Fighting Poverty Through Wall Street Accountability

We’re proud to collaborate with The Nation in sharing insightful journalism related to income inequality in America. The following is an excerpt from Nation contributor Greg Kaufmann’s “This Week in Poverty” column.


This year, I’ve been focused on how anti-poverty activists can move from a defensive battle defined by trying to save what needs to be saved during these budget debates, to an offensive one, laying out a vision that inspires ongoing, unified action and builds a vibrant movement that connects with people in their communities.

I offered one modest proposal for an “anti-poverty contract” — five issues that impact both low-income and middle class people — around which activists and groups could organize. The Western Center on Law Poverty and a handful of other national and local groups are trying to build an effort around that idea.

However, when you consider the scale of the problems we face — and what inspires people to take action — clearly much, much more is needed. As I wrote previously, to build a new anti-poverty movement will require the kind of organizing and actions that are as creative, visible and gripping as the Occupy Wall Street movement.

Enter Stephen Lerner.

Lerner is a labor and community organizer who has spent more than three decades organizing hundreds of thousands of janitors, farm workers, garment workers and other low-wage workers into unions. These efforts resulted in increased wages, first-time health benefits, paid sick days and other improvements on the job. The architect of the historic Justice for Janitors campaign, he is currently working with unions and community groups across the country to break Wall Street’s anti-democratic grip on our politics and our economy.

Lerner lays out a powerful case about the intersection between poverty and Wall Street accountability — and how a Wall Street accountability movement can transform an economy that offers so few pathways out of poverty, and so many ways to keep people impoverished.

Here is our conversation:

Greg Kaufmann: Why is the Wall Street accountability movement now the focus of your work, and what is the potential you see there?

Credit: Dale Robbins

Stephen Lerner: One of the challenges is that there are so many things wrong right now — that you can be involved in any of a thousand causes. The problem is if they are disconnected it doesn’t add up to anything. So, people who are opposed to poverty have a dozen different things they’d like to move on the Hill, none of which are likely to pass at this time.

So the focus on Wall Street is: how do you connect all of these different battles? And, in fact, are there core things in common that drive them together?

If you look at some of the biggest issues of the day — whether it’s the loss of wealth in communities of color, the housing crisis, the student debt crisis, local and state governments cutting jobs and services because of debt — you can connect all of these issues to the original economic crisis of 2008, and the growing and continued dominance of the Wall Street big banks.

The majority of people in this country are either impacted by student debt, the ongoing housing crisis or the crisis of the public sector. And you can trace so much of it to Wall Street. This means instead of having 20 separate campaigns, you can have one campaign, that says how do we rebalance and reorganize the economy so that it benefits everybody — not just a teeny elite at the top.

Kaufmann: How does the effort to address these three issues intersect with the fight against poverty in particular?

Lerner: Let’s start with housing. In this country, for many workers and people of color, wealth isn’t in the stock market, or the Cayman Islands — it’s in a home. And the banks first preyed on folks through subprime loans pre-crisis, making enormous profits while putting people in danger. Then when the bubble burst, millions of people lost their homes, and those who didn’t have had outrageous payments because the subprime loans exploded. Now you still have 13 million families that are underwater — owing more on their loans than their homes are worth.

In Latino communities, 66 percent of their wealth was lost, half as a result of housing. In the African-American community, it was 53 percent. Fifty years of the gains of the civil rights movement and the expansion of the economy were wiped out overnight, pushing millions into poverty. If you add to that the people who are unemployed as a result of the crashed economy — we just have this strange thing that happened: the banks created a disaster, and economists and politicians said, “That’s terrible for the economy, let’s give them trillions.” And then the folks who were actually hit the hardest were forced into poverty.

On student debt: funding to public education was dramatically cut, which obviously hurts poor people and workers the most. As it was cut, people had to take out loans. So 37 million people have now run up a trillion dollars in student debt. It’s a burden no matter what, but if you come from a family that doesn’t have means, you now graduate from school with a crushing debt burden, and then there aren’t jobs available. And there’s a vicious cycle: you cut the budget of public universities, to give tax breaks to banks and big companies, who respond by creating toxic loan packages for students that they make a profit on. And because public funding of universities has been cut — the schools need to borrow more money in order to operate and build, so the banks get a piece of that action, too. And now university endowments are investing in Sallie Mae — the largest private student loan lender — so students have to take out loans to go to school, and the university endowment profits off those loans.

There are much better ways to fund education — like by [publicly] funding education so people can actually afford it, instead of creating these twenty layers that let Wall Street suck money out at every step.

Kaufmann: So individuals and families are getting crushed by housing and education debt, and then you say public debt completes a sort of perfect storm?

Lerner: That’s right, what we call predatory public loans. So three things have happened: Wall Street has taken advantage of the desperation of cities and municipalities since the crisis; the deals are so complex that public entities don’t know what they are getting into; and third is that Wall Street gets its money at a subsidized, Too Big to Fail rate, and in the case of the discount window, almost for free. Banks get money at .075 percent interest from the Federal Reserve, and they then create all sorts of ways to make more and more money off the spread, from the public sector.

Take interest rate swaps, for example. On the surface it sounds like not a bad idea — a bank says they will protect a city from a fluctuating interest rate by locking it in at, say, 4 percent. If it goes higher, they eat it. And if it goes lower, they make money. But they then add so many different formulas and traps, that all of a sudden when the whole thing blew up during the crisis and a city is hemorrhaging money, and they want to get out of it, it turns out that they have an exit fee that’s extraordinary and they can’t afford it. In Detroit, the city had to pay around $470 million on a series of bond and interrelated swap deals gone bad at the same time they were laying off police and firemen. So then you end up in fights like, ‘Do we help the poor, or do we take workers that are middle class and cut their wages so they’ll be poor?’

Kaufmann: Describe what this movement looks like — what are some of the asks and how do you see it potentially playing out?

Lerner: There are multiple levels of how Wall Street is impoverishing the country, and so different people can engage in different ways.

On housing, in Atlanta, Minneapolis, all over California — one piece is the Home Defenders League and Occupy Our Homes. This involves physical encampments, blockading the police and saying you’re not going to take my home, or my neighbor’s home. It’s incredibly vibrant, street-level resistance — and it’s often successful. And as folks are successful, it grows. This is all non-violent, and involves people who are willing to go to jail.

If you take it up a level, there is a simple policy demand, which is that banks should reduce principal on homes to current market value. That means if you’re paying a $300,000 mortgage on a home that’s worth $200,000, the bank should rewrite it to that value. If we did that, it would save $700 billion to $1 trillion — that’s how much people are underwater — and generate $101 billion in economic activity, create 1.5 million jobs, and the average underwater homeowner would save $7,700 a year.

There are cities all over the country that are now exploring using eminent domain to seize these underwater mortgages and rewrite them with principal reductions. For years eminent domain was the tool to take advantage of poor people — tear up a neighborhood, build a highway, build a stadium and tell people they will be paid what their homes are worth on the open market. They said it was for the public good even as it devastated once stable neighborhoods. We’re saying let’s flip that on it’s head — for the public good, let’s seize these mortgages and rewrite them at current market value so people can stay in their homes.

On student debt, there is a gamut of activity ranging from student activism on campuses, to state and local legislation, to sit-ins at the Sallie Mae shareholders meeting, to challenging the Education Department on why they have as contractors like Sallie Mae that are profiting off this disaster. The movement includes Senator Elizabeth Warren’s brilliant bill to give students loans at the same rate we give to banks. Why should banks get money cheap and student loans be more expensive? And it includes people on their college campuses — a movement around Big Banks Off Campus — because the banks shouldn’t be allowed to come on campus and sell their credit cards and figure out new ways to indebt students.

Finally, on public debt, people are fighting back. In the case of Oregon, SEIU Local 503 calculated that the state lost $110 million because of the LIBOR manipulations. So here’s what happens: the SEIU public sector union goes in to negotiate with the state representing public employees, and the state says we want to cut all of these services for poor people. And the workers themselves are often poor — homecare workers who haven’t had a raise in six years. The state says there is no money. And how do you argue if there’s no money? Except that the money was stolen! And so the movement is changing the debate. This is not about: Are public employees overpaid? Are their too many benefits for poor people? Should we have pre-K or not? There are incredible sums of money out there but we’ve devised a system that drains it from the bottom to the top. Why don’t we cut out the middleman? Like let’s have an infrastructure bank and loan the money at cost. Let’s figure out a way so banks can’t make more than a certain amount of money on the spread. And I know that gives the free-market people heart attacks, because this is intervening in the market, but there is no market. Because five banks control it, and where they get their money is from taxpayers. It’s our money.

Kaufmann: To what extent are these three threads — on student debt, housing debt and public debt — coalescing into a movement so they aren’t the kind of independent, divided struggles that you suggest hold us back from big victories?

Lerner: As the campaigns develop, the overlap happens more and more. For example, people are seeing the relationship between housing debt and student debt — needing to take out student loans because your family’s house isn’t worth anything anymore so you can’t help finance an education through a second mortgage like you might have in the past. At the Wells Fargo meeting at Salt Lake City, folks campaigning about student debt showed up, and so did people campaigning on housing, and so did people about the environment. So, on an organic level on the street, people are seeing it more and more.

Kaufmann: After I covered the actions at the Wells Fargo shareholders meeting, a progressive friend and writer told me, “The activists seem to think banks can’t ignore their message, that being heard is equivalent to making change.” How do you think a movement like this actually could make principal reduction, for example, a reality? 

