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Still Doing God’s Work on Wall Street
Jail, anyone? Perhaps that's too harsh, and at any rate premature, but is anyone ever going to be held accountable for the behind-the-scenes sweetheart deals that passed tens of billions of taxpayer dollars through the AIG shell game to the very banks that caused the financial meltdown? Or for the many other acts of double-dealing that left one out of three American homeowners owing much more than their houses were worth while the folks who swindled them were rewarded with hundreds of billions in public money?
Undoubtedly not, since the same folks who are most culpable wrote the laws that made this, and the other scams at the heart of the banking collapse, perfectly legal. And guess what? They're back at work in the government, writing the new laws that will, they claim, prevent us from being had once again. As a telling example of that process at work, check the official response of the Department of Treasury to the devastating report by the special inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), Neil M. Barofsky, titled "Factors Affecting Efforts to Limit Payments to AIG Counterparties." The main factor was that Timothy Geithner followed the lead of Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd "I'm Doing God's Work" Blankfein in crowding the lifeboats with bankers.
Geithner, now treasury secretary, was previously the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY), where he negotiated the deal to pay Goldman Sachs and the other top banks in full to cover their bad bets on securitized mortgages. Barofsky's report concluded that Geithner's scheme represented a "backdoor bailout" for the financial hustlers at the center of the market fiasco. Noting that Geithner denies that was his intention, the report states, "Irrespective of their stated intent, however, there is no question that the effect of FRBNY's decisions-indeed, the very design of the federal assistance to AIG-was that tens of billions of dollars of Government money was funneled inexorably and directly to AIG's counterparties."
Not surprisingly, the Treasury Department that Geithner now heads defended his actions in not forcing "haircuts" on the full dollar-for-dollar payoff by AIG to the banks while he was at the New York Fed: "The government could not unilaterally impose haircuts on creditors, and it would not have been appropriate for the government to pressure counterparties to accept haircuts by threatening to retaliate in some way through its regulatory power."
Nonsense, argues Eliot Spitzer, who as New York attorney general was way ahead of the curve in challenging Wall Street arrogance. Writing in Slate on Monday, Spitzer points out: "Pressuring Goldman and the other counterparties to offer concessions would have forced them to absorb the consequences of making suspect deals with an insurance company that was essentially a Ponzi scheme."
The Ponzi scheme was based on the collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) in which the bankers traded and which AIG had insured with the credit default swaps (CDSs) that they sold but failed to back with adequate funding. Now Geithner's Treasury concedes that AIG "should never have been allowed to escape tough, consolidated supervision." But none of AIG's scams were regulated, nor were any of the others at the center of the larger financial debacle, because of laws pushed through Congress by Geithner's boss, Lawrence Summers, when they both were in the Clinton administration. Specifically, they prevented regulation of those opaque CDOs and CDSs that would come to derail the world's economy.
As the inspector general's report stated: "In 2000, the [Clinton administration-backed] Commodity Futures Modernization Act (CFMA) ... barred the regulation of credit default swaps and other derivatives." Why did the financial geniuses of the Clinton administration seek to prevent that obviously needed regulation? Because the Clintonistas believed the Wall Street guys knew what they were doing and that what was good for them was good for us lesser folk. As Summers, who is the top economic adviser in the Obama White House, put it in congressional testimony back then: "The parties to these kinds of contracts are largely sophisticated financial institutions that would appear to be eminently capable of protecting themselves from fraud and counterparty insolvencies."
Sounds nonsensical today: The inspector general's report notes that AIG, because of the deregulatory law that Summers and Geithner pushed through, was "able to sell swaps on $72 billion worth of CDOs to counterparties without holding reserves that a regulated insurance company would be required to maintain." But why, then, is Summers once again running the show with Geithner when both have made careers of exhibiting total contempt for the public interest? Because there is no accountability for the high rollers of finance, no matter who happens to be president.
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28 Comments so far
Show AllOn a related note, I watched the PBS Frontline show on Credit Cards last night and found that what is going on is simply complete and total corruption of our financial and political system. I had no idea how bad it really was. I recommend checking it out. TV has one thing over print in that you can see peoples facial expressions and body language. The total contempt that the lobbyists and bankers displayed for the average person was VERY disturbing.
Our banking and government systems are now totally corrupted. The corruption is complete, and anybody that thinks that this system can be fixed by political pressure or voting is sadly deluded.
Tom, thanks for mentioning this, I've just watched it. One outfit they didn't mention was the mafia who used to provide a better deal than the payday loan folks. I was also surprised by the segment where a small businessman was running his operation on a credit card. Aren't banks offering lines of credit to small business anymore but hooking them on credit cards?
From personal experience I can tell you they are just cutting credit across the board. I have perfect credit but had one of the two cards I own go from a $3500 limit to $300 and they never even told me.
