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Madoff's Shocking Scheme Is Just a Microcosm of a Much Bigger Disaster

All of Wall Street has been engaging in crimes and swindles like Madoff's against the American people, and the rest of the world, for decades.
December 29, 2008  |  
 
 
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We've been hearing a chorus of "Nail him," "Let him rot," "String him by the ..." And the chorus will just grow louder as we learn of more and more victims of Bernard Madoff's corruption and arrogance.

It started with the bass, sung by the megamillionaires suddenly left with bills they can't afford to pay: mortgages on mansions and pièds à terre, a yacht or two, stablesful of Lamborghinis and tuition for their kids' exclusive private schools.

Then we heard from the baritone section, the well-paid employees of said multimillionaires' companies. At the holiday season, they're keeping themselves busy by spending hours and days in line at the unemployment office.

Tenor is sung by the staff and directors of foundations that give away money to worthy causes, including bone marrow transplants, interfaith outreach programs, higher education, health care services for the elderly and disabled, medical research, religious freedom advocacy, criminal justice reform, fighting poverty.

And they're joined by the sopranos -- all the supporters of Jewish philanthropies (safe to say that's probably at least 40 percent of the nation's Jews, plus non-Jewish supporters of good deeds done by Jewish groups) and the other nonprofits that went under when Bernard Madoff broke their banks and their backs.

And screeching above this chorus are all the rest of us. With plenty of reason.

How could such a thing as what Madoff perpetrated against the American people -- and the recipients around the world of their largesse -- have ever happened here? Here, where regulations exist to keep this from happening? Here, where the government looks after its corporations, er, people, and doesn't allow such things to get so out of hand?

The Madoff mess is simply a microcosm of the bigger picture. Madoff did, possibly as a single person (and quite spectacularly) swindle a highly visible and influential amalgam of people and entities in the biggest hoax of modern economic times. Yet what he actually did is no more out of the ordinary than torturing people in U.S. prisons.

All of Wall Street has been engaging in just such crimes against the American people -- and the U.S. Constitution and other people around the world -- for decades. Corporations listed on the stock exchange, led by revered CEOs, COOs and CFOs (the U.S. royalty), pollute our waters, air and soil; peddle unsafe toys; build weapons of mass destruction; use government bailout money (our taxes) for resort vacations and other perks; send U.S. jobs abroad while running their employees' pensions plans and their small investors' life savings into the ground; and pay those top executives obscene amounts of money even as they're gleefully committing all of the above.

We have a hamstrung regulatory system and a Congress that is all too willing to bail out the incompetent (at best), hubris-filled corporate frat boys who are running these corporations. Alas, the federal government isn't the only enabler; state and local governments come down on the side of corporations more often than not.

Worse yet, our "justice" system almost invariably rules for the corporations against the people -- indeed, over the last century, the courts have given more and more rights of "personhood" to said corporations, so that they now literally have more rights under the law than you or I do. (Heaven forbid you should want your corporate neighbor to stop dumping toxins into the ground whence you get your family's drinking water; you'd be interfering with its right to make a profit. Who cares that your toddler's got Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome or kidney disease? Nothing can get in the way of corporate profit, least of all a family or a community that's trying to protect its people's health, property and future.)

The Madoff case is simply the latest-despicable treachery in a long line of crimes against us. Truly many people are badly hurt by the man's crimes. We should be outraged, and surely those raising their voices in fury have every right to be singing at the top of their lungs. But what is shocking to me about this cacophony is that none of the singers has stopped to recognize the dichotomy between their reactions to two catastrophic recent events.


Longtime journalist and humanitarian Maura Stephens is co-founder and co-director of Iraqi Refugees Assistance Connection and writes and speaks frequently about humanitarian issues in Iraq and elsewhere.
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THAT IS CAPITALISM FOLKS
Posted by: rugby on Dec 29, 2008 2:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The swindling that Stephens refers to has been going on since the birth of capitalism; well over 100 years ago! I don’t understand why anyone should be surprised, but the fact that the super rich have been targeted rather than the small time punters in the case of Madoff’s scheme should be seen as a blessing rather than a curse; simply because the very rich only become so through past acts of corruption, usury, embezzlement, fiduciary irresponsibility and other assorted criminal activities, such as the creation of abstruse derivative products behind which they can launder money and cook their books.

