*I assume that Romney and the so-called masters of the universe are
sincere. From my point of view, they want another chance to destroy the
economy. They think they are the experts and it must be someone else's
fault, or it was caused by too many regulations, even though CDOs were not
regulated.*

In the simplest of terms here is how it all works.

At its heart, the reason behind the LIBOR scam is an attempt to avoid
capital reserve regulations imposed by the government. The reason why
regulation is something that financial managers try so hard to avoid at all
costs is that it limits the financial leverage they can bring to bear on a
deal.

If they can use 2% of their money and 98% of your money, they make a great
profit on their 2% investment. If they lose in this type of high leverage
deal, they only lose their 2% and you lose 98% of your money.

Government regulation (Dodd Frank) requires the financial institution
maintain a prudent level of capital reserve when they do a deal so the deal
looks like this:

If they are required to use 50% of their money and 50% of your money, they
make a diminished profit percentage on their 50% investment. If they lose
in this type of low leveraged deal, they lose their 50% of their money and
you lose 50% of your money. In this restricted regulatory environment, the
appetite of the deal makers for risk is greatly lowered.

High leverage deals have been and still remain the key strategy in making
vast riches with little risk to their own money.

Use the money of the "Muppets" to do the deal and if something goes wrong
the "Muppets" are wiped out.

Romney likes this way of doing business, he grew up in this business
environment and became successful using leverage and he wants to get back
to the wild west of freewheeling risk taking with other people’s money.
Only put a token amount of private equity capital at risk and keep all the
profit and transfer the entire risk to the "Muppets” for the smallest
portion of the reward that is possible.
This is why Romney wants to remove the Dodd Frank financial regulation
legislation.

