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Wednesday, October 18, 2006

New York Times Bashes Religious Tax Exemptions


MEDIA / NEW YORK TIMES BASHES RELIGIOUS TAX EXEMPTIONS



Business Media Institute



Smiley Flag WaverMost people don't believe that another person's tax break worsens their situation. "Otherwise we would have no deductions, no exclusions.” For example, childless people would protest the child tax credit, arguing that it was “shifting the tax burden” onto them. People gladly take deductions for mortgage interest, while understanding that credit card interest isn’t deductible -- some financial decisions are favored by the tax structure.

While states exempt religious organizations from property taxes, they do it “typically through statutes that also cover charities, libraries, museums, private schools and other secular nonprofit groups. Indeed, when the Supreme Court ruled on the constitutionality of this tax break in 1970 it noted approvingly that the benefits did not fall exclusively on churches.” That key fact was buried in the story series, but the writer did not allow it any relevance.



In Government's Name: New York Times Bashes Religious Tax Exemptions

Four-Day 'In God's Name' Series Argues Churches Cheat Taxpayers And Cities Out Of Money


~ By Julia A. Seymour and Amy Menefee
Business & Media Institute
10/11/2006 3:53:12 PM


The New York Times has put an ironic twist on the 8th Commandment: “Thou shalt not steal.” It’s accused churches nationwide of fleecing taxpayers and local governments using the First Amendment.

The Times devoted more than 17,000 words and a four-day series indicting religious groups for what it argued was essentially cheating taxpayers across the country. The pro-government, pro-regulation treatise by business reporter Diana B. Henriques was titled "In God's Name."

Churches “enjoy an abundance of exemptions from regulations and taxes” and the result is “religious organizations of all faiths stand in a position that American businesses -- and the thousands of nonprofit groups without that ‘religious’ label -- can only envy,” wrote Henriques. But she wasn’t suggesting businesses and nonprofits should enjoy fewer regulations or taxes. On the contrary, the story series lobbied for more government control over religious organizations.

Henriques stated that “tax breaks are widely defended both as an acknowledgement of religion’s contributions to society and as a barrier to unjustified government limitations.” Her articles didn’t explore that defense; rather, they blamed religious organizations for burdening local governments and the churches’ neighbors -- taxpayers. She referred to religious groups as a “cost” to government or other citizens 11 times.

In a country where 92 percent say they believe in God or a higher power, according to a recent Baylor University study, Henriques never mentioned that members of all the religious organizations would also be taxpayers -- the same people who support their communities’ public services with their hard-earned dollars. Instead, her portrayal indicated congregations were mooching off the rest of their communities:

• “These organizations and their leaders still rely on public services -- police and fire protection, street lights and storm drains, highway and bridge maintenance, food and drug inspections, national defense. But their tax exemptions shift the cost of providing those benefits onto other citizens. The total cost nationwide is not known, because no one keeps track.”

• “There are no national figures on how much money these tax breaks save religious organizations and on how much extra cost is shifted to other citizens.”

• “Congressional budget records show that just the income tax breaks uniquely available for ministers, rabbis and other clergy members cost taxpayers just under $500 million a year.”

A similar struggle of churches versus local economies also appeared on the front page of the October 9 USA Today, where Emily Bazar reported that “churches are being turned away by cities and towns that hope to enliven a fading downtown or boost their tax base.”

Churches ‘Costing’ Government Money

The idea that any time someone does not pay a dollar in taxes, that is a “cost” of one dollar to the government, is pervasive among journalists. The Business & Media Institute addressed common distortions on tax issues in a 2005 report, “Tax & Spin.”

Henriques used that logic to argue that tax breaks for religious groups cost local governments money -- just as ABC’s “World News Sunday” did on its October 1 broadcast. In that story, reporter Geoff Morrell said the mayor of one Texas town feared churches would “bust the budget” because they weren’t paying taxes.

That’s “the same line opponents of federal tax cuts use,” said Pete Sepp, vice president for communications with the National Taxpayers Union.

And in Henriques’ stories, that zero-sum logic spilled over into a more personal accusation -- that churches were shifting the tax burden onto other individuals in their cities.

