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Drugged Elephant(s) in the Room: How to Address Off Balance Sheets Hiding Leverage?

The 158-year old Lehman Brothers' collapse on September 15, 2008, was the largest bankruptcy in US history. That event is etched on the financial world's collective memory because it unleashed the most devastating financial crisis in generations, causing panic in capital markets, accelerating The Great Unwind, and bringing about a virtual freeze in global trade, The Great Reset. This led to trillion dollar rescue packages from Washington and other capitals.

It has taken a year of painstaking research and a 2,200-page report in nine volumes by a Chicago-based lawyer, Anton Valukas, to lift the lid on the management failures, destructive internal culture and reckless risk-taking that confined Lehman to history. The bankruptcy examiner's massive report on the collapse of Lehman Brothers has found "credible evidence" that top executives, including the Chief Executive, approved misleading statements and used accounting gimmicks as drugs to hide the truth from investors and the public. Worse, the report raises serious questions about the behaviour of auditors and regulators, who are supposed to protect the public. Specifically, the report's revelations include:

The Whistle-Blower

Inside Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, some executives were very concerned about the firm's Enron-like accounting practices as the company headed to the brink in September 2008. In May 2008, Matthew Lee, a former Lehman senior vice president wrote a letter to senior management warning that the company may have been masking the true risks on its balance sheet. His warnings, revealed in the bankruptcy report, show that Lehman's auditors knew of potential accounting irregularities and allegedly failed to raise the issue with Lehman's board. At the time Mr Lee voiced his concerns in May 2008, Lehman was under siege from investors who questioned whether the securities firm was accurately valuing its risky assets. "We are also dealing with a whistle-blower letter, that is on its face pretty ugly and will take us a significant amount of time to get through," William Schlich, a former lead partner on Ernst & Young's Lehman team, wrote in a June 5, 2008, email to a colleague, which is included in the examiner's report.

Repo 105 and The Drug of Balance Sheet Manipulations

In a June 12, 2008, interview with Ernst & Young, the whistle-blower Matthew Lee raised the issue that Lehman was moving as much as USD 50 billion off its balance sheet, using a practice the firm called "Repo 105," the report says. The accounting device was used by Lehman to temporarily park assets off its books at the end of a quarter to make it look as if the firm had less debt, the report concludes, something investors and credit raters would tend to look favourably on. Lehman "had way more leverage than people thought; it was just out of sight," Mr Lee told the examiner in July 2009, according to the report. Herbert "Bart" McDade, the man known inside the bank as its "balance sheet tsar", described the "Repo 105" instruments in an email as "another drug we're on". Another executive ordered traders to "wean themselves off" Repo 105 as if it was a drug.

"The examiner has investigated Lehman's use of Repo 105 transactions and has concluded that the balance sheet manipulation was intentional, for deceptive appearances, had a material impact on Lehman's net leverage ratio and, because Lehman did not disclose the accounting treatment of these transactions, rendered Lehman's [financial statements] deceptive and misleading," the report says. The device was so rare that Lehman could not find a US law firm to give a legal opinion on it, using instead UK-based Linklaters, says the report.

Auditors

In a meeting the day after they interviewed Mr Lee, Ernst & Young auditors failed to mention his allegations about Repo 105 to Lehman's board "even though the Chairman of the Audit Committee had clearly stated that he wanted every allegation made by Lee -- whether in Lee's May 16 letter or during the course of the investigation -- to be investigated," the report states. The examiner's report doesn't just raise questions as to the liability of Ernst & Young, Lehman's auditor; it raises questions about the entire foundation of public reporting. What precise purpose does it serve to have a supposedly independent auditor -- paid for by the company -- sign off on accounts? After Enron's collapse led to the annihilation of its auditor Arthur Andersen, the industry was meant to have been transformed. Aren't accountants subject to the same searching scrutiny as ratings agencies, regulators and the banks themselves? From Enron to Lehman and from Satyam to Parmalat, it is clear that the major accountants lack either the skill or the determination to ferret out fraud.

Crux of Deteriorating Risk Management

The crux of the report, based on the review of 34 million pages of documents out of the 350 billion pages obtained by Mr Valukas, is its portrayal of Lehman's insatiable risk appetite and its alleged efforts to cover up the extent of its financial crisis. At the end of 2006, senior officials at Lehman decided to increase the ceiling on the firm's risk limits, or how much Lehman stood to lose from its trading and investment activities, Mr Valukas recounts. Madelyn Antoncic, then Lehman's chief risk officer, resisted an increase in the limit from USD 2.3bn to USD 3.3bn but was overruled, according to the probe. By the end of 2007, it was USD 4bn. The report provides a scathing picture of just how weak Lehman's risk-management practices ultimately became -- and how they contributed to Lehman's implosion.

