Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Socialism and Populism failing Economics 101

President Nicolás Maduro ordered managers of electronics chain Daka to lower prices or face prosecution.


CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela's President Nicolás Maduro intensified his perceived fight Monday against "bourgeois parasites" he accuses of an economic war against the socialist country by threatening to force more stores to sell their merchandise at cut-rate prices.
National guardsmen, some of whom had assault rifles, were positioned around outlets of an electronics chain that Maduro has ordered to lower prices or face prosecution. Thousands of people lined up at the Daka stores hoping for a bargain after the government forced the companies to charge "fair" prices.
"I want a Sony plasma television for the house," said Amanda Lisboa, 34, a business administrator who waited seven hours outside a Caracas Daka store, similar to Best Buy. "It's going to be so cheap!"
Five managers of electronic retailers including Daka are being threatened with prosecution for unjustifiable price hikes, the Venezuela government said. More stores may be at risk, as well. Government inspectors were dispatched to check prices at an array of other businesses.
"This is for the good of the nation," Maduro said, referring to the military's occupation of Daka. "Leave nothing on the shelves, nothing in the warehouses … Let nothing remain in stock!"
Maduro said his seizures are the "tip of the iceberg" and that other stores would be next if they did not comply with his orders. Maduro is expected to win decree powers in Congress in the coming days that he says will be used to take over more businesses.
The assault against business comes amid a severe shortage of basic goods and extreme inflation, which is currently at an annual rate of 54.3%. Both are tied to policies of the government, which is boosting public spending and printing money in record amounts to pay for it.
Venezuela's central bank said the country's money supply grew 70% in the past year. As a result, the value of the Venezuela bolivar continues to drop at a time when the country must import increasing amounts of basics like food and even toilet paper due to failed state schemes for running the economy.
For Venezuelans, it costs more bolivars every week to buy from stores that must pay the foreign producers of goods they order in hard currency like U.S. dollars. But Maduro blames it on greedy business and his opponents here and abroad.
Hebert García Plaza, head of the High Commission for the People's Defense of the Economy, said a new washer/dryer cost 39,000 bolivars on Nov. 1, and went up to 59,000 bolivars a week later. According to the exchange rate set by the government, that is the equivalent of a washer-dryer going from $6,190 to $9,365.
But that math is distorted because the state's official exchange rate is set artificially far lower than what people get for their bolivars on the black market. In that case the washer/dryer cost $650 on Nov. 1.
Also, Venezuela's policy of restricting the reasons for which people can exchange bolivars legally has raised the exchange rate on the black market, making dollars more expensive for retailers and thus raising the cost of the goods they import.
Importers complain that there is such a shortage of dollars they are having to buy them on the black market to import inventory at a good price. If they were to charge clients based on obtaining the dollars at the official rate, they say they would make no profit.
Maduro's government has brushed aside such complaints and is trying to put an end to black market currency exchanges. The government banned websites that publish the black market dollar rate, a strategy that one prominent Venezuela blogger likened to banning the sale of thermometers to crack down on cold weather.
Nonetheless, many Venezuelans lined up for the reduced-price goods. Televisions were the most in-demand item in the line outside Daka. Also sought were refrigerators, washing machines, sewing machines and other imported appliances.
Water and snacks were being sold outside the stores by Venezuelans keen to profit from the commotion. Happy customers emerged carrying large-screen televisions and other items back to their cars.
"I would bet that the next thing to disappear from shelves are televisions," said Alberto Ramos, an analyst at Goldman Sachs in New York. "What the government is doing is aggravating the picture. There is no economic justification for this."
The government said that five people had been arrested in the country's central city of Valencia for looting. Even Venezuelans who knew the policy was unsustainable were in line for a good deal.
"I have no love for this government," said Gabriela Campo, 33, a businesswoman hoping to take home a cut-price television and fridge. "They're doing this for nothing but political reasons, in time for December's elections."
Maduro has been taking dramatic measures up to the approach of municipal elections on Dec. 8. His popularity has dropped significantly in recent months, according to some independent media polls.
Ramos and most analysts are expecting a devaluation soon after the election, likely leading to even higher inflation. This is not the first time Venezuelans have seen their government steal company assets in times of trouble.
Former president Hugo Chávez often theatrically expropriated or seized assets from more than 1,000 companies during his 14-year tenure. This, among other difficulties for foreign firms, led to a severe drop in foreign investment in the country that has hobbled its ability to produce oil despite having the world's largest estimated oil reserves.
"This is more like government-sanctioned looting," said Caracas-based engineer Carlos Rivero, 42. "What stops them going into pharmacies, supermarkets and shopping malls?"

