result of the work-from-home revolution. Perhaps the most widely discussed has been the way the remote age has prompted workers to emotionally detach from their jobs. Some bemoaned it as quiet quitting; others celebrated it as a much-needed correction to the toxic demands of hustle culture. Either way, it’s clear that people aren’t feeling as connected and devoted to their jobs as they did when they were seeing their coworkers in person every day. 

    But employees, it turns out, aren’t the only ones distancing themselves from the office: Employers are quiet quitting on the whole idea of traditional full-time employment. In a survey conducted by the Atlanta Fed last year, businesses said remote work had led them to stock up on part-time employees, temps, independent contractors, and outsourced positions both at home and abroad. If workers are going to be remote, the thinking seems to go, why not get the cheapest remote workers available? Fewer full-time jobs means fewer costly benefits: healthcare, pensions, on-the-job training, a steady paycheck. In the age of WFH, companies are gig-ifying the American office.

    “It’s the Uberization of the workforce,”

    says Nicholas Bloom,

    a professor at Stanford University who was one of the economists behind the Atlanta Fed survey. “The more remote you are, the more Uberized the job is, and the more you’re just being paid for the day or for the week.”

    For companies, offering full-time employment has always been expensive and risky. But there was one reason bosses were reluctant to outsource jobs: They couldn’t imagine trusting people to get their work done out of sight. They supervised by way of butts-in-seats surveillance — checking that people were at their desks, typing away and making calls and furrowing their eyebrows in a way that suggested they were working hard. That ruled out contractors, because contractors work remotely. And it ruled out many part-timers, because no one wanted to commute 45 minutes into an office just to work a four-hour day.

    But after the pandemic hit, bosses were astonished to discover that their teams were perfectly capable of doing their jobs from home. They learned to supervise their workers by checking their output, not their hours logged at a desk. That, in turn, made them more comfortable with the idea of hiring far-flung contractors, or part-timers who could put in a few hours a day from home. And in a remote environment, even full-time employees started to feel more distant — less like the cliché that they were “family,” and more like faceless avatars on Slack. 

    “If somebody’s coming into your site five days a week, week in, week out, it feels like they’re your employee,”

    says Bloom.

    “You want to give them healthcare, a pension, train them up, have them as a long-term part of the firm. But as soon as they’re not on site, managers are thinking it’s not so obvious they want to pay all those additional costs. Employees aren’t mixing, they aren’t talking over lunch about kids. They may be less loyal to the company. I do hear this from companies — the more remote someone is, the more transactional it feels.”

    Other surveys confirm the shift away from full-time employment. McKinsey estimates that independent workers — a category that includes gig, contract, freelance, and temporary workers — now make up 36% of the workforce. That’s up from 27% in 2016. On Gusto, a payroll platform for small businesses, the average company retains one contractor for every five employees — a ratio that has jumped 63% since 2019. And services that make it easier for employers to hire and manage independent workers have been among the biggest winners of the pandemic. At Deel, which helps companies hire abroad, annual recurring revenue has hit $295 million — up from only $4 million in January 2021.

    Whether all this is a good thing or a bad thing depends on one critical question: Are employees being forced into independent work because they can’t find full-time jobs, or are they opting for gig work because they prefer it? Both McKinsey’s and Gusto’s data indicate it’s mostly the latter. When McKinsey asked people to identify the main reason they’re working in contracting, freelance, or temporary jobs, 25% cited the freedom and flexibility their arrangements offer, and another 25% said they enjoy the work. Everybody has their own reason for stepping away from the full-time grind. Digital nomads don’t want to be tied down by a single job. Sixty-somethings want to work a lighter schedule as they near retirement. New parents are resisting corporate America’s return-to-office dictates. Gen Zers, having lost their sole incomes in the mass layoffs that accompanied the COVID shutdowns, see a different kind of job security in having a diversified portfolio of side hustles. 

    Good or bad, the push to hire more part-time and contract workers will provide an overall boost to the economy. After all, for those who otherwise wouldn’t have or couldn’t have worked at all, a job — even if it doesn’t come with all the perks of being a full-time employee — is better than no job at all. “It’s probably going to increase labor supply by maybe 1% to 2%, which is actually a huge number,” Bloom says. “That’s a huge benefit to everyone, because it increases growth, keeps down prices, reduces interest rates — all good stuff.”

    Still, there’s one detail in McKinsey’s survey that is worrying. In 2016, 14% of respondents said they took contract, freelance, or temporary work mainly “out of necessity to support basic family needs.” In 2022, that share jumped to 26%. Sure, that’s still a minority. But it indicates that a growing share of people are being forced into gig arrangements they don’t want. And if the trend continues, more and more people could end up in jobs that offer no benefits and few career-development opportunities. 

