Friday, January 6, 2017

Re: [blind-democracy] No Conflict Here: 150 Wall Street Firms Own Over $1.5 Billion of Trump's Debt

If it wasn't so insulting it would be funny. I mean this constant
protestation by politicians that they are not influenced by money.
And Donald Trump, the out spoken independent billionaire, is owned by
more and bigger billionaires than he has Trump Towers.
Even the poorest of the poor understand the influence of money. And
if a little money causes us to compromise our values, think of what
lots and lots of money will buy. In fact, the very first thing piles
of money buys are big fat lies. "Money does not influence my
decisions!" And they say it with a straight face, as they pause on
the steps of their mansions.
How well I remember that day in 1976 when I was working under contract
as the Business Enterprises Instructor, and my boss came to me and
told me that the state employees union was calling for a strike vote.
"If the state employees strike, you will still be required to come to
work, since you are not an official state employee."
"But I cannot cross a picket line," I protested.
"You will report for work or be fired," my boss told me.
"Then I'd better start looking for another job," I said.
That was a very scary time. I had just put money down on a house, and
I had my wife and 3 children depending on my job. The strike never
was called, and all the Jarvis' sighed a mighty sigh of relief. I
cannot say whether I would have quit, or crossed the picket line.
You bet money puts pressure on all of us.
And no matter how good a politician appears to be, if he/she says that
they are not influenced by money, I vote against them. Period!

Carl Jarvis

On 1/5/17, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@optonline.net> wrote:
> No Conflict Here: 150 Wall Street Firms Own Over $1.5 Billion of Trump's
> Debt
> Published on
> Thursday, January 05, 2017
> by
> Common Dreams
> No Conflict Here: 150 Wall Street Firms Own Over $1.5 Billion of Trump's
> Debt
> Wall Street Journal analysis uncovers scope of Trump's web of debt and the
> financial institutions 'in a potentially powerful position over the
> incoming
> president'
> by
> Lauren McCauley, staff writer
>
> While concerns over Trump's conflicts of interest continue to mount, the
> president-elect has thus far failed to address the issue. (Photo:
> d_pham/flickr/cc)
> As many suspected, President-elect Donald Trump's web of business conflicts
> is much more complicated than he has let on.
> An analysis by the Wall Street Journal published Thursday found that the
> incoming president owes at least $1.85 billion in debt to as many as 150
> Wall Street firms and other financial institutions.
> According to the examination of legal and property documents, "Hundreds of
> millions of dollars of debt attached to Mr. Trump's properties, some of
> them
> backed by Mr. Trump's personal guarantee, were packaged into securities and
> sold to investors over the past five years," thus "broadening the tangle of
> interests that pose potential conflicts for the incoming president's
> administration."
> In May, Trump filed documents with the Federal Election Commission (FEC)
> that disclosed $315 million owed to 10 companies-but that only included
> debts for companies that Trump completely controls, "excluding more than
> $1.5 billion lent to partnerships that are 30 percent owned by him," WSJ
> reported.
> "As a result," wrote WSJ reporters Jean Eaglesham and Lisa Schwartz, "a
> broader array of financial institutions now are in a potentially powerful
> position over the incoming president."
> Put more directly, as Think Progress's Judd Legum did: "As president, Trump
> will be responsible for regulating entities that he also owes money to."
> In one troubling example, the investigation found that Wells Fargo,
> currently under investigation for a years-long banking fraud scandal, "runs
> at least five mutual funds that own portions of Trump businesses'
> securitized debt;" is "a trustee or administrator for pools of securitized
> loans that include $282 million of loans to Mr. Trump;" and "acts as a
> special servicer for $950 million of loans to a property that one of Mr.
> Trump's companies partly owns."
> "Once he takes office," Eaglesham and Schwartz observed, "Mr. Trump will
> appoint the heads of many of the regulators that police the bank."
> The spread of Trump's debt can in large part be attributed to the process
> known as "securitization," when debt is repackaged into bonds and sold off.
> More than $1 billion of debt connected to the president-elect has been
> handled in this way.
> While concerns over Trump's conflicts of interest continue to mount, the
> president-elect has thus far failed to address the issue. Despite warnings
> from ethics attorneys, he has refused to divest his business holdings,
> though there were reports that he would hand the reins of the real estate
> empire over to his sons and advisors, Donald Jr. and Eric. At the same
> time,
> a December press conference was postponed and is now scheduled for Jan.
> 11-the same day as some of his more controversial appointees' confirmation
> hearings.
> This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
> License
> Skip to main content
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> No Conflict Here: 150 Wall Street Firms Own Over $1.5 Billion of Trump's
> Debt
> Published on
> Thursday, January 05, 2017
> by
> Common Dreams
> No Conflict Here: 150 Wall Street Firms Own Over $1.5 Billion of Trump's
> Debt
> Wall Street Journal analysis uncovers scope of Trump's web of debt and the
> financial institutions 'in a potentially powerful position over the
> incoming
> president'
> by
> Lauren McCauley, staff writer
> . 31 Comments
> .
> . While concerns over Trump's conflicts of interest continue to mount,
> the president-elect has thus far failed to address the issue. (Photo:
> d_pham/flickr/cc)
> . As many suspected, President-elect Donald Trump's web of business
> conflicts is much more complicated than he has let on.
> . An analysis by the Wall Street Journal published Thursday found that
> the incoming president owes at least $1.85 billion in debt to as many as
> 150
> Wall Street firms and other financial institutions.
> . According to the examination of legal and property documents,
> "Hundreds of millions of dollars of debt attached to Mr. Trump's
> properties,
> some of them backed by Mr. Trump's personal guarantee, were packaged into
> securities and sold to investors over the past five years," thus
> "broadening
> the tangle of interests that pose potential conflicts for the incoming
> president's administration."
> . In May, Trump filed documents with the Federal Election Commission
> (FEC) that disclosed $315 million owed to 10 companies-but that only
> included debts for companies that Trump completely controls, "excluding
> more
> than $1.5 billion lent to partnerships that are 30 percent owned by him,"
> WSJ reported.
> "As a result," wrote WSJ reporters Jean Eaglesham and Lisa Schwartz, "a
> broader array of financial institutions now are in a potentially powerful
> position over the incoming president."
> Put more directly, as Think Progress's Judd Legum did: "As president, Trump
> will be responsible for regulating entities that he also owes money to."
> In one troubling example, the investigation found that Wells Fargo,
> currently under investigation for a years-long banking fraud scandal, "runs
> at least five mutual funds that own portions of Trump businesses'
> securitized debt;" is "a trustee or administrator for pools of securitized
> loans that include $282 million of loans to Mr. Trump;" and "acts as a
> special servicer for $950 million of loans to a property that one of Mr.
> Trump's companies partly owns."
> "Once he takes office," Eaglesham and Schwartz observed, "Mr. Trump will
> appoint the heads of many of the regulators that police the bank."
> The spread of Trump's debt can in large part be attributed to the process
> known as "securitization," when debt is repackaged into bonds and sold off.
> More than $1 billion of debt connected to the president-elect has been
> handled in this way.
> While concerns over Trump's conflicts of interest continue to mount, the
> president-elect has thus far failed to address the issue. Despite warnings
> from ethics attorneys, he has refused to divest his business holdings,
> though there were reports that he would hand the reins of the real estate
> empire over to his sons and advisors, Donald Jr. and Eric. At the same
> time,
> a December press conference was postponed and is now scheduled for Jan.
> 11-the same day as some of his more controversial appointees' confirmation
> hearings.
> This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
> License
>
>
>

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