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Ludicrous: Matt Taibbi Accused of Being Anti-Semitic for Goldman Sachs Article

Posted by Matt Taibbi, True/Slant at 8:00 AM on July 13, 2009.


Sample letter: "Isn't it convenient that an Arab-American writer ... looks at Wall Street and picks the most prototypically Jewish firm to demonize."
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“The [Rolling Stone] article makes a very compelling case against Goldman Sachs, but I think the problems it identifies are pervasive in financial firms and corporate America in general,” says Nell Minow, who is the co-founder of the Corporate Library, a research firm that tracks corporate-governance issues. “We need to launch substantive financial reform rather than weighing the faults of one firm versus another.” Minow’s point is this: spend too much time on Goldman and you miss the fact of how broadly the financial system and the regulations that are supposed to keep profiteers in check failed us. And she’s right.

via Goldman Sachs vs. Rolling Stone: A Wall Street Smackdown - TIME.

It’s been interesting, to say the least, watching the public reaction to my Rolling Stone piece last week. I of course expected that some kind of highly unpleasant response would come my way from Goldman and its allies in the press, but I admit to being surprised a little by the form this response took. Obviously I don’t want to dwell on this business, because it’s beyond boring when someone in my position complains about his critics, but I feel like I have to say something about at least a few of the talking points of the inevitable Goldman counteroffensive, which in various forms (letters sent to me personally, public comments) have reached my desk in the last few days.

The most ludicrous of these, and the one that surprised me the most, is the accusation that my article was anti-Semitic propaganda. The first letter I got on this score I actually mistook for a joke sent to me by one of my friends. Then I got another one which I quickly realized was not a joke at all. “Isn’t it convenient,” it read, “that an Arab-American writer for Rolling Stone looks at Wall Street and picks the most prototypically Jewish firm around to demonize.”

The last time I heard something similar was a few years ago, when Debbie Schlussel, a severely dimwitted Detroit-based right-wing pundit, railed against my supposed Arabness after I wrote an article about the Lebanese population in Dearborn, Michigan. I wrote to her to let her know that I’m actually Irish and Filipino, and not at all an Arab, but never got a response. This time the charge is a little different, as several writers complained that my article was “a rehash of every classic anti-Jewish conspiracy theory” and “a pale copy of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.”

The evidence for these charges seems to be as follows. One, I used the word “tribe” somewhere near the end of the piece. Two, the term “blood-funnel” was used (one person also hinted that the use of a squid image was somehow anti-Semitic, but I was not entirely clear what was being referred to there). Three, I “singled out” Goldman and failed to level similar charges at “less Jewish firms” (yes, one letter-writer actually used that phrase) like Morgan-Stanley.

A few points in response to this preposterous argument. Firstly I’m going to make a blanket denial and just say that the question of religion was so far outside my thinking while writing this piece that I never even considered it. If this issue had even entered my head so much as once, I probably would have been more careful, and it is remotely possible that I might not then have used a distantly suggestive word like “tribe,” if only to avoid having to answer charges like this. But I didn’t consider it, for the simple reason that it’s completely ridiculous and not at all relevant.

For one thing, while Goldman’s founders a gazillion years ago were apparently Jewish, I seriously doubt that religion plays any role at all in the makeup of the modern Goldman. I don’t have any way of knowing this, but I would be shocked if it weren’t true that a majority of Goldman’s current employees were not Jewish. And whatever the reality is, I don’t care; it’s not a concern of mine and we didn’t make it a concern in the article.

If anything it seems to me that what defines these Wall Street characters is not religion but the absence of it: even a hardened atheist like myself comes away from the experience of reading about the last two decades of Wall Street history shocked by that community’s complete and utter Godlessness and moral insanity. What I’m saying in other words is that if any of these clowns actually had a real religious sensibility, we wouldn’t be in this mess — and that’s coming from someone who believes all religions to be inherently ridiculous. For Goldman now to hide behind the cloak of Jewish victimhood is both more obnoxious and less convincing than Marion Barry wearing a dashiki after the indictment.