Lerner: First, the enemy of change is the notion that if you are not winning at that moment then you are losing. These things never have an even flow. It’s not like you start one day, you have steady escalation — they go up and down. In Taylor Branch’s book, At Canaan’s Edge, you read these transcripts of FBI wiretaps on civil rights leaders and it’s them saying, “We’re losing”…or “so and so was killed”…or “we have in-fighting, how will we win?” But when we look back at that period now, we see that the Civil Rights bill was going to pass, it was all going to happen. I think when you are in the middle of the battle, under siege, you can’t see the forest for the trees.

But your friend’s critique is fair in that we’ve been screaming about the banks for years, and they are more powerful than ever — the top six banks now control 73 percent of the total assets in the U.S. banking sector. However, we’ve started to identify some levers that we think begin to level the playing field. Eminent domain is one example — if you’re not willing to reduce principal, then we’ll use the power of the city to force you to do it. On LIBOR, city after city is investigating whether they can sue to get their money back. Many are exploring, and some have passed, bills that say if banks don’t meet certain standards the cities won’t deal with them anymore. Los Angeles, Oakland, New York, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh have all passed responsible banking ordinances recently.

Also, the banks’ greed and hubris is so great that [there are] new avenues to go after them. So if you look at the litigation that California Attorney General Kamala Harris filed: this is where the banks essentially did the same thing with credit card loans that they did with mortgages — they moved to litigation without accurate documentation to even show that people owed them money. We are seeing more opportunities for growing protest, more litigation and more public policy changes. You even now have Ohio Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown and Louisiana Republican Senator David Vitter working together on a bill to break up the big banks.

Kaufmann: Is there a role in this movement for people and organizations that are focused on the Hill?

Lerner: Petitions can raise important issues and get people involved. Lobbying can be important — but I think what we need to do is connect all of this to an analysis of who the villains are and why the economy is unbalanced. This is not a problem of lack of policy — we have unlimited great policy ideas. This is not a problem of lack of money to fund anti-poverty programs. This is a problem of power. I think people need to accept that there is no real significant economic and political change as long as the finance sector is so dominant. The D.C.-centric stuff will be far more effective if there is something out there in the rest of the country brewing. If this is just an intellectual policy debate about who has the best idea and who has the best statistics, we’re doomed.

Kaufmann: To win — to really make the kinds of structural changes you are talking about — does the public protest need to be as constant and visible, engaging and creative, as Occupy Wall Street?

Lerner: Yes, we need to get to that. And there is an interesting myth about Occupy that somehow it just emerged out of nowhere. But many of the people who were engaged in it were part of other battles before Occupy Wall Street. The month before Occupy, community groups were doing rallies and sit-ins at banks all over the country. So you never know when things are going to take off. Why did the Vietnam protests take off when they did? Or the civil rights protests? You never know what triggers something to go from dedicated souls to a mass movement.

But your key point is right — the system is currently working for the banks and super-rich. And as long as they feel it’s working we won’t really achieve change. And so some combination of mass disruptive protest — non-violent — of all sorts of local legislative activity; of a growing change in the narrative. Some mix and match of that has to put the kind of heat on them that makes them feel they have to negotiate over these issues — that they need, for example, to fix mortgages because the alternative is worse. We need to have a better system on student loans, because the alternative is worse. I think that’s really our challenge.

Kaufmann: In a recent piece, you suggest that anger is insufficient to sustain a movement — that what keeps people going is love. Can you describe what you mean by that?

Lerner: There are four things currently that are self-defeating for progressives and labor folks: one, the mantra of progressives is built on “we’re losing, there’s no hope, we’re getting clobbered.” That leads to the slogan of much of the progressive movement which is “Let’s fight for small, incremental, not particularly important change now.” So what we largely talk about isn’t very inspiring. We talk about stopping cuts — stopping bad — not how we win good things.

The great movements — take the story of Exodus — they didn’t say, “Can the Egyptians whip us less often?” They said, “We’re leaving. We’re outta here. We’re gonna form a new country, a place where we can be free.” Ghandi, South Africa, the civil rights movement — all of these movements were based on this idea that there is something profoundly better that we can fight for. And I think for many of us in America we’ve lost that ability to say we’re engaged in this — not just because we care about principal reduction — but because we believe in the richest country on earth we can transform society and redistribute wealth and power. So, we need to have a vision that’s inspiring and not be afraid to be called a little utopian.

Second, we need an analysis, a narrative, of who the bad guys are that are concentrating wealth and power. All of the organizing I was involved with — with the garment workers, the farmworkers and the janitors — they all had an analysis of who really had the power and could fix things, and I think we’ve forgotten how to do that.

Third, we need to think about the strategy and tactics that give us leverage, so this is not simply yelling and screaming.  And fourth is about love — which is that people are involved both out of self-interest because they want to make their lives better; but also because they realize their life is better if they help make other lives better.

If you look at the great movements that’s what happens — some combination of vision, analysis, strategy and this deep, deep feeling that by supporting and sacrificing for others — in the labor movement we call it solidarity — you not only transform your own life, but you transform the lives of people around you and in doing that transform how society operates. That’s the roots of how we build what we have to build.


End “Too Big to Jail”: May 18-23, Washington, D.C.

If you think what Lerner has to say makes sense, here’s an immediate opportunity to get involved. Next week, families on the front lines of the foreclosure crisis are traveling from across the country to the nation’s capital to make their voices heard.

Their message is simple: five years into the financial crisis, Wall Street has still not been held accountable, and communities are still suffering. In fact, a new report from Alliance for a Just Society, the New Bottom Line and Home Defenders League shows that $192.6 billion in wealth was lost due to the foreclosure crisis in 2012, and this year another 13 million homes are at risk of foreclosure with $221 billion in wealth on the line. (See “Studies/Briefs” below for more information on this report.)

It’s long past time for the administration to prosecute those who violated the law and for the banks to repay individuals, families and communities that continue to suffer losses — beginning with reducing their mortgages to fair market value.

“We can’t have two systems of justice in this country: one for the rich and powerful, where Wall Street criminals are actually rewarded with bailouts and huge bonuses, and another for the rest of us,” said Vivian Richardson, who will be in D.C. next week after successfully defending her home from foreclosure with the help of members of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment. “These Wall Street banksters stole many homes, and are still committing crimes. It is time for them to be held accountable.”

There will be home-defense and non-violent, civil disobedience trainings on May 18-19 and a rally and march to the Department of Justice on Monday, May 20. The activists will attempt to meet with Attorney General Eric Holder and are prepared to take direct action if that doesn’t happen — blocking entrances, setting up an Occupy-style encampment, getting arrested and staying in jail.

To participate in the Week of Action, you can RSVP here. To take part in the direct action on May 20, fill out this form.


Greg Kaufmann is a Nation contributor covering poverty in America. His work has also appeared on Common DreamsAlternet, Tikkun.org, NPR.org, CBSNews.com and MichaelMoore.com. He serves as an adviser for the Economic Hardship Reporting Project.

The Guardian Glamorizes New ‘Assault on Wall Street’ Movie as Justice

Liz Thatcher's picture

Nothing says “justice” like a violent massacre of Wall Street bankers! At least, that’s what Stuart Heritage, of the UK’s left-wing newspaper “The Guardian” thinks. In his May 14 article titled “Assault on Wall Street trailer: bankers get what’s coming, Uwe Boll style” Heritage justified the rampage before the reader even started on his article.

“The global financial crisis has been responsible for many things, but the redemption of Uwe Boll hasn’t been one of them,” he started his article. This redemption he writes of? A psychopathic Jim Baxford (Dominic Purcell) targeting and brutally executing the top Wall Street bankers in New York.

It should be no surprise that this is how the movie played out. The trailer indicated as much. The final caption of the minute and a half trailer was “Fight for Justice” after depicting one violent act after another.

“Assault on Wall Street” is just the latest attempt by entertainers to keep the Occupy Wall Street movement alive. DC Comics recently launcher a new comic series on May 1 inspired by OWS titled “The Movement.” And later this year, in August, Matt Damon has a new movie coming out that takes class warfare to outer space, titled “Elysium.”

This Week in Poverty: Fighting Poverty Through Wall Street Accountability


(Photo: Press Association via AP Images)

This year, I’ve been focused on how anti-poverty activists can move from a defensive battle defined by trying to save what needs to be saved during these budget debates, to an offensive one, laying out a vision that inspires ongoing, unified action and builds a vibrant movement that connects with people in their communities.

I offered one modest proposal for an “anti-poverty contract”—five issues that impact both low-income and middle class people—around which activists and groups could organize. The Western Center on Law Poverty and a handful of other national and local groups are trying to build an effort around that idea.

However, when you consider the scale of the problems we face—and what inspires people to take action—clearly much, much more is needed. As I wrote previously, to build a new anti-poverty movement will require the kind of organizing and actions that are as creative, visible and gripping as the Occupy Wall Street movement.

Enter Stephen Lerner.

Lerner is a labor and community organizer who has spent more than three decades organizing hundreds of thousands of janitors, farm workers, garment workers and other low-wage workers into unions. These efforts resulted in increased wages, first-time health benefits, paid sick days and other improvements on the job. The architect of the historic Justice for Janitors campaign, he is currently working with unions and community groups across the country to break Wall Street’s anti-democratic grip on our politics and our economy.

