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Spitzer’s Shame Is Wall Street’s Gain

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted March 12, 2008.


Wall Street crooks cheer the downfall of the man who tried to check their criminal greed.
Robert Scheer

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Tell me again: Why should we get all worked up over the revelation that the New York governor paid for sex? Will it bring back to life the eight U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq that same day in a war that makes no sense and has cost this nation trillions in future debt? Will it save those millions of homes that hardworking folks all over the country are losing because of financial industry shenanigans that Eliot Spitzer, as much as anyone, attempted to halt? Perhaps it provides some insight into why oil has risen to $108 a barrel, benefiting most of all the oil sheiks whom our taxpayer-supported military has kept in power?

Sure, the guy, by his own admission, is quite pathetic in all those small, squirrelly ways that have messed up the lives of other grand public figures before him, but why is an all-too-human sin, amply predicted in early Scripture, getting all this incredible media play as some sort of shocking event? The answer is that, while having precious little to do with serious corruption in public life, it does have a great deal to do with stoking flagging newspaper sales and television ratings.

The sad truth is that reporting on major corruption, say, the rationalizations of a president who has authorized torture, doesn't cut it as a marketing bonanza. Just days before this grand exposé, the president vetoed a bill banning torture, and instead of being greeted with horrified disgust, the president's deep denigration of this nation's presumed ideals was met with a vast public yawn. Torture, unlike paid sex, doesn't have legs as a news story.

Sex sells, and frankly it would seem far more exploitative for the news media to pimp this tale to the public than anything that VIP escort service did with the pitiable governor. His behavior was not really any more wretched than messing around with a young and vulnerable White House intern who didn't even get paid for her efforts, yet Bill Clinton survived that one, whereas Spitzer was presumed dead on the arrival of this "news." The New York Times, which editorially has supported the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, whose vast White House experience clearly did not include corralling her husband, now editorializes contemptuously about Spitzer's betrayal of the public trust as well as about his exploitation of his "ashen-faced" wife, who, like Hillary, stood by her man.

The media consensus from the opening salvo was that Spitzer must resign and he will be thrown to the dogs, which is unfortunate because, like Clinton, he has done much valuable work in the public interest, and the outrage over this personal dereliction, tawdry in the extreme, is excessive. I certainly never wanted Clinton to resign, let alone be impeached, but why is Spitzer's paying for sex more disgraceful than ripping it off? Yes, Spitzer allegedly broke a law that shouldn't be on the books, and his resignation in disgrace is inevitable, but it bothers me that George W. Bush and Dick Cheney remain in office despite having violated enormously more serious laws.

Frankly, I don't care what any of these politicians do in their personal lives as long as the practice is consensual, and the thousands of dollars that exchanged hands in this case would provide a presumption that the lady in question was indeed a willing partner in this commercial transaction. True, Spitzer is an outrageous hypocrite for having prosecuted others caught in what should not be considered criminal behavior, but since when is hypocrisy on the part of a politician, particularly as to sex, so shocking?

I wouldn't have written this column had I not read The Wall Street Journal's Page 1 news story headlined "Wall Street Cheers as Its Nemesis Plunges Into Crisis." The article begins with the crowing statement "It's Schadenfreude time on Wall Street" and goes on to quote those whom Spitzer went after over what should be considered the criminal greed that has predominated on Wall Street. It was Spitzer, as much as anyone, who sounded the alarm on the subprime mortgage crisis, the obscene payouts to CEOs who defrauded their shareholders and the other financial scandals that have brought the U.S. economy to its knees.

The best rule of thumb these days is that ordinary Americans should be mightily depressed over any news that Wall Street hustlers cheer, for they have been exposed as a dangerous pack of scoundrels quite willing to rob decent, hardworking people of their homes. And of course no one on Wall Street ever paid for sex.

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Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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A Good Analogy
Posted by: BCcovers on Mar 12, 2008 11:27 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How would you feel if someone came into your house and busted you for smoking pot subsequently sending you to jail and ruining your career and life. Pretty bad huh?

Well how would you then feel if that same person who busted you was caught smoking pot a year later and because of his status and connections in society got off scot-free?

That is exactly what people defending Spitzer are advocating. For a rich polician; the rules don't apply. Especially if he is a democrat and goes after those "evil rich people" (even though, he himself is a trust-fund baby).

