Colossal Financial Collapse: The Truth behind the Citigroup Bank "Nationalization"

The IRS' "Tax Terrorism Season" officially begins January 1st. I expect that the tax revolts Gerald Celente has forecasted to start during the next three years will be starting very soon.
Also see:
Fed Pledges Top $7.4 Trillion to Ease Frozen Credit
November 24, 2008
Bloomberg
Colossal Financial Collapse: The Truth behind the Citigroup Bank "Nationalization"
By F. William Engdahl
Global Research, November 24, 2008
On Friday November 21, the world came within a hair’s breadth of the most colossal financial collapse in history according to bankers on the inside of events with whom we have contact. The trigger was the bank which only two years ago was America’s largest, Citigroup. The size of the US Government de facto nationalization of the $2 trillion banking institution is an indication of shocks yet to come in other major US and perhaps European banks thought to be ‘too big to fail.’
The clumsy way in which US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, himself not a banker but a Wall Street ‘investment banker’, whose experience has been in the quite different world of buying and selling stocks or bonds or underwriting and selling same, has handled the unfolding crisis has been worse than incompetent. It has made a grave situation into a globally alarming one.
‘Spitting into the wind’
A case in point is the secretive manner in which Paulson has used the $700 billion in taxpayer funds voted him by a labile Congress in September. Early on, Paulson put $125 billion in the nine largest banks, including $10 billion for his old firm, Goldman Sachs. However, if we compare the value of the equity share that $125 billion bought with the market price of those banks’ stock, US taxpayers have paid $125 billion for bank stock that a private investor could have bought for $62.5 billion, according to a detailed analysis from Ron W. Bloom, economist with the US United Steelworkers union, whose members as well as pension fund face devastating losses were GM to fail.
That means half of the public's money was a gift to Paulson’s Wall Street cronies. Now, only weeks later, the Treasury is forced to intervene to de facto nationalize Citigroup. It won’t be the last.
Paulson demanded, and got from a labile US Congress, Democrat as well as Republican, sole discretion over how and where he can invest the $700 billion, to date with no effective oversight. It amounts to the Treasury Secretary in effect ‘spitting into the wind’ in terms of resolving the fundamental crisis.
It should be clear to any serious analyst by now that the September decision by Paulson to defer to rigid financial ideology and let the fourth largest US investment bank, Lehman Brothers fail, was the proximate trigger for the present global crisis. Lehman Bros.’ surprise collapse triggered the current global crisis of confidence. It was simply not clear to the rest of the banking world which US financial institution bank might be saved and which not, after the Government had earlier saved the far smaller Bear Stearns, while letting the larger, far more strategic Lehman Bros. fail.
Some Citigroup details
The most alarming aspect of the crisis is the fact that we are in an inter-regnum period when the next President has been elected but cannot act on the situation until after January 20, 2009 when he is sworn in.
Consider the details of the latest Citigroup government de facto nationalization (for ideological reasons Paulson and the Bush Administration hysterically avoid admitting they are in the process of nationalizing key banks). Citigroup has more than $2 trillion of assets, dwarfing companies such as American International Group Inc. that got some $150 billion in US taxpayer funds in the past two months. Ironically, only eight weeks before, the Government had designated Citigroup to take over the failing Wachovia Bank. Normally authorities have an ailing bank absorbed by a stronger one. In this instance the opposite seems to have been the case. Now it is clear that the Citigroup was in deeper trouble than Wachovia. In a matter of hours in the week before the US Government nationalization was announced, the stock value of Citibank plunged to $3.77 in New York, giving the company a market value of about $21 billion. The market value of Citigroup stock in December 2006 had been $247 billion. Two days before the bank nationalization the CEO, Vikram Pandit had announced a huge 52,000 job slashing plan. It did nothing to stop the slide.
The scale of the hidden losses of perhaps the twenty largest US banks is so enormous that if not before, the first Presidential decree of President Barack Obama will likely have to be declaration of a US ‘Bank Holiday’ and the full nationalization of the major banks, taking on the toxic assets and losses until the economy can again function with credit flowing to industry once more.