Bill's comment: History repeats. This approach to economics and governance has failed repeatedly in third world countries. 

Update: NY Post 27Nov13

Venezuela is in a death spiral that could produce a crisis for the United States. Economic collapse, incompetent leadership and Cuban meddling may provoke a showdown among well-armed chavista rivals, with civilians caught in the crossfire. US diplomats, who’ve spent years ignoring or minimizing threats emanating from Venezuela, must act urgently to prevent a Syria scenario on our doorstep.
The late dictator Hugo Chávez left behind a mess: His divisive, illegitimate regime polarized society and devastated the economy. Inflation is running at 50 percent, while the vital oil sector is faltering. The bloated, bankrupt state can’t sustain the social spending that kept the peace; the nation already faces food shortages, power outages and rampant crime.
Chávez’s hapless successor, Nicolás Maduro, won disputed elections in April in what even he called a “Pyrrhic victory.” His mismanagement since has only hastened the country’s decline — for example, dealing with toilet-paper shortages by confiscating paper companies.
Maduro has resorted to accusing the Obama White House of plotting the collapse of the Venezuelan economy. He’s also created a “vice ministry of supreme social happiness” in an Orwellian gesture to tamp down widespread social anxiety. He even moved up Christmas celebrations up in advance of the Dec. 8 local elections.
Last week, Maduro publicly ordered retailers to lower prices on consumer goods. Security forces arrested dozens of shopkeepers and stood by as mobs emptied store shelves. Good luck seeing those shelves restocked. As he further tightens economic controls, Venezuelans will have to settle for what the government provides. Their only other choices: Flee the country, turn to crime — or oppose the regime.
Maduro is most worried about the last. He recently ordered the detention of several civic leaders who’d been mobilizing protest rallies. Regime sources say that he may even nix the upcoming elections and jail well-known opposition politicians.
Most blame these draconian measures on Maduro’s Cuban handlers, the puppeteers behind his rise to power. The destitute Castro regime’s survival depends on Venezuelan oil, so it means to keep Maduro in power by repressing popular unrest and ferreting out dissent — including within the regime.
By pushing Maduro to purge powerful chavistas — many with ties to the military — who disapprove of Havana’s heavy hand, the Cubans have likely overreached. This crackdown has stoked tension within the military between those aligned with Maduro and nationalists who’ve never been comfortable in a Cuban harness.
The regime has very little room to maneuver. Virtually every Venezuelan is infuriated by the daily fight for survival. The anti-chavistas are fed up with the harassment by an illegitimate and incompetent one-party state. All sides in the military are busy weighing their options.
Any act of repression, street brawl, electoral fraud or corruption scandal could unleash all the fury built up over the regime’s 15 years. Tragically, the sight of military units squaring off in the streets of Caracas is not a distant memory.
The United States imports about half the Venezuelan petroleum that it did when Chávez was elected in 1998, but that’s still 9 percent of our foreign oil purchases. Plus, an implosion of Venezuela’s economy — or, God forbid, prolonged civil warfare — will roil the international oil markets and destabilize the region when the US economy is sputtering.
What’s worse, in the last decade, Venezuela has become a narco-state, with dozens of senior officials and state-run enterprises complicit in the lucrative cocaine trade. The regime also is an ally of Iran and Hezbollah, which may find their own ways to exploit chaos in Venezuela.
Geography makes the bloodbath in Syria all but invisible to Americans, but Venezuela is a three-hour flight from Miami and No. 3 in the world in social networking. The US public will see photos and videos of innocent demonstrators mowed down in the street. Moreover, in the Americas, the United States will be expected to lead.
The Obama administration must work with regional partners to respond to the brewing crisis. It should invoke the Inter-American Democratic Charter as a step toward restoring democratic governance, and to warn Maduro and military leaders that they’ll be held responsible for violence against citizens.
If the administration fails to confront these events decisively, Congress should demand action and make clear to the president that leading from behind is not an option.
Roger F. Noriega was US ambassador to the OAS and assistant secretary of state under President George W. Bush. He is an American Enterprise Institute visiting fellow and managing director of Vision Americas LLC, which represents US and foreign clients.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Corruption in China...charges and counter-charges, who do you believe?

