Robert Scheer: 'The Great American Stickup': It Was The Economy, Stupid - Read this and remember. We the people need to demand real financial reform and keep asking for it until we get it. Or, we will get robbed again.

Yes, there is a "they": the captains of finance, their lobbyists, and allies among leading politicians of both parties, who together destroyed an American regulatory system that had been functioning splendidly for most of the six decades since it was enacted in the 1930s.
The big cop-out in much of what has been written about the banking meltdown has been the argument by those most complicit that there was "enough blame to go around" and that no institution or individual should be singled out for accountability. "How could we have known?" is the refrain of those who continue to pose as all-knowing experts. "Everybody made mistakes," they say.

Nonsense. This was a giant hustle that served the richest of the rich and left the rest of us holding the bag, a life-altering game of musical chairs in which the American public was the one forced out. Worst of all, legislators from both political parties we elect and pay to protect our interests from the pirates who assaulted us instead changed our laws to enable them.

Scheer really nailed it, we the people, mainly the middle class were held up by the robber baron banks led by Goldman Sachs. If this makes sense to you pass it along and keep the discussion going. It's life or death for the middle class. That's you and me.

If we as a people learn anything from this crash, however, it should be that there are no adults watching the store, only a tiny elite of self-interested multimillionaires and billionaires making decisions for the rest of us. As long as we cede that power to them, we can expect to continue getting bilked.

Is Derivative Trading a conflict of interest for Big Banking vs Investors?

For all of Goldman Sachs' professed support for an overhaul of financial regulations, the megabank hasn't exactly withdrawn its army of lobbyists. Far from wearing out its welcome, the firm is busier than ever safeguarding its interests while a Wall Street crackdown takes shape in Washington.

Goldman has an unrivaled and influential network of lobbyists, including about 50 people with close ties to Congress and past White Houses, a Huffington Post Investigative Fund analysis of lobbying and campaign records shows. The lobbyists are challenging reforms aimed at Goldman's profit centers, including the trading of complex contracts known as derivatives. The Senate this week will continue debating proposed regulations of derivatives, which are blamed for fueling the financial crisis

The fact that banks have been allowed to trade derivates as a means of hedging their bets on investments like risky mortgage backed securities really points out that the combined lack of regulatory control by our government and the lack of transparency in financial reporting creates an environment where our big financial institutions, like Goldman Sachs, can manipulate markets and reap huge profits at the cost of financial stability. We need more regulation now before we find ourselves in another harmful bubble market.