10
Aug

Subprime or Subcrime? Time To Investigate and Prosecute

Today’s Washington Post:

“Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets

The turmoil in the U.S. credit markets turned global Thursday, prompting central banks in Europe and the United States to pump more than $150 billion into the financial system to keep it operating smoothly.”

The Sub-Prime Crisis Is Really A “Sub-Crime” Crisis. It Is Time To Investigate and Prosecute This Scandal.

There comes a time when the frame of a news story changes. It happened in Iraq when the “war for Iraqi freedom” became seen as a bloody occupation, not a beneficent liberation. It is happening as the war on terror is increasingly perceived as a war of error, and when voting problems are reframed as electoral fraud.

And it will happen in the economic arena too, when we see the “subprime” credit crunch for what it is: a sub-crime ponzi scheme in which millions of people are losing their homes because of criminal and fraudulent tactics used by financial institutions that pose as respectable players in a highly rigged casino-like market system.

Suddenly, after years of denial and inattention, the press has discovered what they call “the credit crisis.” Vague words like “woes” are still being used to mask a financial calamity that some analysts are already calling an apocalypse, as lenders go under and the Stock Market melts downs.

A French bank froze BILLIONS Thursday saying, “The complete evaporation of liquidity in certain market segments of the U.S. securitization market has made it impossible to value certain assets.” Translation from the French: We are all in deep shit.

On Thursday morning, President Bush was asked about this at a press conference. He blamed borrowers for not understanding the documents they signed. If you have ever tried to read the documents banks prepare for mortgage closings, you will know that they are written by risk minimizing lawyers to be too long and dense to be understood. (Later in the day, the market reacted to his upbeat assessment with the Dow plunging 387 points.)

The financial insiders who watched were more than skeptical. Here are some quotes from a discussion on the Mi-implode website. One of the discussants calls our fearless leader, “President Pumkinhead:”

“Why’d president pumpkinhead have a news conference in the morning? Probably hoping no one would see it and he wouldn’t have to lie to as many people.”

Another described what he was watching with more than disbelief:

“He’s being hit with a lot of questions on mortgages, credit crisis, and the economy… and of course the economy is ‘in for a soft landing’, he’s been assured by the treasury that ‘there is plenty of liquidity’, yadda-yadda-yadda.
But he is stumbling over his words more then usual, not making eye contact, not finishing his sentences… and when he wonders a bit, he quickly goes back on script. It is very odd to watch, to say the least.”

“Odd?” Not for him, but, of course, there are more than one man to hold accountable. This is a deeper structural problem that implicates a whole industry and the process of “financialization” it promotes. This crisis is an example of what goes around comes around as the companies that suspended their usual “standards” and “rules” and self-styled “due diligence” knowingly sucked money out of people with poor credit records and who now find their own companies imploding and collapsing worldwide. Many of the victims are people of color. They were targeted by predators.

Underscore that this was done deliberately, with forethought and malice, a well orchestrated plan to create armies of “suckers” and steal—yes, I said it—their monies to leverage even bigger deals. Their greed had no limits, until the scheme collapsed.

Behind it all were the so-called “Masters of the Universe,” the wise men of Wall Street who worked behind the scenes to turn mortgage brokers and small lenders into part of what will one day be seen as a criminal network worthy of prosecution under the RICCO conspiracy laws used against the mob and drug dealers.

Read this account from the Wall Street Journal:

“Lou Barnes, co-owner of a small Colorado mortgage bank called Boulder West Inc., has been in the mortgage business since the late 1970s. For most of that time, a borrower had to fully document his income. Lenders offered the first no-documentation loans in the mid-1990s, but for no more than 70% of the value of the house being purchased. A few years back, he says, that began to change as Wall Street investment banks and wholesalers demanded ever more mortgages from even the least creditworthy — or ’subprime’ — customers.

All of us felt the suction from Wall Street. One day you would get an email saying, ‘We will buy no-doc loans at 95% loan-to-value,’ and an old-timer like me had never seen one,’ says Mr. Barnes. ‘It wasn’t long before the no-doc emails said 100%.’”

You don’t read many accounts like this of businessmen bashing Wall Street in the business press. Could it all have been stopped? Of course, if there were real regulators and rules protecting consumers and the public interest. And if there was a social movement that championed exonomic justice.

And also, if there were investigative journalists like the ones who just wrote a series on the “debacle” of the “debt bomb” in the Journal – but after the collapse, not before. And what do they admit now? That this is NOT just a subprime problem but far more serious and global.

