Simon Johnson has another interesting article Austerity and the Modern Banker posted on Truth Out.
The protesters of “Occupy Albany” issued a powerful consensus statement recently, which reads in part:
“The interests of those who purchase influence are rewarded at the expense of the People, from whom the government’s just power is derived. We believe that this failure in our system is at the core of many interconnected issues we face as a society, and its resolution is key to a just future. We therefore demand true democracy, decoupled from the corrosive influence of concentrated economic power, and we call all who share in this common goal to stand with us and take action toward this end.”
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Jon Huntsman, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, is addressing this directly – insisting that we should force the largest banks to break up and to become safer. No other candidate for the presidency is seriously confronting this issue head-on: just saying “we’ll let them fail” is no kind of answer when the failure of megabanks would cause so much damage.We should learn from both the WaMu and the Occupy movement. In both cases, the lesson is the same: concentrated financial power is a gift that keeps on giving – but not to you.
As for the statement about Jon Huntsman, perhaps this is why some Democrats in New Hampshire are crossing over to vote for Huntsman in the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary.