Bailout $700 Billion
By Senator Feinstein & Walter Sorochan

Posted 2008; updated November 13, 2021.

This an email-exchange between Senator Feinstein & Walter Sorochan. It is included herein because it has valuable information about the proposed Bailout $700 Billion 2008.

To Senator Feinstein
From: Walter Sorochan, PhD.
RE: Bailout Wallstreet 1st e-mail Sept 26, 2008

This bail out is theoretically intended to stabilize the psychological fear in the banking system and wall street. The bailout is supposed to restore confidence on Wall Street. How in the world can you restore confidence by protecting crooks and paying their gambling debt?

I am against you supporting this bailout bill. Private entrepreneurial speculators created this mess and they must accept their losses. I will NOT pay for messy gambling of others. I lived through the 1930’s depression and am prepared to do so again, ….. but no damn bailouts for white collar crime!

Please do not pass this bill for a several reasons:
1. Treasury secretary Paulson is talking in very abstract terms. He provides absolutely no specific information about:
bullet just what he is going to buy
bullet just the kind of free wheeling control he wants & will use as he wheels and deals
bullet speculation that his scheme will work
bullet negative fallout that will make the current economic meltdown worse
bullet not solving the big economic collapse of the American dollar as a monitory exchange standard
2. Paulson has no credibility. He was Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs where, for many years, he allowed his siblings to continue in the deceptive CDS scheme. CDS are thinly traded, have huge counter party risk, are unregulated, difficult to analyze, have shoddy bookkeeping [as off-balance-sheet operations ] and are difficult to monitor. He asks for funding a scheme that has no accountability, just like the scheme he oversaw as a CEO. In front of congressional committees he talks without substance, no concrete information and all on speculation he used as CEO. He creates a big smokescreen but gives us no accountability.
3. No one knows what kinds of derivatives are going to be bought. You don’t buy a horse without checking the teeth of the horse. Yet Paulson wants a free reign to buy debt sight unseen. What kind of a financial genius is he when he ignores simple “ common sense!” No one knows what kind of CDS derivatives is out there, how much is there, much less the real value of such paper debt. He admits he doesn’t know.
4. There is no real value identifying the market street value of the derivatives being considered. If the derivatives had real honest value then the private sector would be gobbling up these bargains. The free market system is telling us that the CDS and bailout are very, very bad.
5. Where is the federal government going to get $ 700 billion? The treasury is broke! Who is going to pay the expenses of this borrowing?
6. This bailout is postponing the bigger financial collapse of the government, which is financially broke. This bailout is postponing the inevitable economic collapse of the USA treasury and government. Providing $ 700 billion is putting good money behind bad and worthless money.
7. Derivatives [ credit default swaps, or CDS ] that are anticipated to be bought are worthless un-secured paper debt. These have zero value.
8. Private commercial banks and investment entities speculated in making money in a Punzi money making scheme. It was identical to gambling in a casino. The CEOs of these institutions and the politicians who deregulated the Glass-Steagall Act should be jailed for creating the financial meltdowns. Paulson does not have this in his bailout!
9. There are no assurances or guarantees that giving Paulson what he wants in the bailout deal will also include regulatory legislation to control CDS and the Punzi swaps to stop. He wants to have regulation come later. No, you need to get the entire package correct from the very beginning.
10. All participating banking and investment entities created “ white collar crime” against the people. All politicians who support this bailout likewise become participants in this crime wave!
Bailout response Feinstein Sept 28, 2008

Dear Dr. Sorochan:
Thank you for your letter expressing concern about Congress' consideration of a plan to meet our Nation's credit crisis with financial help from the Federal Government. This is a difficult situation for which there are no perfect solutions, and I would like to share my thoughts and concerns about this issue with you.

On September 19, 2008, Secretary of the Treasury Henry M. Paulson, Jr. announced a legislative proposal to use $700 billion to purchase illiquid mortgage-related assets from ailing financial institutions. Secretary Paulson's three-page proposal was a non-starter, and without critical changes it has no chance of approval from Congress.

This proposal would have given a blank check to an economic czar who would have been empowered to spend it without administrative oversight, legal requirements, or legislative review. Decisions made by the Treasury Secretary would be non-reviewable by any court, agency, or Congress. The proposal also lacked a requirement for regular reports to Congress on the status of the program. This was simply untenable.

