Showing posts with label Corporate greed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corporate greed. Show all posts

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Tears From The Greedy On Wall Street

Can The Teabaggers figure out who the real enemies are? We'll see when financial reform hits the chambers and the airwaves. Can the GOP convince them that the Democratic Bill is the opposite of what it really is? 

BILL MOYERS AND MICHAEL WINSHIP

With all due respect, we can only wish those Tea Party activists who gathered in Washington and other cities this week weren’t so single-minded about just who’s responsible for all their troubles, real and imagined. They’re up in arms, so to speak, against Big Government, especially the Obama administration.
If they thought this through, they’d be joining forces with other grassroots Americans who in the coming weeks will be demonstrating in Washington and other cities against High Finance, taking on Wall Street and the country’s biggest banks.

The original Tea Party, remember, wasn’t directed just against the British redcoats. Colonial patriots also took aim at the East India Company. That was the joint-stock enterprise originally chartered by the first Queen Elizabeth. Over the years, the government granted them special rights and privileges, which the owners turned into a monopoly over trade, including tea.


It may seem a bit of a stretch from tea to credit default swaps, but the principle is the same:when enormous private wealth goes unchecked, regular folks get hurt -- badly. That’s what happened in 2008 when the monied interests led us up the garden path to the great collapse.


So the Tea Party crowd should be demanding accountability from Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, and scores of hedge funds and private equity firms that constitute what we loosely call Wall Street.


But are the culprits taking responsibility for devastating the lives of millions of ordinary Americans? Don’t kid yourself. If you’ve been watching them appear before congressional committees and the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission -- the independent inquiry that’s supposed to find out what really happened -- you’ve no doubt been reaching for the Pepto-Bismol.


Here’s Robert Rubin, former Treasury Secretary and director of Citigroup, testifying last week. "Almost all of us involved in the financial system, including financial firms, regulators, ratings agencies, analysts and commentators missed the powerful combination of forces at work and the serious possibility of a massive crisis," he said. "We all bear responsibility for not recognizing this, and I deeply regret that."


Okay, maybe you didn’t have a crystal ball. But what about good, old-fashioned business sense? How could you make so much money and not know the score? "You are talking about a level of granularity no board will ever have," Rubin claimed. Citi paid you $120 million as a senior advisor and rainmaker and you’re not responsible for knowing what’s happening below you? You didn't bother to assess the risk you were peddling to clients?


The committee heard a similar alibi from Chuck Prince, who served as CEO of Citigroup during its meltdown: "Let me start by saying I'm sorry. I'm sorry that the financial crisis has had such a devastating impact on our country… And I'm sorry that our management team, starting with me, like so many others, could not see the unprecedented market collapse that lay before us."


Commission Chairman Phil Angelides, the former state treasurer of California, wasn’t buying it. "The two of you, in charge of this organization, did not seem to have a grip on what was happening," he said, and to Rubin, "I don’t know that you can have it two ways: you were either pulling the levers or asleep at the switch."


Nonetheless, the financiers wail, it was all an enormous accident, a once in a century calamity, an act of God. But of course that’s not true. Lots of people saw it coming and made a bundle, taking off with the loot at the expense of the millions who lost their jobs, homes and savings. There’s no longer any question that many bankers continued to game the system after the collapse -- still paying themselves exorbitant salaries and bonuses while hitting everyday people with usurious same day paycheck loans, credit card fees and other charges -- and refusing to help small and medium-sized businesses that could be creating employment.


The Tea Party gang really should have dropped by those Senate hearings this week looking into the failure of Washington Mutual, the bank that went belly up during the meltdown in September 2008 – the largest such failure in American history.


As an 18-month Senate investigation revealed, WaMu made subprime loans that its executives knew were rotten, then packaged them as mortgage securities and pawned them off on unsuspecting investors. Loan officers were paid by the number of mortgages they sold, and ran up the numbers by lying to customers and falsifying data so they could make bigger bucks and win trips to Maui and the Caribbean. At one Washington Mutual office in Montebello, California, 83 percent of the housing loans contained bogus information.


Then there’s Lehman Brothers. Their misfortune, apart from some chicanery only now coming to light, was being small enough to fail. During those black September days two years ago, the Feds decided it was expendable and let it go, leading to America’s biggest bankruptcy ever. In an admirable job of journalism this week, The New York Times reported that Lehman secretly controlled a company called Hudson Castle. Critics say it was used by Lehman to borrow money and to hide bad investments in commercial real estate and subprime mortgages.


