WHAT'S GOIN' ON?

Trying to live a practical, but compassionate life towards all living creatures (animal, mineral, vegetable, humanable) without being a self-righteous ass.

Friday, March 27, 2009

More AIG: This is long, so I've separated it into chapters

(I've gone off schedule, posting these AIG things. But... some stories need to be posted when still au courant!)

Chapter One: The Newest News!


Oh my gosh, this AIG thing... it's like a great soap opera! The latest (in the NY Times): "The following is a letter sent on Tuesday by Jake DeSantis, an executive vice president of the American International Group’s financial products unit, to Edward M. Liddy, the chief executive of A.I.G."

"I was in no way involved in — or responsible for — the credit default swap transactions that have hamstrung A.I.G. Nor were more than a handful of the 400 current employees of A.I.G.-F.P. Most of those responsible have left the company and have conspicuously escaped the public outrage." (Read here, it's worth it.)

It's whiny sounding, but the dude does give more detail into what's going on. And I get the dude's point that Liddy reassured these peeps they would get these bonuses. And I get his point that not everyone in that department was responsible for the shit that went down. On the other hand... he probably could have defended himself a little, without all the details that will now make us mock him too. For example: "Just for the record, not all of us in the department were ALSO the ones who did The Shit! Yo! Just sayin'!" (Oh wait... it's only middle class liberal pseudo hippies like me who use Self Aware Hip Hop References. This commentor says it better.)

But when you start trying to tell us how hard off you will be now... come on... what sort of lifestyle are you leading that requires this level of income just to get through the week? This is the part where I feel like Wall Street Peeples are massively out of touch. They could lower their standard of living even to, say, West Island Middle Class... and they'd have enough to live on for how long? They could have all hit early retirement before any of this went down, if they cared to live like the Commoners. (Barring the things the you need to spend money on in order to work in certain circles... the suits... the business lunches... but I'm sure that's a small %.)


Chapter Two: Comments by NYT Readers!

When you're done, read some of the 917 comments. You can sort them by Editor's Picks, or Readers' Picks etc. Here are the highest "I agree with!" readers' comments:

"I wonder if he is aware that across the country, workers making less than one-tenth of his bonus in annual salary are agreeing to pay cuts, reductions in hours, and withdrawal of promised perks in order to save their coworkers' jobs."

"I'm sorry to say that your email reveals less about why you deserve your bonus and the moral rightness of your argument than the sense of entitlement that has blinded you to your company's practices and your role in benefiting from them."

[This is my fave:]
"The company where I was a janitor went out of business. It wasn't my fault, I kept the floor clean. The taxpayers should be paying my salary."

[And for a different, but still popular opinion...]
"Dear AIG I quit" is a brilliant letter. If the publicity-seeking Attorney's General, who shot their mouths off for their own political gain, had only taken the time to comprehend the facts, they would not have fed the out-of-control frenzy that emanated from the American public which, taken as a whole, is poorly educted, won't read and learn or understand, and can be played like a banjo by those who would seek to smear the current administration. Bravo Mr. DeSantis."

...And Editor's Choice:

"Hint: If your company accepts tens of billions of dollars from taxpayers, consider your bonus renegotiated."

"If the shipping department screws up and costs the company money, then the warehouse guys are not getting a raise. If the doctor makes a mistake and causes a huge lawsuit for the hospital, then raises for nurses and janitors goes down the drain. In this economic climate, how can you expect otherwise?
Wow - you got over $700K for one year of work? Couldn't you have lived on a half of that? Do you realize how lucky you are to even make half as much?"

"So he was shamed into an epiphany. Well at least he had one."

Chapter Three: The Mature Comments!

Seems someone had to Be the Adult and make reasonable points, reasonably expressed...

Adult 1
"Instead of positioning yourself as a victim of the consequences, you might (collectively) have predicted the government and public reaction to your pay structure, and suggested more equitable and sustainable pay in October.

"Rather than quitting and charitably donating what you believe was fairly earned, you might be continuing to provide invaluable services to AIG, and more importantly, to the national and international economic recovery. Your industry desperately needs people with your ability to work constructively within a compromised system and devise practical solutions.
More importantly, it needs people like you who can factor in the actual social and political variables in our country without capitulating to fear and threat."

