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Who owns and controls the US?

Last week I read that China is no longer America’s leading lender and that Japan now is the new creditor-in-chief. China sold about $34 billion of Treasuries in December, taking its holdings to $755 billion, while Japan increased its purchases and now is on top with $768 billion.
Besides that US companies might face sanctions because of US arms sales to Taiwan, if we can believe the statement of Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang.

The United States is spending approximately $1 billion a day overseas on oil, depending on oil imports from foreign countries.
A recent report on the November 2009 U.S. trade deficit found that rising oil imports widened the deficit, increasing the gap between imports and exports. Link

Then I read that Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal – a nephew of the Saudi king – owns the fourth largest stake in News Corp – the parent company of Fox News – making him the largest shareholder outside the family of Rupert Murdoch.
According to the Financial Times, News Corp announced Monday that it is purchasing a $70 million dollar stake in Prince Alwaleed’s Rotana Media.

Here you can read more about the “Saudi’s global agenda”

Saudi prince al-Waleed bin Talal has been described by Forbes as the worlds fifth richest man and is known for his financial ties to the Bush family and the Carlyle Group and for owning a fair-sized stake in Disney and in Citigroup ($4.3 billion dollar). Link 1 Link 2

Prince Alwaleed has publicly acknowledged that he has forced Fox News to edit the coverage he disliked. In September 2005, he acquired 5.46% of voting shares in News Corp., and just a few months later, when Fox reported about riots in Paris and was using the term “Muslim Riots” to describe rioting by Muslims, Prince bin Talal claims that just a call had Fox change the title of the story to “Youth Riots”.  (source)

It seems this partnership is growing even closer, since News Corp was able to aquire a 10% stake in al-Waleed’s “Rotana”, along with an option for another 10%. Rotana already broadcasts Fox programming in the Middle East (producing films, television, recordings, and magazines) and it is believed that Murdoch is hoping to get a toehold in the growing Arab market through the deal.

Conservative activists have attacked the business partnership as “really dangerous for America.”

Like I mentioned above, Prince Alwaleed owns a $4.3 billion dollar stake in Citigroup, and has openly announced that he opposes President Obama’s financial reforms like the banker speculation tax. On Fox News, the bank tax and other financial reforms have been smeared with misinformation and lies.
In an interview with Fox News’ Neil Cavuto last month, Prince Alwaleed spoke about the importance of the “strategic alliance” of America’s reliance on Saudi oil. Other Saudi officials have called efforts to build a clean energy economy in America Saudi Arabia’s “biggest threat.” Saudi Arabia’s economy depends on oil exports and would be the biggest losers in any pact that curbs oil demand by penalizing carbon emissions.

Although little is known about the influence Prince Alwaleed has on Fox content, Fox News dedicates much of its coverage to attacking clean energy legislation that could lead to American energy independence. They do not mention new analysis and facts that (to name just one specific example) the US has three times more wind electricity potential than previously thought… (source)

And then there is this 5-4 Supreme Court ruling in the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision. This ruling for example allows Saudi Arabian-owned subsidiaries (or any other foreign owned subsidaries) operating in the United States to spend unlimited amounts in elections advocating their own interests…

“Freedom of the press belongs to the man who owns one.” A. J. Liebling

But then, it is not really new. The corporate influences are already known… Corporations themselves are not the problem , lack of regulation (ethics) and their intrusion into the democratic process is . This is the single biggest flaw in American democracy .

Corporations and their boards can actually be sued if they behave in any fashion other than to create as much profit as possible for the stock holder… this leaves all ethical questions, war, hunger, pollution, worker rights, an impending climate disaster, health care, entirely outside their abilities to address.

Which makes them very dangerous and anti democratic by nature.

Hey... my name is Su and I was an independent writer/co-writer for a couple of years in Germany. I have many different interests, here are just a few... music, art, journalism (I believe in the ethic of journalism - to seek facts and report it) media, news and newspaper (it is annoying how much is censored) race, religion and culture (sad how many prejudices still exist), science (which is organized common sense imho and the will to find out), writing (still try to end my book), ... international politics, languages (I am still stumbling "over my tongue" when I speak english as well as the grammar - but I make some progress), photography... and and and....
 
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