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Keep Larry Summers as Far as Possible from the U.S. Treasury

By Mark Ames, TheNation.com. Posted November 12, 2008.


In light of all of the corruption and cronyism that have marked the career of Lawrence Summers, why is Obama considering him for treasury secretary?

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We all know in the backs of our minds that Barack Obama's incredible victory will eventually be followed by disappointment. But does it have to come so soon, and hit so hard? The answer will be yes, if Lawrence Summers is named treasury secretary in the president-elect's cabinet, as many observers believe will be the case. Summers was one of the key architects of our financial crisis -- hiring him to fix the economy makes as much sense as appointing Paul Wolfowitz to oversee the Iraq withdrawal. And when you look at the trail of economic destruction Summers left behind in other crisis-stricken countries who sought his advice in the past, then "terror" might be a more appropriate word than "disappointment."

The conventional wisdom is that Summers is the "centrist" choice -- Fareed Zakaria ("I think Summers is an extraordinarily brilliant guy") and David Gergen ("Larry Summers would be superb at this job"), two titans of centrism, both weighed in Sunday on the Stephanopoulos show in favor of Summers. And yet so far the debate over Summers has been largely confined to two outrageous moments in his career: his 1991 World Bank memo calling Africa "UNDER-polluted," and his more recent declarations, while serving as president of Harvard, about women's genetic inferiority in math and science. By themselves, these two incidents might be dismissed as merely provocative in a maverick-moron sort of way, as many of Summers' supporters argue; but in the context of Summers's track record, in which he oversaw the destruction of entire economies and covered up cronyism and corruption, his Africa memo and sexist declarations aren't exceptions but rather part of a disturbing pattern.



From the start, Summers has been on the wrong side of Obama's supporters. In 1982, while still a graduate student at Harvard, Summers was brought to Washington by his dissertation advisor Martin Feldstein, the supply-side economist, to serve on Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisors. Those first years in the Reagan administration were crucial in the right-wing war against New Deal regulation of the banking system and financial markets -- a war that Reagan's team won, and that we're all paying for today. Although Summers eventually identified himself with the Democratic Party -- albeit the right wing of that party -- nevertheless, as the New York Times's Peter T. Kilborn wrote in 1988:




He worked for 10 months as a top analyst in President Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers when his mentor, Martin S. Feldstein, was running it, and his colleagues don't recall him venting anti-Reagan heresies then ....




"One of the ironies of this business is that Summers's economics are quite close to Feldstein's," said William A. Niskanen, who was a member of the Feldstein council.





It's ironic if you expected Summers to be a liberal Democrat -- but par for the course in the context of Summers's real record. Some fifteen years after Summers's stint in the Reaganomics war room, he reappears as one of the key villains fighting to suppress the regulatory efforts of a top
official, Brooksley Born, who was trying to call attention to the dangers of the unregulated derivatives, such as credit swap defaults, which today are considered the key to the current economic crisis.




But let's return to the Summers timeline. After his stint in the Reaganomics brain trust, he returned to Harvard to serve as one of the university's youngest professors. In 1988, he was Michael Dukakis's chief economic advisor, but when that campaign failed to bring Summers to power, he turned to America's great rival, the former Soviet Union, to try out his economic experiments. In 1990, Lithuania, a restive Soviet republic seeking independence, hired Summers to advise on that country's economic transformation. Poor Lithuania had no idea what it got itself into. This was Summers's first opportunity to tackle a country in economic crisis and put his wunderkind theories into practice. The results were literally suicidal: in 1990, when Summers first arrived, Lithuania's suicide rate was 26.1 per 100,000 and falling. Just five years after Summers got his hands on Lithuania's economy, life became so unbearable under the economic transition that the suicide rate nearly doubled to 45.6 per 100,000, worse than any other ex-Soviet republic in transition. In fact, it was the highest suicide rate in the world, suggesting something particularly harsh and brutal about the economic transition in that country as opposed to the others, where suffering and pain were common. Things got so bad that in 1992, after just two years of Summers-nomics, the traumatized Lithuanians voted the communist party back into power, the first East European nation to do so -- even though just a year earlier Lithuanians actually died on the streets fighting communism.



