It’s funny that during the run-up to the first War on Terror, Wall Street had such an
active hand in exploiting the tragedy of 9/11. Thousands upon thousands of puts
short-sold United and American Airlines stocks and WTC-based Morgan Stanley
stock plunged; similarly calls (bets to rise) on defense and related stocks
sent them soaring on that awful day, the War
on Terror’s inciting incident.
Today, we can count on Wall Street again to supply us with
what Warren Buffett calls Weapons of Mass Financial Destruction to strike
terror not just in the hearts of investors, but workers, businessmen, retired
people, the unemployed, the middle-and-working classes and the poor, leaving
our financial system like another Ground Zero, with masses of open-mouthed
crowds and teary-eyed families hovering about it, losing resources and jobs
that took a lifetime to grow.
We’ve come so easily to live with terms like derivates,
credit default swaps, subprime lending, toxic mortgages, collateralized debt
obligations, all of which we’re told by the OTHER
KATHERINE HARRIS add up to some “$1.4 Quadrillion, more money than there is
in all the world (at least till Ben Bernanke turned on the printing press
lately).” They are lethal in the extreme, created by a shadow market, a
criminal market, designed to loot our financial system.
These are instruments of debt created for profit, by a
handful of big banksters and credit companies, knowing how harmful they could
be to banking, mortgage lending, and any credit institutions. Salesmen for the
aforementioned made beaucoup cash on commissions, shoving them downstream to
investment banks, securities and bond firms, and watching them collateralized
into stocks and bonds, sold into corporate, union, institutional and private
portfolios, retirement funds, IRAs, 401Ks, name it.
As with 9/11, these were not demonized Muslims with
box-cutters who brought the financial system down like the World Trade Center.
These were greedy salesmen, morally-bankrupt brokers, bankers, investment
managers who spread the word, as Bernard Madoff did, to profit-anxious clients,
friends, religious organizations, schools, foundations, and so on. These were
and continue to be the true terrorists, homegrown, heartless, even your
neighbor, working in their cells to topple our financial system. Was it a
conspiracy? If you define that word as a group of people working towards common
ends that would harm millions of people, yes, it was a conspiracy.
What is amazing is how the terrorists blended into the
landscape, well-dressed, well-healed, racking up six, seven, eight figure
incomes and more. It seems their only allegiance was and is to their greed,
which as Gordon Gecko tells us in Oliver Stone’s film Wall Street, is good. Yes, greed is good, with that wild Michael
Douglas stare, another Master of the
Universe, as in Tom Wolfe’s market-maven novel.
What’s more amazing is how Congress unknowingly or not paved
the way for the last 30 years at least for new improved, more devastating
Weapons of Mass Financial Destruction by removing protective legislation, the
last being the uptick rule,
which Pail Crag Roberts speaks about in How the
Economy Was lost.
Wiki
tells us, “The uptick rule
is a securities trading rule used to regulate short
selling in financial markets. The rule mandates, subject to certain
exceptions, that, when sold, a listed security must either be sold short at a price above
the price at which the immediately preceding sale was effected or at the last
sale price if it is higher than the last different price. In 1938, the SEC adopted the uptick
rule, more formally known as rule 10a-1, after conducting an inquiry into the effects of concentrated
short selling during the market break of 1937. The original rule was
implemented by Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., the first SEC
commissioner.”
Despite the fact that the uptick rule was a marvelous
defense against short selling, which can drive a market down as wildly as those
we’ve recently seen, “The SEC
eliminated the uptick rule on July 6, 2007. The elimination of the rule was
preceded by a SEC order, placed on July 28, 2004, to create a one-year pilot
temporarily suspending the uptick rule on select securities.
“The purpose of the suspension was so that the commission
could study the effectiveness of the rule. The SEC’s Office of Economic
Analysis and academic researchers provided the SEC with analysis of the data
obtained during a six-month period starting May 2, 2005. The consensus was
against the uptick rule, with the commission concluding that the uptick rule ‘modestly
reduce[d] liquidity and do[es] not appear necessary to prevent manipulation . .
. ’” So they studied it and killed it.
Yet “The rule was originally put in place to avoid the
perpetration of a financial crime known as a bear raid.
However, short sellers themselves viewed the rule as ‘largely symbolic’ and
having little actual effect on short selling.” What else would short sellers
say, “get rid of it, it’s killing us?” Not.
Calls for reinstatement
“On August 27, 2007, the New York Times published an article
on Muriel
Siebert, former state banking superintendent of New York, “Wall Street
veteran and financial sage,” and, in 1967, the first woman to become a member
of the New York Stock Exchange. In this article she expressed severe concerns
about market volatility: ‘We’ve never seen volatility like this. We’re watching
history being made.’ Siebert pointed to the uptick rule, saying, ‘The S.E.C.
took away the short-sale rule and when the markets were falling, institutional
investors just pounded stocks because they didn’t need an uptick . . . ’
“On the March 20, 2008 episode of Mad Money,
Jim Cramer
launched his campaign to reinstate the uptick rule. Citing the wild swings of
the market since its elimination, Cramer said that the SEC eliminated the rule
during a bull
market, when liquidity was not a problem. Cramer believes that, without
the uptick rule in place, short sellers are devaluing perfectly solid stocks.
On the Friday 22, 2008 episode, Jim Cramer
further underscored the true scale of the absence of the uptick rule,
exclaiming that Obama must “reinstate [the uptick rule], a rule put in place to
prevent a repeat of the great crash.
