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Taibbi's Scream: Stop the Political System That Has Let Goldman Sachs Fleece Us for 90 Years

By Rob Johnson, AlterNet. Posted July 8, 2009.


The sordid story of how Goldman Sachs and Co. engineered bubbles in the economy and made a hefty profit.

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I hold my hands in front of me to block my line of sight
It seems my eyes are growing tired of staring in the light
The more I see the more I feel the less I want to know
Because if you think to much you'll blow your mind
You might just lose control and scream

-Lyrics to "Scream," by Seven Nations (Kirk McLeod)

 

In Matt Taibbi's vivid and provocative new article in Rolling Stone, "The Great American Bubble Machine," the man absolutely screams. Evoking the image in Edvard Munch's famous Norwegian painting, Taibbi sounds the alarm to American readers as he explores the sordid story of Goldman Sachs and Co. Tracing 90 years of political and market history, Taibbi colorfully describes the firm headquartered at 85 Broad Street as: "a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money."

Such evocative imagery will surely be discounted by some as hysterical or exaggerated, particularly by those whose senses are deadened by the business press or CNBC-style babble. Rather than engage in a dissection of the details, I would like to explore why Taibbi is screaming and ask why he is screaming for all of us in a way we are not seeing elsewhere in the media. In addition to screaming for us, I wonder whether he is also screaming at us. One thing is certain: he is screaming in a way that a healthy press would do in a hysterical time. Goldman Sachs' uncontested success blurring the boundaries between market and state is symbolic of a tremendous malfunction in finance, politics and civil society. That the firm is well-managed by all measures and that some fine, well-meaning individuals work there is beside the point. Taibbi is telling us that the rules are rigged. That we are being abused.

This is a time for vivid outrage.

Taibbi's rage is filling an emotional void. It is a reaction to what is missing after this profound speculative episode that the IMF suggests will cost over $4 trillion in losses on balance sheets and untold trillions in lost output. It is fury over a crisis that is, by any measure, the most profoundly damaging episode since the 1930s (and the Bank for International Settlements Annual Report released this week strongly suggests that the burden on stockholders is far from over).

What is it that leads to screaming? A wonderful passage in John Kenneth Galbraith's A Short History of Financial Euphoria helps explain. Dr. Galbraith seeks to identify the common elements that recur organically in the buildup and aftermath of every financial boom-bust episode:

"The final and common feature of the speculative episode-in stock markets, real estate, art, or junk bonds-is what happens after the inevitable crash. This, invariably, will be a time of anger and recrimination and also of profoundly unsubtle introspection. The anger will fix upon the individuals who were previously most admired for their financial imagination and acuity. Some of them, having been persuaded of their own exemption from confining orthodoxy, will, as noted, have gone beyond the law, and their fall and, occasionally, their incarceration will now be viewed with righteous satisfaction.


There will also be scrutiny of the previously much-praised financial instruments and practices-paper money; implausible securities issues; insider trading; market rigging; more recently, program and index trading that have facilitated and financed the speculation. There will be talk of regulation and reform."

 

Note the elements: anger, recrimination, introspection, law breaking, incarceration, regulation and reform.

Despite the fact that our news media have been filled with financial stories from Bear Stearns failure in March '08 to the present, the elements listed above seem neglected, muted, or in short supply (Gretchen Morgenson is the exception that proves the rule). This is disturbing, particularly given the scale of losses that the taxpayer has been forced to absorb, along with disappearing funds for future roads, bridges, health care, schools and a tax drag on wealth creation. It is into the void created by the tepid media coverage of this horrid and costly episode that Mr. Taibbi has screamed.


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Matt Taibbi is a Hero ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Jul 8, 2009 1:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And your psychological examination of his motives belies your pathetic patronage of the elite class sensibility that defers the knowledge of the grievous to the realm of the unsaid unsayable vicious paradigms that underwrite their reason d'etre.

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refuse to be lied to? you have to unpack nearly a thousand years of lies
Posted by: Suzon on Jul 8, 2009 2:00 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The US is an outpost of the Norman-English empire (as is Australia, another supporter of "American" wars). We don't realize that the "British" empire is actually the parent of our own imperialism.

We don't realize that the fount from which flows our elitist and reckless culture is the Corporation of the City of London, a financial Vatican which ministers serve and corrupt judges protect. Look here for the origin of the corporation (1067) and for its characteristics (concentration of power at the top, political influence, secret plotting, fraud).