Stress Tests

Lehman Brothers, like its peers, was required to stress-test its trading positions and investments. Despite the risks posed by Lehman's dramatic ramping up of its illiquid investment portfolio, the firm's own stress tests excluded illiquid assets. Specifically, the firm excluded its principal investments in real estate, its private equity investments and its leveraged loans backing buyout deals. For example, a USD 2.3bn bridge loan for the buyout of Archstone-Smith Real Estate Investment Trust in May 2007 was never included in its risk usage calculation, although that single transaction would have put Lehman over its already enlarged risk limit, the examiner notes.

Vulnerability

Lehman's practices meant that the firm did not have a true picture of just how vulnerable it was to volatility in capital markets and, more importantly, in the markets for the illiquid assets in which it had invested. The issue was all the more crucial to Lehman because the firm, with only USD 25bn in capital, had far less of a balance sheet buffer than its much stronger competitors.

Conclusion

The bankruptcy examiner's nine volumes report could have far-reaching implications for former Lehman Brothers' executives, including its former chief, Dick Fuld, and its auditors Ernst & Young. The bank that comes out of the report is an organisation prepared to take short cuts and huge risks to boost earnings, where control and accounting procedures were found to be sorely lacking. It also sheds a damning light on the inner workings of some parts of Wall Street that may be hell-bent on maximising profits and hiding losses plus true leverage using off balance sheet techniques. Contagion risks and counterparty failure have been the main hallmarks of The Great Unwind and The Great Reset thus far. In the light of the Lehman report, the question is whether there is a better way to ensure volatile investment banking and proprietary trading functions do not dominate the future stability of the commercial banking and financial intermediation environment that is so critical to real economic activity across the world. Could transparent leverage rules outlawing the use of obscure off-balance-sheet structures achieve this?

The world outside of policy making is still waiting for a fundamental reassessment of banks’ business models with sophisticated off balance sheet activities that hide true leverage. What banks are actually doing inside and how they may play acrobatics with rules to compete with each other has become utterly opaque and non-transparent to the investors, amongst other stakeholders. Wouldn't a single new rule barring off-balance-sheet techniques prevent a future "Lehman Brothers" to use accounting manoeuvres to make itself look financially stronger than it actually is? This is the “drugged elephant in the room” syndrome on which some policy makers have not yet had the time or inclination to focus.

The post mortem report emphasises not only the need for transparent and comparable accounting rules, for improvements in corporate governance, but it also supports the imposition of a transparent group leverage ratio to provide a binding capital constraint -- that Basel risk-weighted rules have been unable to achieve -- and suggests the need for the elimination of non-transparent off balance sheet activities to hide true leverage. These reforms are essential to deal with contagion and counterparty risk that are so integral to the ‘too big to fail’ drugged elephant(s) in the room.

[ENDS]

We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook's ATCA Open and related Socratic dialogue platform of HQR.

All the best


DK Matai

Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

To connect directly with:

. DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

. Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

. ATCA Open: http://twitter.com/ATCAOpen

. @G140: http://twitter.com/G140

. mi2g: http://twitter.com/intunit

- ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 --

This is an "ATCA Open, Philanthropia and HQR Socratic Dialogue."

The "ATCA Open" network on LinkedIn and Facebook is for professionals interested in ATCA's original global aims, working with ATCA step-by-step across the world, or developing tools supporting ATCA's objectives to build a better world.

The original ATCA -- Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance -- is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment; radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy; organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio, info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of the original ATCA network is by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from over 120 countries: including 1,000 Parliamentarians; 1,500 Chairmen and CEOs of corporations; 1,000 Heads of NGOs; 750 Directors at Academic Centres of Excellence; 500 Inventors and Original thinkers; as well as 250 Editors-in-Chief of major media.

