on 07-02-2014 11:19 AM
...after the criminal banks!
Citizens Electoral Council leader Craig Isherwood today called on the Abbott government to finally hold the banks accountable for their financial crimes, before it goes off on its crusade against union corruption.
Isherwood said, “In 2009 I called for an Australian Pecora Commission, modelled on the U.S. investigation of Wall Street led fearlessly by Ferdinand Pecora from 1932-34, which exposed the financial crimes that led to the Great Depression, and the corrupt dealings between the Wall Street banks and American politicians that enabled the banks to get away with their crimes.
“So far, outside of some Senate inquiries there has been no serious investigation of financial crimes in Australia. Yet after a few high-profile examples of union corruption, people in the Abbott government are pushing for a Royal Commission into the unions.
“I say investigate both,” he said, “but unless the government goes after the banks with the same zeal it has to tear into the unions, it is being corrupt itself, by covering up for corruption on a scale that crooked unionists could only dream of.”
Isherwood cited examples of the banks not being held accountable:
Isherwood noted that there have been numerous corporate collapses in recent years in which the losses were borne by the mum and dad investors but not the banks or the well-connected.
Isherwood concluded, “It is time to clean up the criminal activity in the financial system that has been allowed to flourish under the cover of deregulation.
“We must also impose the only effective regulation which can protect ordinary people from the predations of financial speculators, which is a Glass-Steagall separation of retail banking from investment banking.
“The only reason for the government to not launch a thorough investigation of criminality in the banking system, and not go with Glass-Steagall, is to cover for the bankers.
"The relationship between Macquarie Bank, aka the Millionaires’ Factory, and numerous ex-politicians and public servants who have gone to work for Macquarie after, in many cases, being involved in public policy decisions such as privatisations and public-private partnerships from which Macquarie directly profited."
on 07-02-2014 10:29 PM
on 07-02-2014 10:31 PM
@boris1gary wrote:poddster, we had a word for this where I used to work, hubby has the same word now where he is working, but in the interests of polite posting..........................
Oh yes I am quite familiar with the word that you are too polite to say 🙂
It is just another way of applying pressure to anyone reluctant to being ripped off and an attempt to force a person into conforming the the will of the union.
It is unfortunate that a lot of people under such pressure give in to the pressure instead of standing their ground resisting it.
on 07-02-2014 10:34 PM
donna, some of the govt papers have been released recently re: that period of english history, i might post part of it tomorrow, very interesting reading.
waves to donna
on 07-02-2014 10:34 PM
on 07-02-2014 10:36 PM
on 07-02-2014 10:36 PM
Your memory is failing you.
on 07-02-2014 10:36 PM
.poddster, so of course you refused all wage increases and anything else won by the union representing the other workers at all the places you have worked.
on 07-02-2014 10:38 PM
on 07-02-2014 10:39 PM
Boris, read back and you will notice i negociated my own salary package 🙂
on 07-02-2014 10:39 PM
you do mean Bragg not Shorten? I saw him many years ago at the Trade Union Club in Surry Hills (well i think it was Surry Hills, it was in my wild days.)