For anybody who watched it. How did you like the attitude of the lady lobbyist that was representing the banks? She was the one I thought could hardly contain her disdain for average people.
My very conservative relatives are looking to buy gold, in preparation for when the dollar collapses. They are flummoxed when I try to explain that the people responsible for this were their Republican icons in the last administration, as well as Summers - who blew Harvard's endowment, and Geithner, who helped push the Commodity Futures "Modernization" Act. This modernization actually returned trading back to the roaring 20's style of trading and pushing worthless paper. Of course, they blame Clinton - who was a sap as far as Wall Street was concerned... As NC-Tom stated above, the system is beyond a political fix. There will be a huge crash, likely the result of the current mess, exacerbated by the 2010 ARM adjustments which are looming over the market.
Opt out wherever possible. Don't invest in Wall St, stick to less risky investments. Live in an apartment house (houses are so wasteful and obviously, quite a gamble). Buy as much local food as possible. Don't buy for the sake of buying. Do anything you can do not to participate in their charade. Don't vote, it only legitimizes the system, so it can pretend that people like Obama are anything but hacks.
I certainly agree with your advice to not invest in Wall Street. Wall Street represents the corporations and the corporations run this country. Shut down the corporations is what we need to do. Do not buy anything except what is necessary and force them out of business. The investor class is not that big and certainly not the majority. It is very probably to late to do anything though. We have become sheep that are dependent on the illusion.
A side note to those that think that gold will save them. Gold is a sucker investment and can be manipulated and is manipulated now. It will not be long before it is worthless as the paper that bought it. The plan is to confiscate assets like gold which is very hard to move around and to hide and stop printing paper and issue plastic to everyone. Big brother is coming.
Summers and Geithner--let's turn up the heat and get rid of these creeps.
How do we do that? The only legal way is to get rid of the creep that chose them as advisors. But then these guys have never cared much about legalities. Why should we?
Even if we did manage to get rid of them, who would take their place?
Tammons sez:
"But then these guys have never cared much about legalities. Why should we?"
Because they have the hit men and we don't, let alone the stomach for it.
'The meek shall inherit the earth.' Yeah, six feet under.
-30-
It's true that things are locked up at the national level. However, Ellen Brown (author of the Web of Debt, check out webofdebt.com) is working to create local, county and state level public banking alternatives which will offer low-interest loans, and turn banking into a public service instead of a scam. This will steadily erode Wall St's financial base (already many people are shifting to credit unions, I did).
North Dakota has the only state bank currently (formed in 1919 by farmers and small businessmen who organized, won an election, and changed the laws to pull all the state's money out of Wall St's hands). North Dakota has the lowest unemployment in the nation (4.2%) and a $1.3 billion surplus. The only other state in the USA that is solvent is Montana because of their large mineral wealth, but that's not sustainable. A democrat running for governor of Florida is proposing a state bank there to solve their deficit troubles. Of course he's being opposed by the state's democratic party machine. Michigan is also considering the idea.
Also David Korten's latest, Agenda For A New Economy, offers some guidelines for a massive populist movement to create an economic system that works for all.
"A democrat running for governor of Florida is proposing a state bank there to solve their deficit troubles. Of course he's being opposed by the state's democratic party machine." -- make-it-happen
Thanks for this piece of news. Unfortunately, I'm not surprised to read that the DLC opposes this candidate. Can you tell us the name of this candidate?
I usually read Ellen Brown's articles on Counterpunch, and I have also visited her website a couple of times. Until I began reading her work, I had no idea that North Dakota had a state bank completely unrelated to Wall Street.
The fact that the DLC is opposing the Democratic candidate who is proposing a state bank in Florida is very telling!
Its amazing how this same crowd is now re-inflating the Stock market in an eerie recapitulation of the 1930 "suckers market" that finished off anyone that they didn't swindle in Oct. 29'.
Yea, I agree...
Sioux Rose
SEAGLASS: You nailed it!
Anyone catch "Frontline" last night? About how the Banksters rigged the credit-card system to f**k as many 99%ers as possible?
Well, guess what - although all the major Banksters refused interviews, the insiders who did squawk - to a one - are very PROUD of the jobs they did raping and pillaging. Not a drop of regret, remorse, empathy, compassion - nothing.
See, the Banksters just offered 'products' - it was the stupid greedy poor consumers who didn't bother studying economics and contracts for 8 years who are now paying the price for failing to do their homework.
One of my favorites: debit card overdraft fees. Turns out, wholly unregulated because, instead of calling it a 'service' they call it a 'courtesy.' A 'courtesy' you cannot opt out of, and one they don't necessarily mention when you bite at the 'free checking,' BTW. And, also, there is still no limit on interest rates!
All back to normal...
No, Mr. Scheer, jail is not too harsh. Guillotine, anyone?
