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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Nightmare on Wall Street: Washington Can't Bail out the Sea of Red Ink

By Bill Moyers, Bill Moyers Journal. Posted July 22, 2008.


Author Bill Greider explains to Moyers that the magic of the "free market" is coming to a close.
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The following is a transcript of an interview with author Bill Greider from the July 18 broadcast of Bill Moyers Journal(watch the video).

Bill Moyers:With me now is one of America's leading chroniclers of money, power, and politics, who says what's happening is the disgrace of Wall Street, its excesses paid for by people like those in Cleveland and millions like them around the country.

William Greider has spent forty years examining how powerful institutions affect ordinary people. Once a top editor of The Washington Post, a columnist for Rolling Stone, and now National Affairs Correspondent for The Nation, he has produced a series of best-selling books: Secrets of the Temple: How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country, One World, Ready or Not: The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism, Who Will Tell the People: The Betrayal of American Democracy, and The Soul of Capitalism. He's working on a new book with the title: Come Home, America.

Moyers:

What were you thinking as you saw that report from Cleveland? [The segment preceding this interview with Greider covered exorbitant lending practices in Cleveland].

Bill Greider:

Made me angry all over again, even though I know the story. And then I thought, "This is usury." This is a living example of what the Bible prohibited, which is the sin of usury. Most Americans have never heard of it probably.

Moyers:

Usury?

Greider:

Usury, to be clear about it, is rich people taking advantage of poor people by lending them money on terms that are sure to make them fail. All three of the great religions, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, had a moral prohibition against usury because they recognized that society can't function like that. People of great wealth and their institutions like banks naturally have the power to overwhelm people of lesser means. And you can't allow that in a decent society. It won't survive.

Moyers:

Where were the gatekeepers? Where were the watchdogs? Why did it take the Fed so long to put an end to predatory practices?

Greider:

To make the story overly crude, Congress repealed the law against usury. It was done in 1980 by a Democratic Congress, Democratic President. And, of course, the Republicans all piled on and voted for it. And that was the first stroke, only the first of many, in which they stripped away the regulatory laws from the financial system and from banking.

And that allowed the free market modernized gimmicks of one kind or another, all these things we're now reading about, to flourish. And that's where we are. I mean, the gatekeepers said to the banking industry and to the financial industry, "We don't think federal control or regulation is good for you, so we're, therefore, liberating you to do your own thing."

Moyers:

So why did they do that in 1980? I mean, there was, of course, the rise of the backlash to regulation from 40 years of Democratic rule there was the rise, the arrival of the conservatives with their free market ideology.

Greider:

Right, right.

Moyers:

What was the issue?

Greider:

Well, the driver then, and it was a powerful driver, was inflation. And through the '70s, for lots of reasons inflation, which tends to undermine the value of financial wealth and money, was out of control. The Federal Reserve had lost control of it, not entirely its fault. But that set up a political climate that said the government is not working and that wasn't wrong at the moment. Let's get the government out of the way.

And that was very appealing as framed by Ronald Reagan and other conservatives. But I think it's fair to say most Democrats yielded to it against whatever their original instincts were because of political necessity. And then the third dimension, maybe the most important, was that you had this very powerful industrial sector, that is banking and finance, that wanted and had pushed for years to get out from under the regulatory controls, limits on interest rates, the law against usury, the merger of commercial banks with investment banks, which had been prohibited in the New Deal because it caused the disaster of 1929.

I can go on and on. But you see the pattern. And the point I keep trying to make to people is that history learned the hard way that you do need prudential controls on industries like banking 'cause they're so central to everybody's well being.

Moyers:

Left to their own devices, they go too far?

Greider:

Yeah. They will use their power to their own advantage. And that's what we're witnessing now, a kind of recklessness that was set free by political retreat and people, some of them were sincere. Some of them were just on the make. But here's our great American tension. We want an economy that's dynamic, that's growing, puts more jobs out there for people to get, rising wages, all that good stuff. And at the same time, we want an economy that's stable. And that means no inflation, steady as you go, so forth and so on.


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Bill Moyers is president of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy.



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The Politics of Greed
Posted by: thornwolf on Jul 22, 2008 3:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's all about greed, pure and simple. Institutionalized greed, corporate greed, executive greed, the greed that makes those who have a lot want more, where a lot is never enough because they want it all.

