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Monday, September 11, 2023

Ramaswamy campaign hats made in repressive nation with ‘one of the worst governments in the world’


Vivek Ramaswamy in Phoenix in December 2022 (
Gage Skidmore)
September 11, 2023

“Truth. Vote Vivek.”

Black baseball caps emblazoned with this message made their way around the Iowa State Fair last month, and Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy sported the hat before participating in Fox News’ Republican presidential debate held in Milwaukee, Wis., less than two weeks later.

But the hats have a truth of their own.

They’re made in Myanmar, a country rife with human rights atrocities and led by a military junta. The Myanmar military has propagated torture, sexual violence and mass murders, including killing children, according to pressaccounts and Human Rights Watch.

“It’s clearly one of those countries that’s sliding back on the freedom scale very much so,” said Irina Tsukerman, a foreign policy expert, human rights and national security lawyer and president of communications advisory company, Scarab Rising. “The fact that Vivek has chosen that place as opposed to another country where such issues are not really as prominent, like India or the Philippines maybe, it raises questions why. What is he willing to do for money?”

Ramaswamy’s campaign acknowledged purchasing the hats, explaining that they were from one “rush order for an event.”

“When this was brought to Vivek’s attention, he said we were changing it. He was not aware at all of the source, and it has been changed,” Stefan Mychajliw, deputy communications director for Ramaswamy’s campaign, told Raw Story.

The “Truth. Vote Vivek.” hats are made by a company called Otto, which calls itself “America’s largest source for blank caps and custom headwear.” The caps distributed by the Ramaswamy campaign show tags that say “Made in Myanmar,” and the company’s website also shows images of tags that say “Made in China."

Two Raw Story sources saw the hats in person and confirmed that the labels indicate they were made in Myanmar.

“This is bottom of the barrel,” said Phil Robertson, deputy director of the Asia division for Human Rights Watch. “This is amongst one of the worst governments in the world. It is right at the top of the list of the worst human rights abusers in Asia.”

The Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, a London-based nonprofit organization, is just “seeing the tip of the iceberg of allegations” in terms of the labor rights abuses in Myanmar since it tracks such abuses from publicly available news sources, which is limited due to a lack of press freedom in the country, said Natalie Swan, labor rights program manager for the organization.

A tag inside a "Truth. Vote Vivek." hat distributed in Iowa by the Vivek Ramaswamy presidential campaign shows that the cap comes from a company called Otto and was made in Myanmar.

“There's not some special zone where things are better in Myanmar,” Robertson said. “It's not like somehow that Otto is going to be this shining paragon of good practice in a country where the military is controlled and the workers are repressed.”

Members of Otto’s leadership team did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment. Otto has offices in Ontario, Calif.; Arlington, Texas; and Fairburn, Ga.
China-Myanmar relationship

While the choice of where a presidential campaign sources its promotional hats might seem trivial, merchandising “is a very important part of his foreign policy because it normalizes his positions with the public,” Tsukerman said.

Ramaswamy, who is running third behind former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in some recent national polls, wants an “America first” approach to foreign policy, according to an article he wrote for The American Conservative on August 28.

The merchandise for sale on his website also boasts “Made in USA” as a selling point.


Ramaswamy has been particularly critical of China, which has a close relationship with Myanmar. When asked about “Made in America” stickers on The Fifth Column podcast, Ramaswamy said, “I’ve actually called for total decoupling from China, total economic independence from China, not on protectionist grounds at all but on grounds of long run national security … I think it is not good for the long run security interests of the United States when we are dependent economically on our enemy for our modern way of life.”

Ramaswamy says the United States should no longer have economic dependence on China.

“I will admit that it is unacceptably dangerous that so much of our way of life is dependent upon Chinese manufacturing and Taiwanese semiconductors. I will declare economic independence from China,” Ramaswamy wrote in The American Conservative. “I will incentivize American companies to move supply chains away from China and rebase them in allied markets, especially in our own hemisphere, and I will use trade deals as the main way to do it.”

Mychajliw says Ramaswamy’s support for America’s independence from China is unwavering.

“As far as Vivek Ramaswamy is concerned, the major part of his foreign policy platform is declaring independence from China. We cannot be dependent on America's biggest adversary for the shoes on our feet or phones in our pockets. That does not change, and that's very consistent,” Mychajliw told Raw Story.

But factories in Myanmar, which shares a border with China, often are operated by Chinese factory owners, Robertson and Swan said.

China is a strong supporter of Myanmar’s military government, Tsukerman said, with the Council on Foreign Relations writing that China has “gone all in with the Myanmar regime”.

“It's really rather astonishing to me that he would stoop so low to have a piece of merchandise coming from a country that is one of the worst rights abusing situations in the world,” Robertson said. “It boggles the mind, frankly, that somehow they think it's alright to source something like a hat from Myanmar when any sort of brief Google search can come up with a full page of atrocities that have been committed by that military government.”

Ramaswamy’s foreign policy views were called out during the August Republican presidential debate by his challengers.

“You have no foreign policy experience, and it shows,” said Nikki Haley, former governor of South Carolina, The Hill reported. Haley’s campaign did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

 
Republican presidential candidates, Vivek Ramaswamy (L) and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley (R) participate in the first debate of the GOP primary season hosted by FOX News at the Fiserv Forum on Aug. 23, 2023, in Milwaukee, Wis. 
Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images

Former Vice President Mike President, another Republican presidential candidate, said Ramaswamy is “just wrong” on foreign policy on Fox News this week. Pence’s campaign also did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

“It's hypocritical on his part to claim that he wants to move away from China but nevertheless is supporting products in places where China is very dominant, where it basically is behind many of these manufacturing companies,” Tsukerman said.

Last month, Ramaswamy wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that his “progressive ‘elite’ former peers in places like Harvard, Yale & Wall Street” are “dripping sanctimony and condescension toward the so-called ‘rubes’ in the rest of the country.” Minutes later he shared another post with a similar message.

