Barack Obama
- Crime
Boss
By Stephen Lendman
4-18-9
-
Reposted from
www.Rense.com
-
-
-
- Since taking
office, Obama, wittingly or otherwise, has headed the
largest criminal enterprise in history - the mass looting of
national wealth to enrich his Wall Street benefactors. He
assembled a rogue economic team of Clinton/Robert Rubin
retreads - to fix the current crisis they engineered.
-
- In a March 13
article, (author and former Republican strategist) Kevin
Phillips called them "recycled senior (Clinton
administration) Democrats (responsible for the) tech mania,
deregulation binge and (1997 - 2000) stock market bubble and
crash. (Obama) extend(ed) the (disastrous) mismanagement and
pro-Wall Street bias of the 2008 Bush regime bailout."
-
- He called Geithner
and Bernanke "hapless," the result of their ruinous
misjudgments (and, along with Alan Greenspan, complicit)
with finance-sector malfeasance."
-
- He said Summers
will be "remembered for helping to block federal regulation
of financial derivatives and orchestrat(ing) the 1999"
Glass-Steagall repeal, among his other "achievements." He
went down the list of key economic officials and trashed
them all as the very types to be avoided, not appointed.
-
- He noted that
Bernanke was chairman of George Bush's Council of Economic
Advisers and added: "Imagine if FDR had retained Herbert
Hoover's chief economic advisor and loyal Republican Fed
Chairman in 1933....To think that the pussycat Fed (would
become) a saber-toothed tiger is a deception." Worse still,
ruinous economic policies "could prove fatal" if White House
policies favor "Wall Street but not the national economy or
American people" - the very direction they've now taken.
-
- In a follow-up
April 7 article, Phillips highlighted "The Disaster Stage of
US Financialization....a much grander-scale disaster than
anything that happened in 1929 - 1933. Worse, it dwarfs the
abuses of debt, finance and financialization that brought
down previous leading world economic powers like Britain and
Holland."
-
- Today's crisis
represents "the bursting of the huge 25-year, almost $50
trillion debt bubble that helped underwrite the hijacking of
the US economy by a rabid financial sector...." It's
realigning global power with America losing its economic
leadership won in WW II.
-
- "The ignominy
deserved by Wall Street after 1929-1933 is peanuts compared
with the opprobrium the US financial sector and its
political and regulatory allies deserve this time."
Financialized America radically transformed the country, now
"doubly staggering because of the crushing burden of its
collapse."
-
- Yet major media
pundits and reporters barely noticed and now claim relief is
just a few quarters away - ignoring a metastasizing cancer,
a national disaster, while policy makers heap fuel on a
raging blaze now consuming us, yet too little public rage
confronts them.
-
-
A Former Insider Speaks Out
-
- Economics Professor
William Black is a former senior bank regulator and Savings
and Loan prosecutor, currently teaching economics and law at
the University of Missouri. In an April 13 Barrons
interview, he referred to "failed bankers (advising) failed
regulators on how to deal with failed assets" they all had a
hand in creating and proliferating.
-
- His conclusion:
"How can it result in anything but failure." He called the
scale of financial fraud "immense," and said "Unless the
current administration changes course pretty drastically,
the scandal will destroy Barack Obama's presidency," besides
what it's doing to the country, global economies, and many
millions of people here and abroad.
-
- He scathed Summers
and Geithner, both "important architects of (today's)
problems," and the latter as a failed and dishonest
regulator, yet "numbering himself among those who convey
tough medicine when he's really pandering to the interests
of a select group of banks." No need to mention which ones.
-
- The law mandates
corrective action, the kind FDR took in the 1930s. He,
Bernanke and Summers flout the law, "in naked violation, in
order to pursue the kind of favoritism that the law was
designed to prevent." They've turned taxpayers into
"suckers" who'll pay dearly for decades, maybe generations.
-
- His refusal to put
insolvent banks into receivership, resorting to deceptive
language like "legacy assets," and pursuing the worst of
Chicago School economics "is positively Orwellian....If
cheaters prosper, (they'll) dominate. It's like Gresham's
law: Bad money drives out the good. Well, bad behavior" does
the same thing "without good enforcement."
