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[See also:  Vampire Bankers Suck Life Out Of US Economy ]

A Christmas Message From America’s Rich

Matt Taibbi

(Source)

A Christmas Message From America's Rich

Dario Cantatore/Getty

It seems America’s bankers are tired of all the abuse.

They’ve decided to speak out.

True, they’re doing it from behind the ropeline, in front of friendly crowds at industry conferences and country clubs, meaning they don’t have to look the rest of America in the eye when they call us all imbeciles and complain that they shouldn’t have to apologize for being so successful.

But while they haven’t yet deigned to talk to protesting America face to face, they are willing to scribble out some complaints on notes and send them downstairs on silver trays. Courtesy of a remarkable story by Max Abelson at Bloomberg, we now get to hear some of those choice comments.

Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus, for instance, is not worried about OWS:

“Who gives a crap about some imbecile?” Marcus said. “Are you kidding me?”

Former New York gurbernatorial candidate Tom Golisano, the billionaire owner of the billing firm Paychex, offered his wisdom while his half-his-age tennis champion girlfriend hung on his arm:

“If I hear a politician use the term ‘paying your fair share’ one more time, I’m going to vomit,” said Golisano, who turned 70 last month, celebrating the birthday with girlfriend Monica Seles, the former tennis star who won nine Grand Slam singles titles.

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Finally, a short, concise explanation of our economic crisis:

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(Source: The Daily Bail )

HOLY BAILOUT: Federal Reserve Now Backstopping $75 Trillion in Bank of America’s Derivatives

This story from Bloomberg just hit the wires [October 19 2011].  Bank of America is shifting derivatives in its Merrill investment banking unit to its depository arm, which has access to the Fed discount window and is protected by the FDIC.

This means that the investment bank’s European derivatives exposure is now backstopped by U.S. taxpayers.  Bank of America didn’t get regulatory approval to do this, they just did it at the request of frightened counterparties.  Now the Fed and the FDIC are fighting as to whether this was sound.  The Fed wants to “give relief” to the bank holding company, which is under heavy pressure.

This is a direct transfer of risk to the taxpayer done by the bank without approval by regulators and without public input.  You will also read below that JP Morgan is apparently doing the same thing with $79 trillion of notional derivatives guaranteed by the FDIC and Federal Reserve.

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Answer: To set up the Oligarch Welfare Program following:

A Huge Housing Bargain — but Not for You

Via: The Street:

The largest transfer of wealth from the public to private sector is about to begin. The federal government will be bulk-selling the massive portfolio of foreclosed homes now owned by HUD, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to private investors — vulture funds.

These homes, which are now the property of the U.S. government, the U.S. taxpayer, U.S. citizens collectively, are going to be sold to private investor conglomerates at extraordinarily large discounts to real value.

You and I will not be allowed to participate. These investors will come from the private-equity and hedge-fund community, Goldman Sachs and its derivatives, as well as foreign sovereign wealth funds that can bring a billion dollars or more to each transaction.

In the process, these investors will instantaneously become the largest improved real estate owners and landlords in the world. The U.S. taxpayer will get pennies on the dollar for these homes and then be allowed to rent them back at market rates. (Source)

Here we finally see the hidden motivation and the real purpose of crashing the real estate market: creating an excuse to force people out of their homes, making it easy for lenders to grab their homes. The lenders then are “bailed-out” by the Federal Reserve, who passes the bill on to the tax payers. Once the lenders are bailed out they no longer want to hold actual properties, so they quickly sell all their repossessed homes to giant hedge funds for pennies on the dollar. The lenders know they have to sell quickly before anyone realizes what they did, before anyone files legal actions. Lol! Once the homes are sold off just try and get them back. Can’t be done. Bwahahahaha !!

Crashing the real estate market was necessary to take homes from ordinary people, so they could then transfer them to the wealthy–who will turn around and rent them back to the very people who lost homes.

Voila! Wealth transfer mission $$ accomplished.  

Ahem, why not just give the discount on the homes to the folks who live in them?

Duh. Don’t ask silly questions.

As always, profit before people.

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Yep, our government is now infested by the evil banker elite and their army of sell-outs:

An Updated List of Goldman Sachs Ties to the Obama Government

Key U.S. Government Positions held by Goldman Sachs alumni.

So what? Recent headlines say it all:

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Update 3/17/2011: More Tax Cuts for the Rich: Congressman Dave Camp (R-MI), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, wants to cut the tax rate for the richest of the rich to 25%. To pay for it he would like to see popular middle class tax deductions eliminated. This would add $2 trillion to the public debt over a decade, but well worth it in terms of campaign contributions. (Source)

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“What this fight is really about is not unions versus taxpayers … It’s a fight about who’s going to pay for the crisis that was created by the wealthiest elite in this country.”

Our choice is this. Find the money or lose our civilization. If we want safety, hire cops; if we want education, hire teachers; if we want roads, pay construction workers; if we want clean air, food, drugs and water, pay inspectors. If we want chaos, don’t. (Source)

The average member of the country’s largest public-sector union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, “earns less than $45,000 a year and receives an annual pension of roughly $19,000.” (Source: NY Times)

Wall Street bankrupting America: What happened and how we recover; download infographic here; see petition here.

  • Wall Street banks caused the economic crisis that has left millions unemployed, foreclosed-on, and without prospects in the worst economy since the Great Depression.
  • This crisis has, in turn, caused massive tax revenue shortfalls for the federal government and for state governments across the country: nearly $300 billion combined for 50 states in the years since the crisis began.
  • To deal with these budget woes, politicians are cutting public spending: laying off teachers, attacking public sector workers, raiding pensions, closing hospitals, and eliminating essential services for children, veterans, and the elderly. Download full report here

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This article “Farming the Middle Class” has been moved to here:

http://prof77.wordpress.com/the-20/farming-the-middle-class-how-to-extract-maximum-dollars/

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Just like in 2009, investment banks will once again in 2010 get more than $1000 from every US household . . .

WSJ is reporting that bonuses on Wall Street this year are expected to be around $144 billion–that’s more than $1000 from every US household.

How big is that relative to the overall economy?

ZeroHedge cranked out the numbers and it is 8% of the total money supply (as measured by M1). (Source)

Got that?

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The banking authorities were shocked – shocked – to discover last week that an awful lot of mortgage paper in this country is not quite in order… appears to contain, er, irregularities. . .

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What’s going on here?

There is no rational way to discuss one aspect or another of the hydra facing us. Yes, fraudulent affidavits were used to keep foreclosure mills running. Why not? The mortgages were frauds at inception – deceitful loans made to deceitful buyers. The fraudulent mortgages were quickly passed on to the slice and dice middle-men who knew what they were cutting up was fraudulent but didn’t care as long as they could pass it on – nudge, nudge, wink, wink – as MBS given fraudulently high ratings by firms that were no better than houses of prostitution. A “service” industry grew up that was designed to keep all the players fat, dumb and happy until they were starved, very unhappy, but still greedy, still dumb. (Source)

Want more details? Read this: Nine stories the press is underreporting — fraud, fraud and more fraud

As one commentator summed up the situation: (Source)

You need to be careful of these stories that portray the gang-rape of Americans by the bankers as purely a foreclosure fraud issue. It isn’t. Amy has missed the real heart of the story. The core of the crime is that the mortgages backing the mortgage-backed securities were resold over and over, as many as 20 times, reaping billions in instant profits. But there is no way the sellers of those mortgage-backed securities could make good on the over-subscription, so the only way for the scheme to work is for the housing market to be crashed, and all those mortgages foreclosed as quickly as possible to erase the paper trail that could land the fraudsters in jail!

This scam is not unlike the one portrayed in the Mel Brooks movie “The Producers” in which the producers intentionally choose what they think is a terrible script, “Springtime for Hitler”, which they hope will close the first night. The producers then over-subscribe the investment in the play by 1000%. 100% is spent producing the show, with the other 900% to be pocketed after the show fails and the investors, unaware of the extra shares in the show, accept their losses and leave.

If the over-selling of mortgages into mortgage backed securities was intentional, and that appears to be the case since so many companies were doing it, then the same financial institutions that profited from the selling of mortgage backed securities intended to crash the housing market to cover their escape. They took mortgages and sold them as mortgage-back securities over and over again, then foreclosed the properties to end their obligations to the over-subscribed mortgage backed securities. This is why nobody cared whether home buyers were actually qualified for the mortgages, as the mortgages were never intended to be repaid, only foreclosed on!

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Meanwhile, Wall Street gives points the finger to homeowners:

Wall St. Pins Foreclosure Fiasco on Homeowners

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With fraud absolutely everywhere in our banking system, like some advanced metastatic cancer, financial metabolism comes to a sickening stop. Nobody can buy or sell property. Nobody can trust any American financial institution. Money can’t circulate. Nobody will be able to get any money. It won’t be long before that translates into nobody getting any food. (Source)

In the US, housing is central to the economy, to the financial system, and to the society. It has failed. And with it the consumer economy has lost its main support, so, too, have employment, taxation, the social contract and governance. (Source)

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Rollover, a 1981 movie paints the picture:

Repeat after me: It’s only a movie, it’s only a movie.

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Check out the sweetheart deal the Indymac boys were given by the FDIC. The billion dollar question is…“Does the government really wanna clean up this mess?”

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Since its banks crashed Iceland devalued its currency massively and imposed capital controls.

And a strange thing has happened: although Iceland is generally considered to have experienced the worst financial crisis in history, its punishment has actually been substantially less than that of other nations.

Here’s GDP:

DESCRIPTIONEurostat

And here’s employment:

DESCRIPTIONEurostat

The moral of the story seems to be that if you’re going to have a crisis, it’s better to have a really, really bad one. Otherwise, you’ll end up taking the advice of people who assure you that even more suffering will cure what ails you. (Source)

Iceland’s rebirth suggests that it’s best to take your medicine, let the too big fail, and get on with rebuilding. (Source)

For more details: http://www.lisproject.org/conference/papers/olafsson-kristjansson.pdf

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Off-loading of fiscal responsibility: The most impressive facet of today’s financial landscape is how much of their bad debts the financial sector was able to quickly transform into government debt to be paid through austerity measures imposed on the taxpayers.   After bailing out the banks, governments are destitute and will try to force the public to live on bread and water so the treasury can continue to feed the wealthy. (Source)

The ultimate consequence is going to be that not only will your wages, pensions, health care and other services fade and slowly vanish, what’s left of your wealth will increasingly be confiscated and handed to a bunch of rich gamblers with political clout. (Source)

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Warren Buffett famously said, “There’s class warfare, all right, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.” Unless, maybe, the middle class of USA and Europe learn from the people of Iceland.

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Obama's #1 Partner

That the Obama administration continues to place Goldman Sachs executives in government positions illustrates how little effort is devoted to hiding what is really taking place. (Source)

The list below shows the pervasive influence of Goldman Sachs and its units in the Obama government. Combined, this is the largest and most comprehensive list of such ties yet published. Source: http://seminal.firedoglake.com/diary/46267 (see also here):

  1. Obama and Buffett

    ALTMAN, ROGER.

  2. BERKOWITZ, HOWARD P.
  3. BIDEN, JOE.
  4. BRAINARD, LAEL.
  5. BUFFETT, WARREN.
  6. CLINTON, HILLARY.
  7. CRAIG, GREGORY.
  8. DONILON, THOMAS.
  9. Rahm Emanuel

    DUDLEY, WILLIAM C.

  10. EFFRON, BLAIR W.
  11. ELMENDORF, DOUGLAS.
  12. EMANUEL, RAHM.
  13. FARRELL, DIANA.
  14. FRIEDMAN, STEPHEN.
  15. FROMAN, Michael.
  16. FUDGE, ANNE.
  17. FURMAN, JASON.
  18. Tim Geithner

    GALLOGLY, MARK.

  19. GEITHNER, TIMOTHY.
  20. GENSLER, GARY.
  21. GEPHARDT, RICHARD
  22. GREENSTONE, MICHAEL
  23. HAMILTON PROJECT, THE
  24. HORMATS, ROBERT.
  25. KAGAN, ELENA.
  26. KASHKARI, NEEL.
  27. Elena Kagan

    KORNBLUH, KAREN.

  28. LEW, JACOB (AKA “JACK”) J.
  29. LIDDY, EDWARD MICHAEL.
  30. LIPTON, DAVID A.
  31. MINDICH, ERIC
  32. MURPHY, PHILLIP.
  33. NIEDERAUER, DUNCAN.
  34. OBAMA, BARACK H.
  35. ORSZAG, PETER.
  36. Adam Storch, Head of SEC Enforcement

    PATTERSON, MARK.

