(AJC) – On the Monday, January 30 edition of the Infowars Nightly News, Alex talks with author, journalist, and former Goldman-Sachs director Nomi Prins about the MF Global scandal and the decision by the strapped Greek government to rent out the country’s antiquities in order to pay off a debt owed to international bankers. Read the rest of this entry »
(PrinsBlog) – I confess; I expected to be bored out of my mind listening to President Obama’s campaign – I mean, State of the Union – I mean campaign, speech. I kept hoping some truly earth shattering story would sneak in there beforehand, like say some discovery that Mitt Romney had been having an affair with Newt Gingrich’s ex-wife while he was creating jobs at Bain capital, and we could all focus on that instead. Read the rest of this entry »
(NomiPrins) – In the wake of chopping its Central Bank swap rates today, the Fed has been called a bunch of names: a hero for slugging the big bailout bat in the ninth inning, and a villain for printing money to help Europe at the expense of the US. Neither depiction is right. Read the rest of this entry »
(Nomi) – Often, when I troll around websites of entities like the ECB and IMF, I uncover little of startling note. They design it that way. Plus, the pace at which the global financial system can leverage bets, eviscerate capital, and cry for bank bailouts financed through austerity measures far exceeds the reporting timeliness of these bodies. Read the rest of this entry »
(AJC) – Journalist Nomi Prins notes that the Occupy Wall Street movement is becoming bigger and bigger, like the unions of today. Read the rest of this entry »
(RussiaToday) – This week Max and Stacy ask why Wall Street protesters are maced in the face for merely walking on the sidewalk, while JP Morgan’s CEO can throw a tirade in the face of regulators and a central banker without being pepper-sprayed. In the second half of the show, Max and Nomi Prins discuss the 2nd Great Depression and her new book, Black Tuesday. Read the rest of this entry »
Alex welcomes back to the show author, journalist, and former managing director at Goldman Sachs, Nomi Prins. Ms. Prins will talk about the arrest of IMF boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn on rape charges and the latest article by Matt Taibbi on prosecuting Goldman Sachs and Lloyd Blankfein. Read the rest of this entry »
Alex welcomes back to the show author, journalist, and former managing director at Goldman Sachs, Nomi Prins. Ms. Prins will talk about the arrest of IMF boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn on rape charges and the latest article by Matt Taibbi on prosecuting Goldman Sachs and Lloyd Blankfein. Alex also talks with constitutionalist Alfred Adask about a 60 Minutes hit piece demonizing patriots as domestic terrorists. Mr. Adask was interviewed by CBS for the piece. On Sunday, Adask wrote Am I About To Be Labeled a “Domestic Terrorist”? Alex also covers the latest breaking news and takes your calls Read the rest of this entry »
Alex talks with author and former managing director at Goldman Sachs, Nomi Prins. She is a Senior Fellow at Demos, a non-partisan public policy research and advocacy organization founded in 2000. Prins’ latest book is It Takes a Pillage: Behind the Bonuses, Bailouts, and Backroom Deals from Washington to Wall Street. Read the rest of this entry »
(RussiaToday) – This time, Max Keiser and co-host, Stacy Herbert, talk about emails showing Bear Stearns cheated clients out of billions. In the second half of the show, Max talks to Nomi Prins, author of It Takes a Pillage, about Goldman Sachs’ Facebook deal and more. Read the rest of this entry »
Apparently there is an unlimited amount of air- and broadcast time for self-defined experts to pontificate on who got the economy into this terrible state of affairs, and most of the people yammering have no idea why. But even more interesting, as Ralph Nader points out, is that the ones who got it right are given no time whatsoever. It’s time to take back the media, or turn to independent media like dprogram.net for all the REAL news and analysis Read the rest of this entry »