10.05.11
Cyber Lynch Mob after Lloyd Blankfein
Credit Occupy Wall Street with its non-violent hostile encampment on Wall Street, symbolically drawing a long overdue bullseye on the backs of the Lloyd Blankfeins and Jamie Dimons of the country.
It is no surprise then that hackers would be after their private information.
The addresses of the Goldman Sachs CEO and similar material pertaining to Chase’s Jamie Dimon were posted to Pastebin by a hacking group called CabinCr3w.
This brief ABC News story indicated the Blankfein spill was rapidly deleted, the corporate on-line world still being very much afraid of the masters of the universe.
However, apparently Jamie Dimon of Chase is not considered as menacing.
His entry at Pastebin is still up.
“The group did not explain why it had targeted Goldman Sachs, one of the most prominent investment banks in the world,” reported a seemingly slow-witted reporter for ABC News on-line.
Months ago I posted that the Wall Street banksters remained relatively safe from overt demonstrations of anger because of their anonymity.
Outside of journalists who wrote best-selling books on the economic collapse, average America remained largely ignorant of their names and faces.
At the time I called it the Lloyd Blankfein Rule and this is it:
Even if there’s an appetite for a lynching in the public, if nobody knows the names of the to-be-lynched … then the latter are probably safe.
That may be changing thanks to the NYC protests and the crews of cyber-paupers who show no reluctance in getting after the plutocrats on the Internet.
While they still enjoy the protection of the government and the rule of law — which, as many have figured out, only gets applied for the benefit of the top one percent, they enjoy no public sympathy. And it cannot but help to continually put their names in front of growing crowds of angry people.