This threat shall not stand

Our friend and patriot Marshall Adame received the following letter today from Jim Edwards, the chief staff officer of the Carolinas Independent Automobile Dealers Association. Like his ally at the mercenary company itself, Mr. Edwards apparently has more time on his hands than he has sense.

Mr. Adame:

I am NOT a contractor for Blackwater, I do not deploy to places where others fear to tread and yet I'm very familiar with Blackwater, their personnel, and more importantly their high-level, ethical business practices.

I am the CEO of this country's largest trade association of its genre' and am pleased to call Blackwater a member.

I am also a political activist, control this association's fiscal policies and make recommendations to members vis-a-vis voting for candidates.

I would strongly encourage you to re-visit your thoughts and feelings about Blackwater.

Regards,

James L. (Jim) Edwards, CAE, ARM, AU
Chief Staff Officer
Carolinas Independent Automobile Dealers Association
PO Box 1088
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-455-2117

I'll write more on this over the next few days, but in the meantime I have a few suggestions for Mr. Jim Edwards. I would strongly encourage him to re-visit his thoughts and feelings about Marshall Adame. I would strongly encourage him to apologize to Marshall Adame for the intimidating letter he wrote. I would strongly encourage him to hire PR counsel to manage the damage that will come from his threatening to use the resources of his organization against a political adversary.

I wonder if the members of Mr. Edwards' organization all agree that he should be using his office to make political threats? I wonder if those members will be happy to see the names of their companies plastered all over the blogosphere? I wonder if Mr. Edwards would like to end up on the front page of newspapers all across North Carolina at a time when his members' businesses are in the toilet? Do the Independent Automobile Dealers in North Carolina side with our men and women in the armed forces . . . or do they side with mercenary armies?

Remarkably, Edwards himself was a former Army captain and Vietnam veteran. Like the mercenaries he's defending, the appears to have lost his way.

Organizations that do business with Blackwater are war-profiteers in every sense of the word. The only difference is that some get paid a fortune for their collaboration, while others, like the Carolinas Independent Automobile Dealers Association, get nothing but membership dues.


Give Mr. Edwards a call

He was kind enough to include his phone number in his correspondence to Marshall, so I'm assuming he'd be delighted to hear from you.

704-455-2117, Extension 105

Linda's picture

damn.

no wonder they need pr firms.

Be the change you wish to see in the world. --Gandhi

__________________
"My darling girl, when will you understand that 'normal' is not necessarily a virtue. It rather denotes a lack of courage." - Alice Hoffma

I guess when you're used to blowing the hell out of people

a little ol' letter of intimidation isn't all that big a deal.

Marshall Adame's picture

I am scheduled to speak in Blackwaters back yard on Feb 7

in Borden , Currituck Couty. I am expecting them, but maybe they will stay away.

I'm sure they'll be there.

The economics are the story:

Blackwater Worldwidelooks for people with extensive military experience. Those with special operations training are particularly prized and are lured to the private sector by salaries much higher than those paid by the services.

"It forces us to have to offer higher re-enlistment bonuses because we're competing with private security teams," Latham said. "We're underwriting our competition for a limited pool of expertise."

The Government Accountability Office reported Friday that the Defense Department spent fully one-third of its entire budget in fiscal year 2006 on subcontracts from private firms.

Blackwater is slopping at the public trough, gluttons for public funding that costs our men and women in uniform dearly. A THIRD OF OUR DEFENSE BUDGET goes to private contractors. What could we do if that money went to brave soldiers and Marines who are serving in our volunteer army? Every single Blackwater employee is a drain on the strength of our military. They are war-profiteers, pure and simple.

LiberalNC's picture

I know one member that more than likely won't agree.

If you check out the CIADA "hall of fame" part of their website, you'll see the following:

G. Raiford Troutman, inducted July 9, 1999

Raiford Troutman is one of the most prominent Democrats here in Cabarrus County and the grandfather of Beth Troutman who ran for Congress in the 8th District against Robin Hayes in 2004.
If I'm not mistaken he was at one point the president of the CIADA organisation.
Maybe I should go talk with him?

Left on 49

At least make sure he's aware

that the current staff guy is an idiot. To my knowledge.

You can also reach Edwards

MaxTheDog2's picture

Would you buy a Used Car from Director Edwards?

Dear Mr Director Edwards:

You sure pick the wrong time to promote BlackWater as a Client and be their lobbyist....Have you consider another career as a used car salesperson for American Motors?

With President Bush's promise to veto earmark-laden legislation that emerges from Congress this year, lobbyists who built their businesses around securing targeted federal dollars for their clients worry they may not survive.

