Bigtime cognitive dissonance here. This is a promotional video for an organization opposing the current predatory banking system, and what do they use to represent the evil banks? "A great vampire squid, wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnell into anything that smells like money."
I admire vampire squid, you know. Lovely creatures.
Also, vampire squid live in practically anoxic deep water environments, where metabolic activity is limited. They're also very soft and fragile. They really get a bad rep, and are much, much nicer than bankers.
By the way, this is a British group, and if you're of that persuasion, you should look into their proposals for banking reform.
- Log in to post comments
More like this
I'm referring to the fools trying to p*ss around with how banks pay their staff. It am all over de noos, and to spare the blushes of some of my more delicate readers I won't refer you to Timmy, you can have the Graun instead: Don't cap bank bonuses, scrap them. The EU's plan to cap bonuses sounds…
Here's a much more serious issue than a goddamned cracker: it's the steady accumulation of military power in religious hands. It's not overt policy, but we should be worried that there is an increasing association between religiosity and military service — an association between credulity and…
One of things I never got around to blogging about after the 2008 election was how lower-income whites do vote Democratic, even in the South, despite misperceptions on both the left and right to the contrary. In that vein, Amanda, commenting on Alexandra Pelosi's campaign documentary, clarifies a…
They're almost there. The NY Times' Joe Nocera on Foreclosuregate:
The lawsuit uncovered a raft of similar examples -- case after case where the loan officers not only knew that fraud was being committed, but were actively engaged in committing it. "By about 2006," says the lawsuit, "Countrywide's…