The best comment yet on the Goldman hearings earlier this week, from "KT NY":
(Who else ever started a piece with the word "telling?" Very effective.)
April 28th, 2010 10:51 am
Telling to me was the fact that, although they most certainly had been warned by their attorneys to treat the hearing seriously and the Senators respectfully, the Goldman Sachs crew exuded contempt and smugness from every pore. "Our net worth is higher than yours," they seemed to be saying, "So you're stupid and we win."
What to do about these lunkheads? Clearly, it will not help to explain to them that not all smart people choose to devote their lives to making money: some design the Hadron Collider, identify the gene that causes breast cancer, write symphonies, and even become U.S. Senators. It will not help to explain, because to these guys, competition and its rewards -- status and cash -- are all that matter in life. Period. They're built that way, psychologically, and we're not going to change their minds.
What we can do, however, is recognize that while Wall Street culture -- the Goldman Sachs syndrome -- does in fact add value to our society, by allowing money to move through the system to those who need money to run businesses, that culture must be contained. That's because, as we saw in the Senate hearings yesterday, those who excel at the art of the deal are basically sociopaths, with few moral values and no ethical brakes. Their contributions to society might be analogized to nuclear energy: we build reactors, and the reactors make electricity. Yet those reactors have to be carefully monitored and controlled. If we let them blow up, we all die.
Because of its erroneous, free market ideology -- not to mention the money that it collects from Wall Street -- the Republican Party is incapable of recognizing that letting Wall Street operate without restraints is like building a nuclear reactor in Times Square and yelling "Let 'er rip!" In its own way, the GOP is as blind, and clueless, as the Goldman Sachs traders. That is why regulation is not merely needed, but will occur only if the public starts calling Senators -- like tomorrow -- to make its will known.
There is an election coming up. It's time to let your Senators know that the Era of the Poopy Deal must come to an end.
Globular and Mailer
(first the link to the New York Times article and comments above; too lazy to reformat above the title):
http://community.nytimes.com/comments/www.nytimes.com/2010/04/28/opinion/28dowd.html?scp=3&sq=sociopaths&st=cse
And some good from the Globe & Mail, especially the comments after the article, in today's Business section:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/markets/markets-blog/the-casino-analogy/article1549918/?cid=art-rail-marketsblog