Citigroup and the government have identified a pool of about $306 billion in troubled assets. Citigroup will absorb the first $29 billion in losses. After that, remaining losses will be split between Citigroup and the government, with the bank absorbing 10% and the government absorbing 90%. The US Treasury Department will use its $700 billion TARP or Troubled Asset Recovery Program bailout fund, to assume up to $5 billion of losses. If necessary, the Government’s Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) will bear the next $10 billion of losses. Beyond that, the Federal Reserve will guarantee any additional losses. The measures are without precedent in US financial history. It’s by no means certain they will salvage the dollar system.
The situation is so intertwined, with six US major banks holding the vast bulk of worldwide financial derivatives exposure, that the failure of a single major US financial institution could result in losses to the OTC derivatives market of $300-$400 billion, a new IMF working paper finds. What’s more, since such a failure would likely cause cascading failures of other institutions. Total global financial system losses could exceed another $1,500 billion according to an IMF study by Singh and Segoviano.
The madness over a Detroit GM rescue deal
The health of Citigroup is not the only gripping crisis that must be dealt with. At this point, political and ideological bickering in the US Congress has so far prevented a simple emergency $25 billion loan extension to General Motors and other of the US Big Three automakers—Ford and Chrysler. The absurd spectacle of US Congressmen attacking the chairmen of the Big Three for flying to the emergency Congressional hearings on a rescue loan in their private company jets while largely ignoring the issue of consequences to the economy of a GM failure underscores the utter lack of touch with reality that has overwhelmed Washington in recent years.
For GM to go into bankruptcy risks a disaster of colossal proportions. Although Lehman Bros., the biggest bankruptcy in US history, appears to have had an orderly settlement of its credit defaults swaps, the disruption occurred before-hand, as protection writers had to post additional collateral prior to settlement. That was a major factor in the dramatic global market selloff in October. GM is bigger by far, meaning bigger collateral damage, and this would take place when the financial system is even weaker than when Lehman failed.
In addition, a second, and potentially far more damaging issue, has been largely ignored. The advocates of letting GM go bankrupt argue that it can go into Chapter 11 just like other big companies that get themselves in trouble. That may not happen however, and a Chapter 7 or liquidation of GM that would then result would be a tectonic event.
The problem is that under Chapter 11 US law, it takes time for the company to get the protection of a bankruptcy court. Until that time, which may be weeks or months, the company would need urgently ‘bridge financing’ to continue operating. This is known as ‘Debtor-in-Possession or DIP financing. DIP is essential for most Chapter 11 bankruptcies, as it takes time to get the plan of reorganization approved by creditors and the courts. Most companies, like GM today, go to bankruptcy court when they are at the end of their liquidity.
DIP is specifically for companies in, or on the verge of bankruptcy, and the debt is generally senior to other outstanding creditor claims. So it is actually very low risk, as the amount spent is usually not large, relatively speaking. But DIP lending is being severely curtailed right now, just when it is most needed, as healthier banks drastically cut loans in the severe credit crunch situation.
Without access to DIP bridge financing, GM would be forced into a partial, or even a full liquidation. The ramifications are horrendous. Aside from loss of 100,000 jobs at GM itself, GM is critical to keep many US auto suppliers in business. If GM failed soon most, possibly even all of the US and even foreign auto suppliers will go under. Those parts suppliers are important to other auto makers. Many foreign car factories would be forced to close due to loss of suppliers. Some analysts put 2009 job losses from a GM failure as high as 2.5 million jobs due to the follow-on effects. If the impact of that 2.5 million job loss is seen in terms of the overall losses to the economy of non-auto jobs such as services, home foreclosures caused and such, some estimate total impact would be more than 15 million jobs.
So far in the face of this staggering prospect, the members of the US Congress have chosen to focus on the fact the GM chief, Rick Wagoner, flew in his private company jet to Washington. The Congressional charade conjures up the image of Nero playing his fiddle as Rome goes up in flames. It should not be surprising that at the recent EU-Asian Summit in Beijing, Chinese officials mooted the idea of trading between the EU and Asian nations such as China in Euro, Renminbi, Yen or other national currencies other than the dollar. The Citigroup bailout and GM debacle has confirmed the death of the post-1944 Bretton Woods Dollar System.
