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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Just in Time for Christmas

As day after day of misery goes by in the lives of the little folks crushed by the financial crisis, one question lies in the back of their minds. Who did this to us? Who’s looking for them and when will they be punished? We have known the answer to the first question for some time. The Wall Street investment banks’ sophisticated (read Crappy) investment packages whipped up a perfect storm.

They sold this Crap (their term not ours) to people who should have known better based largely on stellar ratings from the agencies charged with vetting these investments. The ratings agencies were pushed by their customers (big banks)  and did not look – as hard as they should – at the packages.

And it turns out that the bailout bucks we knew about (TARP) were nothing when compared to the zero interest loans the Federal Reserve was handing out to keep the banks afloat, trillions in secret loans. Bloomberg Markets Magazine blew the lid off this program. It was ten times the size of TARP.  By far the biggest hunk of these bucks (63% of the daily average) went to the same gang that got us into this mess – six humongous banks.

How did these half-dozen too-big-to-fail banks position themselves to come out of any crisis they might create covered in gold? Over a couple of decades they conned Congress into repealing the laws designed to prevent things like the 2008 crash. They even got “The Fools on the Hill” (AKA the Congress) to exempt banks from State Lottery laws. Who helped this along?  Clinton’s Secretary of the Treasury, Robert Rubin, fresh from 26 years and the top job at Goldman Sachs.

When the house of cards collapsed, who came up with the plan to save the banks? Bush Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson, fresh from the top job at Goldman Sachs, led the charge to save his comrades.  It gets even better; in 2006 Goldman Sachs was able to foresee that the crap was really crappy and likely to crash. Did they sound the alarm? Of course not, that might have interfered with their efforts to sell crap to their customers. Instead they bet it would crash and reaped a huge profit.

What ties this all together? Two of the key players, Rubin and Paulson, both came from Goldman at just the right moment to get rid of the pesky banking laws. So in addition to the efforts of all the banking lobbyists, you might say it was an “Inside Job.”

However, our wait to make those responsible pay may be nearly over. The SEC has charged six former Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac executives. More important, New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and other State AGs are looking at criminal and civil charges. It would be nice to see a few of the arrogant bankers on their way to jail?  When you think about it, what they did was harmful than Bernie Madoff’’s scams. “Pants-on-Fire” Goldman CEO, Lloyd Blankfein has another view; bankers, he says, are “doing God’s work.”

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