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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Bernie Madoff: Fall Guy or First of Many?

By Eric Lotke, Campaign for America's Future. Posted June 30, 2009.


Congressional Commission on financial fraud has the ability to put hundreds of Madoffs in jail and lead the way for real bank reform.
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Bernard Madoff has been sentenced to 150 years in prison for one of the biggest investment frauds in Wall Street history. The punishment seems to fit the crime....

But there is no closure here. We can’t let Madoff’s sentence distract us from the underlying problems.

This isn’t just about Madoff. This is about the system in which Madoff’s scam took place. This is about systemic fraud and malpractice, the cultural trade of due diligence for easy profit. It’s about conflicts of interest where companies paid ratings agencies for their ratings. It’s about ideological blinders that let regulators and the Federal Reserve look the other way while banks turned into betting parlors.

So Madoff got 150 years for breaking into the bank. Fine.

But what about the guard who was asleep out front? What about the clerk who forgot to lock the door? What about the $300 billion that Citigroup walked out with from one vault, and the $200 billion that AIG took from another? Does anybody know where that money went or what we got for it? Don’t they get in trouble too? Did you know that, or do you know why, Goldman Sachs is paying its biggest bonus payouts in its 140 year history?

That’s why we need a Pecora Commission. We’ve been calling for a “grand inquest” in the spirit of Ferdinand Pecora, the fierce New York City prosecutor who investigated the crash of 1929 as general counsel of the Senate Banking and Currency Committee. Pecora hauled the robber barons into daylight and dismantled them on public cross examination. He subpoenaed the documents, dug behind the deals and took testimony under oath. His efforts paved the way for the regulatory reforms — the Securities Act of 1933, the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 — that held the house together until modern conservatives took them apart in the name of efficient deregulation.

To its credit, Congress is leaning towards a do-over. It created the new Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission to investigate how fraud, regulatory lapses, monetary policy, and obscure accounting and lending practices contributed to the current financial crisis. After much opposition, the Commission even has subpoena power.

All the Commission needs now — and fast — is members. Real ones, with fire in their bellies. Members who aren’t afraid to put people in jail.

This isn't just about politics. Fundamental financial reform is essential to the future of the economy and the country. President Obama is right to warn that we can't go back to an economy where we spend more than we earn, and where finance captures 40 percent of the country’s profits. He's right to condemn the culture of "arrogance and greed" that took over Wall Street.

Now is the time. If we don't get comprehensive financial reform now, we're setting up even bigger dangers in the future — banks and financial firms officially recognized “as too big to fail,” who think they get to keep the winnings and the public will cover the losses. It’s a gigantic “moral hazard” that doesn’t just leave the vault unlocked, it posts an OPEN sign in the window.

Commission members are expected to be named soon. Will they be ghosts of Ferdinand Pecora? Will they be well-behaved bankers or fiery prosecutors? Will Congressional leaders give them the staff and the budget to dig hard, dig deep and broadcast what they find? Stay tuned. Find a way to turn up the heat. Congress is going to show us who’s in charge.


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See more stories tagged with: wall street, goldman sachs, bernie madoff, pecora commission

Eric Lotke is the Research Director at Campaign for America's Future. He recently released a book entiltled, 2044: The Problem isn't Big Brother. It's Big Brother, Inc.

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My Guess is Fall Guy
Posted by: peacelf on Jun 30, 2009 6:12 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like the S&L crisis of the 80's, the government under a Democratic administration is burying the crime of the century in money. Madoff's ponzi scheme revealed how complicated a mess are Wall St banking and investments, that Madoff gave himself up after a long life of luxury, and he was only the tip of the iceberg.

Yes, we can blame the lack of regulation, but the millions of investors looking for a quick buck are just as guilty. And Obama isn't punishing the guilty, but rewarding them for a job well done. Obama, the guy you and I voted for for change! Obama, the first progressive president! Obama, my greatest disappointment.

peace

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MADOFF IS NOT A FALL GUY
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Jun 30, 2009 1:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He's a big time crook who got by "with a little help from his friends". Namely the S.E.C. and the Federal Government. He got what he deserved, and he should have some company in that jail cell. Anna

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» RE: MADOFF IS NOT A FALL GUY Posted by: Don't Panic
Where did the money go Bernie?
Posted by: weathered on Jun 30, 2009 4:11 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets take a guess?

