Monday, December 8, 2008

"The practical problem is that the institutions involved are probably too big to jail. "

Burke turned up in Jesse's Cafe Americain today, so we've got to feature it:

"Among a people generally corrupt, liberty cannot long exist."
Edmund Burke

Although Nassim Taleb makes some excellent points he is a bit narrow in his analysis because of his superior knowledge and experience in a highly specific area of the crisis, which in some ways is a broader cultural crisis.

There may be enough fraud involved in the US over the past twenty years for multiple prosecutions under the RICO statutes. Or it just may be the end result of a general breakdown in morals, from the top down by example perhaps.

One does find some institutions appearing as enablers at the heart of every crisis, from LTCM to Enron to the Accounting Frauds to the Tech Bubble to the Credit Bubble.

No, this was worse than the silence of the witnesses to the assault of Kitty Genovese that gave the label to the bystander effect.

In this case there were 'bystanders' who financially benefited from the assault and who not only kept quiet but actively intimidated and silenced other bystanders through ridicule and fear of retribution. But there are also many who simply did not care then and will not care once the markets rally once again. This is the sad commentary on a nation corrupted by easy money.

There were many bystanders who did call 911 and were ignored because those in the enforcement chain were either asleep on the job or had other competing interests.

The practical problem is that the institutions involved are probably too big to jail.

That is their strength, but ironically also their weakness."

I agree with Jesse, and made a similar point, which is that Taleb, and I'm a big fan, seemed to put actual culprits into the bystander dock.

I love "Too Big To Jail", although I do believe that, as the S & L Crisis had Charles Keating and a few others, there will be a few high profile prosecutions to make everyone feel fine with most of the guilty getting off.

I do not want that to happen, which is why, on my blog, as Taleb has done, only I don't have his smarts or expertise, I believe that I have shown that these investments are not that complicated, at least as to understanding the risk, and that fraud, negligence, fiduciary mismanagement, and collusion, should be vigorously prosecuted where they are found. That's the main reason that I don't like Systemic and Mechanistic Explanations. They have a bad habit of being used to exonerate criminals.

As long as I'm at Jesse's, I think I'll join Burke for a cup of java:


Café Americano

Café Americano
Spécialité Maison





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