US-based Chinese businessman Vincent Wu faces charges for role as ruthless crime boss
(10-18 16:22)
When more than 500 policemen swooped in to arrest 40 suspected gangsters in southern China last year, the alleged kingpin was a Los Angeles businessman who had hoisted an American flag amid a crowd to welcome Xi Jinping, now China's president, to California.
Vincent Wu's (pictured with wife and daughter, waiting to greet President Xi Jinping in Los Angeles) children and lawyers say he is an upstanding, philanthropic Chinese-American entrepreneur who has been framed by business foes who want to seize his assets, including a nine-story shopping mall. But police in the southern city of Guangzhou say he was a ruthless mob boss who led gangsters with nicknames such as “Old Crab'' and “Ferocious Mouth.''
Wu is expected to stand trial within weeks in Guangzhou on charges of heading a crime gang that kidnapped rivals, threw acid at a judge, set fire to farmers' sheds, operated illegal gambling dens and committed other offenses. Wu has told his lawyers that police interrogators tortured him into confessing, AP’s Gillian Wong, reports.
In the absence of an independent legal system, the truth may never emerge. And although Wu is a naturalized US citizen, American diplomats have not been able to see him because China recognizes only his residency in Hong Kong.
The case provides a glimpse into the often murky world of business in China. Widespread corruption means entrepreneurs can cozy up with police and run roughshod over the law, but they are also vulnerable if their rivals gang up with local authorities.
When disgraced politician Bo Xilai led the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing, hundreds of businesspeople were accused of involvement in organized crime; many were believed to have been tortured into confessing while authorities seized their assets. Bo was sentenced to life imprisonment last month for embezzlement, bribery and abuse of power, but allegations that the businessmen were wrongfully convicted were not aired at his trial.
Wu was detained in June last year in a pre-dawn operation involving hundreds of police across Guangdong province, which includes Guangzhou and Wu's hometown of Huizhou.
He is charged with getting an associate to throw acid at a judge who ruled against him in a lawsuit, and with ordering thugs to set fire to sheds owned by farmers who refused his offer of compensation to clear off land he wanted to develop. He's also accused of operating illegal casinos that raked in 48 million yuan (US$7.8 million), and of attacking or kidnapping people who crossed him in various disputes. About 30 other people face related charges of gang crimes.
Wu maintains his innocence, his attorney Wang Shihua said. Before his detention, Wu had been praised by local Chinese newspapers for giving more than 20 million yuan to his hometown.
“My dad is a really good person at heart, especially to the people who are farmers and have not enough money to go to school. He's donated money to the elderly and to help build a road,'' said Wu's daughter, Anna Wu, in an interview from Hong Kong, where she has based herself to try to draw attention to her father's case. “But in China, money speaks louder than law... if you want to bring someone down, you can bribe the police and certain people to make it happen.''
Huang Xiaojun, a former business partner of Wu's and one of his accusers, said it is Wu who exploited government corruption. Huang said Wu tried to kidnap him four times and sought to seize his share of their business by bribing court officials.
“He is a man with no morals and integrity,'' Huang said in a phone interview. “He's extremely good at playing or acting and confusing right and wrong.''
Wu's lawyers want to use his case to test the Chinese government's resolve to stick by its stated opposition to convictions based on evidence extracted through torture. In a written record of a December 2012 meeting with his lawyers, Wu described being beaten, kicked and deprived of food and sleep as police tried to coerce him to sign a confession.
On occasion, Wu's arms were tied behind his back with a rope that was then strung from a ceiling beam _ a torture method dubbed the “suspended airplane,'' he told his lawyers. If he fainted, he was woken with water or chemical stimulants.
“As soon as I did not cooperate, they hit me, hanged me,'' Wu told his lawyers, according to a copy of the deposition provided to The Associated Press by Wu's family.
Wu's legal adviser, Li Zhuang, said more than 20 witnesses also were tortured. During a pretrial meeting at the Guangzhou Intermediate People's Court on Monday, Wu's lawyers demanded that the court keep their testimony out of Wu's trial, which they expect to begin within a month.
An official at the Huizhou police bureau's propaganda department said he “had not heard'' that interrogators might have tortured Wu.
Wu left China in the late 1970s as a stowaway to neighboring Hong Kong, where he obtained residency. He moved with his family to the U.S. in 1994, settled in Los Angeles and eventually became a US citizen.
Even as an American, Wu spent most of his time in China, tending to his businesses and visiting Los Angeles twice a year, his daughter said. But she said he was also active in Los Angeles' Chinese-American business community; photos provided by her show him hoisting an American flag as he welcomed then-Vice President Xi Jinping _ now the president _ to the city early last year.
Chinese authorities have denied Wu access to U.S. officials, saying they regard him as a Hong Kong resident because he last entered China on a Hong Kong identity card.
US officials have sent several notes to Chinese authorities about Wu's case, Wu's daughter said. U.S. Embassy spokesman Nolan Barkhouse said American officials were monitoring the case but could not comment out of privacy concerns.
Associated Press researcher Yu Bing contributed to this report. 


