Who Deserves Wall Street Bonuses?
Wall Street bankers are really mad these days - in both senses of that word!
You'd think these whizzes of speculative finance would be ecstatically happy and filled with gratitude, not anger. After all, having crashed our economy, they were allowed to keep their cushy jobs, get bailed out with trillions of our tax dollars, and permitted to go right back to playing the same old casino games that had previously enriched them at our expense.
Once again, such powerhouse outfits as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are raking-in tons of money - and, as in the gilded days before Wall Street plunged Main Street into deep recession, bankers have promptly reverted to the selfish ethic of lavishing multimillion-dollar bonuses on themselves. Goldman, for example, has already set aside more than $16 billion to dole out as end-of-year bonuses for its bankers. That's a pace of self-enrichment that will siphon off nearly half of all the money that Goldman takes in this year!
So, why are they mad? Because you and I are not showing them any love. Believe it or not, Wall Streeters actually expected that their return to grandiose banker bonuses would be greeted with huzzahs and "you the man" cheers from an admiring public, rather than another coast-to-coast explosion of anger.
Arrogance and avarice seems to be so hardwired into these people that they view outlandish paydays as proof of their business acumen, productivity and success. The richer you are, the more worthy you are, goes their thinking, so not only do they feel entitled to cash, but also to high-fives and hugs from the hoi polloi.
Excuse me, Your Royalnesses, but being mad at us for not cheering narcissism shows just how bull-goose mad you really are. In fact, if you get any goosier, you'll start flying south every winter.
Especially infuriating is the ridiculous assertion by Wall Street elites that our bailout money was more of a burden than a help. Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, declared last month that he never would have accepted $10 billion from the Troubled Asset Relief Program "if I had known it was pregnant with this kind of potential for backlash."
Blankfein's claim is that, while some TARP funds might have been of short-term use, they were not really crucial to the recovery of big banks like his, which quickly repaid the government to get rid of the "pregnancy."
Rather, he explains, it was the good-old financial genius of bankers like him that guided Goldman back into the deep waters of prosperity - and huge executive bonuses.
He and other Wall Streeters are now using this argument in Washington to fend off new banking regulations, assuring lawmakers that the free market of finance is self-correcting and in good hands.Hold it right there, slick. TARP funds were the least of the bailout that you received and are still enjoying. First, $12.9 billion were quietly funneled to Goldman Sachs through last year's backroom bailout of insurance giant AIG - money you're keeping.
Second, by executive fiat, the Federal Reserve let Goldman magically metamorphose into a bank holding company so it could qualify for cheap funds from the central bank. Third, the FDIC (which exists to insure money that people deposit in banks) put its governmental guarantee behind billions of dollars in Goldman bonds, thus allowing the firm to raise even more capital very cheaply.
Fourth, bank competition was deliberately and drastically reduced as part of the government's rescue effort, leaving Goldman free to pull more of the investment market into its monopolistic maw. Fifth, and probably most important, the federal government has made clear to speculators everywhere that Goldman will never be allowed to fail - so take all the risks you want, for taxpayers will cover your losses. This is truly a priceless subsidy.
Honesty has long been a stranger in Wall Street circles - but even there, surely there's a tiny residue of honor that would compel them to admit that any bonus money should go to hard-pressed taxpayers, not to Wall Street's welfare kings.

Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
16 Comments so far
Show AllWho in their RIGHT mind would oppose such a profitable abortion of a pregnancy? Paraguay, here they come; together with the war criminal Bushs, if Obama EVER says to Hague with 'em all!
Lord Griffiths, vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs International: “The general public should tolerate the inequality as a way to achieve greater prosperity for all."
See? No wonder the banksters are angry - They. Are. Just. Trying. To. Help. ALL. Achieve. Greater. Prosperity!!!
I'd be f**king livid at a 'general public' that didn't suck my f**king dick as thanks for helping them achieve greater prosperity with my $100M bonus.
Seriously though - although it manifests as anger, what's really got the banksters flipped is the fact that Greed is no longer Good - which is like telling them there is no God. Because Greed is all they have - they're hired by the Greediest to be more Greedy than imaginable, their entire life/self revolves around nothing but the pursuit of more money, and it's clear that - sooner rather than later - their 'way of life' and entire warped worldview will be wholly obsolete.
Hollow humans whose one reason to exist is now disdained even by their own Godfather, Alan Greenspan. No, the banksters aren't angry - they're scared shitless...
THAT! is the BIG LIE!!!!
and it comes from the pseudoscientist, pseudoeconomist Milton Friedman
the idea that
the richer the rich get
the richer we all get
a REAL scientist, a REAL economist, John Maynard Keynes proved that malarky completely wrong, before "Doctor" Friedman even began to embark on his "illustrious" career
Keynes proved that for economies to thrive and prosper we all need to share in the benefits, that distribution of wealth in the extreme to the wealthy SHRINKS the economy..... and the the reverse stimulates it........ give out one to regular people who will spend it
(wealthy only keep it or buy more stock to 'position themselves better)
the that one causes the economy to expand by a factor of 5 or ten
the economic collapse we are experiencing is a direct result of more and more extreme concentration of wealth with the few
Sorry, Jim. Although I am generally in total agreement with you, there's no tiny residue or even any residue of honor on Wall Street. Honor went out with good manners. Money Rules!