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» RE: Where did the money go Bernie? Posted by: lastmanstanding
Putative Fall Guy
Posted by: RevolutionNet on Jul 1, 2009 12:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He'll walk on appeal and probably recoup his legal expenses from US taxpayers.


FREE AMERICA

REVOLUTIONARY (DIRECT) DEMOCRACY

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While I would like it if he and that other high profile jerk were the first of many...
Posted by: ~Fiona~ on Jul 1, 2009 1:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...I fear they are only the scarificial goats being presented to the clamoring masses as "justice in action"... The real crooks will likely never see the inside of a jail cell... So much for the notion of "...and justice for all..."

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Bye bye Bernie
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jul 1, 2009 4:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pack up all our cares and woes!
Things are fine!
There he goes!
Bye bye, Bernie!

Of course! The evil one has been punished! We can all live happily ever after!

Think again....

Are we really going to be foolish enough to con ourselves into thinking that Bernie was only one taking advantage of the hyper-deregulated casino that America's financial infrastructure has become in the last thirty years? The American people are smarter than that....

Let me rephrase that:

The readers of AlterNet are smarter than that.

Bernie Maddow is the tip of the iceberg. Count on it.

The Real Loss of Michael Jackson's Death

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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» "Bernie Maddow"? Posted by: Tom Degan
Madoff is a perfect scapegoat
Posted by: timenotonmyside on Jul 1, 2009 5:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah, they acted swiftly and with no mercy on the Madoff scandal - but that was to show the sheep ''look we are doing something about it''.

You will never see the names of John Thain-Merrill Lynch's CEO, Jamie Dimon- JP Morgan's Ceo, Lloyd Blankfein - Goldman Sach's CEO or any other Wall Street financier who orchestrated the carnage on the US Economy in the hot seat.
Why ?
I find it impossible to believe that they didn't help perpetrate the decimation of millions pension funds and life savings.

So yeah, I get no warm fuzzy knowing that Bernie is in prison now.

When will Americans wake up and demand action against these capitalist thugs.

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» Crazy Shit! Posted by: Cathyc
Following in FDR's footsteps.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jul 1, 2009 5:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In Madoff's case, the investors didn't know for certain that the promise of an irrational return was a fraud. What's the excuse for our continued buying into Social Security?

Oh yeah. Because our Republican...oops, I mean Democrat-controlled Federal Government needs more money for more things like wars and getting in the car business...maybe even expanding their role in health care. You need all the money you can get to support that level of stupidity, and keep playing the electorate for suckers.

I got a cup of coffee with my Change. What'd you do with yours?

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BM will get "pardoned" by Obama so don't bother.
Posted by: JenniferBedingfield on Jul 1, 2009 6:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
BM is a symptom of our stupid Pavlovian DUMB DOG greedy system. Bernie isn't the first or the last. It'll get worse as long as greed and materialism come first in policies and culture.

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I don't like the title
Posted by: Fempatriot on Jul 1, 2009 6:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Madoff is no "fall guy." He's a thief, pure and simple, who stole money for his own gain. I hope he is the first of many being outed and prosecuted. And I believe that if we do not do something about the thieving banking/finance system on Wall Street, we're going to be rooked out of more and more money. It already appears that having lost billions of investors' monies, Goldman Sachs, etc. have been rewarded by our Congress and now have more money than they started with. I don't trust banks any more. First, we need to get rid of the non-federal Federal Reserve Bank(s) that print monopoly money and then charge US taxpayers for it, and we need to demand that the Federal Reserve be AUDITED so the American people can find out just what is going on behind its secretive walls. The Federal Reserve is the key to all the graft and corruption that is going on and being rewarded yet again.