Sepp said most people don't believe that another person's tax break worsens their situation. "Otherwise we would have no deductions, no exclusions,” he said. For example, childless people would protest the child tax credit, arguing that it was “shifting the tax burden” onto them. People gladly take deductions for mortgage interest, while understanding that credit card interest isn’t deductible -- some financial decisions are favored by the tax structure.

But Henriques took churches to task for not paying property taxes. She admitted that while states exempt religious organizations from property taxes, they do it “typically through statutes that also cover charities, libraries, museums, private schools and other secular nonprofit groups. Indeed, when the Supreme Court ruled on the constitutionality of this tax break in 1970 it noted approvingly that the benefits did not fall exclusively on churches.” That key fact was buried in the story series, but the writer did not allow it any relevance.

“Historically, the reason for income and property tax exemptions was because of the benefit they provide to their community, because they lift a burden from the government,” said Mathew Staver, Founder and Chairman of the Liberty Counsel and Dean of the Liberty University School of Law. The Liberty Counsel describes itself as a “nonprofit litigation, education and policy organization dedicated to advancing religious freedom.”

He mentioned that the Red Cross and other non-profits also receive tax exemptions for this reason.

The idea that localities have been hurting in property tax collections is laughable, Sepp said. "Most state and local governments have benefited handsomely from the run-up in housing values," he said. In fact, state and local revenue from property taxes has increased by a whopping 50 percent since 2000, according to the Census Bureau.

Attacking Churches for ‘Competing’ with Businesses

As the Business & Media Institute has documented, the mainstream media are not usually the biggest supporters of the free market system. Ironically, the Times series complained that religious organizations were hurting businesses by “competing” with many of their ministries, including bookstores and coffee shops.

Throughout the articles, religious groups were painted as villains: unfairly competing to provide child care in Alabama; seeking to destroy “open spaces” by fighting a zoning restriction in Colorado; discriminating by setting an age of retirement in New York; and being uncharitable by creating a retirement community for affluent seniors in Indiana

Henriques wrote that religious tax exemptions “collide with other values important in this country.” The theme was that religious organizations are favored by government and receive special treatment in the form of tax breaks, exemptions from regulations and hiring and firing requirements, and advantages over businesses in fighting existing laws.

Those who consider such benefits an “affirmative action program for religion,” Staver said, he considers “naïve, uninformed or shortsighted,” because in attacking the benefits provided to religious non-profits, the effect would be to undermine those given to all non-profits.

“Some of the questions raised in the article ignore the historical perspective that churches have always adapted to the needs of the community,” said Gary McCaleb, senior counsel with the Alliance Defense Fund, which describes itself as a legal alliance that defends religious liberty. “A large part of Western civilization was preserved because long ago churches served as libraries, agricultural centers and schools for the community’s sake. And ironically we have people complaining today because churches are responding to needs as an act of their religious faith.”

Experts Cited Critical of Religion

Henriques didn’t acknowledge the radical nature of several anti-religious sources mentioned in her series. In a section about a tax dispute, she mentioned how the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco had appointed “Erwin Chemerinsky, a law professor then on the faculty at the University of Southern California” to assist in the case. However, the Times article left out that Chemerinsky also has strident views against conservative Christianity – saying “The religious right is the enemy of freedom,” in a Web posting.

That post, a Sept. 28, 2005, article on the liberal Huffingtonpost blog, was headlined “Time to Fight the Religious Right.” The piece criticized fundamentalists of all religions who “share remarkably similar views on many issues -- and remarkably similar intolerance.” Chemerinsky’s own comments mention how he “argued a case in the Supreme Court challenging a six-foot tall, three feet wide Ten Commandments monument that sits between the Texas State Capitol and the Texas Supreme Court.”

Further, Henriques ignored the widespread criticism of the Ninth Circuit as being liberal, and ruling that the words “under God” were an unconstitutional endorsement of religion in a case about the Pledge of Allegiance.

The Times acknowledged that another legal scholar was also a religion critic. Marci A. Hamilton, is “a law professor at the Cardozo law school at Yeshiva University in New York and the author of ‘God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law,’ which is critical of many religious exemptions, particularly in the areas of land use and family law.”