Fresh off his success in Lithuania, Summers moved to the World Bank, where he was named the chief economist in 1991, the year he issued his famous let's-pollute-Africa memo. It was also the year that Summers, and his Harvard protg Andrei Schleifer (who worked with Summers on the Lithuania economic transformation), began their catastrophic "rescue" of Russia's crisis-ridden economy. It's a complicated story involving corruption, cronyism and economic devastation. But by the end of the 1990s, Russia's GDP had collapsed by more than 60 percent, its population was suffering the worst death-to-birth ratio of any industrialized nation in the twentieth century, and the financial markets that Summers and Schleifer helped create had collapsed in what was then the world's biggest debt default ever. The result was the rise of Vladmir Putin and a national aversion to free markets and anything associated with Western liberalism.



But that's not all. Summers, through Schleifer, was also tainted with some of that country's corruption, which resulted in a US Justice Department lawsuit against Schleifer and others. While Schleifer was being paid by US taxpayers to advise the Russians on capital markets in the 1990s, his wife, Nancy Zimmerman, bought and traded Russian equities for a Boston hedge fund she ran -- they even used Schleifer's US taxpayer-funded offices to run Zimmerman's Moscow-based hedge fund operations.




How close were Larry Summers and Andrei Schleifer? According to former Boston Globe economics correspondent David Warsh, Summers and Schleifer "were among each other's best friends," and Summers taught Schleifer "as an undergraduate, sent him on to MIT for his PhD, took him along on an advisory mission to Lithuania in 1990, and in 1991, shepherded his return to Harvard as full professor, where he was regarded, after Martin Feldstein and Summers, as the leader of the next generation."




In 2000, the Justice Department sought $102 million in damages from Schleifer, one of Schleifer's Harvard associates and Harvard University in a conflict-of-interest suit resulting from Schleifer's role as the lead US adviser to Russia's economic reforms -- questioning the way Schleifer and his wife profited from his position. Schleifer's Harvard team in Moscow was funded by USAID in a no-bid contract, and supported by Summers as soon as he moved into the Treasury Department in 1993. So Schleifer benefited from his relationship with Summers twice: first, by getting a choice contract as the US government's man in Moscow in the 1990s when Summers was in power in the US government, one that benefited his wife's hedge fund (earlier this year, Portfolio suggested that the Schleifers' hedge funds made them billionaires ). Then after Schleifer returned to Harvard to face the lawsuit, Summers, now president of Harvard, presided over a controversial settlement that all but let his protg off the hook. Thanks to pressure by Summers, Schleifer kept his chair at Harvard, where he continues to teach today.




Summers's other favorite man in Russia was Anatoly Chubais -- who consistently ranks at the top of Russia's " most hated man" polls. Chubais was executor of the Russian government's privatization program, in which state companies worth tens of billions of dollars were handed over to insiders for a fraction of their worth in blatantly rigged auctions. Summers praised Chubais as a "demigod" and called Chubais and his free-market cohorts "the dream team." In September 1998, after Russia's capital markets collapsed, along with billions in US-taxpayer-backed loans, Chubais boasted to a Russian newspaper, "We swindled them." By "them," he meant the Western and American aid institutions that funded his reforms.



In light of all of the corruption, cronyism and devastation that have marked his career, Summers' statements about an under-polluted Africa or intellectually-inferior women no longer seem like provocative eccentricities but part and parcel of the Summers shtick. And now there's talk that President-elect Obama may hand the keys to national treasury to Summers -- meaning that he'll be in charge of overseeing a trillion-dollar taxpayer bailout of the entire financial industry, a process already rife with conflicts of interest, cronyism and corruption -- as detailed by Naomi Klein.




