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Friday, February 22, 2008

Re: [chottala.com] Call for TOTAL ERADICATION OF CORRUPTION by Bongobondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1974

Situation was compelled him to declare state of emergency & to eradicate corruption Mr Mujib was bound to reform politics & political banner in the name of BAKSAL for executing his ideology of sociological democracy by establishing social & economical justice. But he did not get chance before executing his plan he was brutally killed.
The reality is that for eradicating corruption from the country it is needed quality experienced leaders who have knowledge to understand the reality of the country & who have efficiency
1)  To keep market prices of essential goods constant
2)  To protect money inflation
3)  To provide jobs to the jobless people
4)  To ensure at least minimum standard of social & economical security to the people.
For doing these functions it needs lawful honest discipline administration under honest experienced discipline lawful skilled leaders.
Only quality educated quality people can be able to eradicate corruption from the country.
 


Syed Aslam <Syed.Aslam3@gmail.com> wrote:
 
General Moeen U. Ahmed heard Bongobondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's
call for total eradication of corruption in 1974 at his graduation
parade.
 
Please read the whole story [Bangla] at:
 
 
 
 
 

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[chottala.com] Analysis: McCain loses leverage

Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., addresses the

crowd during a town hall meeting in Indianapolis, Ind., Friday, Feb. 22, 2008. (AP Photo/Tom Strickland)

AP
Analysis: McCain loses leverage

By JIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press Writer 2 hours, 6 minutes ago

NEW YORK - Republican Sen. John McCain might well ride out his standoff with federal regulators over his withdrawal from public financing for the primaries

The contretemps, however, could haunt him in the general election.

The Federal Election Commission's decision to challenge McCain has forced the Arizona senator and likely Republican presidential nominee to defy the government's top campaign finance regulator in an area of law that McCain himself has helped seed with regulations.

His defiance, legally defensible or not, threatens to strip him of the moral high ground he needs to level the financial playing field for the general election.

McCain has been trying to hold Democratic Sen. Barack Obama to an agreement made last year that if both become their respective party nominees, both would participate in the general election public finance system.

Obama has hedged, saying the terms he laid out last year were not a pledge. Such an agreement, after all, would force Obama to holster his vastly superior fundraising operation — he has raised $138 million in his one-year quest — and require him to confront McCain on equal financial footing. Under public financing, each candidate would get $85 million in government money and be prohibited from spending any money raised from contributors.

McCain took Obama to task for equivocating, and seemed to be seizing the high road as the candidate most devoted to reducing the influence of money in electoral politics.

Then FEC chairman David Mason wrote him "The Letter."

In it, Mason told McCain that he could not withdraw from the primary public finance system until he 1) answered questions regarding a $4 million loan he obtained late last year, and 2) received approval to withdraw from four members of the six-member commission.

McCain and his lawyer, former FEC chairman Trevor Potter, responded unequivocally: McCain was out of the primary public finance system and the FEC could not force him into it.

"That's not a decision; that's an opinion," McCain said of the FEC's action. He added that the FEC cleared Dick Gephardt to pursue the same course. Gephardt "was in the exact same circumstance; we have precedent for it," McCain said Friday morning in Indianapolis.

"We believe that Senator McCain had a clear legal right to withdraw from the primary matching fund system and he has done so," Potter told the Associated Press. "No FEC action was or is required for withdrawal."

Mason, meanwhile, is wielding a regulatory gun that has no bullets. The FEC has four vacancies and cannot convene a quorum. That means there are no votes to either stop McCain or give him the go-ahead.

The dispute is not just about legalities. If McCain were forced to remain in public financing in the primary, his spending would be severely limited just as he was turning his attention to his likely Democratic opponent.

McCain sought permission to participate in the primary financing program last year, when his campaign was flagging and his donors were shutting their wallets. McCain retooled his campaign, obtained the $4 million line of credit in late November, won the New Hampshire primary last month and proceeded to vanquish the rest of the Republican field.

Earlier this month, he notified the FEC that he did not need the public financing after all. He noted that he had not used any of the $5.8 million the FEC said he was entitled to receive and had not used it as collateral for the loan. But the terms of the loan said that if he had lost primary contests, he would have had to reapply for public funds and offer them as collateral.

"I fear they may have gotten too clever by half," said Brad Smith, a former FEC chairman and law professor at Capital University Law School in Columbus, Ohio.

Obama, meanwhile, was being clever himself. Last year, in response to a questionnaire, he said he would participate in public financing for the general election if his Republican opponent agreed to do the same. But in recent days, his spokesman has said that assertion was not a pledge, and Obama himself laid out new conditions for how such an agreement could be reached.

"The candidates will have to commit to discouraging cheating by their supporters; to refusing fundraising help to outside groups; and to limiting their own parties to legal forms of involvement," Obama wrote in USA Today this week. "And the agreement may have to address the amounts that Senator McCain ... will spend for the general election while the Democratic primary contest continues."

A number of Democrats say Obama has built too formidable a fundraising base to abandon it for the general election. He has raised an astounding $36 million in January alone and is on pace to beat that number in February.

"In my mind, to give up that advantage is a huge mistake," said Tad Devine, a Democratic strategist who advised John Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign. Kerry and his advisers have said that it was a mistake in 2004 for Kerry to have stayed within the public finance system in the general election.

The leverage McCain had to keep Obama in the public finance system might now be slipping as he challenges the FEC.

"More than anyone else, Senator McCain's name is synonymous with campaign finance reform," Rick Hasen, a campaign finance expert and law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, wrote in his Web log. "If he's arguably in violation of the law, that will tarnish his reputation. He may be able to make technically correct arguments that he is not in violation, but the smell is bad."
 

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[chottala.com] Call for TOTAL ERADICATION OF CORRUPTION by Bongobondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in 1974

 
General Moeen U. Ahmed heard Bongobondhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's
call for total eradication of corruption in 1974 at his graduation
parade.
 
Please read the whole story [Bangla] at:
 
 
 
 
 
__._,_.___

[* Moderator's Note - CHOTTALA is a non-profit, non-religious, non-political and non-discriminatory organization.

* Disclaimer: Any posting to the CHOTTALA are the opinion of the author. Authors of the messages to the CHOTTALA are responsible for the accuracy of their information and the conformance of their material with applicable copyright and other laws. Many people will read your post, and it will be archived for a very long time. The act of posting to the CHOTTALA indicates the subscriber's agreement to accept the adjudications of the moderator]




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