-
- His bailout plans
are disastrous. They prop up zombie banks by "mispricing
toxic assets....The last thing we need is a further drain on
our resources....by promoting this toxic asset market (and
notions of) too-big-to-fail."
-
- With most, perhaps
all, the big banks insolvent (a polite term for bankrupt),
what's going on is "a multi-trillion dollar cover-up by
publicly traded (enterprises), which amounts to felony
securities fraud on a massive scale."
-
- Ultimately, these
firms will be forced into receivership, their "managements
and boards stripped of office, title, and compensation."
What's needed is a 1930s-style Pecora investigation to get
to the bottom of their fraud, deceit, and cover-up, along
with government complicity to hide it. More on that below.
-
- Black cited
billions to AIG as the single worst abuse so far - to bail
out their counterparties like Switzerland's UBS at the same
time we were prosecuting it for tax fraud. As bad was
following Goldman Sachs' advice to direct a $13 billion
counterparty windfall to itself.
-
- The whole process
reeks of corruption. It must be stopped, and a new direction
instituted under a reformist economic team - one that will
admit the nature and depth of the problem, cut the tie to
Wall Street, and take corrective action the law mandates.
That's "precisely what isn't happening."
-
- Washington is
"wedded to the bad idea of bigness" and power of Wall
Street. In today's America, financialization is predominant.
It's a cancer eating away at the fabric of the nation and
many millions affected, the result of the grandest of grand
thefts.
-
- A good start would
be to break up the financial giants into more effectively
managed and less powerful units - maybe the way Standard Oil
was dismantled through a simple share spinoff. In addition,
"a new seriousness must be put into regulation," and a new
resolve to enforce it.
-
- Today, the whole
system encourages fraud, one based on results at any cost,
so "fudging the numbers" becomes de rigueur and global
bigness the holy grail. It sends the wrong message - play or
pay with your job and future on Wall Street. "The basis for
all regulation and white-collar crime is to take the
competitive advantage away from the cheats, so the good guys
can prevail. We need to get back to that." It's been decades
since we've been there and high time we took it seriously.
Job one is a thorough housecleaning and new direction, much
like what's described below.
-
- On April 3, Black
appeared on Bill Moyers Journal on PBS and explained what's
briefly enumerated below. From his experience as a regulator
and prosecutor, he said:
-
- -- fraud is
initiated in boardrooms and CEO offices by making "really
bad loans, because they pay better;"
-
- -- then grow them
like a Ponzi scheme multiplied through leverage; it's hugely
profitable early on, then inevitably creates "disaster down
the road;"
-
- -- dismantling
regulation makes it possible;
-
- -- one scheme was
subprime, Alt-A , and even prime "liars' loans" - meaning no
checks are made on income, jobs, ability to repay, and the
more they're inflated the more profitable they are; the
amount of them was enormous - for one company alone, they
generated as many losses as the entire S & L scandal;
-
- -- toxic products
were willfully created to scam borrowers for big profits;
-
- -- rating agencies
went along by appraising junk as AAA instead of doing it
honestly;
-
- -- in September
2004, the FBI warned about a mortgage fraud epidemic, but
nothing was done to stop it; so now we have a crisis
hundreds of times greater than the S & L one and bad policy
in play to address it;
-
- -- as in Barrons,
he accused top Bush and Obama officials of a cover-up - to
conceal the insolvency of all major banks and by so doing
broke the law established after the S & L crisis, the Prompt
Corrective Action Law that mandates insolvent banks be shut
down and/or placed in receivership; and
-
- -- this is the
greatest financial scandal in history - swept under the rug
by top government officials of both parties; it's legally
and morally indefensible, and it's wrecking the country.
-
- In an April 6
article, Black calls ongoing "stress tests a complete
sham....to fool people....make us chumps" and essentially
say 'If we lie and they believe us, all will be well" when,
in fact, it's not. It's part of the giant cover-up and
greatest ever criminal fraud - by bankers and complicit
government officials.
-
- On April 13,
Nouriel Roubini shared Black's view. He cited the stress
test "spin machine" leaking stories to the press that all 19
banks in question will pass. None will fail. If more
"exceptional assistance" is needed, Washington will provide
it.