Lerner lays out a powerful case about the intersection between poverty and Wall Street accountability—and how a Wall Street accountability movement can transform an economy that offers so few pathways out of poverty, and so many ways to keep people impoverished.

Here is our conversation:

Greg Kaufmann: Why is the Wall Street accountability movement now the focus of your work, and what is the potential you see there?

Stephen Lerner: One of the challenges is that there are so many things wrong right now—that you can be involved in any of a thousand causes. The problem is if they are disconnected it doesn’t add up to anything. So, people who are opposed to poverty have a dozen different things they’d like to move on the Hill, none of which are likely to pass at this time.

So the focus on Wall Street is: How do you connect all of these different battles? And, in fact, are there core things in common that drive them together?

If you look at some of the biggest issues of the day—whether it’s the loss of wealth in communities of color, the housing crisis, the student debt crisis, local and state governments cutting jobs and services because of debt—you can connect all of these issues to the original economic crisis of 2008, and the growing and continued dominance of the Wall Street big banks.

The majority of people in this country are either impacted by student debt, the ongoing housing crisis or the crisis of the public sector. And you can trace so much of it to Wall Street. This means instead of having twenty separate campaigns, you can have one campaign, that says how do we rebalance and reorganize the economy so that it benefits everybody—not just a teeny elite at the top.

How does the effort to address these three issues intersect with the fight against poverty in particular?

Let’s start with housing. In this country, for many workers and people of color, wealth isn’t in the stock market, or the Cayman Islands—it’s in a home. And the banks first preyed on folks through subprime loans pre-crisis, making enormous profits while putting people in danger. Then when the bubble burst, millions of people lost their homes, and those who didn’t have had outrageous payments because the subprime loans exploded. Now you still have 13 million families that are underwater—owing more on their loans than their homes are worth.

In Latino communities, 66 percent of their wealth was lost, half as a result of housing. In the African-American community, it was 53 percent. Fifty years of the gains of the civil rights movement and the expansion of the economy were wiped out overnight, pushing millions into poverty. If you add to that the people who are unemployed as a result of the crashed economy—we just have this strange thing that happened: the banks created a disaster, and economists and politicians said, “That’s terrible for the economy, let’s give them trillions.” And then the folks who were actually hit the hardest were forced into poverty.

On student debt: funding to public education was dramatically cut, which obviously hurts poor people and workers the most. As it was cut, people had to take out loans. So 37 million people have now run up a trillion dollars in student debt. It’s a burden no matter what, but if you come from a family that doesn’t have means, you now graduate from school with a crushing debt burden, and then there aren’t jobs available. And there’s a vicious cycle: you cut the budget of public universities, to give tax breaks to banks and big companies, who respond by creating toxic loan packages for students that they make a profit on. And because public funding of universities has been cut—the schools need to borrow more money in order to operate and build, so the banks get a piece of that action, too. And now university endowments are investing in Sallie Mae—the largest private student loan lender—so students have to take out loans to go to school, and the university endowment profits off those loans.

There are much better ways to fund education—like by [publicly] funding education so people can actually afford it, instead of creating these twenty layers that let Wall Street suck money out at every step.

So individuals and families are getting crushed by housing and education debt, and then you say public debt completes a sort of perfect storm?

That’s right, what we call predatory public loans. So three things have happened: Wall Street has taken advantage of the desperation of cities and municipalities since the crisis; the deals are so complex that public entities don’t know what they are getting into; and third is that Wall Street gets its money at a subsidized, Too Big to Fail rate, and in the case of the discount window, almost for free. Banks get money at .075 percent interest from the Federal Reserve, and they then create all sorts of ways to make more and more money off the spread, from the public sector.

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Take interest rate swaps, for example. On the surface it sounds like not a bad idea—a bank says they will protect a city from a fluctuating interest rate by locking it in at, say, 4 percent. If it goes higher, they eat it. And if it goes lower, they make money. But they then add so many different formulas and traps, that all of a sudden when the whole thing blew up during the crisis and a city is hemorrhaging money, and they want to get out of it, it turns out that they have an exit fee that’s extraordinary and they can’t afford it. In Detroit, the city had to pay around $470 million on a series of bond and interrelated swap deals gone bad at the same time they were laying off police and firemen. So then you end up in fights like, “Do we help the poor, or do we take workers that are middle class and cut their wages so they’ll be poor?”

Describe what this movement looks like—what are some of the asks and how do you see it potentially playing out?

There are multiple levels of how Wall Street is impoverishing the country, and so different people can engage in different ways.

On housing, in Atlanta, Minneapolis, all over California—one piece is the Home Defenders League and Occupy Our Homes. This involves physical encampments, blockading the police and saying you’re not going to take my home, or my neighbor’s home. It’s incredibly vibrant, street-level resistance—and it’s often successful. And as folks are successful, it grows. This is all nonviolent, and involves people who are willing to go to jail.

If you take it up a level, there is a simple policy demand, which is that banks should reduce principal on homes to current market value. That means if you’re paying a $300,000 mortgage on a home that’s worth $200,000, the bank should rewrite it to that value. If we did that, it would save $700 billion to $1 trillion—that’s how much people are underwater—and generate $101 billion in economic activity, create 1.5 million jobs, and the average underwater homeowner would save $7,700 a year.

There are cities all over the country that are now exploring using eminent domain to seize these underwater mortgages and rewrite them with principal reductions. For years eminent domain was the tool to take advantage of poor people—tear up a neighborhood, build a highway, build a stadium and tell people they will be paid what their homes are worth on the open market. They said it was for the public good, even as it devastated once stable neighborhoods. We’re saying let’s flip that on it’s head—for the public good, let’s seize these mortgages and rewrite them at current market value so people can stay in their homes.

On student debt, there is a gamut of activity ranging from student activism on campuses, to state and local legislation, to sit-ins at the Sallie Mae shareholders meeting, to challenging the Education Department on why they have as contractors like Sallie Mae that are profiting off this disaster. The movement includes Senator Elizabeth Warren’s brilliant bill to give students loans at the same rate we give to banks. Why should banks get money cheap and student loans be more expensive? And it includes people on their college campuses—a movement around Big Banks Off Campus—because the banks shouldn’t be allowed to come on campus and sell their credit cards and figure out new ways to indebt students.

Finally, on public debt, people are fighting back. In the case of Oregon, SEIU Local 503 calculated that the state lost $110 million because of the LIBOR manipulations. So here’s what happens: the SEIU public sector union goes in to negotiate with the state representing public employees, and the state says we want to cut all of these services for poor people. And the workers themselves are often poor—homecare workers who haven’t had a raise in six years. The state says there is no money. And how do you argue if there’s no money? Except that the money was stolen! And so the movement is changing the debate. This is not about: Are public employees overpaid? Are their too many benefits for poor people? Should we have pre-K or not? There are incredible sums of money out there, but we’ve devised a system that drains it from the bottom to the top. Why don’t we cut out the middleman? Like let’s have an infrastructure bank and loan the money at cost. Let’s figure out a way so banks can’t make more than a certain amount of money on the spread. And I know that gives the free-market people heart attacks, because this is intervening in the market, but there is no market. Because five banks control it, and where they get their money is from taxpayers. It’s our money.

To what extent are these three threads—on student debt, housing debt and public debt—coalescing into a movement so they aren’t the kind of independent, divided struggles that you suggest hold us back from big victories?

As the campaigns develop, the overlap happens more and more. For example, people are seeing the relationship between housing debt and student debt—needing to take out student loans because your family’s house isn’t worth anything anymore so you can’t help finance an education through a second mortgage like you might have in the past. At the Wells Fargo meeting at Salt Lake City, folks campaigning about student debt showed up, and so did people campaigning on housing, and so did people about the environment. So, on an organic level on the street, people are seeing it more and more.

After I covered the actions at the Wells Fargo shareholders meeting, a progressive friend and writer told me, “The activists seem to think banks can’t ignore their message, that being heard is equivalent to making change.” How do you think a movement like this actually could make principal reduction, for example, a reality?

First, the enemy of change is the notion that if you are not winning at that moment then you are losing. These things never have an even flow. It’s not like you start one day, you have steady escalation—they go up and down. In Taylor Branch’s book At Canaan’s Edge, you read these transcripts of FBI wiretaps on civil rights leaders and it’s them saying, “We’re losing”… or “so and so was killed”… or “we have in-fighting, how will we win?” But when we look back at that period now, we see that the civil rights bill was going to pass, it was all going to happen. I think when you are in the middle of the battle, under siege, you can’t see the forest for the trees.

But your friend’s critique is fair in that we’ve been screaming about the banks for years, and they are more powerful than ever—the top six banks now control 73 percent of the total assets in the US banking sector. However, we’ve started to identify some levers that we think begin to level the playing field. Eminent domain is one example—if you’re not willing to reduce principal, then we’ll use the power of the city to force you to do it. On LIBOR, city after city is investigating whether they can sue to get their money back. Many are exploring, and some have passed, bills that say if banks don’t meet certain standards the cities won’t deal with them anymore. Los Angeles, Oakland, New York, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh have all passed responsible banking ordinances recently.