The Philanthropia, founded in 2005, brings together over 1,000 leading individual and private philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks, non-governmental organisations and specialist advisors to address complex global challenges such as countering climate chaos, reducing radical poverty and developing global leadership for the younger generation through the appliance of science and technology, leveraging acumen and finance, as well as encouraging collaboration with a strong commitment to ethics. Philanthropia emphasises multi-faith spiritual values: introspection, healthy living and ecology. Philanthropia Targets: Countering climate chaos and carbon neutrality; Eliminating radical poverty -- through micro-credit schemes, empowerment of women and more responsible capitalism; Leadership for the Younger Generation; and Corporate and social responsibility.
— with Ruth Mosqueda, Peter Rothman, Stephen Bogart LeBow, Ushka Mrkusic, Deepak Chopra, Alycia de Mesa, Douglas Ward Kelley, Jane Chavez Umali, Jacqueline Sara, Richard Gerber, Laura Boomer-Trent, Mariamme Baum, Angela Nix, Sumi Allen, Michelle-Jennifer Del Rosario Santos, Tracy Marshall, Michael Buchanan, Elisa Hatch, Cosmic Kimaya, Gloria O'Neil Savage, Akhil Kumar Chaudhary, Fabiana Marcela Capello, Mari Geiger-Howiler, Yasmeen Baroness Von Schleinitz, Ingrid Marie Aquino, Roni Lipstein, Arno Du Pisanie, Judy Osmundson, Gypsey Montes, Dove Daniel and Sid Kataki.
  • Crystal Sun, Ingrid Marie Aquino, Douglas Ward Kelley and 20 others like this.
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    • Angela Nix There r a ton of us that do not think your formulas r black swans but r only hope...GOD Speed!
      March 15, 2010 at 9:53pm
    • Rick McLastnom So my valid and contextually appropriate use of "unapproved" words was deleted in a previous thread, but yet this disgusting image gets the rubber stamp? Disgusting.
      March 15, 2010 at 9:54pm
    • Richard Gerber Ross if the wounded head of the beast suddenly heals that will fit the prophecy story line very well.
      March 15, 2010 at 9:55pm
    • Rick McLastnom Words heard on every Elementary school ground in various forms worldwide, might I add. You want to expose "children" to this? If it weren't for previous censorship I'd have many more less polite words to share.
      March 15, 2010 at 9:55pm
    • Richard Gerber
      I figured out the golden key to the "accounting" and the "commerce system" and the "monetary system" problems. It is not on that web site and I am not publishing here in fact I haven't been writing a lot of things I have conceived or come t...o understand because the whole time the status quo scientists, economists, so called experts, even those not of the status quo have been taking the material I publish and presenting as if they thought of it creating the illusion that they are the source of it. So the public and private sector end up supporting people that are not the most brilliant. That includes many of the so called spiritual guru's that take what I provide for free and package it for a fee. Most of the people you see on TV are selected by the status quo media and are beholden to the status quo and play it's song. See More
      March 15, 2010 at 10:33pm
    • Richard Gerber Yes Gloria, I recall that the "Salem Witches" were actually mid wives taking business away from the Man Doctors which could have been an incentive to demonize them.
      March 15, 2010 at 10:46pm
    • Judy Osmundson
      I'm with you, @Richard on the gambling markets. We are lead to temptation there. The idea of lending money for new business was not a poor one, however, making money on the backs of the losers is not. We quite often have no care as to wha...t we are investing in! Let's now please separate the sin from the sinners as they do remain citizens, and I do not find them irreparable. Selflessness in giving is always rewarded. ;)

      @Laura, I have thought that if we make a risky investment, we are likely to lose it. It seems laws should follow. I really dislike the idea of foreign landowners, period, particularly when governments are not always set up to keep this from happening. I would love to see foreign investment covered by international fair practice law. Private companies have the capacity to bring us to a war state, due to dissatisfaction regarding the business of our countrymen in foreign domain.