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» RE: THAT IS CAPITALISM FOLKS Posted by: bccmeteorites

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I'm sorry, but I can't feel any sympathy...
Posted by: sausage on Dec 29, 2008 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, but I just don't feel any sympathy for billionaires, millionaires, pension funds or charities, Jewish or otherwise, which invested, heavily, in Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme.

The reason they all got caught up in Madoff's swindle is, they were all just as greedy for the American dollar as Bernie.

Face it, while the MSM is churning out post-Madoff sob-stories about little old grandmothers losing their "life's savings" to Madoff's scheme, a year from now none of Madoff's investors will be working as greeters at Wal Mart or flipping burgers at Micky D's! Rest assured that by this time next year all Madoff investors will yet have their homes, Lincoln Towncars or Cadillacs, they just won't have a second or third home anymore, the yacht will go bye-bye and there'll be less of an inheritance to pass on to their ne're-do-well kin.

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Imperial hubris
Posted by: peterjkraus on Dec 29, 2008 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, what do you expect from a population that reveres the military, elevates money grubbers to its elite and holds itself to be the mirror image of some god that it brays to at every turn?

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I kept thinking that the author was going to introduce Roosevelt...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Dec 29, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...as Madoff's foil for embroiling the entire citizenry of the nation in a similar Ponzi scheme.

That history of getting something for nothing has fostered this current "crisis" of foolishness and stupidity writ large, not just this "crisis" folks who willing let Madoff hide their money while he spun his tales.

People who do systematically do foolish things with money should expect to have none of it. Crisis? I call it destiny. Watch out, country!

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Picking up the Pieces
Posted by: Fraud Recovery on Dec 29, 2008 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With Billions lost, many Madoff victims believe they wont be able to recover a penny of their lost investments.

Good news: victims of Bernard Madoff may be able to recover up to 35%of their lost investment through a special provision of the Internal Revenue Service code. We believe that this deduction may be taken in 2008 if steps are taken before 12/31/2008 to preserve the "Date of Discovery" For more information visit www.fraudrecovery.org. or ask your tax professional about IRC Section 165(c)(2).

To avoid being a victim of investment fraud…be prepared! The Association for Fraud Recovery and Prevention, a member organization dedicating to fighting consumer investment fraud, can show you how to protect yourself and your savings. Our "how to tools" would have foiled Madoff and saved investor savings. Visit www.fraudrecovery.org.

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» RE: Picking up the Pieces Posted by: jon B

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Not one goddam nickel!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Dec 29, 2008 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am, sick and tired of Madoff, Wall Street, Paulson, Bernanke and the rest of the Republican scum that differ from common robbers in but one way...they don't need guns to pull a heist. They don't need causation. They don't need alibis. They don't ever have to face interrogation for patent criminality. But one thing is sure, I don't want to see one goddam nickel spent on any of this bailout and filthy lucre scum until all of these bastards are prosecuted and sentenced in perpetuity to Abu Graib. That is justice folks, anything else is bullshit and accomplice liability.

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Madoff is an amateur
Posted by: PaulK on Dec 29, 2008 10:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real Ponzi scheme is the Republican Congress, borrowing ten trillion from foreigners and Americans alike, spending it to pump up the economy temporarily, borrowing more money based on the illusion of a great economy in order to temporarily cover the shortfall, and so on.

Madoff's mere $50 billion crash is one half of one percent the size of the next Ponzi scheme.

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And the other hedge funds are different how?
Posted by: westomoon on Dec 29, 2008 12:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I must say, I don't see a whole lot of difference between Madoff and the other hedge funds -- the difference between "highly leveraged" and "Ponzi scheme" strikes me as falling in the "angels dancing on heads of pins" category.