Also, the banks’ greed and hubris is so great that [there are] new avenues to go after them. So if you look at the litigation that California Attorney General Kamala Harris filed: this is where the banks essentially did the same thing with credit card loans that they did with mortgages—they moved to litigation without accurate documentation to even show that people owed them money. We are seeing more opportunities for growing protest, more litigation and more public policy changes. You even now have Ohio Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown and Louisiana Republican Senator David Vitter working together on a bill to break up the big banks.

Is there a role in this movement for people and organizations that are focused on the Hill?

Petitions can raise important issues and get people involved. Lobbying can be important—but I think what we need to do is connect all of this to an analysis of who the villains are and why the economy is unbalanced. This is not a problem of lack of policy—we have unlimited great policy ideas. This is not a problem of lack of money to fund anti-poverty programs. This is a problem of power. I think people need to accept that there is no real significant economic and political change as long as the finance sector is so dominant. The DC-centric stuff will be far more effective if there is something out there in the rest of the country brewing. If this is just an intellectual policy debate about who has the best idea and who has the best statistics, we’re doomed.

To win—to really make the kinds of structural changes you are talking about—does the public protest need to be as constant and visible, engaging and creative, as Occupy Wall Street?

Yes, we need to get to that. And there is an interesting myth about Occupy that somehow it just emerged out of nowhere. But many of the people who were engaged in it were part of other battles before Occupy Wall Street. The month before Occupy, community groups were doing rallies and sit-ins at banks all over the country. So you never know when things are going to take off. Why did the Vietnam protests take off when they did? Or the civil rights protests? You never know what triggers something to go from dedicated souls to a mass movement.

But your key point is right—the system is currently working for the banks and super-rich. And as long as they feel it’s working we won’t really achieve change. And so some combination of mass disruptive protest—nonviolent—of all sorts of local legislative activity; of a growing change in the narrative. Some mix and match of that has to put the kind of heat on them that makes them feel they have to negotiate over these issues—that they need, for example, to fix mortgages because the alternative is worse. We need to have a better system on student loans, because the alternative is worse. I think that’s really our challenge.

In a recent piece, you suggest that anger is insufficient to sustain a movement—that what keeps people going is love. Can you describe what you mean by that?

There are four things currently that are self-defeating for progressives and labor folks: one, the mantra of progressives is built on “we’re losing, there’s no hope, we’re getting clobbered.” That leads to the slogan of much of the progressive movement, which is “Let’s fight for small, incremental, not particularly important change now.” So what we largely talk about isn’t very inspiring. We talk about stopping cuts—stopping bad—not how we win good things.

The great movements—take the story of Exodus—they didn’t say, “Can the Egyptians whip us less often?” They said, “We’re leaving. We’re outta here. We’re gonna form a new country, a place where we can be free.” Gandhi, South Africa, the civil rights movement—all of these movements were based on this idea that there is something profoundly better that we can fight for. And I think for many of us in America we’ve lost that ability to say we’re engaged in this—not just because we care about principal reduction but because we believe in the richest country on earth we can transform society and redistribute wealth and power. So, we need to have a vision that’s inspiring and not be afraid to be called a little utopian.

Second, we need an analysis, a narrative, of who the bad guys are that are concentrating wealth and power. All of the organizing I was involved with—with the garment workers, the farmworkers and the janitors—they all had an analysis of who really had the power and could fix things, and I think we’ve forgotten how to do that.

Third, we need to think about the strategy and tactics that give us leverage, so this is not simply yelling and screaming. And fourth is about love—which is that people are involved both out of self-interest because they want to make their lives better; but also because they realize their life is better if they help make other lives better.

If you look at the great movements that’s what happens—some combination of vision, analysis, strategy and this deep, deep feeling that by supporting and sacrificing for others—in the labor movement we call it solidarity—you not only transform your own life, but you transform the lives of people around you and in doing that transform how society operates. That’s the roots of how we build what we have to build.

* * *

End “Too Big to Jail”: May 18–23, Washington, DC

If you think what Lerner has to say makes sense, here’s an immediate opportunity to get involved. Next week, families on the front lines of the foreclosure crisis are traveling from across the country to the nation’s capital to make their voices heard.

Their message is simple: five years into the financial crisis, Wall Street has still not been held accountable, and communities are still suffering. In fact, a new report from Alliance for a Just Society, the New Bottom Line and Home Defenders League shows that $192.6 billion in wealth was lost due to the foreclosure crisis in 2012, and this year another 13 million homes are at risk of foreclosure with $221 billion in wealth on the line. (See “Studies/Briefs” below for more information on this report.)

It’s long past time for the administration to prosecute those who violated the law and for the banks to repay individuals, families and communities that continue to suffer losses—beginning with reducing their mortgages to fair market value.

“We can’t have two systems of justice in this country: one for the rich and powerful, where Wall Street criminals are actually rewarded with bailouts and huge bonuses, and another for the rest of us,” said Vivian Richardson, who will be in DC next week after successfully defending her home from foreclosure with the help of members of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment. “These Wall Street banksters stole many homes, and are still committing crimes. It is time for them to be held accountable.”

There will be home-defense and nonviolent, civil disobedience trainings on May 18–19 and a rally and march to the Department of Justice on Monday, May 20. The activists will attempt to meet with Attorney General Eric Holder and are prepared to take direct action if that doesn’t happen—blocking entrances, setting up an Occupy-style encampment, getting arrested and staying in jail.

To participate in the Week of Action, you can RSVP here. To take part in the direct action on May 20, fill out this form.

Online Actions

Wendy’s: Support a fair deal for farmworkers

Tell the Senate to give students the same low interest rates the big banks get

Stand with Milwaukee’s low-wage workers

Young and Unemployed: Tell Bernie Sanders Your Story

End Sequestration Cuts

Tell Congress: Protect Federal Nutrition Programs

Event

Democratizing Wealth and a Sustainable Future—A Conversation with Gar Alperovitz (Wednesday, May 22, 12:15 pm–1:15 pm, New America Foundation, 1899 L Street NW Suite 400, Washington, DC). In his new book, Gar Alperovitz presents a case for democratizing wealth as a foundation for a new and sustainable economy. He offers specific policy ideas for how we might start with a transformation of the banking industry and health care sector. Join the New America Foundation’s Asset Building Program for a vibrant discussion, RSVP here.

DC Housing Authority and People with Disabilities

Jacqueline Young and Latheda Wilson both receive housing vouchers from the DC Housing Authority. Ms. Young’s apartment is too small for her to live with her child, and Ms. Wilson is in an apartment that she says is in substandard condition with mold- and insect-infestation.

Both women have hearing impairments and rely on American Sign Language to communicate—they have limited comprehension of written English. Unfortunately, they say, for years the DC Housing Authority failed to provide sign language interpreters at meetings where critical information regarding rules, regulations and requirements for the rental assistance program was provided, leaving the two women in their current predicaments.

A lawsuit was filed on their behalf by Relman, Dane Colfax, which litigates civil rights cases in the areas of housing, lending, employment, public accommodations, education and police accountability, and the Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia. Deaf-REACH, a DC nonprofit advocacy organization, is also a plaintiff.

The complaint alleges that the Housing Authority engaged for years in a pattern of discrimination—promising but not providing interpreters, and canceling appointments due to a lack of interpreters or other effective means of communication.

“The law is very clear and well-established on this issue,” said attorney Megan Cacace of Relman, Dane Colfax. “Entities like the DC Housing Authority must make their services and programs accessible to people with disabilities and provide sign language interpreters.”

Cacace said Young and Wilson were forced to sit through meetings or presentations without any way of understanding what was being said—or even were denied the opportunity to attend meetings at all—and that they were expected “to communicate through notes and gestures” despite repeated requests for interpreters.

“It’s appalling and unacceptable,” said Cacace.

Richard White, director of Public Affairs and Communications for the Housing Authority, wrote in an e-mail: “As a matter of policy, I’m not going to comment on active litigation. What I will tell you is that DCHA takes its obligations under the Americans with Disabilities Act very seriously. We have policies and procedures in place to accommodate the needs of the disabled in all our operations. We will investigate the claims made and respond to the litigation, through our General Counsel office.”

I look forward to learning about the response and hope that it’s quick, thorough and just. This is the twenty-first century and our nation’s capital, after all. It’s bad enough that we are among the cities with the worst wealth inequality and highest child poverty rates in the country. Can we at least provide basic services for people with disabilities?

“Equality for people with disabilities is an important civil rights issue,” said Cacace. “People like Ms. Young and Ms. Wilson are entitled to, and deserve, equal treatment and respect. This lawsuit seeks to vindicate those rights.”

National Community Action Month

Community Action Agencies (CAAs) are nonprofit private and public organizations with their fingers on the pulse of poverty. They provide direct support for nearly 35 million of the 46.2 million people living in poverty in the United States today.

Each CAA is governed locally and offers programs and services designed to meet a community’s specific needs, including: emergency aid like food pantries and domestic violence counseling, education programs like Head Start and youth mentoring, daycare and job training programs, community economic development, services to military veterans, income management and housing assistance, healthcare clinics, WIC and more.

May is National Community Action Month, a public awareness campaign created by the Community Action Partnership in 1997 to highlight the agencies’ effectiveness in helping America’s low-income people and communities achieve economic security. The CAAs and the people they serve are currently getting hit by sequestration, budget cuts and rising hunger and unemployment, and will hold events to call attention to poverty and economic inequality, and to advocate for their programs as a way to help address these issues.

