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Dave Lindorff: And These Are the People We Expect to Fix Things Now? A Financial History Lesson

George Santayana once famously said, "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it." But what about those who don't just ignore history, but who hire and take counsel from those who committed historic follies in the past?

Back in November 1999, Congress passed legislation pushed by then Sen. Phil Gramm (R-TX), rescinding the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act. The measure, backed by the Clinton Administration, and overwhelmingly passed by the Senate (90-8) and the House (362-57), opened the way for banks to merge with investment banks and insurance companies, and led directly to the current financial cataclysm.

A report on that Congressional action written by reporter Stephen Labaton and published in The New York Times on Nov. 5, 1999 under the headline "Congress Passes Wide-Ranging Bill Easing Bank Laws," includes some remarkable quotes from key players in that sellout to the financial sector.

Here's Larry Summers, a chief architect of the current financial industry multi-trillion-dollar bailout giveaway being orchestrated by the Obama Administration, where he serves as director of President Obama's National Economic Council:
''Today Congress voted to update the rules that have governed financial services since the Great Depression and replace them with a system for the 21st century. This historic legislation will better enable American companies to compete in the new economy.''
And here's what Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), awash in financial industry campaign donations but currently in high dudgeon over the Wall Street's bonus payments to executives, speaking about the '99 measure eliminating Glass-Steagall:
''If we don't pass this bill, we could find London or Frankfurt or years down the road Shanghai becoming the financial capital of the world. 'There are many reasons for this bill, but first and foremost is to ensure that U.S. financial firms remain competitive."
The article quotes the Clinton Administration and Summers' Treasury Department as predicting that revoking Glass-Steagall and permitting banks to expand into investment banking and insurance would save consumers "$18 billion a year" through economies of scale -- a figure that seems rather quaint as taxpayers now pony up trillions of dollars to rescue those same institutions. (The article notes that critics of deregulation argued that even those paltry savings, probably overstated, would flow to financial sector investors, not to consumers.)

The old Times clip (brought to my attention by alert veteran radical writer and activist Bert Schultz of Philadelphia), does highlight a couple of prophetic heroes, too.

Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND), one of seven Senate Democrats who voted against revoking Glass-Steagall, said:
"I think we will look back in 10 years' time and say we should not have done this but we did because we forgot the lessons of the past, and that that which is true in the 1930's is true in 2010. I wasn't around during the 1930's or the debate over Glass-Steagall. But I was here in the early 1980's when it was decided to allow the expansion of savings and loans. We have now decided in the name of modernization to forget the lessons of the past, of safety and of soundness.''
And then there's the late Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-MN), who died in a tragic and still unexplained plane crash during his campaign for re-election in 2002. Congress, he said, seemed:
"...determined to unlearn the lessons from our past mistakes. Scores of banks failed in the Great Depression as a result of unsound banking practices, and their failure only deepened the crisis. Glass-Steagall was intended to protect our financial system by insulating commercial banking from other forms of risk. It was one of several stabilizers designed to keep a similar tragedy from recurring. Now Congress is about to repeal that economic stabilizer without putting any comparable safeguard in its place.''
For the record, also voting against Glass-Steagall repeal in the Senate were lone Republican Richard Shelby of Alabama, and six other Democrats: Barbara Boxer (CA), Richard Bryan (NV), Russ Feingold (WI), Tom Harkin (IA), and Barbara Mikulski (MD). 51 Democrats, 5 Republicans, and 1 independent voted against the measure in the House.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, a key player in the current bailout scheme, isn't mentioned in the Times article about Glass-Steagall, but at the time was a protégé of Summers, working as undersecretary of the treasury for international affairs.

While they are thankfully well out of the loop in the current scramble in Washington to both reverse the economic collapse and try and help financial companies and financiers profit from it, it's worth reading too in this 10-year-old clip what Phil Gramm and then Sen. Bob Kerrey (D-NE) and now embattled president of the New School in New York City had to say about ending Glass-Steagall.

Sen. Gramm:
"The world changes, and we have to change with it. We have a new century coming, and we have an opportunity to dominate that century the same way we dominated this century. Glass-Steagall, in the midst of the Great Depression, came at a time when the thinking was that the government was the answer. In this era of economic prosperity, we have decided that freedom is the answer.''
And then Sen. Kerrey, with a line that should probably be etched someday on his tombstone as his most memorable line:
"The concerns that we will have a meltdown like 1929 are dramatically overblown."
DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist. His latest book is "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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Glass-Steagall Act

It is fine to look back on past laws with nostalgia and to think what if. Currently there are laws limiting speeds on freeways. Driving at that legal speed makes no sense if the freeway ahead is a parking lot. So which CEO has lost his/her job through a policy of giving Ninja loans? Giving a Ninja loan only makes sense when the money you are lending is not yours and you are paid sales commission. Really there has been no attempt to weed out the incompetents in the sections of the financial sector which are now running on taxpayer welfare.. We are told that the only people who are able to understand the complexity of some of the AIG contracts are those working in AIG: those very people who caused the problem. So we are to believe that the counterparty had NO idea what they were agreeing. And we are to pay for that level of competance. My understanding is that the bailout money is given on the basis of who has dinner with whom in New York and Washington and has little to do with sense, the future, whose money is being donated, which bank is the welfare recipient or the Glass-Steagall Act.