      Of course, ultimately, we would want to find the innocence of personal ethics being reflected in law. We are all here to bless, and where we find ourselves tempted to do otherwise, we will want to eliminate the temptation. ;)
      See More
      March 15, 2010 at 10:48pm
    • Rick McLastnom I'm investing in war bonds, always a solid investment!
      March 15, 2010 at 10:53pm
    • Sumi Allen nevermind i wasted my breath. blackjack anyone?
      March 15, 2010 at 10:59pm
    • Angela Nix HEY I am in
      March 15, 2010 at 11:00pm
    • Richard Gerber Very informative Sumi and some very good points. One of the strongest points I have made is that the citizens go into debt once (the 700 billion mentioned above for example), the money then goes to the banks and then we borrow it a second time.
      March 15, 2010 at 11:06pm
    • Gloria O'Neil Savage Richard I agree with your statement about the 'teachers and guru's' stealing the info, have had it done many a time.
      I just feel now it is necessary because it is so exigent.
      I don't doubt for minute I am an infinite being and my reward and truth will come later.
      People are being given the opportunity to choose right from wrong and stealing is an easy one.
      March 15, 2010 at 11:07pm
    • Gloria O'Neil Savage Not only that, but where is the money spent in the first place? We get pennies, and that is on loan too. It is quite the little gaming system.
      March 15, 2010 at 11:09pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      Whoever said (Gloria Savage?) it feels like Shock and Awe, if by that they meant the Naomi Wolf Book on how governments use wars, disasters and crisises has openings to brutally substitute existing economic systems with their very slick bu...t somewhat dodgy extreme neoliberal capitalist Chicago School Milton Friedman financial reforms in countries such as Chile and Iraq, is very close to the actual truth? Because even though millions will be thrown out of their homes and become unemployed for the rest of their lives... The taxpayers of the world bailed out these super banks that had know they were headed for a royal smashup and didn't bother to warn anyone? It's funny how the masses of people don't even question this system that their children's children will be paying for, that is, if they still have jobs, and civilization continues? Right now, the banks are successfully obstructing any new regulation here in the United States by claiming the complexity argument, which is that modern finance is just too dang complicated to try and regulate them so why bother? Rather brazenly arguing that the economic downturn was the clear result of too much regulation, and the only answer is further deregulation? I ask you, if banks really feel that the future of capitalism is complete deregulation, how come the average credit card application is now over 30 pages long, much of it in very fine legalese, a legal professor who teaches contract law couldn't decipher? The solutions of the 1930s put forth by Franklin D. Roosevelt, steadied the booms and busts of capitalism that made it the envy of the world. Deregulating the types of banks that could offer newer varieties of service and allowing them to merge all forms of financial services, in the name of quicker, larger short-term profits, has caused the bubbles to come in ever quickening succession.The Greenspan "put" as it used to be called, which was the Fed. bailout of bankrupt firms and hedge funds, is now part of the assumed business plan. There is no penalty for failure, except for the citizens. The world economy is tapped out. There's not enough money in the universe to bail it out if it tanks again? Obama is not offering any leadership on this I'm sorry to say. He's been harder to convince by taxpayer groups and investors groups and that some new regulation is needed than the banks themselves! I think the system can be fixed fairly easily. It just needs some linguistic epistemological ontological regulatory clarity. CDS, credit default swaps are actually futures, and they should be traded openly rather than in secret. The fact that none of the banks can even figure out who is owed what by Greece, only points to the problem that the banks have used unnecessary complexity in order to gain advantage on their competitors, but more importantly on their customers. The trouble with Enron was, that while it supernova-ed, then crashed and burned, it had been a University in the modern methods of bad corporate governance. Ruthless greed led to investor deception, regulatory deceit and then to full-fledged fraud and then collapse and bankruptcy. Unfortunately the Enron business model has been so successful it is now threatening the entire world economy.See More
      March 15, 2010 at 11:42pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Yakuza, the Golden Triangle and the Panama connection have replaced gold with drugs and massive cheap goods destined for the landfill.
      March 15, 2010 at 11:43pm
    • Richard Gerber Here is a link to Creating Money Out of Nothing and Selling it Modern Money Mechanics explained in great detail by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. It has since been removed from print and made non-available. I suppose because it is rather enlightening. http://coinage.me/Modern_Money_Mechanics.htm even explaining how balance sheets are affected.
      March 15, 2010 at 11:44pm
    • Angela Nix A must read...How did they remove coinage.me? I read that last year? Or that portion?
      March 15, 2010 at 11:51pm
    • Richard Gerber Angela they didn't remove http://coinage.me/ . They removed that document from publication but copies are still circulating on the Internet.
      March 16, 2010 at 12:14am
    • Aurora Carlson
      Dearest Richard, I think the solution we are looking for at this time in our collective evolution is somewhere else.

      Our mind compells us to see us as separate from others, WE being the good guys, the ones with the right perspective, supe...rior to THEM, who are bad and wrong in more ways than we have time to list. It doesn't matter if we call them doctors, politicians, gurus, the status quo... THEY are wrong and WE are right.

      But dear friend... this is the very perspective we all need to transcend. The gurus who in your view steal your truths and sell them for money... if they are truths, then they are accessible to anyone's mind. And selling something for money... you yourself want someone to pay you money to write a book and make a movie. What's wrong with that?