Then there is this other argument, the one being bandied about by Time magazine, among others. According to Steven Gandel of Time, the problem with my piece is that it is — get this — too specific. According to the above passage, focusing on Goldman in particular when attempting to explain (in general) the crimes of Wall Street to ordinary readers is somehow a distraction from the “real problem.” To repeat:

…spend too much time on Goldman and you miss the fact of how broadly the financial system and the regulations that are supposed to keep profiteers in check failed us.

 

I had to read that passage several times to even begin to grasp its ostensible meaning. Apparently this is the best argument that Time could come up with to discredit this article, that the rhetorical technique of using a specific example of a specific bank like Goldman to tell a broader story about Wall Street in general distracts readers from the “more important” issue of how government regulators… failed to stop banks like Goldman! I mean, really, how’s that for circular thinking? This is silly stuff even by Time magazine’s standards.

I’ve been shocked by how many grown adult people seem to have swallowed this argument, that the argument against Goldman’s behavior during the bubbles of recent decades is invalid because “everyone was doing it” -- and other banks, like for instance Morgan Stanley, were “just as bad” as Goldman was.

Two things about that. One, it isn’t true, not really. By any reasonable measure Goldman is and has been the baddest guy on the block for a long time. When it comes to government influence, no other Wall Street company even comes close. And while maybe one might have made an argument that other players were more damaging to society before the crisis of last year, there’s simply no question now, after the bailouts and especially after the AIG fiasco, that Goldman now reigns supreme in the area of insider advantage. To pick any other bank to tell the story of the rapidly growing influence of Wall Street on politics and the blurring of public and private roles would be a glaring journalistic oversight, and surely even Goldman’s biggest supporters would admit this.

Two, even if it is true that “everyone else was doing it”: so what? Who cares? To me this response is highly telling. We published a piece accusing Goldman Sachs of systematically ripping off pensioners and other retail investors by sticking them with rafts of toxic mortgages it knew were losers, of looting taxpayer reserves to cover its bad bets made with AIG, of manipulating gas prices to massive detrimental effect, of helping to explode an internet bubble that caused over $5 trillion in wealth to disappear, and numerous other crimes -- and the response isn’t “You’re wrong,” or “We didn’t do that shit, not us,” but “Well, Morgan did the same stuff,” and “Why aren’t you writing about Morgan?”

Why didn’t we write about Morgan? Because we didn’t. Because it’s your turn, you assholes. Maybe later someone will tell the story of the other banks, but for now, while most ordinary people are only just learning about the workings of the financial innovation era that blew up in their faces last year, the top dog in that universe is going to be first in line to get the special treatment. That might be inconvenient for Goldman, but it doesn’t make the things I or anyone else say about them untrue.

Normally I don’t care so much when people criticize my work. It goes with the territory. But in this case, the response of a bank like Goldman and Goldman’s supporters is characteristic of the subject matter in a way that is important to point out, even after the fact of publication. These are powerful people who know how to play the public relations game, have all the appropriate contacts, and have a playbook that they follow to discredit their critics. Whether it’s me now or the next guy who takes them on, they’re going to come back with some kind of charge, be it “Everyone was doing it,” or “We’re just smarter than the other guys, you can’t blame us for that,” or “The real culprits are the ineffective regulators,” something.

They’re going to say that and more, but whether it’s this time or the next time, the important thing is to pay attention to what they don’t say. And what they didn’t say about this piece is that it was wrong. They didn’t deny any of it. They said others were just as bad, they said I was a bad guy, they said it was a conspiracy theory. But they didn’t say it was mistaken, and that’s the only thing that matters.

Digg!

Tagged as: anti-semitism, morgan stanley, wall street, time magazine, matt taibbi, goldman sachs, rolling stone, nell minow


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String up the Goldman Sachs Executives!!!
Posted by: lupuslefou on Jul 13, 2009 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And let the crows eat their eyeballs.

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How selfish and exhausting can it get?
Posted by: weathered on Jul 13, 2009 8:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
May GoldmanSachs wash the feet of those familes displaced by the Ugliness of their insatiable, arrogant and diabolic greed!

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How can these people sleep at night??
Posted by: Kally on Jul 13, 2009 9:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I cannot even explain how much it irks me that these people have ripped off the people time and again and nothing is done to stop them. I hope these people all end up in federal prison soon, though I know that will never happen as long as bankers and corporations run the country.