    The shift away from full-time employment could also wind up hurting employers in the long run. As companies invest less in their workers, they’ll get less out of those workers, who in return will invest less in their companies. That’s one reason so many bosses are ordering people back to the office. Without a shared workplace culture, they worry about their ability to engage and motivate employees.

    Jessica Schultz, who founded a consultancy called Amplify Group last year, has been grappling with the tension between full-time employment versus gig work. One of the services Amplify offers is serving as a “fractional” chief revenue officer for early-stage companies that can’t yet afford to bring one on full time. And her own staff, which is fully remote, consists primarily of part-time contractors, several of whom live in developing countries. That saves her on overhead and gives her the flexibility to change course quickly while her business is still growing. But she’s also seeing the downsides of outsourced work.

    “I could go to a contractor and say, ‘Hey, I need this done by Friday,’ but I risk the possibility of them saying, ‘I’m not going to get it done by then because I have other work,’” Schultz says. “You have less control over a contractor. They’re not as loyal to me. So I think we’re all just trying to figure out what the right mix of that is for our respective businesses.” Schultz, in fact, is currently in the process of converting two of her contractors into full-time employees.

    So it’s not as if full-time jobs are going extinct. But as the rise of remote work accelerates the shift toward gig roles, millions of workers could find themselves without the job security and benefits that traditionally come only with a W-2 form. And that could be a huge problem for everyone, given America’s insistence on tying basic benefits to full-time employment. More than half of Americans under 65, for example, rely on employer-based health insurance. It’s one thing for employers to quiet quit their employees. It’s another thing for them to leave those employees without healthcare or 401(k)s.

    “We need to think about how we give people access to social supports that used to be solely provided through an employer,” says Liz Wilke, a principal economist at Gusto. “What is the middle path that maintains all of the benefits this set of workers brings to the workforce — flexibility, agility, really strong incentives for consistent and regular upskilling — while still providing them the kinds of social support we think people who work should have? That conversation should happen, especially if this trend continues — which I think, based on our data, it will.” 

    The post In the war over remote work, companies are turning full-time jobs into low-paying gigs appeared first on Basic Income Today.

    This post was originally published on Basic Income Today.

  • Union-busting is big business in the United States – and there’s a massive, $340 MILLION DOLLAR industry fighting against worker’s rights. Plus, Nancy Pelosi’s daughter says that the former House Speaker had an exorcism performed on her house after her husband’s attack. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software […]

    The post Union Busting Has Become A HUGE Business & Pelosi Undergoes Exorcism In Her Home appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • A terrifying revolving door has emerged between intelligence agencies and social media companies. Also, the Federal Trade Commission has proposed a new rule to BAN non-compete clauses for workers. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: There’s a, this terrifying revolving door […]

    The post Former Intel Agents Control Facebook Censorship & FTC Looks To Ban Corporate Non-Compete Clause appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

  • The state of Indiana is suing popular social media app TikTok for endangering children. Also, lobbyists have found a new way to outsmart politicians and get them to attend their corporate events. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio: The state of […]

    The post TikTok Sued In Indiana For Putting Children At Risk & Lobbyists Have Outsmarted DC Politicians appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • The company responsible for toxic PFAS chemicals being a part of our everyday lives has agreed to a massive settlement with cities and municipalities that could provide some relief for residents that have been consuming the toxic chemicals. This fight is far from over, but this is a huge win for the plaintiffs. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss […]

    The post PFAS Chemical Polluter Reaches MASSIVE Billion Dollar Settlement appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • A tech CEO admitted to Wall Street analysts that he has been praying for inflation. Then, a new study has confirmed that there are unsafe levels of PFAS chemicals in every single state in this country. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Click here to find out more about PFAS lawsuits. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a […]

    The post CEO Using Inflation To Justify Price-Gouging & Toxic PFAS Chemicals Found In EVERY US State appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Companies in the United States are using contracts to trap workers in jobs that they hate, creating a new form of indentured servitude. Also, health insurance companies are gouging consumers while taking millions of dollars from the federal government each year. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, […]

    The post Companies Are Trapping Workers In Terrible Jobs & Health Insurance Prices Spike appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • This “invitation only” conference hosted by Baylor Law School was held at the St. Regis in Aspen, Colorado. In attendance nearly 50 judges, over 80 lawyers, 13 corporate GCs and 5 Special Masters along with 7 academicians. America’s Lawyer Mike Papantonio spoke on many different topics including: ·      The Manual for Complex Litigation addresses the obligations of transferee […]

    The post Papantonio Gives Expertise At Baylor Judicial Summit appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Right-wing media outlets such as Fox News have long pushed racist narratives to further their goals. And, outlets like the New York Times—the so-called “liberal media”—do too little, too late, to push back; it falls to the ranks of independent media outlets to create and promote counternarratives based on racial justice. This is not a More

    The post When Corporate Media Fail, Independent Media Rise Up appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

    This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Sonali Kolhatkar.

