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  Report: Fact and opinion construction(think tanks)

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 WORLD-INFOSTRUCTURE > FACT AND OPINION CONSTRUCTION(THINK TANKS) > EXAMPLES OF MAINLY CORPORATE ...
  Examples of Mainly Corporate Funded Think Tanks: Cato Institute


Founded in 1977 the Cato Institutes 1998 budget made up US$ 11 million. Its funding consists of corporate and private donations (especially from corporations and executives in the highly regulated industries of financial services, telecommunications and pharmaceuticals industries) and sales of publications.

Catos corporate donors include tobacco firms: Philip Morris (Rupert Murdoch sits on Philip Morris board of directors) and R.J. Reynolds. Financial firms: American Express, Chase Manhattan Bank, Chemical Bank, Citicorp/Citibank, Commonwealth Fund, Prudential Securities and Salomon Brothers. Energy conglomerates: Chevron Companies, Exxon Company, Shell Oil Company and Tenneco Gas, as well as the American Petroleum Institute, Amoco Foundation and Atlantic Richfield Foundation. Furthermore the Cato Institute is funded by pharmaceutical firms: Eli Lilly & Company, Merck & Company and Pfizer, Inc., foundations, like Koch, Lambe and Sarah Scaife and companies from the telecommunications sector: Bell Atlantic Network Services, BellSouth Corporation, Microsoft, NYNEX Corporation, Sun Microsystems and Viacom.




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Fact and opinion construction(think tanks)
    Think Tanks
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-3   Think Tanks and Corporate Money
-2   History of Corporate Funding of Conservative Think Tanks
-1   Examples of Mainly Corporate Funded Think Tanks: Brookings Institution
0   Examples of Mainly Corporate Funded Think Tanks: Cato Institute
+1   Examples of Mainly Corporate Funded Think Tanks: Manhattan Institute
+2   Corporate Money and Politics
+3   Influence of Corporate Funding on Think Tank Activities
     ...
Advertising, Public Relations and Think Tanks
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R.J. Reynolds
American manufacturer of tobacco products. The origins of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company date to the post-Civil War era, when Richard Joshua Reynolds (1850-1918) began trading in tobacco, first in his native Virginia and then in Winston, N.C., where in 1875 he established his first plug factory. The company began to diversify in the 1960s, acquiring chiefly food and oil concerns, and the tobacco concern became a subsidiary of R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc., in 1970.