Family of Secrets 
'Guns & Butter'/Bonnie Faulkner interviews 
Russ Baker re: 'Family of Secrets - The Bush Dynasty' 
CIA | Bush Admins & Family Dynasty | JFK | Poppy Bush | Etc 
audio: 
http://aud1.kpfa.org/data/20100106-Wed1300.mp3 

Bonnie Faulkner hits broadcasting pay Dirt. 
Disturbing revelations of what our nation would rather deny. 

"Family of Secrets - The Bush Dynasty" with investigative reporter and 
author, Russ Baker. The Bush family's extensive ties to intelligence; the 
Kennedy assassination; Nixon and Watergate; W's rise to power. Russ Baker is 
the author of Family of Secrets - The Bush Dynasty, The Powerful Forces That 
Put It In the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America." 

=== 


A Fresh Wind 
Russ Baker 
January 12, 2010 
http://whowhatwhy.com/2010/01/12/a-fresh-wind/ 

A Fresh Wind 

Traditional journalism organizations as a matter of practice eschew and even 
sometimes demonize the work of independent journalists who document apparent 
high-level collusion against the broader public interest. "Conspiracy 
theory," they sniff. Yet with the fast-changing media landscape, even the 
most cautious enterprises are suddenly suffused with the spirit of the 
muckrakers, who were unafraid to routinely document the extent to which the 
playing field was tilted against the public. With the New York Times, we see 
increasing examples of this bracing wind, typically but not exclusively in 
columns and "analysis" pieces. One such example is Andrew Ross Sorkin's 
"advice" to the new Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission looking into what 
the heck went so badly wrong these last few years. Here's ataste: 

Mr. Blankfein, your firm [Goldman Sachs], and others, created and sold 
bundles of mortgages known as collateralized debt obligations that it 
simultaneously sold short, or bet against. These C.D.O.'s turned out to be 
bad investments for the people who bought them, but your short bets paid off 
for Goldman Sachs. In the process of selling them to institutional 
investors, however, your firm lobbied ratings agencies to assign them high 
ratings as solid bets - even as your firm planned on shorting them. Could 
you explain how Goldman bet against these C.D.O.'s while simultaneously 
trying to persuade ratings agencies and investors that they were good 
investments?.should we continue to allow transactions in which you're 
betting against what you're alsoselling?. 

This one is for the entire group. All of your firms are involved in some 
form of proprietary trading, or using your own capital to make financial 
bets, not unlike hedge funds and other private investors. As the recent 
crisis has shown, these bets can go catastrophically wrong and endanger the 
global financial system. Given that the government sent a clear signal in 
the crisis that it would not let the biggest firms fail, why should 
taxpayers guarantee this sort of trading? Why should the government backstop 
what amounts to giant hedge funds inside the walls of your firms? How is 
such trading helpful to the broader financialsystem?.. 

Again, for the group: Over the last year, your firms have actively used the 
Federal Reserve's discount window to exchange various investments (including 
C.D.O.'s) for cash. You probably have a better idea than most about what 
those assets now sitting on the Fed's balance sheet are worth. Given the 
growing calls for regular audits of the Fed (an idea being resisted by the 
likes of the chairman, Ben Bernanke), do you think the demands for such 
audits arewarranted?. 

This question is for Mr. Mack [John Mack of Morgan Stanley]. In November, in 
a surprisingly candid moment, you publicly declared, "Regulators have to be 
much more involved." You then added, "We cannot control ourselves." Can you 
elaborate on those comments? Is Wall Street inherently incapable of policing 
itself - a view contrary to what most of your peers haveargued?.. 

Mr. Blankfein. Your firm, like other banks on this panel, was paid in full 
by the American International Group on various financial contracts, thanks 
to the government's bailout. You can understand how this has whipped up no 
small amount of fury and questions over why A.I.G. and the government did 
not try to renegotiate those contracts. Because your firm was the largest 
beneficiary of the government's decision, did you or any of your employees 
lobby the Fed, Treasury or any other government agency for this "100 cents 
on a dollar" payout? If so, enlighten us about thoseconversations.. 

It's a safe bet, based on past such inquiries, that the commission will not 
unearth the full dimensions of the problem, nor propose sufficiently bold 
solutions. And if it does, it is likely to be ignored. Journalism itself is 
far better equipped to get to the bottom of things-and to stay on the case 
until meaningful changes come to pass. Here at WhoWhatWhy, as we ramp up 
into a full-blown investigative news organization, we're eager to get onto 
this particulartrail. 

=== 



Russ Baker sites: 
http://whowhatwhy.com/ 
http://russbaker.com/ 
http://911truthburn.blogspot.com 

The Book, more audio, & video: 


http://www.familyofsecrets.com/ 
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