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Both candidates are scrambling to enlist the expertise of the geniuses who helped spur our economic meltdown.

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Obama and McCain Suck Up to the Bankers

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted July 30, 2008.


Both candidates are scrambling to enlist the expertise of the geniuses who helped spur our economic meltdown.
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This is a time to condemn the bankers, not to embrace them. They are the scoundrels who got us into the biggest economic mess since the Great Depression, lining their own pockets while destroying the life savings of those who trusted them. Yet both of our leading presidential candidates are scrambling to enlist not only the big-dollar contributions but, more frighteningly, the "expertise" of the very folks who advocated the financial industry deregulations at the heart of this meltdown.

Republican candidate John McCain even appointed as his campaign co-chairman Phil Gramm, who went from being chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, where he sponsored disastrous legislation that empowered the banking bandits, to becoming one of them at UBS Warburg. Gramm was forced to resign from McCain's campaign only after he went public with his contempt for the financial concerns of ordinary Americans, calling them "whiners" and perpetrators of a "mental recession."

But Gramm and the Republicans couldn't have done it without the support of leading Democrats. The most egregious of Gramm's legislative favors to the financiers took the form of legislation named in part after him -- the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which became law only after then-Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin prevailed upon President Clinton to sign the bill. The bill's immediate major effect was to legitimize the long-sought merger between Citibank and insurance giant Travelers. Rubin's critical support for the bill was rewarded with an appointment, within days of its passage, to a top job at Citibank (later Citigroup) paying more than $15 million a year.

That is the same Rubin with whom Democratic candidate Barack Obama met, along with other influential advisers, on Tuesday to figure out what to do about the sorry state of our economy. But what in the world did he expect to learn from Rubin? And why did he appoint Rubin's protégé, Jason Furman, who ran the Rubin-funded Hamilton Project, to be the Obama campaign's economic director? Hopefully, during their encounter Tuesday, Rubin offered himself as a contrite model of everything that the candidate of change needs to change.

After all, Goldman Sachs, where Rubin spent 25 years of his business career before entering the Clinton administration, has been one of the prime corporate villains in the financial shenanigans that led to the subprime mortgage scandal. As co-chairman of the firm, surely he had knowledge of the financial hanky-panky that would prove so disastrous down the road. Indeed, as Treasury secretary, he favored an extension of the deregulation that enabled this explosion of banking avarice. Not surprisingly, the current Treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, also previously headed Goldman.

When Rubin assumed a top position at Citibank after his stint at the Treasury, he was not above influencing his former employees in the government. In one notorious instance during the fall of 2001, when Enron was going down the tubes Rubin telephoned a Treasury undersecretary and asked him to consider intervening with credit-rating agencies to hold off downgrading Enron's ratings. When the story was leaked, some media accounts noted the possibility of a conflict of interest because Enron owed Citibank $750 million, which it could not pay if bankrupt.

Despite his skills and his vaunted position as Citibank's chairman, Rubin was not spared the disastrous consequences of Citibank's own wild financial manipulations, which, if anything, exceeded those of Enron. Tens of billions in bad mortgage and credit card debt placed the bank at the forefront of the current economic crisis, and so it is weird that Obama would now turn to Rubin for advice.

It's even weirder that the presumptive Democratic nominee would pick Rubin's man Furman as his campaign economic director at a time when cleaning up the mess left by the bankers is the highest priority. Furman hardly distinguished himself four years ago in that role in John Kerry's failed presidential campaign, with its muffled economic message that could not be blamed on the candidate's stiff style alone.

The bigger problem is that folks such as Rubin and Furman, perhaps best known as an economist for his bold but woefully misguided defense of the Wal-Mart business model, clearly do not feel the pain of the voters who are losing their homes.

But then again, why should Rubin, or Gramm on the Republican side, be expected to care when he has made so many millions off the suffering of those voters? Not good at a time when we need a presidential candidate who sticks it to the bankers instead of sucking up to them.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: obama, mccain, election 2008, economic policy

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

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Goldman Sachs biggest bundler of money to Obama...
Posted by: TJColatrella on Jul 30, 2008 4:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article and Goldman Sachs is one of the worst of those manipulating the Oil prices on the Futures market, and they are the biggest bundlers of money for the Obama campaign so there's little hope of relief for America from Obama were gas prices are concerned..

We must close the Goldman Sachs loophole as well as the Enron and London loopholes as well..

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Thanks Robert Scheer
Posted by: rg on Jul 30, 2008 6:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These are the tough questions that the voters should be putting to the candidates.
Judging by the article, It's going to pretty much be : Different master - same whip

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

Yep, The Bankers Are Protecting Their Money Printing Monopoly ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Jul 31, 2008 1:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bankers have the largest government subsidy. The right, through fractional reserve banking, to produce all our countries money through the loans they make.

