The Cody Word
  • December 15, 2008 12:12 PM EST by Cody Willard

    Illuminating the Illuminati: Charles Schumer and Barney Frank Are Owned By The Big Banks

    Here's a winning formula for our society, wouldn't you agree? Let's entrust our politicians to regulate an industry, then have the heads of that industry become the bureaucrats who are entrusted to carry out those regulations, and when things go wrong from all that cronyism, let's have give tons of welfare money to the giant corporations in that industry which can then use that money to donate to their politicians who can then win votes to continue to regulate that now insolvent industry.

    The executives and managers at Citigroup (C), Goldman Sachs (GS), Bank of America (BAC), Morgan Stanley (MS) and the rest of the big Wall Street corporations -- including Chuck Prince and Hank Paulson -- lied to all of us for years about the value of their assets. A lot of those guys who used to run the banks are now charged with regulating and/or doling out trillions of dollars in welfare to their former partners. Yeah, these bankers sucked trillions of dollars in "earnings" built upon those lies out of the economy and instead of saving those trillions for a rainy day when their lies stopped working, they paid themselves and a few of their closest friends most of that money in bonuses and salaries.

    And who was "regulating" all of this gamesmanship? Your socialist Republican/Democrats, of course. Including Barney Frank and Chuck Schumer.

    These are the same guys that you think are going to fix the mess they and their cronies have created. Why do I call Frank and Schumer and the banking industry a bunch of cronies?

    Let's think this through for a minute here....Charles Schumer has taken in more than $6 million in donations from the bankers on Wall Street. Then Schumer takes a trillion dollars of welfare money that could have gone to feed starving children in West Virginia, and instead, gives that welfare to these same bankers, who I continue to point out should be in prison for either fraud or criminal negligence, who "donated" him $6 million.

    Now that Citigroup and the rest of the companies who have destroyed our economy didn't get shut down and broken apart and punished badly for their crimes, but instead have been able to restock their balance sheets with the welfare they just got, they'll be able to continue to "donate" millions to the very guys who were supposed to have stopped them from destroying our economy (and should be fighting to punish the crooks now)....

    Any donations to any politician from any bank or company or industry that's gotten welfare payments should be immediately suspended and donated to the US budget deficit. After all, without the welfare from the government these companies wouldn't be able to "donate" to the politicians who then give them the welfare they've just received from the politicians they just donated to.

    --

    And then of course there was last night's puff piece on Barney Frank from CBS' 60 Minutes last night. Does it make you sleep better at night knowing that yet another Harvard grad who's spent 14 terms (count 'em baby!) supposedly regulating the investment banks which have destroyed our economy through their fraud and incompetence is on the job still? Surely it makes you feel better to know, at least, that despite have taken countless donations from Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) and even having an ex-lover who was a Fannie Mae executive, he was right on top of regulating this company until it shocked him with its collapse this year.

    And certainly you'll sleep better tonight knowing that, according to CBS's Lesley Stahl that "It's no wonder that when "saber tooth" the liberal [Frank] took over the committee that oversees banking, Wall Street shuddered. But two years later, even the most hardened Republicans give him good reviews."

    In the two years he's been overseeing the banking industry, it's utterly collapsed and been nationalized and we've even had to give trillions in welfare to the banking industry itself. Who's giving this "good reviews"? Oh, that's right, the same banking industry and its cronies...

    Listen to what the financial community says: "Here’s Henry Paulson on Barney Frank: 'He’s a market savvy pragmatist who looks for areas of agreement because he wants to get things done.' Here's a guy from JP Morgan Chase. He said, 'He hasn’t veered off into crazyland.' Meaning liberalism. I've heard someone describe you this way. You're liberal on social issues. You're a pragmatist on economic issues," Stahl remarks.

    The guy at JP Morgan, which just received billions in welfare payments from Barney and Paulson doesn't think rewarding those crooks like himself who have destroyed our economy with their lies and incompetence doesn't think that's "crazyland". Hellooooo?! Earth to JP Morgan exec!

    You guys thought I was joking about calling these bankers and the politicians they obviously own the "Illuminati". Here's a definition of Illuminati:

    Illuminati - individuals who are part of a secretive, historical organization that is comprised of mostly influential members with political and/or financial clout.

