The Big Lie

 
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/12/25/wall-street-has-destroyed-the-wonder-that-was-america.print.html


Wall Street has destroyed the wonder that was America.
by Michael Thomas  | December 26, 2011 12:00 AM EST
Imagine a vast field on which a terrible battle has recently been
fought, the bare ground cratered by fusillade after fusillade of heavy
artillery, trees reduced to blackened stumps, wisps of toxic gas
hanging in the gray, and corpses everywhere.

A terrible scene, made worse by the sound of distant laughter, because
somehow, on the heights commanding the dead zone, the officers’ club
has made it through intact. From its balconies flutter bunting, and
across the blasted landscape there comes a chorus of hearty male
voices in counterpoint to the wheedling of cadres of wheel-greasers,
the click of betting chips, the orotund declamations of a visiting
congressional delegation: in sum, the celebratory hullabaloo of a
class of people that has sent entire nations off to perish but whose
only concern right now is whether the ’11 is ready to drink and who’ll
see to tipping the servants. The notion that there might be someone or
some force out there getting ready to slouch toward the buttonwood
tree to exact retribution scarcely ruffles the celebrants’ joy.

Ah, Wall Street. As it was in the beginning, is now, and hopes to God
it ever will be, world without end. Amen.

Or so it seems to me. It was in May 1961 that a series of
circumstances took me from the hushed precincts of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, where I was working as a curatorial assistant in the
European Paintings Department, to Lehman Brothers, to begin what for
the next 30 years would be an involvement—I hesitate to call it “a
career”—in investment banking. I would promote and execute deals, sit
on boards, kiss ass, and lie through my teeth: the whole megillah. In
consequence of which, I would wear Savile Row and carry a Hermès
briefcase. I had Mme. Claude’s home number in Paris and I frequented
the best clubs in a half-dozen cities. But I had a problem: I was
unable to develop the anticommunitarian moral opacity that is the key
to real success on Wall Street.

I had my doubts from the beginning. A few months after I started to
work downtown, I ran into an old friend from college and before, a man
later to become one of New York’s most esteemed writers and editors.

Faces of Occupy Wall Street

Nov. 17, 2011: OWS activists are arrested trying to shut down Wall
Street., Julie Dermansky / Corbis

“So,” he asked, “how do you like what you’re doing now?”

“I like it quite a lot,” I said. And this was true: these were new
frontiers for me, the pace was lively, the money was good enough
($6,500 a year), and there was so much to learn. But there was one
aspect of Wall Street that I found morally confusing if not
distasteful: “There’s one thing that bothers me, though. It’s this: on
the one hand the New York Stock Exchange has sent its president, the
estimable G. Keith Funston, out into the countryside, supported by an
expensive, extensive advertising campaign, to exhort the proletariat
to Own your share of America! As if buying 50 shares of IBM or GM in
1961 is as much of a civic duty as buying a $100 war bond in 1943.”

I then added, “But here’s the thing. At the same time as Funston’s out
there doing his thing, if you ask any veteran Wall Street pro how the
Street works, the first thing he’ll tell you is: The public is always
wrong. Always.” I paused to let that sink in, then confessed, “I have
to tell you, I have trouble squaring that circle.”

And that was back when Wall Street was basically honest, brought into
line thanks in part to Ferdinand Pecora’s 1933 humiliation of the
great bankers of the Jazz Age and even more so because of the
communitarian exigencies forced on the nation by war. From Pearl
Harbor to V-J Day, greed was definitely not good, and that
proscriptive spirit lingered on right up to 1970, when everything
started to change, and the traders began their long march through our
great houses of finance, with the inevitable consequence that the
Street’s moral bookkeeping grew more and more contorted, its
corruptions more elaborate, its self-interest less and less
governable. What someone has called the “Greed Wars” began.

But now, I think, the game is at long last over.

As 2011 slithers to its end, none of the major problems that led to
the crisis point three years ago have really been solved. Bank balance
sheets still reek. Europe day by day becomes a financial black hole,
with matter from the periphery being sucked toward the center until
the vortex itself collapses. The Street and its ministries of
propaganda have fallen back on a Big Lie as old as capitalism itself:
that all that has gone wrong has been government’s fault. This time,
however, I don’t think the argument that “Washington ate my homework”
is going to work. This time, a firestorm is going to explode about the
Street’s head—and about time, too.

