The Socialist Menace Piercing the corporate veil of deception

30Oct/110

Egyptians show solidarity with Occupy Wall Street, including Oakland

"Obama & Tantawi R 1"

I hear a lot of people wondering what the protesters are so angry about in the Occupy Wall Street movements throughout America and worldwide.  In a recent NY Times editorial, Thomas Friedman gives an example of something outrageous that Citibank did that eventually caused it to pay a $285 million settlement:

"[W]ith one hand, Citibank sold a package of toxic mortgage-backed securities to unsuspecting customers — securities that it knew were likely to go bust — and, with the other hand, shorted the same securities — that is, bet millions of dollars that they would go bust... It doesn’t get any more immoral than this."

"From #tahrir to #occupyoakland and #USA"

Eventually, Citi settled the case for $285 million, without admitting that it did anything wrong.   The bankers were never individually punished at all - if anything, they were rewarded.  And this was the situation that took place over and over again at many banks and other financial institutions that make up the metaphorical "Wall Street" of modern America.

No wonder people are furious.

The Occupy protests have spread not only across the country but throughout the globe.  In Cairo, protesters were showing solidarity with Americans, particularly after the incident in Oakland when an Iraq war veteran was struck in the head by police, fracturing his skull.  These were not isolated protesters expressing unity; many different signs were on display.  One read "Obama & Tantawi R 1 Hand in beating the protesters in #tahrir #occupyoakland."  Tantawi is the nominal head of the military government, or junta, currently ruling Egypt with all the tyranny of Mubarak.

"from Egypt to Wall Street"

Another sign reads "From #tahrir to #occupyoakland and #USA one case, one goal #socialjusticeforall, fuck police."  The hashtags, of course, are borrowed from Twitter, which has proven to be an invaluable tool in helping protesters organize across the Middle East during the "Arab Spring."

"From Egypt to Wall Street," another sign proclaims in broken English, "don't afraid.  Go ahead #occupyoakland #OWS."

Workers are increasingly aware of their ties across national borders; the international working class is struggling against the capitalist system with growing ferocity.  This is setting the stage for revolution, something that the ruling class in all nations will attempt to brutally repress.

18Apr/110

Senate releases report on economic crash: fraud and deception, but no prosecutions for Wall Street

Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI)

The U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released a 650-page report last Wednesday on the Wall Street crash of 2008.  The report, entitled "Wall Street and the Financial Crisis: Anatomy of a Financial Collapse," documents extensive and systematic fraud and deception by mortgage lenders, banks, and credit rating corporations.  Furthermore, it finds that the U.S. government agencies responsible for regulating banks were fully complicit.

Senator Carl Levin was chairman of the subcommittee and gave a press conference summarizing its findings.  The U.S. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission released a similar report in January.

Nobody at any major U.S. bank, mortgage or insurance company, or hedge fund has been prosecuted, nor will any be in the future. This is in sharp contrast to the savings and loan crisis in the late 1980s, when government task forces referred 1,100 cases to prosecutors.  Over 800 bank officials went to jail.

Every year, it seems, fewer cases are referred to the Department of Justice or to the FBI.  In 1995, bank regulators referred 1,837 cases to the FBI.  In 2006, a mere 75 cases were referred.  During the financial crisis in 2007-2010, despite rampant criminal conduct, bank regulators referred an average of only 72 cases per year for prosecution.

This just illustrates the ruthless nature of capitalism as an economic system; the bank executives and hedge fund managers made astronomical sums of money while the vast majority of Americans are struggling through a recession, with high unemployment and falling wages.  The government has become completely corrupt, as well, failing to regulate in any meaningful and serious way.

These Wall Street executives are parasites on society, and their trillions of dollars of collective wealth should be appropriated and returned to the public.  The money should be used to fund massive public works projects, such as infrastructure and transportation repairs and new construction - and the executives should be prosecuted and imprisoned.