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總算有人看到九牛重心﹐但為何會採這樣的愚民策略﹖
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麥芽糖

總算有人看到九牛重心﹐但為何會採這樣的愚民策略﹖
2009/03/21 01:13:10 瀏覽3|回應0|推薦0

引用文章只見秋毫﹐不見輿薪

高高洋狗對上低低土狗 (尚未發行)
時事評論財經 2009/02/25 10:43 |瀏覽 2|回應 0|推薦 0|引用 0
 

高高洋狗對上低低土狗 (2) (尚未發行)
時事評論政治 2009/03/08 18:04 |瀏覽 103|回應 0|推薦 0|引用

總算有人看到九牛重心﹐但有人願說明老美何以顧左右而言他﹐為何會採這樣的愚民策略嗎﹖

唉﹗聯網人如果還是看不出其理﹐太公就給兩個歷史引子﹐久遠些﹐何以凱撤大帝會遭同係貴族者謀殺﹖近點的﹐何以康梁只有百日維新﹖伊娘列﹗別以為老美民主政制﹐沒有皇族(有人謂老美政界是有十大皇族喔)﹐不同樣是『寧予外人﹐不給家奴』﹐同一類思維。

Bait and Switch

The Real AIG Conspiracy

By MICHAEL HUDSON March 18, 2009

It may seem odd, but the public outrage against $135 million in AIG bonuses is a godsend to Wall Street, AIG scoundrels included. How can the media be so preoccupied with the discovery that there is self-serving greed to be found in the financial sector? Every TV channel and every newspaper in the country, from right to left, have made these bonuses the lead story over the past two days.

What is wrong with this picture? Is there not something over-inflated about the outrage led most vociferously by Senator Charles Schumer and Rep. Barney Frank, the two leading shills for the bank giveaways over the past year? And does Pres. Obama perhaps find it convenient that finally, at long last, he has been able to criticize something that he believes Wall Street has done wrong? Even the Wall Street Journal has gotten into the act. The government’s takeover of AIG, it pointed out, “uses the firm as a conduit to bail out other institutions.” So much more greed is involved than just that of AIG employees. The firm owed much more to other players – abroad as well as on Wall Street – than the assets it had. That is what drove it to insolvency. And popular opposition has been rising to how Obama and  McCain could have banded together to support the bailout that, in retrospect, amounts to trillions and trillions of dollars thrown down the drain. Not really down the drain at all, of course – but given to financial speculators on the winning “smart” side of AIG’s bad financial gambles.

“The Washington crowd wants to focus on bonuses because it aims public anger on private actors,” the Journal accused in a March 17 editorial. But instead of explaining that the shift is away from Wall Street grabbers of a thousand times the amount of bonuses being contested, it blames its usual all-purpose bete noire: Congress. Where the right and left differ is just whom the public should be directing its anger at!

Here’s the problem with all the hoopla over the $135 million in AIG bonuses: This sum is only less than 0.1 per cent – one thousandth – of the $183 BILLION that the U.S. Treasury gave to AIG as a “pass-through” to its counterparties. This sum, over a thousand times the magnitude of the bonuses on which public attention is conveniently being focused by Wall Street promoters, did not stay with AIG. For over six months, the public media and Congressmen have been trying to find out just where this money DID go. Bloomberg brought a lawsuit to find out. Only to be met with a wall of silence.

Until finally, on Sunday night, March 15, the government finally released the details. They were indeed highly embarrassing. The largest recipient turned out to be just what earlier financial reports had rumored: Paulson’s own firm, Goldman Sachs, headed the list. It was owed $13 billion in counterparty claims. Here’s the picture that’s emerging. Last September, Treasury Secretary Paulson, from Goldman Sachs, drew up a terse 3-page memo outlining his bailout proposal. The plan specified that whatever he and other Treasury officials did (thus including his subordinates, also from Goldman Sachs), could not be challenged legally or undone, much less prosecuted. This condition enraged Congress, which rejected the bailout in its first incarnation.

It now looks as if  Paulson had good reason to put in a fatal legal clause blocking any clawback of funds given by the Treasury to AIG’s counterparties. This is where public outrage should be focused.

Instead, the leading Congressional shepherds of the bailout legislation – along with Obama, who came out in his final, Friday night presidential debate with McCain strongly in favor of the bailout in  Paulson’s awful “short” version – have been highlighting the AIG executives receiving bonuses, not the company’s counterparties.

There are two questions that one always must ask when a political operation is being launched. First, qui bono --  who benefits? And second, why now? In my experience, timing almost always is the key to figuring out the dynamics at work.

