Say NO to Workers; Yes to the Obscenely Rich!

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Parents say more than ‘no’

“The Party of No? It has to be said” (Letters, April 2), comparing Republicans to parents who must sometimes say “no” to their children, needs clarification.

Consider what the Republican parents are saying “no” to – education, health care, supporting benefits for poor families – while saying “yes” to purchases of luxury items by wealthier members of society.

These are not the actions of responsible, caring parents.

Peter Rogers, Pleasant Hill 

Fleeced by unions

The California GOP deserves praise for blocking typical Democratic answers to budget problems: more taxes.

Why is it so difficult for the millions of nonunion California taxpayers to understand they are getting fleeced by the public employee unions who refuse to allow the mere mention of “pension reform” into the discussion?

Why do the many articles and letters about this budget impasse conveniently avoid addressing the real problem or simply give it passing mention?

The budget problem is not going away until public employee unions face reality and stop living lavishly on the backs of the vastly greater majority of nonunion, hardworking California taxpayers.

Karl Spurzem, Corte Madera [a very Upper-middle class community]

Union workers live lavishly?

Re: “Fleeced by unions” (Letters, April 2).

I am not a California public employee, but “living lavishly”? Really? Implying that union employees are frolicking in mansions at the expense of other California workers is ridiculous.

Kristen Ross, El Cerrito

Goldman Sachs rewards top execs with cash bonuses
Christine Harper, Bloomberg News
Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Lloyd C. Blankfein’s $19 million compensation for 2010, almost double the prior year, ended two years in which the firm’s top executives gave up cash bonuses.

Blankfein’s pay included $5.4 million in cash, $12.6 million in restricted stock, a $600,000 salary and about $464,000 in other benefits, a proxy statement from the New York firm showed. Blankfein’s $9.8 million pay for 2009 included $9 million in restricted stock plus salary and other compensation.

Cash awards are back at Goldman Sachs, the fifth-biggest U.S. bank by assets, after a 38 percent drop in annual earnings and a year in which the stock price ended close to where it began. While pay is up from 2008, when Blankfein, 56, and six other senior officers got no bonuses, it remains below Blankfein’s record-setting $67.9 million award for 2007.

“The fact that they would return to a more market-based pay is probably not surprising” after 2008 and 2009, said Rose Marie Orens, a senior partner at Compensation Advisory Partners LLC in New York. “They’re not quite back to anything remotely like what they paid in the prior years.”

Goldman Sachs’s 2010 share performance – a decline of less than half of 1 percent – outstripped competitors including Bank of America Corp. and Morgan Stanley, which was the second-biggest U.S. securities firm after Goldman Sachs before both converted to banks in 2008. Shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co., which reported a record profit last year, rose 1.8 percent during the year.

“While our performance in 2010 was not as strong as in 2009 due to difficult market conditions for much of the year, we continued to create value for our shareholders and prudently manage our firm from a risk perspective,” Goldman Sachs said in the proxy.

All 30 members of the management committee received only restricted stock for their 2009 bonuses and four of them – Chief Financial Officer David A. Viniar, 55; President and Chief Operating Officer Gary D. Cohn, 50; and Vice Chairmen J. Michael Evans, 53, and John S. Weinberg, 54 – received the same $9 million award as Blankfein.

For 2010, Goldman Sachs once again matched those four executives’ bonuses to Blankfein’s $12.6 million in restricted stock and $5.4 million in cash. All four also received a $600,000 salary in 2010.

“They’ve had a history of paying their top five like partners,” Orens said. “It’s unusual, but it really comes from their partnership mentality.”

The firm disclosed in January that Blankfein’s salary will increase to $2 million in 2011 and that Cohn, Viniar, Evans and Weinberg will each receive a $1.85 million salary starting this year. Each of them had received a $600,000 salary since 1999, the year the firm became a public company.

Blankfein and eight deputies reaped a total of $125 million during 2010 from their investments in private equity and hedge funds managed by the firm, the proxy disclosed. Blankfein’s payments, which included profits and any return of capital, totaled $27.2 million, outstripping his compensation.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/04/05/BU381IPOET.DTL

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Chevron approves raises for top execs

Chevron Corp. said Monday its board of directors has approved pay increases for the company’s top executives.

