Chris is Paris posted something on this earlier, but here’s a twist:Read More......“In a letter to Geithner dated Saturday, Liddy informed Treasury that outside lawyers had informed the company that AIG had contractual obligations to make the bonus payments and could face lawsuits if it did not do so.”Let’s assume that’s true, and start the countdown clock.
When the auto industry needed a bailout, the true believers in the GOP said the problem was labor costs and that the auto companies really needed to declare Chapter 11 so they could renegotiate their union contracts.
I don’t know a whole lot about bankruptcy law, but if AIG is “stuck” with a personnel payment structure that doesn’t make sense in the current climate, surely the Republicans will remember their brilliant suggestion for handling auto assembly line workers who are being “paid too much.”
Surely they’ll stick with that approach. I mean, it’s not like their argument in this would change just because now we’re talking about bankers and investment brokers. That would be ridiculous, wouldn’t it?
So I think we should give them kudos for integrity and making tough choices – by starting a countdown clock and praising them for how quickly they will no doubt get around to making the same suggestion for screwing bankers that they made for screwing auto workers.
Too bad we couldn’t run a betting pool on how long it will take. That would be a way for at least one person outside of Wall Street to make money off of this bullshit.
Reid's birthright
2 minutes ago