Wednesday, February 16, 2011

MORE on Barack Obama's STUNNING, amazing, insane COMPLICITY with FINANCIAL CRIMES, Matt Taibbi's latest understated expose

Obama's Rubinite  administration of  "of, by, and for Goddamn-Sachs" officials   are doing as much to WHITEWASH CRIMES by the current crop of banking & financial criminals - at JP Morgan-Chase, at Goddamn-Sachs, at Bob Rubin's Citi-bank, at AIG, at Wachovia and Wells Fargo,  and throughout Wall Street's fraud saturated market rigging, bailouts larceny, ratings agencies,  audit companies, (etc.)  -  as the George W. Bush administration  was doing to ENABLE Enron and other  financial crimes in America,  and Iraq war "Blackwater" mercenary killings, US army torture, and assorted  financial crimes, in the U.S. occupation of Iraq. 

Hopefully, future historians will reserve a special circle of hell for Barack Obama, whose abject CORRUPTION, titanic COMPLICITY & INCOMPETENCE at prosecuting America-economy gutting financial crimes, is MORE DESTRUCTIVE to America (the American economy), than Republican President George W. Bush, Vice President  Dick Cheney, and then Asst. Secretary of Defense  Paul Wolfowitz's crew GIVING the 9-11 hijackers a  "green light" free pass to committ mass-murder terrorism on 9-11-2001....
 Why Isn't Wall Street in Jail?
  Financial crooks brought down the world's economy — but the feds are doing more to protect them than to prosecute them. 
 By Matt Taibbi, the March 2, 2011 issue of Rolling Stone.
 http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/why-isnt-wall-street-in-jail-20110216?page=1

Over drinks at a bar on a dreary, snowy night in Washington this past month, a former Senate investigator laughed as he polished off his beer.
"Everything's fucked up, and nobody goes to jail," he said.
  "That's your whole story right there. Hell, you don't even have to write the rest of it. Just write that."
I put down my notebook. "Just that?"
"That's right," he said, signaling to the waitress for the check. "Everything's fucked up, and nobody goes to jail. You can end the piece right there."

Nobody goes to jail. This is the mantra of the financial-crisis era, one that saw virtually every major bank and financial company on Wall Street embroiled in obscene criminal scandals that impoverished millions and collectively destroyed hundreds of billions, in fact, trillions of dollars of the world's wealth — and nobody went to jail. Nobody, that is, except Bernie Madoff, a flamboyant and pathological celebrity con artist, whose victims happened to be other rich and famous people.
The rest of them, all of them, got off. Not a single executive who ran the companies that cooked up and cashed in on the phony financial boom — an industrywide scam that involved the mass sale of mismarked, fraudulent mortgage-backed securities — has ever been convicted. Their names by now are familiar to even the most casual Middle American news consumer: companies like AIG, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley. Most of these firms were directly involved in elaborate fraud and theft. Lehman Brothers hid billions in loans from its investors. Bank of America lied about billions in bonuses. Goldman Sachs failed to tell clients how it put together the born-to-lose toxic mortgage deals it was selling. What's more, many of these companies had corporate chieftains whose actions cost investors billions — from AIG derivatives chief Joe Cassano, who assured investors they would not lose even "one dollar" just months before his unit imploded, to the $263 million in compensation that former Lehman chief Dick "The Gorilla" Fuld conveniently failed to disclose. Yet not one of them has faced time behind bars.
Invasion of the Home Snatchers
Instead, federal regulators and prosecutors have let the banks and finance companies that tried to burn the world economy to the ground get off with carefully orchestrated settlements — whitewash jobs that involve the firms paying pathetically small fines without even being required to admit wrongdoing. To add insult to injury, the people who actually committed the crimes almost never pay the fines themselves; banks caught defrauding their shareholders often use shareholder money to foot the tab of justice....