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Jim Hightower | Who Deserves Wall Street Bonuses?

    Wall Street bankers are really mad these days -- in both senses of that word!

    You'd think these whizzes of speculative finance would be ecstatically happy and filled with gratitude, not anger. After all, having crashed our economy, they were allowed to keep their cushy jobs, get bailed out with trillions of our tax dollars, and permitted to go right back to playing the same old casino games that had previously enriched them at our expense.

    Once again, such powerhouse outfits as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are raking-in tons of money -- and, as in the gilded days before Wall Street plunged Main Street into deep recession, bankers have promptly reverted to the selfish ethic of lavishing multimillion-dollar bonuses on themselves. Goldman, for example, has already set aside more than $16 billion to dole out as end-of-year bonuses for its bankers. That's a pace of self-enrichment that will siphon off nearly half of all the money that Goldman takes in this year!

    So, why are they mad? Because you and I are not showing them any love. Believe it or not, Wall Streeters actually expected that their return to grandiose banker bonuses would be greeted with huzzahs and "you the man" cheers from an admiring public, rather than another coast-to-coast explosion of anger.

    Arrogance and avarice seems to be so hardwired into these people that they view outlandish paydays as proof of their business acumen, productivity and success. The richer you are, the more worthy you are, goes their thinking, so not only do they feel entitled to cash, but also to high-fives and hugs from the hoi polloi.

    Excuse me, Your Royalnesses, but being mad at us for not cheering narcissism shows just how bull-goose mad you really are. In fact, if you get any goosier, you'll start flying south every winter.

    Especially infuriating is the ridiculous assertion by Wall Street elites that our bailout money was more of a burden than a help. Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, declared last month that he never would have accepted $10 billion from the Troubled Asset Relief Program "if I had known it was pregnant with this kind of potential for backlash."

    Blankfein's claim is that, while some TARP funds might have been of short-term use, they were not really crucial to the recovery of big banks like his, which quickly repaid the government to get rid of the "pregnancy."

    Rather, he explains, it was the good-old financial genius of bankers like him that guided Goldman back into the deep waters of prosperity -- and huge executive bonuses. He and other Wall Streeters are now using this argument in Washington to fend off new banking regulations, assuring lawmakers that the free market of finance is self-correcting and in good hands.

    Hold it right there, slick. TARP funds were the least of the bailout that you received and are still enjoying. First, $12.9 billion were quietly funneled to Goldman Sachs through last year's backroom bailout of insurance giant AIG -- money you're keeping.

    Second, by executive fiat, the Federal Reserve let Goldman magically metamorphose into a bank holding company so it could qualify for cheap funds from the central bank. Third, the FDIC (which exists to insure money that people deposit in banks) put its governmental guarantee behind billions of dollars in Goldman bonds, thus allowing the firm to raise even more capital very cheaply.

    Fourth, bank competition was deliberately and drastically reduced as part of the government's rescue effort, leaving Goldman free to pull more of the investment market into its monopolistic maw. Fifth, and probably most important, the federal government has made clear to speculators everywhere that Goldman will never be allowed to fail -- so take all the risks you want, for taxpayers will cover your losses. This is truly a priceless subsidy.

    Honesty has long been a stranger in Wall Street circles -- but even there, surely there's a tiny residue of honor that would compel them to admit that any bonus money should go to hard-pressed taxpayers, not to Wall Street's welfare kings.

Copyright 2009 Creators.com

 

  

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....."but even there, surely

....."but even there, surely there's a tiny residue of honor that would compel them to admit that any bonus money should go to hard-pressed taxpayers, not to Wall Street's welfare kings." The above comment is so right, so abundantly fair, clear and concise. Why are the taxpayers not treated equally, even royally, for their contribution? TBTF is as important as health care if the country is to be reclaimed as a democracy.

So obvious by now to all who

So obvious by now to all who have eyes to see the truth. History is repeating itself writ very large this time. As a still young supposed democracy we have a duty as a people to bring this madness to an end and return the control of circulating wealth to a game of fair advantage rather than Winner at the top takes all and crows about it, expecting the rest to not simply go blind to the truth but to celebrate their mad dash to selfish destruction!

Guys, guys, guys . . . It's

Guys, guys, guys . . . It's never been about "fair"; not even really about "greed". These feckless executives aren't even the ones (OK, undoubtedly some are)calling the shots! The ones too slippery and nefarious to be caught, fined or even regulated for the good of the overwhelming majority of the rest of us, are the guys who bet on the continuing and/or coming collapse, the guys who really profit from others' misery. That's total criminality but - and they will chuckle to themselves in a most satisfied way at your outrage - completely legal. As long as THOSE DUDES own the Government and the CEOs and the Boards . . . and don't forget the armies of Thugs, nothing will change. Their criminal lawyers are enmeshed with the good guys; their criminal judges are enmeshed with the good guys; their criminal legislators are on Dancing with the Stars, their criminal teachers pretend to instill values in your children, while creating legions of people who can't do anything but try to consume (actual consumption is harder these days). There's only one way: once they retreat into their gated fortresses, lay siege. Not with battering rams or even trebuchets . . . plug up the sewers. Eventually they will beg to be regulated, but it will get seriously, seriously horrible before that happens.

Jim, don't forget the

Jim, don't forget the accounting change that let them recook, er, rebalance their books. Magic accounting makes everything look good.