The legal and fiduciary duty of the officers and directors of a corporation is one thing: the enrichment of the shareholders. It's not the wellbeing of the worker or the protection of the environment or a fair deal for the hapless consumer. No, it's share value, period.

As long as that mentality persists, the rich will rake the workers and comsumers over the coals relentlessly. Who will stnad up to do something about it?

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

» RE: The Politics of Greed Posted by: richholland
» RE: The Politics of Greed Posted by: ConnecttheDots
Abolish the Corpse
Posted by: marid on Jul 22, 2008 4:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and go back to the original system of revocable, limited, and reviewed charters for mainly public works projects. Keep the Merchants of Death and the Parasites on the backside of America personally responsible for all their actions. Might be a place to start.

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» RE: Abolish the Corpse Posted by: crazy carlos
it's about fear: crooks have to run scared
Posted by: Suzon on Jul 22, 2008 4:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Once you've robbed and even killed people, you become vulnerable. The more people you've robbed and killed, the more vulnerable you are. Look at Bush and Cheney, safe at the moment, but for how long? What was done to Saddam can be done to them.

Even if ordinary people have serious financial worries, they "only" have to worry about being homeless and hungry, not about being sent to prison or killed by an angry mob.

I think there's a link between the Lloyd's of London fraud and the rampant "greed" (inspired by fear) of the last thirty years. It was in the late 1970s that Lloyd's insiders saw huge losses (mostly due to asbestosis) in the pipeline and devised a scheme to "recruite to dilute", inviting foreigners and women to become Lloyd's names but concealing the true state of affairs. More than 30,000 people were bankrupted and some of those commited suicide. (The SEC pulled the plug on its investigation not long after Prime Minister John Major visited President Bush at Camp David in 1992.)

The insider Names at Lloyd's were understandably terrified at the thought of being bankrupted, punative creditor-biased UK bankruptcy law allowing a total financial wipe-out and, moreover, a three year ban on practicing a profession! Fifty-one Conservative MPs would have been kicked out of Parliament and the government would have fallen.

(Source: www.time.com/europe - hard copy published February 21, 2000)

Defending ill-gotten gains is not just full time employment but a never-ending job! And you do have to somehow get the law-makers to enable you and the judges to defend you.

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» dirty englishman replies Posted by: zipper696
The Fearless Manatee Hunter
Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter on Jul 22, 2008 4:54 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The secret hand giveth and the secret hand taketh away.

What else do you need to know.....?

My best regards to all,

The Fearless Manatee Hunter
Killer of the Gentle Sea Cow

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Jokers For the Ruling Class
Posted by: Mister_PsyOps on Jul 22, 2008 5:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“Usury, to be clear about it, is rich people taking advantage of poor people by lending them money on terms that are sure to make them fail.”

What a foul little joke that statement and its “interview” is.

The “Owners” of a private bank monopoly “Federal Reserve” Corporation set up to systematically gouge and extort Americans runs the nation as surely as temp Washington stooges do not.

And in this status quo case and every case, “rich people” are a corrupt, cozy old ruling class behind yet another crash to soak the poor / middle class for the Fascist Corporate Crime State (a.k.a. Kool-Aid State) that rules the nation with the west.

Like Moyers, Greider is a transparent apologist for the system he pretends to criticize. His whitewash book “Secrets of the Temple” on the Ponzi scheme “Federal Reserve” Corp (not federal no reserves) among others verifies this.

Moyers forfeited the credibility he had at his silence over a transparent 9/11 cover-up for what is easily the most grotesque betrayal of the nation in modern history.

So, we are left with one limited hangout apologist burbling to another as both wring their hands in mock angst at what passes for “alternative media”

What cheap nonsense.