-
- However, Q 1 macro
data tells another story as growth, unemployment, and
falling home prices alone "are worse than those in FDIC's
baseline scenario for 2009 AND even worse than those for the
more adverse stressed scenario for 2009. Thus, the stress
test results are meaningless" as worsening data are
outdistancing "the worst case scenario."
-
- In other words,
test results "are not worth the paper (they'll be) written
on" as their assumptions are fraudulently based. They're
"fudge tests....blatantly rigged" to put a brave face on a
very bleak economic picture.
-
- They're in addition
to other changes, including the recent Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) ruling. It's responsible for
developing "generally accepted accounting principles" known
as GAAP. On April 3, it changed so-called "mark-to-market"
standards to "mark-to-make believe" ones. It also voted to
allow banks to book smaller impaired asset losses to paint a
brighter profits picture. It let Wells Fargo, for example,
claim a Q 1 profit when it's drowning in losses, ones it can
hide and not take.
-
- Also likely coming
is restoration of the "uptick rule" that prohibited
short-selling in a down market. Established in 1938 to
prevent disorderly selling, it allows shorts only when
shares trade up. In June 2007, it was removed.
Re-introductory proposals are now being considered to
artificially boost prices.
-
- Roubini calls it "a
form of legalized manipulation of the stock market by
regulators....to prevent short-sellers (from doing) their
job, i.e. make stock prices reflect fundamentals and prevent
bubbles."
-
- Overall, alarm
bells should be warning about reckless monetary and fiscal
policies, but perverse market reaction was relief that's
wildly premature according to some like Roubini. Others see
a protracted downturn, a prolonged winter, and if conditions
deteriorate enough perhaps a nuclear one, unlike anything
before seen, and why not:
-
- -- world economies
are plummeting at depression-level speed by all key measures
- production, consumption, trade, profits, asset values,
capital flows, and more;
-
- -- unemployment is
soaring; in America close to 20% with all excluded and
understated categories included;
-
- -- pensions have
been lost along with benefits;
-
- -- homelessness is
rising sharply, the result of over six million foreclosures;
tent cities are appearing across the country;
- -- recent data
shows soaring foreclosures up 24% in Q 1 2009; in March
alone, 46% higher than a year earlier - alone providing
clear evidence of serious trouble; and
-
- -- desperation is
fueling anger and despair as conditions keep deteriorating
absent sound policies to address them.
-
- On April 6,
Professor Vernon Smith (a 2002 economics Nobel laureate) and
research associate Steven Gjerstad headlined a Wall Street
Journal op-ed: "From Bubble to Depression?" They asked:
-
- -- what creates
bubbles?
-
- -- why does a large
one, like the dot.com bubble, do no damage to the financial
system while another (housing) caused collapse?
-
- They believe
"events of the past 10 years have an eerie similarity to the
period leading up to the Great Depression," including rising
mortgage debt and speculation, then asked:
-
- Had banking system
difficulties "been caused by losses on brokers loans for
margin purchases in 1929, the results should have been felt
in the banks immediately after the stock market crash." But
they weren't apparent until fall 1930, a year later.
-
- Further, if money
supply contraction caused bank failures, why haven't massive
infusions today prevented the crisis? They conclude that
conventional wisdom needs reassessing and believe "excessive
consumer debt - especially mortgage debt - was transmitted
into the financial sector" causing the Great Depression.
-
- Their hypothesis
"is that a financial crisis (originating) in consumer debt,
concentrated at the low end of the wealth and income
distribution (affecting so many households), can be
transmitted quickly and forcefully into the financial
system....we're witnessing the second great consumer debt
crash, the end of a massive consumption binge," but want
more study to prove it.
-
- However, much more
than that is needed - real reform, a complete reversal from
current policy of the kind addressed below. Also, Smith and
Gjerstad omitted a crucial fact - how misdirected today's
massive infusions have been. Instead of helping beleaguered
households, they've gone mostly to bankers for purposes
other than economic recovery; namely, recapitalizations, for
acquisitions, and big bonuses at the same time they fire
thousands of lower level staff.