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Wall Street Has Been About Greed Since Paul Warburg.
Posted by: edgar_michel on Jul 1, 2009 6:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paul Warburg represented the ascendancy of the privileged class in America as the Federal Reserve Act was ushered in in 1913. see: Paul Warburg

1929 wasn't the beginning of the depression it was the year a well oiled design for the consolidation of banking power in the United States was put into action.

When Americans finally wake up, if they ever do, they will understand that 9/11 wasn't the beginning of the War on Terror but rather a well oiled plan for the further consolidation of banking/corporate power in the United States and the further or final dismantling of the Constitution of the United States.

Everything else is just talking around the periphery.

What's really tragic is that we as a nation and a world should be spending trillions on finding solutions to global warming and climate change that really endangers everyones lives, and instead, we have trillions going to gluttons who only desire to further satiate themselves.

Bernie Maddoc is like I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the fall guy whose family will be well taken care of, no matter what happens to him personally. And as has been said elsewhere in these comments, he will probably walk on appeal or have his sentence significantly reduced.

But putting Bernie Madoff in prison doesn't fix any of the problems. The money that was siphoned off this economy needs to be retrieved. Bernie Madoff shouldn't be given a sentence of 150 years, he should be required to collect all the money he siphoned off from all those who received his stolen property and return it to the tax payers so it could be used to build climate friendly infrastructures.

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Wall Street Has Been About Greed Since Paul Warburg.
Posted by: edgar_michel on Jul 1, 2009 6:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paul Warburg represented the ascendancy of the privileged class in America as the Federal Reserve Act was ushered in in 1913. see: Paul Warburg

1929 wasn't the beginning of the depression it was the year a well oiled design for the consolidation of banking power in the United States was put into action.

When Americans finally wake up, if they ever do, they will understand that 9/11 wasn't the beginning of the War on Terror but rather a well oiled plan for the further consolidation of banking/corporate power in the United States and the further or final dismantling of the Constitution of the United States.

Everything else is just talking around the periphery.

What's really tragic is that we as a nation and a world should be spending trillions on finding solutions to global warming and climate change that really endangers everyones lives, and instead, we have trillions going to gluttons who only desire to further satiate themselves.

Bernie Maddoc is like I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, the fall guy whose family will be well taken care of, no matter what happens to him personally. And as has been said elsewhere in these comments, he will probably walk on appeal or have his sentence significantly reduced.

But putting Bernie Madoff in prison doesn't fix any of the problems. The money that was siphoned off this economy needs to be retrieved. Bernie Madoff shouldn't be given a sentence of 150 years, he should be required to collect all the money he siphoned off from all those who received his stolen property and return it to the tax payers so it could be used to build climate friendly infrastructures.

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» RE: Sorry, Browser Idiosyncracy Posted by: edgar_michel
BA
Posted by: mnstra on Jul 1, 2009 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Recent article in the Right Wing Times.:"Wall Street bankers being shot on sight as the leave their buildings in New Yuk. Goldman Sachs took the most shootings.

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Madoff's real crime
Posted by: LMNOP on Jul 1, 2009 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Madoff's real crime, and the reason he was made a sacrificial offering, was that he was working outside of the system, like any drug dealer in my home town who isn't selling for the police.

Also, he robbed the robbers instead of fleecing us scum. Not OK.

Tsk tsk.

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» Money Laundering? Posted by: FoonTheElder
Madoff & those of his ilk saw the private Federal Reserve destroying our economy by design...
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Jul 1, 2009 7:42 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and he wanted to do his part & get rich too.

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Madoff/Intelligence Agencies
Posted by: MyLeftFoot on Jul 1, 2009 8:05 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The failure of federal prosecutors to bring conspiracy charges against Bernard Madoff, the mega-billion dollar Ponzi scammer who pleaded guilty March 12 to eleven counts of fraud and other crimes in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, is providing cover to those who pulled the strings on Madoff's illegal operation.

