ALL PUBLIC retirees and current employees in Ohio, besides the Governor, AG and State Law Makers, need to vote out all current law makers. They all know, they either ignore us, double talk to us, call us conspirators, or act like they know nothing. Bull! There is overwhelming factual information that is ignored and poor pooed. They should all leave before it catches up with them.
Our effort to crowdfund an investigation of OPERS was undermined by a fake GoFundMe, which was shut down before any money changed hands and a fake Facebook poster-- see Forbes articles about this. Someone REALLY didn't want us to look deeper.
i’m not sure if you know this, but this all stems from the connection of former governor of Ohio had with Wall Street. He opened up an office in Columbus and basically him and his cronies funneled money from the fund into really bad investments and managed to squander money that would’ve multiplied if it was in simple depository accounts. a firm in New York took a long hard look at the case, but they voted taking the case down at a partners meeting, which is very disappointing to me.
ALL PUBLIC retirees and current employees in Ohio, besides the Governor, AG and State Law Makers, need to vote out all current law makers. They all know, they either ignore us, double talk to us, call us conspirators, or act like they know nothing. Bull! There is overwhelming factual information that is ignored and poor pooed. They should all leave before it catches up with them.
Agree-- it appears all Ohio state officials are united in purpose: the state pensions should be used to further their political ambitions.
look at ohio Pers for some real wasting of pensioners money. lost money in a 10 year bull market by steering the money to their cronies on Wall Street
Our effort to crowdfund an investigation of OPERS was undermined by a fake GoFundMe, which was shut down before any money changed hands and a fake Facebook poster-- see Forbes articles about this. Someone REALLY didn't want us to look deeper.
i’m not sure if you know this, but this all stems from the connection of former governor of Ohio had with Wall Street. He opened up an office in Columbus and basically him and his cronies funneled money from the fund into really bad investments and managed to squander money that would’ve multiplied if it was in simple depository accounts. a firm in New York took a long hard look at the case, but they voted taking the case down at a partners meeting, which is very disappointing to me.