I can't believe no one's posted this yet. It's getting a fair amount of press from some bigger outlets. And I know nothing about Pro Publica or their political leanings. But they're working with NPR which is probably the most objective major news outlet in the country.Well, in a sense, everyone. But mostly it's the fat cats on Wall Street trying to line their own pockets. At the very least they exacerbated an underlying problem that no one pointed out. At worst, they ran up the prices of investments they knew were worthless while lining their own pockets. It's hard to see the coming tsunami when everyone's making money but after reading this article it appears it's a little closer to the latter.http://www.propublica.org/article/banks-self-dealing-super-charged-financial-crisisBeware, it's a long read.
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8/28/2010 11:59:33 PM
I thought that such escapades were fairly well known at this point.Regardless, I clicked on this thread because your title phrasing echoed that of salisburyboy back in the day and I hoped that the top of the page would say THE JEWS.
8/29/2010 12:14:49 AM
sorry to disappoint
8/29/2010 12:18:24 AM
Not this stale as shit argument again…
8/29/2010 12:19:45 AM
8/29/2010 4:25:59 PM
MAIN STREET not WALL STREET rabble rabble rabble
8/29/2010 4:47:52 PM
8/29/2010 4:51:18 PM
It's clear that Wall Street will always and forever be ahead of the regulatory agencies. Just like at the current state of high frequency trading. Everyone outside of the players profiting off of this business can look at it and say this serves no utilitarian purpose to society and carries with it unnecessary risks and yet the SEC won't even go so far as to say "turn the machines off until we come up with prudent regulation". I think we need a panel that reviews violations not just of the black letter but also the spirit of any law and if violators are found then they should be banned from Wall Street or any security packaged and traded in a way related to Wall Street for a decade. The punishments are simply not severe in the least for the crimes perpetrated on society.
8/29/2010 5:18:13 PM
8/29/2010 7:24:43 PM
I think the punishment fits the crime there. It's not like they lose anything but their job that they're irresponsibly doing... which isn't the case right now. If you don't do your job competently, wouldn't you expect to lose it?
8/29/2010 8:31:51 PM
8/29/2010 9:16:08 PM
The solution was to not bail them out. Anything else is just missing the point. If you want to punish someone, legally, punish everyone in Congress that voted for it.
8/29/2010 9:25:56 PM
Unfortunately, that does nothing to prevent the same bad actors from perpetuating fraud on the economy in some new fashion. They still have access to the same networks of people that help them and others like them to skim money from society in one way or the other.
8/29/2010 9:28:25 PM
Nothing withers your network of people faster than owing people money that you cannot pay back. And the only people capable of skimming money from society are Congressmen. Everyone else must first convince people to give them their money. And nothing makes that harder than bankruptcy. [Edited on August 30, 2010 at 1:31 AM. Reason : .,.]
8/30/2010 1:31:01 AM
^So congress isn't supposed to do the job delegated to them with regards to budgeting and spending?I mean, you can talk about how much you want them to have to work with, but spending the money in the treasury is kind of what you're supposed to do in congress. It's article 1.This isn't a statement on what "common welfare" means, it's just a statement that, yeah, congress does have the power legally to tax and spend.[Edited on August 30, 2010 at 3:27 PM. Reason : .]
8/30/2010 3:24:33 PM
8/31/2010 12:40:37 AM
I don't think you can really blame either side. The borrowers were following the will of the market as were the lenders. It will always be either the lack or existence of legislation. You can't blame the ship for hitting the iceburg and you can't blame the iceburg for sinking the ship, the blame will always reside on the captain for either steering it too much or too little.
8/31/2010 1:00:42 AM
So, PinkandBlack, is it your assertion that all previous Congresses that didn't bail out failed corporations were not doing "the job delegated to them"? I did not realize the Constitution required Congress to pass whatever bill came to the floor. That said, I think an Amendment to make bailouts unconstitutional would allow us to bailout current idiots and avoid moral hazard. But I suspect the democratic process will work in this instance. After the next round of bailouts, which theory suggests will be much larger than the last round, bailouts will be sufficiently unpopular that politicians will be unwilling to grant them under any circumstances for at least a generation. History does show that this is not the first time that western government experimented with bailouts during financial crisis, they ended badly last time, and they will end badly this time.
8/31/2010 8:41:59 AM
I like how you speak in such absolutes on a subject that certainly isn't one.
8/31/2010 9:17:27 AM
I think the a decent solution would just be to make bonuses illegal for Wall Street employees. They can still be paid huge wages, but when they're making risky deals in order to create massive bonuses for themselves they should lose the privilege of getting bonuses. Some of you might argue that this is too much interference in a private business but when a business like this is capable of affecting the entire economy there need to be different rules. If a company still wants to pay an employee a huge basic salary that's well within their right but the way the current system is set up we're basically incentivizing bad behavior and that is unacceptable.Remove bonuses and bailouts and the investment banks will start operating they're supposed to operate.
8/31/2010 7:07:02 PM
#1) blatantly unConstitutional.#2) They'll just find other ways to pay them the bonuses.#3) Horribly bad idea to begin with.The proper thing to do is not to bail out companies in the first place. Then the crazy bonuses for taking asinine risks won't be likely to come back, as companies know they will be fucked when the risks don't pay off.]