The bailout, as currently implemented, threatens to devastate America's economy much as Russia's and Lithuania's were devastated before. The idea that this is exactly the right time and place to put Larry Summers in charge of our economy's future is so frightening that it makes the Sarah Palin vice presidential choice seem almost quaint by comparison. Let's hope the rumors are wrong.


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See more stories tagged with: barack obama, larry summers, treasury secretary

Mark Ames is a contributor to eXiledonline.com. He is the author of Going Postal: Rage, Murder, and Rebellion: From Reagan's Workplaces to Clinton¿s Columbine and Beyond.

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Duh ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Nov 12, 2008 12:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"In light of all of the corruption and cronyism that have marked the career of Lawrence Summers, why is Obama considering him for treasury secretary?"

Indeed ... why ?

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

» RE: Duh ... Posted by: okcsteve
So...
Posted by: andyc on Nov 12, 2008 2:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Have you spelt this out to Obama, directly?

He needs to know just how much change people actually want.

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» RE: So... Posted by: gnaw_bone
» RE: So... Posted by: smc31569
» RE: So... Posted by: oregoncharles
Barack Obama (and future Administration), if you are reading this...
Posted by: ZPaul on Nov 12, 2008 3:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Barack Obama (and future Administration), if you are reading this, remember: we put our faith in you. We don't expect you to be a revolutionary. But we DO expect change. Having you as President, to those of us who voted for you, means big change. We understand that in politics, sometimes you have to compromise. But there's a line you must not cross. That line is the point at which compromise and "inclusion" becomes selling out to the Right. Because you may be "everybody's President", from Left to Right. But the Right did not elect you, Barack Obama. The People did. The People elected you. And we want you to appoint decent, qualified people to occupy these important positions.

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» Pull the plug on all MSM Posted by: weathered
Don Quixot
Posted by: Don Quixote on Nov 12, 2008 3:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry to dissappoint you, but Obama cannot make much difference choices or policies than McCain, that is already decided by others. The US President is not the most powerful person in the US, because he is not the richest man in the US. Money is power, and the megarich and megacorporations decide the policies, not the President. If Obama tries to act independently and disobeys "orders", it will happen to him like to John Kennedy. Both parties have secret agreements and never hold the past administration accountable for anything, so there is not much difference if the president is republican or democrat, black or white, man or woman, youg or old. Sorry, that is my experience in watching US politics since the fifties and reading over previous history. In Zeitgeist.com (except the mistaken first part) 2nd and 3rd part this is crudely but clearly explained.

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» RE: Don Quixot Posted by: weathered
» Zeitgeist Posted by: Fog
» RE: Don Quixot Posted by: koolwoman
If at first you don't succeed, destroy all the evidence.
Posted by: blogoffanddie on Nov 12, 2008 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is choosing people for their expertise. Larry Summers knows how corrupt and broken the system is because he helped make it that way – hey, who better to understand the mind of white collar criminals than white collar criminals?

http://blogoffanddie.wordpress.com
http://theimpolitecanadian.wordpress.com/
Errors have been made, others will be blamed.

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Obama-In the Pocket of Federal Reserve Bank
Posted by: 911FalseFlag on Nov 12, 2008 5:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am an attorney who is a realistic skeptic about any real change occurring in this country since the political system is completely corrupted and beyond repair. With that said, I am looking for the following from President Obama;
A country where the President and Congress tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
A country where the President and Congress are not in the pocket of the military industrial oil private central banking complex.
A country where foreign policy in the Middle East is determined with the best interests of this country and the world as a whole in mind instead of the best interests of the military-industrial oil private central banking complex and Israel to the detriment of the people in this country and the world.
A country where the truth about 9/11 being an inside job is exposed by the President and the guilty parties prosecuted;
A country where the truth about the Federal Reserve Bank and its control of the economic policy of this country and the scam that is is exposed and remedied,
A country where the truth about electronic voting machines being used to steal presidential and congressional elections is exposed and paper ballots are used at all state and federal elections.
A country where President Obama breaks from the tradition of letting the president's predecessor off the hook for that administration’s crimes. For the Bush administration, their crimes are Mass Murder, war crimes and treason together with a long list of other felonies.
I do not expect to receive any real honest, direct response. However, please surprise me and show me that you know what I am referring to in my comments above.
If you need information regarding what I am talking about (which I hope you do not), please go to my website which is www.911inside job.net.