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» RE: Jokers For the Ruling Class Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: Jokers For the Ruling Class Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: Jokers For the Ruling Class Posted by: Mister_PsyOps
» RE: Jokers For the Ruling Class Posted by: Mister_PsyOps
» RE: Jokers For the Ruling Class Posted by: Mister_PsyOps
» Your "Big Lie" Posted by: buffeliscious
» Your "Big Lie" & Bigger Liars Posted by: PointMan
» Is that you again, Noam? . . . Posted by: dustdevil
» It's not all about 9-11... Posted by: buffeliscious
» I'm through with you? . . . Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: I'm through with you? . . . Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: There was no cover up Posted by: solrev
» RE: There was no cover up Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: There was no cover up Posted by: EncinoM
» Your bringing up 9/11 Posted by: buffeliscious
» You Flaunt your own Ignorance Posted by: Mister_PsyOps
» Blah blah blah... Posted by: buffeliscious
» RE: There was no cover up Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: There was no cover up Posted by: EncinoM
» Mr Know-it-all speaks Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: Mr Know-it-all speaks Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Mr Know-it-all speaks Posted by: GuitarBill
» So it took 36 years . . . Posted by: dustdevil
» No, we want . . . Posted by: dustdevil
» RE: No, we want . . . Posted by: EncinoM
» Mr NeoCon recycles LIES Posted by: PointMan
» RE: Mr NeoCon recycles LIES Posted by: EncinoM
» RE: Mr NeoCon recycles LIES Posted by: EncinoM
» And the blah blah continues... Posted by: buffeliscious
Avarice, pure and simple!
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jul 22, 2008 5:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With deregulation, with the help of the Fed, and with the success of the Super Bull market, everybody's animal spirits in the financial system became more animal. And yet as these banks and other financial institutions need to be bailed out still no one is demanding for accountability nor regulations to be put into place.

Is it just me did we as a country not get it when Enron collapsed! It wasn't just an "isolated" incident. This is about rich folk wanting it all at the expense of everyone else, and this is happening on a global scale.

We need to hold Congresses feet to the fire and start demanding that they get a spine and do what really needs to be done - legislate and regulate.

When will we the people start demanding that Congress stop continually feed at trough while they are helping their buddies ram thru legislation that is hurting the 90% of Americans that are just trying to live!!!!!

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Sad
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Jul 22, 2008 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is so sad is that Dictator Bush has become so consumed with his Global Domination efforts that he has let the US itself fall apart at the seams. Greed and corruption at its finest!

JT
Ultimate Anonymity

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» RE: Sad Posted by: anneliese-nyc
This article concerns only ONE aspect of the cancer of the U.S.
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Jul 22, 2008 5:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just who can explain how to go about cleansing the country when those in power have the power to prevent any cleansing?

Look at the terrible joke of voting.
What true choices do we have?
They are ALL in bed together and use the powers of government to repress everyday, common people.

For anyone to believe that we actually have any real power over the CONTROLLERS is to be more than naive.
It is to be a daydreaming fool.

I am not rich however, I am fairly comfortable.
I am not in a position to practice "usury" in any manner.
I've worked a long time to build a sole prop small business and do not waste what money I do have.
Because I have a comfortable life does NOT make me oblivious and/or unfeeling about what is being done to my friends/neighbors and my country by those who have manipulated government power for their own benefit, the main benefit being that they have ensured that there is no way for the common man to bring them down.

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» We're Zimbabwe with Nukes. Posted by: pangolin
Reality check: the rich aren't going to lose power- EVER
Posted by: Farasien on Jul 22, 2008 5:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I agree with the article's conclusion that the rich and powerful have royally (pun intended) screwed us filthy Little People, I don't agree that there is a real change coming. Rich bankers and financiers aren't stupid- that's the common misconception. They are evil, and to remain alive and well during their centuries-long reign over all of us, have had to be shrewd and calculating. They got power initially by creating guilds and organizations around production, then learned to pool their money and start up banks who in turn lended it, at huge interest rates, to the greedy and power-hunger-controlled royalty of their day. When the modern ideas of fairness and equality (both of which, historically speaking, are VERY recent inventions) came up, they didn't die off, go bankrupt or run screaming to the hills, they did what anything organic does if it wants to survive- it changed and made itself look legitimate. The trend towards hard-line royal capitalism we now see in the world isn't a new invention, its an in-name reestablishment of the old royalty lending system seen in the mideval times. The rules that were imposed on the rich were a temporary foray into the antiquated ideals of common sense, and as can be seen if you pay attention, are easily repealed. Greed isn't purely a disease people suffer from, it is also a very powerful (I might even say unstoppable) tool that those who are in the real seats of power have learned to wield. Remember the phrase 'everybody has their price'? It came from these bastards, and weather or not people realize it, it is, in our modern society, an absolute truth. The rich bastards in the modern age have realized that the tide is turning a bit and have already insulated themselves from an uprising, just as they always do, by pulling out their money, bribibg or outright buying the right people to ensure their future and are just waiting for the right moment to jump back in. If you think about it, bankrupsy is a transferrence, or really, a withdrawl of wealth. What this means, considering the current financial world is, the power brokers have pulled out the majority of their cash, knowing that if they didn't, the people would take it from them, and are simply in waiting mode for things to crash, which then allows them to put it back in, buy up even more of the little that is left in the world they don't already completely own, and repeat the process, as they have done for all of recorded history. Its what has happened in every single financial crash through history, and this time its no different.

