Greedy Bastards: How We Can Stop Corporate Communists, Banksters, and Other Vampires from Sucking America Dry by Dylan Ratigan
“Greedy Bastards” is a fun, engaging look at “extractionism”, that is taking money from others without creating anything of value. Former host of The Dylan Ratigan Show and political commentator for the Young Turks, and now candidate for the House in New York’s 21st Congressional District, Dylan Ratigan provides readers with an expose on greedy bastards. This interesting 256-page book includes the following eight chapters: 1. Trillion Dollar Vampires, 2. The World’s Biggest Ongoing Heist, 3. International Trading Pirates, 4. Health Care Without Health, 5. The Castle Is Collapsing, 6. Breaking the Oil Pushers’ Grip, 7. The Unholy Alliance, and 8. It’s Just Us.
Positives:
1. Straightforward prose. Engaging tone, with a can-do attitude.
2. Covers many political/economical issues of interest and provides his unique perspectives.
3. A fun book to read. Ratigan has passion and conviction behind his words and has a keens sense of injustice.
4. To the heart of what this book is about. “Greedy bastards don’t make money at all. They just take it.” “I’m a ‘capitalist who takes,’ exploiting my power to influence the government for my own private gain, no matter the harm to anyone else. I’m a greedy bastard.”
5. He provides four principles to combat the vampire industries acronymed VICI: Visibility, Integrity, Choice and Interests.
6. He identifies the banking system as the number one heist. “We are still stuck with a financial system that has become, essentially, a secret casino where the world’s wealthiest companies and individuals bet with trillions in other people’s money—our money—exempted from the laws that the rest of us have to follow. The winning gamblers keep all of the profits for themselves, while the government and the people pay the losses.”
7. He identifies the Act that was at the heart of the recession. “The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, sponsored by Republican Representatives Phil Gramm of Texas, Jim Leach of Iowa, and Thomas Bliley of Virginia, revoked the rule, established after the stock market crash of 1929, that no one company could act as a traditional bank, a Wall Street investment firm, and an insurance company at the same time.”
8. Provocative quotes that stay with me. “The financial markets need regulation the way a nuclear power plant needs a cooling agent for its radioactive fuel rods.”
9. Provides solutions to address the banking system. “Maybe we should tax spending—consumption—rather than income, and let the tax code discourage short-term investors and reward long-term investors. If you find a way to use your computer to extract money from the stock market in a few seconds, you should be taxed very high. If you commit your money for years and launch a business and build something new that others can use, you should be taxed low.”
10. Interesting perspectives on international trade. “Wal-Mart, to give one example, became increasingly a Chinese company, orchestrating the shipment of goods made by poor Chinese workers to increasingly poor American workers.”
11. Observations that hurt. “It’s more profitable for the trade vampires and the banksters to invest in China and pay off the American politicians than it is for them to invest in America. It pays short term. And like any other kind of criminal, bankers will keep committing the same crime as long as it pays.”
12. Exposes the health care system. “There is no penalty for overcharging a patient. So it should not come as a surprise that Medical Billing Advocates of America, a national association that checks medical bills for consumers, says eight out of ten hospital bills its members scrutinize contain errors.”
13. Interesting financial implications in health care. “The VHA already had the advantage we’ve seen with the Mayo Clinic, in that doctors are salaried instead of charging a fee-for-service. Its physicians don’t clamor for expensive technology just because it boosts profits; they are paid to treat people, period.”
14. A look at the cost of education. “I’m describing the college loan market, which has become a big greedy-bastard business. As of June 2010, the total value of student loans, reports the website FinAid, approached $1 trillion. According to the Federal Reserve, that’s more than enough money to pay off every credit card held by every single person in the country.”
15. The educational gap. “Ultimately, poverty is the biggest root cause of our educational gap. As unemployment rises, driven by the trade and bank extraction, poverty increases with it. In 2010, the fraction of Americans living in poverty clicked up to 15.1 percent of the population, and 22 percent of children are now living below the poverty line, the Wall Street Journal reported. In the same way that politicians subsidize the production of foods such as high-fructose corn syrup, which contributes to obesity and diabetes, they incentivize wealth extractions—resulting in unemployment and a spike in poverty, which then adversely affect our educational system.”
16. The truth behind big oil. “The costs of government subsidies for oil companies hidden in our tax code, which, according to Bob Deans of the National Resources Defense Council, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget estimates officially at $46 billion over the next ten years. However, former CIA director James Woolsey said they might be five times that much, explaining, ‘You get a lot of disagreement about how much they are total. There are a lot of subsidies for oil that have been in the tax code for a long time. . . . It depends on what you count.’”
17. Exposing a rigged system. “Consider General Electric, the biggest corporation in America. In 2010, according to the New York Times, GE reported profits of $14.2 billion, of which $5.1 billion came from operations in the United States. What did the company pay in taxes that year? Nothing.”
18. Eye-opening facts. “Back in the 1950s, corporate taxes contributed 30 percent of the federal government’s revenue. Today that number has fallen to less than 7 percent.”
19. The power of lobbying. “Lobbying is an essential service. But because of the unholy alliance, lobbyists wield influence based on their ability to raise money for or against a given policy, not based on the good of that policy.”
20. Greedy politicians. “The financial incentives to vote with the greedy bastards extend beyond political careers. Politicians who are sympathetic to major industries are often hired by those industries once their political work is done. This is essentially a deferred bribe.”
Negatives:
1. No notes or links to source material, which is a must for a book of this ilk.
2. No formal bibliography.
3. More like a good rant than a scholarly effort.
In summary, this is a fun book to read. Ratigan wrote this book to identify vampire industries, and provides guidance on how to combat them and ways to stop them. He provides four principles that hopefully will turn bad deals into good ones. The book is an expose of the greedy. The lack of notes to source material is disappointing but there is much to enjoy in this one and I recommend it!
Further suggestions: “The Age of Greed” by Jeff Madrick, “Makers and Takers“ by Rana Foroohar, “The Price of Inequality” by Joseph E. Stiglitz, “Saving Capitalism” by Robert B. Reich, “A Fine Mess” by T.R. Reid, “The Monster: How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Wall Street Bankers Fleeced America…” by Michael W. Hudson and “The Looting of America” by Les Leopold.