[ExI] dirty secrets of capitalism?

Dylan Distasio interzone at gmail.com
Tue Oct 10 22:57:27 UTC 2017


I would add that IMO the Vampire Squid aka Goldman Sachs is the worst
offender of the bunch.  Goldman always wins at the expense of everyone
else.  They are embedded throughout the US government including that of the
current administration and use their masterful cross pollination between
private and public networks to great effect.

On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 6:55 PM, Dylan Distasio <interzone at gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
> On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 6:23 PM, William Flynn Wallace <
> foozler83 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> From The Week:
>>
>> by Rana Foroohar  NYT
>>
>> Lending to Main Street (not sure I understand all of the metaphor)
>> comprises 15% of the business of the big NY banks.  The rest 'exists in a
>> close loop of trading' and corporate deals that works solely to enrich the
>> already rich.
>>
>
> Main Street is the real economy as opposed to Wall St.  After working for
> a large investment bank for over a decade, I have come to the conclusion
> that they need to be broken up and the Glass Steagall Act needs to be
> reinstated walling off investment banking from private lending.  Once they
> have been broken up into smaller entities, they should be allowed to fail
> if they take excessive risk.  The FDIC will protect most account holders in
> terms of deposits, and the ones who have to worry about exceeding the
> maximums are savvy enough to work around it.
>
> The market was not allowed to clear after the financial crisis (with the
> exception of Lehman Brothers).  Central banks (Federal Reserve and others)
> have taken away any worries over risk or failure.  If banks had to own
> their risk, things would be significantly better.  Over the course of most
> US history, this was how financial markets worked.
>
>
>>
>> Do we even have local banks any more, so that we can take our money away
>> from the big banks that use our money to play games with it?
>>
>
> Yes, there are still plenty of regional banks that do traditional
> lending.  I encourage you to seek them out and reward them with your
> business and deposits.
>
>>
>> Does this dispel the myth that if you raise taxes on the rich you hurt
>> their ability to create jobs, trade, factories, etc.?
>>
>
>  I am of the opinion that all taxes are collected staring down the barrel
> of a gun.  They're expropriation by another name.  The less of them the
> better...
>
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