  37. PERRY, RICHARD.
  38. RATTNER, STEVE.
  39. REISCHAUER, ROBERT D.
  40. RIVLIN, ALICE.
  41. RUBIN, JAMES.
  42. RUBIN, ROBERT.
  43. SHAFRAN, STEVEN.
  44. SPERLING, GENE.
  45. STORCH, ADAM.
  46. SUMMERS, LARRY.
  47. THAIN, JOHN.
  48. TYSON, LAURA D’ANDREA.

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FURTHER READING:

1. Greg Gordon (McClatchy Newspapers), “Goldman’s White House Connections Raise Eyebrows” April 21, 2010.

2. Fflambeau, “With the Obama Administration Infested With Goldman Sachs People, How Real is the Obama/Democratic Attack on Big Banks” FDL Diary, April 21, 2010.

3. “More Investigations of Goldman Sachs, A Double-Edge Swords for Obama and Democrats”

4. Paul Street’s article showing that Obama held corporatist ideas long before elected and his indebtedness to the interests of big business.

5. Matthew Skomarovsky, “Obama Packs Debt Commission with Social Security Looters”, March 28, 2010 at Alternet.

6. Fflambeau, “A List of Goldman Sachs People in the Obama Administration: Names Attached to the Giant Squid’s Tentacles”

7. David Sirota, “Wall Street Democrats Unveil Plan to Undermine Progressives”, April 5, 2006.

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Hopey/Changey Guy

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Big NY Banks at work in Jefferson County, AL

Looting Main Street

How the nation’s biggest banks are ripping off American cities with the same predatory deals that brought down Greece

By: MATT TAIBBI

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Our economic crisis is not an accident. It’s the result of unchecked greed run rampant. Matt Taibbi shares the story of how a big NY bank preyed on Jefferson County, AL–exposing a much larger game plan.

Who will join the party next–at our expense?

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While for many Americans the financial crisis remains an abstraction, a confusing mess of complex transactions that took place on a cloud high above Manhattan sometime in the mid-2000s, in Jefferson County you can actually see the rank criminality of the crisis economy with your own eyes . . . our days of laughing at other countries are over. It’s our turn to get laughed at. (Source)

Educate yourself. Click on the link, read his 6-page article:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/32906678/looting_main_street/1

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Matt Taibbi’s related articles:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/32255149/wall_streets_bailout_hustle/

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/30481512/wall_streets_naked_swindle

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/29127316/the_great_american_bubble_machine

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Tax Enforcement at work

The English who colonized East Africa had the problem that the natives were quite self-sufficient and did not particularly want anything the English had, so they could not be induced to work for the English. The solution was to tax them, demanding payment in English pounds! Then they were forced to work for the English to get money to pay their tax, or go to jail as lawbreakers.

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You must work to live. If you work you must pay income tax, or go to jail. You must pay income tax entirely in US dollars, or go to jail. The Federal Reserve has a monopoly on the printing of dollars. All others go to jail. (Source)

The Federal Reserve is a privately owned bank, granted a banking monopoly and authorized by US Congress to issue IOUs called Federal Reserve Notes, otherwise known as “dollars”.

So what? Thomas Jefferson’s words continue to fall on deaf ears:

If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered…I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies… The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.

Curious how this works in practice? This video/media series explains:

http://www.swarmusa.com/vb4/content.php/299-Renaissance-2-0-Section-One

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It has now become evident to a critical mass that the Republican and Democratic parties, along with all three branches of our government, have been bought off by a well-organized Economic Elite who are tactically destroying our way of life. The harsh truth is that 99 percent of the U.S. population no longer has political representation. The U.S. economy, government and tax system is now blatantly rigged against us. (Source)

Toute nation a le gouvernement qu’elle merite.
Every country has the government it deserves.

Lettres et Opuscules Inedites (1851) vol.1, letter 53 (15 August 1811)
Josephe de Maistre 1753-1821
French writer and diplomat

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Pushing back

This week saw a succession of strikes and protests throughout Europe . . . [due to leaders] demanding unprecedented cuts in social programmes, wages and pensions in order to pay for the trillions of dollars handed over by European governments to the banks.

The broadest mobilizations have been in those countries where the most savage cuts have been announced. Wednesday’s general strike in Greece, involving 2 million workers in the public and private sectors, marks a turning point in the political situation throughout Europe. It represents the most significant manifestation of a growing movement of resistance to the attempt by Europe’s governments and corporations to make workers pay for the economic crisis and the multi-billion-euro bailout of the banks. (Source: WSWS)

It is becoming increasingly likely Greece may ask the International Monetary Fund for a bail out now that Germany is making it all to clear it won’t be providing aide. And since the United States is the largest contributor to the IMF, US taxpayers will find themselves footing the bill for the Greek debt crisis. (Source)

heating up.

Greece is . . .

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Les Leopold, Posted: January 27, 2010 09:06 AM

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/les-leopold/why-are-we-donating-2000_b_438301.html?source=patrick.net

Wall Street is awarding itself $150 billion in bonus money…..and it comes from us!

That’s $500 for every man, women and child in the country — $2,000 for a family of four. (Maybe we should try deducting it from our income taxes as a charitable donation.)

Had we not bailed out the financial sector, there would be no bonus pool this year. Zip, zero, ziltch.

Wall Street, and no one else, crashed the economy through its fantasy finance extravaganza. Wall Street went begging for subprime debt in order to create and market their new financial securities, the most profitable activity in their history. As a result of their securitization casino, which leveraged bet upon bet, the housing market turned into a bubble and finally burst. Wall Street had miscalculated, big time.

We gave the Wall Street banks gigantic loans and enormous guarantees on their toxic assets. We gave them TARP. It all totaled to more than $12 trillion, with most of it still in play, even after the TARP repayments. (See Nomi Prins’s excellent accounting..)

Yep, that's it

Wall Street was saved from bankruptcy, including Goldman Sachs which now cavalierly insists that it didn’t really need the bailout money (yet it took $12.9 billion of taxpayer support via AIG, and tossed it into its bonus pool.) Wall Streeters actually think they’ve earned the $150 billion in bonuses through their own cleverness. Think again. It’s nothing more than taxpayer welfare.

