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Bankers Gone Bonkers: Global Financiers Should Make Insanity Plea

By Pam Martens, CounterPunch. Posted February 4, 2008.


A road map to how the banking industry landed itself in the financial loony bin.

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With Wall Street capital disappearing as fast as foreclosures are climbing, one foreign head of state had an epiphany. French President Nicholas Sarkozy advanced the idea recently that the global financial system is "out of its mind."

To develop this theory further, I've reconstructed below some of the mileposts on our journey to this financial loony bin.

Exhibit One: Commit-a-Felony-Get-a-Bonus Contract

Back in 2002, Mark Belnick, who had previously been one of the legal go-to guys for Wall Street as a rising star at corporate law firm Paul,Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, found himself transplanted as General Counsel at fraud-infested Tyco International. Mr. Belnick inked a retention agreement for himself and it was duly filed without fanfare at the top corporate cop's web site, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The agreement guaranteed Mr. Belnick a payment of at least $10.6 million should he commit a felony and be fired before October 2003.

Very prescient fellow, Mr. Belnick was indeed charged with a few felonies like grand larceny and securities fraud by the Manhattan District Attorney's office. Mr. Belnick was acquitted of those charges and the SEC let him off the hook for aiding and abetting federal violations of securities laws with a $100,000 penalty payment and a prohibition against serving as an officer or director of a public company for five years. Mr. Belnick agreed to the SEC settlement without admitting or denying the charges. Mr. Belnick did not lose his law license and continues to practice law.

While Mr. Belnick was drafting his "felony bonus" agreement with Tyco, he was also teaching a law course at Cornell on ethics. Today, his agreement is available at the FindLaw.com web site as a "sample business contract," raising the suspicion that we as a society have become desensitized to financial insanity.

Exhibit Two: Supreme Insanity

On December 7, 2006, Wall Street was elated to learn that the U.S. Supreme Court had agreed to hear its case requesting that a no-law zone be drawn around its financial borders for acts of collusion and commercial bribery, such as those so well documented in the issuance of new stock offerings during the tech/dotcom bubble. Calling the matter an alleged "epic Wall Street conspiracy," the U.S Federal Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit had earlier turned down Wall Street for its requested grant of immunity.

The Wall Street firms and their legions of lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court, arguing that the SEC (which, by the way, has no criminal powers) should have sole authority to regulate it and, therefore, it should be immune from other U.S. laws governing collusion and commercial bribery. (Credit Suisse First Boston Ltd. v. Billings.)

On June 18, 2007, the Supreme Court issued its opinion giving Wall Street everything it wanted, concluding that the SEC was doing a good job. The Court wrote: "...there is here no question of the existence of appropriate regulatory authority, nor is there doubt as to whether the regulators have exercised that authority."

The sweeping ignorance of that statement is breathtaking. Whether it was Wall Street firms price fixing on NASDAQ for decades or the orchestrated rigging of the market for new stock issues in the late 90s or the current institutionalized system of credit fraud, the SEC always has its lens fogged until some college professors or investigative reporters publish a step by step playbook, disseminate it widely, and force the SEC to take action to save face.

Worse yet, when the SEC finally does take action, it imposes fines of millions for stealing billions, making crime one of the most productive profit centers on Wall Street.

This 2007 decision from the Supreme Court comes exactly 20 years and 10 days after the 1987 Supreme Court decision in Shearson/American Express Inc. v. McMahon. Under this ruling, Wall Street has been able to run a private justice system called mandatory arbitration to hear the cases of the investors or employees it defrauds (with the exception of class actions). The instruction manual for this private justice system explains that adherence to the law is not required; arbitration panel members, many on Wall Street's payroll, can just go with their gut.

In other words, the highest court in our land is telling Americans that the reward for serial lawlessness is immunity from the law.

Exhibit Three: Banks' Secret Profit Center: Your Death

Few Americans are aware that for at least 16 years big business and banks have been secretly taking out millions of life insurance policies on their rank and file workers and naming the corporation the beneficiary of the death benefit without the knowledge of the worker. The individual policies are frequently in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. If the employee leaves the company, no problem; big business is still allowed to collect the death benefit and they track the employee through the Social Security Administration to keep tabs on when they die. These policies are commonly known as "dead peasant" or "janitor" policies because they insure low-wage earners including janitors. Some of the largest corporations in America have been boosting their income statements by including cash buildup in the policies as well as receiving the death benefit tax free.


