Wall Street's Fantasy Finance Scheme

Hosted byIan Punnett

Wall Street's Fantasy Finance Scheme

Highlights

  • Synthetic CDOs
  • 'Financialization' of the Economy
  • Avoiding Future Financial Crises
  • About the show

    Director of two non-profits, Les Leopold returned to the show to explain how Wall Street's casino-style practices magnified the impact of the subprime mortgage crisis and profoundly damaged the U.S. economy. According to Leopold, banking firms, such as Goldman Sachs, wreaked havoc by selling incredibly complex investments known as synthetic collateralized debt obligations (CDOs). The banks packaged and repackaged the same risky debt bonds, which had no real underlying assets, into countless CDOs. Ultimately, this turned $300 billion of bad mortgages into several trillion dollars worth of losses to investors, he added.

    One such investor, the School Board of Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, lost roughly $200 million in this fantasy finance scheme. Large investment banks, on the other hand, were protected from substantial losses by AIG, which in turn was protected with taxpayer money, Leopold continued. The total cost (so far) to bailout Wall Street has reached $8 trillion, Leopold said, noting that this enormous amount benefits only a very small portion of the population. To avoid future financial crises, Leopold suggested breaking up 'too big to fail' banking firms, reducing the overall size of the financial sector through taxation, and imposing regulatory reform.

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    Ian Punnett was our special guest in Streamlink's Live Chat last month, for a one-hour Q & A. Below are excerpts (members can view the full transcript) in which he discusses religion, philosophy, and comics.

    illusion

    Hi Ian, I have gone to Bible college, was raised a Pentecostal Christian. Studying the Bible all my life. After 14 years of C2C, no longer a born again Christian! How do you do it? Have you since you started hosting Coast?

    Ian Punnett

    Because God for me is a verb. I don't need a scientific explanation that satisfies all aspects of faith. If what I am doing is helping people, making one person less hungry or treat others better, I am being my faith. That way, the only faith I worry about having is the one I'm showing.

    rocky

    You said once on air something to the effect that you did not necessarily have to subscribe to every element of a creed to recite it... that it was like a historical thing... When I was a child I was expected to recite various Christian creeds. I always hardly said them because I didn't want...

    Ian Punnett

    I understand that. A 4th Century creed doesn't speak to me but the process of chanting with others does. So, it's not the what's being said as the how it's being said and what it symbolizes that brings me peace.

    Kat

    Do you think we are now experiencing what has been foretold in Revelation or are you of the mind each age feels as if the end is near?

    Ian Punnett

    I think some people in every generation think they are special enough to have the world end in their lifetime. It's really important to them to have the party end before they leave. I am not one of them. Revelation is beautiful and a treasured part of my Bible but not because I take up any time trying to "decode" it for today's circumstances.

    susano

    Ian, have you studied philosophy? if so, who are some favorite thinkers?

    Ian Punnett

    My undergrad is in English Literature and Rhetoric and I have a Masters of Divinity so I've studied everybody. My favorite is Jeremy Bentham because Spock quotes him and he is the only philosopher who is as stuffy in death as he was in life (some of you will get that joke).

    peasoup

    How much of the things people say on your show do you really believe?

    Ian Punnett

    Weird question. I believe they believe it. I am not required to believe it and it would hurt the show if I felt like I had to. Empathy defeats therapy, you know? You can't ask good questions if you are the guest's advocate. Does that make sense? Or am I just giddy because Kate Gosselin finally got kicked off Dancing with the Stars?

    Doug

    Hello Ian, you have heard much on your shows and C2C. Has anything you've heard rattled you, frightened you?

    Ian Punnett

    Yes, I would say that the only thing that that has rattled me was the first time I had Jim Marrs on connecting the conspiracy dots back a couple hundred years. I didn't sleep for days thinking about that.

    Kat

    Hi Ian. If you could pick the topic and guest for your favorite evening what would the topic be and who would the guest be?

    Ian Punnett

    I always prefer the experiential guest, somebody who has actually put themselves on the line. I'd like to interview somebody very credible whom I could trust who has spent time in a satanic cult. That would be interesting.

    brandon

    What subject on c2c would you most like to know the truth on?

    Ian Punnett

    Aliens, hands down. Yes or no, I want to know now.

    Gormo

    Hello Ian Punnett, I enjoy listening to your programs! I was wondering who your favorite super hero is and why?

    Ian Punnett

    I'm a Batman/Dark Knight kind of guy although I will admit that old, anachronistic ones like the Green Three (Arrow, Lantern and Hornet) never get old for me.

    bryan

    Hey, Ian. What comics are you reading now? Loved the World War Z episode so much!!!!

    Ian Punnett

    I am reading a history of "Watchmen" since they're showing it a lot on HBO. Plus, I just bought some old Green Lanterns for giggles.

    Guest

    What is it that you say at the end of every C2C show?

    Ian Punnett

    "Deus te amat" is Latin for "Funky Cold Medina."

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