Actually, I think so much leftwing and bankbashing agitation in the bourgeois 
media, Wolfe, Krugman et al (see below) is a very, very good thing. It might 
even be best that it is directed at the Obama administration. I have to think 
about that. Might be better to direct more of the angry words at the banks and 
bourgeoisie themselves. Feature O's Wall Street supporters, rather than 
whispering about them. Who are they ? Lets talk about them, and expose them by 
name to the working class. That's a class conscious approach.  Is this thread a 
class struggle , class conscious rant or just a petit bourgeoisie vs petit 
bourgeois rant ? 

Of course, isn't Wolfe's proposal faux socialism ? Is he proposing permanent or 
temporary nationalization ? Even a 5 trillion dollar stimulus package would be 
still only a reform.  

PEN-L'ers seem to be pissed at Obama for not carrying out _social democracy_ . 
I don't see Krugman or Wolfe raising questions about the system.  Socal 
Democracy and left Keynesianism is still capitalism, so PEN-L'ers cursing O 
aren't quite as radical as they imply.

Workers of the World , unite !

Charles



Thursday, February 12, 2009 
Daniel Howes
Commentary: Bankers' arrogance costing the taxpayers billions
 
Next time some sanctimonious jerk lectures you on the bubble surrounding 
Detroit's automakers and those who depend on them, remember two words -- Wall 
Street. 

Or just one -- bankers. 

In another day of outrage Wednesday before the House Financial Services 
Committee, the nation's top bankers showed how truly disconnected many of them 
are from the Bigger America. That they're more tone deaf than the most clueless 
auto CEO or union president (which is saying something). That they project a 
hubris stunning in its totality because their services are considered 
indispensable to the country. 

They mostly are, which is beside the point. How the globe's top bankers can 
threaten financial Armageddon, hold up American taxpayers for billions in 
bailout cash, get massive infusions and then pay their people billions in 
bonuses exceeds the meaning of the word "arrogance." 



 
 
The biggest bubble, folks, isn't in Detroit, where CEOs agree to work for $1 a 
year in exchange for a comparatively measly $17.4 billion in loans (less than 
the $18 billion in bonuses securities firms paid to those working in New York 
City). Here, we get the trade-off -- massive restructuring, job losses, union 
givebacks and politically correct vehicles are a condition of federal help. 

There, The New York Times runs a Sunday story detailing the impossibilities of 
getting by in the Big Apple on a salary of $500,000 a year. There, Wall 
Streeters whine of getting screwed on their bonuses because, well, it's not 
their fault the subprime mortgage holdings blew a massive hole in the corporate 
earnings. 

There, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo says Merrill Lynch & Co. pulled 
its bonus pay-outs forward so it could disburse nearly $4 billion to "their 
failed executives" -- before the sullied brokerage reported a $15.3 billion 
loss on Jan. 16. That's the same day Merrill's new owner, Bank of America, said 
the taxpayers would invest $20 billion in the combined entity and backstop the 
deal with another $188 billion in protection. 

"What my office has learned thus far concerning the allocation of the nearly $4 
billion in Merrill Lynch bonuses is nothing short of staggering," Cuomo wrote 
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., in a letter dated Tuesday. "While more than 39,000 
Merrill employees received bonuses from the pool, the vast majority of these 
funds were disproportionately distributed to a small number of individuals." 

Case in point: Merrill's top four recipients reaped a combined $121 million in 
bonuses. "Rewarding failure," an increasingly common phrase used even by 
President Barack Obama, doesn't begin to describe it the Wall Street way. 

Bubble, indeed. Here in Detroit, implosions requiring federal intervention 
beget pain -- bonuses evaporated, plants closed, tens of thousands of jobs cut, 
benefits reduced, a jobs bank that pays people not to work eliminated. There, 
39,000 people at just one firm are rewarded for their part in helping to 
destabilize the global financial system. 

Populist rage can be a dangerous thing, but on this it's not misplaced. Here, 
federal dough came with onerous conditions, most of which forced harsh change 
in livelihoods and Detroit's dysfunctional culture. There, federal money flowed 
in and goodly chunks flowed out in fat pay envelopes glorifying a culture whose 
chief product is taking care of its own. 

And that's all. 

We need banks. We need vibrant capital markets and the "animal spirits" that 
make them work, build wealth and reward risk. But they also can destroy it, 
take their cut and leave the rest of us to pay the bigger price. 

Daniel Howes' column runs Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. You can reach him at 
(313) 222-2106, [email protected] or detnews.com/howes. 


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