Here's hoping, Joe, Webmaster of 911insidejob.net

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Obama and the Federal Reserve Bank
Posted by: 911FalseFlag on Nov 12, 2008 5:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Based upon the individuals who he is considering to appoint to head the Treasury Department, Obama will continue a policy of allowing the Federal Reserve Bank to dictate economic policy and continue to scam people in this country out of trillions of dollars.

The following is a short excerpt from an article posted on my website:
All of the leading candidates for the position of Treasury Secretary under president elect Barack Obama directly represent the old guard of the corporate elite system that has used the American economy as it’s engine to drive their march toward a global empire for decades.

Under the banner of “change” whichever of [2] these candidates is appointed to the Treasury will continue to rapidly expand the empowerment of the Federal Reserve monetary system and institute the very policies that have led us to the brink of financial ruin to move the economies of the world toward a centralized global banking system.

The Leading candidate for Obama’s Treasury Secretary is current Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York [3] Tim Geithner.

go to www.911insidejob.net

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RE: No way
Posted by: tiffanyjewelry on Nov 17, 2008 12:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
tiffany jewellery is not just a luxury item

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Not good
Posted by: Tripoli-Kid on Nov 12, 2008 6:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Larry Summers would be to the treasury the same as DICK Cheney is to the vice-presidency.Not good.

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Exhuming JP Morgan?
Posted by: chlamor on Nov 12, 2008 6:37 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are are various "career tracks" that these people get on, from Government regulators to politicians to Federal Reserve Bankers to Academics, and so on. The "norm" has been that very few actual bankers or finance capitalists of any kind actually serve in government or in this kind of first-level advisory. Once in a while, you get a famous rich-guy who made it in local real estate or whatever, or you get a name (Ross Perot) or you get some very narrow stripe of characters that put themselves into government (typically defense contractors like Haliburton or KBR in the last round).

This time, though, it is very different. Look at how many senior bank executives are on Obama's list (and I can think of a bunch of others who are part of the transition team, etc.). As counterpoint, the government bankers and academics are mostly missing, which is very unusual. You have Volcker who doesn't count, and a bunch of minor-leaguers. The two fake-Nobels (Stiglitz and Krugman) are not prominent. I am willing to bet that this "team" is statistically different from any that have come before and it ain't no weird Naomi Klein nightmare of "corporatists", either. This is a government of bankers.

No wonder Obama doesn't like lobbyists. Who needs parasitic intermediaries when your team consists of the real thing.

This is some serious "change". Shit, the only one missing is old J.P. his-self.

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I am skeptical as well
Posted by: sawdust on Nov 12, 2008 7:07 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About Summers. There are three or four other people I'd rather see in the job. On the other hand, several years ago, at my company's direction, I was sent off to takeover a retail arm of our business that had been grossly mismanaged, The most recent financial statements were obviously fraudulent. An hour after I took over, the business manager and architect of the financial statements came to me and said, "Fire me if you want to, but I know where all the dirt is". She did, we found it and I couldn't not have saved the place as quickly as I did without her. Tough call, thisone.

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» RE: I am skeptical as well Posted by: dp1228
» RE: I am skeptical as well Posted by: dp1228
Maybe it's high time we built better pols from state and local elections ground up, no?
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 12, 2008 7:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Otherwise, don't expect much on the federal level but this same old tired bullshit.

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Larry Summers, Volker, Emanuel, reconcilliation with Lieberman, Robert Rubin
Posted by: PakiBoy on Nov 12, 2008 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and the rest in Obama's camp.