WMR spoke to a former close aide to Madoff who related how he handled a number of transactions personally for Madoff. The source said that Madoff was running a special type of "pump and dump" scheme. The source said Madoff would "pump money out of the system and dump it out to another place." When asked what that "other place" was, the source replied, "Israel."

linked text

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I Nominate...
Posted by: wtfo on Jul 1, 2009 8:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Elizabeth Warren. I have been a fan of hers ever since reading "The Two Income Trap" and watching her on some excellent docmentaries (e.g. "Maxed Out") and television shows. She has the intellect, honesty, sensitivity, and personality necessary to do "the people's work" on this new commission.

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» RE: I Nominate...I second that Posted by: VZEQICVA
Remember ENRON? Who went to jail?
Posted by: Ted Voth Jr on Jul 1, 2009 8:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember ENRON? Who went to jail? Martha Stewart…

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Anthony D'Auria
Posted by: Tony D on Jul 1, 2009 8:28 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, Bernie Madoff is the so called "tip of the Iceberg" of Ponzi schemes and now is the time to send divers down to investigate the bottom of the "iceberg" of legal Ponzi schemes (Banks and etc)

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Two questions
Posted by: clvngodess on Jul 1, 2009 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Where's the moolah?

2. When do we start prosecuting the Banksters?

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This is 400 Year OLD Stale NEWS Repeated Mantra
Posted by: ak47blog on Jul 1, 2009 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
MAINSTREAM MEDIA CREATES MYTHS, STEREOTYPING, INACCURATE FACTS, INCORRECT
ASSOCIATIONS. The LONE CORRUPT CRIMINAL....

Exploitative media barons, news outlets including communicators, academics, educators,
authors, publishers, editors, reporters, radio, TV, websites continue unabated to include distortions distractions on the current demise of US and world financial collapse. The Madoff sound bytes and buzz words are basically distractions for illegal financial transactions which are "PYRAMID SCHEMES".
The chronology relating to Wall Street
illegal pyramid financial scams originated in "England c.1660 and copied verbatim in America c.1792" under a Buttonwood Tree in lower Manhattan now the New York Stock Exchange.

Consequently, the incorrect association and insidious perpetuation of lone corrupt criminal myths by MSM, educators, communicators is to deflect and distract the GREAT CRIMES that now permeate our financial and global market systems. Subsequently, the correct scam is “Pyramid Scheme” the current USA demise is a “Reverse Pyramid Market Scheme”

The current operators of massive “Pyramid Schemes” “Reverse Pyramid Market” scams continue their great crimes with assistance
from illegal government policy welfare stimulus bailouts, myths, MSM distractions, and controlled markets.

Not one person or entity has been held accountable to date that includes "Where's the Money Madoff", "Bonus Baby AIG", "Wall Street Pyramid Scam Banks", "Reverse Robin Hood Merry Men Goldman Sachs," "Old School Pyramid Scam Citi Bank BofA, " and the entire dominate Ivy League explosive personality controlling the US government financial system.

Madoff the pyramid scammer will disappear possibly with a media hype "death by heart attack".

visit

also see ......

ak47 21stCenturyreversePyramid

http://21stcenturyreversepyramid.blogspot.com/

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campaign finance
Posted by: jstepp590 on Jul 1, 2009 9:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The underlying problem here is campaign finance. As long as we allow the people who are the problem to pay for the campaigns of our polititions we will always have these problems and things will never get fixed.

Our "leaders" didn't just wake up one day with a burning desire to repeal 70yr old laws. They were paid to do it by the financial industry. This is just one of the problems caused by our campaign finance laws. The health care hijacking is another. Until we get a Clean Election system in place we will never have a government of, by and for the people because the careers of our elected officials will depend on the very people they are supposed to regulate, instead of us the citizens.

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OK, we nailed Bernie Baby
Posted by: willymack on Jul 1, 2009 10:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And this may be the start of something great. If others are to fall, let's start with the dismantling of the "Federal" Reserve, which is NOT federal, and NOT a reserve. What it actually is is a clearing house for corporate crooks, and so hopelessly corrupt that there's no fixing it, nor should it be fixed. Get rid of it, once and for all and jail the criminals in it.
If this is done, I'll believe REAL reform is on the way.
Until then, let's just say I'm skeptical.

