The Great American Bubble Machine

Matt Taibbi on how Goldman Sachs has engineered every major market manipulation since the Great Depression

The formula is relatively simple: Goldman positions itself in the middle of a speculative bubble, selling investments they know are crap. Then they hoover up vast sums from the middle and lower floors of society with the aid of a crippled and corrupt state that allows it to rewrite the rules in exchange for the relative pennies the bank throws at political patronage. Full Story »

Posted by Randy Morrow
Tags Help
Subjects: U.S., Business
Topics: U.S. Economy
Member Tags: bail out, Goldman Sachs
Editorial Help
Posted by: Posted by Randy Morrow - Jul 3, 2009 - 1:32 AM PDT
Content Type: Article
Edit Lock: This story can be edited
Edited by: Randy Morrow - Jul 3, 2009 - 1:32 AM PDT

To:


Separate email addresses with commas.
25 recipients max.

Note:

Reviews

Show All | Notes | Comments | Quotes | Links
Member_photo_thumb
3.2
by Chris Finnie - Jul. 3, 2009

Other than the list of Goldman alums who have served in positions of power in finance and government, Taibbi fails to offer any proof for his assertion. They were in position to do it, but he never shows they did. As far as creating the bubbles, Goldman was certainly a player, but far from the only one. It has always interested me, though, that they are almost always the one who gets out early enough to emerge unscathed. A topic the piece doesn't cover.

Less invective and more proof would have made it a better piece. I don't doubt he's right. He just didn't show me how.

…in a society governed passively by free markets and free elections, organized greed always defeats disorganized democracy. More »

See Full Review » (13 answers)
Photo_84_thumb
5.0
by Doug Greer - Jul. 17, 2009
See Full Review » (5 answers)
Silhouette_sml
4.3
by Randy Morrow - Jul. 3, 2009

Mr. Taibbi exposes the methods and tentacles of Goldman Sachs.

See Full Review » (11 answers)
Silhouette_sml
4.4
by Harry A Farr - Jul. 3, 2009
See Full Review » (5 answers)
NT Rating | My Rating

Ratings

4.1

Good
from 4 reviews (43% confidence)
Quality
4.1
Facts
4.2
Fairness
4.0
Sourcing
3.0
Style
4.0
Context
4.0
Depth
3.8
Enterprise
4.5
Relevance
4.5
Popularity
4.1
Recommendation
4.5
Credibility
4.2
# Reviews
2.0
# Views
5.0
# Likes
1.0
# Emails
1.0
More
How our ratings work »
(See these related stories.)

Links Help

No links yet. Please review this story to add some!