Change is DOA indeed!

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I am . . .
Posted by: covalentbonded on Nov 12, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
shocked; shocked I tell you, to see that Obama (the Great Centerist) would want Summers to run the Treasury!

Change: That's what you'll have in your wallets till this gets done with.

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I wonder...
Posted by: jshubbub on Nov 12, 2008 7:59 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if the people posting all of the outraged comments regarding this story are basing said outrage solely on this story. Obama is not a stupid man. Surely, there is another side to this thing.

A hint of this story's overwhelming bias comes very early on when the author blames the Lithuanian suicide rate on Summers. For all I know, Summers is a real tool, but blaming him exclusively for the rise in an entire nation's suicide rate is taking things a bit far, don't you think? Hysterics beget hysterics, and you don't have to scroll far down the comments to find plenty of them.

Before you commit to total disdain for the man, the process, and Obama himself it might be useful to gather information from more than one source.

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» RE: I wonder... Posted by: Beck
Oh Please already - he WON, he does not need you now
Posted by: eeezzz on Nov 12, 2008 8:02 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama said and promised anything to everybody and the Kool Aid drinkers were so intoxicated that they went home with him. What made you all think that he would still respect you the morning after? You were TOO EASY!

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» Yep, earth girls are easy Posted by: MartianBachelor
We need a woman treasury secretary
Posted by: Auk on Nov 12, 2008 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey, that'll show Larry Summers that girls are good at math!

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Why, oh why, do you expect different from Obama
Posted by: DCostello2 on Nov 12, 2008 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did you really think the unicorns were coming back? that the blue birds would sing every morning? that rainbows would appear every day at noon? C'mon people. Did you really????

You should have gone beyond drinking the Koolaide and actually reading something about Obama and what he's DONE. Do some reading and thinking about what he's said besides 'hope and change'. It's all pretty much there if you take the blinders off and look.

For starters, Obama is a Democrat. He's not a progressive. Democrats, as an instution, are NOT progressive. They are centrists, Republican lite. Obama fits the mold perfectly. A couple of quick and easy clues that Obama is not a progressive:

1 - he believes that separate can be equal in the case of same sex marriage.

2 - he not only supports the death penalty, he supports expanding it for non-fatal crimes.

3 - he supports stripping your rights from the Constitution. He voted in favor of the Patriot Act - twice, and, more damning, he blah, blahed against the illegal wire tap bill but not only did he SUPPORT it but he voted to end the discussion. Big supporter of the democratic process and the Constitution.

4 - he supports bailing out Wall St but not you and me.

5 - he blah, blahs about Palestine but gave the most pro-Israel speech to AIPAC in years!!

The list goes on and on and on. Which brings me to my original question - why would you expect anything different???

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I don't think this article is "hysterics". I just see facts
Posted by: ZPaul on Nov 12, 2008 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author stated facts. What, pray tell, is hysterical about that? Hey I don't want to spoil Obama's celebration party, I'm delighted he won, mostly because the Republicans lost.

So, studying this possible pick's very questionable record and questioning it seriously is "hysterics"? I just see it as studying - and questioning. I happen to think that questioning is a very healthy thing to do, generally speaking.

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No surprises re Summers
Posted by: xvictor on Nov 12, 2008 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama had been bought and paid for by the banks and other interests. Note his light speed quickness in agreeing to the bailout money for the investment banks. what does that say? Aside from that, however, his liberal ideology is still a better alternative to McCain's neolithic politics and his ilk. Sometimes, to get things done, one has to shake hands with the devil on a somewhat frequent basis.

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Summers is just one of several poor candidates
Posted by: 6399 on Nov 12, 2008 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In light of all of the corruption and cronyism that have marked the career of Lawrence Summers, why is Obama considering him for treasury secretary?

Good question? And Obama seems to be considering other highly questionable candidates at the moment. Hell, if Rahm Emmanuel wasn't questionable, I don't know what is.

