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MY FAVORITE POPULIST

BORROWED OPINIONS

WALL ST. BUSY SELECTING OUR PRESIDENT – by Jim Hightower 

The top presidential candidates of both political parties are meeting with voters in a key primary, promising to help them on the issues they care about.

Are they in Iowa? No. New Hampshire? Uh-uh. California? Nowhere near it. So, where? Wall Street.

While regular citizens won't start voting on the presidential contenders until January, an intensive, closed-door primary has already been taking place inside the confines of investment banks, hedge funds, and other financial institutions in Manhattan. Reporters are not allowed in, candidates don't issue press releases about their appearances, and there is no disclosure about what the presidential wannabes pledge to these elite banking interests in order to gain their financial backing. It's strictly a private campaign - albeit with enormous public impact.

Bear Stearns, for example, has had its own presidential tour, summoning seven major candidates to its Midtown headquarters for exclusive presentations and Q&A sessions with its managing partners. If you're just a plain ol' voter, you'd be lucky to get a handshake with any of these aspirants, but this financial conglomerate can command its own little tête-à-tête with Romney, Clinton, Giuliani, Obama, Thompson, and others.

Business Week magazine reports that these Wall Street barons not only want to get commitments on issues like global trade and tax cuts, but they also use the private sessions to measure the candidates' ability to "make smart decisions in times of uncertainty, a trait bankers and traders prize in themselves."

Wait a minute! Aren't these the same people who brought us Enron, NAFTA, offshoring, exorbitant credit card fees, dependency on oil, pension collapses, and other "smart decisions?" Indeed, isn't Bear Stearns itself butt deep in the ongoing subprime mortgage disaster?

Why should anyone listen to them?

Vaughn Tolle said:
 
"If you've got the money, honey, I've got the time...."
 
posted 768 days ago
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Danny said:
 
Perceived or real, I have my opinion on it, people believe that politics any more is nothing more than strictly about money. Not about those who maybe don't contribute large sums of money to their candidate(s)/party of choice. Therefore, politicians help to convince the public of the perceived by doing just what the public thinks really happens.

 
posted 768 days ago
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Rox said:
 
IOW, they're living up to our expectations, huh, Danny? Sounds reasonable. LOL
 
posted 768 days ago
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lindainks55 said:
 
OT - but I want to tell you Danny it's good to see you are ONLY busy and all is OK otherwise!
 
posted 768 days ago
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Danny said:
 
Rox,

It is what I call, the lowering of expectations. If they are lowered enough, then anything positive(no matter how small or insignificant) seems like the greatest thing since sliced bread. ;)

Linda,

Yes, all is well. I had to take a break from writing code and fixing code for this software project. Quite a bit depends on this working, if it doesn't work there will be a large population of users who won't be able to do anything and we can't have that.
 
posted 768 days ago
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