All Hail the Corporatist in Chief

Any one who thinks the Democratic Party or the Democratic President represent the interests of the little guy in this oh you asscountry can’t be reading any newspapers.  I’ve always thought that the Republican Party overly favored big business and was out to set up monopolies for all its cronies.  It’s hard to believe anyone aligning themselves with liberal interests or even a real conservative could support the continuing infusion of cash, tax cuts, and legal breaks to industries that are squeezing the profits out of both workers and businesses that actually make something or do something.  The middlemen  are now running the country and snatching its wealth.

First, there’s this Politico Story where even the headline offends my sensibilities of justice and fair play:  Dem officials set stage for corporate-backed health care campaign. The President’s undisclosed meetings are reminding me more and more of the Dubya/Cheney years.

At a meeting last April with corporate lobbyists, aides to President Barack Obama and Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.) helped set in motion a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign, primarily financed by industry groups, that has played a key role in bolstering public support for health care reform.

The role Baucus’s chief of staff, Jon Selib, and deputy White House chief of staff Jim Messina played in launching the groups was part of a successful effort by Democrats to enlist traditional enemies of health care reform to their side. No quid pro quo was involved, they insist, as do the lobbyists themselves.

The result has been a somewhat unlikely alliance between an administration that came into power criticizing George W. Bush for his closeness to Big Business and groups such as the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America and the American Medical Association.

The previously undisclosed meeting April 15 at the offices of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee led to the creation of two groups — Americans for Stable Quality Care and a now-defunct predecessor group called Healthy Economy Now — that have spent tens of millions of dollars on TV advertising supporting health reform efforts.

No sooner had I read that then I went to WaPo and found this one: Bailed-Out Banks Raking In Big Profits.

The nation’s largest banks, preserved from failure by federal aid and romping in markets revived by federal aid, are racking up vast profits even as the broader economy struggles to emerge from recession.

While loan losses continue to mount, the banks are making it up on Wall Street, trading in stocks, bonds and other financial instruments, and collecting fees for services such as helping companies raise money.

Goldman Sachs and Citigroup reported third-quarter profits Thursday, joining J.P. Morgan Chase in outstripping the expectations of financial analysts and solidifying their places as among the banks that have benefited most from the government’s massive rescue of the financial industry.

Of course, I’ve been advocating for better control of the shadow banking system for as long as I can remember. These guys are now out in the day light and acting like the financial crisis never even happened. They’re in better market position than they have ever been and are now using it to sell portfolios back and forth to run up paper profits. Not only that, the so-called defenders of the little guy are not only doing nothing, they’re doing worse than nothing.  HelenK brought my attention to this one from the NY Times: Bill Shields Most Banks From Review.  Just when you thought their loanshark-like lending practices which contributed so heavily to the bad economy and so many job losses would be exposed, Barney the Congressman (not the Dinosaur) shows where his bread is buttered.

Bowing to political pressure from community bankers, the House Financial Services Committee approved an exemption on Thursday for more than 98 percent of the nation’s banks from oversight by a new agency created to protect consumers from abusive or deceptive credit cards, mortgages and other loans, The New York Times’s Stephen Labaton reported.

The carve-out in legislation overhauling the regulatory system would prevent the new consumer financial protection agency from conducting annual examinations of the lending practices at more than 8,000 of the nation’s 8,200 banks, leaving only the largest banks and other lenders subject to the agency’s examiners.

Earlier in the day, the committee completed its work on a different contentious provision of the legislation when, on a nearly straight party-line vote of 43 to 26, it approved tougher regulations over the derivatives market. That provision, too, contained exemptions for many businesses.

The exemption for the banks was endorsed by the chairman, Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, who saw it as necessary to win support for the overall bill from the committee’s moderate and conservative Democrats. Their support is particularly important because the Republicans are unified against the legislation.

How much longer can our national wealth and legislative process support people that basically do nothing for a living but act as cost inducing middle men in markets?  Insurance companies  and  Investment bankers have very little value added.  They just run up costs between the real customers and the real producers of the goods and services.  Why are they being protected and why is their profit grabbing ability being enhanced by the democrats in Washington?

Just so you know where the real damage lies, take a look at the USA today headline: Wages tumble toward 18-year low.

Average weekly wages have fallen 1.4% this year for private-sector workers through September, after adjusting for inflation, to $616.11, a USA TODAY analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data found. If that trend holds, it will mark the biggest annual decline in real wages since 1991.

