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Thursday, Oct 11, 2007 11:44 AM UTC2007-10-11T11:44:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The Clinton Foundation’s donors

Read Salon's compilation of certain donations to the William J. Clinton Foundation, and a list of those who have paid speaking fees to the former president, here.

Rank Name Amount sum
1 Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, WA $12,429,835
2 Alphawood Foundation $4,250,000
3 Wasserman Foundation $3,350,000
4 Walton Family Foundation $2,000,000
5 The Alix Foundation $1,075,000
6 Peninsula Community Foundation $1,002,500
7 Sidney E. Frank Foundation, NY $1,000,000
7 The Annenberg Foundation $1,000,000
7 Walmart Foundation $1,000,000
10 Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable and Educational Trust $950,000
11 Bernard & Irene Schwartz Foundation $700,000
12 The Rockefeller Foundation $600,000
13 Monterey Fund, Inc. $517,800
14 Citi Foundation $500,000
14 Marin County Foundation $500,000
16 The New York Community Trust $407,335
17 Anheuser-Busch Foundation $400,000
18 Lewis B. & Dorothy Cullman Foundation $265,000
19 Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation $250,000
19 Ford Motor Company Fund, MI $250,000
19 NoVo Foundation $250,000
19 The Bank of America Charitable Foundation $250,000
19 The Jon S. Corzine Foundation $250,000
19 The Winnick Family Foundation $250,000
25 Cumming Foundation $200,000
25 The Engelberg Foundation, FL $200,000
25 The Wedge Foundation $200,000
28 The Berry Gordy Family Foundation $150,000
28 Trinity Foundation $150,000
30 Jonathan M. Tisch Foundation $114,000
31 AT &T Foundation $100,000
31 Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation $100,000
31 Katz Foundation $100,000
31 Regions Foundation $100,000
31 The Dyson Foundation $100,000
31 The Philip D. and Tammy S. Murphy Foundation $100,000
31 Walter H. and Phyllis J. Shorenstein Foundation $100,000
38 Charles Stewart Mott Foundation $65,579
39 Altman/Kazickas Foundation $50,000
39 Craig and Kathryn Hall Foundation $50,000
39 Harman Family Foundation $50,000
39 The David S. and Sylvia Steiner Charitable Trust $50,000
39 Wood-Rill Foundation $50,000
44 Waitt Family Foundation $35,932
45 Riggs Benevolent Fund $33,500
46 The William M. & A. Cafaro Family Foundation $28,000
47 May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation $25,000
47 Sandler Capital Management Charitable Foundation $25,000
49 Lockheed Martin Corporation Foundation $20,000
49 The Seattle Foundation $20,000
51 The Tommy E. Short Charitable Foundation $17,500
52 John S. and James L. Knight Foundation $15,000
52 Willametta K. Day Foundation $15,000
54 The Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation $14,000
55 Hassenfeld Foundation $10,000
55 John M. O’Quinn Foundation $10,000
55 The Floyd & Delores Jones Foundation $10,000
55 The Semel Charitable Foundation $10,000
59 Lone Pine Foundation, Inc. $9,100
60 Boston Foundation $5,000
60 JEHT Foundation $5,000
60 The Gill Foundation $5,000
60 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation $5,000
60 The Heyday Foundation $5,000
65 Alan B. Slifka Foundation $2,750
66 Community Foundation of Greater Memphis $2,200
67 Sandel Family Foundation $1,000
67 The Community Foundation for the National Capital $1,000
69 Arkansas Community Foundation, Inc. $700
70 Moss Foundation $500
71 The Bert & Sandra Wasserman Foundation $180
TOTAL $35,808,411
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Thursday, Feb 23, 2012 4:15 PM UTC2012-02-23T16:15:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

The latest lies in the war on choice

The GOP debate made clear that the goal of the new culture war is preventing women from controlling their own lives

U.S. Republican presidential candidates former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney

U.S. Republican presidential candidates former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney (Credit: Joshua Lott / Reuters)

Why did the audience groan when John King asked in last night’s CNN debate whether the Republican candidates believe in contraception? It probably wasn’t because it was an asinine formulation (“Since birth control is the latest hot topic, which candidate believes in birth control, and if not, why?” as if birth control were a unicorn). It’s likely because the audience seems to have realized that it’s not a good look for Republicans to be so obviously engaged in curtailing women’s rights — which is why the candidates, or at least Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney, started talking about “out of wedlock” births. And though linking births outside marriage to contraception may have seemed like a non-sequitur, it wasn’t.

