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Author Topic: "It Isn't Reform Unless It Gives Goldman an Aneurysm" - Goldman Untouchable?  (Read 1133 times)
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WhiskeyGirl
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« on: November 01, 2009, 10:20:25 AM »

Quote
It Isn't Reform Unless It Gives Goldman an Aneurysm
by danps
Sat Oct 31, 2009 at 02:14:28 AM PST
Various attempts to reform the financial system are bouncing around the capitol these days.  The reaction of one of Wall Street's biggest players to them may be as good an indicator as any of how serious they are…

Issues of financial reform and regulation can be intimidating to laymen (this layman anyway) because of its insanely complex nature.  It is easy to imagine the system as a big Jenga tower, and moving one piece might cause the whole thing to come crashing down.  No one wants to be seen as inadvertently - but earnestly! - advocating for a ruinous policy.  Of course, that means the opposite extreme is then in play:  Turning into Hamlet and endlessly agonizing over what to do at the expense of actually doing something.  Not to mention the fact that, not to put too fine a point on it, wide swaths of our leadership has for years now been deliberately advocating ruinous policies both at home and abroad.  That should certainly make those of us in the unwashed masses comfortable with forcefully advocating what seems reasonable based on available data.  It's not as though we could screw it up any worse.

Still, it would be nice to have a rule of thumb, compass point or guiding principle to go by.  Having been a reasonably close ******* of the meltdown and its aftermath, here is one I have come up with:  It is necessary (but not sufficient) that any proposal be strenuously opposed by Goldman Sachs (GS). In a largely protected industry Goldman appears to be the closest thing to untouchable as we have… It has installed a revolving door between the highest levels of the government and its board room, enjoys privileged lines of communication with the Treasury secretary exceeding even that of our closest allies, was happily positioned as a key competitor died, then days later benefited as a key debtor was drenched in cash (Yves Smith called it a "massive backdoor subsidy to the likes of Goldman"), and as it happens was the second largest contributor to the president in the 2008 election cycle.  More so than any other player in financial services, GS always seems to be nearby when bad things happen.

Read more here – http://www.congressmatters.com/storyonly/2009/10/31/1816/-It-Isnt-Reform-Unless-It-Gives-Goldman-an-Aneurysm

The Grim Reaper of Wall Street?
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