The Misguided Outcry for "Perp Walks"
It is bad enough to hear the lie that capitalism caused our economic crisis repeated ad nauseum by both the dishonest and the clueless. It is even worse to hear some of the “solutions” proposed by the incoming presidential administration and other hardcore Keynesians; now that most people are convinced that “laissez faire” is to blame for our troubles (as if the outgoing regime wasn’t as Keynesian as Keynes himself). Worst of all, since the so-called “experts” have been so wrong, even blow-dried talk show hosts feel empowered to render their completely uninformed opinions. None have been more annoying than the latest outcry over the lack of “perp walks” during the sub-prime meltdown and subsequent economic disaster.
The argument, if one could call it that, is that although the government has failed in the past to regulate properly to avoid economic crises, they have at least prosecuted the greedy perpetrators who supposedly caused them. For example, during the accounting scandals of the early 2000’s, Ken Lay, John Rigas, and Bernie Ebbers were just a few of the executives who were prosecuted and sentenced to particularly harsh jail terms for their roles in the demises of their respective companies. The SEC even took the bizarre step of prosecuting Arthur Anderson – not its executives, but the corporation itself – proving that even imaginary entities were not beyond the long, destructive arm of the federal government. Supposedly, these headline-making witch hunts “send a message” to the rest of the high finance class that it’s time to clean up its act. It also seems to make financial talk show hosts (who seem to learn nothing about economics no matter how long they remain on their jobs) feel much better about things, no matter how little these prosecutions have to do with the economic problems said hosts pretend to report on. Of course, ratings never suffer when the wealthy are marched off to the prisoner's dock.
During this crisis, however, there have been no such prosecutions for the “fraud” everyone keeps talking about as if it actually played a major role in the mortgage meltdown. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure that there was fraud committed, and the perpetrators should be prosecuted. However, both the media and most of the public continue to demonstrate their complete lack of a sense of proportion when they point to fraud related to tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars while we are experiencing a crisis involving TRILLIONS of dollars. We can burn all of the witches we want, but it won’t get us any closer to solving this crisis. As our socialism bubble continues to deflate, we must confront the systemic problems that caused it or they will finish devouring what is left of our once powerful economy.
It is a little too easy to simply dismiss the lack of prosecutions as the Bush administration refusing to go after its friends during their waning days in office. No matter how friendly they may have been to Wall Street (at our expense) over the past eight years, they have not hesitated to turn on their friends at the first sign of trouble, as the above-mentioned prosecutions demonstrate. Ken Lay in particular seemed to be a close personal friend of President Bush, but when the heat came, Mr. Lay found that door firmly closed. No, close ties to Wall Street are not the reason for the lack of prosecutions for fraud in this crisis.
As I’ve said before, this latest crisis was not caused by fraud or even greed, it was caused by theft. To understand this, one must acknowledge all of the parties in the transactions in question. Whether it is out of ignorance or by design, our politicians and media[1] consistently fail to acknowledge one of the parties. It is hard to give them the benefit of the doubt, because this omission is crucial to promoting their great lie, the failure of free markets.
For example, when talking about sub-prime loans, the only parties acknowledged are the borrower and the lender. Supposedly, the “predatory lenders” misled the borrowers about the terms of the loans, duping them into taking more risk than they should have. At the same time, many borrowers were irresponsible or even dishonest in taking on more debt than they could afford. Even those lenders that did not perpetrate some kind of crime in misleading the borrowers were at least grossly irresponsible because of their “lax lending standards.” So, the case is made that these two parties, acting freely as economic agents in a supposedly laissez faire environment, made bad decisions causing enormous losses that could have been prevented with more regulation. Thus, it is more regulation that is needed to prevent a similar catastrophe from occurring again.
The obvious question that one would ask is why anyone needs to be protected from the consequences of their own actions. If the lenders or borrowers take too much risk, they may lose their money. However, it is their money to lose, and if they lose it, what harm could this do to anyone else?
The answer lies in the true nature of the transactions in question. The argument above assumes there were two parties to each loan, when in fact there were three. However, unlike the borrower and the lender, the third party – the taxpayer - WAS NOT acting freely. The third party was forced to put up his or her money as collateral, without which not one sub-prime loan would have occurred. Moreover, the mortgage-backed securities that are playing such a pervasive role in the collapse of the financial system also would not have been sold had the purchasers not been assured that the government was backing the loans. This was nothing resembling a failure of free markets. It was an easily predictable consequence of government distorting the financial system and the economy by intervention into the markets. As is always ultimately the case, its intervention boils down to armed theft of property. Regardless of the fraud that may have been committed by lenders or borrowers, it was this crime by government that is responsible for the crisis.