8/31/2010 7:13:46 PM
I'm just curious, which part of the constitution says that this can't be done?I'm fairly certain there exists legal structures already in place via the various regulators that could enforce something like this. However, I don't think we really need to go that far if we set up other aspects of our economy such that finance doesn't pay off the way it currently does.You know there is something fucked about your society when engineers, physicists, and math PHds are being employed not tackling some of the most difficult problems of our generation (pick one, energy, cancer research, agriculture) but instead are coming up with computer algorithms to treat the stock markets like a casino that can be exploited through something dubious and fraudulent means.There is no reason to treat finance like anything other than a means to an end. We don't need a 3000 page bill to do it either.
8/31/2010 9:32:02 PM
which part of the Constitution says it can't be done? Maybe the part that says "you can't make laws directed at one person or a group of specific people," for starters...
8/31/2010 10:48:08 PM
^^ The allocation of scarce resources is valuable. Thanks to the people on wallstreet doing better at allocating scarce capital, our farmers and cancer researchers have better equipment than they otherwise would have. I am not talking marginally, either. If it were not for the people working on market allocation, we would not have ANY cancer researchers, as there would be no workers left as 80% of us would still work in agriculture.
8/31/2010 11:41:21 PM
CEO pay back to record levelshttp://www.newsweek.com/2010/08/31/ceo-crybabies.html
9/1/2010 2:29:15 AM
9/1/2010 9:02:20 AM
So, you believe that before computers, no stock trader ever made a mistake? Trust me, they did. Of course, then as now, mistakes are punished: the owners of a computer program or an error prone human trader must eat the losses that come from selling low and buying high. On the other hand, if these systems you rant against are actually producing profits by selling high and buying low, then they are a benefit to society, as they are making prices more stable and accurate. Someone is paying these people for their efforts, it must be profitable. And it must not be that destabilizing, as the exchanges are private entities and perfectly capable of banning such practices if they are driving away customers.
9/1/2010 9:24:22 AM
9/1/2010 10:04:31 AM
The money must come from somewhere. "Profits that shouldn't be there" are still profits; they are coming from someone. Why is that someone happy paying your profits? Why not go talk to them about why you believe they should stop paying you. You don't need an act of Congress to address this problem. Contracts are not signed under a gun, they are negotiated, and so you can only be taking advantage of someone that wants you to do so.
9/1/2010 12:14:19 PM
9/1/2010 12:33:34 PM
9/1/2010 2:42:30 PM
9/1/2010 6:56:53 PM
I don't think you understand how the regulators work. The Fed could easily claim that percentage based bonuses are banned if corporations want access to the discount window.And it seems from my wikipedia-ing bills of attainder, they are mostly related to after the fact laws that a legislature would try to pass. A ban on bonuses would be no different in spirit than a minimum wage. They are both intervention in the free market, but a ban on bonuses wouldn't be a punishing or taking of private property without trial.Pretty good try though, for the soap box and all.
9/1/2010 8:08:22 PM
haha. bills of attainder are not the same as ex post facto laws. Those are two distinctly different things.
9/1/2010 8:55:37 PM
Why are we discussing what the Fed can do if we're talking about the constitutionality of an action?
9/1/2010 9:10:09 PM
9/1/2010 9:13:03 PM
9/1/2010 10:01:37 PM
not at all. Preventing a specific subset of people someone from entering in to contracts with each other based on alleged wrong-doings via law is very much covered by BoAs.As for bailouts, this isn't the first time we bailed out a car company. it's also not the first time we bailed out banks. It's common fucking knowledge. I don't have to prove to you that 2+2=4.
9/1/2010 10:22:28 PM
9/2/2010 10:40:12 AM
9/2/2010 3:03:39 PM
9/2/2010 3:25:46 PM
^^ Come on man. Don't you get it, information about this is known by everyone, perfectly. And it wouldn't exist unless all parties were profiting from it. Loneshark said so.
9/2/2010 5:45:55 PM
^^That sounds like the same justification that we used for the war resolutions. "Only Congress has the power to declare war, but since we have that power, we'll just give it to the President." The only difference is that the Executive branch is an actual branch of government, whereas the Fed is a secretive institution that has no constitutional basis. Either way, you can't just hand off powers like that.
9/2/2010 6:03:22 PM
Which part of the constitution says they can't?
9/2/2010 6:04:50 PM
If you're asking that question, I don't think you're reading the Constitution the way a constitution is meant to be read. Aside from certain parts of the Bill of Rights, the Constitution is not a list of things that the government can't do. It designates what sphere each branch operates within; it defines the limits of government. There are an unlimited number of actions that the Constitution does not expressly prohibit. That doesn't mean any branch of government should perform those actions.
9/2/2010 6:14:37 PM
I'm just playing devils advocate, I'm not such a big fan of the people that control the Fed. But when I run into a libertarian making that type of argument I walk away feeling let down.If the constitution doesn't prohibit it...look, up until Nixon took us off the Gold Standard, congress had been setting the value of our dollars, long after the creation of the Fed. So they were regulating the value of the money as defined in A1S8. You need to understand this. It doesn't matter the system, powerfully connected people will forever be gaming it to their advantage and to the disadvantage of the rest of us. We (the middle class) can only hope they throw us some bones along the way so that we can live out a happy life before we die.
9/2/2010 6:21:29 PM
9/2/2010 6:41:12 PM
9/2/2010 9:21:42 PM
9/2/2010 9:27:01 PM
Definitions. By my definitions, the ratings agencies are government sponsored enterprises. As such, you are arguing they should have been run by the government, which they were. They were run poorly, as us libertarians would predict, so you probably think the fault was giving them too much autonomy. I would agree. Government sponsored enterprises usually work best when members of Congress are clearly liable for their behavior, which is why so much of our government works even worse than theory suggests.
9/3/2010 12:54:10 AM