the great swindle
Having recently seen this movie, my old trope about the US turning into a third-world country is heavily on my mind.
If you haven't seen Spike Lee's "When The Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts," see it, and soon.
And how does the other 1% live? For a taste, read Amy Goodman on the latest bailout outrage. Emphasis mine.
If you haven't seen Spike Lee's "When The Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts," see it, and soon.
And how does the other 1% live? For a taste, read Amy Goodman on the latest bailout outrage. Emphasis mine.
The $700-billion financial bailout package, TARP (Troubled Assets Relief Program), was supposed to mandate the elimination of exorbitant executive compensation and "golden parachutes." As U.S. taxpayers pony up their hard-earned dollars, highflying executives and corporate boards are now considering whether to give themselves multimillion-dollar bonuses.
According to The Washington Post, the specific language in the TARP law that forbade such payouts was changed at the last minute, with a small but significant one-sentence edit made by the Bush administration.
. . . .
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said recently, "The Treasury Department's implementation of the TARP is insufficiently transparent and is not accountable to American taxpayers." Barney Frank, D-Mass., chair of the House Financial Services Committee, said earlier, "Use of these funds ... for bonuses, for severance pay, for dividends, for acquisitions of other institutions, etc. ... is a violation of the terms of the act."
Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa said of the loophole, "The flimsy executive-compensation restrictions in the original bill are now all but gone." Put aside for the moment that these three all voted for the legislation....
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