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Latest On The European Fiscal Adventureland Ride

melodramaLike a bad mini-series, the European non-events events just keep rolling on in. Here are the latest ones.

From the Financial Times, leaders failed to create a new treaty.

Leaders of the European Union’s 27 countries failed to agree to change the EU’s treaties in order to implement tighter fiscal rules and instead chose to create a new intergovernmental treaty which will likely have less teeth and be negotiated only among 23 of the bloc’s members.

Despite the division – which will leave Britain and Hungary out of the new pact, with the Czech Republic and Sweden still weighing participation – Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank president, signalled his approval, a key vote of confidence that could allow the ECB to move more aggressively in eurozone bond markets.

The U.K. was a major veto and the reason for the failure. Reuters:

"This is a summit that will go down in history," said Sarkozy. "We would have preferred a reform of the treaties among 27. That wasn't possible given the position of our British friends. And so it will be through an intergovernmental treaty of 17, but open to others."

Corporations Pay No State Taxes Either

We already know many large multinationals pay no Federal taxes, but did you know many businesses don't pay State taxes either? Citizens for Tax Justice has issued a new report, Corporate Tax Dodging in the 50 States, 2008-2010. The report shows, instead of creating jobs and products, corporations seem to be in the business of tax dodge.

60 Minutes Asks Why Isn't Anybody in Jail for the Financial Crisis?

You might recognize a pattern. There is systemic fraud inside a corporation. Someone tries to blow the whistle. Their reward? Fired, their income lost and reputation ruined. Such is the fate of those who tried to do anything regarding the massive subprime mortgage fraud, a major underlying cause of the financial crisis.

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