In a Nutshell

Let's face it. Considering the Historical Great Train Robbery, we know more about the US financial crisis and see it continuing to bilk Americans. This monumental crisis will go down in history as, "The Great Tax Payer Robbery." AIG, too big to fail? AIG, too big to exist!

Gambling on US recovery

The big question looming out there is, what if this administration sat back and did nothing about the financial crisis? Some say the crisis would iron itself out. Of course, doing nothing would be essentially sailing in uncharted waters. The financial crisis did not begin the day Obama took the presidential oath. It had been going on for quite some time in the Bush administration where GW did relatively little to stop the country from going down the black hole. So we have a pretty good idea of what "doing nothing" begets the country. This administration is pretty much following the blueprints of FDR in the Great Depression. That depression was not pretty and neither is this crisis, but we know from historical accounts that FDR's methods ultimately worked. Presently, the nay sayers want to sit back and do nothing, hoping things will somehow work out. As said, we've (been there, done that) with the Bush administration and now know the repercussions of that approach (or lack of approach.) This country cannot afford to take the same route gambling on the unknown. We are left with one alternative and that is the course the administration is presently on ... bailouts, loans, new regulations, etc. When so much is riding on national financial recovery, we are forced to go with the tried and true regardless of the pain, regardless of the doubters. Sailing uncharted waters completely sunk a lot of ships in US History.

Now What

do we do? The people are now the paper owners of these institutions, yet they continue to be run for the benefit of the same financial and political kleptocrats.

Democracy is and should be noisy

Quite eloquent, Dallas112263. But sitting quietly and hoping that our elected government does the right thing, is not what democracy is about. I thought we learned that lesson well enough over the past eight years, especially as we seemed to have forgotten it from Thomas Jefferson's pen. So, let us watch President Obama closely and not expect the best from him even when we love and honor him. Let us be watchful and noisy with our questioning. He'll be better and stronger for it, and so will we as a nation doing good and well. --- (Rrrandy of wurstwisdom.com)

Sitting quietly... Not!

Thank you for your compliment, writers write to be read, and since no one pays me by the word to write, thus validating my skill, I do value the opinions of my peers.

I do not advocate sitting quietly, democracy is a noisy thing and needs to be noisy, confusing and always imperfect. I only call for a more human, less pedantic reaction to our politics and how Mr. Obama is using the tools available to turn this "ocean liner" of state hard to port...

Just as Mr. Bush had his Reichwing always pushing its more radical agenda, so Mr. Obama has us... Bearing in mind that the Bushies failed by overreaching, we should temper our desires for a "perfect Union" and be more realistic about what can be accomplished. We have long way to go, we aren't going to get there overnight or on a straight line.

This is not abandoning your principles or idealism, it is just an acknowledgement of real politics, real people... We can no more drag them to the light than Bush could force real democracy in Iraq at the point of gun... No, first you get 'em talking, then you make 'em mad and get 'em feeling something, only when you get them to feel, rather than think, can they change.

RGJ/Dallas112263

Addendum:

Today President Obama met to consult with bank industry "leaders" about his recovery plans. Among them was the CEO of Citigroup, the bank holding company that really kicked off the whole deregulation fiasco back in 1998 when, in open defiance of the Glass-Steagall Act, it merged with Travelers, the insurance giant, undermining 66 years of separation of banking from more speculative financial activities, and paving the way for the repeal of Glass-Steagall less than a year later. Nice place to turn for advice, Mr. Prez (kind of akin to inviting your predecessor, George W Bush over for some advice on rescuing the Constitution, or visiting Charlie Manson to discuss ways of ending torture). Dave Lindorff www.thiscantbehappening.net

The Art of the Possible...

I say it so often it should be on my forehead...

But we deal in the world of the possible not the ideal. Hindsight is better than 20/20, and what can look like prescience after ten years is often just a throw away line, a doubt expressed or refuted on the way to where you've already decided to go...

Like a clock that is right twice a day or the guy who always says "it'll never work" being right at least 33% of the time... Anyone who is consistent, long enough, eventually gets to also be right...