Obviously, this is the reason that we haven’t seen “perp walks.” It is unlikely that our federal government is ever going to indict itself for any of its crimes, no matter who is president or what party has a majority in Congress. As for the private sector, the truth of the matter is that most of the conduct by the lenders actually amounted to them doing exactly what the government told them to do. They relaxed their lending standards because government pressured them to give loans to people that they wouldn’t have otherwise lent to, using money stolen from us to remove the onerous risk. Had the lenders been more responsible, they faced charges of discrimination against minorities or other disingenuous “fairness policies” designed to help our government achieve its age-old socialist dream of forced equality. In fact, as I’ve said before here, even the executives at Fannie Mae began to come forward and express concern about the risk that the GSE’s were taking on. What was the answer from our government? The GSE's were told that they weren’t doing enough; they should be “helping” more people. Government stole money from us to cover bets that even their own people were telling them were losers.
Therefore, if there are going to be any perp walks, it should be members of the federal government themselves that should be doing the walking. While we are making arrests, let’s not let the guilty from past presidential administrations escape justice. As I’ve previously argued, it was really the Clinton administration that sowed the seeds of this crisis. It was Clinton that raised the GSE’s to such prominence and pushed through legislation making it a crime to deny a mortgage. Even using the government’s faulty reasoning[2] that a lack of regulation is to blame, it was Clinton that signed the bill repealing the Glass Steagall Act and paving the way for the government-enabled speculation that followed.
Ironically, as bad as the Bush administration has been in so many other ways, it was actually their failure to reverse these Clinton policies that represents their most significant contribution to the mortgage crisis. Most importantly, neither Clinton, nor Bush, nor the majority of the members of Congress can deny their guilt in the central crime that has been perpetrated. They all had a hand in government theft of property. For these perp walks, the federal marshals won’t have to fly to Chicago or New York to make the arrests. They need only walk down the street.
[1] I still observe the quaint practice of referring to them as if they were separate entities.
[2] The Glass Steagall Act is another of those FDR regulatory schemes that is only perceived as necessary because of risks that ultimately exist because of government’s improper involvement in the economy.
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Your an officier of this company and government tells you that you must loan. You know this loan is sub-prime and it will eventually cause a problem. What do you do? You have to obey the law. So you must follow the directive. Your job is to inform.
You inform your stockholders, and the banks and you have done your job. Later when the hat is ready to drop. You resign, take your fat bonus and walk. The next day the place crashes. You have warned and no one instructed you to do otherwise.
You can also quit, but someone else will take your job and you first need to find another. Now to the directors.
Stockholder is a specualtor and a director. He has been collecting nice checks. He has seen the perspectus and should know the risk therein. I admit there is many brokers that are order takers and nothing more. If stockholders were doing there job they would have sold and checked out long before this became a disaster. So they get nothing and complain while the officier got his bonus. If the speculator was doing his job. He would have sold his stocks and stocks going lower would have brought this disaster to a head long before the officier walked. That is why shortselling is actually a good thing, but I trade anyway you want to make the rules.
Stockholders are to be watching the perspectus to know when the risk is getting greater then the return or they feel comfortable with. The stockholders did nothing. If your broker advice is not retaining or gaining on your investment. You should be seeking profitable advice.
This is true of banks also. How many people put money in the bank for safe keeping. I tell you the supreme court has already ruled it is the banks money when it forecloses. That is why they designed FDIC. Now the FDIC just raised the limit to quartrer of mil. That tells you they are trying to get the larger funds to stay in banks, because they are short now. That may be great for small disasters.
If Citigroup would have closed. All the banks in the world would have closed is my opinion. Now do you think the government FDIC is going to keep its guarantee? When there is about 1500 banks in the USA on the watchlist for foreclosurers by the FDIC with 80 bn. to cover them all.
So one who puts their money in a bank. Weather savings, cd's, money markets, checking acct. They are the banks on foreclosure. In simple terms. The purchase price that someone gives for that foreclosed bank, minus what the bank has(your savings etc.) equals debt owed at foreclosure. You get your share of what is left over with everyone else. My last experience, not a bank, but a foreclosure was ten cents on the dollar.
So word to wise is make sure your bank is a strong bank, so when it reopens your money is still there and not paying debt. Now if we all put money in sound banks. We would be moving it around and the bad banks would be closing long before they became a real problem.