Both were sold as highly exclusive private investment opportunities only for the super-rich, and the super-rich have gotten accustomed to their own private versions of so many basic infrastructure functions, which normally work much better and require much less of them than the public infrastructure the rest of us must use. I'm sure they thought it was just another reflection of God's favor that their investments with Madoff could bring a 25% return -- only marginally higher, I might add, than the other hedge funds.

And when the other hedge funds were faced with investors wanting to pull their money out, they had to have a desperate fire sale of what few securities they actually owned to provide the funds, because they only had assets to cover less than one-thirtieth of the paper value of their operations. Sure sounds like a Ponzi scheme to me. Also, I gather that nobody, even the people who were creating and selling them, actually understood the derivatives they were creating and trading -- another classic sign of a con game, no?

I'm so reminded of the S&L crisis of the 80's, where financial professionals flocked to lend money to high-risk nations and ventures, because of the 25% interest those high-risk loans had to pay -- and then were astonished when those high-risk loans defaulted and took the S&Ls with them. Not to mention the insider sweetheart real-estate deals they lost out on too. Somehow, the super-wealthy these days seem to really go for that "smartest guys in the room" neo-Calvinist "God's elect" feeling -- it has made them perfect marks. It's hard to muster anything more than the most distant compassion.

And, excuse me? Our hearts are supposed to bleed for all the privately-endowed charities and educational institutions that have been affected by the Madoff collapse -- but not for the same functions in the public sphere, which have been in equally dire straits for years now? For the retirement funds affected by a financier's scam, but not for the many retirement funds pillaged by corporate chicanery? Basically, Madoff's investors have just been put in the same boat as us "little guys" -- and that's a tragedy?

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capitalism needs to end, now!
Posted by: chance garden on Dec 29, 2008 12:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So what is the author going to do about "the corruption"? What will anybody do about it? Just goes to prove how corrupt our whole system is. Right from the begining, when the phony banking system creates money out of thin air and charges "the people" interest just for the priviledge to use a commodity (money) that without which it is impossible to survive.

This capitalistic culture needs to come to an end. We must forge a new society based not on the profit motive and money values, but on values that place people before profits and luxury and class superiorities.

War is coming to end this phony world...how can it not?

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We need a hero!
Posted by: shockman on Dec 29, 2008 8:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The romanticized and mythical vision of the "United States of America", and all its glorious historical basis for our cultural values of Freedom, Justice, Equality, Liberty, the Pursuit of Happiness, Prosperity, the Land of Opportunity, and the promise of success built off the sweaty back of the sacrificial working man/working woman, all died with the atom bomb.
We are currently astride the downward spiral, tail spin of an experimental Democratic society, which has lasted longer than all other forms of cultures, civilized societies, or governmental institutions, known to mankind. We have surpassed the generally accepted average life span by a good 100 years.
There are several reasons why almost all other forms of governments, cultures, and societies have, through out our world's history, failed to survive longer than 300 years. Generally, the downfall was the result of a greedy and oppressive ruling class, which was torn down, demolished, and destroyed by the very same blistered and calloused hands, which helped build the goddamn thing, in the first place.
In our case, it is the incestuous triad of the industrial - military complex (as Eisenhower had warned), specialized lobbyist based politics, and the unregulated Financial /Banking culture, which now controls and dominates our entire means and purpose of existence, and is the malignancy that is now spreading and destroying our lives. They are all interrelated, co-dependent, and dysfunctional; owned and operated by the very few, the very rich, and the all but invisible elite.
This garbage is so old, so rotten, and so deeply entrenched in our daily lives that we start to feel like we deserve this way of life, that we should appreciate and praise God for 15 dollars an hour wage, two week vacations, and meager benefits. We are also conditioned to believe that there is something wrong if everything is going right. Wall street investors generally make more money when the economy is
bad and unemployment is high. Except for now, when we all are entering uncharted financial waters.
The historical tradition and purpose of Revolution exits for a reason. It is in the “small print” on the binding contract, written by any society, wherein the mass majority of the “have nots” are feed up with living and dying in reaction to the actions of the “have more than they need”.

“This revolution will not be televised”, (will not be trivialized, scanned and digitalized…)
“This Revolution will be live”.

