Write some thoughts:
1. The so-called financial crisis, under the deregulation, is essentially a Ponzi scheme dominated by a few financial predators. Take investors' money, borrow without risk control, and get high returns. In the end, the game of drumming and passing flowers could not be played, and bankruptcy followed one after another. The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, the investment bank, and the bankruptcy of AIG, the world's largest insurance company, triggered a chain reaction. In the financial crisis, it is not the money that evaporates, but the money of the majority, which is silently passed away by a very small number of people.
2. Dance until the music stops. Everyone recognized that it was a crisis, but no one stopped because there were huge profits to be made. Investment banks sell companies they know are junk, and credit rating agencies give companies facing bankruptcy a 3A (best rating). Because people who are in the Ponzi scheme can only ensure that their interests will not be lost if they cheat. Once the capital chain is broken, you have to finish the game yourself.
3. Politicians and chaebols wear the same pair of pants to achieve each other. This also means that the rules are made by those with vested interests in order to safeguard established interests. Therefore, whether it is Bush Jr. or Obama taking office, the changes that were talked about during the election campaign become empty words when they are in power. Politicians themselves need help from chaebols.
4. An industry is too powerful, and it is even more difficult to reform it. The United States is still a certain city in the United States, and the number of financial talkers exceeds three times that of members of Congress. You have to reform it, and finally find it kidnapped.
5. The U.S. Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve, several major investment banks, and several prestigious schools in the United States including Harvard University. There is free movement of people in office, professors can be the chairman of the Federal Reserve, and investment bank CEOs can also switch to professors. What is this indicating? People are a family, a community of interests. Therefore, don't be too superstitious about political, economic, and educational power figures. Smart people are teaming up to take out the money of those of us who don't know the truth. The truth of the world is like this, those successful studies you want to learn from them must not be learned. What you can learn, must not be their real success.
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