2016-05-06, 20:18
  #529
Medlem
John Doe´s manifesto del 2

John Doe´s manifesto part 2

Citat:
In that regard, I have a few thoughts.

For the record, I do not work for any government or intelligence agency, directly or as a contractor, and I never have. My viewpoint is entirely my own, as was my decision to share the documents with Süddeutsche Zeitung and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), not for any specific political purpose, but simply because I understood enough about their contents to realize the scale of the injustices they described.

The prevailing media narrative thus far has focused on the scandal of what is legal and allowed in this system. What is allowed is indeed scandalous and must be changed. But we must not lose sight of another important fact: the law firm, its founders, and employees actually did knowingly violate myriad laws worldwide, repeatedly. Publicly they plead ignorance, but the documents show detailed knowledge and deliberate wrongdoing. At the very least we already know that Mossack personally perjured himself before a federal court in Nevada, and we also know that his information technology staff attempted to cover up the underlying lies. They should all be prosecuted accordingly with no special treatment.
In the end, thousands of prosecutions could stem from the Panama Papers, if only law enforcement could access and evaluate the actual documents. ICIJ and its partner publications have rightly stated that they will not provide them to law enforcement agencies. I, however, would be willing to cooperate with law enforcement to the extent that I am able.
That being said, I have watched as one after another, whistleblowers and activists in the United States and Europe have had their lives destroyed by the circumstances they find themselves in after shining a light on obvious wrongdoing. Edward Snowden is stranded in Moscow, exiled due to the Obama administration’s decision to prosecute him under the Espionage Act. For his revelations about the NSA, he deserves a hero’s welcome and a substantial prize, not banishment. Bradley Birkenfeld was awarded millions for his information concerning Swiss bank UBS—and was still given a prison sentence by the Justice Department. Antoine Deltour is presently on trial for providing journalists with information about how Luxembourg granted secret "sweetheart" tax deals to multi-national corporations, effectively stealing billions in tax revenues from its neighbour countries. And there are plenty more examples.
Legitimate whistleblowers who expose unquestionable wrongdoing, whether insiders or outsiders, deserve immunity from government retribution, full stop. Until governments codify legal protections for whistleblowers into law, enforcement agencies will simply have to depend on their own resources or on-going global media coverage for documents.
In the meantime, I call on the European Commission, the British Parliament, the United States Congress, and all nations to take swift action not only to protect whistleblowers, but to put an end to the global abuse of corporate registers. In the European Union, every member state’s corporate register should be freely accessible, with detailed data plainly available on ultimate beneficial owners. The United Kingdom can be proud of its domestic initiatives thus far, but it still has a vital role to play by ending financial secrecy on its various island territories, which are unquestionably the cornerstone of institutional corruption worldwide. And the United States can clearly no longer trust its fifty states to make sound decisions about their own corporate data. It is long past time for Congress to step in and force transparency by setting standards for disclosure and public access.
And while it’s one thing to extol the virtues of government transparency at summits and in sound bites, it’s quite another to actually implement it. It is an open secret that in the United States, elected representatives spend the majority of their time fundraising. Tax evasion cannot possibly be fixed while elected officials are pleading for money from the very elites who have the strongest incentives to avoid taxes relative to any other segment of the population. These unsavoury political practices have come full circle and they are irreconcilable. Reform of America’s broken campaign finance system cannot wait.
Of course, those are hardly the only issues that need fixing. Prime Minister John Key of New Zealand has been curiously quiet about his country's role in enabling the financial fraud Mecca that is the Cook Islands. In Britain, the Tories have been shameless about concealing their own practices involving offshore companies, while Jennifer Shasky Calvery, the director of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network at the United States Treasury, justannounced her resignation to work instead for HSBC, one of the most notorious banks on the planet (not coincidentally headquartered in London). And so the familiar swish of America’s revolving door echoes amidst deafening global silence from thousands of yet-to-be-discovered ultimate beneficial owners who are likely praying that her replacement is equally spineless. In the face of political cowardice, it's tempting to yield to defeatism, to argue that the status quo remains fundamentally unchanged, while the Panama Papers are, if nothing else, a glaring symptom of our society’s progressively diseased and decaying moral fabric.
But the issue is finally on the table, and that change takes time is no surprise. For fifty years, executive, legislative, and judicial branches around the globe have utterly failed to address the metastasizing tax havens spotting Earth’s surface. Even today, Panama says it wants to be known for more than papers, but its government has conveniently examined only one of the horses on its offshore merry-go-round.
Banks, financial regulators and tax authorities have failed. Decisions have been made that have spared the wealthy while focusing instead on reining in middle- and low-income citizens.
Hopelessly backward and inefficient courts have failed. Judges have too often acquiesced to the arguments of the rich, whose lawyers—and not just Mossack Fonseca—are well trained in honouring the letter of the law, while simultaneously doing everything in their power to desecrate its spirit.
The media has failed. Many news networks are cartoonish parodies of their former selves, individual billionaires appear to have taken up newspaper ownership as a hobby, limiting coverage of serious matters concerning the wealthy, and serious investigative journalists lack funding. The impact is real: in addition to Süddeutsche Zeitung and ICIJ, and despite explicit claims to the contrary, several major media outlets did have editors review documents from the Panama Papers. They chose not to cover them. The sad truth is that among the most prominent and capable media organizations in the world there was not a single one interested in reporting on the story. Even Wikileaks didn’t answer its tip line repeatedly.
But most of all, the legal profession has failed. Democratic governance depends upon responsible individuals throughout the entire system who understand and uphold the law, not who understand and exploit it. On average, lawyers have become so deeply corrupt that it is imperative for major changes in the profession to take place, far beyond the meek proposals already on the table. To start, the term “legal ethics,” upon which codes of conduct and licensure are nominally based, has become an oxymoron. Mossack Fonseca did not work in a vacuum—despite repeated fines and documented regulatory violations, it found allies and clients at major law firms in virtually every nation. If the industry’s shattered economics were not already evidence enough, there is now no denying that lawyers can no longer be permitted to regulate one another. It simply doesn’t work. Those able to pay the most can always find a lawyer to serve their ends, whether that lawyer is at Mossack Fonseca or another firm of which we remain unaware. What about the rest of society?
The collective impact of these failures has been a complete erosion of ethical standards, ultimately leading to a novel system we still call Capitalism, but which is tantamount to economic slavery. In this system—our system—the slaves are unaware both of their status and of their masters, who exist in a world apart where the intangible shackles are carefully hidden amongst reams of unreachable legalese. The horrific magnitude of detriment to the world should shock us all awake. But when it takes a whistleblower to sound the alarm, it is cause for even greater concern. It signals that democracy’s checks and balances have all failed, that the breakdown is systemic, and that severe instability could be just around the corner. So now is the time for real action, and that starts with asking questions.
Historians can easily recount how issues involving taxation and imbalances of power have led to revolutions in ages past. Then, military might was necessary to subjugate peoples, whereas now, curtailing information access is just as effective or more so, since the act is often invisible. Yet we live in a time of inexpensive, limitless digital storage and fast internet connections that transcend national boundaries. It doesn't take much to connect the dots: from start to finish, inception to global media distribution, the next revolution will be digitized.
Or perhaps it has already begun.
Citera
2016-05-06, 20:28
  #530
Medlem
Ja, sen får vi se om det är den äkta källan eller om det är någon som kör en fuling och utger sig för att vara källan men inte är det.