Englishmen gave America its Declaration of Independence and its constitution, but they also gave us a heritage of murderous violence--against the native people, against Africans, against Chinese, against anyone perceived to be a threat. When you're a thief, you have to be very nimble and very unscrupulous or you'll get your comeuppance.

These people--the frightened rich--are sorely lacking in emotional intelligence. They are dangerous to us, dangerous to their colleagues and dangerous to themselves.

I wonder what would happen if large numbers of us began burning Federal Reserve notes and refused to pay our bills? After all, prisons can only operate with the consent of the prisoners.

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» Great Writing! Thank You. Posted by: thornwolf
» Hail brittania; we miss you. Posted by: johnwinthrop
we can scream till we're blue in the face...
Posted by: ellie on Jul 8, 2009 3:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but it's screaming in a vacuum... hasn't anyone noticed that no matter what is going on at 'main street' has no connection to what is going on wall street... there is a clear disconnect showing boldly and the SEC just loosened the transparency rules again to close us off from what is really going on within these brokerage houses... it's a power game people...

seems our only chance at survival is to cut wall street out of the equation and create our own economies out of trade and barter, no cash allowed... as long as treasury is doing what wall street tells it to do, things are only going to get a lot worse...

again, we do not matter... we are expendable in this current system!!!

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» RE: you see the disease Posted by: Sister_Lauren
GS bought Congress on a installment plan
Posted by: weathered on Jul 8, 2009 3:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
they don't have a thing to fear as long as the MSM monster does its job.

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"We are amidst a crisis of political legitimacy."
Posted by: orda on Jul 8, 2009 4:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another...

...That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government...

...But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government...


Get busy.

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» I'm with you guys... Posted by: zigy
BACK TO WHERE WE NEVER LEFT !
Posted by: TFYQA on Jul 8, 2009 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another journalist who's going to join the likes of Greg Palast in being ignore in a pure tradition of the functioning analphabet & village idiot nation our so called masters & leaders wants us to be & think about ourselves. linked text

If only we could participate more like north Koreans ;)
linked text

"Americans do not have the intellectual capacity to revolt. All you need to keep them pacified is to give them a dozen donuts & a gun !" - Max Keiser

Our whole culture is organized around wealthy people who keep poor people poor, uneducated, and powerless.

“It’s here that the American dream decided it liked the taste of the vomit it was chocking on. Just rolled over on its back and screamed for more drugs. it didn't die.“ - Warren Ellis

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They won't have our money or our futures...
Posted by: freelyb on Jul 8, 2009 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...if we don't hand them over. Let's figure this out, truly. We need massive non-violent revolt. What's going to be toughest is getting the two major political factions to agree to disagree on everything else as we move forward to take our country back financially. Unfortunately, we really do need each other. But, if we can shop peacefully at Safeway together -- which we do every single day -- surely we can come up with some kind of unified approach.

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» RE: How about a third party? Posted by: Sister_Lauren
Nah
Posted by: RevolutionNet on Jul 8, 2009 6:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
90 years is being too optimistic, too generous.

The problem with our banks wasn't hard wired into the Constitution but the central bank idea wormed its way into the American apple very early on.


FREE AMERICA

BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE

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Would they hire a commander of the Nazi Party or an Al Queda sheik?
Posted by: johnwinthrop on Jul 8, 2009 6:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Simple: Media asks presidential candidates if they will hire anyone who works for or has worked for Goldman Sachs as an employee, an outside attorney or accountant, or consultant for any reason whatsoever. If answer is yes, you drop out of race. If turns out you lie, you resign immediately and voluntarily return salary. Suicide is a welcome option but not required.

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» Nah, require it (suicide). Posted by: thekidde
Same level of thinking.
Posted by: frankly1 on Jul 8, 2009 7:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Everytime I read one of these pieces, usually about someone else's writing, they prattle on about how the elites failed the country blah blah blah.
THEY DID NOT FAIL. THEY SUCCEEDED. THIS IS AN ENGINEERED CRASH, BURN AND ROBBERY.
For at least the last thirty years they have been setting this up. It is not over, not by a long chalk. The next wave will be the crash of the dollar (after their holding have been safely diversified of course).They are cashing out and moving on. The average American won't see it comming and will be powerless to act anyway. I am amazed that most Americans can find their way out of their houses.

