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Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs

"Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs" that's the title and subject of the thread. firings are not. you lose as i started the thread i know full and well what the title is now get into gear take some smart pills and see if you are able to take on the subject. still waiting.

(lol)
 
You backslide better than Michael Jackson!

if you are judge judy and this is your court room do something about it. otherwise you're lying and have no power just like truthb told. i'm here let's see what you got. just make sure if you decide to post you stick to the subject please thanks ma'am.
 
if you are judge judy and this is your court room do something about it. otherwise you're lying and have no power just like truthb told. i'm here let's see what you got. just make sure if you decide to post you stick to the subject please thanks ma'am.

This is not a courtroom this is brown pride, sir go ahead and turn your brain on.

You backslide better than Michael Jackson!

i couldn't have said it better myself. how're your own words - bitter?

"Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs" that's the title and subject of the thread. you lose as i started the thread i know full and well what the title is now get into gear take some smart pills and see if you are able to take on the subject. still waiting.

(lol)


(lol)
 
so it's your contention they won't be fired?

(lol)

thank you

YOU can shut up now.

SEC porn scandal results in zero firings, agency says
None of the Securities and Exchange Commission employees caught using government computers to view pornographic images has been fired, according to the agency.


The SEC inspector general investigated 28 employees and five contractors for accessing inappropriate images and Web sites, according to a report released late last week.

Of the employees, eight resigned and six were suspended for periods lasting one to 14 days, the inspector general, H. David Kotz, said in an letter Tuesday to Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa). Five were issued formal reprimands, six were issued informal counseling or warning letters, and three are currently facing disciplinary action.

All five contractors caught were removed from their contracts, Kotz added.

The SEC comes up with different numbers, but they also add up to no firings.

The staffers accessed pornographic Web sites and images by using Google and Yahoo search engines and by successfully disabling Internet filters on their computers, Kotz said.

Grassley on Tuesday asked SEC Chairman Mary L. Schapiro to clarify why the workers faced different levels of discipline. Schapiro sent a memo Friday stating that any employee who violates the agency's computer usage rules will be fired.

The Iowa Republican also asked Schapiro for specific salary and disciplinary information for the 33 workers and contractors.

"We look forward to responding to Senator Grassley in detail," SEC spokesman John Nester said in an e-mail.

Grassley's office also distributed a whistleblower complaint sent to his office regarding an assistant regional director at SEC's Los Angeles office who made 1,800 attempts to access pornographic Web sites from his agency computer.

The letter, purportedly from an SEC employee in the agency's Los Angeles regional office, described poor morale and high turnover partly due to the official getting "a free pass" from agency management for his inappropriate computer use.

Leave your thoughts in the comments section below

Don't let the truth make you bitter.

Nighty night.
 
if you are judge judy and this is your court room do something about it. otherwise you're lying and have no power just like truthb told. i'm here let's see what you got. just make sure if you decide to post you stick to the subject please thanks ma'am.

This is not a courtroom this is brown pride, sir go ahead and turn your brain on.

You backslide better than Michael Jackson!

i couldn't have said it better myself (lol)


"Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs" that's the title and subject of the thread. firings are not. you lose as i started the thread i know full and well what the title is now get into gear take some smart pills and see if you are able to take on the subject. still waiting.

(lol)


Don't let the truth make you bitter.

Nighty night.

roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif


ror!!!!!! about what? i won


roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif

roflmao.gif


now get back to the subject whenever you can get your brain around it. let me know when that happens.

(lol)
 
It's not surprising at all to see a male self-righteous moral hypocritical NeoCon who is a white supremacist that is portraying himself as a woman that is a judge [crazy]
 
i'm sorry but this is not a thread bout dentists or dictionaries. please stick to the subject which is "Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs." if you don't understand it and are afraid to engage as a result let us know. no shame. thanks guy...

(lol)
 
turns out they quit before they got fired. oh well. same difference they ain't on the taxpayer rolls anymore. now

i'm sorry but this is not a thread bout dentists or dictionaries. please stick to the subject which is "Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs." if you don't understand it and are afraid to engage as a result let us know. no shame. thanks guy...