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See more stories tagged with: banking scandals

Pam Martens worked on Wall Street for 21 years; she has no securities position, long or short, in any company mentioned in this article. She writes on public interest issues from New Hampshire.

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View:
Don't Call It Insanity
Posted by: Razst on Feb 4, 2008 3:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Insanity implies faulty, impaired reasoning. A sickness that, given the proper treatment, can be cured or ameliorated. These people aren't sick. They or psychopathic criminals who should spend the rest of their lives behind bars along with all the members of the present administration.

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» Just a point Posted by: andabottleof_rum
» RE: Don't Call It Insanity Posted by: drmeow
Insanity?
Posted by: heid on Feb 4, 2008 4:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As Raszt pointed out, the people perpetrating these crimes are psychopathic, not insane.

The ones who are insane are the rest of us - the ones who allow this to continue. What is it going to take before the American people rise up and take the country back, including the unearned "profits" of corporations and those at the tops of the corporations who stole them? It's long past time to have sympathy for this kind of greed. It's destroying the future in every aspect: financial, moral, ecological, agricultural, health, and anything else one can think of.

What's insane is the average American who goes along without realizing he's a slave, being controlled by his own greed - a greed that has been inculcated by the corporate system - accepting that what's happening is not only normal, but acceptable, for one reason alone: the mad belief that he might become one of those obscenely wealthy people.

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» RE: Insanity? hold up Posted by: DaBear
» RE: Insanity Posted by: mmckinl
....is this for real?
Posted by: kossack1 on Feb 4, 2008 5:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The agreement guaranteed Mr. Belnick a payment of at least $10.6 million should he commit a felony and be fired before October 2003."

Things like this make me oh, so proud to be an american.

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I just paid off my Citibank card
Posted by: Chloe2005 on Feb 4, 2008 5:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AND CUT IT UP. Guess they will just have to take out a policy on me if they want to make any money off me!

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To the biggest rats shall go the greatest rewards
Posted by: hagwind on Feb 4, 2008 5:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just when I thought I could imagine the worst about these people, Pam Martens tells me about the "dead peasant" scheme. GodDAMN. How much do these scammers need, and what lengths will they go to get it?

What I'm pondering is this: How to get the idea across to everybody who's getting directly or indirectly screwed by these people (which is to say, nearly everybody on the planet) that this is what "In Market We Trust" leads to? If these bankers (and plenty of stockbrokers, day traders, currency speculators, and other top execs along with them) displayed this kind of behavior on the school playground -- habitually treating other kids like pawns to be fleeced, scammed, extorted, and otherwise manipulated -- we'd have no trouble recognizing antisocial, pathological behavior for what it is. Instead, our underregulated market economy is set up to give the biggest rewards to the best fleecers, scammers, extortionists, and manipulators -- those who don't "go over the line," wherever the damned line is. They get to draw their own line, it seems, and it keeps getting farther and farther from civilized behavior.

This is why Jesus kicked the moneylenders' butts. This is why Islam forbids usury. There are ways of getting around that, of course: money has a way of undermining religion's better ideas. But you don't need religion to tell you that a society that rewards pathological behavior is sick, sick, sick.

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» Dead peasants Posted by: andabottleof_rum
How about some new laws that prohibit psychopaths from ...
Posted by: Don Garb on Feb 4, 2008 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
being elected to public office, or being promoted higher than manager in publicly traded companies. That's right, let's pass laws that make it illegal for the psychos to be in powerful positions! Testing for the inhumans among us has come a long way. What kind of people would object to such a sensible plan?

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House trashers should trash banks instead...
Posted by: ankhet on Feb 4, 2008 6:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...for the time may yet come when a people's revolt will attempt to rebalance this institutionalized crime wave. This is the reason people trash their houses when foreclosed. It all connects.

There will be blood.

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a big mistake to call them "crazy"
Posted by: zooeyhall on Feb 4, 2008 6:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's a big mistake to call these people crazy. This kind of sputtering by Progressives when faced with this kind of evil is like that of the Germans who dismissed Hitler before he came to power as "crazy".