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Irin Carmon is a staff writer for Salon. Follow her on Twitter at @irincarmon or email her at icarmon@salon.com.  More Irin Carmon

Thursday, Feb 23, 2012 4:00 PM UTC2012-02-23T16:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

There is no ethical smartphone

But if we use our amazing devices correctly, we can change that

ethical_phone

 (Credit: Reuters/Bobby Yip/Salon)

Topics:

John Wood, self-described phone geek, had a problem. He couldn’t “upgrade with confidence,” he confessed on his blog. The “ethical implications” of the globalized, labor-exploiting manufacturing process confounded him. The more he knew, the more constrained he felt. In his capacity as Campaigns and New Media Officer for the Trades Union Congress in the United Kingdom, it was his job to be a voice for the labor movement online. But in his personal life, just getting online meant trampling all over the workers of the world.

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Andrew Leonard

Andrew Leonard is a staff writer at Salon. On Twitter, @koxinga21.  More Andrew Leonard

Thursday, Feb 23, 2012 2:00 PM UTC2012-02-23T14:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Is a Greek debt default still inevitable?

The bailout will avert a euro zone breakup for now, but many worry it won't be enough to fix the nation's economy

A pedestrian passes outside a pawnshop in Athens, Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2012

A pedestrian passes outside a pawnshop in Athens, Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2012 (Credit: AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

ATHENS, Greece — They contemplated a divorce but ended up having another baby.

Global Post

Greece and its euro zone partners saved their marriage by agreeing on a $170 billion bailout, but it hasn’t squashed talk of a messy breakup.

Some analysts see a Greek debt default as inevitable. Even Greece’s lenders fear the program is “accident prone,” as they said in a report for euro zone finance ministers before they approved Tuesday’s bailout.

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Thursday, Feb 23, 2012 1:00 PM UTC2012-02-23T13:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Bathrooms: the new transgender battleground

A Baltimore victory proves that the ladies' room is equality's final frontier

ladies_room

 (Credit: iStockphoto/ShutterWorx)

Topics:

It’s a quiet little provision in a meaningful victory for equal rights. On Tuesday, Baltimore County approved measures prohibiting discrimination “on the basis of gender identity and expression and sexual orientation when it comes to housing, employment, public accommodations and financing.”

It’s that “public accommodation” part of Bill No. 3-12 that is especially hard-won, and so deeply meaningful. It was just last April that Chrissy Lee Polis, a 22-year-old transgender Baltimore woman, was beaten, kicked, dragged and spit upon by two teenaged girls after trying to enter a McDonald’s ladies room. A video shot by  McDonald’s employee Vernon Hackett, who kept filming even as Polis went into a seizure, swiftly went viral. In it, several red-shirted McDonald’s workers can be seen plainly standing around and doing nothing to intervene.

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Mary Elizabeth Williams

Mary Elizabeth Williams is a staff writer for Salon and the author of "Gimme Shelter: My Three Years Searching for the American Dream." Follow her on Twitter: @embeedubMore Mary Elizabeth Williams

Thursday, Feb 23, 2012 1:00 PM UTC2012-02-23T13:00:00Zl, M j, Y g:i A T

Birth control: The right’s still winning

Put aside opinion polls and the Komen and Virginia wins. The right's strategy is long-term and based in the courts

panel

 (Credit: AP)

There’s been a troubling trend among some liberals to do a premature victory dance over the contraception insurance benefit debate. Look at the polling data, the reasoning goes, and you’ll find even Catholics support both Obama’s policy and his reelection. Who doesn’t use birth control, except for few outlier zealots? This is a political winner for Obama and the Democrats, the victory dancers contend. Game, set, match.

It’s far too shortsighted, and worse, dangerously complacent, to measure victory election cycle by election cycle. (Even gaming the outcome of this year’s election is a risky proposition at best.) The opponents of birth control insurance coverage don’t use an election as a metric. Sure, they’d love to win, but even a loss inspires them to redouble their efforts, not to pack up and go home after learning they are on the minority side of public opinion.

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Sarah Posner is the senior editor of Religion Dispatches, where she writes about politics. She is also the author of God's Profits: Faith, Fraud, and the Republican Crusade for Values Voters" (PoliPoint Press, 2008).  More Sarah Posner

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