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Corporate America Gets a Bail-out Bonanza

By Ralph Nader, Nader.org. Posted April 7, 2008.


Corporations have essentially become the government, and now they're bellying up to the bar.

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Is there a larger, more exploited, defenseless group of undifferentiated Americans than the 133 million individual federal income taxpayers? Their dollars are used to subsidize organized corporate interests, giveaway taxpayer assets like minerals under the public lands, and bail out speculative, self-enriching corporations and their crooked bosses.

As large corporations, and their trade associations, complete their takeover of the federal government -- a process that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt called fascism in 1938 -- the corporations become the government.

Just look at the recent headlines in the business press. Article after article features abuses and over-runs by companies contracting with the Department of Defense and other agencies. The enormous volumes of waste, fraud and poor delivery affecting the Iraq war-occupation now only produces ho hum newspaper and television stories.

Recently, the student loan scandals, exorbitant burdens on students graduating from college imposed on them by companies with influence in Washington, like Sallie Mae, whose government guarantees make a mockery of capitalism, have riled members of Congress to some modest action.

Once again this year, the big boys on Wall Street stretched the envelope of risk and greed and ran down to Washington, D.C. to be bailed out by the accommodating Federal Reserve. Chairman Ben Bernanke testified before the Senate that he had no choice but to take on about $30 billion of Bear Stearns obligations or there could be a run on other big banks. Where was the Federal Reserve when this credit, debt and risk spree was building during the past five years?

There is no penalty for failure -- whether on Wall Street or in Washington, D.C. for misusing or wasting the taxpayers' monies.

When the heads of Citigroup and Merrill Lynch were asked to leave their positions recently as CEOs after tanking their companies' shares, they could barely avoid tripping over the many millions of dollars they were taking with them through the exit door. Among many perverse incentives operating within these Wall Street firms, there are rewards for failure -- big bucks rubber-stamped by the look-the-other-way, well paid Boards of Directors.

Back in 1971 and 1980 respectively, the White House proposed a $250 million loan guarantee for Lockheed corp., and a $1.5 billion loan guarantee for Chrysler with the government taking back warrants that it later sold for a profit. There was intense debate and discussion at public hearings in the House and the Senate before they authorized the guarantees.

Now federal agency bailouts of big business, even Mexican oligarchs, rarely seek Congressional approval. Just have the Executive Branch do what it wants. No public hearings. Midnight bailouts without transcripts.

I asked a powerful Senator: "What are the discernable legal limits on the Federal Reserve's bailout authority and how much total risk can the Federal Reserve heap on the taxpayers?" "Can they go to a trillion dollars?" He did not know.

Shifting deficits, debts and unfair burdens to individual taxpayers while the rich and powerful become either tax escapees or big time welfare recipients keep pushing a limitless envelope on today's and tomorrow's taxpayers.

The New York Times' prize-winning reporter David Cay Johnston, has written two books "Perfectly Legal" and just recently, the best seller "Free Lunch" that document these megatrends of corporate socialism -- privatizing corporate profits and socializing corporate losses on the backs of individual taxpayers.

What can be done about these gigantic runaway sprees?

First, pass legislation that broadens individual taxpayers' right to sue in federal court against waste, fraud and abuse, including those receivers of bailouts -- the reckless, avaricious corporations who have Uncle Sam in their back pockets.

Second, have a voluntary checkoff on the 1040 tax return inviting individual taxpayers to join their own taxpayer defense organization. Such a group would have millions of small dues paying members and an on-the-spot skillful watchdog group in our national capital.

Finally, place our public elections off the private auction block and have them funded by well promoted voluntary checkoffs on the tax returns together with a certain amount of free radio and television time for ballot-qualified candidates seeking federal office.

These and other proposals, such as giving shareholders more power to restrain their top executives, will give taxpayers some grip on the wide-open spigot of taxpayer dollars delivered to the misfits of the giant corporate world.

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You have to admit
Posted by: WhatNow? on Apr 7, 2008 5:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ralph Nader says an awful lot with very few words. The more I read his writing the more I've noticed his messages are short but informing.

I wish Mr. Nader was our next president. It would be nice to have an honorable and kind man in charge for a change. His intelligence would be refreshing too. I would not doubt that he would solve many problems quickly with little wasted effort just like he writes.

Thank you Ralph for all you've tried to do for the majority of the people of the United States.

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When and Where Will It End and When Will Wake Up?
Posted by: bettina9292 on Apr 7, 2008 10:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you Mr. Nader. Your ideas are creative and great-except that the nation is over medicated with Big Pharma intoxicants that numb our brains and Corporate media that just echoes the spin of the right wing, capitalist powers that be.People are not listening! Even though we are all suffering and barely making ends meet. The administration and government, reiterate capitalism and trickle down theories. Telling the states to take care of its citizens, but no really takes care or protects Americans. Buyer beware, health care for the richest only.It is dog eat dog, Darwinism's survival of the fittest.
Where are our civil liberties? Where are the protections awarded to citizens by the Bill of Rights and the Constitutions?
Corporations are hypocrites!!! Corporations are legally considered entities with "rights" awarded to citizens, how grotesque! SO these beings that eat and breathe to bear profit are above us all because they have millions of dollars that they have from the government and FED-where as we have nothing-because we are not functioning as a large community.
I believe that it is our Nation's best interest to let the large financial institutions fail naturally in a liaise fair way. The way capitalism was and is supposed to function.
I know the ramifications would be huge to us all (so they..say)-but how much does a life lesson really cost? If the corporations want socialism on the other hand then---hand over the prorated tax dollars to the communities where they generate their prospective dollars from. REGULATE investment bankers, hedge funds, equity managers, international investors, home mortgage brokerage funds. Tax the Richest of the financial entities and corporation and switch the burden where it belongs.

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If they want socialism
Posted by: cwilsondrum on Apr 7, 2008 3:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
fine,,,just send my check for $2,000,000.00 to my bank account. I don' know about everyone else but if we are giving money away,I want some and not that fucking $600.00 tax joke. either make me an equal partner, or let the greedy fuckers fail,and their greedy investors with them. I am really tired of subsidizing corrupt,greedy, rich people. let them eat all the leftovers from the last ceo retirement party.

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Presidential contenders
Posted by: socrates2 on Apr 7, 2008 6:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have always believed that only three or four individuals known to the public (heck, there could be diamonds in the rough leading perfectly respectable lives in Arizona, West Virginia or South Dakota, too; and with the brains and insight to avoid public life) care enough about our republic, our Constitution, our Jeffersonian traditions and our fellow citizens to make decent presidents: Ralph Nader, Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and Paul Krugman.
This piece confirms my belief...

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Let me propose you something, Mr Nader...
Posted by: saltoafronteira on Apr 8, 2008 4:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The de-materialization of currency is one of the worst dangers against freedom and one of the most dangerous tools for totalitarism.
Have you got the guts to denounce the incredible power the banking sistem already has, due to the fact that all transactions, specially salary payments, government transfers, an so on, pass through them?
And what will happen if, one day, not so far in the future, paper currency is purely and simply abolished?
Please, dont think I am one of these wackos that want to regreed back to the middle-ages.
But one thing is for shure: if such an enourmous ammount of power is in private hands, what kind of democratic public controlled power will be able to get the grip and avert abuses?
That's the same thing with the big chains of goods distribution.
The former control money flow, the latter decide who enters the market (and at what price).
Can you imagine if, one day, some of those private hands manage to get the monopoly over one of those power centers? or both?
Think of it, and then do as your conscience determines.

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