Les Leopold is the author of The Looting of America: How Wall Street’s Game of Fantasy Finance destroyed our Jobs, Pensions and Prosperity, and What We Can Do About It Chelsea Green Publishing, June 2009.

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Because I Said So: Henry Paulson justifies the Wall Street bailouts by explaining that letting Goldman Sachs AIG fail would have caused “complete collapse of our financial system, and unemployment easily could have risen to the 25% level.” Instead of just 17.3% and rising.  His proof – he thought so.  He believed.  Has anybody ever challenged these hysterical fears, or do the peasantry just gather up $2,000 per family, send it to the Banksters and say thanks? (Source)

lightningbolt: We aren’t donating anything. The American people were overwhelmingly against the bailout. The money is being STOLEN!!! Our government is aiding these criminals in this theft! Both Bush and Obama are complicit and guilty in this crime.

So Much for the Sovereignty of Our Nation: Sorry, but Joe Taxpayer is not responsible for the inability of AIG to write insurance that it could not cover losses on. Fact is, the United States of America had no one in power to stop the Fed. The Fed did what it wanted to do. No one was a there to protect the taxpayer. America abdicated sovereignty. The country was actually too weak to fight the banks.

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Update 1/26/2011: Google Foreclosure Maps–gone! Google has announced that they will be removing all real estate listings from their Google Maps platform on February 10th of this year (2011). Searches for real estate foreclosures on Google Maps are now being censored no longer possible.

In part due to low usage, the proliferation of excellent property-search tools on real estate websites, and the infrastructure challenge posed by the impending retirement of the Google Base API (used by listing providers to submit listings), we’ve decided to discontinue the real estate feature within Google Maps on February 10, 2011. (Source)

Some people ask if Google might have somehow removed foreclosure maps as part of a supposed “cover up” of the accelerating real estate crash in the U.S. (eg., Another Flood of Foreclosures on the Way).

Silly question.

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Foreclosure Nation . . .

US foreclosure map - each red dot represents a cluster of homes in foreclosure

As of December 1st, 2009, more than 13% of US homeowners were either delinquent or in foreclosure. (Source) UPDATE: As of 10/29/2010 an incredible one in seven or 14% of the nearly 54 million first liens in the country are now either delinquent or in default. (Source)

You can use Google Maps to watch the spreading toxic red dots of real estate foreclosures and defaults multiplying across America. [Google's "foreclosure" mapping feature may not be available outside of the U.S.]

Here’s how:

Select Real Estate -> Foreclosures

Google Maps search feature shows both houses in foreclosure or in default (missed at least one 1st mortgage payment).

  • Go to maps.google.com.
  • Click on the “More” box (located on the map itself in the top right of the Google map).
  • A pull down menu will appear.  Click on “Real Estate”.
  • Now, in the selection box on the left, check “Foreclosure” to select it, and remove the check in “For sale” to unselect it (just click on the check box).
  • Now, the map will show foreclosures. Search for any city or zip code in the search box, or zoom in on any area of interest.
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NOTE: If you don’t see Google Map’s  “Real Estate” check box, then try this:

  1. Click on Google Map’s “Show search options” (located to the right of the “Search Maps” button at the top of the Google Map page)
  2. Click on the drop down menu and select “Real Estate”
  3. Enter your city and state and click on “Search Maps”
The foreclosures will show up as red dots on the map that results. Depending on your map’s scale, each red dot may represent one or more homes with mortgages in default or in foreclosure.
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For example, here is a fairly sobering graphic. The map shows ONE ZIP CODE on Chicago’s South West Side, 60629.
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Chicago - foreclosures

This neighborhood has been gutted. The red dots represent all of the properties in that zip code that are either in pre-foreclosure or are already bank owned. They are each individual tragedies. Take another look at this map for a moment.

Consider the words of Fr. Stan Rataj, Pastor of St. Nicholas of Tolentine Parish, located in the center of this community: “If several hundred families lost their homes to a fire or a tornado, we would rush to help them,” said Fr. Stan. “This tragedy is just as serious, yet people feel that they have to face it by themselves”. (Source)

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See also:

Another Flood of Foreclosures on the Way, and

Home Owners Can Level the Foreclosure Playing Field–by using the poison pill that lenders fear — legal strategy to “encourage” foreclosing lenders to negotiate in good faith.

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Here’s a few other cities . . .

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Washington DC - foreclosures

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Miami, Fl - foreclosures

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Nashville, Tn - foreclosures

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Los Angeles, Ca - foreclosures

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Zoom in to see individual properties in foreclosure

. . . or use Street View to see foreclosures

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Here’s some foreclosure maps as of Jan. 2011 (just before Google maps removed the feature):

Boise, Idaho — 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure (The red dots show foreclosures)

Boise, Idaho -- 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure (The red dots show foreclosures)

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Sarasota, Fla. — 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure

Sarasota, Fla. -- 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Lakeland, Fla. — 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure

Lakeland, Fla. -- 1 in 21 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Tampa, Fla. — 1 in 20 homes in foreclosure

Tampa, Fla. -- 1 in 20 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Port St. Lucie, Fla. — 1 in 19 homes in foreclosure

Port St. Lucie, Fla. -- 1 in 19 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Sacramento, Calif. — 1 in 19 homes in foreclosure

Sacramento, Calif. -- 1 in 19 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Naples, Fla. — 1 in 18 homes in foreclosure

Naples, Fla. -- 1 in 18 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Deltona, Fla. — 1 in 17 homes in foreclosure

Deltona, Fla. -- 1 in 17 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Bakersfield, Calif. — 1 in 17 homes in foreclosure

Bakersfield, Calif. -- 1 in 17 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Reno, Nev. — 1 in 16 homes in foreclosure

Reno, Nev. -- 1 in 16 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Vallejo, Calif. — 1 in 16 homes in foreclosure

Vallejo, Calif. -- 1 in 16 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Orlando — 1 in 15 homes in foreclosure

Orlando -- 1 in 15 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Merced, Calif. — 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Merced, Calif. -- 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Stockton, Calif. — 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Stockton, Calif. -- 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Riverside, Calif. — 1 of 14 homes in foreclosure

Riverside, Calif. -- 1 of 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Miami — 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Miami -- 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Phoenix — 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Phoenix -- 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Modesto, Calif. — 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Modesto, Calif. -- 1 in 14 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Cape Coral, Fla. — 1 in 12 homes in foreclosure

Cape Coral, Fla. -- 1 in 12 homes in foreclosure

Image: Courtesy of Google Maps

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

Las Vegas — 1 in 9 homes in foreclosure

Las Vegas -- 1 in 9 homes in foreclosure

Note: The red dots shows homes currently in foreclosure. The slide title describes the fraction of homes that received foreclosure filings in 2010.

