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In reply to the discussion: What would Teddy Roosevelt have thought of "investor-state dispute" tribunals? [View all]zeemike
(18,998 posts)19. How do you know what it is if it is secret?
Were you one that was granted access to it?
But what WAS leaked is not normal but no doubt it is useful for the corporations...it gets rid of that pesky sovereignty of countries.
And BTW a list of horribles is not an argument...it is the reason for the argument.
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What would Teddy Roosevelt have thought of "investor-state dispute" tribunals? [View all]
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
OP
And on the side supporting the likes of Warren & Roosevelt...that "Marxist" Adam Smith:
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#5
I am seeing fairly new folks on DU lately, telling us condescendingly that we should love and
djean111
Feb 2015
#6
The truth is that there been an explosion in invester-state disputes in recent years, and the breadt
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#23
"Imaginary horibbles." Yeah, we should trust you instead of this no-nothing guy, right?
Scuba
Feb 2015
#30
In actual practice, the functioning of investor-state tribunals has been much worse:
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#12
As the article discussed, it was Oxidental, not Ecuador, which broke the contract,
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#18
Rammed through with the Ecuadorian equivalent of "Fast Track" & "national security" secrecy perhaps?
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#26
So you are advocating extending copyright & patent monopolies, and setting up investor-state...
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#48
Corporate sovereignty, extended patent and copyright monpolies, decreased access to generic
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#52
No one will read it, or admit such law suits are limited. European Union has same deal, and
Hoyt
Feb 2015
#27
Continuing to attack a straw man does not address the exponentially increasing problems presented by
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#34
Lots of these countries need investment, but it won't come if investors are afraid their investment
Hoyt
Feb 2015
#35
More straw man arguments. But the lawsuits/awards have overwhelmingly NOT been about nationalizing
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#36
Like I said, Reich pushed NAFTA and still does. Now he's a guru. I guess that's a straw man too.
Hoyt
Feb 2015
#37
Opposing the TPP as "NAFTA on steroids" is a very strange way to "push NAFTA".
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#38
Reich still defends NAFTA. Recently he said he wished it had stronger Labor and Environmental
Hoyt
Feb 2015
#39
I guess those "stronger Labor & Environmental" standards are the reason corporate interests are so
Faryn Balyncd
Feb 2015
#40