They note that “credit problems once seen as isolated to a few subprime-mortgage lenders are beginning to propagate across markets and borders in unpredicted ways and degrees. A system designed to distribute and absorb risk might, instead, have bred it, by making it so easy for investors to buy complex securities they didn’t fully understand. And the interconnectedness of markets could mean that a sudden change in sentiment by investors in all sorts of markets could destabilize the financial system and hurt economic growth.”

Will the rest of the media follow up and explain what is really going on?

This is very serious folks, but far too many progressives, activists and politicians alike haven’t spoken out about the crime behind this rolling scandal. We should be calling for major debt reform in America, like Bono advocates for Africa. We should demand criminal penalties for the profiteers who started out to enrich themselves and seem to have ended up destroying the very system they misused. We should press the Congress to use its subpoena power to investigate the corporate criminals and their government enablers.

When they propose a bailout, we should demand a “jailout.” The Washington Post reports that the US has started a bail out “pumping more than $150 billion into the financial system to keep it operating smoothly.” Where is this money coming from? Not from the military budget you can be sure.

Blogger Carolyn Baker writes that we all must become more engaged with these issues saying she is:

“profoundly aware of the role of economic issues-perhaps more than militarism, healthcare, education, politics, or any other institution, in the dead-ahead demise of empire.

I also notice that few in the left-liberal end of the political spectrum have a firm grasp on economic issues which I suspect comes from a fundamental polarization between activism and financial intelligence.”

She writes about a book by a conservative named Michael Panzner called “Financial Armageddon” criticizing his analysis as limited, and by extension, many of the left’s avoidance of these issues as well.

She writes: “What is most disturbing to me about the book is what appears to be a total lack of perception regarding the role of fraud, theft, and malicious intent in the American and global financial train wreck which has been exacerbating over recent decades.”

Indeed! What are we going to do about this? How about starting with becoming more aware?

News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org and directed the new film “IN DEBT WE TRUST: America Before The Bubble Bursts.” (Indebtwetrust.com). Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org. To get involved, visit Stopthesqueeze.org

Letter: Jim Millrer correcting my view that a different bomb was used on Nagasaki.

That’s what I always thought (and was taught) too…but actually folks, the Nagasaki bomb was the same design as the one tested earlier that July in the New Mexico desert. The first Hiroshima bomb was the untested design - considered very likely to work because it was considerably simpler than the implosion model. It could not be tested because there was only enough uranium-235 for one bomb. The second bomb, dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9, was code-named “Fat Man”, and was a plutonium bomb of the type tested at Trinity.

So much for the weak excuse that the reason for Nagasaki was to test a different model. We had it, so we used it.

Sincerely,
Jim Miller
www.dreamboxmedia.com

11 Responses to “Subprime or Subcrime? Time To Investigate and Prosecute”

  1. 1
    Bob Johnson Says:

    I am unsure what the deal is with the subprime situation. Yes some people reached for the brass ring to get a home and will be foreclosed and bankrupt. One can recover from that, I did. A number of banking people will lose their butts. Can’t get upset over them - should I? Some investors will lose money, but that happens all the time, doesn’t it. So somebody please explain why this is such a big deal. By the way, is Mr Klugman considered a liberal leaning economist.
    And to JM; For those of us who were related to Marines destined to invade Japan (my father for one), we were more happy with the bombs. We were not too upset with Japanese deaths either considering their multitude of atrocities. Of course, later we learned the evils of radiation. I seem to have spent most of my life under the fear.
    Well we will survive or we won’t and neither result is good nor bad.

  2. 2
    Hartley Pleshaw Says:

    Dear Danny:

    Anyone who has read your blog over the past three years, and/or has seen “In Debt We Trust,” already knew all this was coming. You will probably go down in history as one of the great prophets of our age–not that it will make you (or anyone else) feel any better when the brutal crunch time comes.

    My intense admiration for you notwithstanding, it should be pointed out that there were and are others who saw the future (soon to be the present): Paul Craig Roberts of “Counterpunch” and–yes, the truth must be acknowledged from whatever source–Pat Buchanan of “The American Conservative.” (Yes, THAT Pat Buchanan, believe it or not.)

    With rare exceptions like yourself, I’m afraid its true that the Left isn’t into economic issues as much as it should be. I think the Left’s attitude on business and economics often mirrors that of the Right toward “the media”: it’s the enemy’s game. so why even bother with it? Unfortunately, like it or not, this is a game we all must play, and that, very soon, a lot of us are going to be big losers in, through no fault of our own.

