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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 11:29 AM Dec 2013

Big Money Democrat and the Detroit Bankruptcy



Interesting details on how money trumps political loyalty:



A who’s who of the conspirators behind the Detroit bankruptcy

By Thomas Gaist
13 November 2013

EXCERPT...

Michigan State Treasurer Andy Dillon

Andrew or “Andy” Dillon is a leading Democratic politician in the state of Michigan, who was speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives before being appointed state treasurer by Snyder. Dillon was elected to the House in 2004, and ran for the Democratic nomination for governor unsuccessfully in 2010, at which point he hitched his chariot to Snyder’s campaign. He was rewarded with the second most powerful post in the state.

Dillon earned his fortune as a venture capitalist, serving as vice president of commercial finance for General Electric Capital Corporation. He become president of Detroit Steel Company in 1996, and later was managing director of the Chicago-based private equity firm Wynnchurch Capital.

Dillon has been a chief conspirator in the plans for the “restructuring” of Detroit. He worked with Jones Day attorneys to draft the April 2012 consent agreement, which forced major concessions on municipal workers, and has overseen restructuring operations against municipalities and school districts throughout the state using powers of the authoritarian emergency manager law.

An email sent by Dillon on July 10, 2013 to Orr on the wording he should use to justify the bankruptcy filing exposed the conspiratorial character of the operation. Dillon told Orr he didn’t think, “we are making the case why we are giving up so soon to reach an out of court settlement. Looks premeditated.” He advised Orr to “say facts got worse as we dug into the numbers… We don’t even say they rejected the city’s proposal. I think we may want a take it or leave it demand before we pull this trigger. I agree with the recommendation but I don’t think we made the case. After the letter is revised, let’s work on the Gov’s response.”

Dillon resigned his post as state treasurer on November 1—the day after giving a deposition for the bankruptcy trial—saying publicity over his acrimonious divorce was becoming a distraction. Snyder, stating regret, immediately heaped praise on the state Democrat.

“He has been instrumental in many of the comprehensive reforms that are contributing to Michigan’s comeback. He has worked tirelessly on behalf of the people of Michigan, and we’re a stronger state because of his dedication, expertise and leadership.” Dillon’s “partnership with Detroit to assist in the city’s turnaround,” Snyder wrote, “is just one example of Andy’s positive impact on Michigan.”

SOURCE: https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/11/13/whow-n13.html



Dillon lost out on the nomination for the Democratic nominee for Governor in 2010. So, instead of helping the eventual nominee, Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero, he laid low. After Rick "Gateway Pinkslip" Snyder won the job, Dillon joined the Republican administration as Michigan State Treasurer, a reat job for a vulture capitalist -- think "Boardwalk Empire" and Nucky Thompson. Dillon recently left public service to return, again, to the pirate sector.
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last1standing

(11,709 posts)
1. There's a reason we supported Bernero over Dillon in the primaries.
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 11:43 AM
Dec 2013

Bernero may be flawed (supports Matty Maroun's corrupt bridge ventures) but he's a real Democrat, not a New-Democrat who thinks that a gentler, kinder type of Wall Street benevolence is the path to the future.

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
2. ''...a gentler, kinder type of Wall Street benevolence is the path to the future.''
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 11:55 AM
Dec 2013

Well said, last1standing.

It's all like the unctuous turd and tee vee preacher billionaire Pat Robertson planned: First, take the school boards. Then, the statehouses. Then, Washington.

It won't be long before the rest of the country experiences what we in Detroit are going through. And it will all be legal, like.

 

Larkspur

(12,804 posts)
3. TPP would hasten the end of our democracy and turn us all into serfs for
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 12:04 PM
Dec 2013

multi-national corporations.

The Republican and Corporatist Democrat goal is to get rid of democracy and enact global feudalism.

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
4. Clear as day.
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 12:35 PM
Dec 2013

Thanks to Frank "Congo Carlyle" Carlucci, the CEO class can prepare for the Bad Days Ahead:



The Really Creepy People Behind the Libertarian-Inspired Billionaire Sea Castles

The stinking rich are planning billion-dollar luxury liners that keep the land-based Americans they've plundered at a safe distance.

