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Derek Thompson

Derek Thompson - Derek Thompson is a senior editor at The Atlantic, where he oversees business coverage for the website.
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He is a visiting research fellow at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget at the New America Foundation. Derek has also written for Slate, BusinessWeek, and the Daily Beast. He has appeared as a guest on radio and television networks, including NPR, the BBC, CNBC, and MSNBC.

I'm Tired of Populist Rage Against Wall St. CEOs

By Derek Thompson
Jan 14 2010, 11:30 AM ET Comment

Reading this Dana Milbank article about Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein's congressional flogging, it struck me that I've lost touch with America's populist rage. I support financial re-regulation, but I've stopped expecting monthly demonstrations of contrition from the banks' CEOs. I just don't care anymore. Jamie Dimon can send me a fruit basket or a lump of coals, and my opinions about Wall Street, and what we should do to reform it, won't budge.



Milbank's complaints have nothing to do with the events of the past or the policy of the future. They have to do with Blankfein's attitude. The Goldman chief "made it plain that he was done apologizing" ... "smirked as they spoke, challenged the premises of their questions, offered frequent lectures of 'let me be clear,' and often responded to questions by asking questions of his own. [Blankfein] seems to exempt himself from the rules of man." Most of this is utterly besides the point, and that last part doesn't even make any sense.

Blankfein's prickliness in yesterday's testimony was often justified. For example, Angelides and Milbank seem flabbergasted that Goldman would sell mortgage securities and also place bets against them. But that's exactly what a market maker does. Angelides' comparison -- "selling a car with faulty brakes and then buying an insurance policy" -- is off. It's like screaming at a bookie for holding bets on the Colts in this weekend's game after taking your bet against the Colts. That's what bookies do. Congress summoned Goldman's chief to compare its core business to insurance fraud and he dared utter the phrase "let me be clear."

What the heck does it matter what Wall Street CEOs act like? We don't need to line up Fannie and Freddie and subprime home owners and the ratings agencies and all the little financial sinners and wrap their knuckles until Yom Kippur comes around. This is Congress, not Confessional. Just pass financial regulation. Not doing so is the only thing that would require a national apology.


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