But the week’s award for sheer gall goes to a Chicago area hedge fund called Magnetar, named after a kind of neutron star that spews deadly radiation across the galaxies. Thanks to the teamwork of the investigative reporting website ProPublica, as well as public radio’s Planet Money project and "This American Life," we learned that Magnetar worked with Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Merrill Lynch and other investment banks to create toxic CDO’s -- collateralized debt obligations -- securities backed by subprime mortgages that management knew were bad. Then Magnetar took that knowledge and bet against the very same investments they had recommended to buyers, selling short and making a fortune.


To simply call all of this "creative accounting" is to do it an injustice. This is corruption, cynicism and greed on a scale that would make the Roman Emperor Caligula cringe. Or rather, the Emperor Nero. He didn’t just poison the citizens of Rome; legend has it that he burned the place down, fiddling around in the ashes, just like our Wall Street tycoons.


But since we know all this, why is it so hard to hold Wall Street accountable? Which brings us to what the Tea Party people should have been complaining about this week. The banking industry and corporate America are fighting against proposed financial reform with all the money and influence at their disposal, attempting to preserve a system that would enable them to ransack the country once again.


Look at Eric Lichtblau’s report this week, also in The New York Times, under the headline. "Lawmakers Regulate Banks, Then Flock to Them." The financial services industry has hired more than 125 former members of Congress and congressional staffers from both parties to help them fight off accountability.


No wonder, too, that this headline appeared in the Times this week: "GOP Takes Aim at Plans to Curb Finance Industry." That’s not surprising. Earlier this year Republican politicians told Wall Street: Give us the scratch and we’ll scrap reform.


The GOP’s SWAT team -- also known as the United States Chamber of Commerce -- has already spent three million dollars to try to kill or cripple a key part of reform -- the proposed new Consumer Financial Protection Agency. With the Chamber as their front, corporations have bankrolled ads that make it seem like the Red Army is at our doorsteps.


Advocates for reform have countered with ads of their own, but Democrats are deeply in hock to Wall Street, too. Remember the hedge fund Magnetar that bet against its own products? The owners covered their bets with ample campaign contributions to Rahm Emanuel. Yep, the same -- President Obama’s White House chief of staff. At the time he was an Illinois congressman and chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which collected millions of dollars from the financial services industry.


In fact, the website Politico.com reports that "the nation’s ten richest hedge fund managers have dumped nearly one million dollars into campaign accounts over the past several years... consumer advocates and critics from other financial sectors say hedge funds would get off pretty easily" under the Senate reform bill.


Bottom line: "The Wall Street banks are the new American oligarchy – a group that gains political power because of its economic power, and then uses that political power for its own benefit." So write Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund; and James Kwak, former management consultant and software entrepreneur, in their important new book, "13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown."


Their words of warning and the past year and a half make you realize that as usual, Thomas Jefferson, whose birthday we celebrate this week, had it right. Back in 1816, he wrote, "I sincerely believe... that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies."


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Bill Moyers is managing editor and Michael Winship is senior writer of the weekly public affairs program Bill Moyers Journal, which airs Friday night on PBS. Check local airtimes or comment at The Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers .


Let The Sun Shine In......

Friday, September 11, 2009

Insurance Companies Can't Be Held Accountable If They Can Dictate Legislation

Chris Bowers is right on! This is all about who runs this country, in the final analysis. 

Is it the people, the bought-and-paid-for, by big corporations, elected officials, or the officers of big corporations, who continue to see that their stock options don't bleed nor do their bonuses cease to reach astounding, if not nauseating heights, even when they have run their conpanies into the ground with deceitful business and accounting practices?


I guess we will soon know where we stand.When that happens, if we see what we believe to be the truth, that corporate types run not only our nation, but more or less the whole world, it will be time for people of intelligence and decency to come up with a way to deal with the people who buy our elected officials and screw the people every chance they get.

 If these deceitful, greedy fear-mongers cannot be held accountable under laws they help write, it will be up to the citizens to hold them accountable by way of mass non-violent action.


 

by: Chris Bowers

Thu Sep 10, 2009 at 15:25


Last night, President Obama said that he wants to hold insurance companies accountable:
Now, I have no interest in putting insurance companies out of business.  They provide a legitimate service, and employ a lot of our friends and neighbors.  I just want to hold them accountable.

And he told House Progressives that the public option was only one of many possible means to that end:
To my progressive friends, I would remind you that for decades, the driving idea behind reform has been to end insurance company abuses and make coverage affordable for those without it.  The public option is only a means to that end - and we should remain open to other ideas that accomplish our ultimate goal.

In response, I submit the following: it is impossible for the federal government to hold insurance companies accountable if those insurance companies can dictate whatever types of legislation they want to Congress.
Private health insurance companies have made the public option just as much of a sticking point as House 
 Progressives have. Whereas House Progressives have stated they will oppose any health care reform legislation without a "robust" public option, private health insurance companies have stated they will oppose any legislation that includes one.
If these private health insurance companies can have a public option removed from health care legislation just because they do, then there is really no way to hold private health insurance companies accountable. If these companies have enough control over the federal government that they can dictate legislation against the wishes of the member of Congress themselves, then there is simply no way that the federal government can hold private health insurance companies accountable by any means.

So far under the Democratic trifecta, we had stimulus bill that was approved of by the Chamber of Commerce. We saw limits on executive compensation for firms receiving bailout money removed from that same stimulus bill in order to get those executives to accept hundreds of billions in government loans. We had bankruptcy reform favorable to people losing their homes removed from housing legislation in order to appease those same banks. We saw six Democratic Senators flip on card check legislation to appease large employers. We saw a climate change bill that gives away billions of dollars worth of pollution permits to major polluters for free. Now, we have a health insurance industry seeking to kill a public health insurance option just because there might be a chance that providing insurance to people without providing hundreds of millions in salaries to executives might actually result in lower-priced health insurance.



I submit that as long as powerful financial institutions--and that is exactly what private health insurance companies are--can dictate legislation to Congress, then there is no possible way for Congress to hold those financial institutions accountable. You can't drop the public option at the behest of private health insurers and then still think you are somehow going to hold those insurers accountable through a different means.




(We could not agree more! As long as these crooks called corporate officers are not held accountable lawfully for their greed and other heinous behavior and we cannot get the big money out of politics, the ordinary Joes and Josephines of America don't stand a chance of not living the rest of their lives under crushing debt and real death panels run by big health-care corporations, but which are never talked about.  Nothing of any importance will ever change in this country until we demand 1) publicly funded campaigns and elections, 2)  that the electoral college is abolished, at least in its current form and 3) that every voting machine in America has a paper trail.)



This fight is about who runs the country. If Congress drops the public option, it will be because private health insurers told them to drop it. If there is no public option, then these powerful corporations and financial institutions are the ones telling Congress what to do, not the other way around. And when someone is only and ever giving you orders, good luck ever holding that someone accountable. Ever.




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Let The Sun Shine In......

Friday, March 20, 2009

The Big Takeover


On CNN today, I caught a brief blah, blah, blah about how N.Y. A.G. Cuomo had the names of all of the bonus babies. The CNN folks were concerned that the names would be made public, as apparently there have been death threats and such.

I say, who the hell cares about their security?

Make the names public!

The masses have more to worry about than these greedy SOBs' security. Let them spend their bonuses on their own security. They can surely afford it.


.....So it's time to admit it: We're fools, protagonists in a kind of gruesome comedy about the marriage of greed and stupidity. And the worst part about it is that we're still in denial — we still think this is some kind of unfortunate accident, not something that was created by the group of psychopaths on Wall Street whom we allowed to gang-rape the American Dream.

When Geithner announced the new $30 billion bailout, the party line was that poor AIG was just a victim of a lot of shitty luck — bad year for business, you know, what with the financial crisis and all.

Edward Liddy, the company's CEO, actually compared it to catching a cold: "The marketplace is a pretty crummy place to be right now," he said. "When the world catches pneumonia, we get it too." In a pathetic attempt at name-dropping, he even whined that AIG was being "consumed by the same issues that are driving house prices down and 401K statements down and Warren Buffet's investment portfolio down."~~~~~~~The global economic crisis isn't about money - it's about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution


Let The Sun Shine In......

Want to Prevent Another AIG? Let the Sunshine In

The simple fact is that our elite government, all of them, suck to the high heavens as do their pals on Wall Street.

Tea Party, anyone?


BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS
by Meg White

The fact that Americans are mad as hell has not escaped the media or government. Indeed, it seems that everyone is racing to be first to tell the American people where to direct their rage.

Blame AIG! Those greedy bastards are already sucking us dry and giving our money to foreign banks, and then they take millions in bonuses for the very employees that precipitated this crisis in the first place.