This man, for the lives he has ruined, both directly and indirectly: ruinations primary, secondary, and tertiary, should have all of his assets seized, his immediate family deported, and himself should be executed.

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Ponzi schemes
Posted by: chorton on Dec 30, 2008 5:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Justice for Madoff? "Time for 'justice for all'...?" Yes! But where would we stop?

Would we include the bankers who indulged in an orgy of subprime lending and ignored the evidence of a housing bubble, then bundled those loans and sold them as AAA bonds? The rating services that signed off on them? The "investors" who used them to capitalize funds, made bets on them and then used the betting slips like money to capitalize "hedge funds"? The investors who made bets on *those* funds and sold the betting slips?

What about the bankers who pushed endless credit cards at us at 10% interest, then jacked up rates to 30%, added endless fees and fines, "securitized" them and sold them as AAA bonds? And then made and sold bets on whether we would default?

What about the bankers who came crying to Congress for a trillion-dollar bailout, then used the money to buy up other banks while they slash the credit limits of consumers and businesses? And the politicians who voted to give it to them with no strings?

While we're at it, what about the "feel good" politicians and paid-off pundits who conned a whole generation into giving up on real pensions and putting our hard-earned life savings into 401K plans, and the investors who bet our savings on these rotten schemes? Who sold us the ludicrous idea that we could all prosper by cutting taxes on the wealthy? Who peddled the fantasy of a "post-industrial service economy" while they shipped our jobs off to places where people would work for 10 cents an hour? How long did they think we could keep it all going by consuming what we didn't make?

And what about the hotshots who invented these fantastic schemes and the economists who won Nobel prizes for justifying them, the politicians who legalized them and the bankers who lobbied them to do so? Are we now to "reach across the aisle" and make nice with them all?

This is the end of an era that dwarfs the "Guilded Age" and the "Roaring 20's", a fantasy Disneyland/WalMart economy that had to come crashing down. Madoff fit right in with his times. It's a pretty safe bet that his won't be the last such crooked scheme that comes to light. But that this flim-flammery was so widespread and on such a colossal scale - and that much of it was "legal" - is no reason to excuse or forgive the massive greed, arrogance and duplicity which drove this great debacle.

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» WELL SAID!!! Posted by: jon B

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Stealing my themes?
Posted by: jon B on Dec 30, 2008 5:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was about two weeks ago that I put microcosm and Madoff together in a post on an article about Madoff here at Alternet. Although I didn't compare him to Iraq but to corporate Wall Street (the mother of all Ponzi Schemes).

I suppose you could declare Madoff a microcosm of so much in American institutions. Hell, our federal government is showing itself to be one big pyramid investment scam, but at least they are open about it by telling us precisely who will be the early recipients in the scheme (Wall Street) by which we can easily deduce the later dupes (that would be the masses).

I think having a Madoff as a "poster boy" for institutional scams is good. We need some type of name to focus on, but only if many others are put on that same poster, the boys of Wall Street.

More than likely though, the mass population will move on to other "entertainment" to forget about Madoff and the boys of Wall Street. When a person is raped they will turn off their minds during the crime. That's what is going to happen in America AGAIN. We will turn off our minds to the financial screwing we are getting and the rapists from finance (and Washington DC) will mostly go free.

Remember the theme of the Bush Administration when faced with a growing story of mass criminal behavior..."it's a few bad apples." They said this when Abu Ghraib happened but also word for word prior to that during the Enron, WorldCom, etc. financial scams. And as it were for those times where only a few bad apples paid for their crimes, it will probably be again.

Oh, maybe Obama will have a new slogan, but don't bet on mass imprisonment of the Wall Street shysters. Hell, I'm betting even Madoff will die before he goes to prison, just like Ken Lay did.

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Alternet Comments:

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THAT IS CAPITALISM FOLKS
Posted by: rugby on Dec 29, 2008 2:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The swindling that Stephens refers to has been going on since the birth of capitalism; well over 100 years ago! I don’t understand why anyone should be surprised, but the fact that the super rich have been targeted rather than the small time punters in the case of Madoff’s scheme should be seen as a blessing rather than a curse; simply because the very rich only become so through past acts of corruption, usury, embezzlement, fiduciary irresponsibility and other assorted criminal activities, such as the creation of abstruse derivative products behind which they can launder money and cook their books.

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

» RE: THAT IS CAPITALISM FOLKS Posted by: bccmeteorites

Comments are closed-

I'm sorry, but I can't feel any sympathy...
Posted by: sausage on Dec 29, 2008 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, but I just don't feel any sympathy for billionaires, millionaires, pension funds or charities, Jewish or otherwise, which invested, heavily, in Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme.

The reason they all got caught up in Madoff's swindle is, they were all just as greedy for the American dollar as Bernie.

Face it, while the MSM is churning out post-Madoff sob-stories about little old grandmothers losing their "life's savings" to Madoff's scheme, a year from now none of Madoff's investors will be working as greeters at Wal Mart or flipping burgers at Micky D's! Rest assured that by this time next year all Madoff investors will yet have their homes, Lincoln Towncars or Cadillacs, they just won't have a second or third home anymore, the yacht will go bye-bye and there'll be less of an inheritance to pass on to their ne're-do-well kin.

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


Comments are closed-

Imperial hubris
Posted by: peterjkraus on Dec 29, 2008 7:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, what do you expect from a population that reveres the military, elevates money grubbers to its elite and holds itself to be the mirror image of some god that it brays to at every turn?

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


Comments are closed-

I kept thinking that the author was going to introduce Roosevelt...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Dec 29, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...as Madoff's foil for embroiling the entire citizenry of the nation in a similar Ponzi scheme.

That history of getting something for nothing has fostered this current "crisis" of foolishness and stupidity writ large, not just this "crisis" folks who willing let Madoff hide their money while he spun his tales.

People who do systematically do foolish things with money should expect to have none of it. Crisis? I call it destiny. Watch out, country!

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


Comments are closed-

Picking up the Pieces
Posted by: Fraud Recovery on Dec 29, 2008 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With Billions lost, many Madoff victims believe they wont be able to recover a penny of their lost investments.

Good news: victims of Bernard Madoff may be able to recover up to 35%of their lost investment through a special provision of the Internal Revenue Service code. We believe that this deduction may be taken in 2008 if steps are taken before 12/31/2008 to preserve the "Date of Discovery" For more information visit www.fraudrecovery.org. or ask your tax professional about IRC Section 165(c)(2).

To avoid being a victim of investment fraud…be prepared! The Association for Fraud Recovery and Prevention, a member organization dedicating to fighting consumer investment fraud, can show you how to protect yourself and your savings. Our "how to tools" would have foiled Madoff and saved investor savings. Visit www.fraudrecovery.org.

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

» RE: Picking up the Pieces Posted by: jon B

Comments are closed-

Not one goddam nickel!
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Dec 29, 2008 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am, sick and tired of Madoff, Wall Street, Paulson, Bernanke and the rest of the Republican scum that differ from common robbers in but one way...they don't need guns to pull a heist. They don't need causation. They don't need alibis. They don't ever have to face interrogation for patent criminality. But one thing is sure, I don't want to see one goddam nickel spent on any of this bailout and filthy lucre scum until all of these bastards are prosecuted and sentenced in perpetuity to Abu Graib. That is justice folks, anything else is bullshit and accomplice liability.

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


Comments are closed-

Madoff is an amateur
Posted by: PaulK on Dec 29, 2008 10:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real Ponzi scheme is the Republican Congress, borrowing ten trillion from foreigners and Americans alike, spending it to pump up the economy temporarily, borrowing more money based on the illusion of a great economy in order to temporarily cover the shortfall, and so on.

Madoff's mere $50 billion crash is one half of one percent the size of the next Ponzi scheme.

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


Comments are closed-

And the other hedge funds are different how?
Posted by: westomoon on Dec 29, 2008 12:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I must say, I don't see a whole lot of difference between Madoff and the other hedge funds -- the difference between "highly leveraged" and "Ponzi scheme" strikes me as falling in the "angels dancing on heads of pins" category.