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» RE: You don't have to be offensive Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» I'm offensive? Posted by: frankly1
» RE: Just remember... Posted by: Cybershaman
» Very interesting idea... Posted by: zigy
» RE: Very interesting idea... Posted by: Cybershaman
Frankly 1, unfortunately, you're correct about the majority of my
Posted by: thekidde on Jul 8, 2009 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
fellow Americans. Ennui, lethargy, "oh, it's not so bad", apathy, all contribute to a lack of involvement in the commons. I hope, now that many are suffering because of this lack of involvement, that enough will become involved to start some type of revolution. King George III ignored the warning signs, Obama is ignoring the warning signs, progressives own guns too.

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» OH NO! Posted by: frankly1
A corporation is a racket
Posted by: archives@uwyo.edu on Jul 8, 2009 7:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Take em over or bust them up.

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Why the Teabaggers can't get any Traction
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 8, 2009 8:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because as usual they are fighting the WRONG Cause!
It amazed me these idiots don't realize who they are being manipulated and used by, The Corps and their political whores.Our Gov't was founded on a Socialist ideology- reason for the Preamble "WE the PEOPLE", Not the Family Crest (aka Logos).
Yet these morons keep dissing the idea of a Democracy, instead they are carrying the water of the Nobility. Instead of having their protests on Wall Street, they headed to state capitals!
It's not the Gov't body we are battling it's the corps and the poltiicians they buy seats for in both houses of congress.
Reason we have not seen any prosecutions of Economic Treason, is because the Corps Pocket politicians Legalized their Racketeering over the last few decades- reinstituting the Feudalistic economic structure called 'Trickle Down'.Our Economy collapsed because they created the same economic strata as all the other fallen empires in history- all welath and resources hoarded and controlled by the upper echelon!
What these blind ideologues have failed to comprehend is that our Founders created a Free market as a means of granting 'We the People' access to the producer/provide/supplier/ vendor side of the Table, not merely to continue to be the labor and customer for the Noble and merchant Class.
What they also fail to comprehend is that When a group of people go 'Corp' they forfiet that entities right to claim the Rights and priviledges of citizenship. Reason to go 'Inc' is to avoid PERSONAL Liability, thus as an collective they no longer have the Constitutional Rights and Freedoms afforded individual citizens- can't have your Cake and eat it too, Incs.Thus they should not be allowed to contribute to campaigns nor lobby our Democratic Gov't Bodies. these Corps are not only granted Tax cuts and loopholes, they are also granted Taxpayer dollars- Double dipping and siphoning off from the Reservior meant to be recirculated throughout all economic classes. Reason they Desginated the Flow to be a mere "trickle" to those in the socio-economic strats below. Who by the way are the ones who create and produce the wealth these upper echelons are hoarding & stealing.
Our Country was founded not only on Socialistic ideas, but the promise of Redistribution of Wealth and resources To 'We the People'.
The Teabaggers might as well be wearing Red Coats and have Logo's stamped on their heads, since that is who they are working for.They are not just Dumbasses- they are Traitors.

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I've seen Matt Taibbi on TV & I can't imagine him screaming
Posted by: Gabba_Gabba_Hey on Jul 8, 2009 8:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Giggling, maybe!

Good article though.

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Are we Russia?
Posted by: MB6 on Jul 8, 2009 9:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been following popular economics for a few years now--I read a lot of economics blogs that want regular people to understand what's happening (and so since I read Dean Baker's blog, I oddly knew about the housing bubble before Alan Greenspan). During this time the details that continue to shock me most are the similarities between our's and the Russian economy, as in the reign of oligarchs. It started with a link to an academic paper about Why Do Businessmen Run for Office? Answer: business people usually exert their influence quietly behind the scenes but emerge as candidates when their usual methods are frustrated by some structural dysfunction that interferes with their business. They based their conclusions on a study of Russian oligarchs/mafia--and there I recognized almost exact circumstances in my own city. I left it just at that, my beleaguered, corrupt and contented city was like Russia, a developing nation. And I was shocked. But it made sense. Then two years later, Simon Johnson's Atlantic article, about America's financial oligarchy with similarities to emerging economies, said it plainly--it's my whole country not just my city. Another important recent story is Putin's decision to shut down Russian casinos. At the heart of their problem, and apparently our's, is gambling run amok but Russia's problem become too big to ignore (that's an important story but it's not getting much attn). Our own financial system has too many similarities to gambling yet we stop short of acknowledging it is a casino, rigged so that house always wins. Then yesterday I discovered a new-to-me economics blog (Economic Principles.com) who wrote in great detail about America's important, and corrupt, role in creating an economic disaster in Russia as they moved from communism to capitalism, a move that was guided by academic authorities from Harvard, led by Larry Summers who continues to play a leading and controversial role in today's economic "recovery". And now this from Taibbi, who actually lived in Russia during their upheaval. So I think we're Russia, basically. And American citizens as a group are like the widow who deferred all financial decisions to her husband but upon his death she is helpless even to balance her own checkbook or pay her bills, and stuck with his gambling debts. The article about Larry Summers' controversial business dealings as an economics adviser to the post-Soviet transition can be found at http://www.economicprincipals.com, 14 June 2009.