“They remain cloistered in their enclaves and think they’re worldly because they’ve been to London, backpacked in Prague, and took a photo with some starving child in Myanmar — yet they’re downright ignorant, bigoted, and unwilling to hear out their own fellow citizens in their own country. Do that first. Then you can feel good about yourself for going to Haiti or Myanmar *after* that. I know how to give them the dose of reality that they need. I will not be shy about prescribing it,” Ramaswamy wrote.

‘One of the worst governments in the world”


In February 2021 a military coup took place in Myanmar, sending the country into “effective civil war,” where the military has bombed civilians and engaged in” systematic commission of war crimes,” Robertson said.

In April 2023, the military bombed a Myanmar village, killing at least 157 civilians, with at least 25 of them children, the Washington Post reported.

The U.S. State Department has issued a Level 4 travel advisory — it’s most restrictive — for Myanmar, and warns of “significant ongoing challenges and human rights issues” across the nation.

Conditions for garment workers in Myanmar are particularly concerning to human rights activists.

In its August 2023 report, the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre describes “gender-based violence, wage violations, unpaid and mandatory overtime, inhumane working conditions and other forms of abuse” as common, with wages around $2 per day.

As for Ramaswamy’s campaign hats, “It is very, very problematic that this is being produced there, and any claim that somehow this was produced under fair conditions, this is produced in a way that was ethical, I think doesn't hold any water,” Robertson said.

Unions aren’t currently allowed in Myanmar, forcing union leaders to flee the country, and protests are put down by military force. Factory owners are supported by the military and take advantage of workers’ poverty and inability to strike, Robertson said.

In one case in March 2021, the military massacred at least 65 people as part of a protest by factory workers, Human Rights Watch reported. More than 4,000 pro-democracy activists and civilians have been killed by the junta and nearly 25,000 arrested, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.

“You see an immediate crackdown of the right to freedom of association and the right to join and form a trade union in the country, persecution of existing labor rights,” Swan said. “Leaders, you're no longer able to get your union registered in the country, and what that means is that you've lost that foundational framework with which workers can call for better terms and conditions.”

The U.S. Department of State has levied numerous sanctions against Myanmar since 2021.

'Didn’t even invite him': Mehdi Hasan explains how he ruffled Vivek Ramaswamy’s 'easy ride'

Image via Aaron of L.A. Photography/Shutterstock.
ALTERNET
September 10, 2023

During the Sunday, September 10 episode of MSNBC's Yasmin Vossoughian Reports, Vossoughian spoke withThe Mehdi Hasan Show host Mehdi Hasan about his recent interview with biotech entrepreneur and 2024 GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.

The Daily Beast reports, "During a marathon 25-minute sitdown with Ramaswamy that aired on NBC's streaming service Peacock, Hasan held the 38-year-old multi-millionaire's feet to the fire throughout, rarely giving the 'anti-woke' culture warrior a chance to deflect and dodge when confronted over his past comments and behavior."

Vossoughian had Hasan on Sunday's segment to discuss how the interview with Ramaswamy came about and what the MSNBC host expected to get out of it.

"First off, I should point out, I didn't even invite him on the show," Hasan said. "He suggested himself back in July. He tweeted at me saying, 'Have me on your show to debate on this stuff, MSNBC.' So we said, 'All right!' After the debate, when it looked like he was actually a serious contender, we said, 'All right. come on then.' So he actually invited himself — it's part of his strategy of throwing himself into numerous entities — it's how he's made a name for himself. Because was really a nobody six months ago. But he's done this intense media exposure campaign. And my goal was to try and hold him to account for some of the nonsense that he said in those interviews and for some of the lies he's told about his past. What he's done so well up until this point, including on the debate stage in Milwaukee, is to just basically talk over people, speak super fast, and super confidently. Thing is, Yasmin — so do I. So I was ready for that. And we did our homework, my team and I. We came to him with his quotes, with his book, with his tweets, with his tax returns. And I don't think he was quite ready for that because he had an easy ride so far."

Vossoughian went on to say, "That was a moment, Mehdi, when you went at him with his tax returns. If anybody has not seen that part of mehdi's interview, you should certainly watch it online because it is amazing to watch. When you were talking to him, I think two of the biggest things, it seems, you are trying to hold him on was, first, his qualifications, and secondly his trustworthiness. Was it there or was it not? And I think going into it, you probably understood it was likely not gonna be in there. All that being said, Mehdi, right, your audience is not the type of people that are going to be voting for someone like Vivek Ramaswamy. So even by having him on your show...it's not those folks are now gonna say, 'Well, Mehdi kind of called him out.' Right?"

Hasan replied, "Well, first of all I would say there's a value to truth in and of itself. I really don't care if I'm saying truth in an empty room. Sometimes it really doesn't matter the audience, you just have to reinforce the truth. But I will say one thing, Yasmin, the DeSantis people are sharing the hell out of this clip. He's got rivals on the right who are actually very happy to see him held to account. I've seen a bunch of conservatives, people like Meghan McCain, who's no fan of mine, saying 'Why didn't conservative media ask Vivek Ramaswamy these questions over the past six months? Why did he get a pass on the right for so long?' So actually interestingly enough, given the dynamics of the GOP presidential race, where he's snapping at DeSantis' heels, they're actually appreciating the fact that someone's asked some of these questions."

Vossoughian emphasized, "That's a really incredible point. And it's interesting because of the leak that came out of the DeSantis camp just a couple weeks ago, saying, 'We're gonna be focusing more' —ahead of the debate of course — 'We're gonna be focusing more on Vivek on that debate stage' than they would, obviously, the front runner is the former President Donald trump. What do you most, Mehdi, worry about looking ahead to this election, specifically, the primary race, and then ultimately, the general?"

