An interesting story today on the BBC about "banksters", a word which combines "banker" and "gangster".
In 1928, Professor William Z. Ripley of Harvard condemned the practices of Wall Street at that time. He called them "prestidigitation, double-shuffling, honey-fugling, hornswoggling and skullduggery".
He tried to warn then-President Coolidge, but the President was an insider on Wall Street, making money using some of the very practices Ripley was citing. The result was the crash of 1929 and a decade of depression. A depression, by the way, made much worse and much longer by the Socialistic programs of Franklin Roosevelt.
Alas, the situation is remarkably similar today. And we now have a President who will take a slim victory in the polls as a "mandate" to do things far above and beyond what Roosevelt ever dreamed of. I hope you have comfortable shoes. You'll need them when you're standing next to me in the soup line.
Read the BBC story here. There's an interesting twist at the end.
Sunday, February 1, 2009
The more things change ...
Labels:
depression,
economics,
Franklin Roosevelt,
Obama,
quotes,
recession
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