Spitzer went after several prostitution rings as AG; and crafted himself as a moral crusader. All the while engaging secretly in the very activity he publically persecuted. This is abhorrent to the ideals and mores of our country. It's not about sex (even though that sells papers), it's about a hypocrite who committed a crime that would land anyone else in trouble. He has shown himself to be a typical "Do as I say, not as I do" politician. For this he no longer deserves the public's trust and his position as an elected official.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: A Good Analogy Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: A Good Analogy Posted by: Crazy H
» RE: A Good Analogy Posted by: EncinoM
» Pure Truth Posted by: o
» DA's implement SOCIETY's laws... Posted by: BlueBerry PickN
» Are you High? Posted by: BCcovers
The Thieves of Virtue: legislating morality undermines representative government.
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Mar 12, 2008 12:50 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
La Rage (Keny Arkana)
The Thieves of Virtue: legislating morality undermines representative government


By *legislating morality* society is convinced that their Best Interest is served by Power.

think about that.

given that *no person is perfect* at avoiding vice or the appearance of impropriety
& given that there is no ACTUAL PRIVACY...

society has effectively ensured that *nobody is perfect enough* to be beyond the grasp of Money & Power. No person is capable of defending populist reform or justice in the face of Massive Corruption & Fraud.

...& the best interests of the People is served ?

...& Fallon quit this week.

"The Plastic Killers": documentary or corporate assassination of unionists

Naked Truth: Civil Rights & CNN coverage of "F.B.I. biometric database - 'Server in the Sky'"

focus on election integrity populist platforms & the right to peaceful protest
What do you know about the FBI's international biometric Server in the Sky Project?
are we concerned enough about our diminishing *freedoms*, *privacy & right to peaceful assembly

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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Spitzer: the Paris Hilton of Reformers
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Mar 12, 2008 12:59 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nonsense, Spitzer never touched real “Wall Street Crooks”.

Spitzer’s track record at reigning in Wall Street was petty sizzle with no connection to real reform. He did things like going after hedge / mutual funds for “late trading” and Merrill Lynch for “misleading research”. All necessary tweaks but all of them minor surface noise NOT systemic reform.

Of course, he did nothing over the obvious subprime mess but Spitzer also did zero when it comes to genuine reform that would have included abolishing the derivatives racket that is now a debt time-bomb valued at near $700 TRILLION dollars for a sum that is over 10 times greater than the national economy.

And the faux reformer did zip about the greatest con on earth in an unconstitutional (article 1 section 8) private piggy bank monopoly in charge of the nation’s economy – the Orwellian so-called Federal Reserve Corp that is in no way federal with no more than a crooked Ponzi scheme for reserves. (A core fraud behind the nation’s fiat economic rape by organized corporate crime)

The only people that cheer Spitzer’s downfall are those that want a temp distraction scandal from false-flag 9/11 “war on terror” on the public nickel and the nation’s economy headed to 3rd world oblivion.

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» THUS they got what they wanted Posted by: BlueBerry PickN
Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Mar 12, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Eliot Spitzer is a distraction to keep the public quiet while the Bush administration makes their escape.

Try 'Em & Fry 'Em


Direct Democracy!

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he could have been president
Posted by: kylefoley76 on Mar 12, 2008 5:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it is obvious, Lord, what happened.
in attacking greed's worm-wench,
in confronting wall street's lash-vultures,
always their wrath-foam profligate,
his name fabulo-glittered in the press
he undoubtedly eclipsed in narcìssum,
him the bloom-flashing arbiter of justice,
his self the new empire state building,
comet-diamond from his mind arising.

undoubtedly he was the best
attorney general in the nation,
no reason to believe that he would
not have become our most effective governor,
the sloth-merchants swine butchering,
their platmo-flash to smut-gold morphing.
a sudden tsunami of justice crashing,
a weird freak of sunshine
amid an oil-ocean of savàjo.

instead the ego's wrath-talons
his soul dispossessed, obesified,
the gremlins of arrogance surrounding him,
all sorts of warlocks of pride gunning him.

please, Lord, heal this one of our leading politicians,
guide him back into the lumino-flash of mind-treasure,
return him to the fold of beato-bliss,
the flash-beacons surrounding him,
rather than the heinous lust-warts,
cherub-blithe, moon-kiss, and silverado,
instead of junk-jaws, witch-death and gash.