In truth, the only way we could ever be free of this way of doing things is to somehow change our inner natures- to somehow remove greed from our DNA. As much as I'd love to see the gillotines wheeled out to Wall Street and into the center of Washington DC and see a French-revolution-type show of spraying blood and rolling heads, its not going to really happen. Even if it did, those who would really need to get the axe to make the necessarry sweeping changes to society at large would have already have made their escape, leaving powerless underlings to pay the price in their stead. Even if, against all odds, we were to track the elites down and kill them, their families and everyone who profitted from their way of doing things, new power brokers would arise, use the same methodology and the process would start all over again. There is something about humanity that creates this type of system, and nothing short of a reinvention of ourselves ever had any hope of changing it.

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» The BIG Secret Posted by: perkywa
The problem is Bush has only two ears ...
Posted by: pierrot on Jul 22, 2008 5:59 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Under Clinton there was no budget deficit - everything was ok. When he left he had 89% positive rating and rightly so despite this ridiculous but funny private(!)Levisnky affair.

The problem is W. Bush alone. He miss-interpreted 9/11 (it was in fact self-inflicted by letting Israel steal land from the Palestinians for 40 years - who would NOT learn to fly under those circumstances?), which led to Irak, ... and now to Iran, the absolutely ultimate folly.

The problem with Bush? As everybody he has exactly two ears. But most of us get shit in one ear and quality speak in the other - we judge and decide rationally. But Bush gets Zionist-Lobby shit in one of his big ears and right whing evangelical religious shit in the other one of his big ears and that makes him DEAF. Having a president of the USA, the most powerfull man on the planet deaf for 8 years is the ruin of that country.

Kennedy had a plate on his desk saying 'the buck stops here'. Obama, when he becomes President, should add two more plates: 'here stops the jewish lobby' and 'here stops the evangelical lobby' ... conditio sine qua none, and america will be in the healing process.

Long live Jimmy carter

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» RE: Oil? Posted by: tulugaq
» Rabbi Cheney Posted by: edith
» RE: Anti-semitism Posted by: robert.noll
» And guess what Posted by: GuitarBill
» Sorry but.... Posted by: BAKslider
» Pass the Plate Posted by: edith
» It's not 1908 but 2008 Posted by: edith
» RE: It's not 1908 but 2008 Posted by: yellow
» RE: Get a grip, edith! Posted by: Quannah
» The sign Posted by: zipper696
» RE: The sign Posted by: pierrot
"Where were the gatekeepers? Where were the watchdogs? "...
Posted by: gazooks on Jul 22, 2008 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... Why did it take the Fed so long to put an end to predatory practices?" (Moyer's, above)

A great question with an obvious answer, Bill. It's the SYSTEM ITSELF that is predatory. A system that's designed to incrementally, and at times like the 70's and now, in a not so measured rate, rob the "public" of the value of their savings and other dollar denominated assets.

The reason that you ask the question is that you too don't quite get it yet , which is revealed in your description of "inflation".

Prices and wages can NEVER be inflationary. NEVER! They reflect the RESULT of inflation which is EXCLUSIVELY a monetary over supply of demand. It is controlled by the reigning administration through the FED's manipulation of interest rates, manipulation of markets and the with Treasury's complicity. It is the political weapon that enables the grotesque largesse that feeds the patron pigs at the trough. The ones that know what's coming before anyone else. The "friends" of a given administration.

