
In "Predator Nation," Oscar-winner Charles Ferguson exposes how Wall Street and Washington's collusion devastated America's economy. Former Governor Eliot Spitzer called it "Inside Job on steroids" - a searing indictment that will leave you questioning why financial criminals still roam free.
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Picture the aftermath of 2008: millions of Americans losing their homes, their retirement savings evaporating, unemployment lines stretching around blocks. Now picture this: not a single major banking executive went to prison. Not one. Despite fraud so blatant that internal emails literally described their mortgage products as "toxic waste" and "complete garbage," the architects of America's worst financial crisis since the Great Depression walked away with their fortunes intact. How did we arrive at a place where destroying the economy pays better than building it? The answer reveals something far more disturbing than a financial crisis-it exposes the transformation of America into an oligarchy where the rules simply don't apply to those at the top. Think of a rainforest canopy-that dense layer of treetops where sunlight pools, creating an entirely separate ecosystem from the dark forest floor below. America's wealthiest 1% now inhabit exactly such a world. By 2007, they captured 23% of all taxable income, the same share as in 1928, right before the Great Depression. They own a third of America's total wealth and over 40% of its financial assets-more than double what the entire bottom 80% possesses combined. This isn't just inequality; it's economic apartheid. While executives pull down eight-figure bonuses and maintain homes on three continents, median wages have actually declined. The 2001-2007 "boom" years? Average American incomes fell even as the wealthy prospered spectacularly.
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

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