Not
since the race to go to an illegal preemptive war in Iraq have I seen President
Bush pull out all the fear stops like he did Wednesday night, in an attempt to
hard-sell the bailout of $700 billion dollars for his Wall Street friends and
their banker, mortgage companies, and hedge fund buddies.
Instead
of Weapons of Mass Destruction, yellowcake uranium from Niger, and mushroom
clouds on the horizon any minute, we had the promises of �a widespread
financial meltdown,� �a long and painful recession,� and �our entire economy is
danger,� which it has been since the
day he stepped into office. Hardly news from the smirking chimp!
Yet,
the huckster�s fear approach, i.e. act now, don�t think, just do it, response
to a three-page carte blanche blank check from Henry Paulson for his Wall
Street buddies was truly amazing. Especially given the fact that from the
mortgage companies, to the banks, to the investment banks, to the brokerage
houses that knowingly created the predatory-lending documents called mortgages,
bundled them into collateralized disaster and sold them around America and the
world, the fact that these same people are now asking for a bail-out, most
probably to continue this kind of casino behavior is astounding, a death knell
for American justice if it is bought and sold by the Congress critters, no
bright lights themselves.
This
is rewarding the fox, exiting the henhouse, for its voracious appetite and
providing it with an aperitif to soothe its bulging stomach. For all of these
components of the lending cabal are responsible and should be facing Justice
Department charges and jail sentences, just as Bush and Cheney should be facing
impeachment charges and/or trials at The Hague for lying America into a
similarly costly and deadly war in Iraq. For, after all is said, all of their
warnings turned out to be unmitigated lies. There were no WMD in Iraq. There
was no attempt to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger. It was untruth promulgated
by faulty Italian intelligence. And there certainly were no mushroom clouds on
any horizon, except the ones the US put there at the end of WW II at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
What
there is today is �debt crisis� not a �liquidity crisis.� And Michael Gardner
provided a number of excellent solutions to that in his Will the Cure be Worse Than the
Crisis -- The Paulson-Bernanke Bank Bailout Plan. One of them was
to give mortgage holders facing foreclosure the opportunity to pay what they
could towards the true market value of their mortgages, not the
compounded-credit, penalty-laden, bubble-inflated prices. Whatever they could
pay on the dollar would be a start and supplemented by the government. This
would eliminate debt not inflate it. As to the disparity between the current
market value and originally hyped, usurious value, let Wall Street and their
fellow thieves eat the difference. Perhaps spread a little caviar on it for
flavor.
The
fact is these Wall Street bandits engineered a financial Katrina and the point
is to save the drowning, even the drowned who�ve already lost their homes, and
the communities that have been turned into shanty towns given the number of
abandoned homes in them, which the banks in most cases let rot, and are often
broken into for the plumbing, or inhabited by junky squatters. Cleveland lost
90,000 residents to this storm -- only one of the deadly side effects of this
Mafia Ponzi scheme. In fact, the mortgage vigorish (vig on the street for
interest) would make the mob look like Boy Scouts.
Giving
these Wall Street bandits the bailout will only give them the confidence to
repeat this kind of orchestrated (even with just an eyewink) behavior, just as
before this we had the junk bond scandal in the late eighties with Michael
Milliken and his financial engineers at the head, creating high risk paper with
high risk dividends. Despite warnings from more sober heads back then, we ended
up with Black Monday in 1987, the largest single day drop in the history of the
stock market, when the junk paper hit the fan.
Before
that we had the savings and loan debacle thanks to the regulations of standards
for loan giving being eliminated. Bogus loans were made to many, often
profiting individuals like Neil Bush, while the companies that were backed
crumbled like Silverado S & L, leaving investors and the lending bank in
deep trouble. Did we learn? No. We didn�t. One after another, banking regulations
were eliminated, like the 1927 McFadden Act, which prohibited interstate
banking, working on the theory that a bank should take care of its own
community. What a quaint notion. Unfortunately, international banks were free
of that very decent regulation at the time and so the US banks cried �unfair.�
They wanted to be as expansive and varied in the financial products they
offered as their international counterparts. Too bad.
