Wall Street Frauds Make Wonderful Cartoons, Part 19: None So Blind as Those Who Won’t See
A board of directors turning a blind eye / feigning ignorance of cooked books and other financial shenanigans, is hardly new, as witness this cartoon from the cover of the fourth issue of Judge magazine, November 19, 1881. This is the second Judge cartoon by Livingston Hopkins on this subject — his first was on the rear cover of Judge number 1.
Click on picture, to see an enlarged version.
Click here to find both the prior Wall Street Frauds Make Wonderful Cartoons entries, and related I.T.C.H. posts. This series will continue, while the debate on financial reforms continues in Congress (except Mondays and holidays, on which I already had other material planned).
Series Refrain: Bank frauds and Wall Street swindles, resulting in economic ruin for everyone else, were regular and frequent occurrences prior to Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s institution of laws designed to prevent further Great Depressions. These regulations worked until, starting in the 1980s, conservatives began dismantling those protections, stating that we’d be better off with an unfettered and unregulated market, free to do whatever it wants. Wall Street firms swore at that time, that they’d learned the lessons of the Great Depression, and could be trusted to not engage in dangerous practices.
Bull****!
If there is one lesson from the various economic collapses throughout history, it’s that human greed is eternal. There will always be selfish fools, who grab for themselves without care for the damage they inflict on others.
Doug Wheeler
financial reform
JudgeMag

— Doug

































