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Wall Street Robber Barons Ride Again

by: Robert Scheer  |  Truthdig

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Robert Rubin, President Bill Clinton's first Treasury secretary. Lawrence Summers, president-elect Barack Obama's key economic adviser, was a disciple of Rubin. (Photo: Zack Seckler / Bloomberg News)

    Why rush to throw another $350 billion of taxpayer money at the Wall Street bandits and their political cronies who created the biggest financial mess since the Great Depression? And why should we taxpayers be expected to double our debt exposure when the 10 still-secret bailout contracts made in the first round are being kept from the public?

    We don't have time, President-elect Barack Obama's key economic adviser, Lawrence Summers, insisted in a letter to Congress on Monday, promising that the new infusion would not be squandered as was the first installment. But given that Summers is personally as responsible for this meltdown as anyone, why should we trust him on this? Yes, it sounds wonderfully bipartisan that Obama is backing President Bush's request for spending the money now, short-circuiting congressional inquiry, but it was just that sort of bipartisan politics that created this nightmare.

    How insulting that we must now accept Summers' assurance that the Obama administration will "move quickly to reform a weak and outdated regulatory system to better protect consumers, investors and businesses." This from the guy who, as President Bill Clinton's treasury secretary, pushed the deregulation legislation making the subsequent financial crimes of Wall Street legal. The "toxic derivatives" that we taxpayers are now forced to purchase from the Wall Street hustlers were deliberately shielded from all government regulation, thanks to the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which Summers got Congress to pass in the closing days of the Clinton administration with the same urgency that he now pushes for the new Wall Street handout.

    Back then, Summers was a disciple of Robert Rubin, who just last week resigned from his director's position at Citigroup, the financial conglomerate that grew to unmanageable and corrupt proportions thanks to the empowering legislation that Rubin initiated when he was Clinton's first treasury secretary. Rubin has been paid more than $115 million plus stock options at Citigroup, and despite his horrid record is a close Obama adviser. It is one of the great swindles of U.S. financial history that Citigroup was bailed out with $45 billion in a deal that could eventually cost taxpayers an additional $269 billion to guarantee those toxic assets that would have been illegal if not for the legislation backed by Rubin and Summers.

    How did Obama allow himself to become ensnared with the very same folks who are the most culpable? His treasury secretary nominee, Timothy Geithner, is another Rubin protege, who, as head of the New York Fed, worked tirelessly with Rubin to concoct the Citigroup bailout. When candidate Obama gave his major economic address back on March 27, he couldn't have been clearer in condemning the deregulation that Rubin and Summers had engineered:

    "Unfortunately, instead of establishing a 21st century regulatory framework, we simply dismantled the old one - aided by a legal but corrupt bargain in which campaign money all too often shaped policy and watered down oversight. In doing so, we encouraged a winner-take-all, anything-goes environment that helped foster devastating dislocations in our economy."

    He was referring to the deregulation legislation that Summers hailed on the day that Clinton signed it into law as "a major step forward to the 21st century." Now Obama is relying on Summers to reverse a disaster of his own creation. It's like returning to the same surgeon who almost killed the patient in the first operation to once again cut open the body to repair the damage.

    What we need is a second opinion.

    Where is the openness and accountability that Obama promised? Why not pause for a few weeks for congressional hearings on how to spend the new money? We don't even know where the last batch went. On Monday, the Treasury Department finally agreed, and only after a subpoena threat, to turn over to Sen. Carl Levin and his Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations the 10 secret contracts that it signed with top Wall Street firms in the first round of the bailout. Unfortunately, the subcommittee has no plans to make those contracts public, according to a Levin aide quoted in The New York Times.

    That is outrageous. This is our money we're talking about. Why don't we get to read the fine print in what will end up being trillions of dollars in taxpayer obligations? Because we are suckers, that's why, and the folks who swindled us into this disaster can count on it.

  

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Comments

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I agree. Summer's is

I agree. Summer's is dangerous. Dean Baker pointed out that a business provision in the Obama stimulus crafted by Summers was a new bank bailout. We didn't get change on bailing out the financial sector, we get move of the same. What the hell is Barney Frank doing, according to Baker he's again favoring the banks and forgetting the homeowners being forclosed upon. Trillions of dollars backing up banks, nothing for in trouble homeowners. This shows you the state of our federal government. It's still controlled by special interests. We gotta throw the bums out, Dem or Rep. 8 Trillion dollars could change the world, instead we bail out weathy and corrupt people who don't deserve out money.

we may be the stupidest

we may be the stupidest nation in the history of the world; we had everything and we gave it all away to the BANKSTERS

What's the Big Hurry????

What's the Big Hurry???? Just hold off a bit. Scheer is right. Why the rush to give this big money away when we don't even know what it is going for - except for the awful feeling that it's going to them as has got enuf already.

I'm sorry...do we have a say

I'm sorry...do we have a say in this matter? No, of course we don't. They're going to do whatever they want to do, and they don't care what we think. Where, indeed, is the openness and accountability that Obama promised?

It`s high time somebody`s

It`s high time somebody`s ass goes to prison before another penny of tax dollars is handed over to the side-saddle sons-a-bitches responsible for having created this mess in the first place BEAR STERNES,GOLDMAN SACH`s, CARLYLE GROUP, JP MORGAN, CITIGROUP,BoA!

in the end the tax money

in the end the tax money used to bailout the rich is just another ponzi scheme. when the workers cant pay the last bubble will have burst.