Along
with the 1927 McFadden Act, we saw the
on-going demise of the Glass-Steagall Act, enacted 1933 in
the heart of the Great Depression. It required that the services of commercial
banks be sharply regulated and kept separate from the services of investment
banks. Of course, by 1999, Phil Gramm, Republican Senator from Texas, had
managed, along with various naysayers and after several decades of chewing at
that excellent law, to reverse it entirely with Congress�s full approval and
the lovely Bill Clinton�s signature. This opened up the one-stop shopping
investment, commercial, international, hedge fund, derivatives-available,
anything and everything banks of the then new millennium, most notably Citigroup,
still reeling from its multi-billion losses from predatory mortgage paper, not to
mention like losses in derivatives.
Goldman-Sachs
functions in the same league. And it is absolutely wonderful that Warren
Buffett, second richest man in America, wants to lend them 5 billion bucks.
Having been in the reinsurance business himself along with his dubious buddy,
the lovely �Hammering� Maurice �Hank� Greenberg, he should know all the ins and
outs of fleecing billions from innocent consumers who pay their bills on time
and except honest, timely service. Warren, good luck! Given all the ailing
companies you�ve turned around, maybe you can put some lipstick on AIG, cut it
into pieces, and tell the CIA to leave it alone and not launder billions
through its 160 branch offices around the world. Yes, Sylvia, these guys are
dirtier than dirt. Don�t feel sorry for them because they don�t give two cents
about you.
Returning
to our bright light Congress, one of the reasons they�re all huddling so
quickly to reach a Wall Street bailout is to get a piece of that campaign money
the Street will spread their way, on both sides of the aisle, during this
election season, sort of like McCain Aide�s Firm
Was Paid by Freddie Mac. Freddie�s payments were a bit less than $500,000 to
Davis & Manafort (McCain campaign manager Rick Davis� company) initially.
Later, Davis got $30,000 to $35,000 a month to act as president of the
Homeownership Alliance, an alliance of housing industry and consumer groups
(lobby) to promote homeownership. This is a key point to keep in mind . . .
This
blood money coagulates with Bush�s notion of the Ownership Society, a seemingly
laudable cause on the surface, that is, if you actually can afford a decent
mortgage for your dream house. Well, everyone obviously could not. Thus, in
order to keep the housing construction bubble booming to mask little or no real
(honest) growth in the economy, we needed to unlevel the mortgage playing field
and give a lot of the folks without financial bona fides loans anyway. Hey,
come on down. Money�s aplenty, just 5 percent, nah, will give you a bundle for
free. Just sign here, sucker, I mean sister. Don�t worry about that fine print
that will blow up in your face when you miss a payment. That�ll ruin your eyes.
So, the predatory lending not only enriched the mortgage touts, it helped the
housing bubble inflate until it burst.
It
is reminiscent of the dot.com bubble in the late 90s and early 2000s. We had
dot.com companies that were in business for nine minutes and some other dot.com
company was running a laudatory ad about what a great comer the new company
was, and visa versa. The new comer lauded what a great dot.com company their
public sponsor was. And they all pumped and dumped their crappy stock on the
market, with the usual shark buying frenzy that follows the smell of big
yields, sky-rocketing valuations, that is, until the crap hits the fan and you
can lose your shirt. But meanwhile the administration in power had a good run
in the market to show for its lame efforts. This kind of scamming is
bi-partisan, the corruption favored by both sides of the aisle, which is why we�ve
had three such scams in only 20 years, which cost investors, would-be-home
owners, and the FDIC something like a trillion dollars.
Remember,
this is money that gets stripped out of the economy into private hands, lush
mansions, beautiful yachts, Rolex watches, island tax hideaways (in one of
which Greenberg keeps about $20 billion stashed), expensive things of all
kinds. This transfer of wealth, accompanied by the multi-trillion dollar
tax-cuts for these same Richie Riches� aid and abet that transfer to make the
middle and working classes poorer, and of course the wealthy wealthier. So,
it�s the same crap, different scam, all working in unison under the US
government whose leaders are picked by the wealthiest of the wealthy, say
George Soros, David Rockefeller, the Morgans, and so on.
