The
Vampire Squid Tells Us How to Vote
Lloyd Blankfein charges for investment advice — but
his political wisdom is free
By Matt Taibbi
February 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Rolling
Stone" -
Lloyd
Blankfein, Chief Executive Cephalopod of Goldman
Sachs,
issued a warning about the Bernie Sanders
campaign this week.
"This has
the potential to be a dangerous moment," he said on
CNBC's Squawk Box.
The Lloyd
was peeved that Sanders, whom he's never met,
singled him out in a debate last week. "Another kid
from Brooklyn, how about that," he lamented.
He ranted
about how frightening it is that a candidate like
Sanders, who seems to have no interest in
"compromising" with Wall Street, could become so
popular.
"Could you
imagine," he asked, "if the Jeffersons and Hamiltons
came in with a total pledge and commitment to never
compromise with the other side?"
The
slobbering Squawk Box hosts went on to
propose firing all the academics in the country,
because clearly it is their fault that so many young
people are willing to support a socialist.
"I'm
ready," said co-host Joe Kernen, "to send my
daughter to Brigham Young or Liberty or something."
Then
Kernen, Becky Quick and Blankfein all made jokes
about how socialism doesn't work and how all those
Berniebots should take a trip to Cuba.
"The best
real-time experiment is, I went to Cuba," said
Lloyd.
"I haven't
been," Kernen said proudly.
"You should
go," said Lloyd. "You go there, stop in Miami and
you just see the Cuban community and how much wealth
they've generated.
Of course
the politics of Sanders is closer to what you'd find
in Sweden or Denmark than Cuba, but they were
rolling by then.
Lloyd added
that the current popular discontent with Wall Street
was just something that happens randomly, like the
weather. "There's a pendulum that happens in markets
and it happens in political economy as well," he
said.
He added
that he didn't want to pick a candidate because "I
don't want to help or hurt anybody by giving an
endorsement."
For people
who so very pleased with themselves for ostensibly
being so much smarter than everyone else, people
like Blankfein are oddly uncreative when it comes to
deflecting criticism.
The people
who don't like them are always overemotional
communists. All those young people who are flocking
to the Sanders campaign? Dupes, misled by dumb
professors who've never been to Cuba.
And their
anger toward Wall Street? Causeless and random, just
a bunch of folks riding an emotional pendulum that
brainlessly swings back and forth. Don't take it
personally, people are just moody that way.
Bill
Clinton apparently agrees. A story about the former
president's thoughts on the subject appeared in
Stress Test, the vile battle
memoir of the financial crisis penned by infamous
Wall Street toady and former treasury secretary Tim
Geithner.
In the
book, Timmy goes on at length about how sad it made
him that the public was so upset about the bailouts
and other policies he engineered to make the
Blankfeins of the world whole again. Looking for a
way to not feel so hated, he went to Clinton to
"discuss the politics of populism with the master
practitioner."
It's an
important detail. Geithner's instinct for figuring
out how to deal with ordinary people was not to go
talk to any, but instead to talk to someone who'd
had success marketing himself to them.
This
squares with accounts I heard after 2008, about the
Treasury Department in the Geithner years. In one
story I remember, it took a presentation from a
major retail company about expected lower holiday
spending levels to enlighten Geithner's staff as to
the level of economic pain in the population. Until
they saw the graphs from executives, they had no
clue.
Anyway,
according to his book, Geithner got good advice from
Clinton. The former president advised him to press
for tax hikes on the rich, but to "make sure I
didn't look like I was happy about it." Then Clinton
added that Timmy shouldn't take the public-anger
thing too hard:
"You could
take Lloyd Blankfein in an alley and slit his
throat, and it would satisfy them for about two
days," Clinton said. "Then the blood lust would rise
again."
Ordinary
people aren't just overemotional and dumb, they're
also zombies! They don't have grievances, just blood
lusts.
The
attitude shared by Lloyd and Geithner and Bill
Clinton is that the mindless quality of public
discontent means that there's no point in worrying
about it, or negotiating with it. This is funny
because Blankfein is the one complaining that people
like Sanders and his followers don't want to
compromise with him.