The arrogance and sense of entitlement of these people is beyond belief. They must see the rest of us as subhuman. It isn't politeness that keep the belief private, but self preservation. Who knows what the bovine serfs will do if goaded too far. It happened in France in 1789 and they haven't been the same since. Taking to the streets is now in their genes. Perhaps something to do with the taste of rich blood.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
Well said.
John Stanton at Counterpunch does a nice job of summarizing the last thirty years in the USA (Social decay in America).
I have good news and bad news. The good news is the Goldman Sachs boy Jon Corzine went down in FLAMES in yesterday's election in NJ. The bad news is people are still addicted to the stock market like they would be to a casino. Some people delude themselves into believing that they'll be rich as Donald Trump owning stock and believing in "perpetual growth". It doesn't always work out that way but the hucksters on Wall Street want us to keep deluding ourselves. The madness has to end somewhere though.
maxpayne.
"The good news is the Goldman Sachs boy Jon Corzine went down in FLAMES"
I figured that would happen. Like I mentioned to you the other day, Goldman Sachs has brand problems. It won't be just Corzine that is history. Hello... Geithner! Even Huffington Post is doing hit pieces on Geithner.
It wouldn't surprise me to see Goldman Sachs change their name to Betty Crocker Financials. These greedy bastards never change their ways but they do change their names.
"It wouldn't surprise me to see Goldman Sachs change their name to Betty Crocker Financials."
PFFT ! LOL ! Now that's a kicker ! Yep, that name is popular for all the poison food that is associated with it that people can't stop craving.
I don't know that having a Republican for governor of NJ is all that great but I just couldn't imagine NJ taking their embarrassment of having a GS hack as their leader any longer. Four years ago, I never imagined that I wouldn't mind seeing Republicans in power but ever since 2007 when the Democrats took control of Congress, I got disillusioned with this party.
Every time I have to go to Washington on a business trip, I see so many more cars coming from NJ in MD and Northern VA. I think NJ is bleeding even more than I know. I have had my coworkers and friends in the DC metro suburbs confirm that there are more NJ license plates for the past two years with more coming from CT, MA, and NY. Talk about traffic jam hell in NoVA catching up to New York ! I don't know exactly what is going on in those states but I smell more unemployment plaguing them similar to Michigan.
Actually, Max, Corzine will return to Wall St to reap more millions (and probably run for another office after a little Caribbean R&R).
I feel awfully sorry for NJ given its nature of tolerating such a level of corruption in their own state government. I think NJ finally got tired of it and simply wanted Corzine out. I have no idea about Christie since I don't live in that state but I'm sure time will tell just what he really is. Corzine could always count on buying his own seats and Mccain always envied that trait of Corzine. I didn't expect either NJ or VA to be close given Obama's dismal performance spilling into local races.
Mr. Hightower, you forgot the most valuable gift given to Goldman.
With evidence of MASSIVE FRAUD there have been no criminal prosecutions of any of its officers or employees.
When a bank robber never has to worry about going to prison there's absolutely nothing to stop him from engaging in that activity. They'll just keep doing it until all the money is stolen.
Matt Taibbi: Wall Street's Naked Swindle
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/30481512/
wall_streets_naked_swindle/print
McClatchy: How Goldman Secretly Bet on the U.S. Housing Crash
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/77791.html
I think most of them do fly south every winter.
In fact, they fly in the private planes their companies bought as a business expense on the taxpayers dime.
You know, I think I can go with the idea in the article above.
"Arrogance and avarice seems to be so hardwired into these people that they view outlandish paydays as proof of their business acumen, productivity and success. The richer you are, the more worthy you are, goes their thinking, so not only do they feel entitled to cash, but also to high-fives and hugs from the hoi polloi."
I think that is true. Furthermore, I think that because of this, we need to revist how we look at ownership of property. If an individual has the inventiveness and acumen to bypass existing security measures to get someone else's valuables, then obviously they deserved to get them.
Legalize bank robbery in 2010!
My dear fellow, you have just mentioned the core philosophy of our founding fuckers. Wasn't it good old penny pinching Benjamin Franklin that said possession is nine tenths of the law? Well, killing off all those pesky natives to take their land was just a warm up to modern times. It's all about possession and more possession.
Remember, these assholes invented fractional reserve banking. That allows a bank to loan at least 10 times the money they have under deposit. Do the math. It goes right back to Franklin and the nine tenths deal. They "invent" nine tenths of the money out of thin air. It's their money! They invented it fair and square! And you've got to pay interest on it when they loan it to you, get it? Banks hate people who come in the front door and rob the bank; they don't like competition.
And then came the Credit default swaps and the multiple went from ten to several hundred. I guess that's why they call them financial innovations.
Cassius's last line is a must. Banks can rob us in many ways but we can't rob them. Abolishing the corporate personhood might help too.