-
-
The 1930s Pecora Commission
-
- On March 4, 1932
(one year to the day before FDR took office), a
majority-Republican Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs Committee established it to investigate the causes
of the 1929 crash. It was little more than a fig leaf until
Democrats took over, appointed Ferdinand Pecora as special
counsel, and made a real effort for banking and regulatory
reform.
-
- Straightaway,
Pecora looked into Wall Street's seamy underside by placing
powerful bankers in the dock, holding them accountable for
their actions, and doing through hearings what would have
been impossible in open court given their ability to "buy"
justice.
-
- He confronted Wall
Street's biggest names:
-
- -- Richard Whitney,
president of the New York Stock Exchange;
-
- -- noted investment
bankers, including Thomas Lamont, Otto Kahn, Charles E.
Mitchell, Albert Wiggin, and JP Morgan, Jr., scion of the
man who dominated the Street for decades as its boss and de
facto Fed chairman before the central bank was established;
and
-
- -- market
speculators like Arthur Cutten.
-
- He got Morgan to
admit that he and his 20 partners paid no income taxes in
1931 and 1932. Neither did its Philadelphia operation,
Drexel and Co., in the same years and way underpaid them in
previous ones. It made headlines, was stunning, and
galvanized critics to demand reform.
-
- Pecora went
further. He questioned Morgan and others on various matters,
including sweetheart deals for political figures and insider
ones for Wall Street cronies, similar shenanigans to today
but not on the same scale, and under a president then who
cared once Roosevelt took office. He directed "pitiless
publicity" on Street corruption, what they easily got away
with under Republicans.
-
- Pecora was a former
New York district attorney, an Eliot Spitzer-type with a
reputation for toughness and fearlessness, but one serving
at the behest of the President. He established straightaway
that some of Wall Street's most powerful lied to their
shareholders, manipulated stocks to their advantage, and
profited hugely through malfeasance.
-
- Roosevelt
encouraged him in his March 4, 1933 inaugural address
saying:
-
- "there must be a
strict supervision of all banking and credits and
investments; there must be an end to speculation with other
people's money, and there must be provision for an adequate
but sound currency....the rulers of the exchange of
mankind's goods have failed through their own stubbornness
and their own incompetence, have admitted their failure and
abdicated. Practices of the unscrupulous money changers
stand indicted in the court of public opinion, rejected by
the hearts and minds of men...."
-
- "They know only the
rules of a generation of self-seekers. They have no vision,
and when there is no vision the people perish. The money
changers have fled their high seats in the temple of our
civilization. We must now restore that temple to the ancient
truths. (Doing it requires) apply(ing) social values more
noble than mere monetary profit."
-
- Imagine Obama
saying this, followed by strong policies for enforcement
under Roosevelt-style officials. Men like Pecora who asked
tough questions and demanded answers, including on the House
of Morgan's operations, something unimaginable today under
any leadership. Morgan's counsel, John W. Davis, called
Pecora's questions outrageous, but Morgan had to answer in
detail enough to shake the "secret government's"
foundations.
-
- Pecora's staff
examined company records that revealed financial
manipulations among the Street's powerful to reap enormous
profits - enough for Morgan to gain control of most US
industry, buy politicians and diplomats, and effectively
control the most powerful banks in the country.
-
- Years later in his
book, Wall Street Under Fire, Pecora wrote:
-
- "Undoubtedly, this
small group of highly placed financiers, controlling the
very springs of economic activity, holds more real power
than any similar group in the United States." Morgan called
it performing a "service" and exercising no more control
than through "argument and persuasion."
-
- His managing
partner, Thomas Lamont, told the committee that the firm
only offered advice that clients could accept or reject.
Pecora learned otherwise as he peeled away the layers of
company power and influence. He discovered "preferred
clients" and friends of the bank lists in two tiers -
special allies, operatives, and cronies and a "fishing list"
from which new ones were recruited. In total, it showed
Morgan was more powerful than Washington - that the firm
effectively controlled a network of companies that made US
financial policy for over three decades plus leading
politicians and much of the federal bench.
