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The Worthiness of Banker Charity
"Repent," the preacher cried out, startling those who heard him.
This was no street evangelist ranting at the passing crowd, but the archbishop of Canterbury, head of the Church of England. His sharp admonition was pointed directly at a particular set of sinners, who undoubtedly had never given any thought to the morality of their actions: the barons of global banking.
As in our country, people in Europe are enraged at those hustlers of high finance who wrecked the world's economies, then flexed their political muscle to get governments to replenish their bankrupt vaults. Infuriatingly, these bailed-out bankers have now returned to business as usual, including grabbing monstrous bonus payments for themselves.
In Europe, such greed is not only being assailed politically, but it is also being cast as a matter of fundamental moral failure. As another of Britain's leading clergymen put it, "There is a general feeling that the level of bonuses we've seen have been obscene."
While top executives of Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and other big investment houses were initially puzzled and hurt by the public's moral outrage, their audacious sense of personal worth and entitlement quickly kicked back in. So Europeans are now witnessing the spectacle of bankers draping themselves in radiant robes of ethical purity.
"Profit is not satanic," the CEO of Barclays recently proclaimed. "Size is not necessarily evil," asserted the head of Deutsche Bank.
But leave it to Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs (and the world's highest-paid banker - $68 million in 2007 alone) to combine self-pity with self-adulation in a grandiose PR effort to reposition financial thieves as paragons of social altruism. "I know I could slit my writs and people would cheer," he acknowledged in an interview published Nov. 8 in London's Sunday Times. But, he said of himself and his big banking brethren," We're very important.
And, just in case you missed the message of Blankfein's morality tale, he concluded by portraying himself as a mere banker "doing God's work."
Wow. What a wrathful god he must worship!
One wonders - has Lord Blankfein even read about, much less visited, any of the millions of Americans who are out of work or out of business because of the financial schemes and scams that he and his peers conjured up? Who does he think he's fooling? Far from investing capital (including the trillions of dollars they took from us taxpayers) in companies and jobs, these financial whizzes continue to throw it into the global craps game of debt swaps and other speculative nonsense. The game enriches them and their super-wealthy clients, but it creates nothing whatsoever of social value.
Nonetheless, this clueless clique is actually claiming that we commoners should be applauding the return of their multimillion-dollar bonus bonanzas. Why? Because, they aver, the rich payouts allow them to contribute to charity.
Such narcissism reminds me of a story about a selfish, no-good rich man who died and tried to get into heaven. But you can't just walk through the Pearly Gates. An angel reviews your life, then St. Peter decides if you can enter. To counter the angel's negative review, the rich man argued that he had a history of charitable giving. He'd once tossed a nickel into a beggar's cup, he pointed out. Plus, some years later, he had aided a poor woman by giving her a nickel. Then there was the time he put a nickel into the Salvation Army kettle.
Hearing all this, the angel turned to St. Peter and asked, "What in the world should we do with this man?" And St. Peter said, "Give him back his 15 cents, and tell him to go to hell!"
Now that's a story that these big banksters need to hear - and ponder.


11 Comments so far
Show AllWe shouldn't even have given them a penny back - but we should certainly have told them all TO GO TO HELL!!!!
They all should have lost their jobs as the result of their thievery and then been herded into court for their crimes!!!!
Now that's two cents worth.
Mr. Blankfein is a man who is soul-blind, pathetic and has the conscience development of a box of cereal.
I'm certain he truly does not have one joyful moment in his day.
The more millions he acquires the sadder he gets.
And he knows it.
Mr. Blankfein doesn't have any introspective curiosity to understand why he acts as he does and wouldn't understand it if St. Peter himself explained it to him.
If he wasn't such a dangerous and toxic excuse for a human being he'd be deserving of our pity.
His teachers are all around him: the poor, sick, unemployed, homeless.
Mistakenly, he believes he's their master.
So why do liberal voters go to the polls, again and again, and settle for Barak Obamas and Hillery Clintons? (I assume McSame/Palin voters are simply insane) Where were they when Kucinich had a chance, or even Ron Paul? ("But he's a libertarian and wouldn't have given us Health Care." Listen to yourself!!) Where are the politicians who will set up State Banks (like N. Dak) make basic banking services a community service, divorced from profit motive, separate from "casino" functions(CDO's, MDS's, arbitraging, etc.) Banking is a century+ ponzi scheme. Every recession, depression, and panic is PLANNED, like this one was, makes bankers billions. We just moan and take it. NO MORE passes for crooks... like Obama and his Goldman-Sucks companions. WILL YOU PLEASE pay attention! Vote for 3rd parties. Badger your friends and co-workers. Or.. sell your kids to the sex trade.
Absolutely--Kucinich and Paul were the only ones worth anything and it was very disturbing to see Progressive reaction to Ron Paul. Those who totally grasp how the media manipulates ideas bought into the absurd racism charge coming from neo-cons.
I've voted 3rd party for decades (except '92, didn't regret it and '04 and '08 when I did). I don't see how this happens without Instant Runoff Voting, and fear it may be too late.
I already tried this sex trade thing. It didn't work out so well for me. I prostituted myself to the Fortune 500 for twenty years. Then they really phucked me by busting my union, by reneging on health care and retirement and by shipping us all overseas and claiming federal labor law didn't apply. I woke up old, abused and just as homeless as when I had begun. If you vote for the crack-cocaine Republicrat parties again and again the same thing will happen to you. But an addict of big party promises just has to get that high of being on the winning team of crooks.
A vote is a terrible thing to waste. VOTE THIRD PARTY AND SCARE THE HELL OUT OF THEM.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
I guess up there, they're not able to buy off the guy in charge.
Sioux Rose
I'm trying to remember the very creative interpretation of the parable that says it's harder for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man get to heaven as spoken by a multi-millionaire former acquaintence of mine. It involved some marvel about the way camels were kept outside of domestic walls in that era, truly an amazing take on what's pretty obvious about the fable to any BUT the very rich. I can't remember his words verbatim because even when he delivered them I was rolling my eyes.
"Far from investing capital (including the trillions of dollars they took from us taxpayers) in companies and jobs, these financial whizzes continue to throw it into the global craps game of debt swaps and other speculative nonsense. The game enriches them and their super-wealthy clients, but it creates nothing whatsoever of social value."
And this latest scandal is just the latest manifestation of what's been happening since Nixon. The post WW2 financial system was predicated on strict capital controls and investment was mostly the type of investment that Blankfein pays lip service to rather than the speculative funhouse that is in play now.
There is also an addiction to intellectual hubris where the creation of complexities becomes a way of life (but of course you would not understand, you need me to explain this to you and take care of everything).
The "sheepskin psychosis" is epitomized by Greenspan (the name so apt) and the Chicago schl of eco-nomics. All banking banks on banking, to coin an instructive observation by Marsall McCluhan decades ago - "all advertising advertises advertising".
This is illustrative of the schismatosis [?] of trinitarian concepts without any sense of the sacred. I guess thats what makes the sacred sacred - its predictable in the prophetic sense.
We all make innumerable considerate choices every minute of every day. We slip up when choices are made out of fear rather than love. When we fail to correct mistakes while they're small, they add another layer to the blinkers and at the same time the problems grow larger in the finest sense of natural process - one of those prophetic realities.
Pausing and giving way can accomplish tremendous change - especially by those who wield massive resource stocks. One of the problems seems to be that addressing problems is regarded as needing to be done whole-hog as it were rather than being conscious of those innumerable small opportunities that add up so fast.
Jim Hightower is right on the mark again so soon. Damn it! I wish I had written this-- but thanks Jim anyway. it's nice to hear someone tell it like it is.
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