The past couple of weeks Glenn Beck has been raving about some sort of criminal enterprise that he imagines is being run from the White House. Even with the help of his blackboards he hasn't ever been able to coherently explain it, but he is convinced that it exists and, as befits his Messianic hallucinations, it is out to get him.
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KingOneEye's diary :: ::
The cabal that Beck has dubbed "Crime Inc" began as an alleged conspiracy contrived by the climate change gang, which includes everyone from Al Gore to General Electric to the United Nations. Lately the conspirators grew to include your church and any institution that embraces social justice (including Beck's Mormon church). It's a global syndicate that seeks to collapse international economies and install a one-world government. I assume it's being run by the Lizard People (whose leader is Barack Obama) but Beck hasn't gotten to that part yet.
However, it appears that the real Crime Inc is the assembly of advertisers who sponsor Beck's show (the ones who haven't yet fled in disgust). As it turns out, many of them are running less than reputable operations that have run afoul of the law. For instance...
Goldline International
This peddler of over-priced gold products is passing itself off as an investment advisor. They advertise prominently on right-wing radio and TV programs that spread fear of an economic meltdown, which they contend gold is a hedge against. The only problem is that they charge far more than the actual value of the gold in their products and employ high-pressure sales tactics. In many cases gold would have to increase in value over 200% for you to just break even. Rep. Anthony Weiner is requesting that federal regulators look into whether Goldline's highly questionable business practices violate the law.
LifeLock
This is an identity security company that is famous for its CEO who parades his Social Security number around on a billboard mounted to a truck. He also includes it in his TV ads. But now the Federal Trade Commission has "accused Lifelock of operating a scam and con operation. The commission announced, along with 35 state attorneys general, that it had levied a fine of $12 million against the company for deceptive business practices and for failing to secure sensitive customer data." In short, investigators found that LifeLock failed to provide any of the services they promised.
In addition, an investigation by the the Phoenix New Times revealed that LifeLock's CEO has had his identity breached multiple times. Losses in the thousands were racked up for the company head who so confidently broadcast his ID to the world. The New Times also uncovered some nefarious activities by another company founder that included gambling debts, arrests, and even identity theft.
http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2010/5/20/868363/-Crime-Inc:-Glenn-Becks-Corrupt-Advertisers