      We need to realize that the only problem is our separatist mind. The conditioned mind is irrational and frankly... insane. It sees complot, conflict, sinners and problems where there are none except its own creations. If we lift our perspective above the conflict and turbulence created by our conditioned individual mind, then all problems stop existing. In that more expanded place in consciousness we remember that we share the same humanity with its light and shadow, and that we are one inseparable divine being, experiencing its own creations. From there, we stop compulsively projecting madness and our reality becomes golden for real.
      See More
      March 16, 2010 at 12:20am
    • Richard Gerber
      Dearest Aurora, thank you for reminding one of that. Why then is one speaking of one as being separate then? When one uses my name one has separated one's self from one. One could have just put it in ones mind if one is one with one withou...t saying a thing. But that is okay to do. The characters are not one! As one has explained before the characters are not the same, they are different. The being behind them is the same but the characters are not the same. As explained on http://jokers.me/ .
      I am delighted that your character exists : )
      See More
      March 16, 2010 at 1:28am
    • Richard Gerber If not for the separatist mind if who would I talk to or play with?
      March 16, 2010 at 1:30am
    • Gypsey Montes Aurora, well said. We are collectively the problem and collectively should find the solution. I will add further comment on my friends the Elephant when I have time, as i lived with an endaged group of elephants , the Knysna elephant. :)
      March 16, 2010 at 1:33am
    • Gypsey Montes P.s or how to address the elephant in the room!
      March 16, 2010 at 1:35am
    • Aurora Carlson
      Richard, dearest Richard, the characters are here for love only! Love as the sweet emotion sometimes, but also as fun, enjoyment, excitement, exploration, conquered heights and more mountains to conquer ... all that comes with the growth of... awareness! So go ahead and fight those gurus and corporations dear one... and I might go ahead and pull your sleeve or even leg sometimes... as long as we know we are the one, projecting and experiencing its perfect playful self :)See More
      March 16, 2010 at 2:18am
    • Mari Geiger-Howiler
      Thank U DK for this opportunity~* Thank U Richard for sharing your insights and interesting facts. It seems to me that Goldman Sachs used the brilliant system design to start manipulating the markets. I would like to read your book on solut...ions to the accounting, commerce system and the monetary system problems. It frustrates me when I think of current banks’ business models with sophisticated off balance sheet activities that hide true leverage.

      Theoretically, I can picture how to expand the financial freedom and abundance to higher percentage of ppls in the World. If the system is transparent, it could prevent current wealth from concentrating. Furthermore, wealthy population can continue their life style. There are plenty resources, energy, luxury, health...etc (all sources of profits) on this planet and our technology, if we openly share the information and develop them in order to make them available to everyone. This will lead us back to Aurora's statement on raising our collective consciousness. It starts from each of us to bring Love, Peace & Light on the Earth. We are connected and one's change will affect the whole. Additionally, I believe that Truth is simple. We don't have to seek the enlightenment. If the guru call himself enlightened, he probably not. We just remember who we really are. We are all equal divine being ♥ ArigatO for everyone who shared feedbacks here. I enjoyed reading them all.
      See More
      March 16, 2010 at 2:19am
    • Arno Du Pisanie As above so below...thanks Dk : )
      March 16, 2010 at 2:20am
    • Aurora Carlson Dear Gypsey, if by "we are the problem" you mean our belief that we are separate people with separate and conflicting interests... separate from other people, from animals, plants and creation at large... then I fully agree. This kind of "we" is the problem. The solution is in dropping that belief and facing reality.
      I'd love to hear about the elephants :)
      March 16, 2010 at 2:21am
    • Aurora Carlson And I enjoyed reading yours, Mari :) Arigatoo!
      March 16, 2010 at 2:23am
    • Cosmic Kimaya awesome report that..but it also opens ur eyes to how much people in power play around with the common man...how selfish manupilating and wicked that is...and in the end..its the common who suffers...there shud deffy be more transparency...
      March 16, 2010 at 2:33am
    • DK Matai
      Dear Friends

      Lightning Response to Drugged Elephants in the Room: Lehman's Off Balance Sheet Autopsy

      We are grateful to our distinguished friends within The ATCA 5000, The Philanthropia 1000 and HQR Initiative for their lightning respons...e to the Drugged Elephants in the Room briefing on the Lehman Brothers' Off Balance Sheet Autopsy. If you wish to view the Socratic dialogue and to participate in its evolution please follow the links:

      1. LinkedIn

      http://ow.ly/1lt2P

      2. Facebook

      http://ow.ly/1lt2Q

      The original briefing "Drugged Elephant(s) in the Room: How to Address Off Balance Sheets Hiding Leverage?" can be accessed from:

      http://ow.ly/1lu9E

      [ENDS]

      We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook's ATCA Open and related Socratic dialogue platform of HQR.

      All the best

      DK Matai

      Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

      To connect directly with:

      . DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

      . Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

      . ATCA Open: http://twitter.com/ATCAOpen

      . @G140: http://twitter.com/G140

      . mi2g: http://twitter.com/intunit

      - ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 --

      This is an "ATCA Open, Philanthropia and HQR Socratic Dialogue."

      The "ATCA Open" network on LinkedIn and Facebook is for professionals interested in ATCA's original global aims, working with ATCA step-by-step across the world, or developing tools supporting ATCA's objectives to build a better world.

      The original ATCA -- Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance -- is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment; radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy; organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio, info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of the original ATCA network is by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from over 120 countries: including 1,000 Parliamentarians; 1,500 Chairmen and CEOs of corporations; 1,000 Heads of NGOs; 750 Directors at Academic Centres of Excellence; 500 Inventors and Original thinkers; as well as 250 Editors-in-Chief of major media.