-
- Pecora discovered
what's as true today - that a select group of giant banks
run things. They set policy, rig the game to their
advantage, buy politicians the way Morgan did, and pretty
much run the country and the world.
-
- Again Pecora from
his book:
-
- Morgan's power was
"a stark fact. It was a great stream that was fed by many
sources; by its deposits, by its loans, by its promotions,
by its directorships, by its pre-eminent position as
investment bankers, by its control of holding companies
which, in turn, controlled scores of subsidiaries, and by
its silken bonds of gratitude in which it skillfully
enmeshed the chosen ranks of the 'preferred lists.' It
reached into every corner of the nation and penetrated in
public, as well as business affairs. The problems raised by
such an institution go far beyond banking regulation in the
narrow sense. It might be a formidable rival to the
government itself."
-
- Pecora proceeded
from Morgan to others, powerful bankers in their own right
like Kuhn, Loeb's Otto Kahn. Roosevelt championed the
hearings and from them came legislative reforms, the kinds
so desperately needed now but nowhere in sight by an
administration totally subservient to money and power and
thoroughly corrupted by them - after a scant three months in
office.
-
- Congressional
Oversight Panel (COP) Calls for Sweeping Changes
-
- Its head, Elizabeth
Warren, called on the Treasury to get tough on TARP
recipients, including:
-
- -- questioning the
"dangers inherent" in its strategy; the idea of "open-ended
subsidies (to giant institutions) without adequately
weighing potential pitfalls;"
-
- -- acknowledging
that it has no historical precedent and faint hope of
succeeding;
-
- -- leveraging the
$700 billion in TARP funds well beyond what Congress
appropriated - to an amount exceeding $4 trillion and
smacking of high-level corruption;
-
- -- firing top
executives of failed institutions like Citigroup, Bank of
America and AIG; "the very notion that anyone would infuse
money into a financially troubled entity without demanding
(management) changes is preposterous;"
-
- -- shareholders to
be wiped out; "it is crucial (for this) to happen;"
-
- -- choosing among
three alternatives for insolvent banks: "liquidation,
receivership, or subsidization;" Geithner's plan is none of
the above and essentially unworkable; it fails to
acknowledge the decline's depth and degree to which troubled
assets low valuations accurately reflect their worth;
-
- -- if the downturn
gets greater than forecast, "very different actions" will be
needed "to restore financial stability."
-
- Given the extent
and long-term nature of today's crisis, it's shocking that
bad policy practically assures the worst outcome. Maybe a
government/Wall Street cabal prefers it to capitalize on the
wreckage at fire sale prices, at home and globally, as part
of a long-term process of sucking wealth to the top while
ignoring its fallout, both human and economic. Those
calculations don't enter their sophisticated models, only
bottom line ones they can bank on.
-
-
Other Bank Bailout Critics
-
- Willem Buiter was a
former member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy
Committee (1997 - 2000). He's now has a Maverecon blog and
is a Financial Times (FT) regular. He's also a fierce critic
of bank bailouts, a policy he says wastes good time and
money and is destined to fail.
-
- "The good bank
solution and slaughter of the unsecured creditors should
have been pursued actively as soon as it became clear that
most (US international banks were) insolvent." Soon enough
it will be apparent anyway, before year end. "At that point,
(their) de facto insolvency will be so self-evident that
even the joint and several obfuscation of banks and Treasury
will be unable to deny the obvious." And they'll be no
fiscal resources to the rescue. "The likelihood of Congress
voting even a nickel in additional financial support for the
banks is zero."
-
- Joseph Stiglitz was
even blunter in an April 17 Bloomberg interview headlined: "Stiglitz
Says White House Ties to Wall Street Doom Bank Rescue." He
accused the administration of bailing out bankers at the
expense of the economy. "All the ingredients they have so
far are weak, and there are several missing" ones. The
people who created this monster are "either in the pocket of
the banks or they're incompetent."
-
- "We don't have
enough money, they don't want to go back to Congress, they
don't want to do it in an open way, and they" won't act
responsibly and place the banks in receivership where they
belong and let shareholders, not taxpayers take the pain.
This policy guarantees failure. It's "an absolute mess."