"There is a constant drumbeat that people need to start listening to, and it doesn’t seem to be going away,” former Rep. Henry Bonilla (R-Texas), an Appropriations Committee veteran who is now a lobbyist, told Roll Call. “People are wondering what kind of future is out there for firms that are focused entirely on appropriations."

The subscription-only Capitol Hill newspaper reports that firms up and down K Street are reevaluating their business models now that Bush said in his State of the Union address that he would enforce a 50 percent cut in earmarks with his veto pen. House Republicans also have adopted stricter standards over the spending.

Trouble has been building for earmark lobbyists for years since separate scandals involving earmark improprieties sent lobbyist Jack Abramoff and former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-CA) to jail.

The crackdown on targeted spending projects secreted into appropriations bills seems to be reaching a head, and one lobbyist told Roll Call the industry is "pretty close" to a crisis.

"There’s so much uncertainty across the board," the unnamed lobbyist told the paper's Tory Newmyer. "Last year was tough, and the threat still continues."

While the reforms are seen as thinning the herd of appropriations lobbyists, the industry is hardly in danger of complete collapse.

"Ironically, the more they raise the bar, the more folks like us who are really good are valued," lobbyist Rich Gold told Newmyer. Gold heads the lobbying practice at Holland & Knight, where he said business has grown at least 10 percent for the last two years.

Democrats made earmark reform a primary focus after taking over Congress last year, and their focus on increased transparency has resulted in slightly fewer lobbying contracts on budge/appropriations issues -- 1,157 last year compared to 1,259 in 2005, according to a CQ Moneyline analysis Newmyer cites.

As long as lawmakers continue to rely on voters who like to see federal dollars funded to their hometowns, though, earmarks won't disappear completely. But the new focus has thinned the herd of lobbyists seeking those dollars and has sent them looking for "the next big thing," Steve Ellis of earmark critic Taxpayers for Common Sense told The Hill last month.

"The earmark market," he said, "has popped."

nctodc's picture

On an semi-related note

Since Rudy's out and his embarrassing showing will likely bankrupt Giuliani Partners...

How long before he gets bought out and becomes a senior VP at Blackwater?

----
There are people in every time and every land who want to stop history in its tracks. They fear the future, mistrust the present, and invoke the security of the comfortable past which, in fact, never existed. - Robert F. Kennedy

----
There are people in every time and every land who want to stop history in its tracks. They fear the future, mistrust the present, and invoke the security of the comfortable past which, in fact, never existed. - Robert F. Kennedy

Christopher's picture

Seriously.

The 9/11 kid, endorsing John "What's the Economy?" McCain, live from Reagan's Library. There's times where it's clearly proven that you can't make this shit up.

Linda's picture

exactly.

And if you could, it would be published at The Onion.

Be the change you wish to see in the world. --Gandhi

__________________
"My darling girl, when will you understand that 'normal' is not necessarily a virtue. It rather denotes a lack of courage." - Alice Hoffma

MaxTheDog2's picture

Rudy future is bright! Like a burn out light bulb going south?

Since Rudy's out and his embarrassing showing will likely bankrupt Giuliani Partners...

How long before he gets bought out and becomes a senior VP at Blackwater? *nctodc

Not really! Rudy is in great shape for MO bucks....his law firm has the contract on the North American Treaty with Canada and Mexico as his clients...Not counting The Texas Toll Road commission which will let those Mexican Trucks run wide open over the Teamsters Union....

Rudy's security firm already contracts with BlackWater for special high security ops in Iraq and believe it or not ..certain Casio's in Mississippi....

How Blackwater Hurts Our Military

In case you haven't thought this through, here's an excellent article on the subject, with excerpts below:

Competing for personnel

Reductions in the overall size of the military that started in the Clinton administration and the outsourcing of work advocated by former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld are now combining to deplete the services of highly-trained specialists ...

Blackwater Worldwide, for example, looks for people with extensive military experience. Those with special operations training are particularly prized and are lured to the private sector by salaries much higher than those paid by the services.

"It forces us to have to offer higher re-enlistment bonuses because we're competing with private security teams," Latham said. "We're underwriting our competition for a limited pool of expertise."

The Government Accountability Office reported Friday that the Defense Department spent fully one-third of its entire budget in fiscal year 2006 on subcontracts from private firms.

Latham said that as the number of private contractors has swelled, accountability has diminished. "We have fewer contract managers today than we did in the '90s and they're being asked to manage thousands of more contracts."

Kos recommends?

BlueNCtv Player