Wednesday, June 02, 2010

How timely!

OMG! John "Lehman Brothers" Kasich, the man who made the introductions for the Ohio pension plans so they would invest with the now bankrupt Lehman Brothers, has a new book. Can you guess the title? I'll give you a hint Plunderbund's blog title says it all:

"John Kasich's Conversion to Ken Blackwell 2.0 is Complete"

Kasich has written a book called, "Every Other Monday" ---- about his bible study group. Unfortunately, people who really know him have set up a website called NotKasich:

We used to support John Kasich before we learned that John does not practice what he preaches. John Kasich is running for Governor of Ohio and, as you too will learn, is not fit to be Governor of our state as he has been revealed as a mere "silent bystander" with a serious lack of "courage" who "stands for nothing" in regard to the safety, upbringing, and dignity of children and for protecting consumers.

Along with thousands of others, John and his family were betrayed by Worthington Christian Schools (WCS), the private "Christian" school where the administrators got caught while committing serious crimes against the students and parents....

....When a person refuses to hold accountable those who conspire to deceive and defraud him, that is cowardly. However, when a father cowers down to those who deliberately put his very own children at "risk", that father takes on the role of a silent bystander, and that father is clearly a silent, easily manipulated, and cowardly bystander who is a poor example to his very own children and obviously stands for nothing....


This website is definitely a piece that should be read. You can skip the latest Kasich book.


* Here is just a reminder about how Kasich's Lehman Brothers hurt Ohioans ----- Dispatch:

....According to state records, the Lehman holdings of OPERS declined in value from $441.4 million in 2007 to $73.3 million at the end of 2008. The police and fire fund had 14 separate investments managed by Lehman Brothers that declined in value from the purchase price of $14.3million to $2.4 million in 2008...