More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Robert Scheer

GET UPDATES FROM Robert Scheer
 

The Villain Occupy Wall Street Has Been Waiting For

Posted: 11/17/11 06:54 AM ET

In the pantheon of billionaires without shame, Michael Bloomberg, the Wall Street banker-turned-business-press-lord-turned-mayor, is now secure at the top. What is so offensive is that someone who abetted Wall Street greed, and benefited as much as anyone from it, has no compunction about ruthlessly repressing those who dare exercise their constitutional "right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances" that he helped to create.

You would think that a former partner at the investment bank Solomon Brothers, which originated mortgage-backed securities, a man who then partnered with Merrill Lynch in the high-speed computerized trading that has led to so much financial manipulation, would have some sense of his own culpability. Or at least that someone whose Wall Street career left him with a net worth of $19.5 billion would grasp the deep irony of his being the instrument for smashing Occupy Wall Street, the internationally acknowledged symbol of opposition to corporate avarice.

But only in America is the arrogance of the super-rich so perfectly concealed by the pretense of democracy that the 12th richest man in the nation can suppress dissent against corporate rapacity and expect his brutal actions to be viewed not as a means of preserving his own class privilege but as bureaucratically necessary to providing sanitary streets.

Even before he ordered the smashing of dissent by citizens peacefully assembled, Bloomberg denigrated their heartfelt message: "It's fun and it's cathartic," he said of those huddled against the cold in a makeshift encampment, "... it's entertaining to go and blame people. ... It was not the banks that created the mortgage crisis. It was, plain and simple, Congress who forced everybody to go and give mortgages to people who were on the cusp."

It is mind-boggling that Bloomberg still hypes the canard that the banks were forced to reap enormous profits from toxic securities. It is an embarrassing, dishonest position when the record of banker fraud in creating the housing bubble is so well documented in Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuits. Is Bloomberg unaware that the major banks have agreed to pay hefty fines in a meager compensation for their schemes? That he blames the victims of the securitization swindles and then orders the arrest of those who dare speak the truth is a tribute to his belief in the enduring power of the big lie.

If the Bloomberg news service, the stock market idolizer owned by the mayor, had been anything more than an enabler this past decade of Wall Street excess, nay criminality, it's possible we would not be experiencing the current crisis. If this leading financial news outlet had performed the minimum of journalistic due diligence on unregulated credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations and the other swindles marketed with an abandon informed by deep deceit and the financial industry's pervasive corruption, the world economy may not now be in such terrible shape.

Yet the man whose personal wealth increased by $4.5 billion the first year of this meltdown when many Americans were losing their life savings now dares shift blame away from himself and others at the center of economic power to the most vulnerable among us. Instead of blaming the Wall Street lobbyists who got the laws changed so that they could securitize people's home mortgages, no matter how unsound those mortgages were by design, he blames the folks suckered into accepting the banks' phony offerings. "Blame the opium addict and not the pusher" is the excuse for the bankers who turned the lure of easy credit into a housing bubble that, when it inevitably exploded, impoverished the world but left the bailed-out Wall Street hustlers richer than ever.

"There's something wrong with a kid who steals a bike going to jail and someone who steals millions paying a fine," as former New York City Mayor Ed Koch put it in challenging Bloomberg's blame-the-victims copout. The fines to which Koch referred represent a small percentage of the bankers' ill-gotten gains, and, of course, as opposed to the kid who steals a bike, none of the bankers fined by the SEC has even been threatened with jail time. "What do you think they got fined for -- schmutz on the sidewalk?" Koch asked. "They got fined because they abused their relationship with their clientele. And I want to see somebody -- I want to see one of them, of a major corporation, punished criminally."

Instead, the people led away in handcuffs are not the bankers who perpetuated the fraud of turning homes into the junk of toxic mortgages, which should be judged as criminal, but decent people who have committed only the "crime" of speaking truth to power.

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 164
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (6 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
06:37 PM on 11/18/2011
“As the initial excitement wore off and the cold crept in, only the diehards — and those with no place else to go — were likely to remain… In aggressively clearing them from the park, Bloomberg spared them that fate. Zuccotti Park wasn’t emptied by weather, or the insufficient commitment of protesters. It was cleared by pepper spray and tear gas. It was cleared by police and authority. It was cleared by a billionaire mayor from Wall Street and a request by one of America’s largest commercial real estate developers. It was cleared, in other words, in a way that will temporarily reinvigorate the protesters and give Occupy Wall Street the best possible chance to become whatever it will become next.â€

Ezra Klein
redonthehead
Winning trophies for my game face alone
04:09 PM on 11/18/2011
Do lobbyists work on Wall Street or K-Street?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
06:31 PM on 11/18/2011
Who pays the lobbyists?
01:58 PM on 11/18/2011
Really excellent !
12:13 PM on 11/18/2011
Hey Bobby, ..............forget Bloomberg's wealth (hard for you to do I'm sure) and understand that folks have the right to and are urged to have peaceful protests. I don't recall hearing or reading you can block traffic, break laws and set up house in public places. He is doing what any responsible mayor would do.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
06:32 PM on 11/18/2011
He is protecting the 1%, pure and simple.