It’s funny; the Big Lie has a long pedigree. A year or so ago, I was
leafing through Ron Chernow’s indispensable history of the Morgan
financial interests, and found this interesting exchange between FDR
and Russell Leffingwell, a Morgan partner and Washington fixer, a sort
of Robert Strauss of his day. It dates from the summer of 1932, with
FDR not yet in office:

“You and I know,” wrote Leffingwell, “that we cannot cure the present
deflation and depression by punishing the villains, real or imaginary,
of the first post war decade, and that when it comes down to the day
of reckoning nobody gets very far with all this prohibition and
regulation stuff.” To which FDR replied: “I wish we could get from the
bankers themselves an admission that in the 1927 to 1929 period there
were grave abuses and that the bankers themselves now support
wholeheartedly methods to prevent recurrence thereof. Can’t bankers
see their own advantage in such a course?” And then Leffingwell again:
“The bankers were not in fact responsible for 1927–29 and the
politicians were. Why then should the bankers make a false
confession?”

This time, I fear, the public anger will not be deflected.
Confessions, not false, will be exacted. Occupy Wall Street has set
the snowball rolling; you may not think much of OWS—I have my own
reservations, although none are philosophical or moral—but it has made
America aware of a sinister, usurious process by which wealth has
systematically been funneled into fewer and fewer hands. A process in
which Washington played a useful supporting role, but no more than
that.

Over the next year, I expect the “what” will give way to the “how” in
the broad electorate’s comprehension of the financial situation. The
99 percent must learn to differentiate the bloodsuckers and
rent-extractors from those in the 1 percent who make the world a
better, more just place to live. Once people realize how Wall Street
made its pile, understand how financiers get rich, what it is that
they actually do, the time will become ripe for someone to gather the
spreading ripples of anger and perplexity into a focused tsunami of
retribution. To make the bastards pay, properly, for the grief and woe
they have caused. Perhaps not to the extent proposed by H. L. Mencken,
who wrote that when a bank fails, the first order of business should
be to hang its board of directors, but in a manner in which the pain
is proportionate to the collateral damage. Possibly an excess-profits
tax retroactive to 2007, or some form of “Tobin tax” on transactions,
or a wealth tax. The era of money for nothing will be over.

But it won’t just end with taxes. When the great day comes, Wall
Street will pray for another Pecora, because compared with the rough
beast now beginning to strain at the leash, Pecora will look like Phil
Gramm. Humiliation and ridicule, even financial penalties, will be the
least of the Street’s tribulations. There will be prosecutions and
show trials. There will be violence, mark my words. Houses burnt,
property defaced. I just hope that this time the mob targets the right
people in Wall Street and in Washington. (How does a right-thinking
Christian go about asking Santa for Mitch McConnell’s head under the
Christmas tree?) There will be kleptocrats who threaten to take
themselves elsewhere if their demands on jurisdictions and tax breaks
aren’t met, and I say let ’em go!

At the end of the day, the convulsion to come won’t really be about
Wall Street’s derivatives malefactions, or its subprime fun and games,
or rogue trading, or the folly of banks. It will be about this
society’s final opportunity to rip away the paralyzing shackles of
corruption or else dwell forever in a neofeudal social order. You
might say that 1384 has replaced 1984 as our worst-case scenario. I
have lived what now, at 75, is starting to feel like a long life. If
anyone asks me what has been the great American story of my lifetime,
I have a ready answer. It is the corruption, money-based, that has
settled like some all-enveloping excremental mist on the landscape of
our hopes, that has permeated every nook of any institution or being
that has real influence on the way we live now. Sixty years ago, if
you had asked me, on the basis of all that I had been taught, whether
I thought this condition of general rot was possible in this country,
I would have told you that you were nuts. And I would have been very
wrong. What has happened in this country has made a lie of my boyhood.

There should be more to America, Gore Vidal has written, than who pays
tax to whom. It has been in Wall Street’s interest to shrivel our
sensibilities as a nation, to shove aside the verities of which
General MacArthur spoke at West Point—duty, honor, country—in favor of
grubby schemes and scams and “carried interest” calculations. Time, I
think, to take the country back.

This essay was published in Newsweek International's Special Edition,
'Issues 2012,' on sale from December 2011-February 2012.
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