READ MORE: Vivek Ramaswamy’s Hindu faith 'major stumbling block' for evangelical 'Christian nationalists': report

Hasan said, "The most worrying thing is something I've been saying for a long time. I'm sure you have too — the authoritarianism that comes out of the GOP. and Vivek Ramaswamy, despite being the son of immigrants, having a brown skin, is as authoritarian as the rest of them, if not more. On Friday, he announced that he wants to deport U.S. citizen kids of undocumented immigrants. He doesn't accept the birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment. So, it's a real problem when you've got a bunch of people who are not called Donald Trump, but are as authoritarian as he is, if not more so in some cases."

Watch the video below or at this link.

Monday, November 06, 2023

Ramaswamy campaign hats made in repressive nation with ‘one of the worst governments in the world’

Alexandria Jacobson and Raw Story

“Truth. Vote Vivek.”

Black baseball caps emblazoned with this message made their way around the Iowa State Fair last month, and Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy sported the hat before participating in Fox News’ Republican presidential debate held in Milwaukee, Wis., less than two weeks later.

But the hats have a truth of their own.

They’re made in Myanmar, a country rife with human rights atrocities and led by a military junta. The Myanmar military has propagated torture, sexual violence and mass murders, including killing children, according to press accounts and Human Rights Watch.

“It’s clearly one of those countries that’s sliding back on the freedom scale very much so,” said Irina Tsukerman, a foreign policy expert, human rights and national security lawyer and president of communications advisory company, Scarab Rising. “The fact that Vivek has chosen that place as opposed to another country where such issues are not really as prominent, like India or the Philippines maybe, it raises questions why. What is he willing to do for money?”


Ramaswamy’s campaign acknowledged purchasing the hats, explaining that they were from one “rush order for an event.”


“When this was brought to Vivek’s attention, he said we were changing it. He was not aware at all of the source, and it has been changed,” Stefan Mychajliw, deputy communications director for Ramaswamy’s campaign, told Raw Story.

The “Truth. Vote Vivek.” hats are made by a company called Otto, which calls itself “America’s largest source for blank caps and custom headwear.” The caps distributed by the Ramaswamy campaign show tags that say “Made in Myanmar,” and the company’s website also shows images of tags that say “Made in China."

Two Raw Story sources saw the hats in person and confirmed that the labels indicate they were made in Myanmar.

“This is bottom of the barrel,” said Phil Robertson, deputy director of the Asia division for Human Rights Watch. “This is amongst one of the worst governments in the world. It is right at the top of the list of the worst human rights abusers in Asia.”

The Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, a London-based nonprofit organization, is just “seeing the tip of the iceberg of allegations” in terms of the labor rights abuses in Myanmar since it tracks such abuses from publicly available news sources, which is limited due to a lack of press freedom in the country, said Natalie Swan, labor rights program manager for the organization.

A tag inside a "Truth. Vote Vivek." hat distributed in Iowa by the Vivek Ramaswamy presidential campaign shows that the cap comes from a company called Otto and was made in Myanmar.

“There's not some special zone where things are better in Myanmar,” Robertson said. “It's not like somehow that Otto is going to be this shining paragon of good practice in a country where the military is controlled and the workers are repressed.”

Members of Otto’s leadership team did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment. Otto has offices in Ontario, Calif.; Arlington, Texas; and Fairburn, Ga.

China-Myanmar relationship

While the choice of where a presidential campaign sources its promotional hats might seem trivial, merchandising “is a very important part of his foreign policy because it normalizes his positions with the public,” Tsukerman said.

Ramaswamy, who is running third behind former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in some recent national polls, wants an “America first” approach to foreign policy, according to an article he wrote for The American Conservative on August 28.


The merchandise for sale on his website also boasts “Made in USA” as a selling point.

Ramaswamy has been particularly critical of China, which has a close relationship with Myanmar. When asked about “Made in America” stickers on The Fifth Column podcast, Ramaswamy said, “I’ve actually called for total decoupling from China, total economic independence from China, not on protectionist grounds at all but on grounds of long run national security … I think it is not good for the long run security interests of the United States when we are dependent economically on our enemy for our modern way of life.”


Vivek Ramaswamy’s Hindu faith is a 'major stumbling block' with evangelical 'Christian nationalists': report   
WHY?BOTH ARE FASCIST RELIGIONS
Vivek Ramaswamy in Phoenix in December 2022 (Gage Skidmore)


Ramaswamy says the United States should no longer have economic dependence on China.

“I will admit that it is unacceptably dangerous that so much of our way of life is dependent upon Chinese manufacturing and Taiwanese semiconductors. I will declare economic independence from China,” Ramaswamy wrote in The American Conservative. “I will incentivize American companies to move supply chains away from China and rebase them in allied markets, especially in our own hemisphere, and I will use trade deals as the main way to do it.”

Mychajliw says Ramaswamy’s support for America’s independence from China is unwavering.

“As far as Vivek Ramaswamy is concerned, the major part of his foreign policy platform is declaring independence from China. We cannot be dependent on America's biggest adversary for the shoes on our feet or phones in our pockets. That does not change, and that's very consistent,” Mychajliw told Raw Story.

But factories in Myanmar, which shares a border with China, often are operated by Chinese factory owners, Robertson and Swan said.

China is a strong supporter of Myanmar’s military government, Tsukerman said, with the Council on Foreign Relations writing that China has “gone all in with the Myanmar regime”.

“It's really rather astonishing to me that he would stoop so low to have a piece of merchandise coming from a country that is one of the worst rights abusing situations in the world,” Robertson said. “It boggles the mind, frankly, that somehow they think it's alright to source something like a hat from Myanmar when any sort of brief Google search can come up with a full page of atrocities that have been committed by that military government.”

Ramaswamy’s foreign policy views were called out during the August Republican presidential debate by his challengers.