However, that only hinted at Hamilton’s position. In a Sept. 24, 2004, column on CNN.com, she called a bill in support of the words “under God” in the pledge as “lunacy.” “The powers that be at the moment have covered over these fundamental beliefs with misleading blather about how this is a ‘Christian’ nation, implying that Christians are the sole keeper of conscience and morals in the country,” she continued.

The Times story also referenced a study about abuse at child care centers and addiction treatment programs. The study was performed by the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund, “a nonprofit research organization that opposed the faith-based initiatives.” Unsurprisingly, the analysis found higher instances of abuse and neglect at “alternatively accredited facilities” or religious sites.

However, Henriques again underplayed the anti-conservative nature of the organization. The fund is part of the Texas Freedom Network which claims on its own Web site works “to counter the religious right.” The fund “researches the agenda, activities and funding of the religious right.”




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Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Democrat Reid Paid Bonuses With Campaign Funds


POLITICS / DEMOCRAT SENATE MINORITY LEADER HARRY REID USED CAMPAIGN FUNDS TO PAY BONUSES TO SUPPORT STAFF



Washington Times



Smiley Flag Waver


Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid has been using campaign donations instead of his personal money to pay Christmas bonuses for the support staff at the Ritz-Carlton, where he lives in an upscale condominium. Federal election law bars candidates from converting political donations for personal use.



Reid Used Campaign Funds To Pay Bonuses To Staff


~ By John Solomon
ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 17, 2006

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid has been using campaign donations instead of his personal money to pay Christmas bonuses for the support staff at the Ritz-Carlton, where he lives in an upscale condominium.

Federal election law bars candidates from converting political donations for personal use.

Questioned about the expenditures by the Associated Press, Mr. Reid's office said yesterday that he was personally reimbursing his campaign for $3,300 in donations he had directed to the staff holiday fund at his residence.

Mr. Reid also announced he was amending his ethics reports to Congress to more fully account for a Las Vegas land deal, highlighted in an AP story last week, that allowed him to collect $1.1 million in 2004 for property he hadn't personally owned in three years.

In that matter, the senator hadn't disclosed to Congress that he first sold land to a friend's limited liability company back in 2001 and took an ownership stake in the company. He collected the seven-figure payout when the company sold the land again in 2004 to others.

Mr. Reid portrayed the 2004 sale as a personal sale of land, making no mention of the company's ownership or its role in the sale.

Ethics experts told the AP that Mr. Reid's inaccurate accounting of the deal to Congress appeared to violate Senate ethics rules and raised other issues concerning taxes and potential gifts.

Mr. Reid said his amended ethics reports would list the 2001 sale and the company, called Patrick Lane LLC. He said the amended reports would also divulge two other smaller land deals he had failed to report to Congress.

"I directed my staff to file amended financial disclosure forms noting that in 2001 I transferred title to the land to a limited liability corporation," Mr. Reid said.

He said he believed the 2001 sale did not alter his ownership of the land but that he agreed to file the amended reports because "I believe in ensuring all facts come to light."

Mr. Reid labeled the AP story as the "latest attempt" by Republicans to affect the election. The AP reported last week that it learned of the land deal from a former Reid adviser who had concerns about the way the deal was reported to Congress.

On the Ritz-Carlton holiday donations, Mr. Reid gave $600 in 2002, $1,200 in 2004 and $1,500 in 2005 from his re-election campaign to an entity listed as the REC Employee Holiday Fund. His campaign listed the expenses as campaign "salary" for two of the years and as a "contribution" one year.

Mr. Reid's office said the listing as salary was a "clerical error."

Residents and workers at the Ritz said the fund's full name is the Residents Executive Committee Holiday Fund and that it collects money each year from the condominium residents to help provide Christmas gifts, bonuses and a party for the support staff.

Federal election law permits campaigns to provide "gifts of nominal value" but prohibits candidates from using political donations for personal expenses, such as mortgage, rent or utilities for "any part of any personal residence."