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» Have you heard of Dmitry Orlov? Posted by: tommy_slothrop
moving away from usury
Posted by: dadanbetty on Jul 8, 2009 9:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is what I believe to be the best peaceful option for fighting the federal reserve/nwo. Just be happy with the money you may possess and move away from the interest. In other words, find a good Islamic bank that is respected and has a sound reputation.

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We Schizoid Americans
Posted by: popeurbanxxiii on Jul 8, 2009 10:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was our blessed St. Ronnie who taught us that government is the problem, not the solution.

It was the Dim Son, Dumbya who taught us just how true that aphorism was.

And yet when you look at the leading names in government, finance, industy, and lobbying, you find the same names again and again.

We mistrust these people when they are in government, but have complete faith in them when they are in finance, industry, or lobbying? WTF?? Why the hell is that? Oh yeah, that other little nostrum of our Venerable St. Ronnie; markets are rational, let the "Free Market" decide!

If they are untrustworthy as, say, a Cabinet Secretary, why would they be more trustworthy as CEO?

We need to develope the same skepticism for industry and finance as our Blessed St. Ronnie inculcated in us for government. After all, the Newt-er keeps reminding us about "the elite". (Ever notice how many of those have an "R" after their names?)

And notice just how many Goldman Sachs alumns are in Treasury. How could a rational person not be "screaming" like Matt.

Dominus vobiscum...
Pope Urban XXIII

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Root cause
Posted by: solrev on Jul 8, 2009 10:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is easy to point fingers at people or government or corporations, but we have an old saying in my family “it would not be like that if they did not want it like that”. The question is, who are they, well they are the American people. Obama told you look at me, a half black man with a Muslim name. If you work hard (like a good little slave) you too can be like me (in the top 5% with 90% of the money, a wealth creator). That’s the American dream and as long as the fools want to chase that dream they will continue to live the same old nightmare over and over again. If you want to change America you got to change the dream. Third parties fail because they are issues orientated, redefine America then worry about issues that will take you there. Welcome to the revolution of 2012.

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Everyone so far, agrees with Mr.Taibbi;what is needed is the devils advocate.
Posted by: zigy on Jul 8, 2009 11:47 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Taibbi comes across as a conspiricy theorist,i.e. he advocates for a position for which he has neither sufficant nor credible facts to support his thesis: that being that Goldman Sachs has essentially controlled the American economy for the past several decades. Other conspiricy theories along these lines claim the controllers are "the New World Order", or International Bankers, or the Rothchild-Rockefeller banking famalies, or the Federal Reserve Bank. How is Taibbi's assertion any more legitamate then any of these?

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» RE: Still telling lies Posted by: weathered
Read the book...
Posted by: pawheel on Jul 8, 2009 12:57 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Read "The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein. It documents how the U.S. Government, the IMF and the World Bank did this to many other countries since the 50s, have perfected the act, and have now unleashed it on us. It's what was done to Russia in the early 90s as mentioned in the article. It's not necessarily our government as much as it is the ultra rich profitting from other peoples misery.
I read the Shock Doctrine, and it was over a year before I could read another political book, that one was so well written and painful to get through because it put so many pieces together. READ IT because we are noe LIVING IT!

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Taibbi's Article in Rolling Stone- Brilliantly Researched, Flawlessly Written and Easy To Understand
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jul 8, 2009 3:17 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The writer here seems to be questioning why he is emotionally screaming so much - but then effectively answers his own question. He writes "Taibbi describes how he had worked in Russia as a journalist for 10 years. He details the atrocities he saw..."

Well the real atrocities in Russia, following the fall of the Soviet Union were exceedingly well hidden from the West. There was virtually nothing about it in any of the Western media. I personally only discovered the full extent of the horrors, the vast majority of the Russian people experienced recently.