“You have no foreign policy experience, and it shows,” said Nikki Haley, former governor of South Carolina, The Hill reported. Haley’s campaign did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

 
Republican presidential candidates, Vivek Ramaswamy (L) and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley (R) participate in the first debate of the GOP primary season hosted by FOX News at the Fiserv Forum on Aug. 23, 2023, in Milwaukee, Wis. 
Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images

Former Vice President Mike President, another Republican presidential candidate, said Ramaswamy is “just wrong” on foreign policy on Fox News this week. Pence’s campaign also did not respond to Raw Story’s request for comment.

“It's hypocritical on his part to claim that he wants to move away from China but nevertheless is supporting products in places where China is very dominant, where it basically is behind many of these manufacturing companies,” Tsukerman said.

Last month, Ramaswamy wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that his “progressive ‘elite’ former peers in places like Harvard, Yale & Wall Street” are “dripping sanctimony and condescension toward the so-called ‘rubes’ in the rest of the country.” Minutes later he shared another post with a similar message.

“They remain cloistered in their enclaves and think they’re worldly because they’ve been to London, backpacked in Prague, and took a photo with some starving child in Myanmar — yet they’re downright ignorant, bigoted, and unwilling to hear out their own fellow citizens in their own country. Do that first. Then you can feel good about yourself for going to Haiti or Myanmar *after* that. I know how to give them the dose of reality that they need. I will not be shy about prescribing it,” Ramaswamy wrote.
‘One of the worst governments in the world”

In February 2021 a military coup took place in Myanmar, sending the country into “effective civil war,” where the military has bombed civilians and engaged in” systematic commission of war crimes,” Robertson said.

In April 2023, the military bombed a Myanmar village, killing at least 157 civilians, with at least 25 of them children, the Washington Post reported.

The U.S. State Department has issued a Level 4 travel advisory — it’s most restrictive — for Myanmar, and warns of “significant ongoing challenges and human rights issues” across the nation.

Conditions for garment workers in Myanmar are particularly concerning to human rights activists.

In its August 2023 report, the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre describes “gender-based violence, wage violations, unpaid and mandatory overtime, inhumane working conditions and other forms of abuse” as common, with wages around $2 per day.

As for Ramaswamy’s campaign hats, “It is very, very problematic that this is being produced there, and any claim that somehow this was produced under fair conditions, this is produced in a way that was ethical, I think doesn't hold any water,” Robertson said.

Unions aren’t currently allowed in Myanmar, forcing union leaders to flee the country, and protests are put down by military force. Factory owners are supported by the military and take advantage of workers’ poverty and inability to strike, Robertson said.

ALSO READ: Vivek Ramaswamy campaign took money from a notorious Islamophobe


In one case in March 2021, the military massacred at least 65 people as part of a protest by factory workers, Human Rights Watch reported. More than 4,000 pro-democracy activists and civilians have been killed by the junta and nearly 25,000 arrested, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.

“You see an immediate crackdown of the right to freedom of association and the right to join and form a trade union in the country, persecution of existing labor rights,” Swan said. “Leaders, you're no longer able to get your union registered in the country, and what that means is that you've lost that foundational framework with which workers can call for better terms and conditions.”

The U.S. Department of State has levied numerous sanctions against Myanmar since 2021.

Saturday, September 02, 2023

Vivek Ramaswamy Indulges the Republican Base’s Paranoid Style

Vivek Ramaswamy is rising in part because he's simply telling the Republican Party's conspiracy-loving base what it wants to hear.

AUGUST 24, 2023

Kathleen Sebelius, a former advisor to Ramaswamy's companies, has called him "sort of a Music Man." (Image Credit: Gage Skidmore)


At the first Republican presidential debates last night, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy claimed that climate change is a “hoax.”

“Climatism,” he’s often said, is one of America’s new secular, “cult-like” religions replacing the country’s Judeo-Christian foundation.

But just months ago, Ramaswamy told CBS News that climate change is “real” and acknowledged a rise in global surface temperatures “in part due to human activity.”

Ramaswamy has flip-flopped on a range of other issues. It’s an inconsistency that not only makes him just as much a politician as his rivals, but also reflects a broader pattern of shamelessly indulging the new Know-Nothings of the Republican Party.

Ramaswamy and the Paranoid Style


The Paranoid Style has consumed the Republican Party’s base. The right’s conspiracy theories have evolved from depictions of Barack Obama as a Communist-Islamist Manchurian candidate. It’s now taken on a full anti-establishment turn with claims that the January 6th insurrection was an FBI false flag operation.

A wealthy polemicist, Ramaswamy has little to lose by simply telling the Republican Party base what it wants to hear.

The most egregious example of Ramaswamy’s indulgence of far-right denialism is on the 9/11 attacks. When asked by The Blaze earlier this month whether the attacks of September 11 were an “inside job,” Ramaswamy could have easily said the clear and obvious truth that it wasn’t. Instead, he replied, “I don’t think the government has told us the truth,” and then pivoted to generic commentary on skepticism of what governments say.

First, Ramaswamy clarified that he was referring to a long-classified FBI report on official Saudi connections to the 9/11 hijackers. Then, in a recently published interview with The Atlantic’s John Hendrickson conducted in July, Ramaswamy veered even closer to 9/11 trutherism, insinuating the attacks were either an inside job or that the U.S. government at least had forewarning of them.

He said: “I think it is legitimate to say how many police, how many federal agents, were on the planes that hit the Twin Towers. Maybe the answer is zero. It probably is zero for all I know, right? I have no reason to think it was anything other than zero.”

On a host of other issues, Ramaswamy has adopted a persona on the campaign trail at odds with his statements and actions before his presidential run.

Ramaswamy — a former pharmaceutical industry executive — has questioned the safety of COVID vaccines. But his physician wife told The Atlantic that the entire family is vaccinated. He also paid a Wikipedia editor to remove references in his bio to his relationship with Douglas Melton, who helped develop the mRNA vaccine.