Regarding qui bono, what does Sen. Schumer, Rep. Frank, Pres. Obama and other Wall Street sponsors gain from this public outcry? For starters, it depicts them as hard taskmasters of the banking and financial sector, not its lobbyists scurrying to execute one giveaway after another. So the AIG kerfuffle has muddied the water about where their political loyalties really lie. It enables them to strike a misleading pose – and hence to pose as “honest brokers” next time they dishonestly give away the next few trillion dollars to their major sponsors and campaign contributors.

Regarding the timing, I think I have answered that above. The uproar about AIG bonuses has effectively distracted attention from the AIG counterparties who received the $183 billion in Treasury giveaways. The “final” sum to be given to its counterparties has been rumored to be $250 billion, do Sen. Schumer, Rep. Frank and Pres. Obama still have a lot more work to do for Wall Street in the coming year or so.

To succeed in this work – while mitigating the public outrage already rising against the bad bailouts – they need to strike precisely the pose that they’re striking now. It is an exercise in deception.

The moral should be: The larger the crocodile tears shed over giving bonuses to AIG  individuals (who seem to be largely on the healthy, bona fide insurance side of AIG’s business, not its hedge-fund Ponzi-scheme racket), the more they will distract public attention from the $180 billion giveaway, and the better they can position themselves to give away yet more government money (Treasury bonds and Federal Reserve deposits) to their favorite financial charities.

Let’s go after the REAL money given to AIG – the $183 billion! I realize that this has already been paid out, and we can’t get it back from the counterparties who knew that Alan Greenspan and George Bush and Hank Paulson were steering the U.S. economy off a real estate cliff, a derivatives cliff and a balance-of-payments cliff all wrapped up into one by betting against collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and insuring these casino bets with AIG. That money has been siphoned off from the Treasury fair and square, by putting their own proxies in the key government slots, the better  to serve them.

So let’s go after them altogether. Sen. Schumer said to the AIG bonus recipients that the I.R.S. can go after them and get the money back one way or another. And it can indeed go after the $183-billion bailout recipients. All it has to do is re-instate the estate tax and raise the marginal income and wealth-tax rates to the (already reduced) Clinton-era levels.

The money can be recovered. And that’s just what Mr. Schumer, Mr. Frank and others don’t want to see the public discussing. That’s why they’ve diverted attention onto this trivia. It’s the time-honored way to get people not to talk about the big picture and what’s really important.

Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist. A Distinguished Research Professor at University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), he is the author of many books, including Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (new ed., Pluto Press, 2002) He can be reached via his website, mh@michael-hudson.com


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奧婆馬選項很多﹐但像藍綠雞鴨﹐非統即獨﹐各抱主子大腿說策﹐純立場而已﹗
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麥芽糖

啥基本價值﹖難道破產制度非基本價值﹖
2009/03/21 11:05:02 瀏覽40|回應0|推薦1

真是公說公有理﹐婆說婆有理。頗有聯網某些人『前話批後語』﹐口水理大地﹐自成漢文章的調調喔。

何謂之基本價值﹖這個判定﹐一定要有時代的背景﹐方能見真假。

古早時的中古世紀﹐還沒有『破產法』維護債權人人權時﹐欠債還錢﹐乃天經地義﹐普世價值﹔所以啦﹗父債子還﹐夫債婦還﹐祖債孫還﹐沒完沒了的﹐甚至要賣身為奴葬父﹐那是欠債一輩子難翻身。

可是時代進步啦﹗只要一紙上破產法院﹐幾乎可以債務一筆勾消﹐無債一身輕﹐誰管您債權人因此週轉不靈﹐生意收攤﹐上吊自殺也完蛋﹖

就算日後債務人發了大財﹐哈﹗用盡『人格光榮﹑尊嚴』的基本價值﹐動之以情﹐說之以義﹖只見大氣一哼﹕『誰又欠過您啥舊帳﹖要說這些﹐找法官說去﹗』債權人也是只能乾瞪眼﹐伊娘列﹗悔不當初﹐自己狗眼瞎。

人家AIG賣保險﹐付不出各方鏢局賭注﹐大額贖鏢金索賠﹐只要一句話撂下﹕『咱宣告破產』﹐馬上無債一身輕﹐不干任何局外人的事﹔這是現代社會商場擅用的『老痞』術﹐能為眾人接受的『基本普世價值』。AIG雖然用American 為名﹐大家也知道他是他﹐您是您﹐這事不干您老美政府屁事﹖

只見老美政府越混越回頭﹐當起中古世紀唐詰荷德﹐文化復興﹐大丈天有責﹐禮義廉恥﹐國之四維﹐一肩擔道義﹐破筍老大一張三頁紙﹐就賣妻販子去﹐把老美人民當奴妓﹖

嘿嘿嘿﹐布希是這樣賣﹐奧婆馬亦繼之﹐蓋的納騙百姓﹐一路蕭規『馬』隨。怪事固然年年有﹐這個民主現象﹐還是讓太公跌破眼鏡﹐不再『予豈好辯哉』﹐而嗟嘆﹕『予豈不怪哉』﹖『

