
Has it all become a giant Ponzi scheme, with the U.S. taxpayers on the bottom?
The Fed is buying an insurance company? Where exactly is that covered in the Federal Reserve Act? The Associated Press calls it a government takeover, but this is not your ordinary nationalization like the purchase of Fannie/Freddie stock by the U.S. Treasury. The Federal Reserve has the power to print the national money supply, but it is not actually a part of the U.S. government. It is a private banking corporation owned by a consortium of private banks. The banking industry just bought the world's largest insurance company, and they used federal money to do it.
Geez, we are such suckers.
"The point everyone misses," wrote economist Robert Chapman a decade ago, "is that buying derivatives is not investing. It is gambling, insurance and high stakes bookmaking. Derivatives create nothing."1 They not only create nothing, but they serve to enrich non-producers at the expense of the people who do create real goods and services. In congressional hearings in the early 1990s, derivatives trading was challenged as being an illegal form of gambling. But the practice was legitimized by Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, who not only lent legal and regulatory support to the trade but actively promoted derivatives as a way to improve "risk management." Partly, this was to boost the flagging profits of the banks; and at the larger banks and dealers, it worked. But the cost was an increase in risk to the financial system as a whole.2
This is the point: this practice of financial derivatives -- touted by Greenspan as a way of managing risk -- actually increased risk, and put the whole economy in danger of collapsing.
A Ponzi scheme--you're right Minnie. What they're doing now is throwing good money after bad, the nation's future to bail out grand larceny like the world has never seen. Insane!
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