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the dia-tribe
Posted by: tazdelaney on Jul 13, 2009 9:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
my wife born jewish and i raised christian; neither of us practice those religions. we have several jewish friends, a couple moslems, some christians, buddhist one hindu and are ourselves animist.

we've observed that, increasingly, any comments which could be remotely said to be critical of anything jewish or israeli is immediately denounced as antisemitic. the next step is to make accusations that the alleged detractor is in league with terrorists. not much of a joke, that, you may find yourself busted and going to jail if you've even thought of giving to a palestinian charity.

the thing we find ourselves having to point out frequently these days is this: the jews aren't by any means the only semitic peoples, of which there were, after all, 12 tribes. in fact, the war on iraq is definitely anti-semitic, as most of the iraqi people are semitic. israeli commentary and actions against arabs are themselves terrifically anti-semitic.

it is essentially irrelevant, the religious-ethnic background of goldman sachs, or the more WASPy jpmorgan. conspirators with massive crimes against humanity should be convicted without regard for race, creed, color...

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» RE: It is ironic Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: It is ironic Posted by: zipper696
» Us Goldman haters... Posted by: telluride
The story here is the mastery of mind control (marketing) by the corporations
Posted by: Paul_C on Jul 13, 2009 11:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Billions of dollars of research and saturation advertising later, corporate America knows how to manipulate the public like a hand puppet.

They literally know more about Americans than Americans know about themselves. Combine that with unlimited funds and unlimited greed and we see the outcome every day.

Progressives must learn the basics of marketing fundamentals and learn to anticipate, recognize and expose manipulative corporate responses to issues.

Taibbi is doing a great job here showing us how a strong sarcastic but ethical tone can be used to make a mockery of dishonest corporate propaganda.

peace,
Paul

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» RE: Taibbi is my journalism hero Posted by: Sister_Lauren
goldmansachs666.com
Posted by: jingles on Jul 13, 2009 10:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in case you've been missing it, goldmansachs666.com has been back for a few weeks

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Fezziwig28
Posted by: fezziwig28 on Jul 14, 2009 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An attack of this nature usually emanates from someone with no other intelligent argument to use.

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Misdirection on the left, as well as on the right....
Posted by: carolcsme on Jul 14, 2009 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our national dialog has degenerated at both ends. While it tends to range between moderate and conservative, shrillness and ideologues who refuse to use the brains God gave them exist all along the spectrum.

So. Are we going to stay in our houses in front of our tv's and play "consumer" or take back our lives? The social processes since mid-20th Century have divided us into row houses, however nice they are, and many of us are now being dumped out of them. What about neighborhood, community, belonging...those are hardly disposable values. As long as we allow ourselves to be isolated, we allow the craziness to continue.

Choosing to attack someone for some faceless reason sounds like the approach of a paranoid, needy person...I do not want to be such a one, nor do I want my next door neighbor to be such a one. The central message of Christianity is that "God is Love" - and the message is similar in other religions. Can't we all just try to get along? If a man being pounded into mincemeat can ask that question, let me stand with him.

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Matt, you are wrong.....
Posted by: Don't Panic on Jul 14, 2009 11:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
about one very glaring aspect here and that is to Goldman Sachs money is their God and that is what they worship.....getting as much money in as many underhanded and dirty ways as they can is their religion.....they like fucking the little guy and that in and of itself is Goldman Sachs legacy and what they pass on to therir offspring.....anybody who works for people like that have no clue about hum,an beings whatsoever.....peace....and great job

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The Silver Bubble of The late 1970's/early 1980's Wasn't a Goldman Sachs Affair
Posted by: Bruce Wilson on Jul 15, 2009 4:57 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Hunt Brothers, who managed to corner 50% to 75% of the world's silver in the late 1970's, were not associated with Goldman Sachs. They were Texas oil tycoons.

On that fact alone, the byline of Matt Taibbi's story is factually incorrect.

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Keep Up the good work
Posted by: djaffee on Jul 16, 2009 1:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Matt:

Keep up the informative, responsible, and freethinking investigative journalism.