The law specifically defines prohibited personal use expenses as any "obligation or expense of any person that would exist irrespective of the candidate's campaign or duties as a federal officeholder."

Land deeds show Mr. Reid and his wife, Landra, purchased a condominium for their Washington residence at the hotel for $750,000 in March 2001. The holiday fund has existed for years at the condo, workers said.

Mr. Reid said yesterday he thought the expenses were permissible but he nonetheless was reimbursing the campaign.

"These donations were made to thank the men and women who work in the building for the extra work they do as a result of my political activities, and for helping the security officers assigned to me because of my Senate position," Mr. Reid said.

Larry Noble, the Federal Election Commission's former chief enforcement lawyer, said Mr. Reid's explanation is aimed at a "gray area" in the law by suggesting the donations were tied to his official Senate and political work.

"What makes this harder for the senator is that this is his personal residence and this looks like an event that everybody else at the residence is taking out of their personal money as they're living there," Mr. Noble said.

On the land dealings, Mr. Reid announced yesterday he had failed to disclose two other transactions on his prior ethics reports and would account for those on his amended reports along with the 2001 sale.

The first, he said, involved the sale in 2004 of about one-third acre of land he owned in his hometown of Searchlight, Nev. And, he said he had not reported his ownership since 1985 of a quarter acre of land his brother gave him in 1985.

Mr. Reid said the failure to disclose those transactions previously was due to "clerical errors" and they amounted to "two minor matters that were inadvertently left off my original disclosure forms."

He had asked the Senate Ethics Committee on Wednesday for an opinion on the 2001 land sale but decided to amend his forms prior to the committee acting.

Mr. Reid's announcement came after numerous newspapers nationwide published editorials criticizing both his initial failure to disclose the full details of his Las Vegas land deal and his response to AP's story.

The $1.1 million land deal was engineered by Jay Brown, a longtime friend and former casino lawyer whose name surfaced in a major political bribery trial this summer and in other prior organized crime investigations. Mr. Brown has never been charged with wrongdoing, except for a 1981 federal securities complaint that was settled out of court.




Copyright 2006 Washington Times




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Reid's Financial Scandal Not Sexy Enough To Report


MEDIA - POLITICS / DEMOCRAT REID'S FINANCIAL SCANDAL NOT "SEXY" ENOUGH TO REPORT



Cybercast News Service



The CU Smiley Guy .. Sorry folks, I just REALLY thought this smiley was cool and had to share it. CU ADMINLarry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, said there's more focus on the Foley scandal than on Reid because financial scandals are boring when compared with sex scandals.

"It's the kind of shocking, eye-popping thing that attracts everyone," Sabato said of the Foley scandal, "whereas financial scandals ought to attract more attention because they're more common."



Media's Double-Standard

Politics

Reid Land Deal Not Sexy Enough For Front Page


~ By Nathan Burchfiel
CNSNews.com Staff Writer
October 17, 2006


(CNSNews.com) - The news that Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) failed to disclose a land deal that earned him $700,000 -- three years after he sold the land to a friend's company -- isn't "sexy" enough for front page news, according to one political analyst.

Since the Associated Press reported on Reid's 2004 windfall last week, the power players of printed news have focused largely on the two-week-old sex scandal surrounding former Congressman Mark Foley (R-Fla.).

The AP reported on Oct. 11 that in 2001, Reid sold a piece of land in Nevada to the Patrick Lane Limited Liability Corporation that he created with a business partner. Reid's business partner successfully convinced Nevada officials to rezone the property and sold it in 2004.

Because of his partial ownership of the company, Reid made a $700,000 profit off the sale of the land. Reid didn't report the 2001 sale or his stake in the company on his mandatory financial disclosure report.

After initially refusing to discuss the matter - Reid reportedly hung up on the AP reporter when asked about it - he has since offered to amend his financial disclosures to include the land sales and his ownership stake in the company.

Since the story broke, the Washington Post has mentioned it three times: once in story about the scandal on Oct. 12 and in an unrelated article and an editorial on Oct. 13. The New York Times has mentioned the scandal once in an article on Oct. 12.

During the same time period, the papers have mentioned Foley 37 and 28 times, respectively.

