Tag Goldman Sachs

Of The 1%, By The 1%, For The 1%

Now that the primaries have actually begun and the sham contest featuring all those Republican ass-clowns that has filled the media for the last five months is coming to an end with the less-than-surprise result that Mitt Romney is going to be the nominee, it’s probably a good time to point out to you exactly WHO is behind The Mittster.

OpenSecrets.org has been keeping track of who has been putting up the cash for all the candidates, so let’s just see who Romney’s main contributors are:

Yep. Seven of the top ten are Wall Street financial firms or major banks, with good ol’ Goldman Sachs right at the top, and several more in the next ten.

For comparison, here’s the same Top 20 list for Barack Obama:

Not much Wall Street by comparison. Goldman Sachs is way down on the list, and the only financial firm in the top ten is Chicago-based Chopper Trading. Which is not to say that Obama isn’t seeing plenty of money from big corporations, because that’s mostly who’s filling up the rest of that list — all those law firms are lobbyists who represent nothing but big corporations.

So there’s your choice, America: the candidate who represents Wall Street versus the candidate who represents Big Corporations. It’s a long way to November, but it really doesn’t even matter who you choose, because nobody represents you or me.

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“This Is What Revolution Looks Like”

Now come the iconic images that will define the moment when Occupy Wall Street transformed from simple and somewhat uncertain protest into a serious opposition of the crimes and political usurpation of democracy by corporations and banks. And, as I am sure surprises no one at all, those images are of police brutality against peaceful demonstrators:

I, for one, have no doubt that some of these images will become as ingrained in our collective imagination as the Kent State shooting or the pictures of fire hoses unleashed on civil rights marchers in Alabama, and to much the same end: the demonstration of the failure of the authorities to respond appropriately to the demand for overdue justice and change and the desperate resort to violence and brutality.

Journalist Chris Hedges, who has become one of several “go-to” voices throughout the last couple of months for understanding the motivations and broader context of the Occupation, has written what I think is probably the closest thing to a manifesto to come out of the situation to date: “This Is What Revolution Looks Like” The very first paragraph reads like a call to arms:

Welcome to the revolution. Our elites have exposed their hand. They have nothing to offer. They can destroy but they cannot build. They can repress but they cannot lead. They can steal but they cannot share. They can talk but they cannot speak. They are as dead and useless to us as the water-soaked books, tents, sleeping bags, suitcases, food boxes and clothes that were tossed by sanitation workers Tuesday morning into garbage trucks in New York City. They have no ideas, no plans and no vision for the future.

Consider some of the other events of the past week in the context of what is occurring in New York, Oakland, and Portland: the leaders of Greece and Italy have both been replaced by Goldman Sachs “technocrats” to insure that those countries fulfill their obligations to the banks first, regardless of the economic hardships that they will impose on the public. Meanwhile, Tahrir Square in Cairo once again has turned into a battleground between the people and the military junta that took advantage of that revolution to seize power. You have to be stupid or willfully ignorant at this point not to see that this country is approaching a similar crossroads: the failure of our political system has been turned into a running joke by the endless series of “debates” among the hapless, impotent, and possibly deranged Republican presidential candidates, while the Congressional “supercommittee” prepares to walk away from any sort of serious negotiation. We don’t have to worry about whether or not a Goldman Sachs man is going to take over, because the last two Secretaries of the Treasury have been Goldman Sachs executives, and Goldman Sachs bankrolls Barack Obama. So the “beginning of the beginning” is fully upon us, and if you think the authorities will draw the line with some pepper spray and a little extra muscle in the squabble, you’re as delusional as those Republicans.

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How It Works

For the cheetahs, substitute the European Central Bank and Goldman Sachs. For the antelope, substitute Greece, Italy, Spain, Ireland, or possibly even France.

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Feed The World

Sarah Silverman has figured it out…all we need to do is sell the Vatican!

poverty ur doing it rong

While we’re at it, we also should be taking every last penny of the $21 billion bonus pool that Goldman Sachs has stolen and spend it all on clothing and housing and feeding as many people as possible in THIS country.

