Iceland happens to be a complete validation of my advice in late
2008. It is now well on the way to a complete recovery.
One other important tip. The top echelon of a bank can be removed
simply because their second tier is completely able to do the same
job. Special trade knowledge really does not exist at the top end.
What does exist is immature judgment and greed. Both are best
corrected by a glowing example burned into your memory.
As I suggested, I would have arrested every signatory to a failed
bond above a certain credit rating level for outright treason to the
USA and prosecuted them all in Texas. Putting them all on death row
for the length of time it takes to properly correct and restructure
the system is likely wise. Their money will get them out sooner or
later, but that can be long after the next election or two.
I am sorry folks. I worked in the industry and understand just what
happens. It is run by the best salesmen which is why you keep banking
separate from broking and investment banking. Banking is run by the
best lenders or must be to avoid the nonsense that overcame the
industry. A triple A failure must have a cost to the underwriters at
the career level.
So I am not speaking from mere distaste or wanting to blame someone.
This was an inevitable structural failure brought on directly by the
last acts of the Clinton Presidency. The same problem exists in
Europe for other reasons and that is also sorting out the hard way.
Cyprus...What You
Can Learn From Iceland
Thursday, 21 March
2013 15:18By The Daily Take, The Thom Hartmann Show
As the Eurozone
financial crisis continues to plague the island nation of Cyprus, its
citizens are receiving a crash course in how an out-of-control
banking industry and its corrupt banksters can bring an entire
economy to its knees.
The Cypriot economy
has ground to a halt, thanks to massive losses that its oversized
banking sector sustained from investments in Greece and a deep
recession.
Banks in Cyprus have
been shut all week, and are not due to reopen until next Tuesday at
the earliest, to try to prevent a run on the banks.
When all is said and
done, and if the Cypriot economy ever recovers from this financial
collapse, Cypriots will hopefully have a new-found awareness of the
banks, and implement better oversight and regulation over their
financial industry.
That’s exactly
what they did in Iceland, and its working wonders for the small
island nation.
In 2008, when the
global financial crisis began taking down economies one by one,
Iceland was hit incredibly hard.
All three of the
country’s major privately owned banks collapsed, and Iceland’s
stock exchange, the OMX Iceland 15, plummeted. Pension funds were
slashed, and businesses were wiped out.
Iceland could have
responded to that financial crisis the same way that the United
States did, and come up with a massive bailout package to save the
banks, and let their crimes go unpunished.
Or, Iceland could
arrest the banksters that brought down the economy, bail out those
most affected by the collapse – the average Icelanders themselves –
and begin to rebuild the financial industry.
[ this was precisely my advice in 2008 for the USA - arclein]
Iceland chose the
latter. Jail the bums.
In December of 2008,
the Icelandic parliament passed a bill establishing an Office of the
Special Prosecutor.
The job of this new
office was to investigate suspected criminal conduct leading up to,
in connection with, or in the wake of the banking crisis, and to
follow up these investigations by bringing criminal charges against
those responsible for the crisis.
Since the Office of
the Special Prosecutor was created, Iceland has been rounding up
their banksters one after another.
In March of 2011,
Robert and Vincent Tchenguiz were arrested in London, as part of the
Special Prosecutor’s Office investigation into the collapse of the
Icelandic bank Kaupthing.
In December of last
year, a Reykjavik court sentenced two of the top executives at
Icelandic bank Glitnir to jail time.
And just yesterday,
nine more banksters from the Iceland bank Kaupthing were indicted and
charged for their roles in orchestrating five large-scale market
manipulation conspiracies.
These are only a few
of the arrests that have been made, as Iceland cleans up its banking
industry, and holds its own corrupt banksters accountable for their
actions in the 2008 financial collapse.
Meanwhile, here in the
United States, the Wall Street banksters that brought our economy to
its knees are still sitting pretty in their corner offices or retired
with hundreds of millions of dollars of your money.
Just look at Jamie
Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan.
In a recent report on
JPMorgan’s monumental multi-billion dollar trading loss, Dimon is
alleged to have criminally withheld from regulators key details about
the bank’s daily losses.
And numerous other
reports have suggested that Dimon may have been complicit in
JPMorganChase engaging in additional criminal and/or unethical
activity.
But Dimon and the rest
of his fat-cat buddies are doing just fine today, continuing to rake
in multi-million dollar bonuses or golden-parachute retirements.
And Dimon’s actions
pale in comparison to executives at the HSBC bank, who recently
admitted in court to allowing Mexican and Colombian drug cartels to
launder nearly $900 million through their bank. If you'd done
that, you'd be in jail for the rest of your life, but these are rich
white banksters who give millions to politicians and political
parties.
Executives of the
banks also admitted to using various schemes to move around hundreds
of millions of dollars to nations subject to trade sanction,
including Iran, Cuba and Sudan. And, reports suggest that some of
this money made its way into the hands of terrorist organizations. If
you'd done that, you might be in Guantanamo. But, then again, you're
not a bankster.
Despite these
egregious criminal actions, the United States has yet to jail a
single HSBC bankster.
So, what’s the
bottom line to all of this?
Eventually, when
Cyprus’ economy recovers, the Cypriot government will have a choice
to make.
They can choose to let
their banksters go free, and risk another financial meltdown like we
in the United States have chosen to do. Or they can take the
Icelandic approach, crack down on corruption in their financial
industry, and prosecute and jail those responsible for causing and
worsening the collapse.
At the start of the
2008 worldwide economic collapse, Iceland was in worse shape
financially than just about every country in the world.
Today, Iceland is
home to one of the fastest growing economies in the world.
They got from there to
here by throwing their banksters in jail.
Hopefully Cyprus will
take a page out of the Icelandic playbook, and lock-up the banksters.
And America should do
the same thing, too!
2 comments:
though i would agree that the world finance system is often corrupt and greedy, I still have to believe that a blind and lazy populates lead to wolves in their governments who knowingly lead their sheep I mean their citizen to ruin. Advice to all. Never trust your politicians and your government. And ask how is this benefit really being paid for.
SEE www.understandingmoney101.com
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