“While policymakers and hedge fund managers are trying to decide what to do with their Enron refrigerator magnets and their Merrill Lynch shot glasses, Community Action is approaching its fiftieth year of providing bona fide opportunities and economic security for millions of people and families,” said Don Mathis, president and CEO of the Community Action Partnership.

CAAs across the country are hosting poverty symposiums, town hall meetings and other events to raise awareness about poverty-related problems and solutions. Here are just a few of the events:

  • Arizona Community Action Association and Community Action of Northeast Indiana are hosting screenings of A Place at the Table.

  • TRI-CAP in Jasper, Indiana, is hosting a poverty simulation.

  • North Hudson Community Action Corporation in Union City, New Jersey, is hosting a health fair with free dental, blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes screenings, along with nutrition and health information.

“Our network of more than 1,000 CAAs is focusing on the devastating effects that the severe income and wealth gaps are having on everyone in America, not just the poor,” said Mathis.

For more information, go to the National Community Action Month blog, the Partnership’s website, or follow @CAPartnership and #CommunityActionMonth.

Clips and other resources (compiled with James Cersonsky)

Class Size Funding Inequity in NY State NY City,” Bruce Baker

Fast Food Strikes Hitting Fifth City: Milwaukee,” Josh Eidelson

In Wake of West, Texas Explosion, Safety Advocates Recommend Harsher Fines,” Mike Elk

Mother’s Day Edition: Challenges Give Strength,” Equal Voice

Unemployment From a Child’s Perspective,” Julia Isaacs

Unions to Banks: Pay Up,” Sarah Jaffe

The Link Between Mass Incarceration and Voter Turnout,” John Light

Parents to Lawmakers: Protect Child Care, Social Services,” Michael Mello and Brad Wong

Mending factory conditions after Bangladesh,” Harold Meyerson

Welfare fraud investigations perpetuate fraudulent stereotypes,” Monica Peabody

Lift the Millstone of Student Debt That’s Slowing the Economy,” Isaiah J. Poole

The Facts on SNAP: SNAP Is Efficient,” Dottie Rosenbaum

In D.C., parents miss work, lose jobs trying to get child-care subsidy,” Brigid Schulte

Racism Remains Alive and Well,” Patricia Williams

Leaning in With Child Care: A Discussion on Childcare Jobs and the Need for Quality, Affordable Care,” Workforce Strategies Initiative, Aspen Institute [VIDEO]

Congress is Ready to Fight Over Deep Food Stamp Cuts,” George Zornick

Studies/Briefs (summaries written by James Cersonsky)

Enhancing GED Instruction to Prepare Students for College and Careers,” Vanessa Martin and Joseph Broadus, MDRC. In many large cities, students face dropout/pushout rates upwards of 50 percent. Many who drop out pursue the GED, or General Educational Development credential, but too few pass the GED test, and even fewer are prepared to step into college or the workforce. This study assesses an initiative at LaGuardia Community College, the GED Bridge to Health and Business Program, which is designed to help students pass the GED while simultaneously preparing for college and careers. Students in the program receive intensive advising and spend more hours in class than typical GED students. In a randomized evaluation, MDRC finds encouraging results: compared with students who went through traditional GED prep, Bridge students were twice as likely to complete the semester of classes, more than twice as likely to pass the exam and more than three times as likely to enroll in a CUNY school.

Wasted Wealth: How the Wall Street Crash Continues to Stall Economic Recovery and Deepen Racial Inequity in America,” Ben Henry, Jill Reese and Angel Torres, Alliance for a Just Society. The Great Recession took a racially uneven toll: whereas white median net worth fell by 16 percent between 2005 and 2009, net worth for Latinos dropped 66 percent and blacks 52 percent. As 2012 foreclosure data reveals, the foreclosure crisis has far from abated—particularly for people of color. Overall, foreclosures caused a $192.6 million aggregate drop in wealth in 2012—an average of $1,679 per household—and more than 13 million homes remain underwater and vulnerable to foreclosure. In zip codes with proportions of people of color above the national average (16 percent), the average lost wealth per household was $2,008, and in zip codes with majority people of color, the loss was $2,198. Why the ongoing crisis? While banks have received $8 trillion in federal bailouts and loans, the feds haven’t acted on principal reduction—which would save underwater homeowners an average of $7,710 and stimulate the economy to the tune of 1.5 million jobs. The report offers a slate of proposals for government and banks, including: ensuring that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac prioritize keeping families in foreclosed homes through rental and buy-back programs; full legal accountability for Wall Street executive and bankers; legislation like the California Homeowner Bill of Rights that protects homeowners from abusive mortgage servicing; local foreclosure mediation programs; and public reporting from mortgage servicers on foreclosures, short sales and principal reductions by race and income.

A Strategic Road-Map,” Academic Pediatric Association, Taskforce on Childhood Poverty. While there’s no vaccine to end child poverty, the APA says, there are clear strategies for combating its causes and effects. The APA’s road map focuses on four categories: raising children out of poverty through raising the minimum wage, increasing access to quality jobs and improving income and work supports such as the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax Credit; high-quality childcare and early childhood programs for low-income families; “place-based” initiatives, recognizing that poverty, crime, housing characteristics and lack of employment opportunities can all have negative impacts on poor children’s health and well-being; and a White House Conference on Children and Youth to elevate children’s needs and build public support for investments.

Vital Statistics

US poverty (less than $17,916 for a family of three): 46.2 million people, 15.1 percent.

Children in poverty: 16.1 million, 22 percent of all children, including 39 percent of African-American children and 34 percent of Latino children. Poorest age group in country.

Deep poverty (less than $11,510 for a family of four): 20.4 million people, 1 in 15 Americans, including more than 15 million women and children.

People who would have been in poverty if not for Social Security, 2011: 67.6 million (program kept 21.4 million people out of poverty).

People in the US experiencing poverty by age 65: Roughly half.

Gender gap, 2011: Women 34 percent more likely to be poor than men.

Gender gap, 2010: Women 29 percent more likely to be poor than men.

Twice the poverty level (less than $46,042 for a family of four): 106 million people, more than 1 in 3 Americans.

Jobs in the US paying less than $34,000 a year: 50 percent.

Jobs in the US paying below the poverty line for a family of four, less than $23,000 annually: 25 percent.

Poverty-level wages, 2011: 28 percent of workers.

Percentage of individuals and family members in poverty who either worked or lived with a working family member, 2011: 57 percent.

Families receiving cash assistance, 1996: 68 for every 100 families living in poverty.

Families receiving cash assistance, 2010: 27 for every 100 families living in poverty.

Impact of public policy, 2010: without government assistance, poverty would have been twice as high—nearly 30 percent of population.

Percentage of entitlement benefits going to elderly, disabled, or working households: over 90 percent.

Number of homeless children in US public schools: 1,065,794.

Annual cost of child poverty nationwide: $550 billion.

Federal expenditures on home ownership mortgage deductions, 2012: $131 billion.

Federal funding for low-income housing assistance programs, 2012: less than $50 billion.

Quote of the Week

“There is a need for financial reform along ethical lines that would produce in its turn an economic reform to benefit everyone. Money has to serve, not to rule.”
            —Pope Francis

James Cersonsky wrote the “Studies/Briefs” and co-wrote the “Clips and other resources” sections in this blog.

This Week in Poverty posts here on Friday mornings, and again at Moyers Company. You can e-mail me at WeekInPoverty@me.com and follow me on Twitter.

Q&A: Thurston Moore on Chelsea Light Moving, Occupy Wall Street and the …

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Chelsea Light Moving Samara Lubelski John Moloney Thurston Moore Keith Wood
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Ever since he and his wife and Sonic Youth bandmate Kim Gordon announced their split in late 2011, Thurston Moore has kept his mouth largely shut. “I wasn’t doing any press whatsoever – I kind of embargoed that,” says Moore. “Personal issues are not something I talk about. I don’t want to even think about it when it comes to media. It’s not the place for it.” Moore says he doesn’t even use his Twitter account. But he and his new, post-Sonic Youth band, Chelsea Light Moving, released their first album in March, and they’ve finally unveiled their first video. The clip for the protest hardcore track “Lip,” which you can watch below, incorporates footage of Occupy Wall Street rallies and London riots. With that, Moore decided to break his more-or-less silence and talk about the video, his new band and what may – or may not – be in store for Sonic Youth.

What inspired the Occupy theme in the “Lip” video?
It was the idea of the director, Eva Prinz. It’s a protest song I wrote for all the Occupy people I know, and she’s very involved with Occupy in a very activist way. When I went down there, there was so much celebration and theater going on, and I really responded to that. You’d go down and there was poetry being read and a library being built and an ad hoc parade would go around. So I wrote a song somewhat based on that with the chorus, “Get fucking mad/Too fucking bad.” I’m not very articulate about what the complaints are, but Eva wanted to show aspects of it as a filmmaker. The image of the burning bus in London is a very loaded image. Making a video of a song with a chorus of “Fuck fuck fuck” is a little ridiculous. You can’t show the thing. But it was a creative moment.

Where do you think that movement stands now, a year and a half later?
It’s still active in a lot of ways. It’s maybe not so populated. But how it informed so many people is really profound. It brought up the level of awareness of all this corruption. I was touring all last year and seeing Occupy Dublin and Occupy London. I would visit each of these little places. Some would be hundreds of people, some would be 10. It was kind of beautiful.

