Muppet manifesto: Blistering exit for Goldman exec

Joeybagadonuts

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http://xfinity.comcast.net/articles/finance/20120314/US.Goldman.Sachs.Manifesto/

NEW YORK — Goldman Sachs, arguably the most storied investment bank on Wall Street, has been compared to a money-sucking vampire squid and called the evil empire of finance. On Wednesday, it got a black eye from one of its own.
Greg Smith, an executive director at the bank, resigned with a blistering public essay that accused the bank of losing its "moral fiber," putting profits ahead of customers' interests and dismissing customers as "muppets."
"It makes me ill how callously people talk about ripping their clients off," he wrote.
The decay of Goldman's proud culture of teamwork, integrity and humility, he wrote, threatened the survival of an investment house that weathered two world wars and the Great Depression.
The stinging essay, "Why I Am Leaving Goldman Sachs," appeared on the Op-Ed page of The New York Times on Wednesday morning. It was the talk of Wall Street immediately and circulated online all day.
CNBC ran clips of the ornery balcony critics from "The Muppet Show." Other websites quickly posted spoofs, including "Why I am Leaving the Empire," by "Star Wars" villain Darth Vader. Smith became a trending topic on Twitter.
The Times said the essay had received 3 million page views online by 4 p.m. The second-most-viewed story had 500,000, and that was a business section story about the essay.
Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein and President Gary Cohn told the bank's employees in an open letter that Smith's claims did not reflect the culture of the bank. They cited glowing internal reviews of the service Goldman provides to clients.
"It is unfortunate that all of you who worked so hard through a difficult environment over the last few years now have to respond to this," they wrote.
Smith worked for Goldman in London when he resigned, but the bank did not provide further details or say how much money Smith made. He previously worked in the New York office.
Smith, identified by The Times as head of the company's United States equity derivatives business in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, wrote that he attended sales meetings in which helping clients was not part of the discussion.
 
Did anyone ever think they gave a shit about people? At the top levels of most companies you'll find nothing but contempt for customers/clients. It's not always because they're evil, sometimes it's because the people at the top have been doing it so long they're simply jaded. Goldman is just evil though. But then we all knew that already.
 
Did anyone ever think they gave a shit about people? At the top levels of most companies you'll find nothing but contempt for customers/clients. It's not always because they're evil, sometimes it's because the people at the top have been doing it so long they're simply jaded. Goldman is just evil though. But then we all knew that already.

Good point. Most people do get jaded when spending time doing the same thing.
 
To be perfectly honest when I worked I don't think I ever really cared about clients. I liked many of them and I did the best job I could do but most of them got talked about behind their backs and it was usually pretty mean. A customer/client is the boss and nobody likes their boss.
 
The right wingers will be upset that one of their heros has left the building...
 
http://xfinity.comcast.net/articles/finance/20120314/US.Goldman.Sachs.Manifesto/

NEW YORK — Goldman Sachs, arguably the most storied investment bank on Wall Street, has been compared to a money-sucking vampire squid and called the evil empire of finance. On Wednesday, it got a black eye from one of its own.
Greg Smith, an executive director at the bank, resigned with a blistering public essay that accused the bank of losing its "moral fiber," putting profits ahead of customers' interests and dismissing customers as "muppets."
"It makes me ill how callously people talk about ripping their clients off," he wrote.
The decay of Goldman's proud culture of teamwork, integrity and humility, he wrote, threatened the survival of an investment house that weathered two world wars and the Great Depression.
The stinging essay, "Why I Am Leaving Goldman Sachs," appeared on the Op-Ed page of The New York Times on Wednesday morning. It was the talk of Wall Street immediately and circulated online all day.
CNBC ran clips of the ornery balcony critics from "The Muppet Show." Other websites quickly posted spoofs, including "Why I am Leaving the Empire," by "Star Wars" villain Darth Vader. Smith became a trending topic on Twitter.
The Times said the essay had received 3 million page views online by 4 p.m. The second-most-viewed story had 500,000, and that was a business section story about the essay.
Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein and President Gary Cohn told the bank's employees in an open letter that Smith's claims did not reflect the culture of the bank. They cited glowing internal reviews of the service Goldman provides to clients.
"It is unfortunate that all of you who worked so hard through a difficult environment over the last few years now have to respond to this," they wrote.
Smith worked for Goldman in London when he resigned, but the bank did not provide further details or say how much money Smith made. He previously worked in the New York office.
Smith, identified by The Times as head of the company's United States equity derivatives business in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, wrote that he attended sales meetings in which helping clients was not part of the discussion.



Most of Goldman's people are in sales. Would you expect anything different? Sounds like you live in a fair-tail if you believe otherwise
 
I've seen the same with treatment, hospital, nursing home and prison staff too.

One has a better chance of survival in a none government hospital as there is no incentive for government workers to care. Most government workers do not care and that is just a fact. Live or die, those government workers get paid, will ever get fired even if they make mistakes that harm or kill a patient
 
One has a better chance of survival in a none government hospital as there is no incentive for government workers to care. Most government workers do not care and that is just a fact. Live or die, those government workers get paid, will ever get fired even if they make mistakes that harm or kill a patient

I didn't see this article as any great revelation. It's just a reminder that the people who you trust with your money think that you're scum.

As far as privatization, I've worked in a treatment facility run by the government and one privately owned. The only difference is that those who work in privately run facilities are paid far less money than government workers. The tax payers who pay the salaries pay the same amount. The only difference is that the money going to the middle class treatment staff, it goes to wealthy entrepreneurs.
 
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