As some other posters have pointed out, a better description is psychopathic. Someone who is "crazy" is out of touch with reality, delusional. A psychopath knows perfectly well what they are doing. Many of them are intelligent, clever, and charming.

However, they have absolutely no sense of morality, no feelings of empathy for other things or people. The acquisition of wealth and money is the only standard they have in their lives. (The last couple of lines sound like the job description for the ideal CEO).

America is a sick society, because these types of persons have become the ideal. They end up on the covers of Forbes and Fortune magazines. They headline the MSM.

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» RE: a big mistake to call them "crazy" Posted by: tommy_slothrop
The problem is figuring out which ones are psychopaths...
Posted by: lexicon on Feb 4, 2008 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But as it turns out, it really isn't a problem!


Simply put: Anyone who has amassed a net worth of, say, $25million, and IS STILL ACTIVELY WORKING to amass an even larger fortune, is a psychopath.

Once you hit that general range, there is really no-one on the planet that can reasonably say they need more.

I'd also add...anyone who has amassed that kind of fortune WITHOUT INVENTING or PRODUCING ANYTHING, is, by definition, a psychopath.

And how do I come up with this criteria? Well...in today's world of commerce, there really is no way to break into that range without having a) invented something valuable; or b) cheating someone else.

Once you're in that range, there is no further "societal upside" to your accumulation of wealth...at that point, every dollar you get is a dollar that is taken from someone else.

Before that point, you can reasonably make the case that the result of your actions has added to the general wealth in parity to your own increased wealth. After that point, you're just gaming.

lexicon

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» Unproductive yuppie talking heads Posted by: andabottleof_rum
very curious...
Posted by: lexicon on Feb 4, 2008 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...anyone know what sort of relationship you have to have with someone, in order to take out a life insurance policy on them (with you as beneficiary)? And do they need to know about it?

lexicon

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» RE: very curious... Posted by: ankhet
THEY'RE NOT CRAZY
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Feb 4, 2008 7:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They're opportunists. No laws are being broken. I've known people 'in high places'. What many don't realize is how smart they are.Write a law and they find a way around it. The same applies to our administration. I certainly don't like of any of it. But to believe that they will be guided by the same conscience that drives the rest of us is crazy. They rise above it all and it's up to our courts to bring them down. Reagan put them up there in the first place. Thanks, ANNA

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» RE: THEY'RE NOT CRAZY Posted by: alarew666
» RE: THEY'RE NOT CRAZY OK 666 Posted by: VZEQICVA
Wonder what would happen if EVERYONE in the middle class just quit
Posted by: thekidde on Feb 4, 2008 8:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
paying their credit cards and told the banks to kiss off? As this is unsecured credit and the amount would be in the trillions, perhaps the bankers would get the idea of who's really in charge when it comes to the bottom line. There is strength in organization, but this won't happen, unfortunately.

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» Student loans Posted by: heid
oracle99
Posted by: sorcerer99 on Feb 4, 2008 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Regarding crazy bankers:

This kind of thinking reminds me of an ethics seminar I was mandated to take relating to a new employee orientation. This was for a company that claims they have "Good Hands." We were told that to take Chicago Bears single game tickets would be a violation of the ethics code and we would be terminated. When I mentioned that I had personal knowledge that a sole source vendor of the company had provided expensive annual hunting and fishing safaris for executives of the company. I was told there were different rules for different "classes" of employees. I guess I had no class.

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» RE: oracle99 Posted by: VZEQICVA
Third Exhibit similar to Gogol's "Dead Souls"
Posted by: MargoM on Feb 4, 2008 9:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In "Dead Souls" Chichikov, the main character, decides he wants to become one of the upper class landed gentry. However, becoming part of that class also requires owning a certain number of serfs (Russia's historic version of slavery). But there's a major problem: he doesn't have the money to get land and serfs. So he figures he can buy dead serfs on the cheap. To do this he goes around to various estates trying to convince the owners to sell him the deeds to their deceased serfs. The owners of these deeds would have to still pay tax on these deeds for the year that the respective serfs last lived, even if it was just part of a year. So it actually would be financially quite advantageous to sell these deeds. However, such a transaction was unheard of and involved a lot of strange and ironic interactions.

