Senators Hypocritically Slam Bankers
February 12. 2009
Bank CEO's in Congress getting pimp slapped
by senators
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I find it appropriate, yet hypocritical that senators slammed
the nation's top banking CEOs in Congress yesterday, as several
members of the House and Senate, previously took deeply
discounted home loans from them, in what can be viewed as buying
their favor. There wasn't much impartiality, now was there.
To blame them for the crisis, you must also blame yourselves,
as you let it happen at the hands of the
SEC and
FBI
when many red flags were brought to your attention by
independent sources.
These two regulatory and investigative agencies knew what was
going on for years and their respective management instructed
employees to let it to continue, under the misguided belief some citizens are too rich
and powerful to go to prison. This misplaced nationalism and
elitism caused a catastrophe to take root and mushroom.
President Barack Obama needs to use his
post to author and propose tougher legislation aimed at
companies, to ensure this never happens again. A legislative
memorial needs to be dedicated to the current crisis, as a
reminder of what not to do.
I'm sure the American people would have preferred if a
handful of lawbreaking, high profile rich people were
incarcerated a few years ago, in what Congress would deem
embarrassing, rather than have the terrible scenario of
widespread financial disaster unfold, the latter having now
happened.
It’s ironic in light of what has befallen the economy, but I’m sure if you
had asked the American people to
take a vote on which they would prefer, I’m sure they’d choose
option B:
A.) let a group of rich, well-connected
individuals, that do not even constitute .05 percent of the
population, run loose in corporate America, committing financial
crimes that will severely damage the U.S. economy to the point
of collapse and loss of status in the world at #1,
bringing with it terrible economic hardship and suffering on a nation
and several of its allies.
-or-
B.) Charge, incarcerate and thereby neutralize, a group of rich,
well-connected individuals, that do not even constitute
.05 percent of the population, running loose in corporate
America committing financial crimes. Lock them up, thus averting
said miscreants from
severely damaging the U.S. economy to the point of collapse and
loss of status in the world at #1,
bringing with it terrible economic hardship and suffering, on a nation
and several of its allies.
Only an idiot would choose option A, but that’s what members
of the
Congress,
FBI and
SEC
chose for America a few years ago, through
acts of willful criminal negligence, to protect rich and notable
citizens, committing financial crimes in corporate America.
Just because someone appears in Forbes, Time, People magazine
and other periodicals, doesn’t mean they should be allowed to
run wild with dangerous conduct that destroys the financial
welfare of an entire nation.
Congressmen grill bankers
Blame them for financial meltdown
Thursday, February 12, 2009 - Congressmen were practically lining
up yesterday to take whacks at the nation’s most powerful
bankers, accusing them of letting down America and pushing the
nation’s economy to the brink.
“You created the mess we’re in,”
Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Somerville) said at yesterday’s hearing
of the House Financial Services Committee, which hauled eight
bank CEOs to Washington for hours of grilling. “And now you’re
saying ‘Sorry. Trust us.’ . . . America doesn’t trust you
anymore.”…
But the hearing was unofficially an
opportunity for House members to flail away at CEOs from Bank of
America, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs,
JP Morgan Chase, Bank of New York Mellon and Boston’s own State
Street.
http://www.bostonherald.com