Before his presidential run, Ramaswamy also described the January 6th insurrection as a “disgrace” perpetuated by an “angry mob of rioters.” Now he suggests there were “government agents” involved.

Vivek the ‘Music Man’

Ramaswamy’s malleability has led to questions over his authenticity. A DeSantis Super Pac sees it as a potential vulnerability, recommending in a pre-debate memo to “take a sledgehammer” to Ramaswamy and depict him as “Fake Vivek” or “Vivek the Fake.”

Ramaswamy acknowledges that he’s in many ways an anomaly. In his book, “Woke, Inc.,” Ramaswamy depicts himself as a “traitor” to his class — a “truth-teller” on climate, ESG, transgender issues, and affirmative action, which he hyperbolically calls a “cancer on our national soul.”

What’s clear is the Ohio native is a skilled debater who’ll do what it takes to convince or win the target audience.

Kathleen Sebelius, a former advisor to Ramaswamy’s companies and Obama administration health secretary, has called him “sort of a Music Man.”

The New Yorker provides a vivid account of how Ramaswamy feels the pulse of his audience and indulges anti-Zelensky, pro-lab leak, and other conspiratorial sentiment:

“[Ramaswamy] asked for audience members’ names and agreed with what they said, even when it pulled him nearer to conspiracy; in response, the crowd rose and applauded, and moved nearer to him, too.”

What Does Vivek Ramaswamy Believe?


Given his record of flip-flops, what can we say for sure about Vivek Ramaswamy?

I think it’s clear he’s a big believer in America and capitalism.

He also appears to have been a libertarian for some time. Ramaswamy has expressed affinity for Rand and Ron Paul. And his unchoreographed comments on cutting aid to Israel reflect a Paulian libertarian foreign policy.

Two, Ramaswamy takes his religion seriously. His childhood was marked by summer trips to India, including regular pilgrimages to holy Hindu sites. And unlike many other Indian-origin politicians on the right, he’s remained a Hindu and has openly discussed it on the trail.

(It should be noted that paid edits to Ramaswamy’s Wikipedia entry indicate an initial ambivalence in disclosing his belief in Hinduism right before declaring his presidential run. And while Ramaswamy has publicly expressed his Hindu beliefs in ways that make it seem like just another Abrahamic religion, that may simply just be the way that he — as someone who attended Catholic school in the Midwest — came to understand his own tradition.)

As former Vice President Mike Pence’s opening salvo against Ramaswamy made clear, scrutiny of the fast-talking Ohioan will increase. But what he actually believes may be a moot issue.

We’re in an era in which vibes matter more than ideas. And Ramaswamy is resonating with a new generation of extremely online conservatives: the Candace Owens and Charlie Kirk types. Ramaswamy was the most popular candidate in a panel of Republican voters in Iowa convened by CNN after the debate last night, especially among the younger participants.

While the race for the Republican nomination is Donald Trump’s to lose, Ramaswamy’s rise in the polls is clearly more than just a temporary fluke. He probably won’t win the race, but he could be the face of the conservative movement’s multiracial, anti-establishment future.


Arif Rafiq is the editor of Globely News. Rafiq has contributed commentary and analysis on global issues for publications such as Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, the New Republic, the New York Times, and POLITICO Magazine. He has appeared on numerous broadcast outlets, including Al Jazeera English, the BBC World Service, CNN International, and National Public Radio.

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Ramaswamy camp uses Haley’s first name in attack that has critics raising eyebrows



Brianna Herlihy, Paul Steinhauser
Mon, August 28, 2023

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley is hitting back at GOP nomination rival Vivek Ramaswamy, who called her "lying Namrata (sic)," referencing her given Indian name and originally misspelling it on the website.

In an interview with Fox News Digital on Monday, the former two-term South Carolina governor who later served as ambassador to the United Nations said she's "not going to get into the childish name-calling" and that Ramaswamy should "know better than that."

On a new page on the newcomer's campaign website called "TRUTH. Over myth," Ramaswamy, a multi-millionaire biotech entrepreneur, author, and culture wars crusader, attempts to set the record straight on Haley's recent jabs at his foreign policy positions.

One such criticism is Ramaswamy's position on U.S. support to Israel, an accusation leveled by Haley last week during the first GOP presidential nomination debate - and reiterated on Monday at Haley's town hall in Indian Land, South Carolina.

FOX NEWS EXCLUSIVE: HALEY SAYS SHE HAULED IN $1 MILLION IN AFTERMATH OF FIRST GOP PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE


Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy

"WRONG. Keep lying, Namrata (sic) Randhawa. The desperation is showing," Ramaswamy's website read earlier today. It has since been updated with the correct spelling for Haley's birth name.

"Nimarata Randhawa" appears to be a reference to Haley's birth name of Indian origin, but it leaves out "Nikki," which is her legal middle name that she goes by.

DESANTIS PAC TROLLS RAMASWAMY FOR CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY GAFFE IN GOP DEBATE: VIVEK 'IS MISTAKEN'

Ramaswamy, like Haley, is Indian-American.

"I’m not going to get into the childish name-calling or whatever, making fun of my name that he’s doing," Haley told Fox News Digital. "I mean, he of all people should know better than that. But I’ve given up on him knowing better than anything at this point."

"I think we saw the childish, demeaning side of him onstage. I think he’s carrying that out whether it’s on the website or otherwise, but I have no use for it," she continued.


Former ambassador and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a 2024 Republican presidential candidate, headlines a town hall in Indian Land, South Carolina on August 28, 2023

Asked for comment, a spokesperson for the Ramaswamy campaign told Fox News Digital, "How is he making fun of her name? His name is Vivek Ramaswamy."

Matt Whitlock, a former spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, posted on X, formerly Twitter, that Ramaswamy's fact-check website "feels like parody."

