30.6.09

Pecora

Why on earth has Hollywood not yet made a movie about Ferdinand Pecora?

He is the man who led the investigation of the fraud and other criminal behaviour that led to the Wall Street crash of 1929, which started off the great depression. The story of his investigation is amazing, and couldn´t be more appropriate for a major film production. It has everything, including the David and Goliath theme, where Pecora was a lowly Italian immigrant, who was aided by a staff of two people, taking on the giants of Wall Street on behalf of the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency. With only a staff of two people, obviously they weren´t supposed to uncover anything. Except they did, and the Committee hearings became major news at the time, letting out a huge public outrcy over the greed and fraud that had brought about the depression. The populist nature of the hearings irritated a lot of people, including a senator who compared the hearings to a circus. This comment was famously siezed by a Wringling Brothers promoter, who brought along a circus dwarf to sit on the lap of J.P. Morgan, who had been grilled by Pecora.


All of this was huge news at the time and it seems like the action of bringing in these people for public questioning led to a sense of justice being done, that these powerful bankers could not act with impunity (at least not all of the time). More importantly, the hearings led to the Glass Steagal Act of 1933 and the foundation of the SEC (Securitites and Exchange Commission), which stabilzed the U.S. economy for about half a century until neoliberal ideas of deregulation got the best of us.

Go to the excellent Bill Moyers Journal for more info on Ferdinand Pecora the Pecora hearings and an interview with Michael Perino who´s writing Pecora´s biography.

3.6.09

Coming back



It's been a while since I wrote here. Work was really busy for a while, with the 8th session of the Permanent Forum going on, and then we went up to Canada for a week trip to visit family up in Ottawa. I'm glad we drove up there, getting to see a bit of the country. I particularly liked Vermont for a lot of reasons, including the ageing hippies, fantastic cafés, great food and a generally chilled out atmosphere.


Óðinn did remarkably well in the car, considering how unused he is to driving around. This will be the last time he uses this car seat, which is already too small. He´s teething these days, which makes him pretty grumpy and disrupts his sleep a lot, so the poor guy is constantly waking up his parents. Such is the way of things...