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  • Democrats aren't only better people then Republicans but they're better managers too.

    I saw this on Slate.com and thought I'd share. Both the Republicans and the Democrats have mutual funds which invest in companies who give donations primarially to their party but the Republican one is performing about 1/3 as well as the Democratic one. It seems blue can be green and that companies acting socially responsible really can command higher prices for their goods and services.

    Blue Is GreenWhy Democratic-leaning companies outperform Republican-leaning ones.
    By Daniel Gross
    Posted Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006, at 7:31 AM ET

    On the campaign trail, Democrats are loudly claiming that they can outperform Republicans in Washington when it comes to policy. Now they're making the same claim about mutual-fund investing.

    As Moneybox reported in May, the Free Enterprise Action Fund, a tiny mutual fund run by lobbyists, uses stock ownership to push policies associated with the Republican Party. Through the first nine months of this year, it was up 5.59 percent, lagging the 8.53-percent gain for the Standard & Poor's 500. Starting next week, The Blue Fund will try to demonstrate that Democratic principles aren't simply better for the country—they're better for investors.

    The Blue Fund aims to funnel capital to companies that it believes have policies and worldviews that jibe with the Democratic Party. While there are plenty of socially responsible mutual funds that screen stocks for decent environmental and labor practices, "there was no fund available for someone who cared about the political aspects of corporate behavior as well," said Blue Fund co-founder and president Daniel Adamson, a former McKinsey consultant who has also worked in private equity. So, the Blue Fund is also monitoring political contributions to ensure firms really lean Democrat.

    The Blue Fund uses a two-phase screening process to pick companies that Democrats can love. First, the managers of its large- and small-cap funds look for companies whose political action committees and top three executives have given more than half of their donations to Democrats since 1996. Then, those politically correct companies must show they are politically correct—i.e., that they measure up on issues like environmental sustainability, respect for human rights, fair treatment of employees, and diversity. (Here is a full list of qualifying companies.)

    Given Republican control of White House and Congress and corporate America's general preference for Republicans, only a small minority of the stocks in the relevant indices (the S&P 500 for the large-cap fund, the Russell 2000 for the small-cap fund) pass muster. About 15 percent of the S&P 500 members (75) and about 18 percent of the members of the Russell 2000 (370) qualify for the Blue Funds.

    As a result, the Blue Fund is a concentrated index fund whose makeup differs significantly from the S&P 500. Here are the top holdings of the Blue Fund large-cap fund, and of the small-cap fund. The Blue Funds are heavily concentrated on consumer firms, financial services, and technology and doesn't have a single energy stock. (ExxonMobil doesn't donate mostly to Democrats? I'm shocked!) None of the top 10 holdings of the S&P 500, among them ExxonMobil, General Electric, and Citigroup, appears in the top 25 holdings of the Blue Fund. Apple and Google each account for 5 percent of the Blue Fund, and the top 25 stocks including Nike, Starbucks, and Costco, account for 60 percent of the fund. The screening process seems to sift out the small number of American companies that cater to iPod-listening, Nike-wearing, latte-drinking, Internet-surfing, Costco-shopping people with lots of discretionary income and fat 401(k) plans. In other words, coastal and urban Democrats!

    There are a few major differences between the Blue Fund and the Red-leaning Free Enterprise Action Fund. While both have lobbyists and politicos associated with them (former Democratic National Committee Chairman Joe Andrew chairs the Blue Fund), the Blue Fund's team includes people who have experience in the asset-management business. And while the Republicans behind the Free Enterprise Action Fund want investors to take it on faith that their approach is good for investors, the Blue Fund has a white paper, complete with graphs, that shows the superiority of their methodology. While past performance is no guide to future performance, the white paper (see Page 3) shows that over the past five years, the Blue Large Cap Index would have beaten the S&P 500 by 13.1 percent annually, and beaten companies that give a majority of their political donations to Republicans by 15.6 percent annually. That's a massive difference. Of course, virtually any market-cap-weighted portfolio in which Google and Apple constitute 10 percent of holdings would have put up similar numbers in the past several years. But Adamson notes that even if you remove the three companies in the Blue Fund with a market capitalization of over $25 billion (Google, Apple, and Costco), the blue companies still outperformed the S&P 500 by three percentage points per year.