Peaceful, non-violent protest is what this movement is about. Who showed up dressed for a war in the Middle East?
photo
Abbey Normal
There is no darkness but ignorance.­
10:45 AM on 11/18/2011
Khrushchev was wrong, the Soviets won't bury us, we will bury ourselves because the banksters and 1% have been buying and supplying the shovels since 1980.
10:09 AM on 11/18/2011
If you are a kid jaywalking, you may be fined and have to waste time in court. In 30 seconds, you get convicted of jaywalking and the fine is $5 and $105 for Court costs. Thus, you have to pay to the criminal (in) justice system $110 for 30 seconds of 'service". Same with unpaid parking tickets or late-month speeding (4 miles over speed limit). Since most municipalities are broke, they are raking in income by fines which disproportionally fall on those who do not have much money.

The entire system is rigged to fleece the working people and fill the bank-accounts of the rich, especially top 1$ whose income tripled in the last 10 years when most working people's income
decreased.

A healthy society is based on three basic legs: JUSTICE, WORK and COMPASSION. If any one of those fail, the society is sick. We in US are apparently failing badly in all those basic legs on which any healthy society stands and are fallen...this needs to stop by reorganizing the "rules of the game" so that we have free markets of ideas and projects with a leveled playing field. As it is we are letting filthy rich corner even more wealth at the expense of the 99%.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
mrclark
I search for the America I believed in as a boy.
07:38 AM on 11/18/2011
It all goes back to the Nazi propaganda idea that if you tell an idea enough times it will be believed. Wall Street hates OWS because it goes against their skewed message put forth primarily the Republican Party and the Tea Partiers that government and not Wall Street was at fault. Wall Street bought off our representatives since the 1980's and used this power to weaken and in some cases remove policies that would hold them accountable for what happened in 2007. This combined with infiltrating the bodies that would regulate them has given us the system we have today by which we now are accountable for Wall Street's risk without the benefit of the gains. This is not capitalism but is instead an oligarchy which is a form of government where all power is vested in a few persons or in a dominant class or clique; government by the few.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
07:34 AM on 11/18/2011
N O T I C E ! !

Will the last free American

please turn out the lights!
10:26 PM on 11/20/2011
The last free Americans died on United Airlines Flight 93, on 9/11.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
07:31 AM on 11/18/2011
In the fascist state we now live in we have

no right to peacefylly assemble or free speech

unless you qualify financially.
05:59 AM on 11/18/2011
Roger Hamilton
Learning the depths of Social Entrepreneurship has
made me realize many things in my own life. I have been
taking the wrong approach towards life which took me towards
the path I never wanted to take in the first place. Beginning
with the crystal clear clarity about my goals and taking every
one I know into consideration is the next step I intend to take
very seriously.
01:18 AM on 11/18/2011
"It was, plain and simple, Congress who forced everybody to go and give mortgages to people who were on the cusp." I must have missed the bill that forced banks to give out home loans to people who were foreclosure risks. Get that line to Cain. He could use it in the next debate.
06:31 PM on 11/18/2011
Talk to Bill Clinton, Harry Reed, Barnie Frank. The stooges of Fannie&Freddie. The community investment act signed by Clinton to get homeownership for poor people.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
SitandStay
Lorenzo&BushH8ter
12:55 AM on 11/18/2011
Here is a blog of the prosecutions at state level for mortgage fraud. Look at some of the sentences and then consider the sentences that are being gently applied to the others...
Are the private prisons going to be "Club Feds" for the elite, that can not be inspected or regulated because they ARE PRIVATE?
You can search your state in the following link by inserting it in the box in the upper corner.

www.mortgagefraudblog.com

"This law enforcement action is part of President Barack Obama's Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force.
President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.
This case was investigated by Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Assistant United States Attorney Jamila M. Hall prosecuted the case."

Will the new college graduates please apply for jobs with the FBI and clean this place up?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
07:36 AM on 11/18/2011
There is no justice in our justice system . . . for the poor


fanned
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMSmith
11:30 PM on 11/17/2011
SO well put!!
It's truly sickening.
09:58 PM on 11/17/2011
OWS has upstaged the Tea Party: more power to it... it has sidelined the corporate stooges.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:23 PM on 11/17/2011
The man on the television with the endless platitudes is not the real man. The real man set the dogs on the people. The real man lied about his reasons. The real man doesn't deserve the trust people gave him.