      The Philanthropia, founded in 2005, brings together over 1,000 leading individual and private philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks, non-governmental organisations and specialist advisors to address complex global challenges such as countering climate chaos, reducing radical poverty and developing global leadership for the younger generation through the appliance of science and technology, leveraging acumen and finance, as well as encouraging collaboration with a strong commitment to ethics. Philanthropia emphasises multi-faith spiritual values: introspection, healthy living and ecology. Philanthropia Targets: Countering climate chaos and carbon neutrality; Eliminating radical poverty -- through micro-credit schemes, empowerment of women and more responsible capitalism; Leadership for the Younger Generation; and Corporate and social responsibility.
      See More
      March 16, 2010 at 2:44am
    • Richard Gerber
      Aurora where exactly did you get the things about "stealing truths"? I didn't say anything about "truths" I said "material". I didn't say "stealing" I said taking. You weren't even able to read what was actually there but projected what was... in your own mind didn't you? In fact now I am realizing I am a fool the for spending all this time to help a collective that doesn't support me but actually supports glory seeking charlatans and members of the status quo and spiritual "leaders" that don't even live the truth they preach in their own personal lives. I have succumbed to the illusion that there is humanity needing help and and see the reality of a very ungrateful collective. I deeply appreciate all your individual support. As for the rest I will leave the collective to it's own it was all an illusion anyway. Mari you are welcome and thank you for the support and I won't be publishing a book you can read it for free on http://coinage.me/ I am just going to be remain oblivious to the world for now.See More
      March 16, 2010 at 2:50am
    • Aurora Carlson You are so right dear Richard, you said taking material and nothing else. I deeply appologize for any mistake. I am sorry that you do not feel fully suported and appreciated- you probably are right, it is just a moment of succumbing to the illusion. It will pass. You are loved, appreciated, and supported, and all the rest is part of the illusion. Be well!
      March 16, 2010 at 3:01am
    • Martin Murphy
      I think the issues gets too clouded, what we focus on we get, human race is focussed on the wrong values. It's Simple...we're focussed on money/profits instead of purpose of serving others. Money is meant to serve us as is religion, politic...s, banking etc, but it doesnt, we serve them. It will always be so. We dont need long studies, we dont need think tanks producing millions of words, we dont need academics getting funded on long studies, which then in itself becomes a million dollar industry which just prevents action, paralyses by analysis, we dont even need all the answers . We just need Change
      http://www.facebook.com/pages/Be-the-Change-In-Business/249513687284?ref=nf

      And the change needs to happen now, and it needs to be values driven. We inherently know the money system, as it is now, is floored. It either works or it doesnt, it doesnt, we know it in our hearts and it needs more than a band aid to fix it!;o)
      See More
      March 16, 2010 at 3:32am
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      Martha Stewart's case was a case of grave injustice.With all the backroom corporate skulduggery and creative accounting and off-balance sheet solutions to insufficient capitalization, the only major executive, and one of the first to get bu...sted ever was the first self-made female billionaire? An over what? Less than $50,000? I'm hoping that a higher consciousness, will prevail as people express their righteous political desire to restore accountability and stability to financial practices. We have a Food and Drug Administration, the FDA, and Environmental Protection Agency, the EPA, which are not magically perfect governmental departments, but they are certainly valid and valuable ones because we don't have to worry that our overpriced drugs will poison us because they turn out to be pressed tablets of baking soda, because there is some accountability. And with the EPA, which our American conservatives still complain about, and we can drink the water from the tap, and the Hudson River, which used to stink and was filled with trash and oil when I moved to this neighborhood, a block away from it 35 years ago, and now it's alive again and clean enough to swim in, and during the summers people do off the piers. We need an agency to protect the public's interests in financial products. Instead of our current spaghetti web of insignificant, inefficient and ineffective boards and agencies, one Cabinet level post for someone in charge of financial regulation. Contract law. I think hedge funds provide a valuable service! However, like Nassem Taleb, I believe that they Congress should be completely separate hedge funds from banking. SO, when they occasionally go belly up, only the investors and the managers eat all the losses, not the governments or the taxpayers. They'll still be able to make tremendous profits in good times and in bad ones they might lose everything, but they would at least know that's the risk for investing that way? And that way they don't get all the profits, while we suffer all the losses? Our current system has it backwards. It's socialism for corporations, but capitalism for everyone else, and that is not free trade as imagined by Adam Smith? Banks and hedge funds can't be both gamblers and continue to be guaranteed by the state. So please! Gentlemen, just pick one, or the other, you can't continue to do both? Divine Mind and advanced metaphysical positive ethics, and cosmic awareness, and meditation are all things I completely believe in and depend on. But our highest virtues and values alone should tell us that the continuity of our system reliably depends upon the Rule of Law, and the laws concerning the likes of Lehman Brothers, Citibank and Goldman Sachs need to be brought up to date? Let's level the playing fields for everyone and get on with our lives. But first we open the windows and let the light in? People have the right to know what they're buying? I read recently that one trader who proudly said, "At the present moment I'm scooping up all of the junkiest of the junk I can get." Doesn't that sound a little unusual? Maybe he thinks everything, no matter how risky, is backed by the government too?See More
      March 16, 2010 at 4:46am
    • Gloria O'Neil Savage Aurora, Truth sets me free not ignoring it; which is ignorance.
      Being witnessed is crucial for soul, and precisely why the earth lets us ride in her for the journey.
      Perspicacity.
      Dis-sol-ve and see apart.
      March 16, 2010 at 6:10am
    • Aurora Carlson Martin, I agree with you that it is simple, and that focusing on serving/giving is what it is about. When we know that we are the source of it all, it is easy to overflow. That, in my view, is the shift we need - from inner lack to inner abundace. Why do you think it will always be as it is now? Isn't it up to us?
      March 16, 2010 at 6:46am
    • Aurora Carlson
      Dear Gloria, I do not know what you mean by truth, it is a very wide term. Maybe you would like to expand.