It's a strategy to re-inflate a bubble that will do nothing
to speed recovery. "It's a recipe for Japanese-style
malaise."
-
- Financial expert
and investor safety advocate Martin Weiss is most critical
of all. He calls bank stress tests "FLIM-FLAM" in accusing
Washington of hiding the true condition of the nation's 19
largest banks.
-
- Key economic
indicators like GDP contraction and unemployment are far
worse than stress test parameters. "Our own government is
clearly cooking the books - using (false) criteria to
deceive you; hoping you'll trust banks that are clearly
hanging by a thread."
-
- On May 4, they'll
announce the results - jerry-rigged to present an illusion
of solvency, but clearly a deceptive lie. The economy is
sinking, not stabilizing, let alone recovering. The
administration is bailing out bankers while wrecking the
economy and millions of households. Why isn't Washington
addressing the tough questions, he asks. Because the answers
have them "terrified," so they play for time while home
foreclosures are exploding, factories are sitting idle,
consumption keeps falling, yet they hope conditions will
improve.
-
- No one asks:
-
- -- what if states
and cities can't provide vital services;
-
- -- hospitals have
to close down "due to disruptions in insurance payments;"
-
- -- "supermarket
shelves are emptied because trucking companies can't get
short-term loans to stay in business;"
-
- -- utilities "are
crippled as the crisis kills the revenues they count on from
corporations;" and
-
- -- "soaring
deficits drive interest rates sky-high and gut the dollar,
driving the cost of living through the roof."
-
- What if one day we
discover America is no longer America. What if we realize
that day is today.
-
- Another Day,
Another Scheme
-
- The latest one lets
ordinary people participate in Geithner's Public-Private
Partnership Program (PPIP) that sounds suspiciously like
"liars' loan" fraud, except this time "investments" in
worthless junk are involved that will separate fools from
their money.
-
- The New York Times
headlined the plan by comparing it to WW I Liberty Bonds
that helped the country win the war. Now it's "to come to
the aid of their banks - with the added inducement of
possibly making some money...." The idea is for "large
investment companies to create the financial-crisis
equivalent of war bonds: bailout funds" to sucker the unwary
to "invest" and, simultaneously, quiet opposition to the
handouts.
-
- According to money
management firm BlackRock director Steven Baffico: "It's
giving the guy on Main Street an equal seat at the table
next to the big guys." Pimco's Bill Gross called it a
"win-win-win policy." Absolutely for him so he loves it.
-
- Plans are still
being discussed. They won't likely be announced for several
months, but already the scheme is apparent. It's to offload
toxic junk on the public, let unwary investors take losses,
relieve troubled banks of more of them, and arrange for
investment fund issuers (like Pimco and BlackRock) to reap
healthy fees if enough suckers can be enlisted to go along.
-
- As troublesome is
FDIC's role in the scam - through its transformation from
insuring depositors to a much greater one guaranteeing over
$1 trillion in junk assets, way over its charter $30 billion
limit by twisting the rules to arrange it.
-
- Its charter allows
extraordinary steps to be taken when an "emergency
determination by secretary of the Treasury" is made to
mitigate "systemic risk." However, its Section 14 Borrowing
Authority states:
-
- "The Corporation is
authorized to borrow from the Treasury....for insurance
purposes (not speculation, bailouts, or other schemes, an
amount) not exceeding in the aggregate $30,000,000,000
outstanding at any one time....Any such loan shall be used
by the Corporation solely in carrying out its functions with
respect to such insurance (of bank deposits, then up to
$5000, now temporarily at $250,000)...."
-
- "Before issuing an
obligation or making a guarantee, the Corporation shall
estimate the cost of such obligations (as well as market
value)....the Corporation may not issue or incur any
obligation, if, after (so doing) the aggregate amount of
obligations of the Deposit Insurance Fund (exceeds) the
total of the amounts authorized ($30 billion under) section
14(a)."
-
- PPIP violates FDIC
rules. If it's opened to the public, greater fraud will
result with ordinary people hit hardest as usual, the best
reason to avoid this and alert others to be as prudent. It's
another dubious scheme to separate the unwary from their
money and redirect it to the top - to the same fraudsters
responsible for the crisis and their investment company
partners going along with the scam.