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There's plenty more
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Jul 1, 2009 11:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would assume that virtually all of the regulatory agencies are corrupted. My particular interest happens to be commodities and precious metals that have been rigged by Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan ever since the Hunt brothers tried to corner silver.

The problem is, JP Morgan is so short gold and silver (among other commodities) that they couldn't possibly ever cover their shorts. The Chinese are having a field day picking up cheap commodities like silver at bargain basement prices. When the crisis hits, the Fed and Treasury will be bailing out still another criminal enterprise, and lying about it through the main stream media.

Oh yes, the Commodities Futures Trading Commision has been "investigating" the short positions of JP Morgan and others for nearly a year. Don't hold your breath waiting for that "investigation" to be concluded.

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I run into scads of Bernie Madofs
Posted by: donl51 on Jul 1, 2009 12:27 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We all do, everyday,in your email,over the internet,on the TV,during your worst moments....this is a country of scammers,...and in Italy you have your bicycle riding pick-pockets,....its a human trait we're not likely to stop anytime soon or until science and controllers start building humans from their birth to be as they want...absolute perfection..ie Gattica!!....yeah expect to see more ,especially in such a depressed economy ,,it brings out the slimiest!!...not just the greedy!

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If Obama pardons Madoff
Posted by: njguy73 on Jul 1, 2009 5:16 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and he runs again, I will vote for the Republican. I don't care the ticket is Palin-Limbaugh. I will vote for the Republican.

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Should be many, but given the Obama Administration's record so far...
Posted by: Outspokengrandmother on Jul 1, 2009 5:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Obama Administration is failing in everything it promised... why should it do any better with the Wall Street and Hedge Fund Criminals than it has done with Bush and Cheney? He's a huge disappointment across the board and the opportunities are slipping fast. Too bad, there once was hope.

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If Obama officially pardons Madoff
Posted by: njguy73 on Jul 1, 2009 5:19 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and he runs for a second term, I will vote Republican. I don't care if it's Palin-Limbaugh. I will vote Republican.

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Swing in the Wind
Posted by: Traven on Jul 1, 2009 5:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The SEC and the dozen other smaller regulatory agencies which oversee banks, commodities trading, and the banking laws which define capital ratios and how mutual funds are structured and the laws stipulating how complex securities like a CDS or a derivative would be designed have been dictated by financial lobbyists and the law firms that do the behind the scenes bidding since “de-regulation” started being pushed in the Reagan years.

The business press from the Wall Street Journal to the smallest newsletter for investors has been singing the song of unfettered capitalism for more than two decades. So much so the financial industry was able to prevent any real regulation and then dictate the non-existent oversight of Credit Default Swaps and derivatives.

It was common knowledge to any worker on Wall Street, to any employee of a large financial bank or investment house that the SEC was a hapless underfunded agency and a job at the SEC was just a stepping stone to a cushy job anywhere in the financial industry.

It has been this way for more than twenty years.

That this whole “free enterprise”, how dare you even try to regulate capitalism anywhere in any form, has been so ingrained into the mindset of the mass media it is little wonder then the news coverage we get is nothing more than cut-out fall guys like Bernie Madoff getting all the attention. Hundreds of his co-conspirators at dozens of other firms who helped setup third party mutual funds, hidden accounts, and off shore shell corporations will never see the inside of a court room.

It is bad enough that pension funds across the globe have seen their hard earned money shrink to a third of their past value or just go belly up, it is bad enough than millions of small investors whose accounts were small in comparison to the “big boys” have either been cleaned out or seen their account value fall by at least half, yet no one hears the super rich complaining.

Is it not, indeed odd, the super rich were able to get membership in those non-public mutual funds, shell corporations and a whole laundry list of semi-legal constructs that by all outward evidence seem to keep this same super rich in the lifestyle to which they think they are entitled by some hair brain notion of “natural capitalism”.

No, the co-conspirators of Madoff run into the thousands, that our mass media will not go into a depth of this larger story, only seals the deal that our mass media is nothing more than a propaganda organ of a bankrupt degenerate super rich elite safely hiding offstage right.