Rubin would be another disastrous choice. Recycling party apparatchiks is doing this country a great disservice and does not represent "change we can believe in" in any capacity whatsoever.

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Thanks for the headsup.
Posted by: oregoncharles on Nov 12, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So if Summers is nominated, we know what to expect. Or Rubin, or several others.

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just a video
Posted by: Von on Nov 12, 2008 10:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8vaBM5lKN8

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Actually, it's even worse than that
Posted by: MartianBachelor on Nov 12, 2008 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just for the sake of complete completeness... Summers was Treasury Secretary under Clinton when the depression-era laws which kept depository banking separate from other forms of banking (such as mortgage banking and/or investment banking) -- aka, the Glass-Steagall Act -- were overturned in 1999.

It's widely acknowledged that this paved the way for the housing bubble and many if not most of the current troubles in the credit, banking, and financial markets that we now seem unable to find our way out of.

I just thought these facts should be added to Summers resume to drive home the fact that he's totally a tried-and-failed experiment, not just in Lithuania but here in the good old US as well.

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Who would be a good choice?
Posted by: dp1228 on Nov 12, 2008 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We seem spend a lot of time ranting against nominations and generally being "anti-" in the progressive camp. With that in mind, does anyone have suggestions about who WOULD BE a good choice as treasury secretary?

I would prefer an economist who acknowledges the laws of thermodynamics, but those are few and far between and would be dismissed as too radical.

While he does not fit my bill as an ecological economist, the first person who comes to my mind as a good, possibly realistic choice is Nouriel Roubini.

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» RE: Who would be a good choice? Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Realistically, Posted by: oregoncharles
Rolland Miller - Financier
Posted by: rollandmiller on Nov 12, 2008 10:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is Obama Brain Dead?

No but with the suggestion that he would bring Larry Summers, who is one of the architects of the collapse of the Financial system, into his cabinet only reinforces the question.

Obama has the intelect, and leadership to know better so what is going on?

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Change We Can Believe In
Posted by: dockboy on Nov 12, 2008 11:26 AM   
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You guys voted for Obama the Great. You fell for his BS, hook, line and sinker. So quitcher bitchin'.

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» RE: The Greens... Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: The Greens... Posted by: dp1228
» RE: The Greens... Posted by: dockboy
» RE: Let's hope so. Posted by: oregoncharles
Getting All Feminist On US, Mark?
Posted by: Russianrocket on Nov 12, 2008 11:43 AM   
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Mark, what's the deal? When have you ever given a shit about sexism. Go back to banging Ukrainian prostitutes. Those were much more interesting stories.

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mexobserver
Posted by: mexobserver on Nov 12, 2008 11:49 AM   
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As a Mexican, I don't know why you thought Obama would be any different from the Economy-of-Greed-and-Selfishness advocates. He's really not African-American. His African ancestors didn't know slavery or squallor, he grew up wealthy. His search of identity as a teenager deserves respect but never ensured he would be any vigilant of minorities' welfare. Also as a Mexican, I only point out that among the economies destroyed by Larry Summers was the Mexican one, in 1995, with the Mexican peso crisis. Since then, it's been (artificial) crises one after another, all of them taken advantage of by the IMF, which, I learnt by reading Ms. Klein, has more often than not been entirely managed by the U.S. Treasury.

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what's the SOLUTION?
Posted by: pattyr on Nov 12, 2008 11:49 AM   
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so how should we be using our powerful citizens' influence to advocate for the RIGHT candidate for treasury secretary?

who are the top 3, 2, or even single contender whose name(s) we should be presenting to obama? if he has good candidates to consider, there won't be room for summers!

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Truth is,
Posted by: oregoncharles on Nov 12, 2008 12:06 PM   
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Summers is probably disqualified by his record of sticking his foot in it.

So who will it really be?

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» RE: P.S. Posted by: oregoncharles
Change
Posted by: mike_burns on Nov 12, 2008 12:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If peaceful change is made impossible, violent change is inevitable.
Someone, Remind Obama.

