Let
Them Eat Keller
by Robert Scheer
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Funny, he doesnt
look like Marie Antoinette. But when former New York Times
Executive Editor Bill Keller asks
his readers if they are bored by the soggy sleep-ins and
warmed-over anarchism of Occupy Wall Street, it displays the
arrogance of disoriented royal privilege.
Perhaps his
contempt for anti-corporate protesters was honed by the example
of his father, once the chairman of Chevron. In any case, it is
revealing, given the cheerleading support that the Times
gave to the radical deregulation of Wall Street that occurred when
Keller was the managing editor of the newspaper.
As the Times
reported on its news pages in 1998, heralding the merger that created
Citigroup as the worlds largest financial conglomerate: In
a single day, with a bold merger, pending legislation in Congress
to sweep away Depression-era restrictions on the financial services
industry has been given a sudden, and unexpected, new chance of
passage.
The report
all too breathlessly continued, Indeed, within 24 hours of
the deals announcement, lobbyists for insurers, banks and
Wall Street firms were huddling with Congressional banking committee
staff members to fine-tune a measure that would update the 1933
Glass-Steagall Act separating commercial banking from Wall Street
and insurance.
The fine-tuned
law, combined with another one similarly drafted by congressional
Republicans and also signed by Democratic President Bill Clinton,
exempted trading in collateralized debt obligations and credit default
swaps from government regulation. That was the very action that
enabled the banking crisis that has brought the nations economy
to its knees and protesters to Wall Street. Citigroup, where Clintons
treasury secretary and deregulation advocate Robert Rubin ended
up as chairman, specialized in what proved to be toxic mortgage-backed
securities and had to be bailed out with massive taxpayer credits.
One would think
that the failure of The New York Times to cover this sorry
tale as it was unfolding would leave Keller with some humble understanding
of why protesters, undeterred by rain, should be celebrated rather
than scorned. But such accountability has hardly been a hallmark
of those in the media or in business and political circles, who
with few exceptions got it so wrong.
Just how wrong
was laid out in the Tuesday night Republican debate by Ron Paul,
whose consistent libertarian critique has been refreshing throughout
the banking meltdown. Other presidential candidates stumbled over
their earlier support of the TARP banking bailout, and one of them,
Herman Cain, responding to a question about Occupy Wall Street,
stuck by his statement dont blame Wall Street, dont
blame the big banks, if you dont have a job, youre not
rich, blame yourself.
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October
21, 2011
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