Schadenfreude is Far Too Mild a Word
Eliot Spitzer: the thorn in Wall Street's side
By blackhedd Posted in Democrats | Economy | Eliot Spitzer | Wall Street — Comments (15) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
Courtesy of Slate, a smackdown of the Governor of New York State. They say he was laid low by the same kind of investigation he once used to terrorize Wall Street. Actually, no.
The stock market may be battered, the dollar may be plunging, and the economy may be tanking, but there's a bull market in schadenfreude on Wall Street this afternoon. Even as the Dow was on its way to notching another triple-digit loss, whoops of joy erupted from the dispirited trading floors today on news of New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's disgrace. Spitzer, who rose to prominence as a scourge of Wall Street, uprooting corrupt practices, coming down hard on bad actors, and establishing a new moral order, was laid low by reports that he had been involved in a prostitution ring.
Spitzer was not brought down by the kind of investigation he himself specialized in. The last time I checked, soliciting a prostitute is actually illegal in New York, and the transportation of an individual across state lines for the purpose of engaging in prostitution violates the Federal Mann Act.
In other words, the Governor of New York was busted for breaking the law. That's not why he busted people all over Wall Street, who in many cases were guilty of nothing more than success.
Exhibit A: Hank Greenberg, the former CEO of the AIG insurance companies, a wholly unattractive and ruthless little man who built his company up over several decades to a global powerhouse with 80,000 employees and and astounding $80 billion in annual revenue. Say what you will about Greenberg, but he generated a lot of jobs and created a lot of wealth for ordinary people.
But Eliot Spitzer, as NYS Attorney General, by his own admission, creatively interpreted a never-used statute from the 1870s and found a way to accuse AIG of something I really couldn't begin to explain to you. He intimidated AIG's directors with threats of personal criminal liability and they fired Greenberg. To this day, neither Greenberg nor AIG have been indicted or formally charged with any crime.
Spitzer used the awful power of his office to create a public-relations victory for himself by destroying the lives of people all over Wall Street. A similar story applies to Dick Grasso, the former chairman of the New York Stock Exchange and most of NYSE's directors. Grasso, who piloted the exchange through the difficult, transformational times following the 9/11 attacks, was guilty of nothing more than getting a large severance payment.
Now you know why a big cheer went up all over Wall Street this afternoon when we got the news that this filthy skunk has finally gotten his:
It was personal.
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Schadenfreude is Far Too Mild a Word 15 Comments (0 topical, 15 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
For we have a peculiar power of thinking before we act, and of acting, too, whereas other men are courageous from ignorance but hesitate upon reflection.
"No compromise with the main purpose, no peace till victory, no pact with unrepentant wrong." - Winston Churchill
Spitzer campaigned as a pure, ethical, law enforcement officer, when he was nothing but a shakedown artist.
He put himself on a very high pedestal. It will make the tumble to the bottom more painful. And it is well deserved pain at that.
I meant what I said and I said what I meant. An elephant's faithful 100 percent.
Was he the S.O.B. who went after Martha Stewart? I hope so and if so, I hope she's laughing at him now.
John S. McCain III
Eric Cantor for VEEP
Spitzer was nothing more then a scumbag with a badge. I hope he spends a long time incarcerated.
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It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
--Aristotle
....gotten his. He's still a stallion, not a gelding.
"Flies breed disease. So keep yours closed!" General Maxwell Taylor, 101st Airborne, June 1944.
I want him out of office. You'd think he'd be hard to take seriously after this, but the gold standard for clinging to power is Bill Clinton, and I'm sure Spitzer is weighing carefully whether he can follow in the master's footsteps.
some hangovers today in the financial world?
I know some of my friends celebrated like it was the end of Prohibition.
" Got to love the Lord for making things like that."
Morally Compromised
" Got to love the Lord for making things like that."
Morally Compromised
which paid for various bacchanales of its CEO, whom Spitzer placed in NY state prison for a very long time.
What goes around, comes around.
"I believe we must adjourn this meeting to some other place." - The last recorded words of Adam Smith.

Those he didn't use for show trials and making a mockery of the rule of law (Hint he embodied everything that was feared would happen with the RICO statutes) His people would just shake down to support his political ambitions. Nobody wants the AG bringing a labor action against them in NY. It costs a fortune just to hire someone to tell you what the charges mean.
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777