Lloyd
apparently thinks politicians should naturally
reside in a state of more or less constant
accommodation with Wall Street. Thomas Jefferson
would have compromised with us, he says!
One can
assume that his model of a "compromising" politician
is Hillary Clinton, who took $675,000 to
give three speeches to his company. "Look, I
make speeches to lots of groups," Hillary explained.
"I told them what I thought."
Asked by
Anderson Cooper if she needed to take $675,000 to
tell Goldman what she "thought," Hillary shrugged.
"I don't know," she said. "That's what they were
offering."
Even more
significant than the $675,000 Hillary took from
Goldman, or the
$30 million in speaking income she and her husband
received combined in the last 16 months, is
the account of what Hillary apparently told
Goldman she "thought" during those speeches.
According
to Politico, who spoke to several
attendees, Hillary used the opportunity to tell the
bankers in attendance that the "banker-bashing so
popular within both parties was unproductive and
indeed foolish."
She added
that the proper attitude should be, "We all got into
this mess together, and we're all going to have to
work together to get out of it."
This
squares with Geithner's account of what Bill Clinton
said. The former president told Geithner that
slitting Lloyd's throat would only satisfy "them"
for about two days. Them was all those
pissed-off regular people, and the we or
us were politicians like himself and
Geithner.
In her
speech, Hillary's we included the
executives in her audience. Her message was
basically that It Takes a Village to create a
financial crisis. This was the Robin Williams
breakthrough scene in Good Will Hunting,
with Hillary putting a hand on the Goldmanites'
shoulders, telling them, "It's not your fault. It's
not your fault."
But it was
their fault. The crash was caused by a tiny handful
of people who spent years hogging fortunes through a
bluntly criminal scheme in the home lending markets.
The FBI
warned back in 2004 of an "epidemic" of mortgage
fraud that could have an "impact as big as the S&L
crisis," but those warnings were ignored.
What the
FBI was talking about back then mainly had to do
with smaller local lending operations that were
systematically creating risky home loans, falsifying
credit applications to get unworthy borrowers into
mortgages they couldn't afford.
What they
didn't understand back then is that the impetus for
that criminal activity was the willingness of
massive banking institutions on Wall Street to buy
up those bad loans in bulk. They created a market
for those fraudulent loans, bought billions' worth
of them from local lenders, and then chopped up and
resold those bad loans to pension funds, unions and
other suckers.
The
"village" didn't do this. Lloyd Blankfein and his
buddies did this. (Goldman
just a few weeks ago reached a deal to pay a
$5.1 billion settlement to cover its history of
selling bad loans to unsuspecting investors, joining
Bank of America, Citi, JP Morgan Chase and others).
People
aren't pissed just to be pissed. They're mad because
a tiny group of crooks on Wall Street built
themselves beach houses in the Hamptons through a
crude fraud scheme that decimated their retirement
funds, caused property values in their neighborhoods
to collapse and caused over four million people to
be put in foreclosure.
And they're
particularly mad that they got asked to pay for this
criminal irresponsibility with bailouts funded with
their tax dollars.
What the
Clintons have done by turning their political
careers into a vast moneymaking enterprise, it's not
a value-neutral activity. The money isn't just about
buying influence. The money also physically moves
people, from one side of an imaginary line to
another.
You will
never catch Bernie Sanders standing in a room as a
paid guest of a bank under investigation for ripping
billions off pensioners and investors, addressing
the audience in the first-person plural. He doesn't
spend enough time with that kind of crowd to be so
colloquial.
The
Clintons meanwhile have by now taken so much money
that when they stand in a room full of millionaires
and billionaires, they can use the word "we" and not
have it sound odd. The money has irrevocably moved
them to that side of the ropeline. On that side of
the line, public anger isn't legitimate, but
something to be managed and waited out, just as
Lloyd suggests.
When people
like Blankfein tell us they don't take criticism
personally, what they're saying is that it's too
brainless and irrational to be taken any other way.
He means to be insulting. And we should all take it
that way.
© 2016
Rolling Stone |