How did Chelsea Light Moving come together?
It’s always been a band; I was playing with most of them on my last tour, for [2011's] Demolished Thoughts. It just never had a name. I didn’t want to do a record under my own name again because I wanted to take the spotlight off my name. I was craving anonymity. 

As a result of being in the news during the last year?
You know, there’s a lot of that in a way. I wanted to de-emphasize the “solo guy from Sonic Youth.” I maybe wanted to have fun with it a little more? [Chuckles] It’s against the better judgment of selling records. My label and management would have preferred I use my name; it’s easier for them to promote. I did sort of concede in having a sticker on there that says, “Thurston Moore’s new band.” I had just read [RS contributor] Will Hermes’ Love Goes to Buildings on Fire, which I really liked, and I saw this tidbit about Steve Reich and Philip Glass having a moving company called Chelsea Light Moving, because they lived in Chelsea and only wanted to do light lifting. I thought that was a really great name, especially for a British shoegazing band. We’re so decidedly not that, so I thought the juxtaposition was really fun.

Did you get permission from Glass and Reich?
No, I haven’t asked anyone. I want to ask Philip. I will at some point. I haven’t heard from anybody – I don’t think they ever registered that name. But if I’m going to get sued, I might as well get sued by Philip Glass and Steve Reich.

In light of what’s happening in your life, is playing more aggressive rock roll in the new band an outlet for you?
I don’t find it that much more aggressive. I think it employs more traditional aggressive guitar moves. I always loved classic stylings of aspects of heavy metal, punk, hard rock and punk. Those things would be more diffused and modified in Sonic Youth, because that was the nature of Sonic Youth. I would say to Lee [Ranaldo, Sonic Youth guitarist], “Dude, you don’t know how many different Black Sabbath moves I’m trying to present.” I think Lee looked at it with amusement [laughs].

What appealed to you about returning to the two-guitar-bass-drums Sonic Youth lineup after using acoustic guitars and violins on your last two albums?
It was a situation where I didn’t have to worry about that kind of democracy. It was, “This is my band. I call the shots. You’re going to go play this and that. You guys can write your own stuff, but I’m gonna say yay or nay.” It felt liberating, also because the songs were all written on the spot in a rehearsal space in Northampton [Massachusetts].

Do you still live there, where you and Kim had a house?
I live on the road. For the first time since 1977, I have no keys to a place in New York City. I live in Florence [a village within Northampton] in a rental situation. It’s completely temporary. I’ve always lived on the road, but now I really do. It’s like, “I’m 54 going on 55 and this is who I am now.” I toy with the idea of living in different places and establishing a place where I could actually live and set up camp. But I haven’t decided yet. I’m not really in a place where I need to decide that. I’m trying to balance my personal life now. 

Were you surprised by Kim’s recent interview in Elle in which talked about your marital problems?
I’m not gonna talk about it. There’s no aspect of that I will ever talk about.

So is Chelsea Light Moving your full-time band now?
It is. I think names define things, and I’m gonna keep the name whether I have the same members or not, and I’ll keep it as my name for my rock roll music. If Sonic Youth ever plays again, that will be Sonic Youth, obviously.

Is that a possibility at this point?
Um, yeah. I would never say I don’t see why not. Life changes from time to time and who knows what will happen in the future. Your crystal ball is about as clear as my crystal ball is. Really – seriously. It’s not something I think about right now. It’s in stasis, for reasons that are obvious.

What do you make of current indie rock, like Vampire Weekend, the National or Spoon?
I’m totally open to it. I give a listen here or there. But I don’t have much to say about it. Vampire Weekend just made a record that everyone says is great, and I’m really glad to hear that! [Laughs] But I don’t know their music that well. I heard their first record and thought it was kind of interesting. But I tend to go for much more outsider kind of sounds and approaches. The band that made me think they had it going on was this all-girl band from London called Savages. I saw a couple of their gigs and totally dug it. It hit a lot of the marks that have always resonated with me – the early Rough Trade sound, Joy Division, early Swell Maps.

And I’m a sucker for Tegan and Sara. Chelsea Light Moving opened for them at SXSW this year and I was like, “Wow, all these young chicks here to see us.” And as we played, they were all looking at their phones and I thought, “This is the most disinterested audience I’ve ever played for in my life.” Then Tegan and Sara came out and destroyed the place. The audience put their phones down and sang along on every song. I have nothing but respect for any band that does that.

Wall Street, it seems, just can’t lose




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    Wall Street, it seems, just can’t lose

    • Updated: May 11, 2013 – 2:51 PM

    But you, average Americans, can and will as the power game plays out.


    hide

    The Wall Street Bull, located in the financial district of New York City, on Thursday, November 3, 2011. The bronze sculpture, located in Bowling Green Park on Broadway and Main Street, was created by Arturo Di Modica and installed in 1989. In response to Occupy Wall Street demonstrations, the New York City police department now guards the buall around the clock, seven days a week.

    Photo: Mike Roy, Mct – Mct

    CameraStar Tribune photo galleries

    Cameraview larger

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    The cover of last week’s New York Times Magazine shows a house divided — one half well-kept and the other in ruins. “Boom vs. Doom,” the headline reads. Then: “Can Washington Fix this Economy? Adam Davidson referees a debate between Larry Summers and Glenn Hubbard.”

    Take your pick, America — Hubbard, the fiscal conservative who favors cutting entitlements, or Summers, the big-spending liberal who wants to create jobs for all those people his policies put out of work only … geez, is it six years since the bailouts? Time flies.

    In 2010, the documentary “Inside Job” skewered both of these Harvard-trained economists. Back in the mortgage meltdown’s formative years, they’d been coconspirators of sorts. One memorable scene in the film featured Hubbard in his office at Columbia University nervously explaining why studies he’d done for various unnamed “clients” to promote unrestricted trading in high-risk “derivatives” (and for which he was paid handsomely) did not represent a conflict of interest. Summers, who refused to be interviewed for the film, was portrayed as the more serious scoundrel — right up there with former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and with Robert Rubin, the Clinton-era treasury secretary who profited stupendously from mortgage-derivatives trading while working for Goldman Sachs.

    So far only Greenspan has admitted to poor judgment regarding regulation and banking. Summers and Rubin still dismiss any complaint about their policies as “revisionism.” Salon’s Alex Pareene writes that when asked how the repeal of Glass-Steagall banking restrictions led to the bank bailouts, Summers replied with a syllogism: “If permitting the combination of commercial and investment banks caused the financial crisis,” he said, “why was fixing it so dependent on commercial banks buying investment banks?”

    A trader who worked for Rubin at Goldman Sachs describes his ex-boss as blessed with a Teflon personality. “He’s compulsively dishonest in a certain way, and compulsively honest in other ways. Nobody’s perfect. But for $126 million, they ought to show up.”

    You’d think.

    Yet the strategy of denial has served him well. Americans have notoriously short attention spans, and it was eons ago (circa 1999) that pressure from Summers, Rubin, Hubbard et al. forced would-be derivatives regulator Brooksley Born out of her job as director of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

    In fact, according to Pareene, “the financial crisis and subsequent recession have only strengthened the position of the people who believe that unchecked self-interest is its own best regulator.”

    The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act was passed in 2010. The effort to write the rules necessary for it to take effect is being thwarted at every turn. Wall Street’s strategy? Think Battle of the Little Bighorn. At last count, the ratio of lobbyists to regulators was about 300 to 1. The industry has spent more than $1 billion just on influence peddlers in an effort to defang Dodd-Frank. Goldman Sachs alone employs 51 lobbyists. Then there are the lawyers, most notably Eugene Scalia (son of the Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia), also known as the Bulldog, whose specialty is blocking rules on technicalities.

    Exasperated by the quagmire, Sen. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, and Sen. David Vitter, a Republican, offered an exquisitely simple alternative to Dodd-Frank in April. Their bill would make banks with more than $500 billion in assets keep capital reserves of 15 percent, twice the normal amount. That way they can bail themselves out.

    Wall Street bankers blasted the Sherrod-Vitter bill as simple-minded, impossible, a huge threat to our financial sector’s competitiveness abroad, and, as one pundit joked, a probable cause of tooth decay. Seems the banks want taxpayer bailouts grandfathered in. Talk about entitlements.

    The Washington Post political blogger Ezra Klein was in Minnesota last week speaking at St. Olaf. He told students that what troubles him even more than congressional paralysis is how the malaise has trickled down to the populace. Klein, too, sees more and more Americans adopting the Teflon mind-set. Toward the end of his talk, he showed the audience a pair of graphs. The first tracked Summers’ and Hubbard’s issues: persistent unemployment and escalating entitlement costs. “We’ll deal with the economy one way or the other,” Klein said. When the next slide came up, showing a steep rise in global temperatures, he added, “but I really don’t see how we’re going to fix this.”

     

    Bonnie Blodgett is a writer in St. Paul.

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    Film Review: ‘Assault on Wall Street’

    The financial crisis left countless Americans economically devalued and emotionally demoralized, but only one was desperate enough to pick up an assault rifle and strike back. Dominic Purcell plays that guy — a fictitious avatar for the country’s collective outrage — in Uwe Boll’s “Assault on Wall Street,” an ugly, unusually audience-pandering thriller from the prickly German director behind such mass-killing sprees as “Postal” and “Rampage,” this one playing like “Margin Call” with grenades. After half a dozen botched vidgame adaptations, this risible mad-as-hell subgenre could be Boll’s forte. Opening in one theater and on-demand, the low-budget effort will go virtually unnoticed.