    Schumer, Frank, Paulson, Bush, McCain, Palin, Pelosi, Obama and every single other politician and bureaucrat who has taken money from these crooks/insiders/bankers and then gave welfare money to these crooks/insiders/bankers are part of the problem. They are, by definition, part of the Illuminati.

    I repeat -- Any donations to any politician from any bank or company or industry that's gotten welfare payments should be immediately suspended and donated to the budget. After all, without the welfare from the government these companies wouldn't be able to "donate" to the politicians who then give them the welfare they've just received from the politicians they just donated to.

    PS. Let's shoot for some levity? Complete one or both of these lines and post your answers in the comments area of my blog --

    How do you tell the difference between a bureaucrat and an investment banker?

    How do you tell the difference between someone who survives on Medicaid and someone who survives on TARP?

    Survive this economic revolution at http://RevolutioNewsletter.com
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Blarg D Impaler

"How do you tell the difference between a bureaucrat and an investment banker?" 1) By what side of the room they sit in during senate commitee hearings. 2) How many rows of teeth show when they smile. 3) Whether the bodyguards have short haircuts and bad suits, or good suits and bad haircuts. "How do you tell the difference between someone who survives on Medicaid and someone who survives on TARP?" The person surviving on Medicaid doesn't show up in a limo and the person survivng on TARP has a better looking "nurse."

December 15, 2008 at 1:47 pm

Robert

How do you tell the difference between a bureaucrat and an investment banker? 1) The bureaucrat is giving away my money. The investment banker is taking my money. 2) The bureaucrat is asking "How much do you want?". The investment banker is asking "How much can I have?". How do you tell the difference between someone who survives on Medicaid and someone who survives on TARP? Medicaid person wants help to survive. TARP person wants us to pay for their screw ups. (Kind of weak, but the idea is there.)

December 15, 2008 at 1:35 pm

Umpire

Many of the people accepting sub-prime and teaser loans paid less monies for housing over the last 2 to 3 years than they would have if they had rented. I've seen some of these foreclosed properties and the loses to the financial system are way underestimated. The costs of refurbishing/repairing/selling hasn't entered the equation yet. These costs will be additional out of pocket expenses that devalue the mortgage paper further.

December 15, 2008 at 1:35 pm

Bill M

Right On Cody. I'm on your side, lets start a Cody Willard for US Senate! Why is the congress that has 17% approval rating making any decisions. Go on a paid leave of absense for the next 6 years, everything will be okay people.

December 15, 2008 at 1:22 pm

A Capitalist

How do you tell the difference between a bureaucrat and an investment banker? 1) The investment banker doesn't run for re-election. 2) Bureaucrats are better liars. How do you tell the difference between someone who survives on Medicaid and someone who survives on TARP? The TARP crowd gets more stimulus from BFF (Best Friend Forever) Barney Frank, the home stimulus package.

December 15, 2008 at 1:13 pm

Bryan P. Pogodzinski

Dude, Right on agian! These idiots need to be impeached! Keep spreading the word and maybe, just maybe we will wake up and kick these people (I use that term very loosely) in the @$$. P.S. Why don't I ever see Busch Light being serve on Happy Hour?? That's all we can aford here in Michigan and it's now being TAXED! I can't even get a cheap drunk on anymore. I guess it's back to the koolaide thing, just like in the Desert. Keep up the great work

December 15, 2008 at 12:51 pm

TexasGirl

PS.... NO - i have not lost my house YET!!! But i am sure they will do their very best in the effort of their current endeavors, since they have a "take no prisoners" policy in effect .....

December 15, 2008 at 12:51 pm

TexasGirl

BFT someone in the media is drawning attention to the trend setters of this economic mess and the REAL direction the intoxic waste is flowin from. I am sick-n-tired of some banker, broker, realestate agent, government offical, democrate, republican, mortgage company, mortgage service company and anyone else in the finacial investment market, blamin it all on the indivduals that simply wanted a roof over their heads TOO!!!! But because of their basic need of shelter they where taken advantage of by these greedy self-servin people we are suppose to be able to trust with our future!!!

December 15, 2008 at 12:48 pm

about this blog

  • Cody Willard is an anchor on the FOX Business Network. Willard is also the principal of an investment management company. He was a long-time featured columnist for the Financial Times and TheStreet.com as well as a regular featured economist and stock picker on CNBC's ''Kudlow & Company."