I am somewhat worried that all the grandstanding and posturing from Washington is taking the public's eye and anger away from where it truely belongs. Am I outraged that AIG execs and others received up to multi million dollar bonuses? Certainly. BUT they legally received these bonuses thanks to our congressmen and women. The ones who wrote the exemption into the bill and the ones who voted for the bailout bill, you know the one that was so important and so needed that no one had time to read it, they have no place to rant and rail about AIG and other companies until they deal with their own complacency in this matter. It has gotten to the point that AIG execs are being threatened with bodily harm and death. I have to have some empathy with them and their families, it is not like Madoff who lied and stole people's money, or like congress who receive an automatic yearly pay-raise, unless they vote against receiving it. Around 4,000 dollars. It hardly ever comes to a floor vote, it somehow, mysteriously, is lost in committee. And then, our congress can look us in the eye and say: "I did not vote for a pay raise."
CONGRESS' BONUS BABIES
by INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY; IBDEditorials.com
THE AIG AFFAIR:
As Barney Frank compiles an enemies list, Chris Dodd confesses he did in fact author the AIG stimulus loophole. So just who is going to go after those million-dollar retention bonuses at Fannie Mae?
There was Rep. Frank, who once whistled past the Fannie Mae graveyard, demanding in full righteous indignation that AIG CEO Edward Liddy tell him where the bonus recipients — and their families — lived and who they were down to the family dog. All that was missing were powdered wigs and a guillotine.
Liddy, brought in for a dollar a year after the market meltdown Frank had a hand in creating, wasn't the one who should have been in the dock. Frank should have been grilling his Senate colleague Chris Dodd, who now admits writing the language in the stimulus that made these bonuses exempt from any government restrictions.
Sitting next to Dodd should have been Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, late of the Federal Reserve in New York and the architect of the original AIG bailout. After saying he didn't know who wrote the stimulus language exempting AIG bonuses, he now says he did it at the request of Treasury and administration officials.
"When the language went to the conference and came back, there was different language," Dodd told Fox News on Tuesday. "I can tell you this much: When my language left the Senate, it did not include it. When it came back, it did."
On Wednesday, he told a different story, acknowledging that he and his staff did in fact change the language in the stimulus bill to include a loophole for AIG executive bonuses. "As many know, the administration was, among others, not happy with the language. They wanted some modifications in it.
"They came to us, our staff, and asked for changes, and the changes at the time did not seem obnoxious or onerous," Dodd added.
Say what? Exempting AIG bonuses to be paid out with taxpayer dollars seemed harmless to the No. 1 recipient of AIG campaign cash? Some have called this a "reversal" of position. We call it a lie admitted to.
Dodd said the argument put forward by Treasury was that a "flood of lawsuits" would come forward if the change was not made. The bonuses were contractual obligations.
But who is "they" and just who at Treasury advocated the exemption? Just how is Geithner, who followed the AIG mess from the Federal Reserve to Treasury, now the Sergeant Schultz of the administration, someone who knows nothing and sees nothing?
Also pointing a finger at the "Obama economic team" is Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who says they are responsible for stripping a provision from the stimulus bill that he and Republican Olympia Snowe of Maine submitted. It would have taxed such bonuses at a 35% rate. Asked who he spoke to about stripping the item, Wyden said, "Secretary Geithner, Larry Summers, and I'll leave it at that."
"The president goes out and says this is not acceptable, and then some backroom deal gets cut to let these things get paid out anyway," Wyden told the Associated Press. The unanswered questions are who and why?
Now we learn that Fannie Mae, a bailout beneficiary and the ignition source of the mortgage meltdown, plans to pay its own retention bonuses of at least $1 million to four executives as part of a plan to keep hundreds of employees from leaving. Let them work for a buck too.
Just as was the case with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Congress and the administration had a chance to stop this. Instead they protected AIG with a bill written in the middle of the night, sliced and diced by a handful of Democrats in a closed conference room, that those voting on it had not read.
Frank et al. have forgotten how Franklin Raines, who headed Fannie from 1998 to 2004, the years of its worst excesses, pocketed nearly $100 million in pay and bonuses from Fannie. He later became an adviser to Obama, the No. 2 recipient of AIG campaign funds behind Dodd.
This is the administration and Congress that promised to be the most transparent ever. They're transparent all right. We can see right through them.
Here Here. I concur.
ReplyDeleteAll so sadly true.
ReplyDeletesadly thats how those that we elect to serve americas best interest perform .....so whats the cure oh wise penguin? your kind has managed for a few million years to get along and not shaft one another...in the swamp if another gator gets to out of control we eat him...what should the warm blooded upright walkers do?
ReplyDeleteROFL ~ and gator is quite tasty (had some in Cocoa Beach)... so guess this means our Gator stays in control.......
ReplyDeleteDon't mean to laugh at such a serious and sad matter, but we elect whom we think are the best choices.... thinking we will get good decisions and honesty out of them.... what are we to do?
It's depressing to watch our politians lie lie lie. We need to hold them accountable for sure.
ReplyDeleteHow???
ReplyDeleteLike I've said for years...Why did we first go in search of a new land.. because of high taxes in England..now look what we have..and where can we go now? No where..but it is going to get to a point where no one is making any money so where are they going to get their tax dollars then? Hmmmm?
ReplyDeleteNancy Jihad Bella Pelosi and her lying congress can lie and point the finger at everybody else all they want ... except the Americans here are smart enough to see through the smoke and deceit.
ReplyDeletelol its self preservation and heavy is the scaly head that wears the crown
ReplyDeleteWell they have been known Gator to eat each other too....just think of Donner Pass.....LOL.
ReplyDeleteWhat shall be shall be, if no one interferes. That's the way they all should go.