    Whereas most auteurs view filmmaking as an art form, Boll treats it more like a form of anger management, working out his aggression one schlock opera at a time. Now that audiences have grown bored of his brand of incompetence (online, he’s known as the worst living director), Boll has no choice but to rethink his strategy. Shot in Vancouver, “Assault on Wall Street” — whose original title, “Bailout: The Age of Greed,” risked appearing slightly lower in VOD listings — marks an incremental step toward giving audiences what they want: if not coherent narrative, then a chance to vicariously mete out retribution on the white-collar criminals responsible for crippling the country’s economy. And yet, the film seems inexplicably tame, the least interesting execution of a radical concept.

    Best known for his above-the-law role in “Prison Break,” Purcell plays Jim, an ox-like armored-truck guard — all glassy eyes, vacant expressions and Stallone-style line readings. While Jim protects other people’s money for a living, Wall Street fat cats pillage his own life savings via shady investment scams. Despite a flurry of news bites designed to agitate Occupy Wall Street types about a massive rich-get-richer conspiracy, the pic pins all of Jim’s woes on a single CEO (John Heard). Sitting in a near-empty office, the corrupt exec orders a roomful of traders to unload the company’s bogus real-estate fund, making Jim’s investment worse than worthless: It puts him $60,000 in the red.

    The timing is beyond unfortunate, with Jim’s wife (Erin Karpluk) undergoing brain-tumor treatment and the insurance company capping their coverage. In a more traditional genre pic, the obvious course would be to have this inside man rob his employers or to follow the case from the cops’ p.o.v. (as it happens, Jim’s best friends are cops, played by Keith David and Michael Pare). But Boll’s empathies lie elsewhere, asking audiences to side with the terrorist — ironic, considering all the money the helmer has lost his investors over the years.

    Credited with the script as well, Boll frontloads the film with conflict and then spends its second half giving auds their extended revenge fantasy. This doesn’t qualify as an effective dramatic strategy, however, since the first hour proves a melodramatic slog (full of downbeat meetings with lawyers, bankers and doctors), after which nothing stands in Jim’s way. Again, solutions exist to make this approach work, such as opening with the character in custody and flashing back to discover what happened, but Boll ignores them.

    Instead, “Assault” plays like visually bland vigilante porn, which Boll and editor Thomas Sabinsky manage to render confusing via scrambled montages of Jim researching his prey (he laughably infiltrates the boiler-room environment posing as a daytime janitor), holding target practice in public and executing attacks on seemingly random suits. The only way this equation works is if audiences are themselves so upset that they buy into Jim’s behavior.

    What Happened to the Great Wealth Debate?

    Photograph by Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg

    Union Square in New York on May 1, 2012, a last hurrah for Occupy Wall Street.

    May Day came and went last week, and despite the occasional signs on New York lamp-posts promising a return for Occupy Wall Street, downtown wasn’t exactly gripped by the kind of International Workers’ Day rage that gripped some other world cities. In the months leading up to the presidential election last year, the protests filled the airwaves and the 99 percent chants seemed to define and crystallize the national debate. So what happened?

    For one thing, there was the response of authorities. At its home in Zuccotti Park in New York Occupy faced an ever-tightening net of aggressive policing. In other places, like Oakland, Calif., the response made protests a dangerous place to be–and probably succeeded in sending the message that attending the protests would put you in direct confrontation with cops. You can watch the video here if you’ve forgotten that part.

    Nonetheless, the basic 99 percent vs. 1 percent theme of the Occupy protests remained a significant factor through the election. The modest recovery after the financial crisis actually made things worse for the 99 percent: If you look at the latest numbers from Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty, the economists most associated with the inequality discussion, you’ll see in the years 2009 to 2011 their real income actually shrank. That’s why Mitt Romney’s crack about the “47 percent” of unproductive Americans struck such a chord, and proved to be one of the pivotal moments of the election.

    Then the meme atrophied. The language of Manichean battle between rich and poor mobilized protesters in the street and energized the latent resentments of those watching them at home — on both ends of the political spectrum. It didn’t do anything to define what should happen next. It turned out that being angry at the rich or the institutions that fund their wealth is not the same as agreeing on what to change or how to change it.

    The Atlantic’s Derek Thompson discusses a new study (Saez is one of four authors) that helps demonstrate that difference. The study is genuinely surprising, and it’s worth looking at Thompson’s post. The short version  is that as people are given more information on the history of the income gap — some of it with a frankly propagandistic pro-tax, pro-redistribution slant — they become more likely to agree that inequality is a problem. Persuading people that inequality is a problem, however, will not persuade them to raise taxes on the rich. In fact, in some cases it actually made poorer respondents less willing to support redistribution.

    Leave aside the psychological explanations of the study (Thompson doesn’t find them convincing and neither do I) and focus on the result: anger at the rich does not necessarily lead folks to conventionally left-wing or right-wing viewpoints.

    That matches what we’ve seen in the actual debate around inequality. In politics, the rhetoric of rage at the 1% can be–and indeed, has been–marshaled with equal fervor by both the left and the right. The moneyed elites attacked by the left morph easily into liberal elites scorned by the right. One man’s “Wall Street fat cat” is likely to be another man’s “New York limousine liberal.” Movements like the Tea Party are as anti-1% as Occupy Wall Street. They just see taxes and income redistribution as hobby horses of the elite.

    This may be the crux of the issue: Occupy Wall Street found its focus not in changing things for the 99 percent (or the bottom 47 percent, or 20 percent; it doesn’t matter where you draw the percentile line) but in sticking it to the one percent.

    To some degree, when it came to making cuts at the top, the income gap crusade, which preceded the Occupy movement,  succeeded. That’s especially evident in Europe, where the “rip-off initiative” passed in a landslide in Switzerland and Eurozone bonus caps are close to reality. These measures have advanced with the support of (largely conservative) shareholders who have seen high CEO pay as an investor protection issue.

    The bad news for those who focus on inequality is that the somewhat awkward alliance with shareholders will not take them any further. Look at the chart at the right. It comes from a study by University of Chicago professor Steven Kaplan.  The chart shows chief executive pay as a share of big companies’ stock market value. That has stayed stable for decades; outsize as CEO pay has become, it’s still a small part of the total value of the typical company. There are good arguments for why running a company with a market value that’s ten times bigger doesn’t mean you should get paid ten times as much. They don’t matter because ultimately shareholders don’t have enough skin in this game to care all that much.

    That’s why the CEO pay fight won’t yield more than symbolic changes in the broader income gap. What the Occupy movement, as well as vigorous critics of inequality like Saez and Piketty, wanted was not just a few cuts at the top, but a major transfer of wealth to those lower down. The experiment that Thompson cites demonstrates how hard it is to get from riling people up about inequality to persuading them to back that kind of change.

    The general approach of Occupy and its sympathizers mirrors that of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous first inaugural address. Roosevelt attacked the banks and those who ran them with a religious fervor: “The money changers have fled from their high seats,” said Roosevelt, “in the temple of our civilization.” You can see the similarities with the anti-bank jeremiads of Occupy. For the Occupy movement, the lingering memories of the 1930s, down to the Hoovertowns, were clearly one of the key inspirations.

    That rhetoric doesn’t resonate in the same way now. The attack on the rich struck a chord both with the right and the left; in the “Obamacare” debate both sides claimed to represent the real America opposed to Wall Street and Washington. For Occupy, the “Wall Street” half of that equation matters more; for the Tea Party, the “Washington” half. Neither has found it easy to turn the principle of opposing the establishment into policy.

    Saez and Piketty have often pointed out that the share of income going to the top 1% is greater now than at any time since the 1930s. That theme had a powerful resonance for the Occupy movement, who believed that the class-war tinged rhetoric could be deployed again today to garner support for a new war on poverty. So far, a year and a half after the Occupy protests, the evidence is that it can’t.

    Occupy Wall Street group puts ‘zombie’ debt to rest – USA Today

    Non-profit group buys old debt in credit markets like the collection agencies do.

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — An offshoot of the Occupy Wall Street movement has bought more than $1 million in old medical bills in this area and freed the debtors from the obligation of paying it off.

    The New York-based nonprofit Rolling Jubilee fund says it is in the process of buying almost $12 million in outstanding old bills nationwide for pennies on the dollar in an effort to liberate debtors who often cannot afford to pay. And it intends to buy more as it gets more money from donors.

    STORY: Bill collectors get tough, complaints surge

    “It is the Rolling Jubilee’s position that it is making a tax-free gift to the people whose debt it is abolishing,” the organization says on its website. This debt is unpaid bills that creditors sell to collection agencies at a discount and collection agencies sell among themselves, what Rolling Jubilee calls a “shadowy speculative market of debt buyers who then turn around and try to collect the full amount from debtors.”

    Sometimes those debts have been paid off, were settled in bankruptcy court or had an expiration on their statute of limitations. But debt collectors often try to revive a claim, cajoling a debtor to make even a small payment so the entire debt can be resurrected legally.

    Critics call this “zombie” debt because obligations that people thought were long dead come back to haunt them — and can get new life if a debtor gets intimidated and makes the wrong moves.

    “We’re going into this market not to make a profit but to help each other out and highlight how the predatory debt system affects our families and communities,” the Rolling Jubilee Fund says. “Think of it as a bailout of the 99% by the 99%.”