Since this announcement, my offices have received thousands of comments from Californians like you concerned about how this action will affect them. Yet, I believe prudent action must be taken. The bill should include the following principles: a phase-in of funding; oversight, accountability and transparency; a mechanism allowing the Secretary of the Treasury to modify mortgages to prevent additional foreclosures; and a precise cap on executive compensation.

The current credit crisis affects all Americans. If action is not taken to stem the crisis, Americans risk losing their homes, jobs, personal savings, life insurance and more. Banks will cease to lend to businesses and homeowners, and credit will be increasingly difficult to come by for average Americans. I strongly believe that the consequences of failing to act now would be greater than not acting at all. Please know that I will keep your thoughts in mind as this situation unfolds.

Once again, thank you for writing. If you have any additional questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact my Washington, D.C. office at (202) 224-3841. Best regards. U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein
Floor Statement on the Economic
Rescue Proposal
September 26, 2008

Attached please find a statement I recently made on the floor of the Senate expressing my feelings on this issue.

"Mr. President, to date I have received from Californians more than 50,000 calls and letters, the great bulk of them in opposition to any form of meeting this crisis with financial help from the Federal Government. I wanted to come to the floor to very simply state how I see this and some of the principles that I hope will be forthcoming in this draft. Before I do so, I wish to pay particular commendation to Senator Dodd, Senator Schumer, Senator Bennett, and others who have been working so hard on this issue. I have tried to keep in touch -- I am not a negotiator; I am not on the committee -- but California is the biggest State, the largest economic engine, and people are really concerned.

We face the most significant economic crisis in 75 years right now. Swift and comprehensive action is crucial to the overall health of our economy. None of us wants to be in this position, and there are no good options here. Nobody likes the idea of spending massive sums of Government money to rescue major corporations from their bad financial decisions. But no one also should be fooled into thinking this problem only belongs to the banks and that it is a good idea to let them fail. The pain felt by Wall Street one day is felt there, and then 2,3,4 weeks down the pike, it is felt on Main Street.

The turbulence in our financial sector has already resulted in thousands of layoffs in the banking and finance sectors, and that number will skyrocket if there is a full collapse. The shock waves of failure will extend far beyond the banking and finance sectors. A shrinking pool of credit would affect the home loans, credit card limits, auto loans, and insurance policies of average Americans. I am receiving calls from people who tell me they want to buy a house, but they can't get the credit or the mortgage to do so. Why? Because that market of credit is drying up more rapidly one day after the other. It would have a major impact on State and local governments which would lose tens of millions of dollars, if not hundreds of millions of dollars.

Hurricane Ike shut down refineries on the gulf coast 2 weeks ago, and now, today, people are waiting hours in lines for gasoline in the South. Similarly, the collapse of the financial sector would have severe consequences for Americans all across the economic spectrum: for the person who owns the grocery store, the laundry, the bank, the insurance company. Then, if the worst happens, layoffs. And even more than that, somebody shows up for work and finds their business has closed because the owner of that business can't get credit to buy the goods he hopes to sell that week or that month. Wages and employment rates have already fallen even as the cost of basic necessities has skyrocketed. Our Nation is facing the highest unemployment rate in 5 years, at 6.1 percent. Over 605,000 jobs have been lost nationwide this year. My own State of California, a state of 38 million people, has the third highest unemployment rate in the Nation at 7.7 percent. That is 1.4 million people out of work today. One and a half million people -- that is bigger than some States. We have 1.5 million people out of work, and one-half million have had their unemployment insurance expire and have nothing today. Congress is faced with a situation where we have to act and we have to do two things. We have to provide some reform in the system of regulation and oversight that is supposed to protect our economy. We also have to find a permanent and effective solution to keep liquidity and credit functioning so that markets can recover and make profit. The situation, I believe, is grave, and timely, prudent action is needed.

Just last night, the sixth largest bank in America -- Washington Mutual-- was seized by government regulators and most of its assets will be sold to JPMorgan Chase. This follows on the heels of bankruptcies and takeovers of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, AIG, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac. If nothing is done, the crisis will continue to spread and one by one the dominos will fall.

Now, this isn't just about Wall Street. Because we are this credit society, the financial troubles facing major economic institutions will ricochet throughout this Nation and affect everyone. So I believe the need for action is clear. But that doesn't mean Congress should simply be a rubberstamp for an unprecedented and unbridled program.