Chairman and CEO John Watson received a $100,000 raise, bringing his base salary to $1.6 million. The board also agreed to boost performance-based incentive awards for Watson.

Chief Financial Officer Pat Yarrington was given a $60,000 raise to bring her base salary to $860,000 and George Kirkland, Chevron’s vice chairman and executive vice president, received an increase of $100,000 to bring his base salary to $1.3 million.

The Last Man’s Club – James Galvin

My favorite teacher of all time (and I’ve had some extremely good ones in my time) was one of my Creative Writing teachers at Humboldt State (in a department that included Jim Dodge, NY Times best-selling author of Fup, Jayne-Anne Phillips, Black Tickets & Machine Dreams, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Jorie Graham, master of the short story Raymond Carver– some of which were turned into a film by Robert Altman called Short Cuts and featuring a star-studded cast including Julia Roberts & Lyle Lovett– and his graduate advisor R.C. Day– and this just in the short time I was there) named James Galvin. In class he was as judicious in his criticism as anyone I’ve ever seen, modulating his criticism to the skill level of the writer, and always in the spirit of helping them develop, and he encouraged his class to do the same.

(Anyone who’s been in a haphazardly moderated Creative Writing workshop will appreciate exactly how valuable this sort of restraint could be)

Anyway, catch him outside of class, and get a couple of Bushmills in front of him, and you would see exactly how *ahem* opinionated this guy could be. Jim, if you’re reading this– last time I was in Arcata, that hideous sculpture on the offramp at the north end of town (don’t act like you don’t know which one I’m talking about…) was still there–

One night, he mentioned that the short story was an exercise in discovery, and there was one story he wanted to write called The Last Man’s Club, and how he’d never write it because he already knew the ending. Well anyway, he repurposed it as a prose poem, and here is…

The Last Man’s Club
by Jim Galvin

My grandfather was always sad. Sadly, as a boy, he paddled his canoe along the beautiful Hudson River, which was only then beginning to die. During the first war he was very sad in France because he knew he was having the time of his life. When it was over everyone in American felt like a hero — imagine.

Once a year on Armistice Day, he met with all his friends from the war. They got drunk and recounted the stories of the time when they had thought they were men and the world had seemed entirely possible. They placed empty chairs for certain of the dead, and in the center of the table, a bottle of cognac from France, for the last man of them to drink alone, in honor of the others.

Year after year they gathered to watch each other and themselves disappear, turn into empty chairs. Sooner or later they were all sad. Some of them must have realized they didn’t need to join a club for this.

Finally it came down to my grandfather and a man named Oscar Cooper. Neither of them wanted to outlive anyone. They couldn’t remember what honor was. When they drank the cognac it didn’t taste like anything. They threw the bottle in the river as if they thought it meant that neither of them was alive anymore.

When Cooper died the following year, my grandfather took his rifle out into the yard and fired three shots at the sky. Then he went down to the river and drank himself to sleep. After that he was never sad, not even when the river died.

Thank you, Jim.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Galvin_%28poet%29

Unabomber’s Montana land for sale; ‘very secluded’

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Sunday, December 5, 2010
08:01 PST Lincoln, Mont.

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Tasteless, Yet Appalling

A 1.4-acre parcel of land in western Montana that was once owned by Unabomber Ted Kaczynski is on the market for $69,500.

The listing — by John Pistelak Realty of Lincoln — offers potential buyers a chance to own a piece of “infamous U.S. history.”

“This is a one of a kind property and is obviously very secluded,” the listing says. It doesn’t say who owns the property.

The forested land, which had been listed at $154,500, does not have electricity or running water. Photos posted with the online listing show tall trees, chain-link fences topped by barbed wire and a tree with “FBI” carved into it, though it’s not clear why. Pistelak said Friday he couldn’t immediately comment on the listing.

The property does not include Kaczynski’s cabin, which is on display at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2010/12/05/national/a062631S45.DTL#ixzz17GPeKKQp