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Greedy corporations expect government hand-outs and deregulation at the same time.

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The Real Legacy of the 'Reagan Revolution'

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted July 16, 2008.


Greedy corporations expect government hand-outs and deregulation at the same time.
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McCain campaign co-chair Phil Gramm is right: We have "become a nation of whiners." But who is whining more than the bankers that former Sen. Gramm's financial deregulation legislation benefited? The very bankers who now expect a government bailout, such as those at UBS Investment Bank, where Gramm found lucrative employment.

As chair of the powerful Senate Banking Committee, Gramm engineered passage of legislation that effectively ended the major regulatory restraints applied to the financial industry in response to the Great Depression. The purpose of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act -- co-authored by Gramm, passed in 1999 by a Republican-controlled Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton -- was to liberate the banks, stockbrokers and insurance companies from restraints imposed on their activities more than seven decades ago. It was legislation that the financial community, which contributed heavily to Gramm's campaigns in the previous five years, desperately wanted and obviously has abused. So why now bail these institutions out?

Hows about some "tough love" for those bankers suddenly in trouble? You know, the sink-or-swim approach of "welfare reform" that Gramm and Clinton applied to poor people to end their addiction to government handouts. Or, perhaps a heavy dose of "faith-based" personal responsibility initiatives to get those knaves who messed up our entire housing market back on the straight and narrow. Sounds ridiculous I know, because nothing but the bleeding-heart, big-government, throw-money-at-the-problem approach will do when it comes to salvaging corrupt corporations.

That is the real legacy of what has been ballyhooed as the "Reagan Revolution," which Clinton went along with, but which found its full flowering in the administration of George W. Bush. The bookends of the Bush years are the Enron debacle and the federal bailout of bankers drunk on their own greed. And no two people in this country are more responsible for enabling this sordid behavior than the power couple Phil and Wendy Gramm.

Enron, lest we forget, was their baby. Then-Sen. Gramm sponsored the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, which allowed Enron's scamming to happen. As Ken Lay, who was chair of Gramm's election finance committee, put it quite candidly when asked for the secret of Enron's success, "basically, we are entering or in markets that are deregulating or have recently deregulated."

Part of that deregulation involved rulings of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, then chaired by Wendy Gramm, who upon retiring from that post became a highly compensated member of the Enron board of directors, serving for eight years. She even was on the board's audit committee during the time of the corporation's despicable financial shenanigans. While on the Enron board, Wendy Gramm also chaired an anti-regulatory think tank that received funding from Enron and other corporations that benefited directly from the policies her institute espoused.

My point here is not to expose the dubious ethics of the Gramms' various business ventures but rather to question why Sen. John McCain turned to Phil Gramm for leadership in his presidential campaign. Indeed, until his verbal gaffe, Gramm was highly visible and rumored to be the choice for secretary of the treasury should McCain win.

McCain has long promised voters that he learned the hard lessons provided by his being one of the infamous Keating Five in the nefarious savings and loan scandal that cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars. Yet he chose as his campaign co-chair a former senator whose push for government deregulation facilitated the far deeper scandal we now are experiencing. Here is a man whose legislation created what financial guru Warren Buffett termed "financial weapons of mass destruction."

Why in the world would you designate as your key economic adviser someone who left the Senate to become an officer of the bank that is at the very center of this mess, a former senator who not only secured highly paid employment with a banking giant that benefited from legislation he helped pass, but who then lobbied Congress for even more of the deregulatory breaks that got the bank into such deep trouble?

The answer cannot simply be that McCain doesn't care much about economics, as he himself has indicated. Perhaps that would explain his having voted for all of the measures pushed through the Senate by Gramm. Perhaps it even would explain McCain's having been chair of Gramm's own failed presidential bid. But indifference to economics does not explain the prominence of Gramm in the McCain campaign as the top economic adviser during these past months of the U.S. financial crisis. Indifference to the folks losing their homes is a more plausible explanation.