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Size Matters: It is refreshing to see the 326,000 citizens of Iceland tell the British and Dutch – and their own elected capitalists – that they have no desire to pay for the greed of Icelandic bankers or the stupidity of European investors.  The $6 billion “owed” comes to $18,000 a person, which is a ridiculous amount for innocent bystanders to have to come up with.  In the US, the each citizen now owes $40,000 to bail out the bankers – enough to keep us all in debt for decades.  But we’ll pay up and keep envying Icelanders for doing what we are too cowed to contemplate. (Source)

Angry Iceland defies the world (of banksters)

Iceland’s president has blocked a Bill to pay Britain and Holland up to £3.4bn for Icesave depositors, acknowledging that popular feeling in the island nation is too strong to proceed without a referendum. (Source)

Background:

Iceland had 3 main banks who all, albeit to various degrees, made unrealistic profits for investors and depositors in early 21st century times, and then went bust. One bank, Icesave, which had many clients in England and Holland, owes these clients some $6 billion. The people of Iceland, all 320,000 of them as it were, have started questioning why they should pay for foreign investors’ losses with banks with whom they have no connection other than that they happen to be located in their country. (Source)

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Unlike Iceland, in the US Banksters Get What They Want and MORE In its draft regulatory filing, AIG revealed that it had passed TARP bailout money on to several banks, notably paying Goldman Sachs 100 cents on the dollar.  Tim Geithner, then President of the NY Fed, told them to withhold that sort of detail from the public record, so they did. (Source)

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Meanwhile, Obama in a recent speech about banker’s bonuses the underwear bomber said, “”We will not succumb to a siege mentality that sacrifices the values that have made us great,” he said. “That is exactly what our adversaries want, and so long as I am president, we will never hand them that victory.”

That is good to know.

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People are calling Congressional Legislation introduced by Barney Frank, which will pre-approve $4 Trillion for the next free cash give away, “the US Economic Suicide Bomb“:

Barney Frank, "Trust me, my friends need a few trillion dollars a lot more than you do."

- Read the Bloomberg news article here: Bankers Get $4 Trillion Gift From Barney Frank

- Read the 1279 pages of the legislation here: HR 4173

- Read a preliminary analysis here: Congressional Legislation Introduced By Barney Frank Pre-Approves $4 Trillion For Next Crisis

Here is a sampling of online comments about it:

- $4 Trillion works out to about $40,000 from every US household. This US dollar economic suicide bomb is so far beyond all-things-rational… and makes me double-check my supply of tinfoil.

- Current efforts to stave off the financial crisis are doomed to fail and are preparing for the next rescue. A very bad collapse is coming…..it’s just a matter of when. I suspect Frankie is preparing for a bank run.

- There can only be one reason for a sum of money this large, as the Fed only liquidates paper for banks and to some extent for the government. Frank is preparing for a run on the banks. The FDIC is broke. The Fed will buy as many good assets as they can buy and let the rest collapse.

- $4 trillion in liquidity in a year will add 8000 points to the Dow. I guess when you are headed over a cliff you might as well floor it and see what happens.  (Jump the Grand Canyon Dukes of Hazard style.)

- “The bill is 1,279 pages long.” I have a hard time believing Barney wrote that legislation. I bet it was handed to him already typed up, spell checked, and placed in a nice glossy 3 ring binder by a friend of a friend.

- When I was a kid corruption like this was described as only happening in places like Mexico. We are Argentina on steriods.

- Our country isn’t doomed just the way of life we have lived before.

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Of course Obama may do the opposite but Obama says:

We Can’t Continue to Waste Tax Dollars Like ‘Monopoly Money’

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One TRILLION dollars… (Source)

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What does that look like? I mean, these various numbers are tossed around like so many doggie treats, so I thought I’d take Google Sketchup out for a test drive and try to get a sense of what exactly a trillion dollars looks like.
We’ll start with a $100 dollar bill. Currently the largest U.S. denomination in general circulation. Most everyone has seen them, slighty fewer have owned them. Guaranteed to make friends wherever they go.

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image0011

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A packet of one hundred $100 bills is less than 1/2″ thick and contains $10,000. Fits in your pocket easily and is more than enough for week or two of shamefully decadent fun.
image0022
Believe it or not, this next little pile is $1 million dollars (100 packets of $10,000). You could stuff that into a grocery bag and walk around with it.
image0033
While a measly $1 million looked a little unimpressive, $100 million is a little more respectable. It fits neatly on a standard pallet…
image0044
And $1 BILLION dollars… now we’re really getting somewhere…
image0055
Next we’ll look at ONE TRILLION dollars. This is that number we’ve been hearing about so much. What is a trillion dollars? Well, it’s a million million. It’s a thousand billion. It’s a one followed by 12 zeros.
You ready for this?
It’s pretty surprising.
Go ahead…
Scroll down…
Ladies and gentlemen… I give you $1 trillion dollars
image0066(And notice those pallets are double stacked.) Hey, that’s me standing at the lower left hand corner, thinking this must be my stimulus package…
So the next time you hear someone toss around the phrase “trillion dollars”… that’s what they’re talking about.

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The Top 1% in US earn most of their income from owning assets, while the middle and lower classes work at jobs to earn their income.

In 1963 Malcolm X clarified the difference between owners, overseers, and workers . . . (see video clip below)

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Inquiring minds might ask if Malcom X’s speech still relevant today?

Not sure?