(lol)

sorry if it hurts your feelings but you really aren't that good at debating using your intelligence are you? if you are give it a try. maybe you'll have success. the methods you are currently employing have been proven to be... let's say less than successful. don't forget the topic it's in the quote. thanks (lol)
 
Lets recap yet AGAIN so doofy monkey can try to comprende:

so it's your contention they won't be fired?

(lol)

thank you

YOU can shut up now.

SEC porn scandal results in zero firings, agency says
None of the Securities and Exchange Commission employees caught using government computers to view pornographic images has been fired, according to the agency.


The SEC inspector general investigated 28 employees and five contractors for accessing inappropriate images and Web sites, according to a report released late last week.
 
turns out they quit before they got fired. oh well. same difference they ain't on the taxpayer rolls anymore. now



sorry if it hurts your feelings but you really aren't that good at debating using your intelligence are you? if you are give it a try. maybe you'll have success. the methods you are currently employing have been proven to be... let's say less than successful. don't forget the topic it's in the quote. thanks (lol)


sorry but that's not the topic. keep throwing things at the wall maybe someday... some year one will stick... (lol)

here is the original article. go ahead and try using your intellect:

"Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs

BY Glenn Blain
DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU

Friday, April 23rd 2010, 4:00 AM

ALTAMONT, N.Y. - Main Street had a message for President Obama on Thursday: Go get 'em!

In this small, working-class village 20 miles west of Albany, people had little sympathy for big-money executives - and agreed it was time to crack down on Wall Street.

"The system has been faulty for a long, long time," said Anne Best, 52, as she tended to a garden in the village square.

"The major corporations and smaller ones have to learn to empower people, not cutting them off at the knees just to make a profit."

Marsha Mills, 65, said she agreed with the arguments of Gov. Paterson and Mayor Bloomberg that Wall Street is vital to the state's economy. But its activities, she argued, are too hard to follow.

"From what I'm hearing, a lot of it sounds like a lot of gambling," Mills said as she left the Home Front Cafe on Main St.

"They are betting on this and they are betting on that and a lot of us common folk really don't understand what's going on."

Altamont, like many small towns, has suffered from the economic meltdown - it's unemployment rate has shot up 3% to 7.2%.

"The CEOs are making millions of dollars while we are all hurting," said George Kendall, 75, another lunch customer at the Home Front, where walls are decorated with World War II memorabilia.

"There's got to be some equality there somewhere," Mills said.

Still, some in Altamont yesterday expressed concern that too much regulation could be damaging to the economy.

"Obviously, things aren't going the way they should be going," said John Dawson, 57, of nearby Rotterdam. "But sometimes you can have too many controls and regulations."

gblain@nydailynews.com



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/poli...big_stick.html"

b waitin...
 
sorry but that's not the topic. keep throwing things at the wall maybe someday... some year one will stick... (lol)

here is the original article. go ahead and try using your intellect:

"Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs

BY Glenn Blain
DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU

Friday, April 23rd 2010, 4:00 AM

ALTAMONT, N.Y. - Main Street had a message for President Obama on Thursday: Go get 'em!

In this small, working-class village 20 miles west of Albany, people had little sympathy for big-money executives - and agreed it was time to crack down on Wall Street.

"The system has been faulty for a long, long time," said Anne Best, 52, as she tended to a garden in the village square.

"The major corporations and smaller ones have to learn to empower people, not cutting them off at the knees just to make a profit."

Marsha Mills, 65, said she agreed with the arguments of Gov. Paterson and Mayor Bloomberg that Wall Street is vital to the state's economy. But its activities, she argued, are too hard to follow.

"From what I'm hearing, a lot of it sounds like a lot of gambling," Mills said as she left the Home Front Cafe on Main St.

"They are betting on this and they are betting on that and a lot of us common folk really don't understand what's going on."

Altamont, like many small towns, has suffered from the economic meltdown - it's unemployment rate has shot up 3% to 7.2%.

"The CEOs are making millions of dollars while we are all hurting," said George Kendall, 75, another lunch customer at the Home Front, where walls are decorated with World War II memorabilia.

