Forum Post: 5 Things Wall Street Protesters Should Demand of the 1%
Posted 13 years ago on Nov. 18, 2011, 12:56 p.m. EST by OccupiedSoul
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Break up the monopolies. The so-called "Too Big to Fail" financial companies – now sometimes called by the more accurate term "Systemically Dangerous Institutions" – are a direct threat to national security. They are above the law and above market consequence, making them more dangerous and unaccountable than a thousand mafias combined. There are about 20 such firms in America, and they need to be dismantled; a good start would be to repeal the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and mandate the separation of insurance companies, investment banks and commercial banks.
Pay for your own bailouts. A tax of 0.1 percent on all trades of stocks and bonds and a 0.01 percent tax on all trades of derivatives would generate enough revenue to pay us back for the bailouts, and still have plenty left over to fight the deficits the banks claim to be so worried about. It would also deter the endless chase for instant profits through computerized insider-trading schemes like High Frequency Trading, and force Wall Street to go back to the job it's supposed to be doing, i.e., making sober investments in job-creating businesses and watching them grow.
No public money for private lobbying. A company that receives a public bailout should not be allowed to use the taxpayer's own money to lobby against him. You can either suck on the public teat or influence the next presidential race, but you can't do both. Butt out for once and let the people choose the next president and Congress.
Tax hedge-fund gamblers. For starters, we need an immediate repeal of the preposterous and indefensible carried-interest tax break, which allows hedge-fund titans like Stevie Cohen and John Paulson to pay taxes of only 15 percent on their billions in gambling income, while ordinary Americans pay twice that for teaching kids and putting out fires. I defy any politician to stand up and defend that loophole during an election year.
Change the way bankers get paid. We need new laws preventing Wall Street executives from getting bonuses upfront for deals that might blow up in all of our faces later. It should be: You make a deal today, you get company stock you can redeem two or three years from now. That forces everyone to be invested in his own company's long-term health – no more Joe Cassanos pocketing multimillion-dollar bonuses for destroying the AIGs of the world.
I think your numbers 2 and 3 sort of addresses your #5 in other words, let them run their company and overpay their executives just as long as it is their stockholders who pay the price and not the American people then give their stockholders the right to prosecute (criminal and civil) any lies and deception. Credit Unions and small banks are much better than mega banks but they are routinely crushed by the larger banks chiefly because the larger banks steer the influence and regulations in their own favor. If we compel the large banks to operate with the same fiduciary as the smaller banks and Credit Unions (I.E. curtail reckless behavior that only looks as far as the next Quarterly Report and subsequent bonus) then I am sure the market will do the rest and diminish their influence and market size. Remember, in the last crash the banks enjoyed diminished regulation and reclassified CDS's as other than insurance - to accomplish that I know they had to pay off somebody. Overall we just need to limit corporate/big money influence on our government the way the founding fathers wanted, the market economy works as long as you prevent corruption; no system works if it is corrupt (ask Communist Russia, Mexico, Cuba - pre revolution, Somalia, Myanmar/Burma, ). – Guy in the Thoid Row
The supreme court has now ruled that corporations are people and give as much money they want in campaign contributions.
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