Here are some more details:

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Top 1 Percent Control 42 Percent of Financial Wealth in the U.S. – How Average Americans are Lured into Debt Servitude by Promises of Mega Wealth

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Many Americans are not buying the recent stock market rally.  This is being reflected in multiple polls showing negative attitudes towards the economy and Wall Street.  Wall Street is so disconnected from the average American that they fail to see the 27 million unemployed and underemployed Americans that now have a harder time believing the gospel of financial engineering prosperity.  Americans have a reason to be dubious regarding the recovery because jobs are the main push for most Americans.  A recent study shows that over 70 percent of Americans derive their monthly income from an actual W-2 job.  In other words, working is the prime mover and source of their income.  Yet the financial elite have very little understanding of this concept.  Why?  42 percent of financial wealth is controlled by the top 1 percent.  We would need to go back to the Great Depression to see such lopsided data.

Many Americans are still struggling at the depths of this recession.  We have 37 million Americans on food stamps and many wait until midnight of the last day of the month so checks can clear to buy food at Wal-Mart.  Do you think these people are starring at the stock market?  The overall data is much worse:

financial-wealth-united-states
Source:  William Domhoff

If we break the data down further we will find that 93 percent of all financial wealth is controlled by the top 10 percent of the country.  That is why these people are cheering their one cent share increase while layoffs keep on improving the bottom line.  But what bottom line are we talking about here?  The Wall Street crowd would like you to believe that all is now good that the stock market has rallied 60+ percent.  Of course they are happy because they control most of this wealth.  Yet the typical American still has negative views on the economy because they actually have to work to earn a living:

gallup-economics

The above daily poll asks Americans about their view on the health of the economy.  Only 13 percent believe the economy is good or excellent.  Funny how that correlates with the top 10 percent who control 93 percent of wealth.  Many Americans were sold the illusion of the bubble.  They were sold on the idea that their homes were worth so much more than they really were.  And many used this phony wealth effect to go out and spend beyond their means.  They started spending as if they were part of this elite 10 percent crowd.  But once the tide rolled out, it was clear they were not.  And the horribly built bailouts demonstrate who is controlling our political system.  This was not the rule of a capitalist system but a corporate run government.

Just think about the bailouts and which companies were saved.  We ended up bailing out the worst performing and troubled companies thus keeping alive companies that should have completely failed.  Did we bail out Google?  Proctor and Gamble?  Of course not.  These companies actually produce something that people want.  Banks and especially the Wall Street kind merely keep that 42 percent happy by making sure their stock values stay high so they can keep on making money while the average Americans is sold up the river.

Yet many were brought into the easy money fold by going into massive amounts of debt.  And who has most of the debt?  That is right, the average American:

debt

The bottom 90 percent have been saddled with 73 percent of all debt.  In other words much of their so-called wealth is connected to debt.  Debt is slavery for many especially with egregious credit card companies taking people out with absurd credit card tricks and scams.  Yet the corporate propaganda machine is strong and mighty.  Have you ever received an inheritance?  A large one?  Probably not because only 1.6% of all Americans receive an inheritance larger than $100,000.  If this is the case, why in the world do politicians worry so much about the tax impacts of this?  Because they want to keep the corporatocracy alive and well so their spawn can get a piece of their pie.  They give the illusion to average Americans that if you only work hard enough you too can join this elusive club of cronies.  The data shows otherwise.

But if we start looking at investment assets, the true wealth in the country, we start realizing why Wall Street is all giddy about the recent stock market government induced rally:

stock-markets

Of investment assets 90 percent of Americans own 12.2 percent.  The rest goes to the top 10 percent.  Welcome to the new serfdom.  The bailouts that went out to the filthy rich were more about protecting their tiny corner of the world than actually making the economy better.  That is why it is interesting to see companies fire people and Wall Street cheer for the increase in earnings per share.  Good for the few at the expense of the many.  Yet the propaganda out of Wall Street and our government is what is good for Wall Street is good for you.  Just like that 1.6% inheritance issue, the vast majority of Americans won’t deal with that and their primary concern is simply a job.  A job that has provided stagnant wages for a decade while the ultra wealth get richer and richer in a phony form of corporate socialism.

If you break down the data you realize that most Americans don’t have time to speculate in stock markets:

incomedistribution

Only 34% of U.S. households make more than $65,000 per year.  What is that after taxes?  Let us use a state like California for example:

income

Now if we breakdown this data further you will realize that most of the money is consumed by cost of living necessities, not Wall Street speculation.  Just to show this example let us look at a family budget for someone in California making $100,000:

family-budget-100k

Notice after running the budget we are in the hole for $1,000?  That is because of many costs that typical families have.  We can debate the merits of where they are spending money but the point is this; are these people really making beaucoup money from the stock market?  They are putting away $12,000 a year into their 401k.  As we have now found out, 8 percent a year is never guaranteed in the stock market although the corporate powers would like you to believe that so they can have other suckers to unload stocks onto.

“Yet the median household income in the U.S. is $50,000 and not $100,000.  They have even less to invest.”

They are more concerned on working to have a paycheck to pay for necessities.  They are more concerned about paying their house off by the time they retire and hopefully, have a little bit of retirement funds coming in.  The sad fact is most Americans rely on Social Security when they retire.  All those ads of unlimited golf and daily trips to Tahiti are propaganda of how Wall Street lives and they want to sell you the sizzle, and clearly not the steak.  They live their lives paper pushing and sucking the life out of the productive part of our economy.  The average American should now realize this since this financial crisis was primarily caused by them.  They are now on a massive campaign to blame Americans for this.  This is hypocrisy to the next level.  Many Americans have paid for their mistake by losing their home through foreclosure.  We have 300,000 foreclosure filings a month.  Many have taken a hit to their overall stock portfolio (if they have one).  Yet the corporate cronies have protected their horrible economy crushing debts at the taxpayer expense.  Unlike you, many hold bonds on the companies and not common stock like many Americans.  Bondholders have been protected at all costs during this crisis.  Goldman Sachs through AIG received 100 cents on the dollar for their horrible bets.  The banks have unlimited back stops thanks to taxpayers.  This is how the top 1 percent rule the new feudal state.

Welcome to the 2010 serfdom.  Time to wake up and restructure the system.  Many people are starting to wake up to this massive scam.


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Obama slams ‘fat cat bankers’ — but does nothing (Source 1, Source 2)

WASHINGTON — US President Barack Obama has hit out at Wall Street “fat cats”, expressing anger that banks bailed out by the government plan huge bonuses while millions of Americans battle poverty and unemployment. With a recession triggered in part by the excesses of financial institutions, Obama voiced frustration that “some people on Wall Street still don’t get it.”

