Strangulation
October 19th, 2009 8:55 am · 4 comments
Nice piece by Frank Rich on Goldman Sachs, its “blood funnel” (actually Taibbi’s term) - and questions about what Obama actually thinks about all this:
The idea of investing in the real economy — the one that might create jobs for Americans — remains outré in this culture. Credit to small businesses remains tight. The holy capitalist grail is still the speculative buying and selling of companies and the concoction of ever more esoteric financial “instruments.” The tragic tale of Simmons Bedding recently told in The Times is a role model. This successful 133-year-old manufacturing enterprise was flipped seven times in two decades by private equity firms. Investors made more than $750 million in profits even as the pile-up of debt pushed Simmons into bankruptcy, costing a quarter of its loyal workers their jobs so far.
But who cares! Wall Street gets to swing deals and profits! “Workers?” Who cares about them, the investors made money - trickle down! Trickle down!
Ah, yes, but what of our president, elected to change these things?
Those Obama fans who are disappointed keep looking for explanations. Is he too impressed by the elite he met in Cambridge, too eager to split the difference between left and right, too willing to compromise? As he pursues legislation, why does he keep deferring to others — whether to his party’s Congressional leaders or the Congressional Budget Office or to this month’s acting president, Olympia Snowe? Why doesn’t he ever draw a line in the sand? “We know Obama has good values,” Jeff Madrick said to me last week, “but we don’t know if he has convictions.”
What we also know is that if Teddy Roosevelt palled around with John D. Rockefeller as today’s political class does with Wall Street’s titans and lobbyists, the tentacles of the original octopus would still be coiled tightly around America’s neck.
Obama either does something to loosen the tentacles, or his presidency will be strangled, along with the rest of us.
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Tags: Obama · Economy
There are currently 4 comments on this blog postView Topic | Comment on this blognewsjunkie 10/19/09 7:50 PM | Take a deep breath and prepare to be strangled...NONE of those explainations have the ring of truth...there is something more...and the most recent appointment of Goldman Sachs to a money post (as referenced in your last blog) should give a clue....Our turn is over...the US treasury is being looted before our very eyes and we sit back waiting for our "leaders" to act on our behalf...Been "waiting" a long time...The octopus has regained its hold...only this time it learned the mistakes of its past...too bad the average citizen doesn't even see the Octopus... |
citydweller 10/19/09 10:03 PM | In two years the price of oil will no longer be linked to the dollar. In two years the dollar will become toilet paper. Between now and then the Wall Street community has to invent as many rube-goldberg "derivatives" as it can possibly market so that it can squeeze every last penny out of the U.S. economy before those pennies get converted to poo.
Oh, wait, I think I heard the shrill shriek of a winger, warbling on about something communesque that Obama just said/did. Please look over that way and forget what I just said.
You'll find out later anyway. |
gsmart 10/20/09 10:31 AM | You'll find out later anyway.
Later may come sooner than later. Kunstler:
President Obama had better strike first. He's about the only figure left in the whole termite mound who has a shred of even potential credibility left because he still has the power to act. He can instruct the people who work for the executive branch to "claw back" any and all ill-gotten bank bonuses; he can direct the Justice Department to investigate everything from the uses of federal bailouts to grand-scale accounting fraud; he can fire people in high places who have failed to act and lost legitimacy. If he doesn't do these things soon then he's finished, too. In the wake of such a failure things will get fractal fast.
The sense that Wall Street has pulled off a coup d'etat and taken over the machinery of the United States is the most powerful meme out there now, and its power is growing in magnitude every day among all classes of Americans. I can't say how much it reflects reality. Even if it is a result of sheer happenstance - the tragic evolution of an industrial economy into a financial finagling economy - the citizens will still experience it as a stealing of their future. Whatever else one might say about American culture, it is keenly attuned to a sense of heroes and villains. We take great pride in our ability to blow away the bad guys. And life imitates art, as Oscar Wilde observed. |
charlie_crystle 10/20/09 11:55 AM | Later may come sooner than later. Kunstler: President Obama had better strike first. He's about the only figure left in the whole termite mound who has a shred of even potential credibility left because he still has the power to act. He can instruct the people who work for the executive branch to "claw back" any and all ill-gotten bank bonuses; he can direct the Justice Department to investigate everything from the uses of federal bailouts to grand-scale accounting fraud; he can fire people in high places who have failed to act and lost legitimacy. If he doesn't do these things soon then he's finished, too. In the wake of such a failure things will get fractal fast.
The sense that Wall Street has pulled off a coup d'etat and taken over the machinery of the United States is the most powerful meme out there now, and its power is growing in magnitude every day among all classes of Americans. I can't say how much it reflects reality. Even if it is a result of sheer happenstance - the tragic evolution of an industrial economy into a financial finagling economy - the citizens will still experience it as a stealing of their future. Whatever else one might say about American culture, it is keenly attuned to a sense of heroes and villains. We take great pride in our ability to blow away the bad guys. And life imitates art, as Oscar Wilde observed.
It's not too late, if Obama were actually going to do anything. But Goldman is deeply entrenched in US policy, doing deals that privatize public property at a fraction of the cost and taking huge transaction fees for it, not to mention their stunning access to the West Wing through Emmanuel, Summers, etc.
The neo-cons have been replaced by the neo-liberals. US politics has become a battle between these two warring factions--both corporatist. One is the oil-industrial-military complex, and the other is the financial-gov-military complex.
We're just spectators and unhappy participants, taking what we can get. Which ain't much.
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