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See more stories tagged with: deregulation, mccain, reagan

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Pornography of Power: How Defense Hawks Hijacked 9/11 and Weakened America. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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View:
"Tough on Crime"
Posted by: Crazy H on Jul 16, 2008 11:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Repugs have always talked about being tough on crime - but only when the criminals are human beings. They talk about "small government" but again, that only applies to corporations - for humans they want to make more laws and harsher penalties for breaking them.

Case in point - our outdated "Consumer Protection Act." If a corporation doesn't play by the rules of the Fair Credit Billing Act, they stand to lose $50. That's less than a single executive lunch. How many people would worry about speeding tickets if the fine were ten cents; you could accumulate as many as you liked without penalty and the government didn't bother to collect anyway?

Theoretically, price fixing, false advertising, credit fraud, monopolies and a host of other crimes are illegal; but they're not enforced.

If a human steals $100 from a corporation, someone picks up a phone, the cops come get the perp, throw him in a police car, take him to jail and try him in a publicly funded court with publicly funded prosecutors. Cops, cars, courts ... all paid for by the tax payer.

But if a corporation steals $100 from a human, the cops won't arrest anybody. The human has to retain a lawyer at his own expense, and the worst that will happen is that the corporation has to give the $100 back and no-one serves any jail time.

How about we enact a "three strikes" law against corporations? The third time it doesn't obey the fair credit billing act, it loses its license. I bet that you'd get a much faster response to any billing disputes then...

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Thank you, Mr. Scheer, for keeping us posted.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 16, 2008 9:41 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, I recall the name of Phil Gramm. And I recall reading about how Wendy Gramm had something to do with the Enron crimes. But so much has happened since then, that I did not know Gramm was at USB and that he and McCain were joined at the hip.

Sounds like the mob running the casinos in Las Vegas. Only now it's the corporations and the banks. The bigger the crime, the bigger the bail-out? It's a racket.

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Lamar
Posted by: lamar on Jul 17, 2008 5:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The whole idea behind deregulation is that the risk of failure would keep big business in line better than any government regulation. We can debate that issue another day. But if you remove the risk of failure, then what "market forces" are there to discourage cooking the books? We simply can't have it both ways.

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Wrong (sorry). The whole idea behind deregulating (by Reagan, Bush I, Clinton and Bush II) is
Posted by: thekidde on Jul 17, 2008 11:03 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to privatize everything so the profits can be directed to the few, paid for by the many (directly and as cheap labor). Deregulation means never having to say you're sorry - or pay for criminal activity. It's high time the people started trashing the corporations (literally/figuratively - whatever) until they pay attention and have the common good as their goals. Otherwise, nationalize their sorry asses and get rid of the oligarchs.

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» Don't Forget Carter Posted by: dockboy
The Pattern
Posted by: asjogren on Jul 17, 2008 9:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Again, how many times do we need to see the pattern?

- Deregulate financial institutions (thanks Dr. Phil)
- Heaps of private money made quickly
- Collapse
- Taxpayer bailout


If the taxpayer bails out a corporation, we should act more the Venture Capitalists:
- Dilute the existing shareholders ownership severely by getting heaps of stock for our cash infusion
- Sell off or eliminate the unnecessary parts
- Nurse the corporation back to health with controlling interest AND Board Membership
- Sell our shares back to the market after hefty profit


But, above all add regulations so that we don't have to do this again.

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Reagan was a Puppet of CheneyCorp
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 18, 2008 7:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am infuriated by the repeated praises of that BS Regime.
Claims Reagan Brought down the USSR and the Berlin Wall are distortions of reality- rewriting History again. Also there Never Was any such Beast as a 'Reagan Democrat'- he busted unions, he ignored GRID thus AIDS, Deinstitutionalized the Mentally ill- thus leading to a deludge of Homeless, enabled Corp Crimes (S&L), Killed energy/fuel alternatives, Raped the environment......This New Fangled Term 'Reagan Democrat' was developed to give some sort of credence to Hillary, and the rest of the DLC- covert operatives of the Sociopathic Neo Cons and Corporationists!
Nixon was clinically paranoid,Ford was too naive, Jimmy was Politically assassinated,Reagan had Alzheimers when he took office, H.W was a 'yes man', Bill was too horny & arrogant to think, W. is Developmetally disabled and Mac has had a Stroke (along with a long standing Passive/ aggressive personality disorder).CheneyCorp has been running this country for Decades, He and this minions must be prosecuted for Treason, War crimes and Crimes Against Humanity/nature!

