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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-06-11 01:40 PM
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It’s not easy being a hedge fund billionaire these days

It’s not easy being a hedge fund billionaire these days

By Greg Sargent

Leon Cooperman is an extremely wealthy and powerful man. A Wall Street veteran who started his own hedge fund, his fortune is estimated at around $1.8 billion. Even though he’s not a public official, his pronouncements about politics and policy receive widespread media attention.

And yet not all is sunny in Mr. Cooperman’s life. That’s because he still can’t get over the belittling rhetoric President Obama employed about millionaires and billionaires and their corporate jet loopholes in a speech six months ago.

<...>

Last week, Cooperman circulated an “open letter” to President Obama that accused him of a ”divisive, polarizing tone” that risks further inflaming an “already incendiary environment.” The letter was a sensation on Wall Street, so Andrew Ross Sorkin interviewed Cooperman to find out what exactly ticked him off badly enough to inspire him to write it:

“What pushed me over the fence was the president’s dialogue over the debt ceiling,” Mr. Cooperman said, explaining that just when it seemed like a compromise was near, President Obama went on national television and pressed harder on “millionaires and billionaires,” a phrase that has stuck in the craw of many of the elite.

For example, Mr. Cooperman zeroed in on what he described as the president’s belittling remarks about taxing the wealthy: “If you are a wealthy C.E.O. or hedge fund manager in America right now, your taxes are lower than they have ever been. They are lower than they have been since the 1950s. And they can afford it,” the president said back in June. “You can still ride on your corporate jet. You’re just going to have to pay a little more.”...

Mr. Cooperman acknowledges that, in the debt ceiling debate this summer, it was as much the fault of Republicans and House Speaker John Boehner’s inability to gain support for a compromise as it was the Democrats that a deal did not get done. And Mr. Cooperman accepts that taxes are indeed at record lows.

But he says the president could do a better job of pressing for higher taxes on the rich without “the sense that we’re bad people.”

Can we really be at the point where the phrase “millionaires and billionaires” is too sharp-elbowed for our thin-skinned elites to countenance? Are we really at the point where that little jibe from Obama about corporate jets tantamount to casting the wealthy as “bad people”? Making this odder still, Cooperman agrees with Obama on the fundamentals: He agrees that taxes on the rich are at record lows, and according to Sorkin, he even agrees that the wealthy should pay higher taxes. Yet he sees it as belittling to his class for Obama to point out these things in a vivid and forceful way, even though he’s doing so in order to break a political logjam that is blocking the solutions Cooperman himself advocates from being implemented.

more


Here's the direct link to Sorkin's piece.
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DCKit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-06-11 01:47 PM
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1. I'd coo sweet nothings in his ear and diss President Obama 24/7 for $1.5K/week.
Call me dude!
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Remember Me Donating Member (730 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-06-11 03:25 PM
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2. Not bad -- not bad people at all
Edited on Tue Dec-06-11 03:25 PM by Remember Me
just freakin' selfish! Well, and likely sociopathic.

Reminds me of one of my favorite quotes:

"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness". - John Kenneth Galbraith
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Tarheel_Dem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-06-11 05:49 PM
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3. Well, boo-hoo, Mr. Cooperman.
:eyes:



:kick:
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patrice Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-06-11 05:59 PM
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4. Badpeople or not, Mr. Cooperman? I can see how those who've been using our tax/bail-out money to buy
Treasury Bonds, instead of paying off their gambling debts, might be a little "thin-skinned" about raising the debt ceiling. Whether they are bad people or not depends upon how honest they are about the risks they have created for themselves, and, more importantly, for AMERICAN EQUITY and, consequently, what they might, or might not, do with those treasury bonds.
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