“I did not run for office to be helping out a bunch of fat cat bankers on Wall Street,” Obama said Friday in excerpts of an interview with CBS television to be aired on Sunday.

You tell ‘em Obama! Talk is cheap.

. . . go here for a simple explanation of how big banks rip off our government.

The huge bonuses are outrageous fraud that is well understood, but is being condoned. Why? Why does the Obama Administration allow this fraud to continue? Unless, as one blogger asks, “When Obama criticizes bailed-out banks like BoA for their huge bonuses, but fails to take action to stop them, isn’t he just admitting who really runs the country?”

Lavish pay and bonuses on Wall Street have been blamed for encouraging the excessive risk-taking that with the subprime mortgage housing crisis fueled the global maelstrom and brought the US financial sector to the brink of collapse a year ago.

But who’s counting . . . ?

Priorities: 1 in 4 mortgages is now under water, 1 in 3 Americans have either lost their job or live with someone who has, 1 in 4 children is on food stamps and one in 8 families are. We spent over a trillion dollars bailing out Wall Street and friends. It will cost about a million dollars a year to keep each soldier in Karzai’s opium patch and after the ‘surge’ there will be over 70,000 of them. (Source)

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How To Make The World’s Easiest $1 Billion

Henry Blodget, Dec. 10, 2009

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-how-to-make-the-worlds-easiest-10-billion-2009-12

With all the banks paying back the TARP money, some folks are assuming that the great Wall Street bailout is finally coming to an end. But of course it isn’t!

Taxpayers are still guaranteeing all big bank bonds (Too Big To Fail) and subsidizing huge bank earnings and bonuses with absurdly low interest rates. But instead of bellyaching about it, you might as well just smile and cash in.  After all, that’s what Wall Street’s doing.

So here’s how to make the world’s easiest $1 billion:

STEP 1: Form a bank.

STEP 2: Round up a bunch of unemployed friends to be “bankers.”

STEP 3: Raise $1 billion of equity.  (This is the only tricky step. And it’s not that tricky.  See below.*)

STEP 4: Borrow $9 billion from the Fed at an annual cost of 0.25%.

STEP 5: Buy $10 billion of 30-year Treasuries paying 4.45%

STEP 6: Sit back and watch the cash flow in.

At this spread, you should be earning at least 4% per year on your $10 billion of capital, or $400 million.  Sure, there’s some risk that the Fed will grow a backbone and raise short rates, but there’s not much risk.  (They have an economy to fix and banks to secretly recapitalize).  And in any event, if the Fed raises short rates, making your $1 billion will just take a bit longer.  (And if they REALLY raise rates, causing you to actually lose money, it will be someone else’s problem.)

You’ll have made $400 million in a single year!  So pay yourself a fat salary for all your hard work.  And pay your “bankers” fat salaries for all their hard work (But don’t worry–your bankers won’t actually have to do anything.  You’ll just need one of them to borrow the money from the Fed and buy the Treasuries, which he will be able to do part-time.)   At the end of the year, celebrate.  It’s bonus time!

Don’t be greedy.  Pay yourself and your bankers the industry-standard compensation ratio of 50% of revenue.  Your revenue was $400 million, so that creates a $200 million bonus pool.  Pay each of your unemployed friends bankers, say, $1 million.  And give yourself the rest for being such a smart entrepreneur and creating all the jobs and value.

Now, you’ve already made at least $150 million, so it doesn’t really matter what happens next.  But you’re in this for the world’s easiest $1 billion, right?

So proceed to Step 7.

STEP 7: Go public. After bonuses, your bank will be earning about $200 million a year, your capital ratio will be super-strong (10% equity-to-debt!), and your balance sheet will be clean as a whistle (all risk-free Treasuries!).  So you ought to be able to persuade investors to pay you at least 20-times earnings, or a valuation of $4 billion.  Sell 25% of the company for $1 billion.

STEP 8: Use your $1 billion of new equity to borrow another $9 billion at 0.25% from the Fed.  Buy another $9 billion of Treasuries.  Collect another $400 million a year.  Pay yourself and your team bonuses that are twice as large as last year’s.  You deserve it!  And you’re now about $500 million to the good.

STEP 9: Wait for your stock to double or triple, which won’t take long given your amazing growth trajectory and clean balance sheet.  When your market cap hits $10 billion, sell another 10% of the company for $1 billion.  Now you’re really ready to grow.

STEP 10: If you want to get fancy and get nice profiles written about you in business magazines, start buying branch networks from defunct banks (the FDIC will pay you to take them) and start making actual loans.  Also, start hiring trading desks to gamble on things more exotic than Treasuries.  Yes, all this sounds risky, but just remember–the risk isn’t yours, and you’re already $500 million to the good.

STEP 11: Sell $500 million of your stock to a “strategic investor” and let the rest ride.  Don’t worry, if your traders and loan officers turn out to be idiots or the Fed suddenly raises rates, the taxpayers will handle it.  And you’ve already made your $1 billion.

So, congratulations, you’re now a billionaire!  Now all there is left to do is celebrate!


* If you’ve been paying attention, you will note that the only potentially tricky step in this process is the “raise $1 billion of equity.”  Where, exactly, are you going to get $1 billion of equity?  Well, you will have to do some selling there.

Basically, you’ll have to tell a few investors about your awesome new business plan (see above) that will earn them returns of at least 20% on their equity from Day 1.  A 20% return on equity is a lot, especially when the return is largely risk free. So you should have no problem raising that $1 billion of equity.

Given the government’s desperate desire to get banks to start lending again, you might also want to try to hit up the government for some funds.  The pitch will be simple: Old banks aren’t lending because they’re hiding embedded losses and need to protect their balance sheets.  You don’t have that problem.  You’ll use the equity to LEND.  (And you will use it to lend!  You don’t have to say that you’re going to lend it to the US government.  None of the other banks are saying that.)

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(Nov. 19, 2009) Facing a hail of criticism, Goldman Sachs’ top officer, Lloyd Blankfein, has offered a halting apology for the premier investment bank’s role in the subprime mortgage crisis that sank the nation’s economy:

We participated in things that were clearly wrong, and we have reasons to regret and apologize for. – Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs (Source.)

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“The finance, insurance and real estate sector has given $2.3 billion to candidates, leadership PACs and party committees since 1989, which eclipses every other sector. Nineteen percent of total contributions from the employees and political action committees across all sectors came from the financial sector.” (Source.)

