WE'VE Been had bad . . . again!
- By l.t. Dravis
- Published 12/21/2008
l.t. Dravis
I created and have written the nationally distributed marketing newsletter, BOTH SIDES NOW, since 2003. I authored two books, BOTH SIDES NOW, Sell Like Professional Athletes Win and DEATH OF A SALES MANAGER. In 2008, I introduced a daily column for national syndication to newspapers.
WASHINGTON,
D.C. – Sunday, December 21, 2008 – We’ve been had bad . . . again!
The Associated Press reports that two
supposedly smart guys, Treasury Secretary Henry (Hank) Merritt Paulson,
Jr. (B.A. in English from Dartmouth and an MBA from Harvard and former Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of Goldman Sachs) and his bagman, Neel
Kashkari (Bachelor’s degree in Engineering, University of Illinois; Master’s
degree in Engineering, University of Illinois, and Master’s degree in Business
Administration, Wharton School of Business) have handed out nearly 1.6 billion
taxpayer dollars to banks that used the money for cash bonuses, chauffeurs,
company jets, country club memberships, multi-million dollar executive pay
packages, salaries and stock options.
Remember
last September 21, when Treasury Secretary Paulson so somberly urged Congress
to move quickly to give him 700 billion taxpayer dollars to bailout financial
firms?
Paulson
went on MEET THE PRESS and justified the historic bailout by saying, “Credit
markets are still very fragile right now and frozen. We need to deal with this
and deal with it quickly.”
The
Treasury Secretary also said, “I am convinced that this bold approach will cost
American families far less than the alternative – a continuing series of
financial institution failures and frozen credit markets unable to fund
economic expansion. The financial security of all Americans depends on our
ability to restore our financial institutions to a sound footing.”
‘Hank’
didn’t say a word about giving banks $1.6 billion for cash bonuses, chauffeurs,
company jets, country club memberships, multi-million dollar executive pay
packages, salaries and stock options.
George
W. Bush, the man who has all the financial expertise in the free world at his
fingertips said, “My first instinct (sic) was to let the market work.” But
then, according to White House insiders, Bush actually listened to some of his
financial advisors, evidently changed his mind, and said, “a robust and strong
bailout was necessary.”
Bush
went on to explain to all of us who wouldn’t otherwise understand by saying,
“It is a big package because it was a big problem.”
And,
then, if that wasn’t enough, the 43rd President made sure we were
able to understand the complexity of his thought process by letting us know
that “The risk of doing nothing far outweighed the risk of the package.”
Thank
you, Mr.
But,
wait a minute . . . there was nothing in Bush’s statement about giving banks
$1.6 billion for cash bonuses, chauffeurs, company jets, country club
memberships, multi-million dollar executive pay packages, salaries and stock
options.
Hmmm.
Okay,
let’s give these guys the benefit of the doubt and take a hard look at where we
are now . . . perhaps I’m being too picky about Paulson and Kashkari handing
out $1.6 billion so banks could pay for cash bonuses, chauffeurs, company jets,
country club memberships, multi-million dollar executive pay packages, salaries
and stock options.
Three
months after Paulson urged Congress to give him $700 billion, Paulson and
Kashkari have handed out $350 billion.
How
much better off is our economy today?
Paulson
said the bailout was necessary to prevent a ‘series of financial institution
failures’?
How’s
that working for us?
Since
Paulson got his $350 billion, the following financial institutions failed: Franklin
Bank (Houston), Security Pacific Bank (Los Angeles), Community Bank
(Loganville, Georgia), Downey Savings & Loan (Newport Beach, California),
PFF Bank and Trust (Pomona, California), First Georgia Community Bank (Jackson,
Georgia), Haven Trust Bank (Duluth, Georgia), and Sanderson State Bank
(Sanderson, Texas).
Okay
. . . but, surely, the inflow of $350 billion in taxpayer money into bank
coffers has eased the credit crunch, hasn’t it?
Yes
or no?
No.
Why?
Because
nothing in the bailout bill requires banks to lend a red cent to any one, any
time, under any circumstance.
I
know it sounds nutty, but it’s true.
So .
. . why on earth would any bank risk loaning ‘found’ money when the Treasury
Department doesn’t require them to?
Does
anyone believe bankers have the character it takes to use the bailout money to
help anybody but themselves?
Of
course not.
So, I
wondered, why would supposedly ‘smart guys’ like Paulson and Kashkari hand out
hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars to prevent bank failures and free up
credit markets without conditions to prevent bank failures and free up credit
markets?
But
then, I remembered the great words of wisdom left us by an equally great
American, Forrest Gump, who said, “Stupid is as stupid does.”
And then
I knew.
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