The political control of the money supply through the FED is THE fundamental tool. The political policy of governmental "bailouts" is only an option if it has the power to create money "out of thin air" with nothing backing it up. The new billions created dilute the value of all existing billions in the same way as a corporation having unlimited shares to issue in stock at it's whim. How long would such a corporation attract investment?

The loss of value of the dollar is the reason that all prices and wages continuously escalate and since wages are ALWAYS the last to rise two things occur. The worker gets the short end by a depreciated dollar, and higher wages are described as inflationary and fervidly resisted. It happens in EVERY inflationary cycle and suffers the same misleading and deceptive blame which is used to retard the correction of wages proportionately higher. This is the mechanism that has been bleeding the middle class, further impoverishing the poor and creating the climate for an unsustainable, debt driven economy. The control of the media and it's cheerleading spin in support of the myriad lies and propaganda is obscenely obvious.

Gold, used as a measure of value has been the ONLY benchmark in human history that by virtue of it's limited produce-ability in units of weight restrains political abuses of currency inflation when the two are pegged.

Those who decry the restraints of a gold standard as "arcane" and "unworkable" are cut of the same cloth as those pawning off the criminally constructed securities on the rest of the world. Want to see a real measure and trend of value of the DOW? Look at a chart of it as measured in gold. It tells quite a different tale than that as measured by the fiat dollar.

The same vultures that prey on the hopeful, former home "owners" lured to their demise by Bush's promotional abuses of the American Dream. And the same jackals that sold a war that without an unlimited supply of funny money supplied by a compliant, unrestrained FED would NEVER have even been considered. And the same vipers that can send the young to soldier a war for oil, them discard them like so much human garbage.

These are the people that control the supply of the currency and sell the soul of the nation and it's future down a very nasty river.

Dig just a little deeper, Bill.

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Reason "Experience" in DC is a Confession of HIGH Crimes
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jul 22, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time I hear Mac claim 'experience' I review the last few decades of more dependency on foreign oil, foreign investments (and takeovers of american Co's and property), of the dwindling Middleclass, Of interference of OUR guaranteed Rights and Freedoms....
'Experience' In corruption and UNAmerican Activities.
The epitome of his 'Experience' comes with his claims 'The Surge is Working'- To what, bring America to her knees? Billions of Dollars (in debted to foreign countries) and thousands of lives to 'stand Up iraq' while beating Down Americans! Instead of getting US off Oil 3 decades ago, They increased their profits by indenturing US to M.E. 'Royals', Killed all attempts at alternative fuels and Energy, while robbing US blind and forcing US (and Our kids)in to debt
5 yrs of Acting the part of a soldier, does Not excuse YOUR acts of Treason for the last 26 yrs Mac!
Mac's form of Valor grants him the Priviledge of Holding the Door for ALL those who actually had it in Vietnam and Those who are proving it NOW!
Let these Casinos Fall and send all the 'investors' over to their Creditors for Repayment of Loans WE never Co-signed!Freeze & Seize all their Assest as Repayment to US, and let THEIR children carry the Burden for the rest they Owe. A child Born today has at least a $16,000 Tax debt Owed JUST because of the iraq War, What has been added to their debt due to this Embezzlement?
Every CEO,CFO and Board memeber should be arrested and Prosecuted for Treason, War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity.Then God can decide what to do with their immortal (Immoral) Souls.

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80% say we're headed in the wrong direction...
Posted by: chorton on Jul 22, 2008 6:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But to turn this sentiment into a movement that can win we need organization, we have much to learn and we need good tools for sharing information and discussion, locally and nationally. (See my post about newspapers under Bill Moyers.) We have work to do and no time for cynicism and despair. No one - not Obama, not Kucinich or McKinney or Nader - is going to do that for us. And without that effort, the paid prostitutes in the media, the anchors and hosts and shock jocks, will be free to take that 80% sentiment and channel it into racism, jingoism, xenophobia and other assorted loony-tune stories about who we are, where the problem is coming from and who's to blame.

Our strength is in the truth about where the peoples' interests lie, in the truth about our real history, in our labor and community organizations and ultimately in our numbers and unity. They have the money and the megaphone, a well-organized system of exclusive country clubs and corporate boards, and a total lack of scruples; and they're getting scared and getting very mean. There is no time and no excuse for complacency and defeatism.

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» Correction Posted by: chorton