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Lloyd Craig Blankfein, CEO of The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc, left, Kenneth Irvine Chenault, CEO of American Express, Kenneth D. Lewis, chairman of Bank of America and Edward Yingling, president of the American Bankers Association walk to the White House M Credit: OLIVIER DOULIERY

I’d like nothing more than to give the bailout scandal a rest — but the bankers won’t let me! They just keep coming at us with ever-more-clever inventions of greed
and deceit.

Their latest bit of hocus-pocus, accompanied by big puffs of smoke, is a
dazzling show of profits. Yes, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Bank of America,
JPMorgan Chase and other financial giants that only yesterday were insolvent
basket cases now report that poof! — in the first quarter of this year, they magically produced blockbuster profits.
Absolutely A-mazing! Of course, it’s a con job. After all, magicians don’t perform magic. They create illusions.

First — and most obvious — the “profits” are made possible only because you and I have stuffed the banks with massive
infusions of tax dollars. Indeed, they wouldn’t even be standing without our money. I don’t mean merely the $700 billion straightforward bailout approved by Congress, but
also the nearly $2.5 trillion in such backdoor subsidies as dirt-cheap loans
and government guarantees quietly extended by the Federal Reserve and the
Treasury.

Second, the banks lobbied for and won a regulatory break that lets them pretend
that all of those bad housing investments weighing down their books like a load
of toxic waste are worth … well, worth whatever the bankers say they’re worth. So — Shazam! — huge losses are wiped clean by banker fantasy.

Then there are special little puffs of smoke used by particular banks. For
example, Goldman Sachs (which has us taxpayers on the hook for more than $50
billion in its bailout package) breathlessly announced a dazzling profit of
$1.8 billion for the first quarter. The dazzle dimmed, however, when it was
learned that Goldman had altered its definition of “quarter,” shifting its normal December-to-March quarter ahead one month, thus
disappearing December. That was a month in which the bank lost $1.5 billion, so
scrubbing it gave the revised calendar a neat banker buff job.

Meanwhile, these same bankers are using their miraculous profit numbers as an
excuse to — guess what? — bulk up executive paychecks! While the Obama administration has imposed some
limits on the pay of the very top executives of bailed-out banks, the CEOs
expect to be out from under these restrictions before long. So, to take care of
themselves — and to restore Wall Street’s sense that investment bankers are the most deserving people on the planet — they are now setting aside billions of dollars to be distributed at the end of
the year as executive compensation, including the return of outlandish bonuses.

Goldman Sachs leads the pack, having reserved $4.7 billion to cover such
compensation just for the first three months of this year. “We need to be able to pay our people,” barked a Goldman spokesperson. Well, yes, but at the rate of nearly $5 billion
per quarter, every banker in the firm would average $569,000 — and, of course, top executives would draw many times that average.

Can these guys (and they are mostly guys) even spell “outrageous”? These set-asides would return Wall Street to the bloated 2007 level of gilded
greed that perverted its ethics and led to the crash that has swamped us all.
Meanwhile, every billion dollars snapped up by the self-absorbed bankers is a
billion that doesn’t go into loans to help our economy, doesn’t go to repayment of the federal debt run up by the bailout and doesn’t go to shareholders who’ve lost huge sums thanks to these very bankers.

As Chaucer once said about goats: They “stinken.”

This is proof that Wall Street bankers have learned nothing. It’s also proof that Barack Obama’s present bailout policy of saving the bankers must go, and that the bankers
themselves must go.

To connect with a grassroots campaign to bring real structural change to Wall
Street, go to www.anewwayforward.org.

For more Jim Hightower go to www.hightowerlowdown.org

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