Taibbi is screaming because the real wealth of the American people has been deliberately sucked out of them by a totally evil Financial Monster with the complicity of the US Government it now effectively controls.

Taibbi is screaming because he has personally seen the effect of an entire nation rapidly moving from a state of relative wealth (in terms of food, health and basic necessities) to abject poverty virtually overnight.

He can see exactly what is going to happen to Americans because he has seen it happen to Russians.

Most here will think the Russians went from a position of communist impoverishment to a wealth of Western Material Goods. From empty shops under communism to full shops under capitalism.

The reality is that Russians went from full stomachs to empty stomachs. From good health to horrible diseases. From a poverty rate of 1.5% to a poverty rate of over 50%. Millions were literally scratching round like rats eating anything that might find to keep them alive. Even now the death rate is far higher than the birth rate.

The Shock Doctrine Destroyed Russians.

The Shock Doctrine is Now Coming Home To America.

Read Rolling Stone and Weep.

Stand Up To These Bastards or Die.

Tony

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I wonder
Posted by: yesman on Jul 8, 2009 3:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
how long it's going to be before Taibbi is silenced or disappeared. He tells too much of the truth. If anyone ever starts listening, "the Man" will find a way to get rid of him.

The truth is that America is over. We allowed our country to be destroyed without even a skirmish. America is now owned, top to bottom and inside-out, by the Chinese (and a few other foreign powers). Our economy has now been plundered by the "masters of the universe," and all the wealth that we can possibly produce for decades to come (at least) will go toward paying off their debts--that is, at least the amounts that don't go toward keeping the Chinese happy and prosperous. And since we are now worse than bankrupt, we will have no spare resources to deal with the other crises we are facing--those occasioned by global climate change.

The only option is to get rid of the evil system of thievery, corruption and oppression which now exists, and replace it with something life-affirming. Chances of that happening? Slim to none, as best I can tell.

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"Taibbi's scream" is that of a deadbeat drama queen (as usual) defending Police State Rule
Posted by: PointMan on Jul 8, 2009 3:39 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pinning the blame for every economic evil of the last century on Goldman Sachs is not just an absurd red herring but pathetic. It’s also BS limited hangout that makes Taibbi appear to be some kind of real journalist reformer when he is anything but.

The fact Taibbi actually gets paid to pump out such utterly unsupported disinformation garbage says volumes about the state of the corporate controlled U.S. media

Of course Goldman Sachs shared in the blood money greed that led to every unnecessary boom-bust and war shakedown. But GS is only one tentacle of the ruling class that essentially owns the privately rigged "Federal Reserve" Corp that was NEVER federal and has NO reserves. The “FED” was put together by criminal robber barons for their own ends in 1913. In other words the "FED" private bank is a glorified kickback scam for ultra-privileged corporate crime. So is Washington under “FED” money power rule.

Oh, and let's keep in mind that Taibbi still buys the official DC 9/11 conspiracy theory that says 19 Arab cave boys with Wal-Mart tools pulled off 9/11. All led by evildoer genius Osama Bin Laden who denied any involvement days afterward. This is the same fool’s gold Taibbi 9/11 conspiracy theory that Senator Max Cleland and even Kean and Hamilton disowned for the cover-up crock that it is.

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ehswan
Posted by: eric swan on Jul 8, 2009 4:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Re: The scream. Systemic corruption. Backed into my neighbors truck. Result, a bent bumper mount. Consequence: doubled my insurance cost. Conclusion: we have all been corrupted. Like fish in a barrel we are all being shot at. This is the result of there being far too many of us. There will be a culling and in the end there will be far fewer of us. Goldman Sachs is but a symtom.

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» RE: ehswan Posted by: kelly.nickell
Screaming.
Posted by: kelly.nickell on Jul 8, 2009 7:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Matt was the one that brought me to AlterNet to begin with. I bought the book read it, laughed, cried, and ended up here.

But everyone that knows me, knows this; I have been screaming about his shit since 1984, when I was the only D in a room full of R's at Texas Tech.

It's not much consolation now getting letters from people I haven't talked to in twenty years telling me I was right. Didn't want to be right, just wanted people to take a closer look.

And it's not that I was right, I just didn't like being lied to by fucktards like Karl Rove, Lee Atwater, Terry McAuliffe-a real crooks, crook, or being treated like a retard, like for instance - that welfare was the biggest threat to democracy – especially coming from an idiot that talked about government being the problem, then getting himself elected to lead it into the ground.