The bureau’s data cover 82% of private-sector workers but exclude managers and some higher-paid professionals.

“Wages are usually the last thing to deteriorate in a recession,” says economist Heidi Shierholz of the liberal Economic Policy Institute. “But it’s happening now, and wages are probably going to be held down for a long time.”

Insurance companies and financial middle men do nothing but stand between the consumer and the producer.  They add tremendous levels of cost and confusion to those markets and have no gone from helping businesses manage risk to creating more of it.  They are anomalies or so-called frictions  in a market economy.  We does our President and our Congress keep feeding the Sharks and the Vampire Squids?

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18 Responses

  1. I never really understood that prostitution was legal in Washington DC. These fools do not even lay back and think of flag and country.
    Then the ” johns” take the money out of the country so they do not need to pay taxes. example GM , the electric car that Gore got our money to build in Finland and will cost $90,000 to buy. How many other countries will have medicine that cost less than here that was financed by our money?

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  2. How much longer can our national wealth and legislative process support people that basically do nothing for a living but act as cost inducing middle men in markets?

    Well we will find out it seems

  3. Looks like Obama’s real “base”got their ponies. The rest, have been told to STFU
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-10-15/getting-the-job-done/

    • will the backtrack health care bill stop the lobotomies?
      I read the comments and wanted to yell ” You idiot he was only in office 12 days when nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
      They really do not see the cost and damage to this country by the unholy trio of backtrack, axis sally pelosi, and lord haw haw reid. How many future generations will pay for this mistake by the DNC?

      WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

      PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  4. This makes me want to crawl back into bed.

    And here I am, a small business, trying to expand and hire people, but nothing, no money anywhere, nada, zip. The sign on the door might as well say, sorry it all went to GS, none left to create pesky jobs. Better luck next time… sucker.

    • Banks won’t lend you money?

      No grants to help small businesses in a recession?

      (same thing is happening in Italy. Some businesses are in trouble because they are not being paid by other businesses who are their customers. Therefore they are in debt to their suppliers/workers and banks refuse to help)

    • Small businesses are the life blood of America — they are everywhere and many are hurting.

      They can’t get loans and the cost of health care insurance is going up — NEITHER party gives a damn. And that’s the problem.

      I call these middle men — parasites. These creeps are feeding off of the middle class — the people of this country.

      Will the US Supreme Court give full human rights to the corporations?

  5. Damn, but I miss the days when welfare went to the poor and not the wealthy.

  6. http://liberalrapture.com/

    It does not feel good to say ” I told you so” when people all over this country are hurting. Congress is a lost cause until at least 2010. Backtrack can not see past the mirror and really does not want or care to see people that he used that are hurting. by his actions.

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE, MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  7. http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/obama-tells-health-reform-critics-grab-mop/Story?id=8843741&page=2

    Give me that old time religion and a chicken in every pot.
    look at the price to get in to the dinner.

    backtrack makes me sick

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  8. one of the most important reminders i had recently was on a newspaper forum where someone wrote about political actions and legislations: “who does it serve?” i think we all know that we are being sold out by the dems and repubs. thanks to all of you fine men and women legislators who are in the pockets of big business/industry/banking etc. absolutely disgusting to watch this play out.

  9. Our representatives, many of them, aren’t even trying. They have dissed the American public for the bankers who now run the government. This is ridiculous. Can’t have a consumer protection agency with any real authority, can’t stop companies from hiding their money off shore (tax free), and can’t let regulators really regulate the financial industry. They are pathetic, pathetic I tell you.

  10. Oh look who gets to be the number two guy at the SEC. Deputy Dog, all of 29 years old. Yah, he’ll scare the big boys, not.

    http://www.businessinsider.com/found-photo-of-adam-storch-29-year-old-goldman-guy-who-is-now-coo-of-the-sec-2009-10

  11. And Elizabeth Warren is speechless about the Wall Street bonuses. Travesty.

    http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-wall-street-is-winning-elizabeth-warren-speechless-about-record-bonuses-2009-10

  12. Wonderful article, great insight

  13. Small businesses are the life blood of America — they are everywhere and many are hurting.

    They can’t get loans and the cost of health care insurance is going up — NEITHER party gives a damn. And that’s the problem.

    I call these middle men — parasites. These creeps are feeding off of the middle class — the people of this country.

    Will the US Supreme Court give full human rights to the corporations?
    OH! You’re my new favorite blogger fyi

  14. FDR is surely spinning in his grave.

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