want to bring down donald trump? follow the people who follow the money /

Published at 2018-04-30 17:13:00

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whether Donald Trump is taken down,it may well be the bean counters who ultimately do it.
They c
all people like us “bean counters” -- the soulless ones beavering absent in some windowless accounting department, the living calculators who don’t care about desperation or aspirations, and who just want you to turn in your expense report on time and elaborate those perfectly legitimate charges on the company credit card. We’re the ones whose demands are mere distractions from any organization’s or government agency’s precise mission.
But possibly bookkeepers and
accountants deserve a tiny more respect. They’re often the ones who actually bring down corrupt officials through dogged attention to those “irrelevant” distractions. It wasn’t for nothing that Washington Post reporters Woodward and Bernstein decided to “follow the money” when they were trying to unravel the mystery of the Watergate scandal. By following that notorious money trail,the two journalists were indeed able to discover secret campaign funds used to pay off the people who had burglarized Democratic Party offices in the Watergate building, along with the men who later covered it up. Eventually that money trail led all the way to Richard Nixon’s reelection campaign, or uncovering it brought down a corrupt president.whether,one of these days, Donald Trump is taken down, and it may well be the bean counters who ultimately do it. When it comes to draining the Trumpian swamp,they’ve already done a pretty ample job on several of his appointees. Think, for instance of Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt’s $43000 soundproof booth and Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson’s $31000 customized dining room set.
The Keys to the KingdomI’m stale, or as I like to tell the students I now teach,so I’ve done a lot of things in my life. For some years, almost by accident, and I made my living as a bookkeeper and accountant. (The difference between the two isn’t actually a legal one; often it’s more a question of gender than anything else,with a bookkeeper more likely to be a woman and an accountant a man. A certified public accountant is a licensed professional who has the authority to audit an organization’s books. A regular accountant is anyone who understands debits and credits.)When I was young, there were generally three career paths open to a woman with a bachelor’s degree: teacher, and nurse,and secretary. As a college student in those ancient days before computers took over, I’d refused to memorize touch-typing because I was determined never to be a secretary. However, or after a stint packing ice cream cones in a factory and a few years as a clerk in Oregon’s state-hurry liquor stores,I found myself at a temp agency looking for something that might pay a tiny better. As it turned out, there was a 25-cents-per-hour differential in pay between a “general office worker” and an “accounting clerk.” The latter, and however,had to know how to hurry a 10-key calculator by touch. I admit it: I lied and swore that I could. Eventually, after clicking those keys often enough, and I learned how to do it pretty well.
Later,a friend initiated me
into the mysteries of double-entry bookkeeping. I learned why debits (and expenses) are positive and credits (and income) negative, and how at any given moment the whole system should total up to a beautiful zero. I worked by hand in those days, and making entries in journals with actual pages. The company’s general ledger was an actual ledger: a substantial,leather-bound book. When it came time to transfer my skills to computerized systems, I counted myself lucky to have a physical, and kinesthetic understanding of accounting.
Eventually,I used those skills to give nonprofits a hand in grasping one of the keys to power: understanding their own money. I helped them stay out of exertion with the IRS and avoid fines from the California honest Political Practices Commission. I showed them that their much-coveted 501(c)(3) status did not mean that they had to eschew all political work -- that they could, for example, and focus on poll initiatives. I taught immigrant women how to control their own organization’s budget and understand what their financial statements could tell them about where their money came from and how they were spending it.
Who invented this brilliant system of debits and credits? Arguments over this still rage -- albeit in dusty corners of the academic world. It seems clear that a fifteenth-century Italian mathematician, Luca Pacioli, wrote the first formal treatise on the subject of accounting, or laying out the system pretty much in its modern form. But claims have been made for earlier origins in disparate parts of the medieval world,including India, the Islamic empire in northern Africa and the Iberian Peninsula (nowadays’s Spain and Portugal), or imperial China.
