So if lines are drawn and parallen lines do somehow seem to find proper
matches - could be we would find Sleaze Marc Rich aka Marc Reich in same
bed as Terry McAuliffe for it is said this guy also feeds on the
kindness of others and this is how he gets so richie rich?

Seems to be how Jesse Jackson is operatiang too and I wonder how much he
got in federal funds to give to the poor - and with him, charity began
at home with pore Jesse????

So this little blurp from Honolulu (and my old friend who knew the old
King or last surviving King said they still practice the "Old Religion"
in this beautiful Isle......)

So When the Sleaze landed it brought in the likes of a Richie Rich?
How are they getting away with this - grand theft, treason,
traitors.....pushing sodomy on our children, vile garbage on television
called entertainment - and do not forget the Show Time Wars - real wars
with citiies being bombed - notably all white or arab citieis.......

Are people so blind they do not see - Nation of Judas Sheep or is
American so corrupted it cannot tell evil from good?

Seems like it all started with Sadaam when he offered us cheap oil and
wanted to make friends - and then came Jonothan Pollard?

Marc Rich and Terry McAuliffe both deal in "junk bonds".......like to
know more about this

Terry who has now taken over the democrat party which obviously was for
sale again....this sleaze makes a good representative of what you see is
what you get...

Saba

Editorials
Thursday, September 9, 1999
Questionable deal
on Clintons' house

 The issue: Terry McAuliffe put up $1.35 million to help President and
Mrs. Clinton buy a house in New York, where Mrs. Clinton plans to run
for a Senate seat.

 Our view: By accepting such favors the Clintons put themselves in a
compromising position.

HILLARY Clinton, an all-but-official candidate for a Senate seat from
New York, has selected a house to live in and -- more important --
establish residency in the state. Her husband, the president, may have
had something to say about the choice as well -- a $1.7 million home in
Chappaqua, in suburban, affluent Westchester County. But the purchase is
all about Mrs. Clinton's candidacy.

The decision was hardly a surprise, in view of the reports that the
Clintons were house-hunting. What is noteworthy -- and disturbing -- is
how the purchase was arranged.
Terry McAuliffe, a wealthy businessman and fund-raiser for the Clintons,
put up $1.35 million of his own money to help them buy the property.
McAuliffe will put the money in a bank account at Bankers Trust in New
York to provide assurance that the bank's mortgage loan to the Clintons
will be secure. The Clintons owe $5.5 million in legal bills.
Although the arrangement certainly was made to help the Clintons, the
White House maintains that the money did not constitute a gift under
government ethics rules. Regardless of the legal quibbling, it was
clearly a favor, and of a munificent size.

[Saba Note:  Get this crap - "such selflessness - and from where did
this bastrd, this big cget this monoey for Clinton- Marc Rich, etc??]




McAuliffe says he raises money for the president because he likes him
and expects nothing in return. Such selflessness, if sincere, is
admirable -- and rare. That rarity is the reason for the legal
restrictions on campaign contributions.

Fred Wertheimer, president of Democracy 21, an organization dedicated to
overhauling the campaign finance system and former head of Common Cause,
said of Clinton, "He's the president of the United States and someone is
doing a million-dollar favor for him to help him with his personal
financial needs. That creates an appearance problem, a potential
conflict problem, and it's a dangerous kind of act."

Ellen Miller, executive director of Public Campaign, another group
seeking campaign finance reform, said, "Probably no one has more and
longer tentacles into the world of money and politics than Terry
McAuliffe. It's an unhealthy relationship for anyone to have to the
president and first lady. In a way, he has incredible power over them
and incredible power through them as well."

The Clintons are not the only presidential couple to accept favors from
rich friends. But they have a long history of questionable financial
dealings, most notoriously the Whitewater scandal, in which their
partners were convicted of fraud, and the illegal acceptance of
contributions from foreigners in the president's 1996 re-election
campaign.

They have also frequently accepted invitations to spend their vacations
at the homes of rich friends. These invitations are not considered
campaign contributions, but they are certainly gifts, even if legal
ones. McAuliffe's act is in this category, although worth much more than
most gifts.

The president cannot seek re-election again and presumably will never
again seek public office. This means the voters will never have an
opportunity to register to him any objection they may have to the latest
bit of generosity by Terry McAuliffe.

But Mrs. Clinton almost certainly will be on the ballot in New York next
year. McAuliffe's million-dollar favor may be on some voters' minds when
they go to the polls. It should be.
Kewalo development

saba note:   was this money compliments of Marc Rich through his floosie
wife?????
Oi voy.........maybe Ehud in diamnd tracking business and neds good
front man?




 The issue: D.G. "Andy" Anderson says he is abandoning his development
project on state land adjoining Kewalo Basin.

 Our view: Finding an income-producing project for the site is a
challenge for the Hawaii Community Development Authority.
People who objected to a Ferris wheel near Kewalo Basin are shedding no
tears at word that D.G. "Andy" Anderson is abandoning his development
project. Less than five weeks after winning state approval for his $138
million retail-restaurant-family entertainment project on state land
adjoining the basin, Anderson says the project is dead.

The problem, says the developer, restaurateur, former state senator and
city managing director, is that the Hawaii Community Development
Authority, which selected Anderson's project on Aug. 4, has since
imposed requirements he finds unacceptable.

However, Jan Yokota, the authority's executive director, says many of
the requirements were contained in the original request for proposals
but Anderson did not fully satisfy them.

The Ferris wheel proved to be the most controversial part of Anderson's
project, which also was to include a carousel and a miniature golf
course, surrounded by shops and restaurants.

It isn't clear whether the project can be salvaged. Michael Kawaharada,
a member of the authority board, said Anderson has 60 days to meet the
requirements. If he fails, the authority can seek a new developer.
Anderson says Walter Kupau, the Carpenters Union leader who sat on the
authority board until his recent death, was instrumental in winning the
board's OK. But since Kupau's death, he says, other interests have been
trying to kill the project.

However, the authority staff had doubts about the project's financial
feasibility all along and recommended against approval. Lack of a market
study was a particular concern. Anderson should be held to all
reasonable requirements, which certainly would include a market study.

Finding an income-producing development for the state land makai of Ala
Moana Boulevard is a challenge, especially in view of its proximity to
the Aloha Tower Marketplace, Restaurant Row, the Ward Estate properties
and Ala Moana Center.

Despite the objections to the Ferris wheel, Anderson's concept of a
family entertainment center seemed to have promise because it would
offer a different sort of attraction. Now it looks as though the
development authority may have go back to the drawing board.
Published by Liberty Newspapers Limited Partnership
Rupert E. Phillips, CEO
John M. Flanagan, Editor & Publisher
David Shapiro, Managing Editor
Diane Yukihiro Chang, Senior Editor & Editorial Page Editor
Frank Bridgewater & Michael Rovner, Assistant Managing Editors
A.A. Smyser, Contributing Editor
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