"There's got to be some equality there somewhere," Mills said.

Still, some in Altamont yesterday expressed concern that too much regulation could be damaging to the economy.

"Obviously, things aren't going the way they should be going," said John Dawson, 57, of nearby Rotterdam. "But sometimes you can have too many controls and regulations."

gblain@nydailynews.com



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/poli...big_stick.html"

b waitin...

havin problems with the subject? let us know. no shame in not understanding. thanks (lol)
 
No problem: this is what I have to post about the subject.

so it's your contention they won't be fired?

(lol)

thank you

YOU can shut up now.

SEC porn scandal results in zero firings, agency says
None of the Securities and Exchange Commission employees caught using government computers to view pornographic images has been fired, according to the agency.


The SEC inspector general investigated 28 employees and five contractors for accessing inappropriate images and Web sites, according to a report released late last week.

Of the employees, eight resigned and six were suspended for periods lasting one to 14 days, the inspector general, H. David Kotz, said in an letter Tuesday to Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa). Five were issued formal reprimands, six were issued informal counseling or warning letters, and three are currently facing disciplinary action.

All five contractors caught were removed from their contracts, Kotz added.

The SEC comes up with different numbers, but they also add up to no firings.

The staffers accessed pornographic Web sites and images by using Google and Yahoo search engines and by successfully disabling Internet filters on their computers, Kotz said.

Grassley on Tuesday asked SEC Chairman Mary L. Schapiro to clarify why the workers faced different levels of discipline. Schapiro sent a memo Friday stating that any employee who violates the agency's computer usage rules will be fired.

The Iowa Republican also asked Schapiro for specific salary and disciplinary information for the 33 workers and contractors.

"We look forward to responding to Senator Grassley in detail," SEC spokesman John Nester said in an e-mail.

Grassley's office also distributed a whistleblower complaint sent to his office regarding an assistant regional director at SEC's Los Angeles office who made 1,800 attempts to access pornographic Web sites from his agency computer.

The letter, purportedly from an SEC employee in the agency's Los Angeles regional office, described poor morale and high turnover partly due to the official getting "a free pass" from agency management for his inappropriate computer use.

Leave your thoughts in the comments section below
 
sorry but i already beat you there and it's over. you're spamming and trolling now. here is the subject please comment on it without posting a quote you already have if you are able. you would need to read it first. if you have nothing else to say that's it you're done. up to you here is the original article i posted on this thread i started. (lol)

Main Street applauds President Obama's tough talk to Wall Street bigs

BY Glenn Blain
DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU

Friday, April 23rd 2010, 4:00 AM

ALTAMONT, N.Y. - Main Street had a message for President Obama on Thursday: Go get 'em!

In this small, working-class village 20 miles west of Albany, people had little sympathy for big-money executives - and agreed it was time to crack down on Wall Street.

"The system has been faulty for a long, long time," said Anne Best, 52, as she tended to a garden in the village square.

"The major corporations and smaller ones have to learn to empower people, not cutting them off at the knees just to make a profit."

Marsha Mills, 65, said she agreed with the arguments of Gov. Paterson and Mayor Bloomberg that Wall Street is vital to the state's economy. But its activities, she argued, are too hard to follow.

"From what I'm hearing, a lot of it sounds like a lot of gambling," Mills said as she left the Home Front Cafe on Main St.

"They are betting on this and they are betting on that and a lot of us common folk really don't understand what's going on."

Altamont, like many small towns, has suffered from the economic meltdown - it's unemployment rate has shot up 3% to 7.2%.

"The CEOs are making millions of dollars while we are all hurting," said George Kendall, 75, another lunch customer at the Home Front, where walls are decorated with World War II memorabilia.

"There's got to be some equality there somewhere," Mills said.

Still, some in Altamont yesterday expressed concern that too much regulation could be damaging to the economy.

"Obviously, things aren't going the way they should be going," said John Dawson, 57, of nearby Rotterdam. "But sometimes you can have too many controls and regulations."

gblain@nydailynews.com



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2010/04/23/2010-04-23_regular_folks_like_the_big_stick.html
 
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