An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
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Friday, June 17, 2016
Stephen Gandel — Mortgage Exec At the Heart of Financial Crisis Escapes Charges
Mozilo walks with only a hefty fine, not all of which he paid himself.
Was he a robin hood, or a scoundrel? He took money from the rich, gave it to the poor and enabled them to keep consuming even though politicians stopped supporting wage growth and equality. Law enforcement, of course just sees a criminal, I see a hero under there.
Listen to this and then tell me you see him as a hero. [Btw, this interview is entertaining. You won’t be bored. I suggest cranking it up while cleaning out the car, the garage, or any Honey-Do project, if you’re married.] http://harryshearer.com/le-shows/may-1/?tag=bill%20black
He took money from the rich, gave it to the poor and enabled them to keep consuming even though politicians stopped supporting wage growth and equality.
I like Mozilo, enough to be gracious enough to strap him into his beloved sunbed instead of an electric chair and fry him for about the length of a typical mortgage, twenty-five years. It'd be a fitting sentence.
Was he a robin hood, or a scoundrel? He took money from the rich, gave it to the poor and enabled them to keep consuming even though politicians stopped supporting wage growth and equality. Law enforcement, of course just sees a criminal, I see a hero under there.
ReplyDeleteRyan,
ReplyDeleteListen to this and then tell me you see him as a hero. [Btw, this interview is entertaining. You won’t be bored. I suggest cranking it up while cleaning out the car, the garage, or any Honey-Do project, if you’re married.]
http://harryshearer.com/le-shows/may-1/?tag=bill%20black
He took money from the rich, gave it to the poor and enabled them to keep consuming even though politicians stopped supporting wage growth and equality.
ReplyDeleteFantasy.
I like Mozilo, enough to be gracious enough to strap him into his beloved sunbed instead of an electric chair and fry him for about the length of a typical mortgage, twenty-five years. It'd be a fitting sentence.
ReplyDelete