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Fraud*
According to the Collins English Dictionary 10th Edition fraud can be defined as: "deceit, trickery, sharp practice, or breach of confidence, perpetrated for profit or to gain some unfair or dishonest advantage".[1] In the broadest sense, a fraud is an intentional deception made for personal gain or to damage another individual; the related adjective is fraudulent. The specific legal definition varies by legal jurisdiction. Fraud is a crime, and also a civil law violation. Defrauding people or entities of money or valuables is a common purpose of fraud, but there have also been fraudulent "discoveries", e.g. in science, to gain prestige rather than immediate monetary gain
*As defined in Wikipedia

Sunday, May 8, 2011

A Manifesto Against Goldman Sachs

In 2010, Goldman Sachs set aside $3.4 billion for anticipated lawsuits; Goldman Sachs has 286 lawyers who work for them full time. Anyone who values honor and integrity would perhaps wonder why a bank holding company/investment bank would require such money and such expertise to run a financial business. Are the laws so vague and hard to understand that a bank like Goldman Sachs needs to be especially careful in following them? Or is Goldman Sachs cynically pushing the laws so it can maximize profits whereby the expertise and money are just seen as "a cost of doing business?" Can such a bank prosper in a truly democratic political system with regulations that protect all the citizens?

Wayne A. Clark, Ph.D., a writer and historian, has written An American Manifesto in which he describes the emergence of and the experience with the "malignant capitalism" that has begun to tear down democratic ideals. Below are some excerpts from his Manifesto:

An American Manifesto

By Wayne A. Clark - Ad's Libs Blog
. . . .

History shows us that a gradual concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a few leads to a shift from democracy to authoritarianism. Our society is now blighted by the criminal excesses of people whose commitment to a democratic America is trumped by their obsessive pursuit of profit and market share. Neither bank failures nor the ensuing recession changed this. Rather the elite further consolidated their power from infusions of billions of public money into their coffers. Large financial institutions such as Goldman Sachs and Bank of America wield more power and influence than before the failures of September 2008. New York Times columnist David Brooks almost got it right: “Over the past few years, people from Goldman Sachs have assumed control over large parts of the federal government. Over the next few they might just take over the whole darn thing.” (David Brooks, NYT, June 30, 2008)

The Goldman Sachs crowd, along with their like-minded Wall Street friends in and out of government, took over the whole darn thing more than a decade ago. GE wallows in government contracts but paid $0 in taxes in 2010. Still hungry, GE lawyers asked for a $3.2 billion rebate to top off profits of $14.5 billion. The company CEO is an administration insider who heads the White House’s prestigious Economic Advisory Council. The corporate plutocrats know how to play the game and game the system. The Obama administration is exposed as weak, unwilling to challenge Wall Street with the prospect of even minimal reform. Today, nearing the end of Obama’s (first) administration, Wall Street rules the roost and generously rewards its friends in power. The payoff for Obama is that he is expected to raise more than $1 billion in campaign funds for the election of 2012.

. . . .

Bernard Madoff, a lone wolf who literally stole billions from trusting clients, did get a jail sentence. But he never would have come close to prison if he had been institutionally aligned with Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, or any other giant financial corporation. Madoff has stated that only the naïve believe that the banks did not know about his Ponzi scheme. If one or two missed the signals, it was probably because they were busy building their own, more sanitized, version. Rolling Stone journalist Matt Taibbi asked the salient question: “Why Isn’t Wall Street In Jail?” Those flagrant and dumb enough to get nailed paid their fines with what amounted to petty cash. Tabbi wrote that they needed the same punishment that Madoff got: hard time; decades of it and in a proper prison. Or, as one congressional aide told Taibbi, "You put (Goldman Sachs boss) Lloyd Blankfein in … prison for one six-month term, and all this bullshit would stop, all over Wall Street. That's all it would take. Just once." (The New Yorker, March 7, 2011)

. . . .


Free-market fundamentalists, even in a catastrophe like Katrina, leave it to the invisible hand that is not to be interfered with, neither in the market place nor in society at large. Or so they say. Corporate welfare is perfectly acceptable, even desirable. Its advocates are quick to exert their influence in the political arena and have no qualms about marginalizing the rest of us. They rush to channel huge bailouts to irresponsible banks and insurance companies that deserve to fail. The results have been disastrous for the economy and the body politic, but the true believers remain in control of the government and the economy. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, a product of Wall Street, takes his marching orders from his friends at Goldman Sachs. So will the person who replaces him.

. . . .

The boomer intelligentsia can roll back cynicism and restore hope among younger people. They can show them how important it is to rescue the country from corporate thieves and political whores who, in their quest for power and wealth, are rapidly destroying it. Saving the country is more important than sitting in a coffee shop sipping lattes and talking about money, real estate and the retirement home. At some fundamental level, they know that there are more pressing concerns than their own comfort and welfare. With a bit of persuasion, they can enlist the help of their children and grandchildren – the Americans whose future is most at risk. It could be a great last hoorah.

In 1968, a profound slogan emerged from the students and young people rioting in the streets of Paris. It read: “Be Reasonable, Demand the Impossible.” Today Stephane Hessel – author, diplomat, and resistance fighter – tells the grandchildren of that generation: “To Create is to Resist, To Resist is to Create.” Fortunately, Americans can achieve our goals by demanding the possible, and we can do it by both creating and resisting. Poet politician Eugene McCarthy, like Harold Pinter, understood the nature of the beast that has us by the throat and he urged us to resist it. In 1968, while a presidential candidate, he told Americans, “now is the time for all good men and women to forget the party and come to the aid of their country.” Democracy is in jeopardy and the need for a concerted effort to rescue and restore it is more urgent now than it was in 1968. If we do nothing and continue to accommodate the drift toward corporate fascism, our fate is clear. Our children will not forgive us, and we, and they, will die strangers in a strange land. [END]

You can read the whole Manifesto here

3 COMMENTS:

Anonymous said...

They are like white on rice...how you going to stop them?

Did Goldman Sachs Arrange A Full Professorship At Tsinghua University For John Thornton?

"…thanks to Paulson and his connections [Thornton] was named a full professor at Tsinghua University, in Beijing..for reasons not entirely clear as to why this honor was bestowed upon him-he spoke no Chinese-Thornton was the first non-Chinese to be named a full professor at the University and was named the first director of the University’s newly established (thanks to Paulson) Program for Global Leadership." ... MONEY TALKS AND GOLDMAN GANGSTERS GET ALONG GREAT WITH CHICOM GANGSTERS

http://www.sinocism.com/archives/2292

Joyce said...

I would imagine the move to place Goldman Sachs guys all over the world is still in progress. Goldman Sachs doesn't just attempt to control the government in America; it seeks to rule finances globally: a Goldman Sachs guy runs the bank of Canada; Goldman Sachs has people in Greece, Ireland, Russia, Australia, New Zealand, and so on, and so on.

Larry Rubinoff said...

POWER. That is what Goldman Sachs is all about. They are completing the task Meyer Rothschild began in the late 1700's - to take over the world by taking control of all the money.

They have the power, influence governments and even, I believe, control our own government.

They are dangerous. The power they have is dangerous. Our children will pay the price when someday the global logo of Goldman Sachs will be a global ruling symbol to be feared.

Corporate control of governments and politicians was once only the stories in Sci Fi movies but as with much in Sci Fi, it becomes reality.

Do we want to be governed and ruled by a corporation whose only motive is greed at the expense of all people?

Wake Up America...Wake Up World.

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