Bill's note: In the USA we rely on the FBI to investigate corrupt government. We trust the FBI and the courts. I hope this is the case anyway.

Sunday, October 06, 2013

A German's View of Islam

ref: This is an email circulated to me that is worth reading. Other posts on this subject can be found by using the search box for muslim or islam.

The author of this
email is Dr . Emanuel Tanya, a
well-known and well respected
psychiatrist. A man, whose family was
German aristocracy prior to
World War II, owned a number
of large industries and estates.
When asked how many
German people were true
Nazis, the answer he gave can
guide our attitude toward
fanaticism.

'Very few people were true
Nazis,' he said, 'but many
enjoyed the return of German
pride, and many more were
too busy to care. I was one of
those who just thought the
Nazis were a bunch of fools.
So, the majority just sat back
and let it all happen. Then,
before we knew it, they owned
us, and we had lost control,
and the end of the world had
come.
My family lost everything. I
ended up in a concentration
camp and the Allies destroyed
my factories.'

We are told again and again by
'experts' and 'talking heads'
that Islam is the religion of
peace and that the vast
majority of Muslims just want
to live in peace. Although this
unqualified assertion may be
true, it is entirely irrelevant. It
is meaningless fluff, meant to
make us feel better, and meant
to somehow diminish the
spectre of fanatics rampaging
across the globe in the name of
Islam.

The fact is that the fanatics
rule Islam at this moment in
history. It is the fanatics who
march. It is the fanatics who
wage any one of 50 shooting
wars worldwide. It is the
fanatics who systematically
slaughter Christian or tribal
groups throughout Africa and
are gradually taking over the
entire continent in an Islamic
wave. It is the fanatics who
bomb, behead, murder, or
honour-kill. It is the fanatics
who take over mosque after
mosque. It is the fanatics who
zealously spread the stoning
and hanging of rape victims
and homosexuals. It is the
fanatics who teach their young
to kill and to become suicide
bombers.