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Should The Government Stop Dumping Money Into A Giant Hole?
Posted by: fanny666 on Nov 12, 2008 1:53 PM   
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In my humble opinion there is a great Candidate
Posted by: marid on Nov 12, 2008 2:06 PM   
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Joseph Stiglitz, he was and is an outcast from the Wall Street inner circle. Read his Vanity Fair article for a glimpse or pick up one of his books for a perusal. He is critical of the Free Market Fundamentalists, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. He predicted the present Wall Street raping of America and was ostrasized because of it.

Anyone who has worked on Wall Street in the past few years should be automaticly disqualified for they have all proved that they were either absolutely incompetent, criminals, or both. We all know there are honest, qualified, smart people out there but the powers behind the curtain won't allow that to happen.

I was kinda hoping Obama might pull the curtain back and show us the ugly side. Stay tuned.

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Summers is the wrong guy
Posted by: zrants on Nov 12, 2008 4:52 PM   
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If all you say is true, and I do remember hearing the Harvard story, he is the wrong guy for the job. We need someone who is smart and has a heart.

zrants

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Aw FUCK ! Another bailout for BIG AUTO from Obama !
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 12, 2008 5:24 PM   
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Damn, I knew I should have voted for Nader ! Those pesky seductive Obama-ites !!!! RRRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR !

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Now the Nation gets it?
Posted by: douglashoyt on Nov 12, 2008 5:39 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You were warned over and over again with facts and examples, but you ignored them for "hope."

Now you can rot is HELL with the rest of us.

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ALL of it just makes Nader so right.
Posted by: EdinIowa on Nov 12, 2008 5:41 PM   
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It IS better to vote for someone you can believe in and loose then to vote for someone you can't believe in and win because they will ALWAYS let you down.

But yeah, does it have to happen so soon?

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Obama -all sizzle and no steak
Posted by: eeezzz on Nov 12, 2008 6:07 PM   
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Like you did not see it coming?????????????

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Secretary of Treasury guys like bad pennies
Posted by: Mrs. Jefferson on Nov 12, 2008 6:30 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
keep returning. It's not change but the same guys robbing us. Secretary of Treasury is to keep our money safe. Only Congress can vote on the budget and funds. By allowing the President a blank check (and his cronies in agencies) they violate the Constitution. They should be jailed for treason. They ignore their oath of office.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Quayle

Dan Quayle signed the Project for the American Century. Head of an investment firm On October 19, 2006, John W. Snow, President George W. Bush's second United States Secretary of the Treasury, was named chairman of Cerberus. They have a large stake in GM and the automobile industry. I also heard Qualyle is a member of Cerberus has a large stake in GM and military equipment committees at the Pentagon, etc.

No to any bailout to these guys who profit off our tax dollars and destruction of democracy. They move in and out of government robbing us of our treasury and security. It is corporate welfare on steroids.

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LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL
Posted by: gellero1 on Nov 13, 2008 5:30 AM   
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"Change We Can Believe In"

Indeed...............

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Enough centrism!
Posted by: Democritus on Nov 13, 2008 2:52 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shouldn't the appointment of Rahm Emanuel as Chief of Staff be enough centrism? You bet it should. Larry Summers was shown by the women of Harvard to be rooted in the 19th century. Enough of Summers. Enough of centrism. Let's get the 21st century of progessivism rolling.

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And the choice should be....
Posted by: Democritus on Nov 13, 2008 2:57 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All right. Now for a positive recommendation for Treasury Secretary (drumroll, please)-- Robert Reich.

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How Larry Summers Championed Wall Street - Secretary of Greed
Posted by: avatar_singh on Nov 14, 2008 5:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.counterpunch.org/cervantes11142008.html

How Larry Summers Championed Wall Street By Impoverishing the Mexican People
Secretary of Greed

By PETER CERVANTES-GAUTSCHI

Appointing Larry Summers our Treasury secretary would be a grave mistake, and a slap in the face to Mexico and those who struggle for economic justice on both sides of the border.

