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When you’re a member of the American Bankers Association (ABA) meeting in Chicago amid the worst U.S. jobless crisis and most disastrous economy since the 1930s Depression, what’s the logical move to make?
Dress up in a Roaring ’20s costume and party like it’s 1929.
Proving yet again that not only do taxpayer-bailed-out CEOs have no shame, word has it that they plan to flaunt their taxpayer-fueled wealth in our faces, the ABA is sponsoring its Roaring ’20s party in conjunction with its Oct. 27–29 meeting.
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka will lead thousands of mad-as-hell Americans in a rally outside the ABA meeting on Oct. 27, demanding financial reform and re-regulation that will allow us to rebuild our communities, our lives and our economy.
(If you’re in Chicago, join us Oct. 27 at 10:30 a.m. CST. The march departs from the corner of East Wacker Drive and Stetson Avenue. After about a 15-minute march, the rally will be outside the Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers at 301 E. North Water St.)
Because when they’re not stocking up on Gatsby attire, Big Bankers and financial institutions are using the $700 billion in taxpayer bailout money to attack proposals like the Consumer Financial Protection Agency that would actually help working people while decreasing the chance of another Big Bank-fueled financial meltdown. Of course, they’re not using all of our money to fight reform. Some of it—about $7 billion—is going to bonuses for top CEOs.
For decades, these bankers have been dealing to each other, inventing more and more exotic financial vehicles together and basically regulating themselves. No one is safe while they are doing business with each other without oversight or regulation. A 2006 Citigroup report clearly puts it all out there: While the rich are getting a greater share of the wealth, and the poor a lesser share, political enfranchisement remains as was—one person, one vote.
Unfortunately, a big problem in making financial reform happen is actually trying to explain what’s involved. Who understands this stuff? Here’s a simple outline of what the union movement is pushing for right now in Congress.
The Consumer Financial Protection Agency. President Obama’s proposed agency would protect the public against credit card and mortgage rip-offs. The agencies that were supposed to protect us from financial meltdown failed. The new agency would place consumer protection authority in the hands of a single entity that would monitor banks and other institutions—but not your butcher, as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce ludicrously claimed.
A council of regulators to identify and fix systemic risks that could threaten the entire financial system—risks such as institutions becoming “too big to fail,” too complex or too interconnected. When the government intervenes, the goal must be to protect the public, not just rescue executives and rich investors. The past year has proven that the Federal Reserve Board is just too close to the banks. Either we need to reform the Fed or we need to give this job to a truly public agency.
Bring the “shadow markets” into the daylight. Most people—like Michael Moore’s Wall Street guy—probably don’t really know what hedge funds, private equity funds and derivatives are or do. You’re not supposed to—it makes them easy to manipulate. They’ve been unregulated and totally lacking in transparency. These vehicles need serious regulation and oversight before they suck more money into the black hole of convoluted transactions.
Reform corporate governance and CEO compensation to protect the interests of long-term investors—people saving for retirement, not speculating.
As Robert Shapiro notes on the NDN blog, CEOs are richer than ever: “We didn’t need this latest and most conspicuous instance of greed at Goldman Sachs to know that the compensation provided to the uppermost echelons of American business is out of control.”
Since 1990, the pay of American CEOs has jumped from 90 times the average workers’ pay to 250 times—compared to 15 to 30 times for British, French and Japanese CEOs.
Wealth inequality in the United States has been long in coming, according to a new paper by the Center for Economic Policy Research:
While the United States has long been among the most unequal of the world’s rich economies, the economic and social upheaval that began in the 1970s was a striking departure from the movement toward greater equality that…was a central feature of the first 30 years of the postwar period. This is…the direct result of a set of policies designed first and foremost to increase inequality.
Hearkening back a few decades ago when we were told to relax and love to learn the bomb, David Dayen noted yesterday how a Goldman Sachs executive offered us little people similar advice for this jobless era: We “must tolerate the inequality.”