On Sept. 28, ABC News reported that Foley had inappropriate e-mail conversations with underage boys who had taken part in the congressional page program. It was later revealed that Foley also had sexually explicit instant message conversations with boys claiming to be less than 18 years old.

Since Sept. 28, the Washington Post mentioned Foley 115 times, and the New York Times mentioned him 112 times. On Oct. 16 - nearly three weeks after the Foley scandal broke - it was still front page news on the Post.

Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, said there's more focus on the Foley scandal than on Reid because financial scandals are boring when compared with sex scandals.

"It's the kind of shocking, eye-popping thing that attracts everyone," Sabato said of the Foley scandal, "whereas financial scandals ought to attract more attention because they're more common."

Sabato told Cybercast News Service that "most people think every congressman's a pervert," an assumption that he said is "not true."

But while most congressmen have "reasonably normal" sex lives, "dozens and dozens of congressmen and senators in both parties [are] getting wealthy in public offices. I don't think it's supposed to be that way," Sabato said.

Josh Holmes, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee, criticized the mainstream media for "saturating the market with a story that's nearly three weeks old while the news of Harry Reid's shady land deal is barely mentioned."

Holmes said it's "awfully tough to justify why unethical profiteering by the Minority Leader of the U.S. Senate isn't good enough to make the newspaper."

In a statement released Monday, Reid said the AP story didn't amount to a scandal. Calling it a "GOP smear campaign," Reid said the story was "highly misleading," because it "implied I made a profit selling land I no longer owned."

While Reid admitted transferring the title to the land to the limited liability corporation in 2001, he said it was a "routine legal move [that] in no way altered my actual ownership of the land."

In the statement, Reid announced that he had ordered his staff to amend earlier financial disclosure forms to include the transfer of title because he is "happy to go beyond what is needed to provide the fullest disclosure."

The land deal is the third time in 2006 that Reid has dodged major backlash over allegedly serious ethics violations.

In February, the AP reported that he accepted donations from lobbyists and clients associated with lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Reid's office called the connections "routine contacts" that "were taken to defend the interests of Nevada constituents," according to the AP.

In May, Reid came under fire for accepting free passes to a boxing event in Nevada while considering legislation that would have affected the Nevada Athletic Commission, which oversees boxing in the state.




Cybercast News Service



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Dad's Brownies: Rating The Movie Ratings



ENTERTAINMENT / DAD'S BROWNIES: RATING THE MOVIE RATINGS




CYBERSPACE NEWS



SmileyFlagWaver-1A father of some teenage children had a rule that they couldn't attend PG-13 or R rated movies. Still, his three teens wanted to see a particular PG-13 rated movie that was playing at the local theatre.

If any of the kids could eat a brownie which contained just a "bit of crap" and not be effected by it, then he knew they would also be able to see the movie with "just a bit of smut" and not be effected.



Dad's Brownies


~ Cyberspace News
November 2001


A father of some teenage children had a rule that they couldn't attend PG-13 or R rated movies. Still, his three teens wanted to see a particular PG-13 rated movie that was playing at the local theatre. The teens interviewed friends and members of the family's church to find out what was offensive in the movie. The kids also made a list of pros and cons about the movie to convince their dad that they should be allowed to see it.

The cons were that it contained "only" three swear words, the "only" violence was a building exploding, and you didn't actually "see" the couple in the movie having sex; it was just implied off-camera. The pros were that it was a blockbuster movie that everyone was seeing. The movie contained a good story and plot. There were fantastic special effects and the most talented actors in Hollywood. Many of the members of the family's Christian church had even seen the movie and said it wasn't "very bad."

As there were more pros than cons, the teens were asking their father's permission this ONE time to see the movie. The father looked at the list. He said he could tell his children had spent some time and thought on this list and he wanted a day to think before making his decision.

The next evening the father called them into the living room. On the table, he had a plate of brownies. The father told his kids that he had thought about their request and had decided that if they would eat a brownie, they could go to the movie. But just like the movie, the brownies had pros and cons.

The pros were that they were made with the finest chocolate and other good ingredients. They were moist and fresh with lovely chocolate frosting on top. And the brownies had been made lovingly by their own dad.