It sounds like it is much easier for modern day corporations to purchase dead souls than it was for "poor" Chichikov.

Margo in Miami

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Intrigued
Posted by: felixculpa on Feb 4, 2008 9:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to see the spectacle of financial as well as productive power moving eastward. Wall Street has harnessed the manipulative power of the human mind in the service of raw greed. In itself far from being news, its success in eliding oversight from its equations has served to obscure its blank stupidity beyond its mastery of obscurantist algorithms; when the motive is blind greed at the expense of national integrity and justice the foundation of sustainable national wealth as well as the possibility of equitable global distribution of wealth is pulverized, and when the dust settles we are likely to be looking out on a far more barren landscape. Beware of cornered rats. On the other happier hand, as power passes from the hands of the financiers we may look for fresh opportunity to act more freely in the interests of the nation and global humanity.

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It's not nice to fool Mother Nature....
Posted by: monkeywrench on Feb 4, 2008 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At a time when we face a planet-load of problems, some of which are potentially threatening our very existence on Earth, it is absolutely enraging that the greedy holders of 80% to 90% of all the assets of our nation, if not of the world, have not done, and will not do, ANYTHING about those problems. With that percentage of assets being trapped within an insane socio-political system invented by an elite of pathological money changers, how in hell are we to begin to repair our increasingly hostile environment?

(I'd hate to think that America's experiment in democracy will turn out to be just a blip in the history of mankind; but the way that the greedy elite are consolidating resources points in that direction.)

It is becoming clearer by the day that, barring some sort of massive grassroots revolution, we will not solve the environmental problems we have created. I have seen in my 6 decades on this mortal coil hundreds, if not thousands, of inventions and technologies and social systems that could either fix or prevent some of the most serious problems we face; and virtually none of them have been utilized – unless they could turn a healthy profit for some group of insiders. The vast majority of them have been used as bromides, as carrots-on-a-stick to keep hope, and thus forward motion, in the 10% of the population the elite considers to be pack mules. So, we might as well figure out how to adapt to a world increasingly more difficult to live in, because no real help will be forthcoming from those in the best position TO help.

Without a popular uprising to break the cycle of greed and destruction, only Mother Nature will have the power to restore balance. If history is any guide, if we let things get to that point, the result won't be pretty.

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» RE: OOPS! Posted by: monkeywrench
» RE: OOPS! Posted by: UnEasyOne
Imagine
Posted by: willymack on Feb 4, 2008 9:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A psychotic halfwit in the White House, easily controlled by a shadow orgainzation. Imagine a corporate playground where banks and other institutions with fiduciary responsibilities are allowed to run amok without accountibility or consequence. Imagine a military establishment with virtually unlimited powers and absolutely No controls as to how it squanders taxpayer (make that BORROWED) money. Imagine NO enviornmental safeguards, nor any pretense of such. Imagine our rule of LAW brutalized by "signing statements" and other illegal and uncontsitutional actions. Imagine a corporate/political machine with NO intension of relinquishing power, EVER, regardless of the outcome of "elections" (remember 2006)? Imagine a people so self-absorbed, stupid, ignorant, and timid that they allow all these horrors to unfold right in front of their noses, even though they have the power to prevent all of them. How do you like the "Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave, now, folks?

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Please recalibrate your reality...
Posted by: lexicon on Feb 4, 2008 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I read this, I am struck by the rather profound disconnect between people's opinions and the reality on-the-ground.

The nature of this disconnect, is that people seem to be under the mistaken assumption that "laws" are written to "level the playing field". Quite the opposite is the reality.

Laws are, for the most part, written to "create competitive advantage".

Do you think that the tax codes are a byzantine maze-mess COINCIDENTALLY?