    Shirley Logsdon, 80, is one of 1,064 people in the Louisville area who has benefited.

    She thought Medicare had paid her delinquent $983 bill for back pain care last year. That’s what her doctor told her after a 2011 dispute during which the bill had gone to a collection agency, she said.

    “I am very happy that somebody paid it,” said Logsdon, the first debtor in this area to publicly identify herself. “In fact, I had quit worrying about it when we didn’t get any more notices that we owed it.”

    Rolling Jubilee spokesman Thomas Gokey said all of the half dozen or so Louisville-area debtors who contacted the fund after being notified last month that their debt was forgiven said they were unaware their medical bills still were owed.

    Each got a letter from Strike Debt, the sponsor of Rolling Jubilee, like the one Logsdon received, telling her she no longer owed the $983.

    “It is gone, a no-strings-attached gift,” the letter said.

    Logsdon said she was relieved but also irritated because she thought insurance had already paid — a reaction that Gokey said was typical of those who didn’t know their debt still was sloshing around in the financial system.

    The $1.12 million in Louisville-area debt bought by the Rolling Jubilee Fund came from six physicians here, said Fred Melroy, the billing and finance director for the medical practice management firm CureMD in New York City. In January, the Rolling Jubilee fund purchased the entire bundle for $10,000.

    Melroy said the doctors, who work for Louisville Inpatient Physician Services, want anyone who received a letter from Strike Debt to know that they indeed are free from those debts.

    “I would believe that any patient with disputed debt would welcome a letter saying for whatever reason we are canceling your debt,” he said.

    Medicare and Aetna, Logsdon’s former insurance company, had disputed who should pay her bill, But Melroy said an investigation Tuesday, prompted by a Courier-Journal query, concluded that Medicare should have paid it.

    The doctors’ previous billing agency is to blame for not sorting that out sooner, he said.

    Melroy said his company became responsible for collecting the doctors’ receivables in 2011. The physicians were unsure which of the delinquent medical debts their previous billing agency managed already had been paid. Instead, they decided to sell the debt for an average 1 cent on the dollar to the Rolling Jubilee Fund.

    “The last thing they would want would be to harass any patient whose debt was not validated or could not pay for economic reasons,” Melroy said in an email.

    “They kept sending me bills saying the insurance company refused it and Medicare refused it, and then finally, they turned it over to a collection agency,” said Logsdon’s 83-year-old husband, Norbert.

    Shirley Logsdon’s medical records, which she provided, show she had an overnight hospital stay and diagnostic tests, including an X-ray and CAT scan.

    Logsdon’s daughter, Mary Ann Seger, said the numerous phone calls with her mother, the doctors’ office and the collection agency in 2012 were “a nightmare.”

    Then the collection agency stopped calling.

    “We assumed everything was good,” Seger said.

    She had mixed feelings about the notice from Rolling Jubilee that the debt had been paid off.

    “It keeps coming back,” Seger said. “You can’t kill it. If it had been billed properly and handled properly, the debt wouldn’t even have been there.”

    Since the recession, the debt collection industry has ballooned, according to the Federal Trade Commission. But the way the delinquent debts are sold, as a bundle of thousands of different debts, can lead to errors.

    Debt less than 3 years old was verified to be accurate just 58% of the time, said an FTC report called The Structure Practices of the Debt Buying Industry.

    “Confusion is the grease that keeps the wheels of the medical collections industry turning,” Gokey said.

    Meanwhile, Logsdon said she was “tired of fooling with this.”

    “When you step in it, it takes a long time to get it off your shoe,” she said. “It just lingers and lingers and lingers.”

    You’ve probably had to deal with one or two phone calls from a debt collector, calling about a debt that you might not even remember, or even owe.

    Assault on Wall Street: Film Review

    German director Uwe Boll has taken more than his share of critical knocks over the years thanks to such films as House of the Dead and BloodRayne, but you have to at least give him credit for tapping into the populist zeitgeist with his latest effort, Assault on Wall Street. Sort of a Death Wish for the Occupy Wall Street generation, this revenge drama offers the cathartic experience of watching an aggrieved blue-collar worker mowing down an array of financial industry fat cats. If only it was more fun.

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    This more sober than usual effort for the prolific filmmaker was originally called Bailout: The Age of Greed, a title more appropriate for a PBS documentary. Its current moniker more accurately reflects its Taxi Driver aesthetic, emphasized none too subtly in a scene when the main character practices his lethal moves in front of a mirror.

    He’s Jim (Dominic Purcell), a hard working security guard for an armored truck company who’s fallen victim to the rapacious investment bankers who’ve drained his life savings. His financial woes only mount due to the exorbitant medical expenses by his wife Rosie’s (Erin Carpluk) life-threatening illness.

    Advised by his smarmy stockbroker (Lochlyn Munro) that “that’s how investment works…it gives and it takes away,” Jim desperately seeks a loan from his banker, who refuses.

    “Fuck you,” Jim spits out, to which the banker replies, “That’s a fair response, I suppose.”

    Nor is he given much comfort by an unctuous lawyer (Eric Roberts) who makes vague promises of a class-action settlement if only Jim can come up with a $10,000 retainer.

     When Rosie winds up killing herself out of desperation, the grief-stricken Jim plans his violent revenge, purchasing an arsenal from a sleazy arms dealer (Clint Howard) and targeting his victims by perusing financial magazines. Chief among them is Jeremy Stancroft (John Heard, in full villain mode), the investment bank head who shows only contempt for the investors he’s fleeced.

    Interspersed with fateful news reports about the national financial crisis, the film lurches towards its predictably bloody confusion, with Jim mowing down an array of financial types wearing expensive suits before his big showdown with the chief villain.

    Surprisingly, the usually over-the-top filmmaker takes a subdued approach to the pulpy proceedings, keeping things at a low boil with seemingly endless shots of his depressed hero riding the NYC subways. The slack pacing, as well as Purcell’s tedious, stone-faced performance, prevents the film from being the giddy guilty pleasure it might have been.

    Although he’s populated the film with actors with solid B-movie credentials, including Edward Furlong, Michael Pare and Keith David as Jim’s supportive friends, Boll here seems to be aspiring to a more serious level, with mostly dismal results. It seems strange to say, but what he really needed to do was tap into his inner schlockmeister.

    Opens May 10 (Phase 4 Films)

    Production: Lynn Peak Productions

    Cast: Dominic Purcell, Edward Furlong, Erin Karplunk, Eric Roberts, John Heard, Keith David, Clint Howard

    Director/screenwriter: Uwe Boll

    Producers: Dan Clarke, Shawn Williamson

    Production designer: Geoff Wallace

    Composers: Jessica de Rooij

    Rated R, 101 min. 

    Uwe Boll’s ‘Assault On Wall Street’ And The Cultural Legacy Of Occupy Wall Street

    I am not particularly on board with schlock director Uwe Boll’s sensibility or the idea in his forthcoming movie Assault On Wall Street that people who work in finance are worthy targets of vigilante justice:

    But I do think there’s something interesting about the way the movie is being marketed, as an “excoriating look at the American financial system that is sure to stir up plenty of Occupy-esque sentiment” (that description comes from Rotten Tomatoes but reads an awful lot like press release copy).

    Now, obviously Boll’s main characters’ actions have zip to do with the actual functionality or existence of Occupy Wall Street or any aspect of the 99 Percent movement. Taking up an individual crusade of assassinating bankers is not the same thing as starting up a People’s Library. A gun your main character is buying “for fun” is not the same innovative instrument as the People’s Mic. And perhaps most to the point, an individualistic crusade to recoup your losses on investments is not even close to the same thing as a broad-based movement aimed at exposing society-wide inequality. Tower Heist, Brett Ratner’s surprisingly fun 2011 movie about the employees of a luxury apartment building who rob the Bernie Madoff-like swindler who ripped off their pension fund, at least had the sense to make it the theft an attempt at reasonable and collective redistribution.

    But where the aesthetics and tactics of Occupy Wall Street itself were probably never going to be particularly attractive to Hollywood, there’s one way in which the movement is tailor-made for Hollywood. As Kelefah Sannaeh put it in a long review of anthropology professor and anarchist thinker David Graeber’s new book The Democracy Project in this week’s New Yorker: “What’s striking about this formulation, though, is what’s missing: any explicit reference to the one per cent. It was a self-reflexive slogan for a self-reflexive movement, one that came to be known more for its internal politics than for its critique of the outside world.”

    A void that needs a face? Hollywood is on it. In Margin Call, we’ve had Kevin Spacey and Jeremy Irons as sophisticated men made amoral by numbers. Tower Heist gave us Alan Alda as a kindly-visaged, deeply arrogant investor whose kindliness towards his employees curdles into contempt when they dare to question his handling of their money. Assault On Wall Street offers up John Heard as a callous creep who doesn’t care who he rips off. Arbitrage presented Richard Gere as an entitled master of the universe who couldn’t believe the market wouldn’t cooperate to hedge his best, both personal and professional. Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps even offered up a repentant Gordon Gekko. The lords of finance have gotten middle-aged, pasty, and if not outright evil, foolish. Hollywood’s collective portrayal of Wall Street may not have been able to muster a consensus vote from Occupy Wall Street or anywhere else, but in trying to bandwagon on the sentiments of the movement, it’s taken a sledgehammer to the finance industry’s cultural capital—and an image Hollywood helped create in the first place.