Both were sold as highly exclusive private investment opportunities only for the super-rich, and the super-rich have gotten accustomed to their own private versions of so many basic infrastructure functions, which normally work much better and require much less of them than the public infrastructure the rest of us must use. I'm sure they thought it was just another reflection of God's favor that their investments with Madoff could bring a 25% return -- only marginally higher, I might add, than the other hedge funds.

And when the other hedge funds were faced with investors wanting to pull their money out, they had to have a desperate fire sale of what few securities they actually owned to provide the funds, because they only had assets to cover less than one-thirtieth of the paper value of their operations. Sure sounds like a Ponzi scheme to me. Also, I gather that nobody, even the people who were creating and selling them, actually understood the derivatives they were creating and trading -- another classic sign of a con game, no?

I'm so reminded of the S&L crisis of the 80's, where financial professionals flocked to lend money to high-risk nations and ventures, because of the 25% interest those high-risk loans had to pay -- and then were astonished when those high-risk loans defaulted and took the S&Ls with them. Not to mention the insider sweetheart real-estate deals they lost out on too. Somehow, the super-wealthy these days seem to really go for that "smartest guys in the room" neo-Calvinist "God's elect" feeling -- it has made them perfect marks. It's hard to muster anything more than the most distant compassion.

And, excuse me? Our hearts are supposed to bleed for all the privately-endowed charities and educational institutions that have been affected by the Madoff collapse -- but not for the same functions in the public sphere, which have been in equally dire straits for years now? For the retirement funds affected by a financier's scam, but not for the many retirement funds pillaged by corporate chicanery? Basically, Madoff's investors have just been put in the same boat as us "little guys" -- and that's a tragedy?

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


Comments are closed-

capitalism needs to end, now!
Posted by: chance garden on Dec 29, 2008 12:32 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So what is the author going to do about "the corruption"? What will anybody do about it? Just goes to prove how corrupt our whole system is. Right from the begining, when the phony banking system creates money out of thin air and charges "the people" interest just for the priviledge to use a commodity (money) that without which it is impossible to survive.

This capitalistic culture needs to come to an end. We must forge a new society based not on the profit motive and money values, but on values that place people before profits and luxury and class superiorities.

War is coming to end this phony world...how can it not?

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


Comments are closed-

We need a hero!
Posted by: shockman on Dec 29, 2008 8:26 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The romanticized and mythical vision of the "United States of America", and all its glorious historical basis for our cultural values of Freedom, Justice, Equality, Liberty, the Pursuit of Happiness, Prosperity, the Land of Opportunity, and the promise of success built off the sweaty back of the sacrificial working man/working woman, all died with the atom bomb.
We are currently astride the downward spiral, tail spin of an experimental Democratic society, which has lasted longer than all other forms of cultures, civilized societies, or governmental institutions, known to mankind. We have surpassed the generally accepted average life span by a good 100 years.
There are several reasons why almost all other forms of governments, cultures, and societies have, through out our world's history, failed to survive longer than 300 years. Generally, the downfall was the result of a greedy and oppressive ruling class, which was torn down, demolished, and destroyed by the very same blistered and calloused hands, which helped build the goddamn thing, in the first place.
In our case, it is the incestuous triad of the industrial - military complex (as Eisenhower had warned), specialized lobbyist based politics, and the unregulated Financial /Banking culture, which now controls and dominates our entire means and purpose of existence, and is the malignancy that is now spreading and destroying our lives. They are all interrelated, co-dependent, and dysfunctional; owned and operated by the very few, the very rich, and the all but invisible elite.
This garbage is so old, so rotten, and so deeply entrenched in our daily lives that we start to feel like we deserve this way of life, that we should appreciate and praise God for 15 dollars an hour wage, two week vacations, and meager benefits. We are also conditioned to believe that there is something wrong if everything is going right. Wall street investors generally make more money when the economy is
bad and unemployment is high. Except for now, when we all are entering uncharted financial waters.
The historical tradition and purpose of Revolution exits for a reason. It is in the “small print” on the binding contract, written by any society, wherein the mass majority of the “have nots” are feed up with living and dying in reaction to the actions of the “have more than they need”.