    So what makes Democratic-leaning companies do better? Adamson attributes the outperformance to what he calls "progressive leadership." Companies with progressive leaders are more likely to innovate and be flexible, more likely to treat employees better (Costco), more likely to work better with outside organizations that can burnish or damage brands (the Gap), and more likely to earn the loyalty of committed customers with lots of disposable income (Starbucks). And all that leads to better profits and performance. Says Adamson: "Nice guys sometimes can finish first."
    On the campaign trail, Democrats are loudly claiming that they can outperform Republicans in Washington when it comes to policy. Now they're making the...
    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

  • #2
    I saw this on Slate.com and thought I'd share.
    Please don't in the future. I'm kinda fed up with these "lol those stupid liberals/conservatives!" -spin threads.

    Oh, and stop reading Slate. It tries hard to portray itself as neutral in terms of politics, but the substance is spun to the left from reality. As in, sometimes the information is false. And "sometimes" is too often.

    Comment


    • #3
      Please show where it was false and not immediately retracted. In fact please show ANY major news source which has never had to print a retraction.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

      Comment


      • #4
        No, I don't care about this enough to spend over 5 minutes on it. You don't have to believe me if you don't want to, I'm not trying to question your source or anything. I've forgotten about them and don't bother to search for new ones anymore. I'm just saying this as a friend and an ex-Slate reader (and to all other people who care about my opinion) : don't trust on Slate. Their facts are sometimes wrong, their conclusions are often wrong, and their predictions are always wrong.

        Comment


        • #5
          OK, fair enough.
          Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

          Comment


          • #6
            Oerdin is correct Democrats do seem better at generatingmoney quickly.

            Democratic leader's $1 million land deal under scrutiny
            POSTED: 9:52 a.m. EDT, October 12, 2006

            WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid is awaiting word from the Senate ethics committee on whether he failed to properly account for a business deal that allowed him to collect a $1.1 million windfall on land he hadn't personally owned for three years.

            Reid sought the opinion after The Associated Press reported Wednesday that the senator didn't disclose to Congress that he first sold the land to a friend's company back in 2001 and took an ownership stake in the company. He didn't collect the seven-figure payout until the company sold the land again in 2004 to others.

            Reid reported the 2004 transaction as a personal sale, never disclosing his earlier sale or the stake in the company.

            The Nevada Democrat's 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. Brown has never been charged with wrongdoing, except for a 1981 federal securities complaint that was settled out of court.

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

            Reid: 'Everything I did was transparent'
            "Everything I did was transparent," Reid told a Las Vegas news conference Wednesday after the AP story was published. "I paid all the taxes. Everything is fully disclosed to the ethics committee and everyone else. As I said, if there is some technical change that the ethics committee wants, I'll be happy to do that."

            Land deeds obtained by AP during a review of Reid's business dealings show:


            The deal began in 1998 when Reid bought undeveloped residential property on Las Vegas' booming outskirts for about $400,000. Reid bought one lot outright, and a second parcel jointly with Brown. One of the sellers was a developer who was benefiting from a government land swap that Reid supported. The seller never talked to Reid.


            In 2001, Reid sold the land for the same price to a limited liability corporation created by Brown. The senator didn't disclose the sale on his annual public ethics report or tell Congress he had any stake in Brown's company. He continued to report to Congress that he personally owned the land.


            After getting local officials to rezone the property for a shopping center, Brown's company sold the land in 2004 to other developers and Reid took $1.1 million of the proceeds, nearly tripling the senator's investment. Reid reported it to Congress as a personal land sale.

            The complex dealings allowed Reid to transfer ownership, legal liability and some tax consequences to Brown's company without public knowledge, but still collect the payoff nearly three years later.

            Reid hung up the phone when questioned about the deal during an AP interview last week.

            The senator's aides said no money changed hands in 2001 and that Reid instead got an ownership stake in Brown's company equal to the value of his land. Reid continued to pay taxes on the land and didn't disclose the deal because he considered it a "technical transfer," they said.