Regulatory laws, as written and mis-applied by, say, a Republican administration in the new millennium, are only onerous to the small players and wannabe's. The big players can ignore the regulations with impunity, because the economies of scale that they enjoy make the cost of non-compliance trivial compared to the profits of non-compliance. Thus, regulations merely function as barriers to entry for the rif-raff.

lexicon

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jobstress@empnet.com
Posted by: rtihista on Feb 4, 2008 10:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Lucy Ledbetter case and the Enron appeal perfectly illustrates how the current Conservative dominated Supreme Court: Roberts, Alito, Scalia, Uncle Clarence, and Kennedy, have the same ethics of those Wall Street Bankers. That is the ethics and values of thieves and swindlers. In the Ledbetter case, they ruled basically that as long as Ledbetter didn't know Goodyear was cheating her out of thousands of dollars of salary over twenty years in violation of the law, it was perfectly acceptable. In the Enron case, the Swindlers on the court ruled that the banks, like some of those mention in this article, who aided and abetted Enron's fraud were immune from lawsuits. Basically, they were saying that the bankrobber could be sued but not the driver of the getaway car. These people are criminals in judges robes.

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The Only Cure for Widespread Corruption is Economic Collapse
Posted by: US Citizen on Feb 4, 2008 11:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bush administration is fiercely trying to hold up the economy now. I bet if McCain is nominated, Bush will let it fall into the bottomless pit of its own corruption, unless Blackwater does something about it.

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talk about insanity, what about humans
Posted by: nigelbest on Feb 4, 2008 12:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Talk about insanity, what about humans? They:
1. Ignore the growth of violence [war, crime and weaponry] for 1000s of years. Have never seriously sought the cause of this scourge. Have never been seriously alarmed by war. Ignore the sudden growth of war in the last 50 years from being able to kill 100,000 in one day to 60 times PDC [planet death capability].
2. Never made the connection between wealth and power. Ignored the wisdom of the founding fathers to establish a democracy on prevention of wealth concentration, which is necessarily unjust, and tyranny. Believed in the power of a piece of paper over the activities of people. Judged a book by its cover in thinking that a state called a democracy is a democracy, regardless of how much wealth concentrates unjustly.
3. Never noticed that one person cannot do much more work than the average person. Never noticed that pay for natural gifts is paying a person for nature giving gifts to them, not work by them. Never noticed that pay for no work means work for no pay for others. Never cared to find out that 99% are underpaid, that 99% would be better off financially with pay justice.
4. Never learned that the state built on pay injustice cannot stand, and that therefore the first requirement of patriotism is prevention of overpay.
5. Never realised that there is overpay. Never understood that there are wide-open legal thefts in the economy.
6. Never learned that overpay causes underpay, that overpay-underpay causes violence.
7. Confronted with pay from 10,000th of average [$10 a year] to 100,000 times average [$10,000,000,000 a year], as we have now, after 1000s of years of growth of overpay-underpay, never said: that can't be right, and: that has to cause violence.
8. Never noticed that heaps of overpay [individual, national and imperial] have always fallen to the onslaught and erosions of the underpaid.
9. Never learned the realpolitik of the golden rule: don't hurt others, they hurt back!
10. Never analysed the rationalisations of the overpaid for their overpay, and found their invalidity.
11. Never sought to determine what the fairpay is and whether they were below or above it.
12. Never loved pay justice, democracy, peace, liberty, fraternity, happiness, survival.
13. Prefered thinking they were great to being great. Prefered thinking they were maximally happy to being maximally happy.
14. Never noticed that individual contribution by own work is limited, so unlimited fortunes have to be unjust, have to be overpay, have to cause underpay, have to cause violence, which has to grow as both sides try to prevail.
15. Never noticed that everyone trying to get unlimited fortunes out of a limited pool of wealth has to result in endless everyone fighting everyone. Confused a growing pool of wealth with an infinite pool of wealth.
16. Never figured out that the biggest thieves are likely to be the people with the most money.
17. Never figured out that the two things in a trade cannot be of exactly equal workvalue and so every trade has to contain a drop of injustice which must grow to an ocean of injustice and violence with trillions of trades.
18. Never noticed that payment for scarcity is pay for absence of goods, not pay for work.
19. Never noticed that one billion pulls $100 million year at 10%, doubles every 7 years, multiplies by 1000 every 70 years, for no work at all, meaning an equal amount of work for no pay for others.
20. Never noticed that everyone has a right to an equal share of nature's bounty, and that landowners take all that bounty.
21. Never noticed that landowners take all the added value of infrastructure gains.
22. Adored the overpaid.
happinessfinneganswake.blogspot.com

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You Cannot Stand in the Way of Billions and Even Trillions of Dollars in America!
Posted by: sofla100 on Feb 4, 2008 3:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Look at what Wall Street has "campaign contributed" to Hillary, Obama, and of course, McCain and Romney. And, you can betcha the money will keep flowing in. These guys know how to hedge. But, in reality, it is nothing more then legal bribery. When Buffet himself tells how unfair it is that his office staff pays a higher tax rate then he does, you know how badly the system is rigged. SEC and the FED, two little boys easily controlled. Insider trading and "sweet deals," just another afternoon on the street. Individual investors- mostly suckers with money to be stolen. It's the Wall Street way, and it's the American way. How do you stand in the way of billions and even trillions of dollars?

