2,342 Followers, 998 Following, 1,175 Posts
Xuebing Du
d e v o n
The Stonewall Inn
Stranger Things
cherry valley forever
Game of Thrones Daily

roma★
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

ellievsbear
One Nice Bug Per Day
EXPECTATIONS

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will byers stan first human second
Not today Justin
Cosimo Galluzzi
Cosmic Funnies

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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macklin celebrini has autism
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@lilmissfergus
2,342 Followers, 998 Following, 1,175 Posts
“Eminem doesn't license his music to politicians. But he has, for the 1st time ever, to JOE BIDEN. This opportunity comes once in a lifeti
160 Followers, 100 Following, 89 Posts
160 Followers, 100 Following, 89 Posts
This would be a war crime in a combat zone.
I’m related to one of the medics in this photo. Helping protesters is a dangerous job.
the child + uppy arms
Baby Yoda/Disney Mashups
illustrated by Alex Pick
If you see this
You were visited by the magic kitten of rest. Reblog to have a good night’s sleep.
Documents from Nazi concentration camps will include prisoner cards and death notices to help researchers and others investigate victims' fate.
https://www.facebook.com/131855173918979/posts/709456249492199?s=1712090168&v=e&sfns=mo
Teenage girls saying “I can’t even” is basically the same as old ladies saying “Well I never”.
This is messing with my head.
#especially when you realize it was once teen girls saying well i never#and will someday be older ladies saying i can’t even
Dimon in the Rough
In his annual letter to shareholders, distributed last week, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon took aim at socialism, warning it would be “a disaster for our country,” because it produces “stagnation, corruption and often worse.”
Dimon should know. He was at the helm when JPMorgan received a $25bn socialist-like bailout in 2008, after it and other Wall Street banks almost tanked because of their reckless loans.
Dimon subsequently agreed to pay the government $13bn to settle charges that the bank overstated the quality of mortgages it was selling to investors in the run-up to the crisis. According to the Justice Department, JPMorgan acknowledged it had regularly and knowingly sold mortgages that should have never been sold. (Presumably this is where the “stagnation, corruption and often worse” comes in.)
The $13bn penalty was chicken feed to the biggest bank on Wall Street, whose profits last year alone amounted to $35bn. Besides, JPMorgan was able to deduct around $11bn of the settlement costs from its taxable income.
To state it another way, Dimon and other Wall Street CEOs helped trigger the 2008 financial crisis when the dangerous and irresponsible loans their banks were peddling – on which they made big money – finally went bust. But instead of letting the market punish the banks (which is what capitalism is supposed to do) the government bailed them out and eventually levied paltry fines which the banks treated as the cost of doing business.
If this isn’t socialism, what is? Yet it’s a particular form of socialism. Millions of homeowners who owed more on their homes than the homes became worth didn’t get bailed out. Millions of workers who lost their jobs or their savings, or both, didn’t get bailed out. No major banker went to jail.
Call it socialism for rich bankers.
It’s a gift that keeps giving. Dimon took advantage of the financial crisis to acquire Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, vastly enlarging JPMorgan. America’s five biggest banks, including Dimon’s, now control 46% of all deposits, up from 12% in the early 1990s.
And because they’re so big, Dimon’s and other big Wall Street banks are now considered “too big to fail”. This translates into a hidden subsidy of some $83bn a year, because creditors who face less risk accept lower interest on deposits and loans.
More socialism for rich bankers.
After the financial crisis and bailout, Congress enacted a milquetoast version of the Glass-Steagall Act, a banking law from the Great Depression that bankers killed off in the 1990s. The replacement was called the Dodd-Frank Act.
Ever since, Dimon has pushed to weaken Dodd-Frank.
When Obama’s regulators wanted to extend Dodd-Frank to the foreign branches and subsidiaries of Wall Street banks, Dimon warned it would harm Wall Street’s competitiveness.
This was the same Jamie Dimon who chose London as the place to make highly risky derivatives trades that lost the firm some $6bn in 2012 – proof that unless the overseas operations of Wall Street banks are covered by US regulations, giant banks like his will move more of their betting abroad, hiding their wildly-risky bets overseas so U.S. regulators can’t see them.
More recently, Trump’s bank regulators have heeded Dimon, and rolled back Dodd-Frank.
Dimon was also instrumental in getting the big Trump tax cuts through Congress. They saved JPMorgan and the other big banks $21bn last year alone.
Dimon was paid $31m last year. He is estimated by Forbes to be worth $1.3bn.
Ironically, a few weeks ago Dimon warned that income inequality is dividing America. He said that a “big chunk” of Americans have been left behind, and, announcing a $350m program to train workers for the jobs of the future, lamented that 40% of Americans make less than $15 an hour.
True, but $350m over five years isn’t even a drop in the ocean for the Americans left behind.
Wall Street bonuses totaled $27.5bn last year, which is more three times the combined annual earnings of all American workers employed full-time at the federal minimum wage. That’s more than 600,000 low-wage workers.
If Dimon were serious about the problem of widening inequality, he’d use his lobbying prowess to help raise the federal minimum wage. He’d also try to make it easier for workers to unionize, and to raise taxes on the super-wealthy like himself.
But, of course, Dimon isn’t really concerned about widening inequality. He’s not really concerned about socialism, either.
Dimon’s real concern is that America may end the kind of socialism he and other denizens of the Street depend on – bailouts, regulatory loopholes, and tax breaks.
These have made Dimon and his comrades a fortune, but they’ve brought the rest of America stagnation, corruption, and often worse.
“Prince Albert Honeycutt was @FergusFallsMN's first African American resident. Honeycutt served as a liaison between area employers and th