            They also said they have no documents proving Reid's stake in the company because it was an informal understanding between friends.

            The 1998 purchase "was a normal business transaction at market prices," Reid spokesman Jim Manley said. "There were several legal steps associated with the investment during those years that did not alter Senator Reid's actual ownership interest in the land."

            Senate ethics rules require lawmakers to disclose on their annual ethics report all transactions involving investment properties -- regardless of profit or loss -- and to report any ownership stake in companies.

            Kent Cooper, a former Federal Election Commission official who oversaw government disclosure reports for federal candidates for two decades, said Reid's failure to report the 2001 sale and his ties to Brown's company violated Senate rules.

            "This is very, very clear," Cooper said. "Whether you make a profit or a loss you've got to put that transaction down so the public, voters, can see exactly what kind of money is moving to or from a member of Congress."

            Stanley Brand, former Democratic chief counsel of the House, said Reid should have disclosed the 2001 sale and that his omission fits a larger culture in Congress where lawmakers aren't following or enforcing their own rules.

            "It's like everything else we've seen in last two years. If it is not enforced, people think it's not enforced and they get lax and sloppy," Brand said.

            Sale not disclosed to Congress
            Reid and his wife, Landra, personally signed the deeds selling their full interest in the property to Brown's company, Patrick Lane LLC, for the same $400,000 they paid in 1998, records show.

            Despite the sale, Reid continued to say on his public ethics reports that he personally owned the land until it was sold again in 2004. His disclosure forms to Congress do not mention an interest in Patrick Lane or the company's role in the 2004 sale.

            AP first learned of the transaction from a former Reid aide who expressed concern the deal hadn't been properly reported.

            Reid isn't listed anywhere on Patrick Lane's corporate filings with Nevada, even though the land he sold accounted for three-quarters of the company's assets. Brown is listed as the company's manager. Reid's office said Nevada law didn't require Reid to be mentioned in the filings.

            "We have been friends for over 35 years. We didn't need a written agreement between us," Brown said.

            The informalities didn't stop there.

            Taxes loosely handled
            Brown sometimes paid a share of the local property taxes on the lot Reid owned outright between 1998 and 2001, while Reid sometimes paid more than his share of taxes on the second parcel they co-owned.

            And the two men continued to pay the property taxes from their personal checking accounts even after the land was sold to Patrick Lane in 2001, records show.

            Brown said Reid first approached him in 1997 about land purchases and the two men considered the two lots a single investment.

            "During the years of ownership, there may have been occasions that he advanced the property taxes, or that I advanced the property taxes," Brown said. "The bottom line is that between ourselves we always settled up and each of us paid our respective percentages."

            Ultimately, Reid paid about 74 percent of the property taxes, slightly less than his actual 75.1 ownership stake, according to canceled checks kept at the local assessor's office. One year, the property tax payments were delinquent and resulted in a small penalty, the records show.

            Ethics experts said such informality raises questions about whether any of Brown's tax payments amounted to a benefit for Reid. "It might be a gift," Cooper said.

            Brand said the IRS might view the handling of the land taxes as undisclosed income to Reid but it was unlikely to prompt an investigation. "If someone is paying a liability you owe, there may be some income imputed. But at that level, it's pretty small dollars," he said.

            Federal land transferred
            Nevada land deeds show Reid and his wife first bought the property in January 1998 in a proposed subdivision created partly with federal lands transferred by the Interior Department to private developers.

            Reid's two lots were never owned by the government, but the piece of land joining Reid's property to the street corner -- a key to the shopping center deal -- came from the government in 1994.

            One of the sellers was Fred Lessman, a vice president of land acquisition at Perma-Bilt Homes.

            Around the time of the 1998 sale, Lessman and his company were completing a complicated federal land transfer that also involved an Arizona-based developer named Del Webb Corp.

            In the deal, Del Webb and Perma-Bilt purchased environmentally sensitive lands in the Lake Tahoe area, transferred them to the government and then got in exchange several pieces of valuable Las Vegas land.

            Lessman was personally involved, writing a March 1997 letter to Interior lobbying for the deal. "This exchange has been through many trials and tribulations ... we do not need to create any more stumbling blocks," Lessman wrote.