AlterNet / By Mark Ames
June 1, 2010

What happens when Americans plunder America and leave it broken, destitute and seething mad? Where do these fabulously wealthy Americans go with their loot, if America isn't a safe, secure, or even desirable place to spend their riches? What if they lose faith in their gated communities, because those plush gated communities are surrounded by millions of pissed-off Americans stripped of their entitlements, and who now want in?

The first such floating castle has been christened the " Utopia"--the South Korean firm Samsung has been contracted to build the $1.1 billion ship, due to be launched in 2013. Already orders are coming in to buy one of the Utopia's 200 or so mansions for sale- -which range in price from about $4 million for the smallest condos to over $26 million for 6,600 square-foot "estates." The largest mansion is a whopping 40,000 square feet, and sells for $160 million.

SNIP...

Both Thiel and Milton Friedman's grandson see democracy as the enemy--last year, Thiel wrote "I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible" at about the same time that Milton Friedman's grandson proclaimed, "Democracy is not the answer." Both published their anti-democracy proclamations in the same billionaire-Koch-family-funded outlet, Cato Unbound, one of the oldest billionaire-fed libertarian welfare dispensaries. Friedman's answer for Thiel's democracy problem is to build offshore libertarian pod-fortresses where the libertarian way rules. It's probably better for everyone if Milton Friedman's grandson and Peter Thiel leave us forever for their libertarian ocean lair--Thiel believes that America went down the tubes ever since it gave women the right to vote, and he was outed as the sponsor of accused felon James O'Keefe's smear videos that brought ACORN to ruin.

SNIP...

While neither Bush nor the Bin Ladens are principals in the Frontier Group, its founding director, Frank Carlucci, is a name they know well, and you should too. Carlucci ran the Carlyle Group as its chairman from 1989 through 2005, right around the time that the wars started going undeniably bad, and floating castles started to look like a viable plan. But Carlucci's past is much weirder and scarier than most of us care to know: whether it's his strangely timed appearances in some of the ugliest assassinations and coups in modern history, or serving as Carter's number two man in the CIA, and Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Defense, if Frank Carlucci (nicknamed "Creepy Carlucci" and "Spooky Frank&quot is the founding director of a firm that's building floating castles, it's a bad sign for those of us left behind.

I'll get into Carlucci's partners in the Frontier Group in a moment, but first, let's reacquaint ourselves with Frank Carlucci. From an early age, Carlucci learned the importance of getting to know the right people in the right places. He studied at Princeton in the mid-1950s, where as luck should have it, Carlucci roomed with Donald Rumsfeld. Both Carlucci and Rumsfeld shared a passion for Greco-Roman wrestling at Princeton, and both went on to serve in the Navy after Princeton. Their paths would split and merge several times over the next few decades, even as they remained close personal friends throughout their lives. In the late 1950s, Carlucci briefly served as an executive at a lingerie manufacturer, Jantzen (the Victoria's Secret of its day), but quickly left to join the State Department.

CONTINUED...

http://www.alternet.org/story/147058/the_really_creepy_people_behind_the_libertarian-inspired_billionaire_sea_castles



After the penured proles whittle each other's numbers down to size, they'll return ashore to a world "right-sized," one that's free of democracy and much easier to breathe in, rule, plunder and golf.

last1standing

(11,709 posts)
5. The more I think about it, these ALEC sponsored politicians couldn't have chosen a better example...
Thu Dec 5, 2013, 12:36 PM
Dec 2013

...than Detroit. It's hated by the rest of the state for being too "urban," and it has a bad reputation throughout the nation (and world). So, by using Detroit as the "test case" for bankruptcy these people are able to use the very common misconception (even here at DU) that Detroit and its residents deserve to be punished for their actions. Therefore, there's no sympathy, only contempt. People want Detroit to fail to teach certain people a lesson.

