The Villain Occupy Wall Street Has Been Waiting For

By Robert Scheer
In the pantheon of billionaires 
without shame, Michael Bloomberg, the Wall Street 
banker-turned-business-press-lord-turned-mayor, is now secure at the 
top. What is so offensive is that someone who abetted Wall Street greed, and 
benefited as much as anyone from it, has no compunction about 
ruthlessly repressing those who dare exercise their constitutional 
“right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the 
Government for a redress of grievances” that he helped to create. 
You would think that a former partner at 
the investment bank Solomon Brothers, which originated mortgage-backed 
securities, a man who then partnered with Merrill Lynch in the 
high-speed computerized trading that has led to so much financial 
manipulation, would have some sense of his own culpability. Or at least 
that someone whose Wall Street career left him with a net worth of $19.5 
billion would grasp the deep irony of his being the instrument for 
smashing Occupy Wall Street, the internationally acknowledged symbol of 
opposition to corporate avarice. 
But only in America is the arrogance of the superrich so perfectly concealed by 
the pretense of democracy that the 
12th richest man in the nation can suppress dissent against corporate 
rapacity and expect his brutal actions to be viewed not as a means of 
preserving his own class privilege but as bureaucratically necessary to 
providing sanitary streets.
Even before he ordered the smashing of 
dissent by citizens peacefully assembled, Bloomberg denigrated their 
heartfelt message: “It’s fun and it’s cathartic,” he said of those 
huddled against the cold in a makeshift encampment, “... it’s 
entertaining to go and blame people. ... It was not the banks that 
created the mortgage crisis. It was, plain and simple, Congress who 
forced everybody to go and give mortgages to people who were on the 
cusp.”
It is mind-boggling that Bloomberg still 
hypes the canard that the banks were forced to reap enormous profits 
from toxic securities. It is an embarrassing, dishonest position when 
the record of banker fraud in creating the housing bubble is so well 
documented in Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuits. Is Bloomberg 
unaware that the major banks have agreed to pay hefty fines in a meager 
compensation for their schemes? That he blames the victims of the 
securitization swindles and then orders the arrest of those who dare 
speak the truth is a tribute to his belief in the enduring power of the 
big lie.
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If the Bloomberg news service, the stock market idolizer owned by the 
mayor, had been anything more than an enabler this past decade of Wall 
Street excess, nay criminality, it’s possible we would not be 
experiencing the current crisis. If this leading financial news outlet 
had performed the minimum of journalistic due diligence on unregulated 
credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations and the other 
swindles marketed with an abandon informed by deep deceit and the 
financial industry’s pervasive corruption, the world economy may not now be in 
such terrible shape.  
Yet the man whose personal wealth increased by $4.5 billion the first year of 
this meltdown when many Americans 
were losing their life savings now dares shift blame away from himself 
and others at the center of economic power to the most vulnerable among 
us. Instead of blaming the Wall Street lobbyists who got the laws 
changed so that they could securitize people’s home mortgages, no matter how 
unsound those mortgages were by design, he blames the folks 
suckered into accepting the banks’ phony offerings. “Blame the opium 
addict and not the pusher” is the excuse for the bankers who turned the 
lure of easy credit into a housing bubble that, when it inevitably 
exploded, impoverished the world but left the bailed-out Wall Street 
hustlers richer than ever.
“There’s something wrong with a kid who 
steals a bike going to jail and someone who steals millions paying a 
fine,” as former New York City Mayor Ed Koch put it in challenging 
Bloomberg’s blame-the-victims copout. The fines to which Koch referred 
represent a small percentage of the bankers’ ill-gotten gains, and, of 
course, as opposed to the kid who steals a bike, none of the bankers 
fined by the SEC has even been threatened with jail time. “What do you 
think they got fined for—schmutz on the sidewalk?” Koch asked. “They got fined 
because they abused their relationship with their clientele. And I want to see 
somebody—I want to see one of them, of a major corporation, punished 
criminally.”
Instead, the people led away in handcuffs 
are not the bankers who perpetuated the fraud of turning homes into the 
junk of toxic mortgages, which should be judged as criminal, but decent 
people who have committed only the “crime” of speaking truth to power. 

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_villain_occupy_wall_street_has_been_waiting_for_20111117/?ln

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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