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The Mobsters of Wall Street

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Christopher O'Brien

Back in the Saddle Aginn
Staff member
The Mobsters of Wall Street
by Jim Hightower

Assume that you ran a business that was found guilty of bribery, forgery, perjury, defrauding homeowners, fleecing investors, swindling consumers, cheating credit card holders, violating U.S. trade laws and bilking American soldiers. Can you even imagine the kind of punishment you'd get?

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. (Image: Donkey Hotey / Flickr / Creative Commons)
How about zero? Nada. Nothing. Zilch. No jail time. Not even a fine. Plus, you still get to stay on as boss, you get to keep all the loot you gained from the crime spree, and you even get an $8.5 million pay raise!

Of course, you and I would never get such outrageous, absurd, kid-glove pampering by legal authorities. But, then, we're not the capo of JPMorgan Chase, America's biggest bank and a crime syndicate that apparently is too big to jail.

Jamie Dimon is the slick, vainglorious, silver-haired boss of the JPMorgan house of banksters. This CEO has fostered a culture of thievery during his years as a top executive at JPMorgan, leading to a shameful litany of crime. Yet, federal prosecutors have bowed to the politically connected Wall Streeter, refusing to ruffle his feathers with even a single criminal charge.

Meanwhile, one of the scams that Dimon directly supervised produced a $6 billion loss for shareholders in 2012. And his reign of mismanagement and illegalities cost the bank's shareholders another $20 billion in federal fines last year, resulting in a 16 percent drop in profits. You might think the bank's board of directors would at least slap Jamie's wrist for the loss of those billions of dollars, but no — in January, they rewarded him, raising his pay by some 70 percent to a sweet $20 million! REST OF ARTICLE HERE:

jamie-dimon-from-donkeyhotey-at-flickr.jpg
 
J.P. Morgan paid for this service. They have a right to enjoy what they paid for.

Meanwhile, the small-fry Banksters seem to be dropping like flies this week...

Bankster Shoots Himself 7 Times with Nail Gun

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national...-1.1606391
A Colorado executive whose company was under investigation committed suicide this week by shooting himself repeatedly with a nail gun.

Richard M. Talley, 56, was found dead in his Greenwood Village garage Tuesday by a family member, the Denver Post reported. He had shot himself seven or eight times in the head and chest with a nail gun.

How much did his wife have to pay to clean up that mess in the garage? I hope a lot.
 
Another J.P. Morgan bankster hits the pavement...

Investment banker jumps to death from JP Morgan’s headquarters in Central | South China Morning Post

That totals 7 banksters in recent weeks.
  • On January 26, former Deutsche Bank executive Broeksmit was found dead at his South Kensington home.
  • Gabriel Magee, a 39-year-old senior manager at JP Morgan’s European headquarters, jumped 500ft from the top of the bank’s headquarters in central London on January 27.
  • Mike Dueker, the chief economist at Russell Investments, fell down a 50 foot embankment in what police are describing as a "suicide".
  • 37-year-old JP Morgan executive director Ryan Henry Crane died last week.

Something queer is going on.
 
Another J.P. Morgan bankster hits the pavement...

Investment banker jumps to death from JP Morgan’s headquarters in Central | South China Morning Post

That totals 7 banksters in recent weeks.
  • On January 26, former Deutsche Bank executive Broeksmit was found dead at his South Kensington home.
  • Gabriel Magee, a 39-year-old senior manager at JP Morgan’s European headquarters, jumped 500ft from the top of the bank’s headquarters in central London on January 27.
  • Mike Dueker, the chief economist at Russell Investments, fell down a 50 foot embankment in what police are describing as a "suicide".
  • 37-year-old JP Morgan executive director Ryan Henry Crane died last week.

Something queer is going on.

I think the world will be a better place for the loss of them.. no sympathy at all.
 
The Mobsters of Wall Street
by Jim Hightower

Assume that you ran a business that was found guilty of bribery, forgery, perjury, defrauding homeowners, fleecing investors, swindling consumers, cheating credit card holders, violating U.S. trade laws and bilking American soldiers. Can you even imagine the kind of punishment you'd get?

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. (Image: Donkey Hotey / Flickr / Creative Commons)
How about zero? Nada. Nothing. Zilch. No jail time. Not even a fine. Plus, you still get to stay on as boss, you get to keep all the loot you gained from the crime spree, and you even get an $8.5 million pay raise!

Of course, you and I would never get such outrageous, absurd, kid-glove pampering by legal authorities. But, then, we're not the capo of JPMorgan Chase, America's biggest bank and a crime syndicate that apparently is too big to jail.

Jamie Dimon is the slick, vainglorious, silver-haired boss of the JPMorgan house of banksters. This CEO has fostered a culture of thievery during his years as a top executive at JPMorgan, leading to a shameful litany of crime. Yet, federal prosecutors have bowed to the politically connected Wall Streeter, refusing to ruffle his feathers with even a single criminal charge.

Meanwhile, one of the scams that Dimon directly supervised produced a $6 billion loss for shareholders in 2012. And his reign of mismanagement and illegalities cost the bank's shareholders another $20 billion in federal fines last year, resulting in a 16 percent drop in profits. You might think the bank's board of directors would at least slap Jamie's wrist for the loss of those billions of dollars, but no — in January, they rewarded him, raising his pay by some 70 percent to a sweet $20 million! REST OF ARTICLE HERE:

jamie-dimon-from-donkeyhotey-at-flickr.jpg

A day of reckoning is coming.. yes slowly but it is coming.
The cost of living can only go so high before to many have to little... then god help those that would be our lords and masters in this feudalism 2.0 because all the guns, tanks, planes, and laws won't save them.
 
Feudalism 2.0 is an excellent name for it.

The more I study the philosophies, strategies, and goals of the global financial Elites, the more evident it becomes that a return to feudalistic style social structure is almost exactly what they are working for; great masses of landless rent payers taxed and controlled like cattle, only employing modern, more sophisticated control systems than the Throne & Pulpit used to frighten the peasants in past centuries.
 
This is an interesting thread as at its heart is the surface of the real breakaway civilization, that invisible less than 1% that is busy playing RISK with the planet while living in the palaces and the kingdoms. I'm still a little concerned though about our lack of compassion for the suicide. That's a terrible space to have to confront. These foot soldiers of Corporotocracy & Feudalism 2.0 are taking their own lives, which speaks to just how malicious and toxic the world rulers are. It's like any soldier that might kill themselves because the inanity of war, its evil out of greed, its impossible horror and immorality is simply too much too bear.
 
"Corporatism", or "Corporotocracy" (if you're feeling kinder), are also applicable. Government for the sake of preserving and benefiting existing corporations. Quite different to capitalism.

Yes its call Fascism by definition. When state is run for the betterment of the corporate body and not the general population you have Fascism. But I still like Feudalism 2.0 :)
 
I'm still a little concerned though about our lack of compassion for the suicide. That's a terrible space to have to confront. These foot soldiers of Corporotocracy & Feudalism 2.0 are taking their own lives, which speaks to just how malicious and toxic the world rulers are.

I have little compassion for them because they chose that life.

The Corporate/National Socialist vetting process ensures that a person simply cannot rise to their level without compromising their morals 10,000 times along the way.

It's exactly like the Mafia, only on a grander scale. A Mafia foot solider cannot enjoy the benefits of being a "Made Man" until he has proven his loyalty by murdering someone.
 
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