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Olmstein
2nd April 2010, 07:12 PM
When will the people demand defaut on these government debts?


Looting Main Street

If you want to know what life in the Third World is like, just ask Lisa Pack, an administrative assistant who works in the roads and transportation department in Jefferson County, Alabama. Pack got rudely introduced to life in post-crisis America last August, when word came down that she and 1,000 of her fellow public employees would have to take a little unpaid vacation for a while. The county, it turned out, was more than $5 billion in debt — meaning that courthouses, jails and sheriff's precincts had to be closed so that Wall Street banks could be paid.

The sewer bill, in fact, is what cost Pack and her co-workers their jobs. In 1996, the average monthly sewer bill for a family of four in Birmingham was only $14.71 — but that was before the county decided to build an elaborate new sewer system with the help of out-of-state financial wizards with names like Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase. The result was a monstrous pile of borrowed money that the county used to build, in essence, the world's grandest toilet — "the Taj Mahal of sewer-treatment plants" is how one county worker put it. What happened here in Jefferson County would turn out to be the perfect metaphor for the peculiar alchemy of modern oligarchical capitalism: A mob of corrupt local officials and morally absent financiers got together to build a giant device that converted human shit into billions of dollars of profit for Wall Street — and misery for people like Lisa Pack.

More at link:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/32906678/looting_main_street/1

Olmstein
3rd April 2010, 11:56 AM
Really? A huge expose on how wall street is bleeding America dry at the local level, on top of the federal bailout theft going on, and no replies and only 10 views?

Is this not the sort of topic GS.US is interested in?

Seriously, go to Rolling Stone and read the article. It's kinda long, but the subject is a bit complex. Lots of ins and outs and what have you.