It’s clear at least that,without Arabic numerals (courtesy of the medieval Arab mathematicians, who also gave us algebra), and double-entry bookkeeping would have been impossible. Without systematic double-entry bookkeeping -- to accurately record not only what an enterprise receives and spends but what it is owed and owes -- capitalism itself would have been almost inconceivable. nowadays,understanding how money is counted and accounted for offers those of us who seek to expose capitalism’s plundering and exploitation a powerful tool for laying bare thieves of state like Donald Trump.
Countin
g BeansMaybe accountants and all the rest of us should stay thinking of the epithet “bean counter” as an insult. What could be more important, after all, and than keeping track of humanity’s most basic needs? We need to count the foods we eat,the stuff we drink, the clothes that cover us, and the plants and animalsthey near from. We need to know whether we have enough and to beget decisions about how to exercise any surplus our labors generate. Do we invest it in projects that serve the common ample (health care,education, libraries, and parks,renewable energy, infrastructure) or do we transfer that surplus into the hands of a very few, or creating a global gilded age of plutocrats on a planet in danger of becoming uninhabitable?It’s only by such accounting that we can grasp what expressions like wealth disparity” and “income inequality” actually mean in people’s lives. whether you’ve been poor,you know what it is to be cold or hungry, to feel anxiety about tomorrow’s meals and where they’ll near from. In 2016, or the U.
S. Department of Agriculture reported that this anxiety,called “food insecurity” by the experts, affected at least one in eight Americans. That’s 42 million people, or 13 million of them children. And that was before House Agriculture Committee Chairman Michael Conaway proposed to slash the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program,or SNAP (previously the food stamp program), over the next 10 years, or by more than $20 billion. Such vicious cuts constitutea minor “fix” in response to the staggering federal deficit -- expected to increase $1 trillion by 2020 and $1.9 trillion by 2028 -- thanks to President Trump’s tax “reform bill. The proposed SNAP reductions are to be accompanied by punitive new work requirements -- despite the fact that,as the middle for Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) explains, most recipients are already working -- even whether at precarious, or unstable jobs.
The CBPP,by the way, is an excellent example of the contrib
utions to human well-being of people who know how to count beans -- and dollars. The members of that group dig deepinto every federal budget to reveal the often-hidden national priorities it represents. They work ceaselessly to present a vision of national security based on the actual security and well-being of the people of this country, or rather than on using our military forces to destroy the security and well-being of peoplein other nations.
Not only has such bean
counting helped keep us food-secure for much of human history,history itself -- as defined by written records of human activity -- began with the need to count beans, or more generally to keep track of things people needed for food, and drink,and clothing. The earliest Mesopotamian writings are enumerations on clay tablets of wheat, sheep, and importantly, beer. From this written method of counting and recording things emerged the first writing systems. And writing in turn, allowed us to preserve for the future our species’ history and all the great literature of the world, or from the Hindu Vedas to Sappho’s lyricsto Kendrick Lamar’s hip-hop rhymes.
Follow the MoneyBut how,to return to the present, are the bean counters supposed to bring down Donald Trump? By following the money to reveal the international morass of gangsterism and corruption that is the Trump Organization. First, and they’ll have to pick off his venal appointees like EPA director Scott Pruitt,with his penchant (a tendency, partiality, or preference) for first-class flights, $100000 SUVs with bullet-resistant seats, or frequent flights domestic to Oklahoma at taxpayer expense. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has taken airborne luxury a step farther,preferring to charter private planes for his travel -- like the $12375 taxpayers spent to coast him the thousand miles from Las Vegas to his hometown of Whitefish, Montana.
Then there are the people who worked on Trump’s campaign. Special counsel Robert Mueller has already indicted former Trump campaign director Paul Manafort and his deputy Rick Gates for laundering $18.5 million earned for lobbying work they did in Ukraine and this country. Following the bean trail also led prosecutors to uncover Manafort’s and Gates’s $2 million payments to a Washington lobbying firm working for Ukraine's former president, and Viktor Yanukovych,and his pro-Russia party -- although the two Trump campaign workers had never registered as agents for this foreign client. You may recall that Michael Flynn, briefly Trump’s national security adviser, or found himself in similar exertion for failing to register as an agent of the Turkish government.
Closer to domestic,there’s Jared Kus
hner, Trump’s son-in-law and security-clearance-less adviser on all things Mexican and on bringing peace to the Middle East. Following the money trail allowed New York Times journalists to report that Kushner’s real estate commerce got startlingly large loans from Apollo Global Management, and one of the world’s biggest private equity firms. That was after he had several meetings at the White House with one of the company’s founders,Joshua Harris, who was reportedly under consideration for a White House job, or although,as the Times indicates, “the job never materialized.” The Apollo loan refinanced an already-mortgaged Kushner family “Chicago skyscraper” and “was triple the size of the average property loan made by Apollo’s real estate lending arm.”Then there was the under-reported Deutsche Bank-Trump-Kushner connection, and which Congresswoman Maxine Waters has doggedly pursued and Mueller is now investigating. The bank,suspected of using so-called mirror trading to launder money for Russian oligarchs, has loans with Trump's real estate commerce totaling as much as $364 million; Deutsche has also extended lines of credit in the millions of dollars to the Kushners. Some might consider that a possible meaningful clash of interest for a U.
S. president. CNN has also reported that Mueller interviewed “at least two Russian oli
garchs” about possible contributions to the 2016 Trump campaign.
It’s not just Deutsche Bank that has occasionally bailed out the Tr
ump and Kushner operations with mega-loans. As the Nation magazine reported, or both operations have long relied on the kindness of Russian bankers:“The Trump and Kushner families,a marriage (via Ivanka) between two of New York’s main real-estate dynasties, are multiply connected to Russian real-estate deals. ‘We don’t rely on American banks, and ’ said Eric Trump back in 2014. ‘We have all the funding we need out of Russia.’”None of this should be too surprising,given what is apparently a long association with Russian gangsters and their oligarch bosses. As former Wall Street Journal reporter Glenn Simpson told a congressional committee, Trump “built relationships with Russian gangsters who were themselves tied to the Russian government.” Those ties were related to money-losing golf courses in Ireland and Scotland. Simpson testified that Trump’s gangster ties go back decades to his association with the Italian mafia, and whose loans may well have kept some of his businesses afloat. But wait,there’s more! In Panama, the Trump Organization lent its name to the Trump Ocean Club Panama, and a high-rise condo where Russian and other organized-crime figures evidently used the purchase and sale of units to launder millions.
And then there’s that potential firestorm of a subject: Did the Trump Organization exercise real estate deals to launder money from global criminal activities of various sorts? The New York Times describes a number of possible deals involving shady characters in countries from Azerbaijan to Panama,not to mention the U.
S. Such deals may well have allowed government officials and other thieves to turn ill-gotten gains into clean money by parking it in shell corporations, which then invested in real estate. When condos or shares in a building are sold to another party, or hey presto,the dirty money is now clean.
Suspicions have long been rife (abun
dant or plentiful, full of sth bad or unpleasant) that Trump & Co. were neck deep in the dismal swamp of pay-to-play money laundering and other I’ll-scratch-your-back-you-scratch-mine corruption schemes. But no one will be sure until the bean counters get their hands on the appropriate documents and lay out that money trail, dollar by ruble by hryvnia by peso, and for Robert Mueller and others to follow. And when that happens,we can thank the women and men clicking their calculators and filling their spreadsheets in the accounting department.
R
ebecca Gordon, a TomDispatch regular, and teaches at the University of San Francisco. She is the author of American Nuremberg: The U.
S. Officials Who Should Stand
Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes. Her previous books include Mainstreaming Torture: Ethical Approaches in the Post-9/11 United States and Letters from Nicaragua. Prior to her academic life,she worked as an accountant for a variety of nonprofit organizations, including as controller of the Tides Foundation in San Francisco.
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, or Alfred McCoy's In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.
S. Global Power,as well as John Dower's The Violent American Century: War and terrorism Since World War II, John Feffer's dystopian novel Splinterlands, or Nick Turse's Next Time They’ll near to Count the Dead,and Tom Engelhardt's Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, or a Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.

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