    Well, maybe there is some fault to be attached. The Left–that is, the trendy Hollywood/Martha’s Vineyard “Left”–often seems far more interested in non-economic issues than matters of economics and class–hardly surprising, when one considers the prosperous waters in which they swim. Those of us who have advocated a far more class-based activism through the years (here I can pat myself on the back; I worked on the presidential campaign of the last white populist of the Left, Fred Harris, in 1976) are about to vindicated–with, I’m afraid, a vengeance.

    Well, you tried. You may have left Boston a generation ago, but when the bubble bursts, you’ll be remembered as the Paul Revere of the coming cataclysm. I just hope your warnings haven’t come too late.

    Yours in Worry,
    Hartley Pleshaw

  3. 3
    Stephen Bishop Says:

    Thank you for accurately depicting the current crisis. Of course Bush downplays it. It was his doing to see that “All Americans should enjoy prosperity by owning their own home.”

    Bush’s close friend, Roland Arnall became a billionaire by robbing the public with mortgage boiler rooms. Bush appointed him Ambassador to the Netherlands.

  4. 4
    Dwayne Chandler Says:

    Hello, Danny.
    Hang all the bastards.
    Give them the gift that truly
    keeps on giving; the most
    painful and merciless death
    possible.
    It’s what fate is about to
    gift wrap and hand deliver
    to us.
    Fuck em’!
    What is for us is for them.
    Uh, peace on Earth, goodwill
    to all and some other bullshit
    I cannot recall.

    Most sincerely and lovingly,
    Dwayne Chandler; off duty,
    out of uniform, drinking scotch.

  5. 5
    Dwayne Chandler Says:

    Don’t bother going to cnn.com, there
    is absolutely nothing openly posted
    about this crisis.
    You can use their search function to
    dig for information, but it’s all dated.
    Maybe I’ll slide my profane loving ass
    over to msnbc.com. At least I can watch the clip of Jim Cramer going postal over and over again; dishing the dirt, dropping dimes, putting his Wall St. buddies on Front St.

    Most lovingly, Dwayne Chandler.

    Almost forgot, hang all the fuckers.

  6. 6
    Dwayne Chandler Says:

    Nope, nothing at msnbc.com either;
    their “top news” stories were
    updated fourteen minutes ago
    (approx. 1:43 pm, EST, 11Aug07).
    Ha, ha, ha, so fucking funny!
    Right Billy?
    You ain’t afraid of no man.
    uh, Billy says, “we’re all gonna die.”

  7. 7
    mrsp Says:

    I know little of the world financial markets, hedge funds, etc. but I’m certain the intended consequences of this greed will be to profit from the failure…somehow they’ll manage it while claiming it’s UN-intended and the fault of the serfs. Nice one pumpkinhead, blame your victims. The world is waiting for karma to kick in.

  8. 8
    Ernie from Phoenix Says:

    P L E A S E !!! get your facts straight!!

    I’m a typical “NO DOC guy”. My credit history from 1970 is outstanding.– never missed or late on anything. I’ve had some NO DOC loans 2003-2004, and paid them off.

    I’ve seen many FULL DOC loans go to foreclosure and one would have expected it when the loans were being made. People are ignoring credit histories. People get NO DOC loans because they have earned exceptionaly good credit.

    It’s the usual “get it wrong” hysteria of mass media and public opinion.

  9. 9
    Danny Says:

    Ernie—Don’t confuse your personal credit history and experience with the sub prime subcrime. Please read more about in every news outlet worldwide. Its not about no docs–its about predatory practices. I am hardky the only one saying it.

  10. 10
    Stephen Bishop Says:

    15. It was a common and open practice at Ameriquest for Account Executives
    to forge or alter borrower information or loan documents. For example, I saw Account
    Executives openly engage in conduct such as altering borrowers’ W-2 Forms or pay stubs,
    photocopying borrower signatures and copying them onto other, unsigned documents, and
    similar conduct.
    16. The culture at Ameriquest encouraged Account Executives to engage in
    any conduct necessary to close the loan, to close the loan as quickly as possible, and to maximize
    the total loan amount.
    17. I was taught and encouraged to close loans without regard to the
    customers’ financial ability to make payments on the loan.

    Declaration of Mark Bomchill

  11. 11
    Sheila Bilyeu Says:

    I couln’t find another way to contact you. Would you consider trying to help me make money on line for my independent candidacy; I am trying to get third party support regarding running for President; my website was simply constructed by me since I didn’t know much about it:sheilaforpresident.com
    Thank you. If you are not interested do you know of anyone or how would you try to find someone to help?
    sheilabilyeu@yahoo.com
    P.S. I really enjoyed hearing you this morning on Democracy Now.

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