I don't quite understand this.
Now, it's out in the open that banks has assisted in 'money laundering', 'tax evation' and a a lot of other types of criminal activities. So, that should be on public record, and anyone should be able to know about this. Now, is the point that if they have some executives go to jail, then the entire bank will collapse, and may cause collapse in the entire financial system ? That doesn'ẗ make any sense whatsoever. Let's imagine that a bank has 10000 employes, and let's say that 5% of these are engaged in criminal acts, that means 500. This is quite the substantional number, but please don't make me believe that putting all of these to jail, and substituting them with someone else, that we believe to be better banktsters, would cause a collapse in the financial system ?
And what would be the difference in the public eye of fines or having 50 banksters going to jail for a couple of years ? I don't think the public would care much either way..
People have a very short memory for these kinds of things, and I think the fear that's often displayed is unwarranted for.
At the same time we need to ask ourselves the question, is it the government that decides how things are run, or is it the banks ?
I think the top executives should be put in jail, and other people involved should simply lose their job, perhaps get fined or jailed, depending on the seriousness of their crimes.
Now, when we see that not only does the banks get away with it (apart from paying a fine), they even give bonuses to their top executives involved in the very same criminal activity.
Now, should we not just prosectute those banksters without fearing that 'the system' would break down ? If it breaks down, then it breaks down, and what is their fear then, that people will revolt when their savings vanishes?
Do they not see, that this only spurs contempt in the general public? Perhaps most people are too dumb to see what's going on ?
It reminds me a bit about Enron, huge failures, yet execs gets a lot of bonuses:
http://www.forbes.com/2001/12/05/1205enron.htmlThe only logical conclusion is that everything is owned by the big capital, and that big capital rules everything and is in fact above the law.