And just to show how big-hearted they are, financial giants are offering jobless workers gigs standing in line for wealthy financial industry lobbyists. Seems the well-coiffed from Goldman Sachs and other beneficiaries of taxpayer bailout money don’t want to wait to get into congressional hearing rooms—where these lobbyists are fighting to kill regulatory reform and proposals like the Consumer Financial Protection Agency and other reforms that would actually help America’s workers.
Wealth inequality is no accident. And on Oct. 27, thousands of us will take our message directly to Jay and Daisy.
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–Woody Guthrie, “Ballad of Pretty Boy Floyd”
[self moderated to save time]
I sure hope that whoever participates in the march considers dressing up as “Billionaires for Bankers”. The videos of Billionaires for Bush were always fun to watch, but I always wished for a little more variety than their numbers could provide. Maybe this time…. ?!!!
I don’t mean to sound all know it all-y and douchey, but it’s Daisy Fay Buchanan and Jay Gatsby. They weren’t married to each other.
hah, thanks for pointing that out. We’ll fix.
Wow, the bankers are spectacularly tone-deaf. Hope Maddow hears about this.
hey Tula – a quick drive by on my way to work
Maine’s AFL-CIO holding State convention this week. Verry unhappy with Empress Snowe – recessed the floor to enable phonebanking her offices
The only way they could improve this little costume farce of thiers is go the distance: pretend it REALLY is 29′ and at midnight start jumping off the roof of the building en masse. that would turn this from an obscene waste of money into a worthy cause.
Roaring is a good idea, those over runs on taxpayer monies just got a bit reversed: if you recall, Daisy was all about runovers.
Too bad the bankers are merely a bloated and ugly reality, not an elegant creation of F. Scott Fitzgerald.
God, how those fucks must laugh at the rest of us.
Blecch.
Are they going to have guards with tommy guns at the door? It would be great if we could get some video of the festivities. Hey Mike Stark!
AND THE KILLIN’ GOEZ ON AND ON AND…
Citizen Tula Connell and the Firepup Freedom Fighters:
It ain’t that complicated, just call for a return to the banking, securities and exchange and financial regulations that existed in 1940 after the completion of the restructuring of the economic regulation system by the New Deal. Call for banks to be banks and shysters to be shysters. Call for rewriting the anti-trust laws and return to the tax rate structure that existed in 1960 at the end of Eisenhower’s last term. Reenact Glass-Steigel and reduce the FICA tax to 5% and take the cap off so that EVERYONE pays. These are all things that can be explained easily and framed as controlling corruption and saving small business and Andremanureship…It ain’t complicated at all as long as you explain it as keepin’ shysters from making somethin’ for nuthin’…frame it as a return to the “good ol’ days” when crooks went to jail instead of to the White House.
KEEP THE FAITH AND PASS THE AMMUNITION, IT AIN’T COMPLICATED…JUST WATCH THE TARGET AND SQUEEZE THE TRIGGER!!
I hope y’all have a permit and police on your side before you don any goldplated toilet seats!!! go get ‘em!
Citizen Norske,
The enemy is not warm and fuzzy. It is is impervious to words. It kills those having real information.
For me, this is the most apt quote from the book and applies to the now infamous decade of W.
These fools can’t seem to kill the Golden Goose that has given them such lush lives fast enough, can they?
Amazing to watch them be so oblivious to human nature.
They think the entire nation is going to have amnesia about this stupidity?
I doubt it.
Yes, actually the self-entitled Buchanans are a pretty good model for the blind fools that are going to get marched on in Chicago next week.
Their looks might have been cool and elegant, but not more so than Fitzgerald’s evisceration of their morals.
You should get a senator or two to ask a couple of questions. Which nations economies have done the best in the past 18 months? What distinguishes those economies from the US economy? I’m willing to bet that regulation of the banking industry is a key factor.