Hillary Clinton Calls For ‘Toppling’ the 1%…While Being
Bankrolled by the 1%
By Nick Bernabe
April 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "AM"
- This really happened. As crazy as it sounds, Hillary Clinton is trying
to repackage her war-torn
reputation into a populist spitting image of progressive icon Elizabeth
Warren. The New
York Times reports that“Mrs.
Clinton pointed at the top category and said the economy required a ‘toppling’
of the wealthiest 1 percent, according to several people who were briefed on
Mrs. Clinton’s policy discussions.”The New
York Times and Huffington
Post didn’t bother asking the questions that should have been asked,
with their reporting easily summed up by the opening line in the HuffPo peice: “Hillary
Clinton believes that strengthening the middle class and alleviating income
inequality will require ‘toppling’ the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans,
according to a
New York Times profile published on Tuesday.” That statement, so far,
has gone relatively unquestioned by the corporate media.
But, as we all know, politicians tend to say things when
they’re campaigning that differ greatly from what they actually do in real life.
Firstly, Hillary Clinton’s stance that the 1% needs to be toppled goes directly
against the interests of her biggest financiers. Behold her greatest campaign
contributors since 1989 below:
A few familiar
faces — Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Time Warner, 21st Century Fox
(?) — which all happen to fall under the 1% category that Hillary is now
claiming to despise. But Wall Street knows the name of the game, it is their game
now after all, isn’t it? Politico asked
them what they thought about Hillary’s pseudo-populist agenda a few days ago:
Back in Manhattan, the hedge fund managers who’ve long
been part of her political and fundraising networks aren’t sweating the
putdown and aren’t worrying about their take-home pay just yet.
It’s ‘just politics,’ said one major Democratic donor
on Wall Street, explaining that some of Clinton’s Wall Street supporters
doubt she would push hard for closing the carried-interest loophole as
president, a policy she promoted when she last ran in 2008.
William Cohan at Politico added,
Down on Wall Street they don’t believe it for a
minute. While the finance industry does genuinely hate Warren, the big
bankers love Clinton, and by and large they badly want her to be president.
Many of the rich and powerful in the financial industry—among them, Goldman
Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, Tom Nides, a
powerful vice chairman at Morgan Stanley, and the heads of JPMorganChase and
Bank of America—consider Clinton a pragmatic problem-solver not prone to
populist rhetoric. To them, she’s someone who gets the idea that we all
benefit if Wall Street and American business thrive. What about her forays
into fiery rhetoric? They dismiss it quickly as political maneuvers. None of
them think she really means her populism.
This must be some kind of inside joke.
Wall Street knows it’s all politics. They continue funneling
money into her campaign knowing that once she gets into office everything will
be just fine for the 1%. These superficial, pseudo-populist calls for
empowerment of the common working American will fall to the wayside once she’s
elected. Hillary Clinton’s campaign is expected to raise $2 billion dollars
during her 2016 presidential run. A large portion of that money is expected to
come from two of her closest support groups in the private sector: Wall
Street and the military-industrial-complex.
Not exactly surprising considering her cozy
ties to the banking industry and her track record of supporting
pretty much every warAmerica has been in since she became a politician.
Via
TheAntiMedia.org