Your individual freedom to buy, sell, move to another investment. It is your job to investigate and take care of yourself. Or you can listen to congressman, we need to take their money and invest it as the citizens are to stupid to do it. Sad thing, where is my Social Security, Mr. Congressman.
The only thing regulations do is two fold. One it often gets markets moving that would not move otherwise. Two they let you think it is a safe investment when it is not. So speculator beware of the government control.
>>"So word to wise is make sure your bank is a strong bank, so when it reopens your money is still there and not paying debt. Now if we all put money in sound banks. We would be moving it around and the bad banks would be closing long before they became a real problem.
Your individual freedom to buy, sell, move to another investment. It is your job to investigate and take care of yourself. Or you can listen to congressman, we need to take their money and invest it as the citizens are to stupid to do it. Sad thing, where is my Social Security, Mr. Congressman.
The only thing regulations do is two fold. One it often gets markets moving that would not move otherwise. Two they let you think it is a safe investment when it is not. So speculator beware of the government control."
This is so true. I wonder if the majority of Americans would ever consider getting rid of government insured bank deposits. Ultimately, if we really want responsible banking, that is one of the things we would have to do. Of course people could still get private insurance for their deposits, and no doubt insurance premiums for a given bank would do a good job of reflecting the soundness of that bank.
The real perp is the invisible third party in the loan transaction, the federal government that backed all these bad loans with the taxpayer's money. Had every aspect of the transactions been voluntary, there would be no criminal liability at all.
http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/article/133224/Former-Regulator-Cle...?
You claim the repeal of the Glass Steagall act by Clinton incited this crisis. The repeal of the Glass Steagall act was important in opening markets. Excessive market regulation only leads to increased cost to consumers in the long run.
Clinton was against the act. He grudgingly signed the final bill that passed 90-8 in the Senate, and 362-57 in the House to avoid going through a veto override. Previous versions of the bill split under party lines, with Republicans exerting their majority and passing it.
You also claim Clinton passed legislation that forced lenders to give houses to sub-prime lenders. What you fail to mention is the fact that the House AND the Senate were controlled by the Republican party. It was agreed among EVERYONE that these regulations were necessary. They look ridiculous today, but at the time both parties thought they were good for the country. To blame Clinton is absurd and intellectually dishonest.
YES, those GD "Experts" have got us where we are today. YOU get to the crux of things in the NOW.
You purport to the immediate issue that is the cause of the economic collapse. Yet, the public is limited to having to listen to too many of these media idiots ="Experts" talking explanations that are totally irrelevant to the problem.
I had a professor once who said that an "Expert" is someone with enough information to cause more damage than good.
DEFINITION: An "expert" is someone widely recognized as a reliable source of or skill whose faculty for judging or deciding rightly, justly, or wisely is accorded authority and status by their peers or the public.
BUT IF the media is UNeducated as to the reliability of the source they are using to support their conclusions, then what? All that the American People have is a continuance of misleading falsehoods; they have been brainwashed into depending upon "experts" for their learning.
HOW CAN THAT BE FIXED??? I SAY eliminate one of the major sources of misinformation the Public School System. The responsibility of education is NOT placing children at the mercy of Strangers... just because they have been legitimized by a corrupt system to become Teachers says nothing. So
what.
This is just another so called "Expert". What students are taught is out of the hands of the people who really pay for this system to exist. Of course for the NWO people and other money mongers why would they care.
Its like the school nurse who is aware of the "RIGHT" for parents and children to refuse "required" vaccinations. But who will not share that information.
Basically most of all of these institutionalized systems, the primary OBJECTIVE is to keep people uninformed. The media, the medical community, the school system, the universities, health insurance HMO's, PPO's, the Stock market, the government handout programs, the TV commercials.... THE GOVERNMENT and THE CORPORATIONS THIS country needs a complete RE-VAMPING.
Too much to take care of? I don't think so all that is needed to be done is like removing a hem line on a skirt or dress you find that one thread break it and the rest unravels with no effort at all. Then you reconstruct.
THAT's where the work will be BUT YET if we follow the simple policies of what a government is suppose to do according to the U.S. Constitution...There are brilliant people with integrity and of high moral standards not "experts" that can put it together. Like Ron Paul, use him as a standard to measure others. He is just one example of the kind of people the public need as leaders which the individual should study.
Basic to our rights as people of this Republic, the people have the right to "overthrow" a government contrary to our unalienable rights.
What is the quality of LIFE, LIBERTY and the PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS if those rights are continually being tainted by deceit and constantly diminished???
poulianna
The Eye of G_d is watching us