June 20, 2009
Paul J. Nyden
Book review: Senator's book admits mistakes, places blame
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Reckless! How Debt, Deregulation and Dark Money Nearly Bankrupted America

By Byron L. Dorgan

St. Martin's Press,

xvi + 268 pages.

Hardcover, $24.99.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The lack of federal oversight and regulation played a major role in creating economic difficulties Americans face today.

The failure of Congress to see through the carefully crafted lies of top Bush administration officials, including Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, helped enmesh us in the ongoing Iraq quagmire.

Sen. Byron L. Dorgan, D-N.D., documents these problems in his new book Reckless! How Debt, Deregulation and Dark Money Nearly Bankrupted America.

Writing in a readable, often homespun style, Dorgan expresses dismay at the failure of Congress and presidents to rein in the ballooning greed of corporate executives, executives who made hundreds of billions by manipulating home mortgages, creating hedge funds and engineering questionable credit default swaps.

Many seeds of today's economic crisis, Dorgan stresses, were planted during the presidency of Bill Clinton, who chose most of his financial gurus directly from Wall Street.

Dorgan specifically criticizes Clinton for promoting the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 that repealed the Glass-Steagall Act of 1937.

Passed when Franklin D. Roosevelt was president, Glass-Steagall was designed to protect America's banks from risky investments by preventing the irresponsible speculation that helped spark the Great Depression in 1929.

Dorgan was among only eight senators who voted against Clinton's bill.

In his new book, Dorgan criticizes a wide range of banks, insurance companies and investment groups. He asks who was supposed to be regulating their bizarre behavior.

Four banks - Bank of America, JP-Morgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo - now control nearly a third of all bank deposits in the country.

By the end of 2008, Citigroup was reeling from the weight of "toxic assets" it acquired. To help out, the federal government handed Citigroup $45 billion in cash and federal guarantees to cover up to $306 billion in its toxic assets.

Yet, Dorgan adds, the Citigroup executives "whose irresponsible behavior allowed this to happen are still there. The Treasury Secretary bailed them out without requiring any accountability or change in management."

The "willful blindness" of federal regulators, Dorgan believes, should be made into a felony offense.

The costs of war

Reckless details the economic consequences of war, whose costs are shifted to future generations.

"No country can go to war and offer tax cuts to its wealthiest citizens while it adds the cost of war to its federal debt. At least it can't do that without catastrophic consequences to its economy," Dorgan warns.

Today, a lot of our growing national debt is being financed with loans from China and Japan.

Our growing deficit is made worse by an "orgy of greed" by private contractors raking in cash from the ongoing war.

Last year, we had 146,000 American soldiers in Iraq. At the same time, U.S. contractors employed 190,000 workers.

Those private contract workers, often paid $150,000 or more a year, are routinely better equipped with protective body armor and armored vehicles than our own soldiers.

Dorgan has harsh words for former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a four-star general who had chaired the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for testifying at the United Nations on Feb. 5, 2003, to justify Bush administration plans to invade Iraq. The war began on March 19, just six weeks later.

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Posted By: FYI25203 (12:39am 06-22-2009)
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Perhaps if Senator Dorgan had done his job, researched the intelligence put forth before Iraq and joined the 21 Democratic Senators who voted against the authorization for force instead of with the OTHER 28 DEMOCRATIC Senators who voted to authorize the use of force, we wouldn't have been mired down in Iraq to begin with.

Posted By: MU4WVU2 (12:20am 06-22-2009)
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Please look at how long this senator has been in office. He has a staff assigned to him. He has the opportunity to investigate and floor time available to expose problems as they occur. He can initiate laws to correct the problems before they occur if he can analyze potential problems. But...he excells at looking at problems after the fact and makeing floor attacks upon other people who were in attendence at time of offense. Most people can report problems after the fact even without large staffs.

His book should have started with "My inability to see problems as they occur rather than ability to describe problems after the fact".

Posted By: joe46and2 (10:00pm 06-21-2009)
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Do you ever read anything other than partisan garbage?

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