  • Facebook’s parent company META is threatening to remove News articles from the Facebook feeds of users in California if the state passes a law that would require the company to actually pay outlets for their content. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. […]

    The post Meta Threatens To Remove News Articles From Platform appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Last week the Supreme Court handed a massive victory to corporations by ruling that striking union members can be held financial liable for any damages that the company suffers when workers go on strike. This will have a major impact on workers being able to strike going forward. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was […]

    The post Supreme Court Delivers Massive Blow To Striking Unions appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • California lawmakers are weighing a bill that would reach well beyond the state’s borders by forcing large companies in the state to detail their greenhouse gas emissions — even those of their suppliers.

    The bill, which cleared the state Senate on May 30, would require companies that operate in California and generate more than $1 billion a year to report greenhouse gas emissions across their supply chains. While a lot of companies measure and report at least some of their emissions without any legal requirements, many of them don’t account for all the emissions tied to their products. And they don’t all measure and report emissions in the same way. The Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act seeks to change that by making corporations — from giant banks like Wells Fargo to private, family-owned companies like In-N-Out Burger — follow the same protocol and account for all the emissions linked to their business.

    “I think mandatory and standardized corporate climate disclosure is critically important — and even more important in an age of greenwashing,” said Kathy Mulvey, a climate accountability advocate at the Union of Concerned Scientists, referring to the idea that many companies overstate their environmental accomplishments. 

    To get through the state Assembly, the bill has to overcome ample opposition from industry lobbyists, who successfully stymied a similar proposal last year. The thought of a sweeping climate disclosure mandate has rankled the oil and gas industry, the California Chamber of Commerce, the California Cattlemen’s Association, other agricultural groups, and reportedly the state’s most popular fast-food business, In-N-Out. The burger conglomerate has spent $90,000 lobbying this session on the disclosure bill, among other pieces of legislation. (In-N-Out did not respond to multiple requests for comment.)

    The proposed mandate is the latest example of an ambitious climate policy that’s been tied up at the federal level but taken up by California lawmakers. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the federal agency tasked with regulating markets and protecting investors, is considering a similar but less stringent rule requiring only public companies to report their emissions. As the draft SEC rule runs into industry headwinds and provokes legal questions that could prompt officials to whittle it down, California continues to serve as something of a climate-policy test kitchen for the rest of the country. And since many of the country’s biggest companies do business in the state, which boasts the fifth-largest economy in the world, a corporate disclosure mandate there would reach well beyond the state’s borders. 

    “States have a big responsibility to lead on climate because we’re not going to be able to get much done at the federal level given the politics around climate,” said Melissa Romero, the senior legislative affairs manager at California Environmental Voters. “States have to step up here. That’s literally the role California has played, and we have to play it once again.”

    Climate advocates and policy analysts have long been saying that one of the first steps toward lowering greenhouse gas emissions is simply accounting for them. “You can’t manage a problem if you can’t first measure a problem,” said Steven Rothstein, managing director of the Ceres Accelerator for Sustainable Capital Markets, a nonprofit that advocates for market-based climate solutions (Both Ceres and California Environmental Voters have been working closely with legislators on the bill.)

    But even as more investors see climate change as a financial risk and more companies, from McDonald’s to Mercedes-Benz, pledge climate action, there’s no shortage of empty promises. “There’s no one system” for accounting for emissions, Rothstein said. “If you’re a customer, or an investor, or a regulator, and you want to compare [companies’ disclosures], it’s very hard to do that.” 

    Supporters of the California bill say it would expose greenwashing not only by mandating corporate transparency but by implementing a standardized system. In-N-Out, McDonald’s, and Burger King, for example, would have to measure and report their emissions using the same protocol. The bill also would force companies to take into account the greenhouse gasses emitted up and down the supply chain — known as “Scope 3” emissions — not just from their own operations or energy use. 

    Globally, supply-chains make up, on average, 75 percent of a business’ emissions, but can top 90 percent in some industries, like finance and food. Raising cattle for beef puts a lot more heat-trapping gasses in the atmosphere than turning the lights on at a restaurant. One-third of global emissions are linked to food, and agriculture alone accounts for 10 percent of total U.S. emissions. But only about half of the world’s top 100 food and beverage companies measure, disclose, and set goals to reduce Scope 3 emissions. 