Sadly MATT TAIBBI's recent article on Goldman Sachs in Rolling Stone I fear is just the tip of the iceberg.

If anyone thinks these elites whether they be Americans of any nationality of the global super rich could give a dam anyone has a job, or medical care or even food to eat, then ask your self, will they really do anything real to head off global warming other than buy a cushy bunker in some elite walled in community somewhere while they safely watch billions of us starve and die on CNN.

Here’s a clue: they are letting the thousands of smaller investors of Bernie swing in the wind.

You are next.

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This IS About Politics!
Posted by: aussidawg on Jul 1, 2009 6:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"This isn't just about politics. Fundamental financial reform is essential to the future of the economy and the country. President Obama is right to warn that we can't go back to an economy where we spend more than we earn, and where finance captures 40 percent of the country’s profits. He's right to condemn the culture of "arrogance and greed" that took over Wall Street."

Wrong. This is 100% about politics and Obama's words are completely empty. The politicos don't want anything to happen to the source of all the campaign funds/lobbying dollars that line their pockets. The guys that are supposed to make and enforce the rules to keep the investment class contained are owned by those very people.

Nothing will change until we have political campaigns that are funded by only public funds with harsh criminal penalties for any private or corporate funds. Since our beloved "representatives" obviously aren't going to vote for anything that isn't in THEIR best interest (does anybody honestly believe these guys run for office because they want to be of service to their country?) , it would seem that rather drastic measures are going to have to happen for any change to occur. The alternative of course is to continue our downhill slide into serfdom.

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Mr.
Posted by: bar5608 on Jul 1, 2009 11:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, poor Bernie is in jail for the remainder of his wasted life. But where are all the rest of the Thugs whos stunts were just as damaging as Bernies. Bernie stole Billions, but the orchestra leader at Goldman Sachs made his way up into the trillions in 'ill gotten gains.' Why arent they in the cell next to Bernie? I believe there are hundreds of likely 'Perps'. Enough to fill all the available cells. We have to keep the pressure on Congress to do something about these crooks who are walking away scott free. And that includes Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld.

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He is neither.
Posted by: wagner on Jul 2, 2009 5:55 AM   
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He is not the first and not the last of many. He is just one of many and one of the relatively few who got caught.

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Israeli Connection
Posted by: sevs4u on Jul 2, 2009 8:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can't help but wonder based on the magnitude of this fraud, how involved the government of Israel is involved. Though the corporate media will not mention this, I have a suspicion much of the money was fed through Israeli banks to pay for new settlements. Any thoughts?

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Pecora was a fraud.
Posted by: Livemike on Jul 2, 2009 7:49 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His commission far from destroying the "robber barons" simply favored one set of them over another, diverting blame from the Rockefeller group to the Morgan group, their rivals. A classic example was Glass-Steagall which banned combinations of savings and investment banking as unsafe, although in both the present crisis and the 1929 one this was actually safer. Some believe it's not just a coincidence that this hurt the Morgan group and helped the Rockefellers. Deregulation did not cause the current crisis, regulation did.

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Warren Buffert was delivering returns about 10% above Madoff.
Posted by: Livemike on Jul 2, 2009 8:00 PM   
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There was the occasional bad year on geometric average he was better and his returns were legitimate.

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Bernie Madoff....
Posted by: MargaretA on Jul 4, 2009 12:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bernie Madoff will undoubtedly go down in history as one of the biggest crooks ever to walk the earth. Today, the awaited Bernie Madoff sentencing has been handed down, and for running the largest Ponzi scheme in history, the culprit has been given 150 years, effectively a life sentence. Some have already pled for the release of Madoff, as his crime is revealed, and there won't be unsecured loans to repay his victims or reestablish any credibility for him at this point. The judge decided that the prosecution was correct in asking for the maximum sentence, and gave him 150 years in the clink. Billions in quick cash won't help Bernie Madoff now.

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sex
Posted by: sex on Jul 6, 2009 2:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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