Kunstler | What is most perilous for our country now, would be to journey
through a second epic crisis of authority in recent times without
anybody facing the consequences of crimes they might have committed. The
result will be a people turned utterly cynical, with no faith in their
institutions or the rule of law, and no way to imagine a restoration of
their lost faith within the bounds of law. It will be a deadly divorce
between truth and reality. It will be an invitation to civil violence, a
broken social contract, and the end of the framework for American life
that was set up in 1788.
The first crisis of the era was the Great Financial Crash of 2008
based on widespread malfeasance in the banking world, an unprecedented
suspension of rules, norms, and laws. GFC poster-boy Angelo Mozilo, CEO
and chairman of Countrywide Financial, a sub-prime mortgage racketeering
outfit, sucked at least half a billion dollars out of his operation
before it blew up, and finally was nicked for $67 million in fines by
the SEC — partly paid by Countrywide’s indemnity insurer — with criminal
charges of securities fraud eventually dropped in the janky
“settlement.” In other words, the cost of doing business.
Scores of other fraudsters and swindlers in that orgy of banking
malfeasance were never marched into a courtroom, never had to answer for
their depredations, and remained at their desks in the C-suites
collecting extravagant bonuses. The problems they caused were papered
over with trillions of dollars that all of us are still on-the-hook for.
And, contrary to appearances, the banking system never actually
recovered. It is permanently demoralized.
How it was that Barack Obama came on-duty in January of 2009 and got
away with doing absolutely nothing about all that for eight years
remains one of the abiding mysteries of life on earth. Perhaps getting
the first black president into the White House was such an intoxicating
triumph of righteousness that nothing else seemed to matter anymore.
Perhaps Mr. Obama was just a cat’s paw for banksterdom. (Sure kinda
seems like it, when your first two hires are Robert Rubin and Larry
Summers.) The failure to assign penalties for massive bad behavior has
set up the nation for another financial fiasco, surely of greater
magnitude than the blow-up of 2008, considering the current debt
landscape. Not a few astute observers say they feel the hot breath of
that monster on the back of their necks lately, with all the strange
action in the RePo market — $500 billion “liquidity” injections in six
weeks.
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