Pages

1/30/2016

The Big Short (2015) Is A Must See Movie


Author: jakob13 from United States
13 December 2015
The Big Short' is a winner. Based on Michael Lewis book of the same title, it tells the sorry story of the fraud and deceit practiced on the American people, nay, on the world by Wall Streets finance capitalism. We know the culprits: Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Lehman Bros., Morgan Stanley, Citibank, Wachovia, Credit Suisse, UBS and on and on who invented financial instruments such as CDO, credit swaps and other fancy unintelligible names, based on mortgages, with the connivance of the credit agencies--Dow Jone, Standard and Poor's and Fitch.

The Big Short' with a light seriousness is a crash course on the duplicity of Wall Street investment bankers who earned large fees on junk bonds with triple A ratings; who bundled junk to palm off on an unsuspecting public looking for big gains by pandering to the snake oil elixir of getting rich quickly; and who feed on the naivety of the broad American have-nots with the dream of owning a home of their own. And so with some humor but much sadness are we lead through the byways of four different groups of bankers who saw the hoax for what it was and its impending implosion that would bring down the deck of cards of capitalism. And the took out bets on the market, by buying short. And they won big time!

But the banks are still around, and the ratepayers footed the bailout, but at what cost! And we see this in the turmoil of the Republican party: for the discontent abroad in the US has thrown more than 25 percent of the population into poverty, loss of jobs, home, into heavy debt and no future for their children. And these banks have not reformed their ways...now they've come up with the same of gimmicks with a fancy name--something like beneficial financial tranche--as the play the same old mug's game. And like the Bourbons, t The cast is stellar--especially Christian Bale and Steve Carell and Ryan Gosling as well as the minor players. And like the Bourbons, in the words of Talleyrand, 'they learned nothing and forgot nothing', but the contempt they have for all of us. And to make the case stronger, the fools on the Supreme Court have strengthened the hands of big money and the oligopoly and the fat cats of Wall Street and the coupon clippers and the devil take the rest of us!



Published on Nov 6, 2014
The abject failure of the nation's top law enforcer to enforce the law against bankers of any significance in the wake of a $10,000 billion crisis is notorious. Less well-known are (1) the astounding lengths to which Eric Holder's DOJ has gone to protect criminal banks, which just so happen to be clients of his law firm, (2) the degree to which the rule of law has been subverted (it's been destroyed; we have been living under the rule of man, officially, for some time), and (3) the broader implications of Holder's reign on U.S. national sovereignty (grave).

This video series explores all three topics and more.

Frontline's Untouchables demonstrates the power of real journalism in bringing even the elite to heel, in this case literally overnight. The show is a masterpiece in narrative structure and is shot beautifully as well. At 54 minutes, it's well worth the time:



http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/untouchables/

Martin Smith, who wrote and produced the Untouchables, received the 2014 John Chancellor Award for Excellence from Columbia's journalism school. While putatively for his work on the Retirement Gamble a year later, the award has the appearance of a veiled accolade for the more powerful Untouchables. (It's not unlike, say, Dennis Hopper's 1986 Oscar nomination for Hoosiers instead of for his more controversial role in Blue Velvet the same year.)





THE LATEST


How Bank of America’s $16.65 Billion Settlement Compares



In the five years since the crisis, government authorities have won nearly $83 billion in credit crisis and mortgage-related settlements from the nation’s six largest banks — while the banks have earned more than $320 billion in profits.


Citigroup to Pay $7 Billion to End Mortgage Deal Probe



The nation’s third largest bank will pay $7 billion to settle a federal investigation into whether it misled investors about the quality of mortgage-related securities that it sold in the run-up to the financial crisis.


Could BNP Conviction Signal the End of “Too Big To Jail”?



Nearly six years since the peak of the financial crisis, U.S. prosecutors are still battling the impression that no single bank is too big to jail. But a pair of recent victories may help reverse that perception.


Is SEC “Fearful” of Wall Street? Agency Insider Says Yes



An SEC trial attorney used a recent retirement speech to criticize the agency for being too “tentative and fearful” in confronting Wall Street following the 2008 financial crisis.


Watchdog Calls Out DOJ For Mortgage Fraud Response



An inspector general’s report has called into question the Justice Department’s stated commitment to holding people accountable for misconduct that precipitated the financial crisis.


How JPMorgan’s $13 Billion Settlement Stacks Up



Its the largest fine against an American company ever — and here’s how it compares to other recent bank settlements.


Bank of America Liable for Mortgage “Hustle” Program



For the first time, a major U.S. bank has been found liable for fraud in the sale of defective mortgages during the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis.