Blame Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT)! He wrote in a change to the stimulus bill that allowed the AIG bonuses to be paid.

Oh wait, no. Looks like we got that one backwards, so...

Blame Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner! He's the one that asked Dodd to change the stimulus bill, fearing that Dodd's amendment to prevent all bonuses being paid out to rescued bankers might expose the government to lawsuits.

Let's just blame President Barack Obama, because he doesn't look pissed off enough! Or because he's too pissed off!

All this anger is understandable, but it isn't helping us out of this crisis. This kind of infectious anger is an emotion that fosters putrefaction and corrosion. We need a cure, not a supplement. But most cures are costly, and the American body politic is running low on cash as well as political capital. Thankfully, the best antiseptic is cheap: sunshine.

So where do we turn for help but the Sunlight Foundation? This group has been working toward greater government transparency for years now, but they've recently renewed their push to have Congress actually read the bills they vote on.


Read The Bill from Sunlight Foundation on Vimeo.

Lisa Rosenberg, a Sunlight Foundation government affairs consultant, talked to BuzzFlash about their Read the Bill initiative, which proposes that all non-emergency legislation be available and posted online 72 hours before Congressional debate begins.

The list of rushed bills according to Sunlight is massive: the stimulus, the Wall Street bailout, FISA, the Fannie/Freddie bailout and more. And that's just the most recent history. Don't forget about the past eight years of tossing accountability like a hot potato between a pushy executive branch and a negligent legislature. Um, Iraq war resolution anyone? How about the PATRIOT Act? And while we're on the subject of eliminating civil liberties, who wants seconds?

According to Rosenberg, the AIG bonus situation shows why the status quo is "really problematic right now." If the 72-hour window was already in place, things would have been different with the bonus loophole.

"Someone would have found it and the outrage would have been directed at Congress at a time when they could have changed it," Rosenberg said. "Instead they're going to write a whole new bill [to tax the bonuses]. Congress hasn't learned from their mistakes."

The initiative was introduced in the last Congress, but it didn't go anywhere. Rep. Brian Baird (D-WA) sponsored legislation that would require posting legislation on the Internet for 72 hours before vote consideration in 2007, but it died in the House Committee on Rules.

"It's on his radar," Rosenberg said of the possibility of Baird taking up the measure in the 111th Congress. She didn't have any immediate predictions for the initiative, but it's possible the infusion of fresh faces from the 2008 election cycle could break up some of the previous resistance.

"I think seniority has a lot more to do with it," she said. "Freshmen are more open to the idea."

Perhaps the most important outcome of this sort of legislation is the deflation of the moral high ground so many politicians stand on when they claim they didn't know what was in a particular bill after a controversy turns up. The argument goes that if lawmakers don't have enough time to read legislation before they are forced to vote on it, they shouldn't be held responsible for the dirty details. Plenty of lawmakers claim they want more time to read bills. But do they really want that kind of accountability?

"A lot of it is lip service," Rosenberg said, noting that "you'll see a lot of Republicans complain about not having time to read" legislation sponsored by Democrats, and vice-versa. On the other hand, there are plenty of reasons for Congress to let the bill die yet again.

"My best guess is a combination of a fear of really altering the way they've always done business," Rosenberg said, adding that there is also an "unfounded fear" that the 72-hour window would slow Congress down to a standstill.

Some lawmakers may be equating a loss of speed with a loss of force. Rosenberg offered a third reason why the initiative might encounter resistance: "Certain members think they have a lot more power when they can slip things into a bill at the last minute."

The argument can certainly be made that simply allowing enough time for a bill to be read doesn't guarantee it'll make it onto The New York Times Bestseller List. In other words, you can lead a lawmaker to legislation, but you can't make him read.

Thank goodness for that other cheap cure: the information superhighway. Turns out that if you put stuff up on the Internet, there's a good chance people will look at it. Some of those people won't have behinds to cover and donors (or, ahem... constituencies) to cater to.

Remember that it wasn't Congress or the White House or the Treasury that revealed the existence of the AIG bonuses. It was the fourth estate. If the information is there, someone will look at it.

So let us trade in our tirades for change. A frown makes a terrible umbrella, but if it weren't raining, we wouldn't need one. Let's use this anger for something more productive and let the sunshine in.

A BUZZFLASH NEWS ANALYSIS

Learn more and sign the petition at the Sunlight Foundation's ReadTheBill.org.


Let The Sun Shine In......