Couple
this with the offshoring of millions of jobs, the elimination of
pensions, health-care, and the breakdown of unions, the hoped-for diminution to
disappearance of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and you will see in the
distance, a slave class of Americans, happy they�re working for peanuts. That�s
the end endgame: America as banana republic.
It
will be much worse than letting these Wall Street turkeys suffer, that is,
having to take responsibility for their sins, and sins they are, creating
schemes like derivatives that are so many chips in a financial casino, lacking
transparency, but pouring trillions of funny money into the system that only a
few, a small few, can track and profit, while many will sufferer when they fall
like stacks of plates on everyone�s heads. While we�re at it, add to that the
huge drug trade that money-launders a trillion dollars or so into the economy
via financial entities. America, like many countries around the globe has become
the playground of the Devil as well as the rendition grounds of the angels,
whistle-blowers of all kinds.
Speaking
of whistle-blowers, let�s consider the politically-assassinated ex-Governor,
ex-Attorney General of New York State, Eliot Spitzer. On February 24, 2008, the
crusading governor had the guts to run an editorial in the Washington Post
called Predatory Lenders�
Partner in Crime -- How the Bush Administration Stopped the States From
Stepping in to Help Consumers. Here are the opening paragraphs for your
reading pleasure. I hope you read every word of it. It cost a man his career. A
month later, he was politically dead by sexpionage.
�Several
years ago, state attorneys general and others involved in consumer protection
began to notice a marked increase in a range of predatory lending practices by
mortgage lenders. Some were misrepresenting the terms of loans, making loans
without regard to consumers� ability to repay, making loans with deceptive �teaser�
rates that later ballooned astronomically, packing loans with undisclosed
charges and fees, or even paying illegal kickbacks. These and other practices,
we noticed, were having a devastating effect on home buyers. In addition, the
widespread nature of these practices, if left unchecked, threatened our
financial markets.
�Even
though predatory lending was becoming a national problem, the Bush
administration looked the other way and did nothing to protect American
homeowners. In fact, the government chose instead to align itself with the
banks that were victimizing consumers . . .�
Remember,
Spitzer was also the guy that brought Hank Greenberg down from his perennial
gig as CEO of AIG in a series of investigations. The various frauds perpetrated
on consumers cost AIG $1.6 billion in fines. Hank was kicked out, though I�m
sure he smells the money and would love to sneak back in. Nevertheless, hats
off to Spitzer. He is not the lascivious demon painted by the media. And he
never invited a thousand dollar a night male hooker, so-called reporter Jeff
Gannon/Jim Guckert to sleep over at his house like Bush did without the Secret
Service even knowing about what nights G/G was there or not.
Despite
all this, the jerks of Congress are making sounds like they�re already reaching
an agreement (if they haven�t already and are just too scared admit it; waiting
to see how many of their phones are ringing off the hook). Speed is not the
issue. Quality of agreement, making the right decision is the issue. Speaking
of that, pick up your phone and call them right now and tell them you don�t
want to make a deal with Wall Street. You want Wall Street and Friends to buy
back their dirty paper from the foreclosure candidates and victims with the
financial assistance of the US government. And you want them to buy back their
mortgages at the everyday-low Wal-Mart prices they are now going for. Then the
America citizen, the everyday working stiff, the family man and woman, the
people of this country, will have a chance for a decent life, a comeback to
sane living, a hope for a green future in more ways than one.
In
fact, we can start with going green, and building the infrastructure and cars
and houses to go with it that can make us a prosperous, brilliant people again,
winners not losers to the trash on Wall Street, the Geckoes who think �Greed is
good.� Greed sucks. It�s the Common Good, that FDR knew so well, that can save
this country from the dregs. Don�t turn your back on it, not even for a piece
of this rotten apple pie on the congressional table. And if they do the dirty
deed, keep on calling them and telling them what you think of them. And when
voting time comes, get even.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New York
City. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net. Look for his new book, �State Of Shock: Poems from 9/11 on� at www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.