From Thomas Adams at Naked Capitalism... http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2009/11/goldmanaig-conspiracy-theories-theres-a-reason-they-wont-go-away.html
“...Goldman was one of the few banks that clearly set out to profit from shorting CDOs…So Goldman only used AIG, who would provide protection against their downgrade, which Goldman knew would happen because they were stuffing AIG with toxic ABS CDOs.”
Corroborated by other sources, such authorship and insider foreknowledge would constitute deliberate fraud. Furthermore, if GS had inside knowledge that these bets on disaster would be covered at 100% by taxpayers, it is an egregious criminal conspiracy. Given the known incestuous relationships between Government Sachs, the Treasury, the SEC, and the Fed, that seems very likely.
Yet another sinister synchronicity, GS was "...big with John Paulson’s CDO adventures ([see] “The Best Trade Ever”)…”. BTW, Paulson & Company (no relation to Hank) also made billions shorting these same irrational CDSs. And joining this same 'foresighted' firm after he ‘resigned’ ---Alan Greenspan, architect of the disaster. Would it be too backward-looking to ask why these guys are not wearing orange jumpsuits, shackles and hoods?
Wall Street, the Treasury, and the Federal Reserve are apparently still colluding in a giant Ponzi racket. When it blows up, jail may be too kind for these perps; thay are more likely to be put to the proverbial guillotine by breadless peasants.
Sioux Rose
DOUG: Great post. It's been said that novice criminals sent to prison emerge far better educated in "the craft." I offer the analogy that those behind the S & L Debacle, added to Arthur Anderson's firm of accountants, added to the Enron "business" model were the earlier experiments (in how to completely take advantage of the system) that led to the bankers' waltz away with all the public's money. With deregulation, criminal minds were set free to get everything they could, and how much easier the task if their transactions took on the semblance of legal activity and had full taxpayer backing, to boot. And with these odds they still turn around and play virtual games of debtors' prison with the rest of us tethered to credit card slavery at rates that are fast reaching up into the cosmos... it's been two decades of practice making the scale of theft perfect (to those who have convinced themselves that due to their dark genius they are entitled to it all). Guillotine sounds about right.
speaking of giving banks haircuts how about some of these bankers getting their
hairs parted by the way of a round by a firing squad! there has never been a group
of people as arrogant as these in the history of human beings! that these
people are still above ground is proof that we no longer live in a democracy.
democracies do not tolerate this type of behavior. this can and will as we
learn more make us angrier then we can articulate with words and there are
some incredibly articulate people posting here! take a bow folks.
Doug,
Re: "Would it be too backward-looking to ask why these guys are not wearing orange jumpsuits, shackles and hoods?"
Why? Because in this country, "we hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to office."--Aesop
Isn't the myth that unfettered capitalism has made America rich now being debunked by China's regulated capitalism?
Will the "Free World" ever realize that capitalism only ever entails the organized transfer of wealth from those who have too little to those who already have too much?
Certainly Americans won't as long as, as the author infers, they believe that wealth is not only a sign of favor from their invisible friend but also a reward for hard work and prudence.
"Still Doing God’s Work on Wall Street"
Dear Lord/God: Thank you for sending us (Lloyd B.) Goldman Sachs and other financial parisites to do your work for you -if indeed it was you who sent these misfits to suck the remaining life-blood out of your children. You've done one heck of a job!
Peace be with you.
I thought the devil made them do it>
How about a "Haircut" for Geithner and the rest of the Clinton-Era thugs that are vacuuming all the remaining wealth of the U.S.?
Maybe a crew cut with the old Guillotine.
A close shave of re-regulation and prosecution of fraud would go a long way to slow these little bastards down.
You know, as courageous as they make themselves out to be - they are utterly risk averse and can only operate when EVERYTHING IS GOING THERE WAY.
Hopefully, they will be going to prison, en masse, very soon.
Dr. Bankenstein is still "fixing" the economy.
sierra7
The lady lobbyist was totally disgusting! But, not unexpected!!
The Frontline program was good; I especially was shocked (and am usually not "shocked" by anything produced by this system of outright greed) with the revelations of a specific computer program used by banks to "front load" the highest credit card expenditure before the smallest so that the cardholder would be liable quickly and liable for "extra charges" and penalties.
The major problem is where are the regulators????
They're all crooks, from the bankers to the prostitutes in our government bending over for the lobbyists.
Especially despicable to me are Christopher Dodd and Barney Frank. But, the other side of the aisle are also disgusting...do nothing, say nothing except against everything, etc.....(I'm a registered non-partisan voter).
Kick them all out!
"I especially was shocked (and am usually not "shocked" by anything produced by this system of outright greed) with the revelations of a specific computer program used by banks to "front load" the highest credit card expenditure before the smallest so that the cardholder would be liable quickly and liable for "extra charges" and penalties." -- Sierra7
I was shocked by the same piece of information, and like you, I am not easily shocked!