What they don't understand is that once it happens to Detroit, there's precedent for the next city (i.e. Chicago) and then the next. Where does it end? It doesn't. Not till the people forget their hatred of "the other" and stand up against the greed of the corporations. Detroit is the best place to start. After Detroit falls, it will be much harder to turn the ship around.

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
6. They blame the victims...just like the Great Wall Street Bailout of 2008.
Fri Dec 6, 2013, 01:23 PM
Dec 2013

Remember how the poor homeowners who got loans for homes they "could not afford" were the popular scapegoats for the Wall Street banks failures in 2008? That's the national version of what Detroiters experience from much of the rest of Michigan -- as you wrote, last1standing: Hatred of the Other.



HOW WALL STREET — NOT PENSIONERS — WRECKED DETROIT

November 20, 2013 | Government & the Public Sector | Salon | David Sirota

In its house editorial yesterday, USA Today retold the now-accepted story of Detroit’s bankruptcy. Railing on “reckless public pensions,” the newspaper told its readers that the Motor City is “Exhibit A for municipal irresponsibility” because it allegedly “negotiated generous pensions” that were too lavish. In this fable, the average Detroit pensioner’s$19,000 a year stipend – which many get in lieu of Social Security – is somehow defined not only as excessive, but also as the primary cause of the city’s financial problems. Detroit, thus, becomes a weapon in the larger Plot Against Pensions, as the right holds it up as a cautionary tale supposedly showing that A) police officers, firefighters and sanitation workers are greedy and B) America cannot afford to fulfill negotiated agreements to pay public-sector workers a subsistence retirement benefit.

No doubt, there is a tiny grain of truth in this otherwise inaccurate story. Yes, it is true, Detroit is a cautionary tale for governments about financial management and legacy costs. However, it is not a cautionary tale about allegedly greedy employees living the MTV Cribs life off taxpayers. As an eye-opening new report from a former Goldman Sachs executive documents, it is instead yet another cautionary tale about Wall Street’s too-good-to-be-true schemes that end up being, well, too good to be true.

Commissioned by the think tank Demos, the new report out today from former investment banker Wallace Turbeville shows that contrary to the myths about a bloated municipal government overspending on lavish social services, Detroit’s “overall expenses have declined over the last five years” by $419 million thanks to the city “laying off more than 2,350 workers, cutting worker pay, and reducing future healthcare and future benefit accruals for workers.” Today, Turbeville notes that “Detroit has a significantly smaller workforce per capita than comparable cities.” Yet, those draconian cuts still left the city with an annual $198 million shortfall because of three big problems – none of which has anything to do with supposedly greedy public workers and their allegedly overly “generous” pension benefits. [...]

As Turbeville shows, in the five years leading up to today’s crisis, the city’s pension contribution expenses were essentially flat. Yes, its health care contribution expenses increased, but they rose by less than the nationwide annual increase in health care expenses, meaning Detroit experienced nothing out of the ordinary on that score. So if benefits didn’t drive the legacy cost increases what did? As Turbeville documents, it was fees, financing costs and payments incurred by Wall Street’s swap scheme. Those expenses constitute more than 61 percent of the total legacy-cost jump.

In his report, Turbeville notes that “the banks are now demanding upwards of $250-350 million in swap termination payments” in order to let Detroit out of the apocalyptic swap scheme. In an actual bankruptcy, creditors might have to forego some of those fees – or in the industry lingo, they might have to “take a haircut.” But in the era of bailouts, ordinary Americans have to take haircuts, but Wall Streeters almost never do. Thus, the banks’ demand for termination payments has been turned into yet another opportunity for the financial industry to swindle Detroit taxpayers. Specifically, Detroit’s Republican-appointed emergency manager is pushing the city council to take on an additional $350 million in debt from a new loan with Barclays.

CONTINUED...

http://www.demos.org/news/how-wall-street-%E2%80%94-not-pensioners-%E2%80%94-wrecked-detroit



We still have a chance, thanks to the good sense people show when presented with the facts. That Corporate McPravda never mention these facts show just who owns and operates the show that passes for "news."
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