Robert Reich recently confessed that his very accurate prediction, made six months before the Meltdown, that the economy would meltdown in six months was indeed quite correct, but that he had been making the same prediction for five years...

With all that said, the nail you were holding when you began writing was fairly driven, the repeal of Glass-Steagall was very much key to what has occurred since. But it was just one of the steps that many of these familiar fingers were all over, Gramm and his spouse especially.

It occurs to me that had Sen. McCain not chosen Gov. Palin and had he managed to keep his mouth essentially shut after the Convention... Had he defeated or cheated Sen. Obama in a close one... The market would have recovered, the lies would still be told as truth and the "game" would still be on... So count your, and our, blessings.

I also have no doubt that our President has thought this through and like a decent chess player, he is more than a few moves ahead of us... I believe he knows what we know and knows exactly what eventually must be done, he just has to find a way to get a revived democratic Republic to go there...

Progressives can and should be essential to the process, but only if we temper our idealism with a dose of faith, in Obama the man and our democracy in general, and a dash of realism, at least enough realism so that our purer nature doesn't cast so much light that others can't make sausage, or Law...

RGJ/Dallas112263

If you were talking about health care, I'd say maybe, but...

In the case of the bailout, this "chess game" you allege that Obama is playing involves his blowing trillions of dollars on buying off the investors in Wall Street's own crap game. That would be like surrendering your queen, both rooks and both bishops in a gambit--something no chess master would do. And we haven't even talked about Afghanistan, where the chess gambit involves plunging the US deeper and deeper into a bloody morass with thousands of US troops dying and perhaps tens or even hundreds of innocent Afghanis and Pakistanis dying so that the president can--supposedly--convince reluctant Republicans and Blue dog Democrats that war is not the answer? I think not. We on the left need to accept that this president, while he may have some good instincts, has bought some really lousy ideas from some really bad advisers and lobbyists. And we need to speak out loudly, to protest even more loudly, and to build a movement to resist these terrible decisions. That is, as another writer in this string wrote, how democracy is supposed to work. Not on the basis of faith. Dave Lindorff www.thiscantbehappening.net

Again, the world is as it is...

On that bright crisp day in late January, a day I had envisioned and worked toward for many long years, when Lincoln's Bible was placed so his hand could rest upon it, Barack Obama swore an Oath, to his God and to his People, to preserve and defend the Constitution. I believe we saved our Republic and that very Constitution by electing him President so overwhelmingly that none could doubt our resolve nor could they muddy the result...

We all breathed a sigh of relief to see him there, confident, intelligent, well spoken and graceful... But in the back of every one's mind was The Mess, a huge tangle of failed Bushian initiatives, domestic, foreign, economic, political and legal issues that all desperately needed radical reform or a quick stake through the heart. But at that moment I was content to just listen and be grateful for just this opportunity, just a shot at really changing how America lives and how we impact the world.

As a longtime student of politics and history I had a vague idea of the size of the task ahead and understanding only a little about how Mr. Obama thinks, having only the almost flawless campaign to look back on for reference, I was nonetheless pleased and content. This was a very focused and persistent President, one who had felt the sting of being black in America but had risen to its highest office. I trust him.

I have no illusions about his politics, he is a "moderate" Democrat who assumed the mantle of "left-winger" only in comparison to his rivals in both parties, much as Howard Dean, who is no leftist, was characterized in 2004 and for the same reason, opposition to the War. But please recall how many times you agreed with Pat Buchanan over the last 6 years and he is no leftist, either...

No, Mr. Obama is as square as they come, in his live video greeting from his campaign plane the night before the California Primary he thanked the assembled mass of "Deadheads for Obama", brought together at the Warfield by a reunited Grateful Dead to support his candidacy, saying in conclusion that we "need to get out tomorrow and vote, but right now lets all sit down and enjoy the show!" Sit down and enjoy the Dead? Sitting? Hmmm, clueless... Even Al Gore knows better...

In his specific defense, today, I would only point out that all of the travesties you point to, the Wall St. bailout and crap shoot, Iraq, Afghanistan... All of this was ongoing on Jan. 21st, and I would submit that his actions since are the limits of the possible, they are the increments we will look back on and say, "Yes, that was the first step in turning it around...". What did you expect him to do? Burn it down and march legions of stockbrokers and executives off to jail? Order all the troops home on Day One?

I mean its only been a little over two months... The National Security State was born before I was and solidified its control over finance and politics when I was a child, I am now 52... Reversing the course of power in America is going to take more than just one election, more than just one President...

But right now, with this moment of opportunity in our grasp, we need to bargain for the obtainable, not the stars...

Oh, but please... don't you stop yelling and agitating... As you said we do need to demonstrate that there is another path, but when this President begins blazing a new trail, he needs to be able to count on us havin' his back...

RGJ/Dallas112263