The real truth behind Citigroup bailout
What neither Paulson nor anyone in Washington is willing to reveal is the real truth behind the Citigroup bailout. By his and the Republican Bush Administration’s adamant earlier refusal to take an initial resolute action to immediately nationalize the nine or so largest troubled banks, he has created the present debacle. By refusing on ideological grounds to instead reorganize the banks’ assets into some form of ‘good bank’ and ‘bad bank,’ similar to what the Government of Sweden did with what it called Securum, during its banking crisis in the early 1990’s, Paulson and company have created a global financial structure on the brink.
A Securum or similar temporary nationalization would have allowed the healthy banks to continue lending to the real economy so the economy could continue operating, while the State merely sat on the undervalued real estate assets of the Swedish banks for some months until the recovering economy made the assets again marketable to the private sector. Instead, Paulson and his ‘crony capitalists’ in Washington have turned a bad situation into a globally catastrophic one.
His apparent realization of the error of his initial refusal to nationalize came too late. When Paulson reversed policy on September 19 and presented the nine largest banks with an ultimatum to accept partial Government equity ownership, abandoning his original bizarre plan to merely buy up the toxic waste asset-backed securities of the banks with his $700 billion TARP taxpayer money, he never revealed why.
Under the original Paulson Plan, as Dimitri B. Papadimitriou and L. Randall Wray of the Jerome Levy Institute at Bard College in New York point out, Paulson sought to create a situation in which the US ‘Treasury would become an owner of troubled financial institutions in exchange for a capital injection—but without exercising any ownership rights, such as replacing the management that created the mess. The bailout would be used as an opportunity to consolidate control of the nation’s financial system in the hands of a few large (Wall Street) banks, with government funds subsidizing purchases of troubled banks by "healthy" ones.’
Paulson soon realized the scale of crisis, largely triggered by his inept handling of the Lehman Brothers case, had created an impossible situation. Were Paulson to use the $700 billion to buy up toxic waste ABS assets from the select banks at today’s market price, the $700 billion would be far too little to take an estimated $2 trillion ($2,000 billion) in Asset Backed Securities off the books of the banks.
The Levy Economics Institute economists state, ‘It is probable that many and perhaps most financial institutions are insolvent today -- with a black hole of negative net worth that would swallow Paulson's entire $700 billion in one gulp.’
That reality is the real reason Paulson was forced to abandon his original ‘crony bailout’ TARP plan and opt to use some of his money to buy equity shares in the nine largest banks.
That scheme as well is ‘dead on arrival’ as the latest Citigroup nationalization scheme underscores. The dilemma Paulson has created with his inept handling of the crisis is simple: If the US Government paid the true value for these nearly worthless assets, the banks would have to write down huge losses, and, as Levy economists put it, ‘announce to the world that they are insolvent.’ On the other hand, if Paulson raised the toxic waste purchase price high enough to protect the banks from losses, $700 billion ‘will buy only a tiny fraction of the 'troubled' assets.’ That is what the latest nationalization of Citigroup is about.
It is only the beginning. The 2009 year will be one of titanic shocks and changes to the global order of a scale perhaps not experienced in the past five centuries. This is why we should speak of the end of the American Century and its Dollar System.
How destructive that process will be to the citizens of the United States who are the prime victims of Paulson’s crony capitalists, as well as to the rest of the world depends now on the urgency and resoluteness with which heads of national Governments in Germany, the EU, China, Russia and the rest of the non-US world react. It is no time for ideological sentimentality and nostalgia of the postwar old order. That collapsed this past September along with Lehman Brothers and the Republican Presidency. Waiting for a ‘miracle’ from an Obama Presidency is no longer an option for the rest of the world.
F. William Engdahl is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by F. William Engdahl
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Centre for Research on Globalization. The contents of this article are of sole responsibility of the author(s). The Centre for Research on Globalization will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements contained in this article.
To become a Member of Global Research
The CRG grants permission to cross-post original Global Research articles on community internet sites as long as the text & title are not modified. The source and the author's copyright must be displayed. For publication of Global Research articles in print or other forms including commercial internet sites, contact: crgeditor@yahoo.com
www.globalresearch.ca contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available to our readers under the provisions of "fair use" in an effort to advance a better understanding of political, economic and social issues. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material for purposes other than "fair use" you must request permission from the copyright owner.
