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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
12.12.2007 - 02:35pm ET
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War on Greed Film Goes on Downtown D.C., Capitol Hill 'Walkabout' as Congress Debates Closing Tax Loopholes for the Super-rich vs. Tax Relief for the Middle Class
(CSRwire) ***SCHEDULE FOR WEDNESDAY morning, DEC. 12:***
10:20 a.m. - start at Private Equity Council offices: 950 F Street, NW
11:30 a.m. - end at Carlyle Group headquarters: 1001 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW
WASHINGTON,Dec. 12/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- SEIU will screen Brave New
Films' latest short film, "War on Greed: Starring Henry Kravis," which
juxtaposes the lavish lifestyle of buyout industry tycoon Henry Kravis
with the lives of middle class Americans, throughout Washington, D.C.
this week. Throughout the day on Wednesday and Thursday, activists will be
using walking video billboards, new technology that allows for street level
viewing by passersby. The "War on Greed Walkabout" will include stops
outside the offices of the buyout industry's lobbying group, the Private
Equity Council, Capitol Hill, Metro stations, fire stations, and along the
K St. corridor and the Carlyle Group Headquarters.
Note to reporters: if you would like to accompany the "War on Greed
Walkabout" please contact SEIU's Renee Asher at 202-255-4251.
The film, released online at http://www.warongreed.org last
Thursday, has been viewed more than 195,000 times on YouTube as of this
morning.
Senate Republicans blocked legislation to reduce taxes on middle class
Americans by closing tax loopholes that allow buyout industry tycoons to
pay a lower tax rate than many teachers, nurses and firefighters.
Henry Kravis, one of the major winners from the Senate's decision to strip
the carried interest provision from their AMT bill, is the 57th richest
person in America and founder of the private equity firm Kohlberg, Kravis
Roberts (KKR).Kravismade $450 million last year, which works out to $1.2
million a day or $51,000 an hour.
While average Americans have seen their wages stagnate and the cost of
healthcare rise the wealthiest 1% makes a larger share of the national
income today than they have at any time since 1928. In 1980, American CEOs
made 42 times as much as the average worker. Today, the average CEO makes
more than 400 times as much as the average worker, while the top 20
private equity and hedge fund managers pocketed 22,255 times the pay of
the average worker.
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