-
- The Treasury
extended the deadline for PPIP participants (to April 24)
and loosened some of its guidelines - suggesting that
investor support has been less than expected.
-
- However, on April
2, the Financial Times (FT) headlined: "Bailed-out banks eye
toxic asset buys." Giants like JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup,
Bank of America, and Goldman Sachs "are considering buying
(each other's) toxic assets," and why not when it's a
win-win way to offload each other's junk, do it at inflated
prices, and stick taxpayers with the risk. New York
University's Stern School of Business Professor Lawrence
White put it this way:
-
- "I'm worried about
the following scenario: You and I have troubled assets, I
buy assets from you, you buy them them from me, and at the
end of the day it (looks) suspiciously like you bought
assets from yourself" with Treasury funds.
-
- PPIP prohibits
banks from buying their own assets but lets them do it from
other firms, either directly or through investment funds set
up for that purpose, and according to Treasury: "It's an
open program designed to get markets going."
-
- On April 3, Reuters
reported that "US regulators may be open to letting TARP
recipients participate in the new program," and already
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley suggested they'll do it.
Others expressed interest in what some observers call a
giant money laundering scheme compounding the colossal
flimflam that in the end most likely won't work - except to
extract multi-trillions from the public to banksters with
Washington acting complicitly as transfer agent.
-
- Meanwhile economic
fundamentals are deteriorating at depression-level speed and
depth while Obama remains in denial. On April 2 at the G 20,
he cited "a very productive summit that will be, I believe,
a turning point in our pursuit of global economic recovery"
when, in fact, it produced nothing beyond the usual hype -
plus this time the quadrupling of the IMF's budget to
inflict
- debt bondage on its
willing partakers.
-
- We're clearly in
early stage unchartered waters of what Michel Chossudovsky
calls "The Great Depression of the 21st Century" heading
America for "fiscal collapse" because of policies amounting
to "the most drastic curtailment in public spending in
American history" - directing most of it for militarism and
foreign wars, Wall Street bailouts, and half a trillion for
public debt service.
-
- In an April 12
commentary, longtime, well-respected Chicago financial
journalist Terry Savage headlined "Social Security Myth" in
reporting on some of the fallout. Someone has to pay for
"fixes" and militarism, that someone is us, and target one
is Social Security. According to Savage:
-
- "Most likely,
Social Security will become a "needs-based" payout to low
income, elderly recipients - not a return of the
'investments' you made with all those FICA deductions from
your pay check every month over your working career." In
other words, Washington intends to renege on the 74-year old
promise FDR announced to the nation on August 14, 1935:
-
- "Today a hope of
many years' standing is in large part fulfilled....This
social security measure gives at least some protection to
thirty millions of our citizens (now over 56 million,
including Supplement Security Income recipients) who will
reap direct benefits....This law represents a cornerstone in
a structure....by no means complete. (It) will take care of
human needs and at the same time provide the United States
an economic structure of vastly greater soundness. (The
passage of this bill marks) a historic (achievement) for all
time."
-
- It's now in
jeopardy, so here's what Savage advises. Prepare. "Save more
money, (and) start from an honest assessment" of what's
coming. What FDR gave will be taken away. "And that's The
Savage Truth." A disturbing and outrageous one as well as
all the other ways we've been betrayed.
-
-
- Stephen Lendman is
a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog
site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday -
Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions
with distinguished guests on world and national issues. All
programs are archived for easy listening.
-
-
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13225
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Occupy Wall Street:
Change will not come until we Understand
and Rewrite the Entire Balance of Power in America
The Land Destroyer #OccupyWallStreet Guide
by Tony Cartalucci
October 9, 2011 reproduced from
Global Research,
As
Americans begin pouring into the streets with
dissatisfaction,
there seems to be some confusion as to
who the source of their problem is.
That 'who' is a corporate-financier oligarchy
that has
been destroying America
Contents
Introduction
1. The Federal Reserve
Directors
2. The Group of Thirty
3. President Obama's
Cabinet, Past & Present
4.
America's Unelected Policy Makers & Their Corporate
Sponsors
5. Solutions

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