For media inquiries: crgeditor@yahoo.com
© Copyright F. William Engdahl, Global Research, 2008
The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=11117
© Copyright 2005-2007 GlobalResearch.ca
Web site engine by Polygraphx Multimedia © Copyright 2005-2007
- dicktater's blog
- Login to post comments

should we buy gold?
and stop paying off all debt??
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB122748912533552007-lMyQjAxMDI4MjI3...
-------
"It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there."
--William Carlos Williams (from the poem 'From')
eV, Debt? What debt?
Thems on Wall Street ain't got no debt. All thems got is revenue. Of course, your utility companies might see things differently.
Did you watch the 5 minute Celente video or listen to the hour-long interview by AJ?
Seems to me that investing in some type of storable food and water filtration, non-hybrid garden seed, and a little community cooperation would be first priorities. IMHO, if something is left over, then buy the three Gs - gold, gas, and guns. Decide quickly though. I'm hearing ammo will be shooting up in price long before gold will.
Celente says that there will be another FDR-style gold confiscation coming. My understanding is that the Banksters supressed the price of gold then, bought cheap and resold later for huge profits after FDR's confiscation and prices had increased dramatically.
Gold has been interesting to watch because with worldwide scarcity on the market and government mints not able to meet demand, one would reasonably believe that prices would do the opposite of what they have lately. However, if final currency implosion around the world is imminent, the value of gold, silver, etc. should head for Mars. But then, what would anyone be trading for it? Whatever anyone does with metal should be to take physical possession and hide it as best possible.
Celente also forecasts widespread tax revolts. It should be painfully obvious to every single "taxpayer" by now that the government and fed crime cabal can print "money" at will from absofuckinglutely nothing. So, there is no need for an income tax, except as a method of KONTROL of course. Are you considering income taxes a debt to not pay? You don't have to answer that. However, there is something to be said for being a "nontaxpayer".
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
Mr. T
Sadly, I'm talking about credit-card debt.
How can you be a "nontaxpayer?" By simply not paying your taxes? By that logic, laws only apply to law-abiders, not to non-law-abiders, and I can be a non-law-abider by ceasing to obey laws.
I listened to the Fox clip and am half-way done with the hour-long one.
Thank for the tip on bullets and supplies. I seriously doubt I can get water without electricity, but we already have a great water-filtration system (reverse ionization). A generator would be good, but then it would run out of fuel and I'd have drive somewhere to get propane. Hard to do without gas. You say I should buy gas? How do I store it? A big tank would just attract robbers. I cannot get a gun. I'd need a letter of recommendation to get one in NY! (I'd be hard pressed to think of someone who write me such a letter, as virtually everyone I know seems to think guns are bad. I don't, actually, and was thinking the other day about where I could put one if I had one.) I'm basically screwed.
I do have visions of piling up funds for months while I stop paying bills (mortgage, cc debt, etc.). Maybe I could buy a used yacht and sail away (living on hard tack and gruel, reading the same 14 paperbacks over and over again). Somehow, I don't want to survive if all my friends and relatives die. I do need to take care of my kids though, frankly, that's so hard to think about. We should leave the country while it's still possible.
E
-------
"It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there."
--William Carlos Williams (from the poem 'From')
Nontaxpayers
Nontaxpayers are such because they have no tax liabilities. So, they aren't not paying their taxes. Uh, laws apply to whomever a legislating body has jurisdiction, law-abiding and scofflaws alike. It's all about jurisdiction.
I think that the supreme Court opinion above is pretty straight forward. The supreme Court has identified two classes. There is a distict class with whom the tax laws and the enforcers have business, taxpayers. And there is a class with whom the law and the enforcers have no business, nontaxpayers. The questions that every individual should want answered regard what causes someone/thing to be in one class and not the other. For example, if there are certain activities in which one might become involved that would make them liable for a tax then, are the activities worth the liability. If I wanted to distill whiskey and sell it (a taxable activity), I would be liable for and be required by law to pay a tax. For payment of the tax, I would receive a stamp to place on each bottle as proof that my whiskey was tax-paid. Check out the bottles at the liquor store. I remember a time when each and every pack of cigarettes carried a similar stamp. Maybe it's on the carton now, I don't know. But, if I grew my own tobacco or distilled my own whiskey for personal consumption, there would be no tax liability.