The brownies had only one con. They contained just a little bit of dog poop. But the father had mixed the dough well -- the kids would probably not be able to taste the poop. Plus he had baked it at 350 degrees so any bacteria or germs from the poop had probably been destroyed.

So if any of the kids could eat a brownie which contained just a "bit of crap" and not be effected by it, then he knew they would also be able to see the movie with "just a bit of smut" and not be effected.

Of course none of the teens would eat the brownies. And they never asked to see another PG-13 or R movie again.





Cyberspace News




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It's Time To Quit Yor Job When ...


BUSINESS - LIFE / WORKING FOR A DISRESPECTFUL, DEMEANING BOSS? - IT'S TIME TO QUIT YOUR JOB




CBN.com



SmileyFlagWaver-1The toxic corporate culture, poor management, gross inefficiency and the attitude that comes down from the top is the toughest thing to change.

A disrespectful, demeaning boss is without question the top reason people walk away from jobs.



CAREER

It's Time To Quit When ...


Dan Miller
~ By Dan Miller

CBN.com -- Having the radio show on Sunday nights gives me a new appreciation for people who dread going to work on Monday morning. Callers share concerns, fears and disgust about what they are facing the next day.

I’m currently working with 52 yr-old Liz, who, after 24 years of faithful service -- walked out of her high level corporate job two weeks ago. She described the high stress, the layers of poor management, and the gross inefficiency. I hear lots of reasons for leaving a job including a lack of autonomy, no time flexibility, feeling unappreciated and poor pay. But as I talked with Liz, even all those great reasons for leaving would have been tolerated; however, what could not be tolerated was a disrespectful, demeaning boss. This is without question the top reason people walk away from jobs.

I look for telltale signs someone needs a change. Obviously, physical aches and maladies are often a first clue. People relate the sense of dread that may start on Sunday night, but then may pop into your head immediately after Sunday morning church or even ruin the enjoyment of Saturday. Liz talked about spending 25 minutes just sitting in her car in the parking lot before having the courage to walk in the door, and thus being late, compounding the frustration and belittling.

I am not one to burn bridges. When someone contacts me I never suggest leaving a position until we have a clear goal and transition plan in place. I also attempt to categorize those things we can change and those we cannot. Discrepancies in pay or promotions, company policies and even specific job tasks are things that can be changed. But the corporate culture, the attitude that comes down from the top is the toughest thing to change. If your company has a toxic corporate culture, or you have a direct boss who is disrespectful and demeaning, it may not be reasonable to think you can change it. The price you pay emotionally and eventually physically, is too high. Life is too short. With that, it may be time to quit. …

"If you always live with those who are lame, you will yourself learn to limp." -- Latin Proverb




© Copyright 2006 The Christian Broadcasting Network





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Wal-Mart Declares War On Democrat Party


BUSINESS / WAL-MART DECLARES WAR ON DEMOCRAT PARTY



Cybernet News Service



The CU Smiley Guy .. Sorry folks, I just REALLY thought this smiley was cool and had to share it. CU ADMINWal-Mart "has officially declared war on the Democratic Party" just three weeks before the Nov. 7 midterm elections, according to a group that wants to "change" the nation's biggest retail chain by unionizing its 1.3 million employees.

The world's largest retailer is about to take the unusual step of distributing information about specific candidates to its 1.3 million employees nationwide.

Wal-Mart said it will specifically target local, state and national leaders who appeared this summer at a series of anti-Wal-Mart rallies organized by Wake Up Wal-Mart ... elected officials who have been critical of Wal-Mart, distributing information about their voting record concerning legislation that has affected Wal-Mart's business



Culture

Wal-Mart 'Has Declared War' on Dems, Union Foe Charges


~ By Randy Hall
CNSNews.com Staff Writer/Editor
October 16, 2006


(CNSNews.com) - Wal-Mart "has officially declared war on the Democratic Party" just three weeks before the Nov. 7 midterm elections, according to a group that wants to "change" the nation's biggest retail chain by unionizing its 1.3 million employees.