"[N]ot sure why using Nikki Haley’s maiden name (spelled wrong) is a rebuttal. But makes clear her debate attacks got under his skin," Whitlock said.



He went on to comment that this type of political attack "usually comes from lunatics (on the left or right) accusing her of whitewashing her identity and hiding her heritage. (Who are too stupid to google it and realize Nikki is her actual birth name)."

Another X user pointed out that "what's even crazier" is that Haley was the only candidate during the debate to properly pronounce "Vivek," which he says rhymes with "cake."

Saat Alety of Fed Hall Policy Advisors wrote on X, "The references to @NikkiHaley's maiden name or first name as pejoratives are bewildering. She's a married woman -- her last name is Haley."

"Nikki is an extremely common name in Punjabi culture - and it's her middle name. Sad to see this from an Indian-American, @VivekRamaswamy," he wrote.

RAMASWAMY, PENCE CLASH AFTER FORMER VP CALLS GOP NEWCOMER A 'ROOKIE': 'THIS ISN'T COMPLICATED'


Entrepreneur and 2024 presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy raps after a "fair side chat" with Gov. Kim Reynolds at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on Aug. 12, 2023.

Haley went after Ramaswamy during the debate, saying he has no foreign policy experience and "it shows."

"He wants to hand Ukraine to Russia, he wants to let China eat Taiwan, he wants to go and stop funding Israel. You don’t do that to friends. What you do instead is you have the backs of your friends," Haley said.

Ramaswamy responded, "Our relationship with Israel would never be stronger than by the end of my first term, but it’s not a client relationship, it’s a friendship, and you know what friends do? Friends help each other stand on their own two feet."

WATCH: HALEY CLASHES WITH RAMASWAMY OVER US AID TO UKRAINE

Republican presidential candidate and former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley greets voters at a town hall event on April 26, 2023, in Bedford, New Hampshire.

"You know what I love about them? I love their border policies, I love their tough-on-crime policies, I love that they have a national identity and an Iron Dome to protect their homeland, so, yes, I want to learn from the friends that we’re supporting," Ramaswamy added.

"No, you want to cut the aid off, and let me tell you, it’s not that Israel needs America, it’s that America needs Israel. They’re on the front line of defense to Iran," Haley responded, drawing applause from the crowd.

Ramaswamy's website says, "By the end of Vivek’s first term, the US-Israel relationship will be deeper and stronger than ever because it won’t be a client relationship, it will be a true friendship."

"The centerpiece of Vivek’s Middle East policy in Year 1 will be to lead "Abraham Accords 2.0" which will fully integrate Israel into the Middle East economy – by adding Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, and Indonesia to the pact which was one of President Trump’s crowning foreign policy achievements," the website says.





Saturday, September 16, 2023

HINDU RAJ
Inside Vivek Ramaswamy's intense, high-maintenance, and highly air-conditioned empire

Katherine Long,Jack Newsham,Meghan Morris,Jake Swearingen
Updated Fri, September 15, 2023 

Chelsea Jia Feng

  • Vivek Ramaswamy got rich in finance and pharma before declaring war on "wokeness."

  • Former staff say he could be finicky and paranoid, and treat staff more like servants than workers.

  • Rooms had to be set to 64 degrees or below, with three Army Rangers tasked with keeping him cool.

Inside Vivek Ramaswamy's intense, high-maintenance, and highly air-conditioned empire

Biotech executive-turned-presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, 38, has pitched himself to voters as a truth-teller, an ace debater, and someone who can "handle the heat."

And if the Republican were to actually nab the GOP nomination, things could get pretty warm: Ramaswamy has ticked off a litany of extreme, attention-grabbing policies that would radically shake up the nation.

He wants to invade Mexico to attack drug cartels; fire 75% of federal employees; scrap the majority of federal regulation; and abolish the Department of Education, the FBI, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. He's also proposed gutting the Federal Reserve; increasing reliance on fossil fuels; and pegging the dollar to gold, silver, and agricultural commodities.

 

The bombast has made a fan out of Donald Trump, who sits atop the Republican field and has called Ramaswamy a "very, very, very intelligent person." While Ramaswamy broke away from most of Trump's other primary challengers in the wake of a feisty debate performance in August, he is still a long shot to become the Republican nominee.

With single-digit polling figures, Ramaswamy is battling former vice president Mike Pence and former diplomat Nikki Haley for third place behind Florida governor Ron DeSantis. The much-indicted Trump is far away in the lead, according to national polling averages from FiveThirtyEight, with roughly half of registered Republicans saying they'd vote for him.

The debate introduced Ramaswamy to voters as a confident, charismatic, brash, and meme-able entrepreneur who thrives on conflict and won't back down. But seven people who worked with Ramaswamy at Roivant Sciences and Strive Asset Management, two companies he founded, told Insider that the real Vivek's self-assuredness comes with an entitled edge in private.

Behind closed doors, some of these former employees said he can be a neurotic, mercurial, and paranoid leader. He takes pains on the campaign trail to come across as salt of the earth. But a person who worked closely with Ramaswamy said, "He thinks people are put on this earth to serve him."

Ramaswamy has cast himself as the child of penniless immigrants who worked hard and scrapped harder to make it in business. But while his parents may have come from humble beginnings, Ramaswamy was raised in affluence. His father worked as an engineer and patent attorney at General Electric, and his mother worked as a psychiatrist in private practice.

Ramaswamy was the valedictorian of his prestigious private boys' school. In 2011, he received a fellowship from a foundation started by George Soros' brother to attend Yale Law School, a move he later defended in the conservative media because he "didn't have the money." But he was also working at a hedge fund at the same time, earning nearly $500,000 the year he applied for the fellowship and $2.2 million the next year, his tax returns show.

