Six Steps to Dis-Empowering Wall Street

by: Mike Lux

Wed May 06, 2009 at 11:00


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Dick Durbin summed up the plain and ugly truth for us: the banks "are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And frankly own the place."

It's time for the rest of us to declare these big banks politically and morally insolvent, and foreclose on their ownership of DC. The question is how to do it.

Here are six steps toward dis-empowering Wall Street:

Mike Lux :: Six Steps to Dis-Empowering Wall Street
1. We need to create a big new coalition which becomes the center of gravity on the banking issue, in the same way that Health Care for America Now has become such a center on the drive for progressive health care reform. I envision this as a combination of national organizations and networks, and the grassroots activists like the folks who have been organizing at A New Way Forward. National groups that might be interested labor unions; consumer groups (many of which are already quite active on this issue), broader progressive movement organizations like USAction, ACORN, Campaign for America's Future, and Center for Community Change; neighborhood organizing networks like Industrial Areas Foundation, National Peoples' Action, and Gamaliel.

2. We need the best and brightest thinkers on this issue- people like Joseph Stiglitz, Dean Baker, Paul Krugman, Simon Johnson, Rob Johnson, William Greider, George Soros, and Leo Hindery- to come together and work through a Plan B, an alternative path to the one being taken now.

3. We need to press forward aggressively on passing public financing of campaigns, because without that happening, the power of the banks will remain overwhelming even if we do convince the Obama administration to go a new way.

4. We should support and encourage the kind of investigative journalism projects on banking that Huffingtonpost and Atlantic Philanthopies are supporting through the Huffingtonpost Investigative Fund.

5. Progressives at the national and local level should reach out to community bankers and savings and loans. They might not all agree with us, but I'm guessing the broad majority are sick to death of the power of the biggest banks.

6. Speaking of which, we should start a nationwide movement to switch our deposits from the big banks into community banks and the savings and loans. I don't think most people like giving their money to people who are destroying our economy and democracy.

Let the movement begin.


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Thank you and I would add a couple more (4.00 / 5)
1) Don't forget credit unions
2) The importance of financial literacy
3) Creation of a progress organization that establishes a set of principles for investing and based on those principles offers a "seal of approval".  This organization would review a financial companies business practices.  

RebelCapitalist - Financial Information for the Rest of Us.

#3 (4.00 / 1)
#3 is very interesting. Socially responsible investing (and  business practices in general) is long overdue.

People from the wealthy Hollywood "elites" to work a day Americans are becoming more and more interested in this.

It will become the norm at some point.


[ Parent ]
What About The Faith-Based Folks? And The Unions? (4.00 / 6)
I may be a godless heathen, but their absence from your list on item #1 immediately struck me as a major oversight.  I'm sure it wasn't intentional, and this is very good big-picture plan.  But faith-based organizing and union organizing are both custom-made for this issue, with the ability to take action both nationally and locally.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3

Excellent points (4.00 / 3)
and don't forget to use the debit option and enter your pin on transactions using your debit card.  It saves retailers money on transaction processing fees and is less money that gets directed back to the banks in terms of transaction fees.

Unfortunately, some banks actually charge their customers a user fee for using your cash card like a cash card.  So check those fees first.

Or, just pay in cash as much as possible! I've gone back to weekly cash withdrawals and use on-hand hard cash as much as possible for purchases.  


[ Parent ]
Wall Street (4.00 / 5)
What about Robert Kuttner?  He is an excellent economist, working on these issues since the 80's.  

A Great Start To A Vexing Problem & A Few Idea (4.00 / 3)
1.  I think #3 is the important item in the long-term, because plutocracy has hijacked our democracy at levels comparable to the Guilded Age.  That said, I do have hope with organizations like ChangeCongress (are there others?) helping to push for public financing of campaigns.

2.  Also, I recommend to everyone to get rid of whatever credit cards that they do not need.  Or least, find alternative banks/financial institutions that have not been wrecking the economy, in with no apparent shame, turning around and hiking up credit card rates.

3. As a member of Obama's 11-13 million plus, I constantly rebuff certain requests for help--not on major and important legislation that I support--citing my disapproval of the Administration's handling of the banking and financial institution.  I think this is another avenue to reach out. Or, start a facebook page or website to bring others along for reform at the site via networking.  Not everyone on that list is an Obama ditto-head.

PS  Great Post--we need an organized front to tackle this problem.
 


Buy Blue (4.00 / 3)
With regard to your #2, we need a Buy Blue type list for banks and credit card companies so we know which banks are better to do business with.  

[ Parent ]
Great Point (4.00 / 1)
I will send an e-mail to Rising Donkey.  Though, I am sure the members of this site may know where to turn.

[ Parent ]
A lot of good ideas so far (4.00 / 4)
and I hope things start moving forward in a cooperative and coordinated way ASAP. Understandably, most people I've spoken with feel completely powerless, (and therefore hopeless), regarding this issue. Whatever progressive actions start happening, it's important to make sure they get wide publicity so that people know there's something positive they can do and not just throw up their hands in despair.

I think these concrete steps will be great (4.00 / 1)
despair lifters.  I know it would me.  Since the great democrat betrayal on the Iraq War, I haven't really thought politicians could lead on anything.

My blog  

[ Parent ]
Credit unions. (4.00 / 4)
If you're not already a member, look for one you can join. You won't regret it.

Montani semper liberi

Very good ideas all (4.00 / 1)
Unless you have really, really bad community banks or credit unions in your area you shouldn't be a member of a big bank. They reinvest in your community, have probably helped build your favorite local business.

So I see four main things we should organize around

1. A aggressive, detailed plan developed by leading economists with clear numbers for what it will cost, what changes to the law it will require and how it will be implemented.

2. A nationwide campaign to encourage people to switch to community banks and progressive credit unions (not all credit unions are created alike).

And separately we should push strongly for

3. The Fair Elections Now Act

4. Donating to support investigative journalism by HuffPost Fund and any other outlet that takes on the task. Journalists working to expose unfair labor practices helped usher in many of the critical labor reforms of the Progressive and New Deal eras.

I'm not sure if all of those should be pushed for under one national coalition. At least the journalism stuff should be separate and possibly Fair Elections Now and even the switch to better banks movement. New Way Forward seems like a good name to me.  

John McCain: Beacuse lobbyists should have more power


uh. (4.00 / 1)
We need to create a big new coalition which becomes the center of gravity on the banking issue, in the same way that Health Care for America Now has become such a center on the drive for progressive health care reform.

Ah, an organization like HCAN, cool. You mean a big umbrella that provides cover for avoiding any real reform of the financial sector and preserving massive profits and personal income, while absorbing all the media coverage as the "reasonable" opposition so that anyone who actually wants to, I dunno, change things is pushed into the crazy bomb thrower pile?

Yeah, that sounds good. Sign me up.

not everything worth doing is profitable. not everything profitable is worth doing.


And return the power over money supply to Congress (0.00 / 0)
not the Federal Reserve.

existing organizations to learn about (0.00 / 0)
Would any of these groups would be partner material?


It would be good to have a list of organizations that already exist who might have a stake in such a movement, as well as a list of those who would oppose it.


Credit Unions are good places to put (4.00 / 1)
your money relative to bad banks, but they aren't necessary liberal particularly if they are credit union for a conservative corporation.  Lockheed Martin has a credit union for instance.

So

I don't think we should partner with any business interest group.  

My blog  


[ Parent ]
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