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Sarah van Gelder

Sarah van Gelder

Posted: April 9, 2009 02:54 PM

A Plea to President Obama: Don't Bankrupt America

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Dear President Obama,

I'm getting a sinking feeling. Watching your appointees' latest bank bailout makes me wonder if all your administration's good work on health care, education, and jobs will be swept away by the extraordinary giveaway of trillions in taxpayer money to a group of powerful Wall Street operatives, who appear willing to bankrupt our country to continue building their wealth and power.

Could this be happening on the watch of someone who, like yourself, came to Washington with the promise of personal integrity and a concern for the common good?

From outside the Beltway it looks pretty clear: Your financial team's identification with Wall Street corporations is compromising their ability to advise you on what can save our country. Please listen to some of today's most astute independent analysts:

Jeffrey Sachs, Columbia University economist:

"Two weeks ago, I posted an article showing how the Geithner-Summers banking plan could potentially and unnecessarily transfer hundreds of billions of dollars of wealth from taxpayers to banks. ... In fact, the situation is even potentially more disastrous than we wrote. Insiders can easily game the system created by Geithner and Summers to cost up to a trillion dollars or more to the taxpayers."

Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary:
"So you and I and other taxpayers have kept these hedge-fund honchos flush enough to be able to reap the bonanza that Geithner now wants to bestow on them for cleaning up the mess they and others on Wall Street made -- a bonanza to be financed by you and me and other taxpayers, who are taking on all the risk."

David Korten, author of Agenda for a New Economy, and board chair of YES! magazine:
"Wall Street will continue to play out its extortion racket so long as the public is willing to put up with the bailout-first, reform-later capitulation of the Federal Reserve and the FDIC. There must be a strong and immediate public demand to restructure first."

William Greider, writer for The Nation, formerly with The Washington Post, and author of some of today's best books on the economy:
"If Wall Street gets its way, the 'reforms' may further consolidate power and ratify a corporate state--a grotesque hybrid that combines the worst aspects of socialism and capitalism. The reform ideas announced by Geithner would plant the seeds by creating a 'systemic risk' regulator, presumably the Federal Reserve, to oversee the largest, most politically adept banks and financial firms that qualify as 'too big to fail.' Capitalism, with its inherent tendency toward monopoly, would have the means to monopolize democracy."

Chris Hedges, a Pulitzer prize-winning reporter:
"If we do not immediately halt our elite's rapacious looting of the public treasury we will be left with trillions in debts, which can never be repaid, and widespread human misery which we will be helpless to ameliorate. ... The stimulus and bailout plans are not about saving us. They are about saving them. We can resist, which means street protests, disruptions of the system and demonstrations, or become serfs."

And here's William Black, a regulator who takes bank regulation seriously, in an interview with Bill Moyers:
"We're hiding the losses, instead of trying to find out the real losses. ...Follow what works instead of what's failed. Start appointing people who have records of success, instead of records of failure. ... There are lots of things we can do. Even today, as late as it is. Even though they've had a terrible start to the administration. They could change, and they could change within weeks."
It's not too late, Mr. President. We can still keep these corrupt financial institutions from bankrupting America. We need you to stand up to the Wall Street insiders in your own administration who might understand what boosts the profits of banks, but not what helps our economy. Please replace them with independent advisors, who haven't spent their careers working for investment banks, hedge funds, and the Federal Reserve.

We don't need to re-inflate the disastrous bubble casino and we don't need to pump more taxpayer dollars into the too-big-to-fail institutions that have caused this mess. Instead, it's time to take a long, cold look at these banks, which George Soros says are now "basically insolvent."

Nationalize them. Reorganize them. And decentralize them -- make sure none are too big to bring down our economy. And make sure we never again find ourselves in the bizarre circumstance of having the biggest failures -- the ones whose actions threaten to destroy the economy -- calling the shots in Washington. Instead, reorganize these banks so that all of them are linked into the real economies they should be serving, not undermining -- the locally rooted enterprises that provide the sustainable livelihoods we need.

Yes, we can! Mr President. And for the sake of our country, we must.

Sincerely,
Sarah van Gelder
YES! Magazine

If you share these concerns, please:

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AZ4thatone
03:49 PM on 04/11/2009
Agreed, STOP Bailing out the Banks! They are NOT looking after the interests of the public, only the interests of their corporatio­n. They are loot*ing the public treasury and in turn for the publics trust and faith, they are now denying credit, raising credit rates and conspiring to defraud the public by manipulati­ng peoples credit scores through credit card closures and limit reductions­. These steps by the bank can turn a great FICA score to a ruined credit report overnight! Then people cannot go elsewhere to transfer their balances and are stuck paying high interest rates to banks that already received millions in bailout money.
B of A and Citi are doing this to people right now. I agree with Chris Hedges; we need to take this to the streets and start protesting NOW!
03:53 PM on 04/10/2009
Oh you silly little people, don't you know the Federal Reserve is OMNIPOTENT­!
Give me the power to print the money and charge interest on it. I'll give every penny of interest I make back to the government that gives me the power to print it, making it look like I'm on the up and up.
In the background I'll choose(buy­) all your leaders and have them pass all the laws that work in my favor and I couldn't give a crap what happens to the little people that gave me that power who rightfully had it in the first place.
As your world central banking overlord I will do my best to keep you servants on the hamster wheel of life as best I can because that's how I derive and usurp the power for myself. I love my Omnipotenc­e.
10:12 PM on 04/09/2009
Obama's worse than Bush!

Why?

Because we knew that Bush was a thief and a liar, owned by big oil and the banks.

We believed Obama represente­d change. We trusted him. And so far, he has betrayed that trust.

I had warned here, since last Fall, that no one man could change the system of financial Oligopoly that has grown in DC. I never suspected that the one man we hoped might make a dent in it, would so willingly become part of it.

We've seen the list of names of the advisors and department heads he has surrounded himself with. We know their credential­s and the part they've all played in making this economic disaster happen.

We read every day now how Giethner's plan will only continue to enrich the Wall Street robber barons he serves--fo­ur blogs just today on HuffPo blowing holes in the program he has sidesteppe­d Congress with. Not my opinion only--but the words of highly regarded men in the field each saying that this is doomed to failure.

I know I'll get heat for this. Too many still believe Obama has a "plan," and he's smarter than we are and will whip wall street into shape, save the ecnonomy, and bring justice to the land. I'll say it right here--he won't.