1. Hmmm . . .
    Joined
    19 Jan '04
    Moves
    22131
    22 Dec '11 15:041 edit
    Dear Jamie Dimon,
    Posted By Downtown Josh Brown On December 22, 2011 @ 7:00 am In Bailouts,Psychology/Sentiment,Really, really bad calls | 24 Comments
    >
    Josh Brown takes the JPM CEO to school:
    >
    Dear Jamie Dimon,

    I hope this note finds you well.

    I am writing to profess my utter disbelief at how little you seem to understand the current mood of the nation. In a story at Bloomberg today [1], you and a handful of fellow banker and billionaire “job creators” were quoted as believing that the horrific sentiment directed toward you from virtually all corners of America had something to do with how much money you had. I’d like to take a moment to disabuse you of this foolishness.

    America is different than almost every other place on earth in that its citizenry reveres the wealthy and we are raised to believe that we can all one day join the ranks of the rich. The lack of a caste system or visible rungs of society’s ladder is what separates our empire from so many fallen empires throughout history. In a nation bereft of royalty by virtue of its republican birth, the American people have done what any other resourceful people would do – we’ve created our own royalty and our royalty is the 1%. Not only do we not “hate the rich” as you and other em-bubbled plutocrats have postulated, in point of fact, we love them. We worship our rich to the point of obsession. The highest-rated television shows uniformly feature the unimaginably fabulous families of celebrities not to mention the housewives (real or otherwise) of the rich. We don’t care what color they are or what religion they practice or where in the country they live or what channel their show is on – if they’re rich, we are watching.

    When Derek Jeter was toyed with by the New York Yankees when it came time for him to renew his next hundred million dollar contract, the people empathized with Derek Jeter. Sure, this disagreement essentially took place between one of the wealthiest organizations in the country and one of the wealthiest private citizens – but we rooted for Jeter to get his money. Nobody begrudged him a penny of it or wanted a piece of it or decried the fact that he was luckier than the rest of us. In the American psyche, Jeter was one of the good guys who was deservedly successful. He was one of us and an example of hard work paying off.

    Likewise, when Steve Jobs died, he did so with more money than you or any of your “job alliance” buddies – ten times more than most of you, in fact. And upon his death the entire nation went into mourning. We set up makeshift shrines to his brilliance in front of Apple stores from coast to coast. His biography flew off the shelves and people bought Apple products and stock shares in his honor and in his memory. Does that strike you as the action of a populace that hates success?

    No, Jamie, it is not that Americans hate successful people or the wealthy. In fact, it is just the opposite. We love the success stories in our midst and it is a distinctly American trait to believe that we can all follow in the footsteps of the elite, even though so few of us ever actually do.

    So, no, we don’t hate the rich. What we hate are the predators.

    What we hate are the people who we view as having found their success as a consequence of the damage their activities have done to our country. What we hate are those who take and give nothing back in the form of innovation, convenience, entertainment or scientific progress. We hate those who’ve exploited political relationships and stupidity to rake in even more of the nation’s wealth while simultaneously driving the potential for success further away from the grasp of everyone else.

    Here in New York, we hated watching real estate and financial services elitists drive up the prices of everything from affordable apartments to martinis in midtown with the reckless speculation that would eventually lead to mass layoffs, rampant joblessness and the wreckage of so many retirement dreams. No one ever asked the rest of us if we minded, it just happened. I’m sure people across the country can tell similar stories.

    So please, do us all a favor and come to the realization that the loathing you feel from your fellow Americans has nothing to do with your “success” or your “wealth” and it has everything to do with the fact that your wealth and success have come at a cost to the rest of us. No one wants your money or opportunities, what they want is the same chance that their parents had to attain these things for themselves. You are viewed, and rightfully so, as part of the machine that has removed this chance for many – and that is what they hate.

    America hates unjustified privilege, it hates an unfair playing field and crony capitalism without the threat of bankruptcy, it hates privatized gains and socialized losses, it hates rule changes that benefit the few at the expense of the many and it hates people who have been bailed out and don’t display even the slightest bit of remorse or humbleness in the presence of so much suffering in the aftermath.

    Nobody hates your right to make money, Jamie. They hate how you and certain others have made it.

    Don’t be confused on this score for a moment longer.
    ________________________________________
    Article printed from The Big Picture: http://www.ritholtz.com/blog
    URL to article: http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/12/dear-jamie-dimon/
    URLs in this post:
    [1] a story at Bloomberg today: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-20/bankers-join-billionaires-to-debunk-imbecile-attack-on-top-1-.html

    ________________________________________

    I thought this was a good response to those who are always crying about "blaming the rich". Ritholtz also has more than once brought factual evidence to bear debunking the notion that government actions required lenders to make subprime loans and that subprime loans to low income people was the main (or even a major) cause of the 2008 meltdown. But most of that evidence has also been presented on here, so no need to repeat it (No.1 Marauder has prsented much of it); I'm becoming convinced that ideology generally trumps facts anyway...
  2. Joined
    07 Mar '09
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    27933
    22 Dec '11 23:361 edit
    I fail to see how facts have anything to do with what Fox has already convinced stupid consumers to believe. I would advise them not to read your post. It might prevent them from voting in the Republican primary and then it would be inevitable that Democrats pick the Party's nominee. (I was hoping that a coalition of the stupid with help from Democrats and Independents would pick that candidate.)

    So, remember, vote early, vote often, vote stupid! (Vote Rick Perry.)
  3. Hmmm . . .
    Joined
    19 Jan '04
    Moves
    22131
    23 Dec '11 00:371 edit
    Originally posted by TerrierJack
    I fail to see how facts have anything to do with what Fox has already convinced stupid consumers to believe. I would advise them not to read your post. It might prevent them from voting in the Republican primary and then it would be inevitable that Democrats pick the Party's nominee. (I was hoping that a coalition of the stupid with help from Democrats ...[text shortened]... pick that candidate.)

    So, remember, vote early, vote often, vote stupid! (Vote Rick Perry.)
    Man, are you on a tear! I love it, TJ!

    EDIT: Thought you might like this one--

    "It is simplicity that makes the uneducated more effective than the educated when addressing popular audiences." Aristotle.

    You, however, make the point in a much more entertaining--and likely mnore effective--way. 🙂

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