My constituents by the thousands have made their views clear. I believe they are responding to the original 3-page proposal by the Secretary of the Treasury. It is clear by now that that 3-page proposal is a nonstarter. It is dead on arrival and that is good. Secretary Paulson's proposal asked Congress to write a $700 billion check to an economic czar who would have been empowered to spend it without any administrative oversight, legal requirements, or legislative review. Decisions made by the Treasury Secretary would be nonreviewable by any court or agency, and the fate of our entire economy would be committed to the sole discretion of one man alone -- the man we know today, and the man whom we don't know after January. Additionally, the lack of governance or oversight in this plan was matched by the lack of a requirement for regular reports to Congress. This proposal stipulated that the economic czar, newly created, would report to Congress after the first three months with reports once every 6 months after that. This was untenable. Six months is an eternity when you are spending billions a week. The Treasury Secretary asked Congress to approve this massive program without delay or interference. It is hard to think of any other time in our history when Congress has been asked for so much money and so much power to be concentrated in the hands of one person. It is a nonstarter.

Yesterday, shortly before we met for the Democratic Policy Committee lunch, we were told there had been a bipartisan agreement on principles of a possible solution, and many of us rejoiced. We know that our Members, both Republican and Democrat, have been working hard to try to produce something that was positive. Then, all of a sudden, it changed. One Presidential candidate parachuted into town which proved to be enormously destructive to the process. Now, negotiations are back on the table, and as I say, we have just received a draft bill of certain principles.

I would like to outline quickly those principles that I think are important. First is a phase-in. No one wants to put $700 billion immediately at the discretion of one person or even a group of a very few people, no matter how bright, how skilled, how informed they might be on banking or finance principles. The funding should come in phases and Congress should have the opportunity to make its voice heard if the program isn't working or needs to be adjusted.

The second point: Oversight, accountability, and governance. The Treasury Secretary should not and must not have unbridled authority to determine winners and losers, essentially choosing which struggling financial institution will survive and which will not. The original plan placed all authority in the hands of this one man, and this is why I say it was DOA -- dead on arrival -- at the Congress. We must assure that controls are in place to watch taxpayer dollars and make sure they are well-spent fixing the problem, and that oversight by a governance committee and the Banking Committees are strong, and that they give the best opportunity for the American people to recover their investment and, yes, even eventually make a profit from that investment. That can be done and it has been done in the past. I believe that frequent reporting to Congress is critical. Transparency, sunlight on this, is critical. So Congress should receive regular, timely briefings, perhaps weekly for the first quarter, on a program of this magnitude. A proposal should mandate frequent reporting and the public should be ensured of transparency to the maximum extent possible.

I also believe that within the first quarter -- and this, to me, is key -- a comprehensive legislative proposal for reform must be put forward. We must reform those speculative practices that impact price function of markets. We must deal with the unregulated practices that have furthered this crisis. Look. I represent a State that was cost $40 billion in the Enron episode during 1999 and 2000 by speculation, by manipulation, and by fraud. There still is inadequate regulation of energy commodities sold on the futures market. And that is just one point in all of this. We must prevent these things from happening. The only way to do it is to improve the transparency of all markets. No hidden deals. Swaps, in my view, should be ended. The London loophole should be ended.

We have to outline rules for increasing regulation of the mortgage-backed securities market, along with comprehensive oversight of the mortgage industry and lending practices for both prime and subprime lending.

Senator Martinez of Florida and I had a part in the earlier housing bill, which included our legislation entitled the SAFE Mortgage Licensing Act. We found that the market was rife with fraud. We found there was one company that hired hairdressers and others who sold mortgages in their spare time. We found there were unscrupulous mortgage brokers out there unlicensed, preying upon people, walking off with tens of thousands of dollars of cash. This has to end. It has to be controlled. It has to be regulated.

So I believe the crisis of 2008 stems from the failure of Federal regulators to rein in this Wild West mentality of those Wall Street executives who led those firms and who thought that nothing was out of bounds. Every quick scheme was worth the time, and worth a try. Congress cannot ignore this as the root cause of the crisis. It was inherent in the subprime marketplace, and it has now spread to the prime mortgage marketplace.