Furthermore they can lend out 10 times the money they actually have on deposit so $100 in deposits can be used to loan $1000. Since they can loan out multiples off their deposits then they get multiples in interest payments. So if interest is at say 6% they get $60 in interest for the $100 they have in deposits, a 60% gross profit!

Wouldn't you protect this kind of deal if it were yours?

Just think about it. How does the government get its money? Most it gets through taxes but when we need more we have to borrow it from the privately owned and operated Federal Reserve! Why should we have to borrow money from ourselves and then pay interest on it? It's crazy!

With the creation of a Public Central bank that creates money without interest and the arbitration of credit we would have hundreds of billions probably over a trillion dollars more a year in government receipts!

Liberals and progressives need to start talking about how our money is being created. Without this discussion all other issues become moot as the banks control the very lifeblood of the economy; the money we need to pay for a progressive agenda.

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Bankers = Bank Robbers
Posted by: vkobaya1 on Jul 31, 2008 3:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in 50s when I was growing up, cops and robbers was a popular TV show theme. Back then, we never dreamed that bankers and bank robbers would become synonymous in 50 years. Had speculated many times what the future would be like, space ships, ray guns, household robots, flying cars, flying belts, etc. Then again, never, never though it would be possible for a moronic, murderous, theiving traitor to sit in the chair in Oval Office.

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After attending one of his town hall talks, I became an admirer of Sheer, but--
Posted by: HughScott on Jul 31, 2008 3:42 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I want to hear SOLUTIONS from Robert, not criticism.

Meanwhile, the WORST of two "evils" -- Unfit McCain -- is about to steal the election by using Karl Rove's scurrilous and unpatriotic playbook.

It is imperative that freedom-loving Americans focus on McCain and cut Obama some slack. To that end, understanding how much more destructive would be a McCain administration, visit my new nonprofit website:www.UnfitMcCain.com

The home page banner says, "Five reasons why you should not vote for Sen. McCain in 2008" -- which are:

1. He will continue President Bush's belligerent foreign policy which led to the unjustified and unending Iraq War that has killed more than 4,000 U.S. military personnel, decimated our armed forces and added mega-billions to the national debt.

2. McCain has endorsed the failed Bush economic policies that are destroying the middleclass, causing jobs to go overseas, pushing homeowners into foreclosure and endangering the future of our offspring for decades to come.

3. McCain is America's "Number One Neocon" with direct ties to Bill Kristol's rightwing extremist oganization, Project for a New American Century (PNAC), which promoted regime change in Iraq before 9/11 and wants to dominate the world with U.S. military power.

4. During the 2008 presidential campaign, McCain showed he lacked the necessary integrity to be commander-in-chief by flip-flopping on major issues -- such as torture, off-shore drilling and the 2001 Bush tax cuts that favored America's wealthiest citizens.

5. Finally, McCain distorted his POW record and exploited it for political gain.

The last reason summarizes my facts-check of "Songbird" McCain's dishonorable behavior in North Vietnam. Part of the information is based on my recent communications with a former POW.

If you agree with my findings and love America, please tell your friends and family about UnfitMcCain.com.

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam veteran, lifelong registered Republican and former McCain supporter.

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The American Plutocracy
Posted by: david.model@senecac.on.ca on Jul 31, 2008 9:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama and McCain's snuggling up the subprime mortgage bandidts is symptomatic of a much more serious problem. It's not just the banker's who influence presidential candidates and then the president himself. Corporations from every major sector of the economy exercise seductive power over politicians dangling money in front of their power-hungry eyes to entice them to prostitute themselves by offering favors to the corporate elite rather than serving the public interest.

http://www.stateofdarkness.com

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Mccain, I understand that rightwing lunactic. Obama? How's Cooke County doing these days?
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 31, 2008 10:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to see how they're doing as a result of Bush's extension of RAYGUNomic policies that Obama has been caving in to more often than not.

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Mr.
Posted by: bar5608 on Jul 31, 2008 11:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After all the hype we've heard about Obama and his incredible ability to collect donations over the internet from individual small donors, now you're telling me he is taking money from Goldman Sachs? We do not need a bunch of scurillous lies about Obama now. We need to tell the truth and nothing but the truth. If you cannot provide some proof of these allegations, shut the hell up!!!!!

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» RE: Mr. Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: Mr. Posted by: Forestero
Take Back The Fed
Posted by: sivere on Jul 31, 2008 4:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You will know that a candidate is worth at least his weight in salt when he/she mentions:

1. That there exists a $1 QUADRILLION derivatives bubble;
2. That the source of the problem is the encouragement and assitance of the Fed in creating the said bubble;
3. The possibility to

www.TakeBackTheFed.com
www.xFed.mobi (mobile)

Until a candidate acknowledges these points, consider them deceptive. THEY KNOW ABOUT IT. If they are being deceptive, the best assumption is that they are going to go into office and continue supporting the bubble and its proponents. They will bail out the banks, not the republic.

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McBama O'Cain for the Ruling Class
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Jul 31, 2008 5:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]