Summers, while serving as under secretary of the Treasury in 1995, engineered the destruction of Mexico's economy by increasing interest rates to unmanageable levels—business and farm loans went from 11% to 56%, credit card rates from 7% to 61%, home loans from 5% to 75%, car loans from 7% to 91%. The result was massive human suffering and the forced migration of millions of economic refugees to the United States.

Although Wall Street banks profited handsomely, the impact of 1995 loan interest rate increases in Mexico was more than millions of people and businesses could handle. Thousands of farms and businesses, both large and small, went bankrupt. In 1995 alone over 12,000 of Mexico's businesses filed for bankruptcy, and as economic activity came to a standstill and demand was cut, orders were canceled and plants operated at less than minimum levels. Idle capacity in many branches of the manufacturing sector increased to 70%. It became impossible for millions of workers to support their families by earning paychecks in their own country. Unable to earn enough to support their families, many of them migrated to the United States to find family wage work.

A report adopted by Mexico's Senate on September 21, 2007 noted that Alan Greenspan gave Summers credit for the draconian interest rate measure and Greenspan wrote in his memoir:

That experience (the Mexican bail-out) formed a lasting bond between Rubin, Summers, and me ... Larry could be shrewd too: it was his idea to put such a high interest rate on the Mexico loans that the Mexicans felt compelled to pay us back early.

Larry Summers' tenure at Treasury the last time around was marked by enriching the relative few while devastating the very many. The U.S. citizenry voted for a change and a priority on Main Street over Wall Street. Policies that impoverish workers, whether here or in Mexico, do not reflect the change we voted for.

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Great info!
Posted by: CA NOW on Nov 17, 2008 9:50 AM   
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Thanks for all the info! We linked to this article in a post on the CA NOW blog about Obama's potential appointments.

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S H Mills
Posted by: SHMills on Nov 23, 2008 5:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are numerous reasons why Larry Summers has proven he would not be the best choice for our next Treasury Secretary or any type of economc advisor to our next president. Here is just one more reason.


Harvard alum Iris Mack, MBA/PhD requested a meeting with Larry Summers to express her concerns about how her HMC boss Jeff Larson used derivatives to manage an HMC portfolio. Larson eventually left HMC to start Sowood hedge fund with hundreds of millions of dollars of Harvard alums' donations. Sowood was one of the first hedge funds to blow up during the subprime mortgage derivatives crisis.

Dr. Mack communicated with Summers' office regarding such derviatives trades. Perhaps, she could have saved Harvard alums hundreds of millions of dollars if Summers had bothered to continue to hear her out before forcing her resignation. There is a wealth of information describing this derivatives whistleblowing case: correspondence between Dr. Mack and Summer's office (emails, faxes, snail mail, phone records, etc.); legal documents; reports from FBI and DOJ interviews, etc. Two of these documents may be found in an attached file.

Given all this, you have to wonder whether Summers was either too
(a) corrupt and wanted to coverup up something(s) at HMC.
(b) arrogant to think that Dr. Mack had anything of value to tell him about mathematical finance and derivatives. Please recall Summers' comments about women and math. Also, please note that Dr. Mack has a doctorate in Applied Mathematics from Harvard and a Sloan Fellows MBA from London Business School.
(c) incompetent to understand what Dr. Mack was trying to warn him about regarding derivatives trades in HMC portfolios.

Did Summers try to silence Dr. Mack the way he, Rubin and Greenspan tried to silence Attorney Brooksley Born of the CFTC? Who knows what goes on in Summers' head? Nevertheless, he seems like a dreadful choice for our nation's next Treasury Secretary.

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S H Mills
Posted by: SHMills on Nov 23, 2008 5:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is a great compilation of articles detailing why Larry Summers, Robert E. Rubin and Alan Greenspan should be in JAIL!

http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/

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