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Eliot Spitzer never really put reform first.
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 12, 2008 5:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All he did was make it to giving the multinationals, already flush with billions, a simple hand-slap settlement of a few million dollars. New York is too expensive as it is. I'm surprised Wall Street hasn't moved its headquarters from New York to South Dakota where they perfectly belong. New York would be much better off having the Green Party in charge.

As for his sex scandal, if he thought he was getting privacy rights, he really blew it. As the economy keeps burning in flames and as the occupation in Iraq gets worse, the media will pull another "Chandra Levy"/"Monica Lewinsky" and allow another 9/11. Time to repeal the 1996 Telecom Act and restore the Fairness Doctrine.

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SEX TRUMPS PRESIDENTIAL RACE COVERAGE
Posted by: PacificGatePost on Mar 12, 2008 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is about our own bewilderment. It is almost as if Spitzer meticulously planned, scripted, then executed his own destruction. He originally set in place the mechanisms intended to uncover exactly the kind of deceit he perpetrated, and is now apologizing for.

A man nicknamed variously, but most consistently as Mr. Clean, and considered a likely aspirant for the White House in 2012 imploded before our eyes.
------------

http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/

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Undoubtedly, the PROMIS software,
Posted by: rockpicker on Mar 12, 2008 8:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
or its progeny, was used to bust Spitzer, as investigators looking for dirt on him quite unexpectedly came on anomalous transactions, and, "bingo," they struck pay dirt!

If that makes you right-wing weirdos feel good, knowing that those capabilities are out there and being used as political weapons, then you're welcome to the nightmare you've helped create.

In case any of you can actually bring yourselves to admit your ignorance and want to know why PROMIS presents a danger to all freedom-loving people, you can educate yourself on the subject with a copy of Mike Ruppert's "Crossing the Rubicon." (My suggestion is, while there, read the whole thing. It may open your eyes to just how truly 'fucked' we've let ourselves become.

And shove your tin foil bullshit up your stupid asses.

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» The fact remains Posted by: rockpicker
» RE: The fact remains Posted by: EncinoM
Spitzer screwed up as well as away.
Posted by: Livemike on Mar 13, 2008 2:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" It was Spitzer, as much as anyone, who sounded the alarm on the subprime mortgage crisis, the obscene payouts to CEOs who defrauded their shareholders and the other financial scandals that have brought the U.S. economy to its knees."

Well no. In fact Spitzer was busy framing Martha Stewart for lying to investigators about insider trading. Even with his snitches for immunity working overtime he couldn't pin an actual financial crime on her or point to a single person who suffered as a result of her acts. The only "crime" committed (even if his witness didn't perjure himself) could not have happened without the investigation! And Ron Paul said more about the subprime disaster than he ever did.

Hunting down Wall Street crooks? Don't make me laugh, all he did was convict a few nobodies of nothing for publicity.

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» RE: No he didn't Posted by: Urstrly
Spitzer's honest moment
Posted by: arthur_ide on Mar 13, 2008 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Spitzer admitted his infidelity--the only one hurt by his action(s) was/is his wife (but she has made no comment on it or whether or not she was/is opposed to it). Sex is a private matter. Spitzer's admissions are commendable, and he never should have resigned.

The real criminals are those who deliberately betray the public trust (sex has nothing to do with that), such as Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, and Bush who have lied, had hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians and thousands of US soldiers die in a needless, insane war for oil. It is time that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Gates and other henchmen of the oil industry be sent to the Hague to answer for their crimes against humanity and then shot dead on worldwide public television--as they have fouled the world in an identical manner as Adolf Hitler, Idi Amin and other common thugs.

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» RE: Spitzer's honest moment Posted by: BCcovers
» RE: Spitzer's honest moment Posted by: badkitty
Spitzer was on the right track and game plan in line to be Prez.
Posted by: symcokid on Mar 13, 2008 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Spitzer had aspirations to be President and he was just following precedents set by JFK and Bill Clinton, that is to whore it up and get a lot while you are young - the next step, the White House.

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Spitzer’s Shame Is Wall Street’s Gain
Posted by: BalPatil on Mar 14, 2008 9:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Congratulations on hardhitting comments on the doublestandards of the media. But one is a little intrigued by Sheer's punchline :"And of course no one on Wall Street ever paid for sex". If sex is a commodity what is the mechanism of its exchange on the Wall Street?

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