Men så är det till och med i den bästa av propagandavärldar.
Citera
2016-05-09, 09:56
  #531
Medlem
duqus avatar
Panama Papers, databas släppt, lista här:

Databasen har just nu släppts, jag lägger ut i spoiler nedan ifall nu databasen stängs ner eller annat skulle hända.

Svenska adresser som förekommer i databasen:

Klient-namn i Sverige:

"Företags"-namn:

Källa databas: https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/search?country=SW&q=&ppl=on&ent=on&adr=on
Citera
2016-05-09, 10:28
  #532
Medlem
Tror vi att det är hela? Jag kollade lite snabbt och jag hittade inte Mattias Asper som nämndes tidigt exempelvis..
Citera
2016-05-09, 10:28
  #533
Medlem
BernardLoutres avatar
Jag ser honom inte men det hade varit roligt om man hittade "Spöket/Livvakten" i den där listan.
Citera
2016-05-09, 10:57
  #534
Medlem
duqus avatar
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av groenpoese
Tror vi att det är hela? Jag kollade lite snabbt och jag hittade inte Mattias Asper som nämndes tidigt exempelvis..

Men går inte han in under "Burton" som gjorde upplägget ?.
https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/63242

Men man kan ju ana att Icij kör med hård censur och bara vill hänga ut organisatörerna, då visar det sig ännu en gång hur den svenska skenheligheten fungerar....
Citera
2016-05-09, 11:49
  #535
Medlem
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av duqu
Men går inte han in under "Burton" som gjorde upplägget ?.
https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/nodes/63242

Men man kan ju ana att Icij kör med hård censur och bara vill hänga ut organisatörerna, då visar det sig ännu en gång hur den svenska skenheligheten fungerar....

Du har förmodligen rätt i det... Det är ju ganska många andra namn som förekommer men då kan de antas ha lagt upp det själv då snarare än via någon mellanhand.
Citera
2016-05-09, 14:20
  #536
Medlem
Saturnuspojkens avatar
Kl. 20.00 i kväll släpps informationen från skattverket. Hoppas det kommer på TV-nyheterna.
Citera
2016-05-09, 14:38
  #537
Medlem
Referenshumlas avatar
IT/utbildningsföretaget Juniper AB finns med på listan

Företaget har och har haft en namntvist med ett amerikansksk företag som nu etablerat sig i Sverige.
I länken beskriver de sin frustration:
http://www.juniper.se/namnstold/

Citat:
Frågan är inte bara hur vi ska göra när stora företag är fräcka mot små.

Frågan är också om hur namnskyddet kan stärkas i Sverige.

Frågan är nu hur starkt namnet är som varumärke

Företags presentation av det trevliga Familje-skattesmitar-företaget i Stocksund:
http://www.juniper.se/
Citera
2016-05-09, 14:45
  #538
Medlem
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av groenpoese
Tror vi att det är hela? Jag kollade lite snabbt och jag hittade inte Mattias Asper som nämndes tidigt exempelvis..

Jag fick upp en popup som sa

New data on May 9!

On May 9 at 2 p.m. EDT the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists will be adding to this database information on more than 200,000 offshore entities that are part of the Panama Papers investigation.
Citera
2016-05-09, 15:43
  #539
Medlem
Besudlarens avatar
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av Referenshumla
IT/utbildningsföretaget Juniper AB finns med på listan

Företaget har och har haft en namntvist med ett amerikansksk företag som nu etablerat sig i Sverige.
I länken beskriver de sin frustration:
http://www.juniper.se/namnstold/



Frågan är nu hur starkt namnet är som varumärke

Företags presentation av det trevliga Familje-skattesmitar-företaget i Stocksund:
http://www.juniper.se/

"Juniper AB – ett familjeföretag med flera järn i elden"
Citera
2016-05-09, 16:04
  #540
Medlem
Saturnuspojkens avatar
Det flesta verkar vara småfiskar eller?
Citera

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