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Best argument of the need for authentic religion.
Posted by: Sojourner on Feb 4, 2008 3:46 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem complained about here has been around for a long, long time. We all know that in Jesus' time they were called money-lenders and tax collectors.

Just as we have not managed to advance one whit in eliminating monetary greed, so have we not advanced much with solutions.

"Give away all that you have, and follow me." All the rest is commentary.

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well well how deep is it
Posted by: john henry on Feb 4, 2008 5:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
there is no end to all of this greed its starts off in high places then it comes to the companys an corps.this started back many years ago but the lazy personl was push up by his buddies or the good old boys he did there biding then more got there an more good old boys an pertty soon you have a power block they you get the rules changed through new laws that cancels the old law or make it so unclear that no body can unstand then that how you do it mr. lincoln an mr. jejjerys had something to say about this look it up a time for take down is coming an we all are going down but we the people will come back the day is coming so do as best as you can an get clear of your debats as best you can

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Dead Peasants: an American Tradition
Posted by: pbutler on Feb 4, 2008 5:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The "dead peasant" hustle goes back further than the 16 years that Martens reports US banks have been playing it.

Wal-Mart has been profitably insuring its serfs for much longer - possibly even as far back as when Sam Walton put H.R. Clinton on his board of directors.

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DID I MISS SOMETHING???
Posted by: crazy carlos on Feb 4, 2008 7:09 PM   
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Among many thing done, i was an insurance underwriter for a while. The Holy Grail of insurance is you must have an insurable interest in the object insured; be it a life, car, home or whatever. I don't see an insurable interest in most of this article.

Maybe I missed something--but if I didn't, this whole thing sounds like what came out of the north end of a south bound bull.

Crazy Carlos

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.
Posted by: ShoShenQ on Feb 4, 2008 9:26 PM   
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its not insanity, its greed, insane greed.

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This is simply another way for the mega-rich to rip off taxpayers.
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Feb 5, 2008 1:56 AM   
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How so?

Here goes: Insurance companies are in business to make money. They make a profit (on average) on every policy. They have tax advantages also and invest payments on policies etc., but in general, they price policies to make a profit. Therefore, unless Wal Mart is intentionally offing employees or has a magic formula that the insurance actuaries would kill to get themselves, this is a losing proposition...

Unless...

The tax advantages for this dodge are great enough that even after giving the insurance companies their cut, this is more profitable than other, legitimate investments.

Upthread, a former insurance guy (Crazy Carlos) commented that Wal Mart has no actual skin in the game - "insurable interest." That only becomes a problem for WalMart if the insurance companies refuse to pay up. Since they are in on the game and like all those nifty premiums, it doesn't become an issue.

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Bonkers Like a Fox @ the Henhouse
Posted by: Propaganda...Noise on Feb 5, 2008 10:01 PM   
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Private cartel bankers and company have run Washington with the squawk parrot media since the “Fed” was put on over America.

Would you like a little bust with that boom? Coming right up…

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Have you forgotten about the actual cause of the mortgage crisis?
Posted by: rickiey on Feb 6, 2008 12:38 PM   
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The root cause is this:

Measuring opportunity, based on outcome.

No sooner had the ink dried on its discrimination study than the Boston Fed, clearly speaking for the entire Fed, produced a manual for mortgage lenders stating that: "discrimination may be observed when a lender's underwriting policies contain arbitrary or outdated criteria that effectively disqualify many urban or lower-income minority applicants."

Some of these "outdated" criteria included the size of the mortgage payment relative to income, credit history, savings history and income verification. Instead, the Boston Fed ruled that participation in a credit-counseling program should be taken as evidence of an applicant's ability to manage debt.

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