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Maybe The Message Is Getting Through, Maybe Not

Did you happen to read Tom Friedman’s op-ed in yesterday’s New York Times? Check this out:

Let’s today step out of the normal boundaries of analysis of our economic crisis and ask a radical question: What if the crisis of 2008 represents something much more fundamental than a deep recession? What if it’s telling us that the whole growth model we created over the last 50 years is simply unsustainable economically and ecologically and that 2008 was when we hit the wall — when Mother Nature and the market both said: “No more.”

Now, I don’t think Tom Friedman reads my little blog, but didn’t I basically say this just the other day? This is not just a downturn, it’s a threshold for changing the entire paradigm, kiddies, and throwing money at rich people isn’t going to cut the mustard.

Now the drums are starting to pound in the faraway hills, calling for the head of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. While Geithner undoubtedly has the support and blessings of President Obama, and Obama needs to take some heat on this too, it has been Geithner as the supposed “go-to guy” on the banking crisis who is starting to make Hank Paulson look like a freaking Chatty Cathy. Financial commentator Henry Blodget rants on at length about Geithner’s failure here and comes up with the following indictments:

Before taking office at the end of January, Tim Geithner had many months to develop a solid plan for what to do. He had the opportunity to see what was working and what wasn’t and to consult with dozens of experts, many of whom had no stake in the matter (unlike the Wall Street kingpins who seem to have shaped Geithner’s inaccurate view of the situation). He had the opportunity to see and understand that what America needs most right now is clarity and decisiveness.

Then he took office. In the five weeks since, Tim Geithner has:

* Given a speech billed as the solution to the financial crisis in which he promised something vague, someday, that sounded an awful lot like the bad plan that didn’t work in the past administration (which really isn’t that surprising, given that Geithner was the one who came up with the earlier bad plan).

* Floated multiple versions of the same plan into the press hoping that one would be enthusiastically received by someone other than Wall Street (no dice.)

* Refused to seriously discuss the consensus opinion of most neutral economists and experts: That the banking system is insolvent and that the solution is pre-privatization.

* Given Congressional testimony in which his brusque, defensive manner and weak responses have inspired no confidence and served only to make people wonder again why Obama picked him for the job.

and, most importantly, Tim Geithner has:

* Refused to revisit or defend his almost certainly inaccurate view that this crisis is merely a temporary price decline caused by a lack of liquidity, rather than a collapse of a debt-driven economy. You can’t cure the patient if you’re treating the wrong problem.

Now, I’ll say again that Barack Obama deserves almost as much blame for 1. picking Geithner because he knew the appointment would appease Republicans and 2. endorsing what was basically the Paulson Plan II even though it was clear before the inauguration that it was the wrong thing to do. And at some point I hope people are going to hold Obama to that. But for now, he should probably find someone who a) isn’t Larry Summers or Bob Rubin and b) paid his fucking taxes on time to replace him.

This somewhat lame defense of Geithner appeared in Tina Brown’s Daily Beast from BBC reporter Katty Kay. Kay’s arguments all stem from the political side of the equation, while Blodget’s critiques come from the policy side. In this particular situation, though, political arguments are probably the last line of defense anybody really wants to engage in. The reality is that the bank bailout situation remains an enormous failure that simply started with Bush and has continued with Obama and needs a new direction, which almost certainly requires a new point-man.

Oh, and while we’re at it, this post from CNBC commentator Barry Ritholtz ought to make the steam start pouring out of your ears, if it isn’t already. Ritholtz says that Bloomberg News reports that the bailout money that the government has been pouring into AIG is being funneled back to Goldman Sachs and other investment banks, not being used by AIG for its own situation. They are getting away with this because they don’t have to tell anybody what they are doing with the money. And guess what….Hank Paulson AND Tim Geithner are both former Goldman Sachs bigwigs…hmmm…

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