“On September 18, 2008, Republican presidential candidate
and Senator John McCain said that the SEC allowed short-selling to
turn ‘our markets into a casino.’ Sen. McCain criticized the SEC and its
Chairman for eliminating the uptick rule.
“On October 6, 2008, Erik Sirri, director of the Securities
and Exchange Commission’s Division of Trading and Markets, said that the SEC is
considering bringing back the uptick rule, stating, ‘It’s something we have
talked about and it may be something that we in fact do.’
“On October 17, 2008, the New York Stock Exchange reported a survey
with 85% of its members being in favor of reinstating the uptick rule with the
dominant reason to ‘help instill market confidence.’”
As of Thursday, February 26, Jim Cramer’s The
Street.Com, quotes him as saying Fed chief Bernanke recently “talked of
reinstating the uptick rule, which was put in place after the Great Depression,
but recently repealed by former SEC Chairman Christopher Cox. The uptick rule,”
Cramer said, “prevents short sellers from relentlessly beating down a stock by
requiring an uptick, a moment of strength, before shares can be sold short.” So
there’s a ray of hope
Maybe now we can consider repealing the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act, CFMA, which included “The Enron Loophole,”
signed by Bill Clinton in 2000; or reinstating the Glass Steagall Act
repealed in 1999 by the Gramm-Leach Bliley Act. The Glass Steagall Act created
the kinds of protections we had before Clinton. Both were signed around
Christmas when Congress must have been out shopping and two gifts from Santa
came down the chimney for the banking and securities industries.
This non-enforcement of laws and protection, too, is also
similar to the lead up to 9/11, during which worldwide warnings about a large
attack involving hijacked airliners on the US and/or the WTC went unheeded by
the FBI and CIA. Those warnings that were heeded and managed to seep through to
the White House went unheeded there, as if the highest levels of the
administration wanted the tragedy to occur. Could that possibly be? That would
make 9/11 another kind of conspiracy, the box-cutter wielding Muslims mere
patsies, strings pulled by larger politically elite hands.
The long-range goals of the two conspiracies, at the WTC and
nearby Wall Street, had a common objective: to severely harm the United States.
In fact, we seemed to glide from 9/11 ever so gracefully via a building and
housing bubble into the Wall Street
Terror. Could the same hands be at work, attempting to reduce us to a Third
World Country, to bankrupt us, to enslave our working classes in poverty, and
to make the top 10 percent earners the inheritors of their wealth? Yes they
could be.
Who will fight back
now?
The current administration seems somewhat bewildered if not
in a fog about who gets what bailout or stimulus. Let’s make it simple for
them. As much as possible, this money should go directly to benefit the people
of the United States, the unemployed, those in danger of losing their homes,
those whose savings and investments have been wrecked, those who are hanging by
a thread, those who are ill, aging, young and healthy and ready to grow. It
shouldn’t be handed out to banks to sit on or give themselves bonuses and jet
planes.
So, President Obama, focus beyond your inspiring speech, on
the above mentioned and let AIG and the banks crumble in their juices, with no
one to blame but themselves for their tumbles, and make some examples by punishing
the CitiGroups and Countrywides of the US for their Ignorance, Arrogance and
Greed. Save the money for where it’s needed most, as you put it: job creation,
energy, education, healthcare, and start reducing, not encouraging, further
debt, personal or national.
It can be done. By busting these financial trusts that our
sucking the blood money out of the body of the nation to feed themselves like vampires.
If not, you will find as Chris Hedges points out in The
Economy Sucks and or Collapse 2 that as Admiral Dennis Blair testified
before Washington’s new director of national intelligence that a “deepening
economic crisis posed perhaps our gravest threat to stability and national
security. It could trigger, he said, a return to the’ “violent extremism” of
the 1920s and 1930s,’” in simple terms, people in the streets ready to riot,
“nationwide civil conflict or disturbance.”
Hungry, abused US citizens could be facing their own armies.
It’s already happening in “roughly a quarter of the countries in the world,”
this instability, for want of a better word “insurrection.” When people have
nothing to lose, the government has a lot to worry about, especially with “an
overvalued dollar (which will soon deflate) . . .” This is real, beyond
speechifying. When the financial crisis becomes a currency crisis, you will
have an utterly combustible situation.
One must rethink whether we wish to continue being an
Imperial force rather than a democratic nation; whether to shore up our assets,
the strength of our people and resources, or keep borrowing ourselves into
oblivion to support an Empire. If we pursue the latter, we’ll go the way of all
empires, from the Soviets back to Great Briton, to the Ottomans and the Romans.
Tell that to those who would advise you. Remind them of history. Of the French
Revolution, bloody as it was. The people can be driven back so far. Then like
compressed gas, they suddenly explode. Roosevelt saw this and acted, swiftly
and righteously, to avoid a civil catastrophe.
As Hedges says, “The principle failures of our elites is
their inability to recognize an actively organized pool of disinterest called
the public good . . . Our elites -- the ones in Congress, the ones on Wall
Street and the ones being produced at prestigious universities and business
schools -- do not have the capacity to fix our financial system . . . The
democratic system, they think, is a secondary product of the free market. And
they slavishly serve the market.”
You, President Obama, are the leader of all the people, top
to bottom. Serve them well. As Hedges tells us, “If we do not become angry. If
we do not muster within us the courage to confront the corporate state that is
destroying our nation, to actively defy entrenched power, we will have
squandered our credibility and integrity at the moment we need it most.” And we
would give, I might add, the victory to the financial terrorists within.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New
York City. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net. read his new book, “State Of Shock: Poems from 9/11 on” at www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.