It is also critical that accurate assessments of the value of these illiquid mortgage-related assets be performed to limit the taxpayers' exposure to risk and structure purchases to ensure the greatest possible return on investment.

Taxpayer money must be shielded at all costs from risk to the greatest extent possible.

Reciprocity is not a bad concept if you can carry it out. The Government must not simply act as a repository for risky investments that have gone bad. An economic rescue effort that serves taxpayers well must allow them to benefit from the potential profits of rescued entities. So a model -- and it may well be in these new principles -- must be developed to ensure the taxpayers are not only the first paid back but have an opportunity to share in future profits through warrants and/or stocks.

As to executive compensation limits, simply put, Californians are frosted by the absence of controls on executive compensation. Virtually all of the 50,000 phone calls and letters mentioned this one way or another. There must be limits. I am told that the reason the Treasury Secretary does not want limits on executive compensation is because he believes that an executive then will not bring his company in to partake in any program that is set up. Here is my response to that: We can put that executive on his boat, take that boat out in the ocean, and set it on fire. If that is how he feels, that is what should happen, or his company doesn't come in. But to say that the Federal Government is going to be responsible for tens of millions of dollars of executive salaries, golden parachutes, whether they are a matter of contract right or not, is not acceptable to the average person whose taxpayer dollars are used in this bailout. That is just fact.

The one proposal that was made by one of the Presidential candidates that I agree with is that there should be a limit of $400,000 on executive compensation. If they don't like it, too bad, don't participate in the program. As I have talked with people on Wall Street and otherwise, they don't believe it is true that an executive, if his pay is tailored down, will not bring a company in that needs help. I hope that is true. I believe there should be precise limits set on executive pay.

Finally, as to tangible benefits for Main Street in the form of mortgage relief, there have been more than 500,000 foreclosures in my home State of California so far this year. In the second quarter of this year, foreclosures were up 300 percent over the second quarter of 2007. More than 800,000 are predicted before this year is over.

I have a city in California where one out of every 25 homes is in foreclosure. This is new housing in subdivisions. As you look at it, you will see garage doors kicked in. You will see houses vandalized. You will see the grass and grounds dry. You will see the street sprinkled with "For Sale" signs, and nobody buys because the market has become so depressed.

This crisis has roots in the subprime housing boom that went bust, and it would be unconscionable for us to simply bailout Wall Street while leaving these homeowners to fend for themselves.

Everything I have been told, and I have talked to people in this business, here is what they tell me: It is more cost-effective to renegotiate a subprime loan and keep a family in a house than it is to foreclose and run the risks of what happens to that home on a depressed market as credit is drying up, as vandals loot it, as landscaping dries up, as more homes in the area become foreclosed upon; the way to go is to renegotiate these mortgages with the exiting homeowner wherever possible. I feel very strongly that should be the case.

I don't know what I or any of us will do if we authorize this kind of expenditure and we find down the pike in my State that the rest of the year, 800,000 to 1 million Americans are being thrown out of their homes despite this form of rescue effort. Think of what it means, Mr. President, in your State. You vote for this, any other Senator votes for it, and these foreclosures continue to take place and individual families continue to be thrown out of their homes. It is not a tenable situation.

I hope, if anybody is listening at all, that in the negotiating team, they will make a real effort to mandate in some way that subprime foreclosures be renegotiated, that families, wherever possible, who have an ability to pay, have that ability to pay met with a renegotiated loan. I have done this now in cases with families who were taken advantage of. We called the CEO of the bank, and the bank has seen that the loan was renegotiated, in one case in Los Angeles down to 2 percent. That is better than foreclosing and running the uncertainty of the sale of the asset in a very depressed housing market.

These are my thoughts. Again, it is easy to come to the floor and give your thoughts. It is much more difficult to sit at that negotiating table. I once again thank those Senators on both sides of the aisle who really understand the nature of this crisis -- that it isn't only Wall Street, that it does involve Main Street, and if there is a serious crash, it will hurt tens of millions of Americans, many of them in irreparable ways. So we must do what we must do, and we must do it prudently and carefully.

I yield the floor. I suggest the absence of quorum."
Sincerely yours,
Dianne Feinstein United States Senator

Further information about my position on issues of concern to California and the Nation are available at my website http://feinstein.senate.gov/public/. You can also receive electronic e-mail updates by subscribing to my e-mail list at http://feinstein.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ENewsletterSignup.Signup.

