The Bloomberg news investigation into Charles and David Koch has  uncovered unlawful and unpatriotic environmental crimes, political  donations and business decisions benefiting Iran. There are so many  secret sins committed by the Koch brothers no one story can cover it  all.
  But this is the story everyone will be talking about. We've  documented many of the Koch brothers' attacks on middle class families,  and detailed their commitment to ending public education and re segregating communities. 
  The Koch brothers have smeared us and journalists who investigate  their misdeeds. But the totality of evidence is clear: through our 
Koch Brothers Exposed film series, as well as reports in the 
New Yorker and now Bloomberg Markets magazine,  there exists beyond a shadow of a doubt the Koch brothers' culpability  for the onslaught against Social Security, the environment, our public  education system and much more.
  The Koch brothers use their $50 billion personal wealth to distort and 
shape policy to grow their corporate profits.  The Koch brothers hate public service, and work to deny the government  and public sector any chance at success and social good. So when a  Southern school board began blazing a trail by growing academic  achievement in a diverse community, the brothers acted to reverse the  community's gains.
Wake County, NC was unique for its ability to grow successful  outcomes for students with varying ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds.  The achievement gap between race and class continued shrinking, and  educators everywhere attributed the success to how the school board  assigned students to school.
 
The Koch brothers are keen to let their think tanks and front groups do their dirty work for them. 
They have donated more than $5 million to Americans for Prosperity,  a Tea Party group that allied with like-minded organizations in North  Carolina. The Koch brothers put their money to work, and the result was  external groups laying the groundwork for a long, subtle campaign to  elect a new school board majority.
  The Koch-supported candidates won and promptly began reversing the  student assignment plan. They favored one that would lead to segregated  schools.
  The Koch brothers' plan to resegregate schools hit a roadblock when  students, parents, teachers, and civil rights leaders united to stop the  return to Jim Crow.
  Bloomberg's findings about the Kochs' approving sales to  anti-American agents in Iran, bribing African officials and the Koch way  of stealing oil from Native Americans and lying to regulators is truly  disturbing, but there's so much more to the Koch legacy of sin.
  The Koch-supported school board members in North Carolina face an  election this month. An anonymous campaign flier, which could come back  to Koch-supported groups, accuses the NAACP of indoctrinating local  anti-resegregation candidates. It's drawn 
scrutiny from state officials.
  The Kochs' wealth has been behind similar smear campaigns and stunts in 
Michigan and 
Wisconsin. 
  In the aggregate, the Koch brothers are the personification of what's  driving hundreds of people to occupy Boston, Los Angeles and elsewhere,  and the thousands of protesters and sitting-in outside Wall Street in  Lower Manhattan.
  The Koch brothers have been chipping away at the American social  contract and grand bargain: that people who want to work can have a  decent standard of living. That promise is in tatters, and that's why so  many people, young and old, find it necessary to make their voices  heard in our cities.
  Before the Bloomberg report was published, the Koch brothers were  playing defense through friendly media outlets. They attacked Bloomberg  loudly and routinely, often questioning the integrity of the Fourth  Estate and attempting to chill a free press.
  The Koch brothers are the subject of press and activist scrutiny because they embody a generation of excess. Whether it's 
chartering a vacation yacht for $500,000 per week or 
donating $28.4 million to think tanks that attack Social Security, the Koch brothers are leading the corporate charge to put profits before people.
  The Koch brothers' defenders in friendly media outlets lump the  brothers in with the excess of dozens of corporations that regularly  violate laws and skirt punishments. This is simply more grist and  motivation propelling the protestors who are occupying our cities.