The hard, quantifiable fact is
that the peaceful majority, the
'silent majority,' is cowed and
extraneous. Communist Russia
was comprised of Russians
who just wanted to live in
peace, yet the Russian
Communists were responsible
for the murder of about 20
million people. The peaceful
majority were irrelevant.
China's huge population was
peaceful as well, but Chinese
Communists managed to kill a
staggering 70 million people..
The average Japanese
individual prior to World War II
was not a warmongering
sadist. Yet, Japan murdered
and slaughtered its way across
South East Asia in an orgy of
killing that included the
systematic murder of 12
million Chinese civilians; most
killed by sword, shovel, and
bayonet. And who can forget
Rwanda, which collapsed into
butchery. Could it not be said
that the majority of Rwandans
were 'peace loving'?

History lessons are often
incredibly simple and blunt,
yet for all our powers of
reason, we often miss the
most basic and uncomplicated
of points: peace-loving
Muslims have been made
irrelevant by their silence.
Peace-loving Muslims will
become our enemy if they
don't speak up, because like
my friend from Germany, they
will awaken one day and find
that the fanatics own them,
and the end of their world will
have begun.

Peace-loving Germans,
Japanese, Chinese, Russians,
Rwandans, Serbs, Afghans,
Iraqis, Palestinians, Somalis,
Nigerians, Algerians, and many
others have died because the
peaceful majority did not
speak up until it was too late.
Now Islamic prayers have been
introduced into Toronto and
other public schools in Ontario,
and, yes, in Ottawa too while
the Lord's Prayer was removed
(due to being so offensive?)
The Islamic way may be
peaceful for the time being in
our country until the fanatics
move in.

In Australia, and indeed in
many countries around the
world, many of the most
commonly consumed food
items have the halal emblem
on them. Just look at the back
of some of the most popular
chocolate bars, and at other
food items in your local
supermarket. Food on aircraft
have the halal emblem, just to
appease the privileged
minority who are now rapidly
expanding within the nation’s
shores.

In the UK, the Muslim
communities refuse to
integrate and there are now
dozens of “no-go” zones within
major cities across the country
that the police force dare not
intrude upon. Sharia law
prevails there, because the
Muslim community in those
areas refuse to acknowledge
British law.

As for us who watch it all
unfold, we must pay attention
to the only group that counts --
the fanatics who threaten our
way of life.



Thursday, July 11, 2013

WHY MEN ARE SELDOM DEPRESSED:


 
Men Are Just Happier People --
 
What do you expect from such simple creatures?
Your last name stays put.
 
The garage is all yours.
 
Wedding plans take care of themselves.
 
Chocolate is just another snack.
You can be President.
 
You can never be pregnant.
 
You can wear a white T-shirt to a water park.
 
You can wear NO shirt to a water park.
 
Car mechanics tell you the truth.
 
The world is your urinal.
 
You never have to drive to another gas station restroom because this one is just too icky.
 
You don't have to stop and think of which way to turn a nut on a bolt.
 
Same work, more pay.
 
Wrinkles add character.
 
Wedding dress $5000. Tux rental-$100.
 
People never stare at your chest when you're talking to them.
 
New shoes don't cut, blister, or mangle your feet.
 
One mood all the time.
 
Phone conversations are over in 30 seconds flat.
 
You know stuff about tanks.
 
A five-day vacation requires only one suitcase.
 
You can open all your own jars.
 
You get extra credit for the slightest act of thoughtfulness.
 
If someone forgets to invite you,
 
He or she can still be your friend.
 
Your underwear is $8.95 for a three-pack.
 
Three pairs of shoes are more than enough..
 
You almost never have strap problems in public.
 
You are unable to see wrinkles in your clothes..
 
Everything on your face stays its original color.
 