Some aspects of his management style are quirky: he'd order Taco Bell for the office on his birthday, according to former employees. But he's also been known to demand white-glove service from staffers, these people said, insisting that they follow an often bizarre laundry-list of rules and procedures to suit his every need.

Chief among them: A relentless fixation on temperature. Not only can Ramaswamy not stand the heat, these people said — he dictated that the office thermostats at Roivant and Strive had to be set to 64 degrees or below. The workspaces were so frigid, former employees told Insider, that coworkers resorted to using space heaters at their desks and wearing their Roivant-branded Patagonia fleeces to ward off the chill.

"Yes, Vivek likes it chilly," campaign spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin confirmed.

When he traveled, he'd insist on booking backup flights, and backups to the backups, and a handful of backup hotel rooms, a former employee said, describing him as obsessive about ensuring his travel went smoothly. (On the campaign trail, Ramaswamy makes duplicative travel arrangements out of "utmost respect" for the "time and effort" of primary voters who come to his events, McLaughlin said.)

When he ordered takeout for lunch, he had his assistant plate it and serve it with a napkin before he ate, one person said. Another former employee said he asked that cottage cheese be waiting on his desk every morning.

"Curious you find this newsworthy," McLaughlin said, adding that on the campaign trail, "we eat takeout every day," and that Ramaswamy serves himself and others. To say he forced subordinates to serve him food is "false," she said.

Ramaswamy was so concerned about his safety — long before he began running for president -— that he hired a former Army Ranger as a personal security guard. The former Ranger would regularly sweep the Strive offices for security threats, a former employee said. (McLaughlin said the security is necessary because Ramaswamy and his family have received death threats.) At one point, his presidential campaign employed three former Army Rangers, including Ramaswamy's current body man, according to financial disclosures.

The Rangers were also responsible for rushing ahead of him to his hotel room when he traveled to cool down the room and ensure it was a "sufficient temperature" before he entered.

Ramaswamy's campaign disputed the characterization of him as entitled and unusually demanding. "Vivek applies the same standards to himself as to those around him," McLaughlin said, saying he works around 18 hours a day "on average" and calling him "unusually respectful" in light of his relatively rapid rise to immense wealth: Forbes estimates his net worth at around $950 million.

"Vivek doesn't believe that people are put on this earth to serve him, but that they are supposed to serve whatever mission they've signed up for," she added

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Vivek Ramaswamy at a Republican primary debate.

An intense leader of fast-growing companies

Ramaswamy's colleagues and business partners described him as intense, smart, energetic, and the consummate salesman. He worked at the hedge fund QVT after graduating from Harvard and attended Yale while still with the fund.

He founded the pharmaceutical company Roivant at age 28, despite having limited experience in drug development, on the principle that not every drug that major pharma companies abandoned was necessarily a bust.

People who worked there said he fostered an environment more akin to a fast-moving tech startup than a pharmaceutical company. He encouraged employees to second-guess the decisions of larger companies in the industry, and gave employees equity stakes in the drug-development subsidiaries – or "Vants" – that Roivant incubated.

Ramaswamy is "masterful" at raising money, said a former Vant executive, who asked not to be named discussing his former boss. Roivant attracted investors including Masayoshi Son's SoftBank Vision Fund, Peter Thiel's Founders Fund, and the hedge fund Viking Global Investors. Ramaswamy "deeply understands the content of what he is selling and that he is very forthright about the risks and opportunities," McLaughlin said, characterizing him as "far more detail-oriented than ordinary CEOs."

Ramaswamy's latest venture, the anti-woke asset management company Strive, was kickstarted last year with $20 million from investors including Thiel, JD Vance, and Bill Ackman. Strive passed $1 billion in assets under management this month.

Former Roivant employees said Ramaswamy worked hard and expected the same of others. When a colleague asked about cutting out early on "summer Fridays" at a town hall meeting, Ramaswamy ridiculed the idea, two of them said.

"He lost his cool completely and went off on a rant about summer Fridays and how dare anyone ask about that," one of the former employees said.

McLaughlin called the employee's recollection "inaccurate," adding that Ramaswamy "has never once raised his voice or used bad language with employees."

Roivant has brought several drugs from development into the market, including a skin cream that could eventually generate more than $1 billion a year in sales, the threshold for a blockbuster treatment, according to an estimate from analysts at Leerink Partners — particularly if FDA approval comes through for broader applications. But even when his ventures failed, Ramaswamy managed to benefit personally.

Roivant's first big bet was on an Alzheimer's drug it bought from GlaxoSmithKline for an up-front cost of just $5 million. Ramaswamy spun the drug's promise into a new company, Axovant, that was valued at $2.2 billion shortly after its IPO. He drummed up interest in the company on CNBC's Mad Money and in business magazines. Forbes, which had named him to its 30 Under 30 list while he was still at QVT, profiled him twice.

Two years after the IPO, poor results on clinical studies for the Alzheimer's drug sent Axovant's share price plunging 95%, hurting those who'd bought Ramaswamy's pitch that he could upend the pharmaceutical industry by liberating wonder drugs from the greedy claws of Big Pharma. Ramaswamy laid off 67 people, trade publication FierceBiotech reported.

He told employees "the layoffs came from a place of strength and this is the A-team," one former employee recalled, and then tossed in another sports metaphor about there being "blood on the court." Ramaswamy does not recall using those words, McLaughlin said, but does not dispute the employee's recollection, adding that he is a "strong believer in cutting underperformers and retaining only the top talent — as he expects to do in the federal government." 

But despite the Axovant bloodbath, Ramaswamy's 2015 tax returns show $37 million in capital gains. (McLaughlin said it was from selling "a tiny portion" of Roivant stock.) He made $18.8 million more from 2016 to 2019.

Ramaswamy had a second big payday in 2020, after Roivant struck a $3 billion deal with Japan's Sumitomo Pharma Co. Ltd. Ramaswamy reported $174 million in capital gains the year of the deal.