註﹕本文原只有英文﹐原擬存檔﹐自作參考。但一上傳﹐有一網友馬上按推薦﹐逼得太公只好剖腹交心﹐放些小狗屁﹐不值一文﹐請包涵喔。

AIG details $105 billion in payouts

Cash used to cover collateral payments, wind down derivatives contracts

By Sam Mamudi & Simon Kennedy, MarketWatch

The cash paid to AIG's so-called counterparties was used to cover collateral payments, cancel derivatives contracts and meet obligations at its securities lending business.
Now majority-owned by the government, AIG (AIG:
American International Group Inc
 Last: 1.26-0.36-22.22%
4:02pm 03/20/2009
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
AIG
 1.26, -0.36, -22.2%)
has received more than $170 billion in bailout funds to keep it in operation since mid-September, when it found itself on the verge of collapse.

<br>
<br>
<br>
          Chart of AIG
Most of the leading U.S. and European banks were represented on the list of recipients of AIG payouts. Goldman Sachs Group (GS:
Goldman Sachs Group Inc
 Last: 97.32-1.98-1.99%
4:01pm 03/20/2009
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
GS
 97.32, -1.98, -2.0%)
got the biggest single total, receiving $12.9 billion.
Bank of America Corp. (BAC:
bank of america corporation com
 Last: 6.19-0.76-10.94%
6:40pm 03/20/2009
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
BAC
 6.19, -0.76, -10.9%)
and brokerage subsidiary Merrill Lynch together received $12 billion, followed by Societe Generale (FR:013080: news , chart , profile ) , which took $11.9 billion, and Deutsche Bank (DE:DBK: news , chart , profile ) (DB:
deutsche bank ag namen akt
 Last: 37.51-1.20-3.10%
4:01pm 03/20/2009
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
DB
 37.51, -1.20, -3.1%)
, on the receiving end of $11.8 billion.
Payments to municipalities totaled another $12.1 billion.
"AIG recognizes the importance of upholding a high degree of transparency with respect to the use of public funds," the company said in a statement.
AIG had previously argued that disclosing the identity of counterparties could damage its business relationships or cause competitive harm, but it's come under increasing pressure from lawmakers to provide details.
Counterparty payouts
AIG said that between Sept. 16 and Dec. 31, it paid out $22.4 billion in collateral related to credit default swaps, or CDS. Such swaps are essentially insurance policies on a company's debt in case it were to default.
Video: Why AIG execs are getting bonuses
WSJ's Liam Pleven and Dennis Berman discuss the growing controversy over AIG's decision to award bonuses to several employees, after government funds were used to boost the troubled insurer.
The largest recipient of these payouts was France's Societe Generale, which received $4.1 billion, while Germany's Deutsche Bank received $2.6 billion and Goldman Sachs took $2.5 billion. Merrill Lynch and Bank of America got, between them, $2 billion.
Over the same period, the insurer paid $43.7 billion to securities lending counterparties. Chief among these was U.K.-based Barclays PLC (BCS:
Barclays PLC
 Last: 5.62-0.74-11.64%
4:00pm 03/20/2009
Delayed quote data
Sponsored by:
BCS
 5.62, -0.74, -11.6%)
, which received $7 billion. Deutsche Bank got $6.4 billion, as did the combination of Bank of America and Merrill Lynch.
Another $27.1 billion went for payouts made to cancel some CDS contracts. The top recipients of these monies were Societe Generale and Goldman Sachs, who received $6.9 billion and $5.6 billion, respectively. See AIG's disclosures in full.
The remainder of the $173 billion of taxpayer money that AIG has received has been used to repay debt, boost capital levels at some of its units and fund vehicles created to wind down its derivatives contracts.
AIG's shares, once part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, have fallen more than 99% from their peak early in 2007.
The announcement over bailout payments came as the company became embroiled in a row over bonus payments to employees at AIG Financial Products, the unit largely responsible for its near collapse last year.
The decision to pay around $450 million in bonuses elicited howls of protest in Washington.
President Barack Obama said on Monday that his administration will attempt to block the bonuses.
"This isn't just a matter of dollars and cents. It's about our fundamental values," said Obama. See full story.
On Sunday Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, called on the government to examine whether the bonuses can be legally recovered. See full story. End of Story
Sam Mamudi is a MarketWatch reporter in New York.
Simon Kennedy is the City correspondent for MarketWatch in London.

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