Lorentz makes very efficient solar-powered well pumps:
http://www.lorentz.de/ongrid/en/home
With a pump of this type, you would be trickle pumping to a large storage tank when the sun shines until the tank is full, when a foot valve shuts off the pump. Gravity feeding from a tank positioned higher in elevation than the outlet would be ideal, especially if the topography allowed for creating sufficient hydraulic head to build usable pressure for faucets, showerheads, and toilets. If not, an old-fashioned hand pump can do the trick or, a modified stationary bicycle could be set up to pump to containers to be carried.
I had my 5KW generator modified to be dual-fuel powered. Just by turning a valve and simple precautions, I can use gas or propane. Depending on what else you might use propane to power, it can be delivered and stored in tanks of various sizes, 100, 300, 500, 1000 gallon, etc. to meet your needs.
Pinkard and Bowden - Propane (nyuck, nyuck)
Lindsey Williams is saying that oil will remain around $50/barrel for quite some time so, propane should be coming down and typically mirrors the price of gasoline (propane is a by-product of gasoline production).
Propane prices, note trends:
http://www.nyserda.org/Energy_Information/nyepf.asp
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pet_pri_wfr_a_EPLLPA_PRS_cpgal_w.htm
Perhaps membership and/or discussion can help with issues of firearm ownership in NY:
New York State Rifle & Pistol Association
http://nysrpa.org/
Rifles or shotguns are fine defensive weapons.
NY Firearms - New York Firearm & Gun Ownership, Laws, Politics, Weapons, Discussion Forums
http://www.nyfirearms.com/blog/
Don't assume that you or anyone else knows what NY law requires and/or prohibits. Read it for yourself. Here's a really good page to start:
New York State Gun Laws
http://www.nyfirearms.com/blog/nys-gun-laws/
Rifles and Shotguns Handguns
Permit to Purchase No* Yes
Registration - Firearms No* Yes
Licensing of Owners No* Yes
Permit to Carry No* Yes
* Except in New York City
If you live in New York City, get the fuck out now.
If I have you associated with the wrong state, find the laws for yours.
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
UK TOP INCOME TAX RATES COULD HIT 61%
Don't believe for an instant that top rates only will climb. They will climb for all levels.
I think its a good time to learn how to become a nontaxpayer. Then when the coming tax revolts start, you don't have a dog in that fight.
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
D: Thanks for all the
D:
Thanks for all the helpful info. I had no idea about NY State gun laws; I'm not in NYC, so I can get a rifle, although I'll have to figure out how to use it, lock it up, etc. Thanks for the info - I had no idea! I was thinking about handguns, not rifles, but you're right, they can protect as well as handguns. Some of the laws are funny - you cannot possess more than 20 guns _not_ on your home or business. (But there is no limit to the number of guns you can possess if you keep them at home or on your business.)
I also loved the "propane" song lyrics (set to music by Eric Clapton)! Esp the part about hot cousins and cold fingers, eheheheheh.
The solar-powered pump idea is excellent, esp. if the collection tank is placed on a hilltop, to take advantage of gravity for water pressure. I have a dream that includes this kind of set up on a bunch of land, off the grid, as a nontaxpayer! I'd have to quit my job, though, which kinda stinks. (I assume a "nontaxpayer's" income is all under the table.) My job may quit me however if the economy keeps going south. I guess everything is about to implode. That GM going under scares me because I know what would happen to the entire auto industry and its associated parasite industries. Michigan will be toast - other than autos, all they have is tourism and they've wreaked their lakes with pollution, so that's kind of shot. What's left? Skiing maybe - but only up north. Whole swathes of Germany along the Rhineland plus areas the UK would buckle under, too. I don't know about Japan, but they seem heavily involved, as well. I predict that China will swoop in and buy out 2 of the 3 big three.
I'm still not done listening to Celente.
Best to you,
E
-------
"It is difficult to get the news from poems yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there."
--William Carlos Williams (from the poem 'From')
NY State Gun Laws
Look again. I think that you will see that the requirements for handgun permits aren't as restrictive as you might think. I highly recommend a safety courses for all.