            For years, Reid also had been encouraging Interior to make land swaps on behalf of Del Webb, where one of his former aides worked.

            In 1994, Reid wrote a letter with other Nevada lawmakers on behalf of Del Webb, and then met personally with a top federal land official in Nevada. That official claimed in media reports he felt pressured by the senator. Reid denied any pressure.

            The next year, Reid collected $18,000 in political donations from Del Webb's political action committee and employees. Del Webb's efforts to get federal land dragged on.

            In December 1996, Reid wrote a second letter on behalf of Del Webb, urging Interior to answer the company's concerns. The deal came together in summer and fall 1997, with Perma-Bilt joining in.

            In January 1998 -- just days before he bought his land -- Reid applauded the Lake Tahoe land transfers, saying they would create the "gateway to paradise."

            None of Reid's letters mentioned Perma-Bilt. Reid's office said the senator never met Lessman nor discussed the Lake Tahoe land transfer or his personal land purchase. A real estate attorney handled the 1998 sale at arms-length, aides said.

            "This land investment was completely unrelated to federal land swaps that took place in the mid-1990's," Manley said.

            Lessman said he never talked to Reid or asked for his help before the 1998 land sale, and only met the senator years later at a public event. "Any suggestion that the land sale between Senator Reid and myself is somehow tied in with the Perma-Bilt exchange is completely absurd," Lessman said.

            Land rezoned for shopping center
            Clark County intended for the property Reid owned to be used solely for new housing, records show. Just days before Reid sold the parcels to Brown's company, Brown sought permission in May 2001 to rezone the properties so a shopping center could be built.

            Career zoning officials objected, saying the request was "inconsistent" with Clark County's master development plan. The town board in Spring Valley, where Reid's property was located, also voted 4-1 to reject the rezoning.

            Brown persisted. The Clark County zoning board followed by the Clark County Commission voted to overrule the recommendation and approve commercial zoning. Such votes were common at the time.

            Before the approval in September 2001, Brown's consultant told commissioners that Reid was involved. "Mr. Brown's partner is Harry Reid, so I think we have people in this community who you can trust to go forward and put a quality project before you," the consultant testified.

            With the rezoning granted, Patrick Lane pursued the shopping center deal. On Jan. 20, 2004, the company sold the property to developers for $1.6 million. The next day, Reid was given $1.1 million of the sale proceeds.

            Today, a multimillion dollar retail complex sits on the land.

            A behind-the-scenes power broker
            Brown has been a behind-the-scenes power broker in Nevada for years, donating to Democrats, Republicans and charities. He represented a major casino in legal cases and dabbled in Nevada's booming real estate market.

            Brown befriended Reid four decades ago, even before Reid served as chairman of the Nevada gaming commission and decided cases involving Brown's clients.

            Brown's name has surfaced in federal investigations involving organized crime, casinos and political bribery since the 1980s.

            This past summer, federal prosecutors introduced testimony at the bribery trial of former Clark County Commission chairman Dario Herrera that Brown had taken money from a Las Vegas strip club owner to influence the commission. Herrera was convicted of taking kickbacks. Brown was never called as a witness.

            Brown declined to discuss past cases where his name surfaced, including Herrera. "The federal government investigated this whole matter thoroughly, and there was never any implication of impropriety on my part," he said.

            Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
            "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

            “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

            Comment


            • #7
              Looks like a paper work issue.
              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

              Comment


              • #8
                A paper work issue as in:

                a) Getting First Dibs on lands adjacent to areas scheduled to be handed over from the Federal government to private use when redistributed when Reid first purchased the land. ( in the world of stocks that would be considered insider information)

                b) Selling for an equity stake in Browns shell company knowing that Brown was going to request rezoning.

                c) reaping the profits from Browns shell company in a disproprotiante share to his equity stake 1.1 Million profits out of 1.6 million selling price.

                d) Reaping those same profits knowing that Brown invoked his name to 'incent' the rezoning.

                Alll simple and innocent mistakes.

                Do we know at this point who the rezoning board was? Could Rory Reid (Harry's son) been involved in that decision as he was a county commissionar elected to office on Jan 6, 2003?
                "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

                “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

                Comment


                • #9
                  I forgot about the boxing ticket scam. Luckily my local leftist rag remembered.