Adult 2
"When you say that last fall many of you stayed at A.I.G. precisely because you were told that your contracts would be honored, can you understand that some of us wish that many of you would have stayed on simply because of your sense of pride in your work, and because of your sense of duty and patriotism?

"Please understand: I do not question your patriotism, nor do I condone the wanton attacks on your profession. I have no doubt that the situation was mishandled, in part because we are all panicked a little, and in part because politicians are politicians.
But, Mr. DeSantis you are not like the plumber who should be paid for his work because it was the electrician's fault that the house burned down. It's a lot more like we've got bombs dropping on our heads and many of us are getting killed, or living in bomb shelters. The lines at soup kitchens are growing, we've got ghost towns where people have had to abandon their homes, we've got an entire generation of people who don't know if they will ever get jobs, because they are not quite as brilliant and hard working as you and I are. That in itself is not a crime, and people don't deserve to be homeless just because they are ordinary folks. Last time the world financial situation resembled the present one, the world went so crazy that millions of people were murdered in a war that engulfed the world!

"You should not be vilified because you are working in the financial world, but nor should you behave as if all that's happened was that one house burned down. Our entire world is in danger of burning down. Come and join the rest of us in asking what you can do for your country and for your fellow human beings..."


Chapter Four: The Adults Get Me Thinking...

I appreciate the Adults, because I believe those are the people who can actually reach the intended audience. If this DeSantis is reading the NYT comments (who wouldn't be??) he's only going to feel defensive over the ones that amuse us the most. But the people who give polite, patient, reasoned answers might actually mean something to him.

I think what Adult 2 said is what little Tommy Friedman was trying to say. I don't think he was defending Rich Folk, so much as pointing out a possibly more effective way of facing the bonus scandal. When Obama was running for Prez, a lot of what people liked about him was that he inspired, and made many people *want to be better people.* I heard that over and over. So if anyone could have said something inspiring, yet subtly shaming, and gotten away with it, it would have been him. ...Whereas my initial approach of calling AIG folk Unsexy Vampires... maybe less effective.

It reminds me of that old experiment, where students who were treated as smart and gifted excelled pretty much for the rest of their lives, versus students who were told they were slow. If you call on people to be Heroes! by working for little pay to restore AIG (see the next comment), then maybe you'll evoke their better natures. Rather than putting them in a position of defending themselves from being crooks.

Maybe I'm being unrealistic. Well... optimists are less in touch with reality, but we stay afloat longer because of it. (The rats!) ;-) I know I'm channelling Joseph Campbell here:

"Solo was a very practical guy, at least as he thought of himself, a materialist. But he was a compassionate human being at the same time and didn't know it. The adventure evoked a quality of his character that he hadn't known he possessed. ... Our life evokes our character. You find out more about yourself as you go on. That's why it's good to be able to put yourself in situations that will evoke your higher nature rather than your lower."

So... is it not possible that we can also put other people in situations that will evoke their higher nature? As opposed to the Wall Street atmosphere they're used to, that probably evokes lower natures on a daily basis.

1 comment:

gmc said...

As you are evidently finding this topic of interest (and I enjoyed your comments)... you may enjoy reading Weiss' Ultimate Safe Money Guide. He is obviously an advocate for the 'regular' investor and he 'outs' many of the practices on Wall Street related to the teck-stock Scam/meltdown in 2000ish; and the Insurance Industry meltdown in the late 70/80s, etc.. (deja vu!)

Many of his comments written in 2002 have proven to be prophetic. For example he points out that the teck stock bubble burst set off a deep plunge in commercial real estate, and goes on to show how a similar meltdown in residential housing might also occur.

In his section on the vulnerabilities of stock investing, he points out that in the current over-heated economy of 2002, investors should be looking at ways to protect themselves from potential sudden losses of 30 to 70 % ...

His ability to peer through the smoke screens and tell us what's going on in the industry is remarkable and similar to the AIG situation, it's fascinating to read how Big Companies and "players" have produced these huge messes that have damaged small investors over and over again.