NY State Gun Laws
http://www.nyfirearms.com/blog/nys-gun-laws/
Possession - Handguns (in part)
"A license is needed to possess a handgun in one’s home or place of business. Application is made to the licensing officer of the city or county where the applicant resides, is principally employed, or where his principal place of business as a merchant or storekeeper is located. An alien may obtain a pistol license if he or she meets these requirements. The determination whether to grant the license is completely within the discretion of the licensing officer. However, the licensing officer must state specifically and concisely in writing the reasons for a denial. A denial can only be overturned in court if the denial is shown to be arbitrary and capricious."
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
On credit card debt and home loans
This is a gross over simplification.
Most credit card debt is unsecured debt. We contract with a card issuing company, agree to pay certain interest and penaties, etc. We do this to keep the card so that we can buy things that we don't really have the money to buy, and sometimes for legitiamte purposes like travel, convenience, safety, etc. If we have credit card debt, it's most likely from buying shit we saw on teevee but, really didn't need.
So, we stop paying the bills. Soon the letters start coming, then the phone calls. Often, the letters and calls will contain an offer to settle for significantly less than the amount owed. Of course, paying off like this still results in negative marks on our credit rating. Not paying means even worse marks against us. in most cases, the card issuer writes off the bad debt and it is picked up by some debt collection agency. They are not not necessarily working for the card issuer. And, they DO NOT have the original contract between the card issuer and card holder.
This contract is evidence that there was an agreement between card issuer and holder and spells out the terms of the agreement. Sometimes the deputy arrives with a summons to appear in court. But, if a debt collector cannot produce the original agreement in court in their attempt to collect by force, they have no standing. They can't even prove that they own the debt and the right to collect. Most never challenge the debt collection agencies at this point and judgements are entered against them. It's a dirty little secret they don't want you to know.
Well guess what. Many mortages have been sold and bundled so many times that whoever is now in receipt of the payment stream hasn't the foggiest notion where the original contract is located. Same thing happens to the borrower in foreclosure because they don't know the dirty little secrets of contracts and the mystery of bundled mortages.
I doubt that there is time for anyone new to this to school themself in this shit before the real shit hits the fan anyway.
But, here it gets more interesting. If real estate values continue to fall, what is the point of making payments based on an amount more than double the property's current value and in which there is very little equity (remember, most of the early payments of an amoritized loan consist mostly of interest and very little against the principal)? More than likely, most everything put into the property will be lost anyway.
I keep thinking that there's going to be a shitload of dirt cheap rental property soon in foreclosed homes that just can't be resold to anyone. What else are they going to do with them? Bulldoze them over and build parks? Shopping malls? Car lots? Home Depots?
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
Scarey tales... can come true...
It can happen to youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu...aaaaaaaaaggggggghhhh!
Bottom line here is, if you get laid off and are offered a severance package, take it and run, run, run like you've never run before.
There is a video at the link below. Watch it there or grab this FLV file here:
http://dl.getdropbox.com/u/337131/ShameShameShameLehmanBrothersCollapse....
Shame, Shame, Shame: Lehman Brothers Collapse
Monday, 24 Nov 2008
http://www.myfoxny.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail;jsessionid=42F8A27F076780...
Arnold Diaz reports.
MyFoxNY.com -- This report shows a side of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy that hasn't been told yet. While CEO Richard Fuld is walking away with millions of dollars, some former employees say they've been left with nothing but broken promises.
5's Arnold Diaz went looking for answers.
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen
Boo!
This is from the Russian site, regarding a break up of the US:
He predicted that the U.S. will break up into six parts - the Pacific coast, with its growing Chinese population; the South, with its Hispanics; Texas, where independence movements are on the rise; the Atlantic coast, with its distinct and separate mentality; five of the poorer central states with their large Native American populations; and the northern states, where the influence from Canada is strong.
He even suggested that "we could claim Alaska - it was only granted on lease, after all."
On the fate of the U.S. dollar, he said: "In 2006 a secret agreement was reached between Canada, Mexico and the U.S. on a common Amero currency as a new monetary unit. This could signal preparations to replace the dollar. The one-hundred dollar bills that have flooded the world could be simply frozen. Under the pretext, let's say, that terrorists are forging them and they need to be checked."
This one...
...in case anyone is wondering:
http://en.rian.ru/world/20081124/118512713.html
"A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you're talking real money."
~~ attributed to Senator Everett Dirksen