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Economic Crimes Against the Nation
Posted by: Triton on Jul 16, 2009 4:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The banksters of Goldman Sachs demonstrate that there is no limit to greed, selfishness and disregard for humanity. Their arrogance is beyond an measure of acceptable behavior. Only in our country are such monumental criminals free but they are aided and abetted by our government. Some country:Some democracy. The public service of these people is limited to the display of their wealth. Any committment to the principles and needs of this nation is beneath their contempt.

Like the Frenchy nobility they party while many others are struggling just to survive. They even want to have our cake. The rest of us are unnecessary in their world and fit only to live in the environment of Slum Dog Millionare.
They are the undeserving rich, above the law and masters of the world.

There is a limit of toleration for these kinds of people. They need to be eradicated. In China they would be shot. In other less civilized places they might be disemboweled or stoned to death. We claim to be a civilized nation although our government has only a forward looking approach to torture. There is a real need for justice, not law with regard to these people. There are plenty of lamp posts on Wall Street.

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Goldman Sachs expose and antisemitic babble by "critics"
Posted by: dkmeller on Jul 17, 2009 5:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You must be saying something right.

After all, they wouldn't unleash these vile and defamatory verbal accusations like "antisemitism", "racism", "neonazi" or "white supremacist" against you unless you were really engaging in
speech whose content is indeed HATED by the establishment. Speech--or writing--that they wanted suppressed at all costs.

Goldman Sachs, corrupt as they are, is merely the tip of the iceberg. The real enabler is (and for a long time, has been) the Federal Reserve.

There is legislation, HR-1207, which has been introduced by Ron Paul R-Texas, which will (if passed) allow a full and independent audit of the Federal Reserve for the first time since 1913!

Goldman Sachs, for all its evil and greed, is merely a surface boil on the body politic, a symptom of a very pervasive terminal infection which is destroying our economy and society! It is the Federal Reserve which is the disease. When Bernanke's outfit is finally put under the microscope, banking misdeeds like the ones documented by your article will be the smallest things those banksters-and their pals in Congress and the "regulatory" agencies- will have to worry about!

Keep up the good work!!

PEACE AND FREEDOM!!
David K.Meller

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Don't grovel Matt....
Posted by: telluride on Jul 18, 2009 7:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not Goldman's "supporters" who are libeliing you... it's their relatives.

You hit an 5000 year old ethnocentric nerve.

-- the author protests too much.

Some truths do not change.

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The Boy Who Cried Wolf
Posted by: peaches on Jul 18, 2009 8:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Taibbi's detractors would do well to remember the wisdom of the fable of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf".

If everyone in the WORLD who agrees with Matt Taibbi's logic were to wear name tags that read, "Hi, My name is Auntie Semite", then the word "antisemite" will become meaningless overnight, guaranteed.

People who really care about the Jewish people (not those who hide their crimes behind a cloak of victimhood and persecution) would do well to realize that people who mindlessly bleat "Antisemite, antisemite" are no friend of Jews at ALL. In fact, they do a great disservice to Jews by diluting the word "Antisemite" and put all Jews in grave danger by desensitizing people to genuine antisemitism.

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The Boy Who Cried Wolf
Posted by: peaches on Jul 18, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Taibbi's detractors would do well to remember the wisdom of the fable of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf".

If everyone in the WORLD who agrees with Matt Taibbi's logic were to wear name tags that read, "Hi, My name is Auntie Semite", then the word "antisemite" will become meaningless overnight, guaranteed.

People who really care about the Jewish people (not those who hide their crimes behind a cloak of victimhood and persecution) would do well to realize that people who mindlessly bleat "Antisemite, antisemite" are no friend of Jews at ALL. In fact, they do a great disservice to Jews by diluting the word "Antisemite" and put all Jews in grave danger by desensitizing people to genuine antisemitism.

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Where are the headlines pointing to JEWS?
Posted by: telluride on Jul 18, 2009 12:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When was the last time we read an angry headline that pointed out the merits of a story by pointing out the author was A JEW!!

never gonna happen...

which in turn creates double standards

which in turn creates Auntie Semites!

We keep score... and that makes us Nazis?

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