Sorochan 2nd response to bailout Sept 28, 2008

Hi Senator Feinstein;
Thank you for finding the time from your busy schedule to respond to my concern about the Bailout of Wallstreet.

I read your presentation to the oversight committee. It was very good. But I did not like that your response was a canned one. Your secretary responded and my guess is that you personally did not read my previous e-mail and probably will not read this one. You are shielded from the reality of your constituents!

But unfortunately, bailing out wallstreet is not the answer. It merely postpones the inevitable; that our economy and capitalistic system is broken and it has flaws that need more immediate attention than the bailout. This is not being addressed in the bailout!

The big issue is continuing federal debt. From where is the $ 700 billion going to come from? Our treasury is flat broke, we are on the verge of bankruptcy and you advocate borrowing more money from somewhere unknown! How can you say that this is good economics! Where is your real conscience and loyalty to the American people?

My daughter is 19 and a university student at UCSD. I will not allow her to take any loan for her education. She needs to learn to live within her financial means. I expect nothing less from you, President Bush and the USA government. Balance the budget first before you try to borrow bailout money! I don't want my daughter and her children to be burdened by your inability to make good prudent decisions.

Furthermore, The culprits who allowed the swaps [ credit default swaps ] to mushroom are the same ones who are now trying to fix it. Paulson, who was the CEO at JP Morgan, fostered and encouraged his employees to swap derivatives. He was an expert on swaping unsecured debt paper derivatives. Now he is telling you and the rest of the country on how to fix a problem he helped create. His fixer is to continue to give his wall street kids a reinforcement to do business as usual; with no penalties for fraud. His past experience may make him qualified to talk about swaps but he has eroded his credibility of character [ honesty, trustworthiness, truthfulness ]. Why would you listen to him? He has no credibility!

Paulson states that the bailout is needed to help the American people. This is a play on the word “ people,” His top priority is helping banks and investment houses, not people. His spin is trying to gain empathy for his proposed bailout. He is not telling the truth here!

Chris Dodds, Chairman, Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, received over $ 15 million in lobbying payolla over the past 10 years from bankers, Fannie, Freddie and other Wall streeters; while his counterpart, the ranking republican whip, Chairman Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala), Ranking Member, got almost $ 2.5 million from banking lobyists to support swaps. Yet these are the foxes that are trying to rescue the corrupt chickens on wall street. Wallstreet lobbyists have bought Dodds and other politicians to keep them gambling on wallstreet with an illegal Punzi scam.

Although I have presented a very simplistic but true picture of just how senators and congresspersons are behaving and how they are fixing the financial crisis, the realistic issue is graft and corruption in political circles. We need justice to be shown by you and the White House and not favoritism to those who commit crime. Are you a participant in this fraud and fiasco?

The bailout has so many flaws and political spins that even a person with good common sense has difficulty spotting these. For example, there is no assurance that the bailout money given out to needy bankers will be used & recycled again into the housing market. Instead it will be used to shore up the poor liquidity of banks. This isn't even discussed by you and others. There appears to be no common sense on capital hill. Yet your constituents are grasping for real honest approaches to solving our financial crisis and politicians are giving them spin junk bond solutions.

This bailout does not fix the real big problems in this country. The failing economy will continue to fail and you are not stopping the anticipated depression. Why put good money behind bad bailout?

We need to clean house in a big way and get corporations out of government. We need to restore representative government of the people and not corporate take-over. Until this happens, it will be more bailouts and financial crises. This is also what you need to be addressing instead of bailout.

Bailout allows business as usual and more financial disasters ahead. There is honest talk in world circles about restructuring the global economic system. The USA dollar as a monitory exchange system in the world appears about to be replaced by a new economic world order. Instead of the bailout, you should also be dealing with this bigger crisis.

I plead with you to vote against the bailout. Face reality and don't encourage more corporate greed. Give wallstreet an equal playing field so finances can sort out and fall as they may. A bailout distorts wallstreet from doing its job. Bailout is in a sense manipulating wallstreet to be on side of speculators and more financial trouble.

Neither you nor the bailout provide assurance that a deep recession will be avoided.

Please vote against the bailout.
Thank you
Walter Sorochan