Still “Untouchable”? Policing Wall St. 5 Years After the Crisis



Has Wall Street permanently escaped accountability? FRONTLINE asks a group of leading journalists to explore what the meltdown has meant for the policing of Wall St.


Survey: One in Four on Wall Street Open to Insider Trading



If public confidence in Wall Street remains battered from the financial crisis, a new survey of ethics in the financial services industry is unlikely to help.


Rethinking Past Settlements, SEC Aims For More Mea Culpas



New SEC Chairman Mary Jo White says she is looking to boost accountability.


Is Wall Street Still “Untouchable”?



In “The Untouchables,” which re-airs tonight on FRONTLINE, correspondent Martin Smith examines why not one major Wall Street executive has been prosecuted for fraud tied to the sale of bad mortgages.


Eric Holder Backtracks Remarks on “Too Big To Jail”



The attorney general on Wednesday sought to walk back earlier comments that some financial institutions may be too large to prosecute.


SEC Nominee Signals Cautious Approach to Prosecuting Banks



Prosecutors should consider the “collateral consequences” of bringing criminal indictments against financial institutions, SEC nominee Mary Jo White told lawmakers at her confirmation hearing.


Holder: Big Banks’ Clout “Has an Inhibiting Impact” on Prosecutions



The attorney general’s comments underscored previous concerns that the Justice Department hasn’t been sufficiently aggressive in prosecuting major banks for the fiscal crisis.


Senators Bash DOJ for “Evasive” Response on “Too Big To Jail”



Two U.S. senators have criticized the Department of Justice for offering an “aggressively evasive” response to their questions about why major banks have avoided prosecution for the financial crisis.


Supreme Court Ruling a Blow for Future Financial Crisis Cases



The unanimous decision largely ensures no new civil fraud charges will come out of the crisis, now that five-year statute of limitations for such cases has nearly expired.


4 Reasons Why the S&P Fraud Lawsuit May Be a Game-Changer



The Justice Department alleges Standard & Poor’s, the nation’s largest credit ratings agency, knowingly understated the risk behind many of the financial products that caused the subprime mortgage meltdown.


Senators Ask DOJ: Is Wall Street Really “Too Big to Jail”?



Senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) want to know whether the DOJ avoided prosecuting banks in order to protect financial markets.


Eric Schneiderman: Mortgage Task Force Eyeing Broader Suits



The appetite is growing for cases that address systemic fraud during the financial crisis, says the co-chair of the Obama administration’s Mortgage-Backed Securities Working Group.


Report: DOJ Criminal Chief Lanny Breuer Stepping Down



Lanny Breuer is leaving his position as head of the Justice Department’s criminal division, The Washington Post reported Wednesday. As assistant attorney … Continue reading 


Did Wall St. Get Away With It? Live Chat Wed. 2 pm ET



Join us for a live chat on “The Untouchables” with producer Martin Smith and New York Times DealBook reporter Peter Eavis at 2pm ET on Wednesday, January 23rd. You can leave a question now.


Blowing the Whistle on the Mortgage Bubble



Well before the 2008 financial meltdown, mortgage industry insiders discovered a ticking time-bomb that they say went up to the very top of Wall Street. What did they find? Who did they warn? And what happened to their warnings?


Too Big To Jail? The Top 10 Civil Cases Against the Banks



In nearly every major legal case to emerge from the crisis, government prosecutors have won multi-million dollar settlements, but companies and officials have not been required to admit wrongdoing.


Were Bankers Jailed In Past Financial Crises?



Not one Wall Street executive has been prosecuted for fraud related to the subprime crisis. How does that compare to past downturns?


Phil Angelides: Enforcement of Wall St. is “Woefully Broken”



The current system of enforcement in the financial services industry has done little to deter pervasive fraud, says the former chairman of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.


Lanny Breuer: Financial Fraud Has Not Gone Unpunished



Prosecutors are holding Wall Street to account for the financial crisis, but success should not be measured solely by the number of convictions to date, says the head of the Justice Department’s criminal division.


Ted Kaufman: Wall Street Prosecutions Never Made a Priority



The lack of high-level prosecutions from the financial crisis can be traced to the Obama administration’s ambivalence to upset the banks, the former U.S. senator told FRONTLINE.


As Deadlines Loom for Financial Crisis Cases, Prosecutors Weigh Their Options



For more than four years, regulators have struggled to successfully prosecute a Wall Street bank or its executives for alleged misconduct during the financial crisis. Now, time may be running out.


“Fraud Was … the F-Bomb”



Well before the housing bubble burst, alarm bells were beginning to sound among key players in the mortgage industry: due diligence underwriters.















////////


No comments:

Post a Comment