      My view, if you should like to hear it- I have found that any truth, when it describes our individual limited perception and conclu...sion about the world, is relative. All partial realities and beliefs are true to those who hold them, we all live in separat realities as persons. Therefore, there is absolutely no use in contesting another's point of view, which is as true for them as mine is for me.

      The truth that sets us free reveals that our own consciousness is projecting all these different partial truths. It also reveals that consciousness is not personal at its source. We are in essence the one pure and unconditioned consciousness projecting and experiencing itself in many forms and points of view. Discernment and the end of ignorance means to me realizing who we actually are.
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      March 16, 2010 at 7:06am
    • Robin Lynn Ore
      For years now, the debates about one world government have been discussed on the interactive medium of the Internet, as opposed to the one way message and entertainment of television and talk radio.

      What is happening is an awareness that t...he life support system of money is falling apart, due in part to factors such as unfair trade agreements and practices, including outright theft of IP and trade secrets. Meanwhile, robotics is increasing at a steady pace, leaving us with an automated workforce, no jobs and no money. The top 1% of the elite have 99% of the money.

      The push, as it was in Germany prior to the rise of dictator Hitler was communism, and central to that was a one mind agenda rather than the individual human rights and choices of the US Constitution.

      The question is how do we move from an industrial economy now controlled by China into a knowledge, technology, "green" and talent based economy? The key lies in the communications technology region which on the one hand holds much promise with net-neutrality and freedom of speech and education over the Internet. On the other hand, there is much danger in the control of communications in the hands of a few who can now use it for propaganda and very soon, direct access to the human brain and body.

      If the former happens, we will have adhered to the Constitution, upholding the rights of the individual. If the latter happens, the ONE "BORG" mind with no thoughts of their own and no possibility of diversifying from the collective, will end the God given individuality of the person and education. The 1% (or less) will have succeeded with worldwide domination of the electro-magnetic spectrum and massive mind control.

      The balance would be a social responsibility tax on the thieves of the past who now have the 99% to maintain our standard of living in this transition, rather than the attrition genocide agenda they are following now, under the auspices of "anti-communism" as evil. If one does not own one's own property, one is destined for an imprisoned detention center and one's children for an evil kidnapped, enslaved, sex trade, then fertilizer.

      Where is the gold? If not a gold standard, then how about a preservation of the rights of the mind, net-neutrality, rights to education, freedom of speech, upholding IP and Trade Secrets, Truth by subliminal lie detection, bans on neuromarketing, electronic dissolution of memory and forced reflection and basic needs as a right of life on earth? Then we can bank on the future Utopian creations and achievements of individual human minds and reward these. It will encourage people to chose to spend their time on progress.

