And Trump will clearly do whatever is in the best interest of the Trump corporation as managed by his children. Where are you going to find this magical president who has never worked for a corporation or whose spouse or children have never worked for a corporation? You can make up some silly conflict of interest for anybody.
As a conservative, I have never woken up in a cold sweat after a nightmare about Goldman Sachs. Destroying Goldman Sachs has never been a top agenda item for me. Why are they such a boogeyman suddenly, other than as a convenient line of attack against Cruz?
When has Cruz ever gone against a conservative position and gone with something Goldman Sachs wanted instead?
If Cruz governs pro-life, pro-gun, anti-NSA surveillance, anti-same-sex-marriage, tax-cutting, budget-balancing, nominating Scalia-like judges, anti-Obamacare, etc., I couldn’t care less if he outright sends a billion-dollar check to Goldman Sachs. It’d be a worthy trade-off.
I've considered Goldman Sachs to be dangerous for a long time.
Among things I've read, this article has some interesting insights: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-great-american-bubble-machine-20100405
Or, if you accept without question that anything Trump is involved in as just as dangerous to America as Goldman Sachs, I'll understand if you choose not to read it.
Wissa, there is simply no comparison between the Trump Organization, which is about real estate development, hospitality and lifestyle merchandising, and the Goldman Sachs investment banking firm. Look it up on Wikipedia. Trump had a few bad years when the bottom fell out of Atlantic city and Atlanta real estate markets, and also when he built a beautiful resort on the Scottish coastline and tried to get them not to build a windfarm in direct line of sight; otherwise, he builds it and they come — all over the world. By constrast, here is the table of contents from Wikepedia about Goldman Sach’s Controversies alone:
4 Controversies
4.1 Sale of Dragon Systems to Lernout & Hauspie
4.2 Involvement in the European sovereign debt crisis
4.3 Employee’s Views
4.3.1 Greg Smith resignation letter
4.3.2 What Happened to Goldman Sachs by Steven Mandis
4.3.3 Cristina Chen-Oster and Shanna Orlich Lawsuit
4.4 California bonds
4.5 Personnel “revolving-door” with US government
4.5.1 Former New York Fed Chairman’s ties to the firm
4.6 Insider trading cases
4.7 First Quarter 2009 and December 2008 financial results
4.8 Involvement with the bailout of AIG
4.8.1 Firm’s response to criticism of AIG payments
4.8.2 Final AIG meetings on September 15 at the New York Federal Reserve
4.9 $60 million settlement for Massachusetts subprime mortgages
4.10 Abacus mortgage-backed CDOs
4.10.1 2010 SEC civil fraud lawsuit
4.11 Other prosecutorial actions
4.12 Alleged commodity price manipulation
4.12.1 Goldman Sachs Commodity Index and the 2005â2008 Food Bubble
4.12.2 Aluminum price and supply
4.13 Oil futures speculation
4.14 Initial public offering kickback bribes
4.15 Taylor-related civil and criminal cases
4.16 Danish utility sale
4.17 Libya investment losses