"Roivant did better under Ramaswamy than most similarly-sized drug companies," said Erik Gordon, a University of Michigan business school professor. "It could have been his innovative approach to managing drug development or luck despite his missteps with the FDA, and probably was a little of each."

Ramaswamy was "visionary," a third former Roivant employee said. Apart from his prodigious ability to win over investors, he chose a strong successor before stepping down as Roivant's CEO in 2021 "to take the company into the next phase of professionalization," this person said.

"He deserves credit for all those things."



Vivek Ramaswamy rapping Eminem's "Lose Yourself" at the Iowa State Fair.

Getty Images

Hype man in chief

But there's a flip side to Ramaswamy's ease at schmoozing investors. His critics see him as a hype man, wielding a megawatt smile and "debate me" rapid-fire eloquence to pump the value of the two companies he founded — and now his presidential prospects.

At Roivant, Ramaswamy kept his politics largely to himself, former employees said. But some felt his political ambitions were obvious. While he worked five days a week in New York when he wasn't traveling, he maintained a residence in Ohio. Some employees thought he would one day run for US Senate there, as his friend and Yale Law classmate Vance ended up doing.

In 2020, he gained a toehold in the conservative movement via the Wall Street Journal's op-ed page, where he emerged as a crusader against the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing movement, which seeks to convince investors to put their money in environmentally and socially conscious enterprises. He left Roivant and founded Strive a year later.

Building on Ramaswamy's tirades against ESG, Strive promises to advocate loudly against diversity and climate initiatives at the companies where it invests its clients' money.

The firm also gives investors the option to put their money into exchange-traded funds (ETF) made up of explicitly anti-woke companies, such as in the fossil fuels and military manufacturing sectors. (Strive's biggest ETF offers investors broad market exposure to the largest US companies.)

The firm has ridden a backlash to the ESG movement from pension fund managers in red states, according to reporting from The Lever and the nonprofit Documented. The Texas Employees Retirement Fund has invested $100 million in a Strive ETF that omits Chinese companies, while Indiana signed a $150,000 agreement with Strive to review the state retirement system's investment policies. Strive has also pitched Republican political institutions on a Strive 401(k), a former employee said. 

McLaughlin said that in pitching state pension funds, Strive has behaved no differently than any asset manager. "The real problem," she added, is that major asset managers like BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard "have captured the state pension fund system in a way that blocks out new entrants and competitors."

Meanwhile, two former employees, John Phillips and Joyce Rosely, have alleged in separate lawsuits that Ramaswamy asked them to violate securities laws by using unapproved marketing materials and pitching investors on Strive's ETFs before they could legally do so.

In his suit, Phillips said Ramaswamy gave the impression he'd stay involved with the business even though he was preparing to run for president. He also claimed that Strive, Ramaswamy, and co-founder Anson Frericks misled him about commitments they'd gotten from investors, the number of ETFs he'd have to sell, and their ability to hire more employees to support his work.

Rosely also said the company's HR head and Frericks did nothing to investigate allegations that another executive was harassing a younger woman employee.

"When Ms. Rosely brought up the issue with defendant Frericks, his only response was that it was none of his business," her lawsuit said. Strive has disputed the allegations in both lawsuits and said it follows the law. The company said Phillips was fired for underperformance and Rosely failed to meet her sales goals.

Strive doesn't appear to have any special sauce except its anti-ESG stance, two experts who reviewed the firm's offerings told Insider.

"They're basically making exact replicas of the BlackRock funds, but they're just saying, 'Trust us to vote just for profits and for the company to be excellent,'" said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Eric Balchunas.

Strive said its management fees are similar to those of its competitors. But it charges slightly higher fees than BlackRock, which Todd Rosenbluth, the head of research at ETF data company VettaFi, said should give investors pause.

Investors are "likely not eager to pay more money to get exposure to the corporate efforts of the asset manager," Rosenbluth said — something which holds true for both pro and anti-ESG funds.

Some employees resented being pigeonholed as an "anti-ESG" investment firm, according to a former Strive employee. So, to some extent, does the company itself: in a statement to Insider, a spokesperson said Strive has sought to position itself as "apolitical," with a focus on "prioritizing shareholders," not stakeholders.

Christopher Lenzo, Rosely's lawyer, was more blunt. "It seems fairly apparent that the company was established merely as a talking point for Ramaswamy's presidential campaign," he said in an email.

Strive dismissed talk that it was created as a political stunt.

"Vivek was under no obligation to give real-time updates to prospective employees of his desire to serve his country," the company said in a statement

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Vivek Ramaswamy cheers with supporters at the Jalapeno Pete's bar at the Iowa State Fair.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

A stump speech that works as a sales pitch

Ramaswamy's run for president can appear from certain angles to be the sales pitch of a lifetime.

Ramaswamy stepped away from Strive this spring, but as he's progressed in the polls, Strive too has seen success. The firm passed $1 billion in assets under management in early September, it announced on social media, up from roughly $600 million when Ramaswamy announced his run in March, a higher level of growth than typical for a fund of Strive's size, said Rosenbluth.

"In a crowded ETF market, Strive's investment approach has gained visibility due to Vivek Ramaswamy's public persona," Rosenbluth said. (Strive's "fast growth started long before" Ramaswamy announced his campaign, McLaughlin said, noting that the fund has only existed for a year.)

Ramaswamy owns a stake in Strive worth roughly $40 million, according to disclosure forms, somewhere between 50% to 75% of the company, according to SEC documentation. "An asset manager's value typically increases in tandem with its asset base," said Rosenbluth.

In other words, as Strive's fortunes continue to rise, so do Ramaswamy's. But to some people who knew him, the notion that Ramaswamy is running for vice-president — or to juice his business prospects — is absurd.

"I think he's going to win," a former Roivant employee said. "He doesn't play for second place."