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August 17, 2007 at 11:37:02

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Gilded Age Crime: Poor Go Homeless, Wealthy Get Bailouts

by Brent Budowsky     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

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Driving to the Naval Academy at Annapolis, the route goes through poor neighborhoods where house after house have signs: For Sale.

What this really means is: foreclosed. 

Listening to Jimmy Cramer yell and scream on CNBC about how “there is so much painout there,” he was not referring to underpaid American troops, or homeless American poor, but the banks, hedge funds and private equity deal-makers whose hundreds of millions of dollars have been reduced to hundreds of millions of dollars.

In fact, the great pain suffered on Wall Street is this: At the market close this past Thursday, the Dow Jones average was up 3 percent, down from an all-time record high only several weeks ago.

These are tough times for the wealthy.

What has happened during the Bush years, with the Bush ethic of “grab all you can” greed, is the stench of a new Gilded Age that is morally disgraceful, economically unsustainable and politically deadly for Republicans if the Democrats speak clearly against this.

Hillary would probably argue that the wealthy, like special-interest lobbyists, are just plan old Americans who never influence government with their money. Some in Congress will have to interrupt their fundraisers and offend their campaign contributors. For most Democrats, this is the issue of a lifetime, the stuff of which landslides are made of.

Is it right that American troops are told we can’t afford to give them body armor and protected vehicles, so they die preventable deaths, while the highest-income 1 percent receive huge tax cuts?

Is it right that the new racket on Wall Street is that banks make bad loans, sell them to hedge funds and private equity firms, many of whom are virtually unregulated and untaxed, who then complain about their pain after they foreclose on average Americans for falling a little behind their payments?

It is good that today the Fed cut the prime by 50 points, but it is bad, and terribly wrong and unjust, that in the last week the Fed has essentially used Americans’ money to bail out the wealthy who made the profits, while doing zero for the foreclosed and homeless.

When the banks, hedge funds and private equity firms make bad deals, they keep the personal profits, while the corporate profits are protected by bailouts. Meanwhile, when the average Americans in the middle class, or the poor, fall a little behind, they get the boot, they lose their jobs, they are thrown into the street without homes and often without food.

Erin Burnett, the new glamor star at CNBC, says with a sneer that Americans are wrong to believe they have any right to a home.

In Ms. Burnett’s world, the people have no right to a home, but the hedge funds have a right to the bailout. When things go bad, the average Americans get the boot, while the upper class gets the loot, paid for by the taxpayer, helping only the few.

With American troops getting killed because of a lack of armor we can’t afford to give them, paying loan shark rates for desperation loans because of fair wages we don’t pay them, with middle America feeling the squeeze because of the greed, and poor Americans going hungry and homeless, Jimmy Cramer cries out against the pain at the top. Erin Burnett sneers at the dream of a home, and the Gilded Age stars tell The New York Times they have more money, because they are superior.

Why are so many of these superior specimens of humankind the first in line for the bailout, paid for by those they believe inferior?

The Gilded Age ends on Jan. 20, 2009, but until then, the bailouts will flow for the few, while the pain will be felt by the many.

This is another reason the world will rejoice when the age of Bush ends, and the age of reform begins, after the American people speak in November 2008.

 

Brent Budowsky is a regular columnist on thehill.com. He served as Legislative Assistant to U.S. Senator Lloyd Bentsen, responsible for commerce and intelligence matters, including one (more...)
 

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3 comments


Not just the "Poor"


Being one who is a victim of this corporate crime, I would like to say it is not just the Poor, our income level is not considered poverty level, we are not even among the sub prime borrowers . Yet, as of Nov 1st we will be forced to move due to foreclosure.
we are one of the millions on the lower end of middle class, yet with health care debts and raising cost of basic needs, we are only able to pay for the very basics: food, utilities, gas, etc....

The blame rest solely on the shoulders of big corporate greed, and politicians.

For those who feel the need to vote for less federal government rather then reform, know that our story will soon be yours.
Those who think universal health care is socialism, therefore bad, know that at any second of any day, our story can become yours.
Those who vote for the "what is mine is mine and thus I should not have to share a small portion to help others", know that you are only a heartbeat away from living this american nightmare.

No corporation will ever put you nor the environment over profit, unless forced to.

Knowing that socialism is not a govt ran economic system, but people owned. Knowing that socialism does not mean dictatorship, or even any change in our voting processes. Knowing that socialism means protection for all members of a society and not just the wealthy.

Tell me how it can be worse then the system we have now?

by ann staley (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 3 comments) on Saturday, Aug 18, 2007 at 11:36:36 AM

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Excellent piece, Brett, but

I don't share the confidence that you posit in your penultimate sentence, "[t]he Gilded Age ends on Jan. 20, 2009, but until then, the bailouts will flow for the few, while the pain will be felt by the many"

I don't see any movement on the Democratic side of the aisle to reign in the plundering classes of Wall Street pirates and corporatist clip-artists.

Why? Because they owe allegiance to them --their bosses and financiers --not to us, the citizenry.

Corrupt elites, as a rule, bring themselves down by means of their hubris. Hopefully, from the rubble, we can rebuild the republic, san both of our corrupt, corporate-controlled, truckling-to-Wall-Street shams of political parties we endure, at present.

 

by Phil Rockstroh (29 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 42 comments) on Saturday, Aug 18, 2007 at 1:33:38 PM

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Gilded Age crime

By giving corporate welfare it will obvious TRICKLE DOWN to those who need it most like, stockholders, golden parachute buyout for corporate executives, huge multi million $bonuses for the corporate executives who lead their companies to disaster. In Bushitspeak this is known as OPPORTUNITY TO LOOT THE TREASURY. The American taxpayer just stands buy and lets it happen. I'm glad I don't pay taxes and this is the reason why.

by Swami Bogananda (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 38 comments) on Saturday, Aug 18, 2007 at 3:53:28 PM

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