The same hairstyle lasts for years, maybe decades.
 
You only have to shave your face and neck.
 
You can play with toys all your life.
 
One wallet and one pair of shoes -- one color for all seasons.
 
You can wear shorts no matter how your legs look.
 
You can 'do' your nails with a pocket knife.
 
You have freedom of choice concerning growing a mustache.
 
You can do Christmas shopping for 25 relatives
 
On December 24 in 25 minutes.
 
No wonder men are happier.
 
Send this to the women who can handle it
 
And to the men who will enjoy reading it.
 
Men Are Just Happier People
 
NICKNAMES
 
· If Laura, Kate and Sarah go out for lunch, they will call each other Laura, Kate and Sarah.
 
· If Mike, Dave and John go out, they will affectionately refer to each other as Fat Boy, Bubba and Wildman .
 
EATING OUT
 
· When the bill arrives, Mike, Dave and John will each throw in $20, even though it's only for $32.50. None of them will have anything smaller and none will actually admit they want change back.
 
· When the girls get their bill, out come the pocket calculators.
 
MONEY
 
· A man will pay $20. for a $10. item he needs.
 
· A woman will pay $10. for a $20. item that she doesn't need but it's on sale.
 
BATHROOMS
 
· A man has six items in his bathroom: toothbrush and toothpaste, shaving cream, razor, a bar of soap, and a towel.
 
· The average number of items in the typical woman's bathroom is 337. A man would not be able to identify more than 20 of these items.
 
ARGUMENTS
 
· A woman has the last word in any argument.
 
· Anything a man says after that is the beginning of a new argument.
 
FUTURE
 
· A woman worries about the future until she gets a husband.
 
· A man never worries about the future until he gets a wife.
 
MARRIAGE
 
· A woman marries a man expecting he will change, but he doesn't.
 
· A man marries a woman expecting that she won't change, but she does.
 
DRESSING UP
 
· A woman will dress up to go shopping, water the plants, empty the trash, answer the phone, read a book, and get the mail.
 
· A man will dress up for weddings and funerals.
 
NATURAL
 
· Men wake up looking the same as when they went to bed.
 
· Women somehow deteriorate during the night.
 
OFFSPRING
 
· Ah, children A woman knows all about her children. She knows about dentist appointments and romances, best friends, favorite foods, secret fears and hopes and dreams.
 
· A man is vaguely aware of some short people living in the house.
 
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
 
A married man should forget his mistakes. There's no use in two people remembering the same thing!
 

 

Monday, July 01, 2013

TV costs defy inflation

A 1954 advertisement. In today's (2013) dollars this $200 TV would cost $1700. The cost of electronics has been kept low by advances in technology. Today Walmart has a 22" LCD TV with built-in dvd player for $178.

Disease 1900 to 2000



The graph shows the U.S. death rate for infectious diseases between 1900 and 1996. The line starts all the way at the top. In 1900, 800 of every 100,000 Americans died from infectious diseases. The top killers were pneumonia, tuberculosis and diarrhea. But the line quickly begins falling. By 1920, fewer than 400 of every 100,000 Americans died from infectious diseases. By 1940, it was less than 200. By 1960, it’s below 100. When’s the last time you heard of an American dying from diarrhea?  “For all the millennia before this in human history,” Coburn says, “it was all about tuberculosis and diarrheal diseases and all the other infectious disease. The idea that anybody lived long enough to be confronting chronic diseases is a new invention. Average life expectancy was 45 years old at the turn of the century. You didn’t have 85-year-olds with chronic diseases.”

With chronic illnesses like diabetes and heart disease you don’t get better, or at least not quickly. They don’t require cures so much as management. Their existence is often proof of medicine’s successes. Three decades ago, cancer typically killed you. Today, many cancers can be fought off for years or even indefinitely. The same is true for AIDS, and acute heart failure and so much else. This, to Coburn, is the core truth, and core problem, of today’s medical system: Its successes have changed the problems, but the health-care system hasn’t kept up.