    Both in California and at the federal level, it’s the proposed requirement to disclose those kinds of emissions — from the cows, not just the kitchen — that has spawned the most resistance from industry groups. In a March 8 letter to legislators, the California Chamber of Commerce — leading a coalition of more than 50 groups — said the mandate would “necessarily require that large businesses stop doing business with small and medium businesses that will struggle to accurately measure their greenhouse gas emissions let alone meet ambitious carbon emission requirements, leaving these companies without the contracts that enable them to grow and employ more workers.” The American Farm Bureau Federation made a similar argument against the SEC rule when it was proposed last year, saying the rule would prove a major burden for farmers and ranchers who aren’t equipped to monitor and report climate pollution, like how much methane their cows burp. 

    Romero objected to those claims, noting that the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act would allow companies to use industry averages in their calculations, rather than forcing suppliers to cough up primary data. She also noted that some companies — such as Patagonia, Ikea, and Sierra Nevada, the California-based brewery — have expressed support for the disclosure mandate as a way to help lower corporate emissions and hold companies accountable. 

    Although the bill narrowly failed in the Assembly last year, Romero said she’s more optimistic about its chances this session since there are several new climate-minded Assembly members. Governor Gavin Newsom, however, hasn’t taken a public position on it yet. 

    This story was originally published by Grist with the headline A California bill could reveal corporate America’s climate secrets on Jun 8, 2023.


    This content originally appeared on Grist and was authored by Max Graham.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.


  • This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Guest cornel use

    Cornel West, the iconic academic and social critic, has declared his candidacy for president of the United States in the 2024 election. He is running with the People’s Party, a progressive alternative to the two major parties that grew out of Bernie Sanders’s 2016 campaign. With 2024 shaping up to be a rematch between “neofascist” Donald Trump and “milquetoast neoliberal” Joe Biden, West says voters need a real alternative focused on tackling inequality, racism, war and corporate greed. “There’s an indifference to the plight of the vulnerable,” West tells Democracy Now! He also discusses the war in Ukraine, censorhip, right-wing extremism, and allegations of sexual harassment and assault against People’s Party founder Nick Brana, among other topics.


    This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Republicans are using statehouses to enact the most dangerous parts of their agenda, and many of these Republicans actually ran for office without a Democratic opponent. Author David Pepper talks with Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins about why Democrats can no longer sit on the sidelines, even in deep red areas of the country – […]

    The post Republican Fascists Often Face ZERO Challengers In Elections appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • New studies have found that the most popular drinks in America contain alarming levels of toxic heavy metals that can cause all sorts of problems within the human body. And, as usual, the regulatory agencies aren’t doing anything about it and they’re actually saying that it isn’t a big deal. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This […]

    The post Study Finds Toxic Metals In Most Popular US Drinks appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Years after a DuPont chemical factory exploded in Texas, the company has finally been fined a paltry $12 million dollars. Four people died in the explosion, nobody went to jail, and the company continued to pull in billions of dollars after nearly ruining an entire town. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by […]

    The post DuPont Values Human Life At $3 Million In Texas Explosion appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • The workers that helped save the Gulf Coast after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster are now developing illnesses that they say is a direct result of the work they performed. The companies responsible don’t want to help them, even though these workers did the dirty work to clean up after BP and the others […]

    The post New “BP Sickness” Develops In Oil Clean Up Workers appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • A new report has identified at least 150 activists that have been targeted by the fossil fuel industry for harassment. Plus, some of the biggest pharmacies in America are facing lawsuits over the placement of non-FDA approved homeopathic medicines. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please […]

    The post Fossil Fuel Industry Targets Activists With Lawsuits & Pharmacies Put On Trial For Homeopathic Meds appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • Elon Musk now owns Twitter – but the investments from Saudi Arabia shouldn’t leave you feeling warm and fuzzy. Plus, nearly three-quarters of Americans want to have age limits for politicians. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please excuse any typos. Mike Papantonio:             Elon Musk now owns […]

    The post Saudi Arabia Jailing Twitter Critics & Voters Agree On Age Limits For Politicians appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.

  • The founders of the group Occupy Democrats have been accused of funneling hundreds of thousands of dollars into their own pockets. Then, the US government wants to reevaluate our relationship with Saudi Arabia, but Wall Street has other ideas. Mike Papantonio & Farron Cousins discuss more. Transcript: *This transcript was generated by a third-party transcription software company, so please […]

    The post Occupy Democrat Leaders Accused Of Pocketing Donations & Wall Street’s Love Affair With Saudi Arabia appeared first on The Ring of Fire Network.

    This post was originally published on The Ring of Fire.