                  Sen. Reid should look in mirror first


                  Published on: 10/13/06

                  Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid would be well advised to stop thundering about corruption in the Republican ranks or crying "cover-up" over the GOP's failure to promptly and appropriately deal with former Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) and his sexually explicit e-mails to congressional pages. Reid faces too many questions about his own behavior to crusade against the misdeeds of others.

                  Currently, he's trying to explain a land deal in Nevada on which he made a pile of money and which may not have been properly disclosed. When the property was sold in 2004, it belonged to a company formed with a long-time friend and included a parcel that once had been owed by Reid. Despite having transferred his parcel to the company, the Nevada Democrat continued to report in Senate documents that he still owned it personally. That's a breach of Senate disclosure rules, according to the Associated Press, which first reported the transaction details.

                  Reid is now considering whether he should amend his disclosure statement.

                  Two months ago, the Los Angeles Times reported that Reid had smoothed the way for a campaign contributor and friend to develop a huge tract of land northeast of Las Vegas. Reid tried twice — before he was successful — to get a utility right-of-way moved from the proposed development site onto public land.

                  The first effort stalled because of objections from the Bureau of Land Management and others that the developer wasn't going to pay anything for a deal that would greatly increase the value of his development site. Eventually, it was determined the developer should pay the federal government more than $10 million.

                  Then there are the free boxing tickets Reid took from the Nevada Athletic Commission. The panel was hoping to block formation of a national boxing commission; Reid favored one.

                  Only after the Associated Press reported this summer that Reid got the expensive tickets did the senator decide he would no longer accept such gifts.

                  Unfortunately, Reid's ethics meter only seems to work when it's too late.

                  — David McNaughton, for the editorial board
                  AJC
                  "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

                  “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    But the important thing

                    is the Democrats are better in bed than Republicans too. Just ask Ted Kennedy.
                    “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

                    ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      They certainly are better at investing if these results are to be believed.
                      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        No doubt about it them Dems seem to be able to make money hand over fist.
                        "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

                        “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Ogie Oglethorpe
                          A paper work issue as in:

                          a) Getting First Dibs on lands adjacent to areas scheduled to be handed over from the Federal government to private use when redistributed when Reid first purchased the land. ( in the world of stocks that would be considered insider information)

                          b) Selling for an equity stake in Browns shell company knowing that Brown was going to request rezoning.

                          c) reaping the profits from Browns shell company in a disproprotiante share to his equity stake 1.1 Million profits out of 1.6 million selling price.

                          d) Reaping those same profits knowing that Brown invoked his name to 'incent' the rezoning.

                          Alll simple and innocent mistakes.

                          Do we know at this point who the rezoning board was? Could Rory Reid (Harry's son) been involved in that decision as he was a county commissionar elected to office on Jan 6, 2003?
                          this is a local issue, but i haven't been watching the news closely enough to comment much on it.

                          But it's happening all the time. Friends of people on the zoning board are getting rich. Lots of people are getting rich on land that is rezoned. Reid isn't the first politician to face scrutiny over this, but he's the most high profile one.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Democrats aren't only better people then Republicans but they're better managers

                            Originally posted by Oerdin
                            I saw this on Slate.com and thought I'd share.
                            Please stop. Whenever you start a thread you only embarrass yourself and clutter up the forum.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              this is a local issue, but i haven't been watching the news closely enough to comment much on it.

                              But it's happening all the time. Friends of people on the zoning board are getting rich. Lots of people are getting rich on land that is rezoned. Reid isn't the first politician to face scrutiny over this, but he's the most high profile one.
                              Ogie Oglethorpe is the same guy who said that John Kerry wounded himself for his medals. He'll spin every conspiracy theory he gets his hand on. His technique is all about quantity crashing quality: repeating a claim until it becomes true. My advice to you is that you don't trust anything what he says. Use your own judgement in trusting external links if they are provided.

                              Originally posted by Kuciwalker
                              Please stop.
                              Cutting unneeded political rumours and spin with zero information value away from Apolyton OTF

                              Comment

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