"Rather than embrace our positive vision for a better America, Wal-Mart has officially declared war on the Democratic Party, elected leaders and every American who believes we should pay workers a living wage, provide affordable health care to all, protect American jobs and keep America safe," Paul Blank, campaign director for WakeUpWalMart.com, said in a statement Friday.

"Even though an overwhelming majority of Americans, including Democrats, Republicans and Independents, now reject President Bush's right-wing agenda that has brought us a culture of corruption, repeated scandals, shipped American jobs overseas and even jeopardized our national security, Wal-Mart is launching a political campaign to help keep President Bush in power by trying to defeat Democrats who called on Wal-Mart to be a more responsible employer," Blank added.

Blank's comments came in response to an article in Thursday's Minneapolis Star Tribune, which stated: "The world's largest retailer is about to take the unusual step of distributing information about specific candidates to its 1.3 million employees nationwide, according to a company official.

"The information, which is still being prepared, likely will include quotes from elected officials who have been critical of Wal-Mart, as well as information about their voting record concerning legislation that has affected Wal-Mart's business," the story noted.

The Star Tribune report stated that "Wal-Mart said it will specifically target local, state and national leaders who appeared this summer at a series of anti-Wal-Mart rallies organized by Wake Up Wal-Mart."

As Cybercast News Service previously reported, the "Change Wal-Mart, Change America" bus tour covered 19 states in 35 days and was designed to pressure the retail chain to increase employee wages and improve its corporate citizenship.

David Tovar, director of media relations at Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., told the Star Tribune: "Our associates are very proud of the Wal-Mart they work for, and we feel they have a right to know what some politicians are doing and saying about the company."

Even Chicago aldermen, many of whom supported a measure to force large retailers such as Wal-Mart to pay employees a "living wage," could be targets, Tovar said. The bill was vetoed by Mayor Richard Daley on Sept. 11, and the city council was unable to resurrect the measure.

The controversy comes two weeks after the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company launched its associate (employee) voter registration drive in Iowa on Sept. 29. As part of that effort, Wal-Mart is distributing educational materials made available by the League of Women Voters, as well as a voter education packet.

"As the nation's largest private employer, we are in a unique position to strengthen the communities we serve by encouraging our associates to register to vote and empowering them to participate in America's democracy," Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott said at the time.

Cybercast News Service has reported that several Democratic officials have been critical of Wal-Mart's policies, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Massachusetts Sen. Ted Kennedy.

In addition, most of the officials who spoke at events during the "Change Wal-Mart" tour were Democrats, including Sen. Joe Biden from Delaware, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and John Edwards, a former U.S. senator and vice presidential candidate from North Carolina.

None of that was lost on Blank, whose Wake Up Wal-Mart organization is funded by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union - which usually supports Democratic candidates.

"From this day forward, no citizen -- regardless of their party affiliation -- should doubt how right-wing Wal-Mart's agenda really is," Blank said. "It is an agenda that no American could support, jeopardizes the future of our country and is one of the key reasons why Wal-Mart's public image continues to collapse."

"On behalf of the American people, we are not going to allow big corporations like Wal-Mart to take America in the wrong direction," Blank added.

"In that spirit, WakeUpWalMart.com, with the help of 276,000 grassroots supporters, will be announcing a major new initiative next week that will make it clear to Wal-Mart and its right wing operatives that our movement will never stop fighting until the day Wal-Mart truly changes for the better," he noted.

"That's going a bit far," Tovar told Cybercast News Service regarding Blank's comments.

"Our voter registration campaign is part of our ongoing effort to keep our associates informed about statements that are made about the company," Tovar said. "Communicating with our associates is something that we've been doing for a long time, and this is just a continuation of that.

"Anytime misstatements about Wal-Mart are made by public officials and candidates for public office, we are compelled to let our associates know the accurate information," he noted. "At the same time, when others praise Wal-Mart, we have the same responsibility to let them know that as well.

"All of this is done on a nonpartisan level," Tovar stated. "We're not telling our associates how to vote in any way, shape or form, but we do feel that sharing this type of information is a responsibility that we owe to our associates.

"And it's something, quite honestly, that they appreciate," he added.




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