I would like to personally thank every one of the fucktards I’ve ever argued with about government, regulation, law, economics, and liars. You're welcome - you got your wish; your Reagan pretty well broke it for all time. It's what you wanted - "The starved beast" as I recall - a federal government so broke and disfunctional we could invite Texas and Alaska to secede from the union for what ever idiotic reason they could muster. Groovy -go for it.

Look, here’s what you never bothered to listen to: We aren’t socialists, we don’t go around crusading for abortion, we don’t want higher taxes, we own guns, we eat meat, and do and want a few other million things that are not the exclusive provenance of the fucktards on the other side of the goddamn fence.

We just happen to understand one very important aspect of the human animal a little better, I guess, than those that place all of their efforts into removing all the rules for themselves. Those rules help keep us from eating ourselves; they even work sometime.

What is so hard to understand about a much needed return to reasonable regulation built around sound debate in our halls of government? How about some work towards solutions Mr. Boehner? M Malkin, has anyone slapped a knott on your head today, or are you just stupid because you get paid to be? And you Ann Coulter, how come we're not hearing of your stupid shit today? Last but not least; R&B - the kings of conservative blues. I am sending you guys a hundred bucks a piece, it should just cover your tax bill(s). You're welcome too. Never tell anyone a D wouldn't help your sorry asses out.

Why is taxation so un-patriotic? Why is government bad and business good – they ‘re all American people, right? I have never bitched about paying taxes to anyone, never bitched about them being too high, or not well spent - not once in my lifetime. But everyone needs a tax break. You better start deciding what you are willing to give up - cause it cost a lot of money to build and fix shit, particularly when there isn't anyone around to keep the private sector from breaking it off in your backside.

Why do we continue to throw ourselves off the bridge in support of the fuckers that brought us to this point? What the fuck is wrong with us?

Sorry folks, I'm just a little pissed off tonight.

Help us Matt, PLEASE scream some more.

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Mr.
Posted by: bar5608 on Jul 10, 2009 9:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pres. Obama, great guy that he is, made some huge mistakes right out of the box. The appointment of Tim Geithner to the post he now occupies, was the screwup of the Decade. Geithner is nothing more than a mechanic. He knows how Wall St. works. But just because he knows where the gear shift is, it doesn't mean he can see the road. And so he's on the wrong road. It was never a good idea to bail out the banks. We don't really need them. Uncle Sam should have became the "Loaner of First resort", bypassing the banks and pushing the economy along in the process. Now we've spent the money and got nothing. Geithner has to go, along with his helpers.

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We need Real Change
Posted by: cdmsr on Jul 10, 2009 12:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have said and still believe that (since we need at least two viable parties) a new leftist party needs to be created. Call it the Liberal or Progressive or Labor (whatever) Party and let the Democrats become the more conservative of the two (they aren't sufficiently liberal as they stand). Consign the GOP to the dustbin of history with their predecessors (Federalists, Know Nothings and Whigs) where they are determinedly headed at present. Then, maybe, the US can regain its place on the Road to Glory.

In the meantime, we need some miscreants frog-marched to prison. We need a Wealth Tax (calculate how much each crooked, rich bastard got from the Bush tax cuts and tax it right back into the Treasury (what the hell: let's go back and recoup Reagan's cuts, too) and return the Upper Tax Brackets to at least 70% (I'd prefer 90%). Too much wealth in too few hands (plutocratic oligarchy) is the main ingredient in a recipe for disaster for a democracy.

And, by the way, does anyone connect Federal deficits and wealth concentration in the upper five (and especially the top ONE) per cent of the population? We are selling our country's future to the Chinese and giving the proceeds to the super-rich! The present "financial crisis" is just the latest transfer of wealth upwards.

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9-11 Truthers: CONTACT YOUR SHRINK IMMEDIATELY!!
Posted by: cdmsr on Jul 10, 2009 12:31 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do you schizo morons have to inject your paranoid bullshit into every serious discussion on the Web? Really, I know conspiracies DO happen and the official line isn't always trustworthy, but you people are so far into the ether your oxygen-deprived brains are failing.

The only conspiracies involved in 9-11 were the al-Quaida plot itself (which required neither genius nor super powers) and the conspiracy of stupidity that was the entire Bush adminstration.

Now, I know this is going to piss you off and raise your ire and indignation but,seriously, they have medicines that can help you (or am I part of the Big Pharma Conspiracy?)

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