Favorite quotes from the Star Chamber

Posted by Marc Hodak on February 11, 2009 under Collectivist instinct, Irrationality, Politics | 3 Comments to Read

Today was Circus Day, when “Wall Street Titans” were thrown to the lions in Congress.

First, we hear from Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Michael Capuano:  “America doesn’t trust you anymore.”  True enough, but rather a strange critique coming from a Congressman.

Capuano also let go with the following rant:  “You come to us today on your bicycles after buying Girl Scout cookies and helping out Mother Theresa and telling us, ‘We’re sorry, we didn’t mean it, we won’t do it again, trust us.’ Well, I have some people in my constituency that actually robbed some of your banks and they say the same thing.”

Awesome.

Next, we have this bit of advice from California Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman regarding the leasing of private planes:  “You could sell them.”

Sell leased planes?  You mean cancel the leases, right.  Surely a person writing our laws knows the difference between owning and leasing.  Ownership, Congressman Sherman?  You know, where a person has property… Oh, never mind.  In any case, how does everyone unloading their planes help the economy?  This, of course, is raw opposition to luxury, which will certainly lead to the same place such craziness led to the last time this kind of populism flared its ugly nostrils.

Next, Democratic Rep. Paul Kanjorski of Pennsylvania told the executives that if their banks did not use TARP money to make risky loans, “Please find a way to return that money before you leave town.”

I can imagine Lloyd Blankfein and Richard Kovacevich going straight to Treasury after the hearings and saying, “Please, please, take back this money.  We’ll keep our toxic assets.  We’ll risk bankruptcy.  But get us out from under all this meddling, mindless, messy red tape that spins out of your economically illiterate colleagues on Capital Hill like topsy.  Please, take back this cash!”

Treasury would, once again, say:  “Sorry.  Your potato.”

Then, we have another solon from Massachusetts, Rep. Barney Frank.  Ah, Barney Frank, you lovable dolt.  After Vikram Pandit of Citigroup said he would take no more bonuses until his firm is profitable again, Frank said, “Why do you need any bonuses at all when a good salary would do?  This notion that you need some special incentive to do the right thing troubles people.”  Congressman Frank clearly believes that the banks should have a rational, straight-forward salary scale, like GS-1 through GS-15.  That way, our banks could be just as effective as the Post Office or Amtrak.  Or Congress.  You wonder if some of these people even believe in having a private sector.  For others, you don’t even have to wonder.

The most frustrating thing about listening to these proceedings is how our representatives wear the mantle of “the people,” as if they really speak for me and you, instead of their own grandstanding interests.  The sanctimony is truly nauseating.  The second most frustrating thing is how completely blameless they hold themselves.  Some of the people, like Frank, were the most responsible for this debacle, far more responsible than any of the eight CEOs sitting in front of them.  That makes for a truly Orwellian spectacle.

There were many other great lines from the MSM articles themselves, written like editorials passing for news.  But who has time to parse MSM statements?

P.S.:  Yes, I know Kovacevich wasn’t at the hearing–his successor Stumpf was–but imagined the former making a more colorful plea than his more politic successor.  One can only imagine what the table pounding Kovacevich was thinking when he heard this crazy remark.

  • jd said,

    I, for one, wish Barney Frank and his Fan/Fred oversight committee had their pay based on the solvency of the institutions they oversaw. Frank and Dodd screwed us, and then blamed everyone else.

  • Finance Information Blog said,

    […] Favorite quotes from the Star Chamber » Hodak Value […]

  • nfd said,

    Everyone is worried about jobs going overseas, but I think they should be more optimistic. America is great for generating new jobs and dealing with change. My grandfather said railroads once lost a lot of business when electric companies switched from burning coal to nuclear power. Railroads also needed less workers when trains stopped using cabooses. Yet while the railroad jobs may have disappeared, new jobs like webpage designers and video store clerks have appeared. Horse buggy manufacturers became car manufacturers and typewriter companies now make computers. Many industries that were supposed to disappear like movie theatres due to VCR’s and accounting because of computers have never been stronger.

    Farmers made up 90% of the labor force in 1790, but only made up 2.6% of the work force in 1990. While women only made up 18% of the work force in 1900, 46% of the work force was female in 2007. There are fewer farmers yet more men and women are working now because the labor market is more diverse with new jobs.

    http://www.agclassroom.org/gan/timeline/farmers_land.htm

    http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/a0104673.html

    Jobs that are shipped offshore will be replaced by new technical jobs in the US.

    While manufacturing jobs may go overseas to cheaper locations, the United States still manufactures more than any other country.

    http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2009/10/13/data-on-the-largest-manufacturing-countries-in-2008/

    Even if more jobs go overseas, America will always have factories. I highly doubt that the United States will buy fighter jets from China. The price of labor may be cheaper in Asia now, but as oil and shipping prices rise, buying American products will not seem to be so expensive. Chinese products also have a reputation for poor quality and counterfeiting. BMW does not worry that Chinese car companies will steal their customers.

    Many jobs cannot be outsourced, either. You are not likely to call a doctor, lawyer, mechanic, mover, driver, electrician, real estate agent, or plumber in China to fix a problem you have in the USA. Are all the farms, restaurants, churches, government workers, and athletes in the US going to be shipped overseas, too?

    Even if all the manufacturing jobs in the United States went to China, wouldn’t the Chinese need American skills? You could move there and teach English. Most of those container ships returning to Asia are EMPTY. Why not think of something the Chinese would like to buy? Americans are creative. Do you think China will be known as the new Disney and Hollywood? Will China become famous for apple pies, hamburgers, hot dogs, baseball, gun rights, democracy, free speech, and religious freedom?

    Phil Gramm was right. The US has become a nation of whiners.

    While change is sometimes scary and being cautious is good, hysteria is not. Think for yourself and don’t be a Chicken Little.

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