Dick Durbin, US Senator, denounced the financial sector’s influence on the Senate and says this about Congress, the banks “frankly own the place.” (Source)

NY Senator Chuck Schumer - puppet darling of Wall Street lobbists

New York Senator Chuck Schumer has received $2,167,300 in contributions from the financial sector. A member of the SenateBanking Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, Senator Schumer received more contributions from the hedge fund, private equity, and securities and investment industries than any other member of congress. Credit Swisse, JP Morgan, UBS, and New York Life Insurance are among his biggest donors.

Want more details? Go to OpenSecrets.org to see which members of Congress have received Wall Street money.

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No, You’re Reading That Right

79.9 percent rate targets credit-challenged

How much is too much?
Bob Hansen

Gordon Hageman couldn’t believe the credit card offer he got in the mail.

“My first thought, it was a mistake,” Hageman said.

The wine distributor called the number on the offer, gave them the offer code and verified his information. Sure enough, it was right:  the pre-approved credit card came with a 79.9 percent APR.

Yes, 79.9 percent.  (Source)

Is it time to stand up? Check this out:

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Fleecing the sheeple . . .

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Goldman Sachs CEO

Goldman Sachs CEO: Lloyd Blankfein

Is anyone still surprised that Goldman will announce huge profits on Tuesday? Does anyone still care? Rigging computerized trading is just one small trick on the repertoire; rigging the government is a bigger one.  (Source.)

Ponder the many articles about how Goldman Sachs (along with other large banks) are manipulating the NYSE and most other financial markets. For example:

  • ‘Secretive’ firms dominate US share trading,  According to the Financial Times, trading firms drive “almost three quarters of all US equities trading volume,”  that such firms represent about 2 per cent of the 20,000 or so trading firms operating in the US markets. But they accounted for 73 per cent of all US equity trading volume. [emphasis added] (Source: Financial Times; July 10 2009.)
  • There have been several days in the last few months where Goldman Sachs, by themselves, trading for their own account (not for any client account), have accounted for over 40% of ALL NYSE trades. They now control an average of around 10% of ALL trades. (Source.)
  • Controlling 10% of all trades is more than enough to influence stock prices. Goldman Sachs must have been good at it because, after their US Government bailout, Goldman Sachs now plans to pay their execs in 2009 the largest bonuses ever. (Source.) In aggregate Goldman Sachs will pay workers $17.92 billion in 2009, compared with $10.9 billion last year–an average of $642,447 per employee. (Source.) [Angry yet? Check out this.]
  • When former Goldman Sachs employee, Aleynikov, was recently charged with stealing Goldman Sachs software, the Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Facciponti told a federal magistrate judge: “The bank [Goldman Sachs] has raised the possibility that there is a danger that somebody who knew how to use this program could use it to manipulate markets in unfair ways.” Meaning: Proof that Goldman Sachs has the software to manipulate markets. (Source.)
  • Would a firm like Goldman Sachs sink so low as to manipulate stock prices? In Rolling Stone Issue 1082-83 (2009), Matt Taibbi describes how, “Goldman Sachs has Engineered Every Major Market Manipulation Since the Great Depression.”  In his article he builds his case, names names, and cites sources. (Read the article here: Source.)
  • Manipulating financial markets is not enough to satisfy endless greed. The political system is being manipulated as well. Goldman Sachs was among the top 3 contributors to the Obama campaign. (Source.) In the last decade, the financial industry’s $5 billion investment in campaign contributions and lobbyists resulted in boatloads of government hand-outs. By Bloomberg News’ account, $12.8 trillion worth of taxpayer loans, grants and guarantees were made to benefit Wall Street. Of course it is no accident that Goldman Sachs is one of the top 3 recipients of government give aways. (Source.)
US Citizen

US Citizen

The conclusion is clear, capital markets are now just a rigged game for taking money away from suckers–ordinary people like you and me. The efficient market hypothesis is a joke, a scam.

“Green shoots”? Bawahahahaha . . . what a cart load.

Even a former US Treasury Asst. Secretary said in a public forum that Geithner works for Goldman Sachs, not for the people. (Read here: http://prof77.wordpress.com/)

Right now is like the calm before the tsunami hits–people are walking around on the seabed looking at the sea shells, thinking this all just a very, very “low tide,” with no idea what is coming.

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Would you pay your mortgage to just anyone who says they now own your mortgage? What if they were lying? Or would you ask to see a copy of the paper trail to verify if it was true or not?

Watch what happens when a homeowner requests a simple document from Bank of America who claims, without any proof whatsoever, to now hold her mortgage and threatens to foreclose on her.

(Source: W.C. Varones)

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After 2 years, the major beneficiaries are Banks and Wall Street. Unemployment and foreclosure filings at all-time record high. What other proof do you need that we are focusing on bailing out the Banking Oligarchy?

Wall Street buy-out chief Mark Patterson says the US bank bail-outs are a ‘sham’ to enrich speculators. (Source.)

The US Treasury’s effort to stabilise the banking system through the TARP program is a hopelessly ill-conceived policy that enriches speculators at public expense, according to a buy-out firm supposed to be pioneering the joint public-private bank rescues.

MatlinPatterson took advantage of Tim Geithner's TARP matching funds to buy Flagstar Bancorp in Michigan - he now owns 80pc of the shares and the US government under 10pc.

Photo: AP

“The taxpayers ought to know that we are in effect receiving a subsidy. They put in 40pc of the money but get little of the equity upside,” said Mark Patterson, chairman of MatlinPatterson Advisers.

The comments are likely to infuriate Tim Geithner, the US Treasury Secretary, because Matlin Patterson took advantage of the TARP’s matching funds to buy Flagstar Bancorp in Michigan. His confession appears to validate concerns that the bail-out strategy is geared towards Wall Street.

“It’s a sham. The banks are insolvent.” Mr Patterson expects the great crunch to end in deliberate inflation. “The US government has thrown 29pc of GDP at this crisis compared to 8pc in the early 1930s. . . . The only way out is to debase the currency, but that is going to lead to some very high inflation three years down the road,” he said. (Source.)

New York-based MatlinPatterson Global Advisers LLC is a private equity firm specializing in distressed situations. MatlinPatterson manages $3.9 billion and currently is looking to raise $4.5 billion for its third buyout fund.

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