The mortgage fiasco came to

The mortgage fiasco came to be when balloon payments home buyers could not afford kicked in right? RIGHT! Soooo just extend the balloon payments out to 10, 15 even 20 years on the STANDARD 30 year note everyone who buys a house uses AND you ignorant sob`s can simply take a percentage of the EQUITY over that extended period to offset the balloon if not eliminate it completely! AMAZING buyers stay in the home, the crooked banks bare the frigging burden of their ponzi scheme and the bleeping problem is solved and you can put that $350 Billion into direct funded from the bottom up rebuilding infrastructure!!!

Obama = Clinton(2) So we

Obama = Clinton(2) So we move from Neo-con to Neo-liberal. He so wanted to be the first black president he was willing to sell his soul to the devil. He's been backpedaling on progressive issues ever since his primary victory. His job now is to save Corporate Capitalism. It matters not if he and his cohorts bury the next generations in a mountain of debt. Meanwhile the outraged citizen watches helplessly as the elected representatives proceed with phase 2 of the reckless bailout of the financial institutions in direct contradiction of their expressed wishes. This is not how a Republic is supposed to work. The corruption continues. Don't look for this administration to pursue indictments against the many criminals who prospered during the Bush years.

As I stated during the

As I stated during the initial euphoria of Obama being elected president, all politicians are inherently crooked, and any politician that has a chance to achieve high office must sell their soul to someone. I said back then that we would have to see whose pocket Obama is in. Well, I guess we know now. And what's this with the hurry-up to commit the remaining TARP funds without consulting Congress first? I am always skeptical when I am told that I have to close on a deal now without being given a chance to do due diligence, and all Americans should be skeptical with regards to this latest scam as well. The USG needs to take those banks bleeding red ink and being given TARP bailout funds and nationalize them. This would allow the formation of a truly Government owned and controlled national bank so that we can abolish the FED. Then, our treasury can actually make money for the nation instead of pissing it away to the FED to pay the interest on our national debt. And yes, Government owned national banks do work and work well in Western countries, and they do in fact add to the nation's bottom line.

"Bipartisan" and

"Bipartisan" and "oligarchic" are synonyms. Money rules. There is no vision, and we perish. The good news is that things will improve after the perishing part is over, just as Egyptian harvests improve after the Nile floods. In the meantime, terrified, we are damaging our future and shortening our lives in our attempts to forestall an inevitable collapse. We need to adapt to reality, but instead we inject ourselves with the financial equivalent of amphetamine. It's going to make things much worse than they needed to be. Floods are normal and necessary. What's abnormal is the size of the backlog of floods that, in our hubris and cowardice, we've delayed for decades with various kinds of trickery, always borrowing from the commons. There's a limit to that, and we're reaching it at last.

What America looks like at

What America looks like at the beginning of the end of the experiment in representative democracy.

This foot stopping outrage

This foot stopping outrage is getting, well, a bit tedious. You know the drill, right? OK one more time. You start in day care at 6 mos because your parent or parents are working. At 5 you start schools that would be overcrowded if they were designed to do more than warehouse. Well, they are, actually. They are supposed to prepare you for frequent largely rote memory tests that determine your school’s, your teacher’s and your fate. The poorer your community, the less preparation. When you finish school, you can a) look for a low paying job (the first of many), or b) join the military which will not keep its promises to you if it doesn’t kill you in wars on behalf of Exxon then you do a), or c) go to college. If the latter, you leave with a huge debt (to private banks unknown to you on terms you never knew). You look for a job, but you’re “overqualified” for most and fail to stand out among the 1000 applicants for the few that might use what you paid that college tuition for. Finally you get to join a) and b) in a job that uses little to nothing of your education. Since you are a “managerial employee” you’re paid a pittance and required to work 60 hrs a week without overtime. Eventually, the CEO disappears and the company collapses or your job and/or company is sent overseas. Gotta get a new job, debt pressing. Sick? Tough luck. Repeat post sequence several times. No retirement money beyond disappearing SS, so work til you drop. Penury, hunger, isolation and splitting pills occupy your golden years. Got it now? Oh, almost forgot, the drill emphatically doesn’t apply to those provident enough to have chosen rich parents or sociopathic enough to have joined the better class of the rich.

We've been "punked" for

We've been "punked" for sure. Paulson wouldn't help bail out his old competitor, Lehman Bros, but gave billions to his former colleagues at Goldman Sachs who immediately used it to buy up their former competitor Lehman Bros. The simple fact of the matter is that our Congress is comprised primarily of millionaires whose wealth depends on Wall Street. Most of them, with a few exceptions, represent Wall Street and not the average citizen. There are a number of relatively simple solutions to some of the problems facing us now, but they are solutions that don't please the financial masters and so we'll never see them. Also, by the by, I'm kicking myself for falling for Obama's hype. I guess I just so desperately wanted to see some honor and morality put back into the government that I grasped at a straw. Now it's all coming out: no prosecutions even for those who committed war crimes, no arraignments for administrative officials who admit that they flaunted the law. It's going to be the same old story, but with a different cast of characters.