MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Keating

Keating 5 ring a bell?

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The Central Virginia Progressive-The DAVISReport sent us this message:

Dick Cheney with lipstick in her best wink wink, nod nod, curtsy curtsy, wiggle wiggle, bratty girl whine is really desperate to turn this election around on fear and smear politics.

Fact is Obama’s connection to William Ayers has been dissected to death and it comes down to the happenstance of serving on the same board with a university professor who has a criminal history dating back 40 yrs and not relevant to the context of their crossing paths in the context of his life today as a university professor.

Like a good little pit bill she is trying real hard to gain some traction with her flirty little smear and fear act (that is so demeaning to woman) but Americans are a little too preoccupied with real crisis like vaporizing portfolios and melting mortgage houses to engage.

It does seem a bit surprising and arrogant however, that McCain would send her on this witch hunt on his behalf considering his own embarrassing involvement in the Keating 5 scandal. You’d think he’d understand the damage of innuendo and the guilt by association of questionable relationships.

Thing is, he wasn’t 8 yrs old when the crimes occurred. More on the Keating 5 scandal on the link below, courtesy of the L.A. Times

The DAVISReport

Keating 5 ring a bell? – Los Angeles Times

Posted by www.EileenDavis.blogspot.com The Davis Report – The Voice of Central Virginia and the Capital City.

A sucker . . . born every minute

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First came the looting of savings and loans across the nation, which, by the standard of today’s economic failures, was a quaint little hold-up.

It still gave us this delicious title: The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One by William K. Black.

Have you heard of a better title for anything?

Maybe “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.”

But here, on pulp and in black and white, Black shows how our elected officials conspired with rogues to rob depositors, investors and workers of earnings and life savings.

Republican presidential nominee John McCain was there, acted as Charles Keating’s lookout for regulators.

Black, as Director of Litigation for the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, investigated the looting of the savings and loans industry. He reveals in his book how Keating and hundreds of other S&L rogues took advantage of a weak regulatory environment to perpetrate accounting fraud on a massive scale. In his expert insider’s account of the savings and loan debacle of the 1980s, Black shows how corrupt corporate executives—in collusion with regulators—defrauded  whole industries for their own personal gain.

Using the latest advances in criminology and economics, Black develops a theory of why “control fraud”—looting a company for personal profit—tends to occur in waves that make financial markets deeply inefficient.

He then pointed out how CEOs, using the same destructively fraudulent tactics, caused the business failures of the early 2000s that continue until today.

His prescription for stopping the periodic looting is active, independent regulators.

McCain, although he’s making different noise today, calls himself a free marketer still. He wants no regulations of the markets or industry.

Even as McCain was escaping censure by the skin of his teeth in the savings and loans debacle, McCain’s best bud in the United States Senate, Phil Gramm, was stalking a bigger quarry: Glass-Steagall Act.

Improper banking activities, such as commercial banks’ involvement in the stock market, was blamed for the 1929 stock market crash that led to the Great Depression. To prevent another depression, Congress passed the Glass-Steagall Act, which separated investment and commercial banking activities. The nation recovered, these industries functioned the way they were supposed and the American economy grew strong again.

Phil Gramm, who is now one of Sen. McCain campaign’s most influential economic advisors, fought to destroy Glass-Steagall and break the back of the American workers. It took him years but he eventually, in 1999, succeeded in passing the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.

Out of that Gramm law flowed the calamitous collapses that followed–Enron, WorldCom, ImClone, Tyco, followed in recent days by the demise of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Lehmann Bros., Merrill Lynch, and, momentarily, AIG should soon follow.

The collapses, of course, mean ruined the lives of countless investors, depositors, and employees.

Another McCain top economic advisor is Carly Fiorina who, when she was CEO of Hewlett-Packard, nearly drove the company into the ground after forcing through a controversial merger with Compaq Computers. By the time she left in 2005, the company lost half its value and suffered heavy job losses.

Somebody needs to ask McCain if he subscribe to Fiorina’s attitude about American workers, which she relayed to members of Congress on January 7, 2004:

“There is no job that is America’s God-given right anymore. We have to compete for jobs as a nation.”

The statement infuriated workers who felt that lower wages overseas encouraged U.S. corporations to use less-qualified, offshore workers, instead of better-qualified American ones.

The assaults on American workers by corporations, aided by elected officials who should be looking out for them, continue, of course. Industry after industry have devalued work that sustained American communities and shipped those jobs overseas to countries.

Unions, especially after World War II, led the growth of the American middle class, the largest economic expansion in history.

Elected leaders like McCain, acting as handmaidens for American corporations, against led the assault on unions and the jobs that sustained us as a nation.

But, if John McCain is now to be believed, he is going to be the bulwark that American families and workers should rely on. He had this to say at a rally in Florida today:

Mr. McCain vowed to take aim at what he called the “unbridled corruption and greed that caused the crisis on Wall Street.’’

And, guess how he plans to do this?

Yep, McCain wants to set up a commission to study the problem. You know, like the 9/11 Commission, whose recommendations were largely ignored by the administration that commissioned it.

What is the saying, there’s a sucker born every minute?

McCain knows by experience that Americans are suckers and that they will fall for anything. Afterall, how does a man who wallows in corruption and debacle after debacle, who is surrounded by the very worst offenders of what ails our nation, come out smelling like a rose every time, despite never changing his ways?

Doesn’t McCain shine bright as a paragon of virtue despite bedding down with corporate lobbyists preying on Americans even as we speak?

“K-e-a-t-i-n-g-5”

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AP News Dispatch:

McCain: Greed created Wall Street’s problems, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Filed at 12:52 p.m. ET

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Republican presidential candidate John McCain says Wall Street’s financial turmoil is the result of unchecked corporate greed.The Republican says government must protect the public from investment schemes too complex for people to understand or regulate.McCain told a crowd of several thousand at a rally Tuesday in Tampa, Florida, that people have the right to know when their jobs and pensions and the entire economy are, in his words, ”being put at risk by recklessness on Wall Street.”

McCain has a reputation as a free-marketeer, but he says that Washington regulatory agencies need to be overhauled.

Instead of a dozen federal agencies behaving badly, he says the nation needs the best ones doing the right job.

Let me see if I follow this: The problem is corporate greed and John McCain is the solution?

The same John McCain? Certainly not the same McCain who, even now, is swaddled daily by corporate lobbyists. That McCain? Maybe he’ll appoint Charles Keating to help him police Wall Street. You know, the Keating who looted Lincoln Savings while McCain and four other United States senators acted at lookouts.

This is from Wikipedia:

In 1989, American Continental Corporation, the parent of Lincoln Savings, went bankrupt. More than 21,000 investors, most of them elderly, lost their life savings (in total about $285 million.) This occurred largely because they held securities backed by the parent company rather than deposits in the federally-insured institution — a distinction apparently lost on many if not most depositors until it was too late. The federal government covered almost $3 billion of Lincoln’s losses when it seized the institution. Many creditors were made whole, and the government then attempted to liquidate the seized assets through its Resolution Trust Corporation, often at pennies on the dollar compared to what the property had allegedly been worth and the valuation at which loans against it had been made.

In 1989, Keating was subpoenaed to testify before the House Banking Committee, but refused to answer questions, invoking his right against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

McCain and his wife Cindy, by their own accounts, stayed at Keating’s Bahamas vacation home about ten times. All the while, McCain was exercising influence to keep federal regulators off Keating’s back.

“The Best Way to Rob a Bank Is to Own One” is the title of the book written about the exploits of Keating and his U.S. Senate hand-holders.

How John McCain could utter the words “greed” and not fear being struck dead by lightning is beyond me.