Re-maligning the Rich

It seems dozens of wealthy Wall Streeters that donated to Obama in 2008 are now realigning and donating to Mitt Romney. Many may just be hedging their bets as Obama is still raising plenty from Wall Street. In June he reportedly gathered $2.4 million at one event in a New York restaurant.  

However-

According to a review of fundraising data, 67 people who work in the financial sector and live in the New York City metro area gave to Obama in 2008 and the former Massachusetts governor in 2011.

This select group from Credit Suisse, the Blackstone Group, the Stanwich Group and Goldman Sachs has since donated more than $147,000 to Romney. Supposedly these reversals come as a result of Obama’s “tough” rhetoric while pushing to pass the Dodd-Frank banking laws.  

One aspect of this that is little hard to stomach given the fast pace of recovery on Wall Street compared to main street is the executives expressed feelings of “betrayal” by Obama.

"Everybody I speak to is on the same boat — disappointment," said one Wall Street executive who requested anonymity

They seem more fragile and easily offended than one might expect of hardened business execs.

And there is this heartrending remark

"It's not healthy for rich people to feel maligned,"



Or is that a tearful threat?

It could be if you take seriously a recent warning from Warren Buffett, one of the World’s richest men

“There’s class warfare, but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.”

So enjoy the upcoming Labor Day holiday and please be gentle with the wealthy. After all we have been warned that it isn’t healthy for the rich to feel maligned! Be thoughtful and try to keep in mind the burden it must be for the top 400 wealthiest people in this country to own more than the bottom half combined.  

7 thoughts on “Re-maligning the Rich

  1. Remember, too, that if they’re suddenly asked to pay their fair share, they’ll just up and move — that’s what we’re told here in VT, anyway.

    Such dainty flowers those rich and powerful people, none of the stamina of the middle and working class, who day in and day out have to struggle to put up with the pathetic nonsense spewed by our ruling class — after putting in a long day at work (if they’re so lucky) to pay for their wars, their corporate subsidies and the infrastructure that Ayn Rand’s acolytes apparently think materializes out of thin air just for their benefit.

    Would hate to see what happened to the rich if the masses suddenly (at long last) rose up with torches and pitchforks and gave them a piece of their mind. Smelling salts all ’round…

  2. They’re proving themselves utterly debased without our help.

    If they really think we’ll take even a moment’s pause to consider how hard it must be to be reviled as immoral sociopaths, they’re very, very wrong.

    If they’re not careful, they’re going to inflict enough suffering on their fellow/sister citizens to cause a backlash unlike anything seen since the French Revolution. Echoes of Madame DuFarge’s needles click softly in the dark of night, and people are growing restless.

    Hunger, cold, illness, and the suffering of children will not be tolerated for long.

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