Cheers:    Axil






On Wed, Jul 25, 2012 at 5:15 PM, Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Chemical Engineer <cheme...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>> I realize they were not all bankers.  At least arrest the bankers for
>> negotiating a worthless instrument(s)...
>>
>
> Unfortunately, most of them were not committing any crime. CDOs were not
> subject to any oversight or regulations in 2008. You cannot make laws
> retroactive. That is unconstitutional.
>
>
> If they were a captain of a ship in the miliary that sank, they could call
>> for their own court martial: . . .
>>
>
> Many of these people were called before Congress and raked over the coals.
> On the other hand, they were paid $50 million a year and they they got to
> keep the money.
>
> This is infuriating. But what worries me about the future is that the
> problems have not been corrected. The situation is likely to recur. The
> institutions are still "too big to fail." Risky trading and moral hazard
> still abound. The people who caused the problems and the Republican Party
> together have prevented meaningful reforms. I'm sorry to introduce
> political subjects here but it is a fact that Romney says he wants to do
> away with the the reforms that have been implemented. It is not like he is
> hiding his agenda. He says the continuing economic weakness is caused by
> the reforms.
>
> I assume that Romney and the so-called masters of the universe are
> sincere. From my point of view, they want another chance to destroy the
> economy. They think they are the experts and it must be someone else's
> fault, or it was caused by too many regulations, even though CDOs were not
> regulated. Only a few of the top people, such as Greenspan, expressed
> remorse for their roles.
>
> People who cause terrible problems are seldom aware of what they have
> done. They are seldom repentant. World War I British generals who were
> responsible for the disasters at the Somme, Gallipoli and elsewhere
> never felt they made a mistake. Why would they? They were promoted, made
> into knights of the realm, and Lord This or That. The highest surviving
> officer from the Titanic, Lightoller was appalling. He admitted no personal
> responsibility. He defended the system to the hilt. To the end of his life
> he attacked Sen. Smith, because Smith reformed the system. (See my essay
> for details.)
>
> Needless to say, this applies to cold fusion in spades. The people who
> took leading roles in suppressing it were praised by the mass media and by
> the establishment. They often boast about their historic role in doing
> this. As far as I can tell, not one of them has ever read the literature.
> It has never crossed their minds that cold fusion might be real, and they
> may have made a mistake. (Mike McKubre disagrees with me about that. He
> thinks several of these people are aware of the facts and running scared.
> He knows the situation better than I do.)
>
> Whether these people know the facts or not, they never say "cold fusion
> might be real so maybe we should look into it." They never say that
> suppressing research and destroying the careers of scientists is
> unethical. Park and others think this is how science is supposed to work.
> They say cold fusion is fraud and lunacy and it must be suppressed to
> preserve the integrity of science. Naturally, I think they are wrong. My
> point here is not to reiterate what everyone knows I think, but rather to
> point out that there is a *tremendous* gap in perception between people
> on different sides of this dispute. There seems to be no common ground. No
> grounds for discussion, or compromise. We do not even agree about the basic
> principles of the scientific method, such as the idea that experiments
> overrule theory. Look at Huizenga's book for proof of that.
>
> We do not agree about the definition of "replication" or whether it is
> necessary for an experiment to be easily replicated before you can believe
> it. Or whether it has to be controlled, or explained in theory before you
> can believe it. Some of the 2004 DoE reviewers sincerely think that an
> experiment that is not explained by theory cannot be believed. This is not
> a minor quarrel about technical details. It is not as if they have some
> doubts about the calorimetry in this experiment, or the mass spectroscopy
> in that one. The discussion never gets that far. It is not about technical
> issues. We define the scientific method one way, and they define it in
> other ways that are radically different and utterly incompatible with our
> definition.
>
> This is true of many other monumental disputes. There was no common ground
> between the WWI generals and people such as Winston Churchill who opposed
> them. There were no grounds for negotiation between Lincoln and the
> secessionists of 1860. In the Titanic dispute, Sen. Smith wanted to make it
> a rule that sailors assigned to lookout posts high on a mast would be
> issued binoculars. Who would argue with that? The testimony revealed that
> if lookouts on the Titanic had been given binoculars, the accident would
> have been avoided. What sane person would want to save the cost of few
> pairs of binoculars at the risk of wrecking a ship worth hundreds of
> millions of dollars, and killing thousands of people?!? But the shipping
> interests oppose him. They tried to prevent this regulation along with all
> the others. They ridiculed him. They attacked him and tried to destroy his
> reputation. Lightoller opposed this and every other idea Smith proposed.
> The British Board of Trade decided not to make binoculars mandatory. The
> dispute was not really about binoculars. It was about outsiders telling
> them how to run their business. It was about pride. About hubris.
>
> I doubt that people opposed to cold fusion are really worried about the
> integrity of science. Perhaps they think they are, but I doubt that is what
> drives them. Maybe they themselves do not know. Their umbrage seems far out
> of proportion to the issues at stake. Why should anyone care whether a few
> dozen retired scientists putter around with palladium deuteride? Why would
> anyone make late-night calls to high officials to cancel funding? Why
> publish books and hysterical op ed columns in major newspapers accusing
> them of crimes? These experiments cost practically nothing by the standards
> of modern physics. Perhaps opponents feel that chemists have no business
> doing nuclear physics.
>
> People at the center of this dispute such as McKubre, Fleischmann, Bockris
> and Melich have often interacted with the opposition. They have often had
> showdowns with them. This usually ends badly, with the researchers being
> bashed and funding cancelled at the last minute. Opponents resemble Lucille
> "Lucy" van Pelt. They are "crabby and manipulative bullies" (Wikipedia's
> apt description of L. v P.). Their favorite trick is to snatch away the
> football just at the moment you run up to kick it. The researchers who keep
> flying up in the air and landing on their butts do not understand what
> drives the opposition. They don't get why these people want to yank away
> the football. They do not agree about what drives the opposition. It is a
> mystery of human nature.
>
> I do not think there is a rational explanation for the opposition. I
> suppose it is an emotional response. I could be wrong. Perhaps someday
> e-mails will be revealed showing this is a calculated effort to preserve
> research funding, or to protect the oil industry. I doubt that will happen,
> but who knows?
>
> - Jed
>
>

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