Michael Bloomberg isn’t leaving office until January but Wall Street is already beginning to miss the New York City mayor — and bracing for a possible backlash from his replacement.
In his 12 years leading the city, Bloomberg has been a vocal champion of New York’s business and banking communities. When the knives have come out, he has time and again come to the defense of the financial services industry without batting an eye at the political reality that advocating for Wall Street is a highly unpopular move for public officials.
Perdido 03
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Wall Street Gets Sad Over Bloomberg's Impending Departure
From Politico:
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i agree with you absolutely. And what are we the dumb American public going to do about it, as we are fleeced upside down and backwards. Left with nothing.
ReplyDeleteHmmm, read Chris Hedges.
How long are we going to allow this?
A good question. Looks like things are still going to have to get worse for people to rise up. I thought Occupy was a beginning, but it was suppressed with the help of the oligarchs. But it will arise again, in some other form.
Delete"What American politician DOESN'T work with you (Big Bankers).
ReplyDeleteOh we'll...John F. Kennedy...and Abraham Lincoln. Both of these Presidents were attempting to wrest control from Big Banking when assassinated. Lincoln was printing the " greenback", and JFK began printing silver backed U.S. notes - the true currency of the people. President Andrew Jackson expelled Big Banking from the Federal Government...YET managed to survive to tell his tale.
We are all slaves to Big Banking at this time.
Strange how all of the host "Arab Spring" countries were fighting to free themselves from the petrodollar system at the time of their "liberation." Iraq as well was beginning to free herself from the dominant Central Banking system, before invasion.
(All Wars Are Banker Wars)
Http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5hfEBupAeo4
It is true that the titans of finance have their mitts in everything and every so-called "crisis" seems to benefit them in the end.
DeleteJust a coincidence, I guess...and after the fall of Presidents and countries, the currency is immediately monopolized by the Central Banking system.
ReplyDeleteA central bank that keeps inflating the currency and yet, claims there is no inflation...
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