“This revolution will not be televised”, (will not be trivialized, scanned and digitalized…)
“This Revolution will be live”.

This man, for the lives he has ruined, both directly and indirectly: ruinations primary, secondary, and tertiary, should have all of his assets seized, his immediate family deported, and himself should be executed.

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Ponzi schemes
Posted by: chorton on Dec 30, 2008 5:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Justice for Madoff? "Time for 'justice for all'...?" Yes! But where would we stop?

Would we include the bankers who indulged in an orgy of subprime lending and ignored the evidence of a housing bubble, then bundled those loans and sold them as AAA bonds? The rating services that signed off on them? The "investors" who used them to capitalize funds, made bets on them and then used the betting slips like money to capitalize "hedge funds"? The investors who made bets on *those* funds and sold the betting slips?

What about the bankers who pushed endless credit cards at us at 10% interest, then jacked up rates to 30%, added endless fees and fines, "securitized" them and sold them as AAA bonds? And then made and sold bets on whether we would default?

What about the bankers who came crying to Congress for a trillion-dollar bailout, then used the money to buy up other banks while they slash the credit limits of consumers and businesses? And the politicians who voted to give it to them with no strings?

While we're at it, what about the "feel good" politicians and paid-off pundits who conned a whole generation into giving up on real pensions and putting our hard-earned life savings into 401K plans, and the investors who bet our savings on these rotten schemes? Who sold us the ludicrous idea that we could all prosper by cutting taxes on the wealthy? Who peddled the fantasy of a "post-industrial service economy" while they shipped our jobs off to places where people would work for 10 cents an hour? How long did they think we could keep it all going by consuming what we didn't make?

And what about the hotshots who invented these fantastic schemes and the economists who won Nobel prizes for justifying them, the politicians who legalized them and the bankers who lobbied them to do so? Are we now to "reach across the aisle" and make nice with them all?

This is the end of an era that dwarfs the "Guilded Age" and the "Roaring 20's", a fantasy Disneyland/WalMart economy that had to come crashing down. Madoff fit right in with his times. It's a pretty safe bet that his won't be the last such crooked scheme that comes to light. But that this flim-flammery was so widespread and on such a colossal scale - and that much of it was "legal" - is no reason to excuse or forgive the massive greed, arrogance and duplicity which drove this great debacle.

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» WELL SAID!!! Posted by: jon B

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Stealing my themes?
Posted by: jon B on Dec 30, 2008 5:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was about two weeks ago that I put microcosm and Madoff together in a post on an article about Madoff here at Alternet. Although I didn't compare him to Iraq but to corporate Wall Street (the mother of all Ponzi Schemes).

I suppose you could declare Madoff a microcosm of so much in American institutions. Hell, our federal government is showing itself to be one big pyramid investment scam, but at least they are open about it by telling us precisely who will be the early recipients in the scheme (Wall Street) by which we can easily deduce the later dupes (that would be the masses).

I think having a Madoff as a "poster boy" for institutional scams is good. We need some type of name to focus on, but only if many others are put on that same poster, the boys of Wall Street.

More than likely though, the mass population will move on to other "entertainment" to forget about Madoff and the boys of Wall Street. When a person is raped they will turn off their minds during the crime. That's what is going to happen in America AGAIN. We will turn off our minds to the financial screwing we are getting and the rapists from finance (and Washington DC) will mostly go free.

Remember the theme of the Bush Administration when faced with a growing story of mass criminal behavior..."it's a few bad apples." They said this when Abu Ghraib happened but also word for word prior to that during the Enron, WorldCom, etc. financial scams. And as it were for those times where only a few bad apples paid for their crimes, it will probably be again.

Oh, maybe Obama will have a new slogan, but don't bet on mass imprisonment of the Wall Street shysters. Hell, I'm betting even Madoff will die before he goes to prison, just like Ken Lay did.

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