Kenneth Thorpe, chairman of the health policy and management school at Emory University, estimates that 95 percent of spending in Medicare goes to patients with one or more chronic conditions — with enrollees suffering five or more chronic conditions accounting for 78 percent of its spending.

personal observations: When I go to the lab for blood work it is 95% elderly patients in the waiting room. I think I read that 75% of the cost of a person's health care will occur in the last 6 months of life.

A funny story

Why Parents Drink
The boss wondered why one of his most valued employees was absent but had not phoned in sick one day. Needing to have an urgent problem with one of the main computers resolved, he dialed the employee's home phone number and was greeted with a child's whisper. ' Hello?'
'Is your daddy home?' he asked.

Yes,' whispered the small voice.
May I talk with him?'

The child whispered, '
No '

Surprised and wanting to talk with an adult, the boss asked, 'Is your Mummy there?' '
Yes'
'May I talk with her?' Again the small voice whispered, '
No'

Hoping there was somebody with whom he could leave a message, the boss asked, 'Is anybody else there?'

'
Yes , ' whispered the child, 'a policeman  '

Wondering what a cop would be doing at his employee's home, the boss asked, 'May I speak with the policeman?'

'
No, he's busy' whispered the child.

'Busy doing what?'

'
Talking to Daddy and Mummy and the Firemancame the whispered answer..

Growing more worried as he heard a loud noise in the background through the earpiece on the phone, the boss asked, 'What is that noise?'

'
A helicopteranswered the whispering voice.

'What is going on there?' demanded the boss, now truly apprehensive.Again, whispering, the child answered,

The search team just landed a helicopter'

Alarmed, concerned and a little frustrated the boss asked, 'What are they searching for?'

Still whispering, the young voice repliedwith a muffled giggle...

'
ME'

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Lefties Show Their Values in Hate Filled Rhetoric


Story in our local paper inflames lefties. Excerpt:


"Officials from the national chapter of Kappa Delta sorority are investigating a report that the Bloomington chapter of the sorority house participated in a themed event that demeaned the homeless this week.
Heidi Roy, director of communications for Kappa Delta sorority’s national headquarters in Memphis, Tenn., issued a response on Friday to the “cultural insensitivity” of members of its Sigma Upsilon chapter at Indiana University.
“National and local leaders of Kappa Delta sorority were recently made aware of an inappropriate event theme that perpetuated insensitivity toward the homeless community. Kappa Delta does not condone these actions or any language that demeans an individual or group. We continue to investigate and will respond accordingly,” Roy stated in a news release."


Here is my sampling of comments by readers on this story today:

I never did care for sororities or fraternities, so I'm really not surprised at anything they do. These girls are ignorant, self-absorbed infants.

the Greek system loves to collect for national charities, but wouldn't raise a hand to help local homeless folks. Guess adults who are down and out aren't as glamorous as kids with cancer at Riley

It's easy mocking and deriding other human beings while tucked away in ivory towers, but none of these little fascists would dare go down to shalom center with that crap, nor would any punk-a$$ white boy go to the hood and act like a jackass...if they did, they'd get a large dose of reality that conflicted with what they've been programmed to believe.

wonder if the girls see the irony; they are poking fun at the unemployed who use cardboard signs to solicit handouts from strangers. Unemployed sorority members use their cell phones to solicit handouts from Mommy & Daddy.

Typical that conservatives would show up in support of spoiled white chicks to laugh at the expense of a marginalized disenfranchised group.

My own comment on the story:

The prejudice, racism and class warfare shown by the lefties is here for all to see.  Without knowledge of the facts or knowing the girls involved the sorority is criticized for: 1. being white, 2, being in a sorority, 3. being  fascists (a favorite lefty  slur), 4.  being spoiled (by parents who care about their kids??),  5. giving to national charities ( how evil!). One commenter indirectly threatens violence .