Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Banks Don’t Commit Crimes, Bankers Do

- Jim Hightower OTHERWORDS COLUMNIST JIM HIGHTOWER IS A RADIO COMMENTATO­R, WRITER, AND PUBLIC SPEAKER.

Hey, stop complainin­g that our government coddles Wall Street’s big, money-grubbing banks.

Sure, they went belly-up and crashed our economy with their greed. And, yes, Washington bailed them out, while ignoring the plight of workaday people who lost jobs, homes, businesses, wealth, and hope.

But come on, buckos. Haven’t you noticed that the feds are now socking the banksters with huge penalties for their wrongdoing­s?

Wall Street powerhouse Goldman Sachs, for example, was recently punched in its corporate gut with a jaw- dropping $5 billion punishment for its illegal schemes. It’s hard to comprehend that much money, so think of it like this: If you paid out $100,000 every day, it would take you nearly 28 years to pay off just $1 billion.

So imagine having to pull five big Bs out of your wallet. That should make even the most arrogant and avaricious high-finance flim-flammer think twice before risking such scams.

So these negotiated settlement­s between the feds and the big banks will effectivel­y deter repeats of the 2008 Wall Street debacle, right? No.

Notice that the $5 billion punishment is applied to Goldman Sachs, not to the “Goldman Sackers.” The bank’s shareholde­rs have to cough up the penalty, rather than the executives who did the bad deeds.

Remember, banks don’t commit crimes — bankers do. Yet Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein just awarded himself a $ 23 million paycheck for his work last year. That work essentiall­y amounted to negotiatin­g a deal with the government to make shareholde­rs pay for the bankers’ wrongdoing­s — while he and other top executives keep their jobs and keep pocketing millions.

What a great example for young financial executives. With no punishment, the next generation of banksters can view Blankfein’s story as a model for Wall Street success, rather than a deterrent to corruption.

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