Not Too Big to Jail: Eliot Spitzer Is Wall Street’s Worst Nightmare
Not Too Big to Jail: Eliot Spitzer Is Wall Streets Worst Nightmare
Posted on Aug 19, 2013
By Ellen Brown,
Web of Debt
Before Eliot Spitzers infamous resignation as governor of New York in March 2008, he was one of our fiercest champions against Wall Street corruption, in a state that had some of the toughest legislation for controlling the banks. It may not be a coincidence that the revelation of his indiscretions with a high-priced call girl came less than a month after he published a bold editorial in the Washington Post titled Predatory Lenders Partner in Crime: How the Bush Administration Stopped the States from Stepping in to Help Consumers. The editorial exposed the collusion between the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and Wall Street in deregulating the banks in the guise of regulating them, by taking regulatory power away from the states. It was an issue of the federal government versus the states, with the Feds representing the banks and the states representing consumers.
Five years later, Spitzer has set out to take some of that local regulatory power back, in his run for New York City comptroller. Mounting the attack against him, however, are not just Wall Street banks but womens groups opposed to this apparent endorsement of the exploitation of women. On August 17th, the New York Post endorsed Spitzers opponent and ran a scathing cover story attempting to embarrass Spitzer based on the single issue of his personal life.
Lynn Parramore, who considers herself a feminist, countered in an August 8th Huffington Post article that it is likely to be in the best interests of the very women who are opposing him to forgive and move on. His stand for womens reproductive rights and other feminist issues is actually quite strong, and his role as Wall Street watchdog protected women from predatory financial practices. As New York Attorney General, he was known as the Sheriff of Wall Street. He is one of the few people with not only the insight and experience to expose Wall Street corruption but the courage to go after the perpetrators. .......................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/not_too_big_to_jail_eliot_spitzer_is_wall_streets_worst_nightmare_20130819/?ln