      In other words, upholding the US Constitution with an automated system, devoid of human subjectivity and error. We need "AutoLaw" to defend our freedoms and rights in a millisecond society.
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      March 16, 2010 at 11:20am
    • Judy Osmundson
      Robin, we surely have the ability to collectively collect in places where law does not penetrate. This is in the land of no death and no separation either, the land of the consciousness. What do we do here? Perfect Principle is the rule ...of law, because there is no jail and no jailer and no place to hide. This is actually the spiritual Truth of being. The rest is just pretense. I find that our contraptions mirror or hint at our spiritual struggle. We might want to begin to practice. ;)See More
      March 16, 2010 at 7:29pm
    • Anthony J Whitehouse These sort of practices will not stop until someone does serious jail time ! Roll out the tumbrils !
      March 18, 2010 at 9:52am
    • Richard Gerber Yes of course the plan is to send them all to Deception Island the island of fire and ice, the truth is stranger than fiction http://www.deceptionisland.aq/
      March 18, 2010 at 12:33pm
    • Ingrid Marie Aquino as all above have said so well...it is just greed and incorrect and selfish interests...dialogue is good as a preventative for this happening in the future..building awareness among all of us is the best way to stop this type of exploitation....
      March 19, 2010 at 10:52pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore
      Judy, each person has their own experience and level of understanding from which they "see" the physical world and "see" the spiritual world. I am not sure what is meant by your interesting words but a spiritual struggle is not mine. I have... no doubt. I do, however, know far more than many about the contraptions which prevent time belonging to the person. These can effect even prayer for those whose lives are being lived currently in their "vessel". I welcome correspondence from you about ...WE begin to practice...

      I say it must begin right now with Earth's most pressing problems, which I put right on top as Senate Bill S.3801, The BIG BROTHER BILL. This will end all discussion if it occurs.

      It affects everyone so,... everyone, everywhere should read the words in this evil military tribunal bill based on suspicion. No rights, unlimited detention, complete torture memo words apply, not just US but all "coalition partners" and... this one is for the citizens. It is also not for acts. It is for suspicion that someone might be thinking about committing an act...against the "interests" of the United States OR it's coalition partners.

      WAKE UP!

      Happy first day of Spring to all and thanks D.K. for this forum.
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      March 20, 2010 at 12:10am
    • Tracy Marshall Do you have a link please Robin? sounds awful but typical of the way our governments are operating, we do need to wake up as you say.
      I do not like to feed fear but I also do like to be aware, it is our responsibility to maintain balance as best we can.
      Enjoy the spring season, the colour is errupting from the ground, beautiful!
      March 20, 2010 at 2:48am
    • Rebecca Tozer Robin - at first look (google), I could not find this bill. So, yes, please do provide some links. Thanks!
      March 20, 2010 at 8:33pm
    • Robin Lynn Ore Here is the link with part of the wording of the bill. I will try to find the PDF link for the whole thing but this will give you an idea of it's finality. http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-s3081/text
      March 20, 2010 at 9:11pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley I went to the Bill's site page and voted. So far 8 for and about 96 against? Doesn't seem so popular, but it's an ugly read.
      March 21, 2010 at 2:55am
    • Robin Lynn Ore
      It gets worse Douglas. It turns out that the definitions relate back to the Homeland Security Bill of 2002. I am looking into that and now see that any technical person or scientist can be captured into forced slave labor for military subco...ntractors and their affiliations with foreign manufacturers...for their profit. It is the end of entrepreneurialism as well. Included in that is this: http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/dltr/articles/2002dltr0018.htmlSee More
      March 21, 2010 at 6:49pm
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      You should subscribe to the Secrecy News, which is published by the American Federation of Scientists. I used to for years and I'm going to sign up again I seem to drop off their mailing list? But the editor, Steve Aftergood is really good.... I mean as a trustworthy man and a dogged reporter. saftergood@fas.org
      You can e-mail him directly at that address to be added to his daily newsletter about the trials and tribulations of declassification, and trends in government being outsourced to a non-governmental agencies. They also provide links to mildly classified documents like, Reports from the NCBO, National Congressional Budget Office, which usually repaid in preparers backgrounders for all of the legislators on topics and specific legislation. and is probably the best source of information about how our government thinks, what are its policies, and how they perceive their mission domestically and in the world? You can look through their site and search it, as you might've not as you might imagine it's pretty geeky, but that's good, we don't want flashy websites from serious scientists. Steve will e-mail you back if he has any suggestions on how to frame your request, to get what you want. Interestingly enough, though I can't remember her name, but as I was exploring new political contacts for Facebook friends, I friended a very nice looking black woman who is now the chief agency head for processing freedom of information requests? And looking over her background, she is not cut from the Reagan/Bush/Cheney cloth, meaning that it might be possible to make freedom of information requests again, and get them answered? Is there any software I can use to download my entire Facebook friend's Profiles to a database, and make it Google desktop searchable so I can find people like her whose names I can't remember, but whose activities I am unlikely to forget?

      I just wrote Steve an e-mail and introduce you and said you would be writing him. And I sent him the two links so he could look at it too. Good luck to him and give him a shout out! DK
      See More
      March 22, 2010 at 7:39am