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Carter Ruled
Posted by: dockboy on Jul 18, 2008 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I suppose most of you would have preferred four more years of Jimmy Carter

  · 14% inflation
  · 20+% interest rates
  · 7.7% unemployment rate
  · being held hostage by 3rd World Countries (Iran)
  · etc

Carter had no coherent strategy to combat any of this. Reagan did. Sure, he made some tough, and unpopular decisions, but he got us out of the mess that was the Carter years. But you guys excuse Carter, because he was a democrat.

What pisses off Robert Scheer and the rest of you, is that despite nearly 20 years of attempts to rewrite history, and denegrate Reagan, you have been unable to convince the vast majority. I doubt you will succeed anytime soon.

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» RE: Please don't "suppose" for me. Posted by: brock_samson
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: bet-sea
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: dockboy
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: jnick
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: gregii
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: BenjamminH
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: fkuechmann
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: HSencillo
» RE: Carter Ruled Posted by: gregii
Actually, Scheer makes some valid criticisms regarding the consumer mortgage...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jul 19, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...irresponsibility fiasco. With less than 1% of U.S. home in foreclosure, however, I'd hesitate to call it a crisis just yet, though.

With regard to Scheer's unusually sound arguments, what did the federal government do in response to consumer, banking, and investor greed fiasco? They did what they usually do: the wrong thing entirely. Congress, the fed, and the treasury "preemptively invaded" the market. They have given investors a blank check to continue what they were doing previously, backed mostly by taxpayers who didn't take out irresponsible loans they had no means to pay for. Keep your chin up, though--it was great for international relations; the foreign markets rushed to buy into these taxpayer-guaranteed scams. The government created a no-lose situation for investors, over ruling one of the central tenets of investing: do so only if you are comfortable with the risk of losing what you've invested.

So, our Congresscritters removed the risk from people who invested in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac assets, when what they should have been doing is using these companies' impending failures not to bail them out, but throw them both overboard in favor of a better regulated, more diverse lending system.

Honestly, since when are near-monopolies ever a good thing for consumers, even when they're backed by bellicose Congresscritters willing to spend our money for us? Government (taxpayers) sponsored consolidation and strengthening of these two institutions is ridiculous.

I say jettison the giant government-backed punks, and put the risk of lending squarely where it needs to be: the bank down the street, that depends on making good loans to responsible payers in order to put food its employees' tables. There's just no valid reason with an economy as large and robust as ours to put all our little eggies in--what are for all intents and purposes--a single little "they're too big to fail" basket.

Let them fail! They willfully made bad loans to irresponsible people! These shareholders deserve to take their lumps, and companies that make a habit of making bad decisions deserve exactly what you and I would get if we ran our business into the ground.

No taxpayer bailouts of bankers, shareholders, or home-renters (mortgage holders) are necessary nor desirable for the rest of us who didn't toss around money we didn't have like junior Warren Buffet-wannabe's.

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The Real Legacy of the "Reagan Revolution" is Financialization, Globalization and Chronic Stagnation
Posted by: yellow on Jul 19, 2008 2:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All of which has, of course, led to a massive maldistribution of wealth and income and low aggregate consumer demand which acts to sustain financialization, globalization and chronic stagnation in a vicious cycle.

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At least the MAFIA is fair!!!!
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jul 21, 2008 12:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've been held hostage long enough!!! If we must have the Godfather, I'd prefer to call him "Don Vito Corleone"!!!!

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