Seeking Alpha

williambanzai7 » Comments » Single Comment |

  • Republican Bailout Counterproposal? Utterly Idiotic [View article]
    Wall Street and the Subprime Sting
    WilliamBanzai7

    Doyle Lonnegan: Your boss is quite a card player, Mr. Kelly; how does he do it?
    Johnny Hooker: He cheats.
    (From the Sting)

    "This Sucker Could Go Down" "W"

    It is ironic, that on the weekend that arguably
    the greatest confidence game of all time is
    reaching its climax in Washington in the form of the
    mother of all
    Wall Street bailouts, Paul Newman, the star of The Sting,
    the greatest Confidence movie of all time, has passed on.
    In the Sting, Newman plays Henry "Shaw" Gondorf, a master con man who
    orchestrates the greatest con ever, that is until September 2008.

    The Sting is chuck full of gangsters, incompetent cops, grifters,
    colorful schemers, con men, marks
    and shills, and keeps you on the edge of your seat straight though to its conclusion.
    Just like the Great Subprime Swindle of 2008, there are
    twists and turns galore, and you don't know how it
    is going to until the final 10 minutes.

    Welcome to the Great Subprime Swindle of 2008.
    We are barely into what could not be a more fitting sequel to The Sting.
    In this new episode, the Wall Street gang succeeds
    in conning Main Street USA out of its real
    estate/retirement nest egg by
    employing thousands of mortgage brokers, investment banking con men and
    dubious ponziesque securities called Collateralized Debt
    Obligations and Credit Default Swaps. Like the Sting, the cast
    is chuck full of colorful characters like Alan (the "Maestro") Greenspan, Dick (the "Gorilla") Fuld,
    Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, James "Jimmy" Cayne
    Henry "Hank" Paulsen and
    Ben Bernanke (who will soon be known as "Father Moral Hazard"). What is it
    with gangsters, con men, bankers and
    nicknames? In the plot we get to watch innocent
    bystanders, a dopey mark like
    AIG and now the American taxpayer, get conned and swindled out of
    roughly $700 Billion USD-- no one knows for sure. As
    in The Sting, the key stone cops (the SEC), show up
    long after the action has taken place. Unlike the Sting,
    there is no Shaw character to exact poetic justice against
    the Wall Street gang.

    One hundred years ago a man named Franklin Keyes, Esq.
    (you guessed it, a Wall Street lawyer) published a tract
    titled: "Wall Street Speculation, Its Tricks and Its Tragedies".
    In it he says: "Wall Street is dominated by some of the brainiest
    and shrewdest men in the country, natural born sharpers and schemers,
    and before the average man can get the better of them,
    except through the merest chance,
    he will have to eat brain food for a long time."

    Nothing could be further from the truth.

    Paul Newman, you're than man, rest in peace.





    Sep 28 12:13 pm |Rating: 0 0
All Comments by williambanzai7 »
Comments by Ticker
williambanzai7's
Comments Stats
98 comments
Rating: 0 (0 - 0 )