FightTheSmears.com-Obama Kikealike Johnson on Board Goldman-Sachs with 21Mil Year from FannieMae and 7Mil from Cuntry That Lied
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Posted: Wed, 18/06/2008 - 10:20
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Uploader: godschosenpoop
Reputation: 8630 Rank: Ubermogul
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Posted: Wed, 18/06/2008 - 10:20
173 views
Uploader: godschosenpoop
Reputation: 8630 Rank: Ubermogul
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Comments
HA HA--THIS SHITFACE SHABBOS
HA HA--THIS SHITFACE SHABBOS JIM JOHNSON IS ON THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF GOLDMAN SACHS AND COLLECTED 21 MILLION A YEAR FROM FANNIE MAE AND 7 MIL FROM COUNTRYWIDE BUT WE SHOULD GO TO JAIL FOR TALKING ABOUT ROSTHSCHILD-BERNANKE-GOLDMAN SACHS SEAMLESS KIKERY. FUCK YOU ZOG--PEOPLE ARE GOING TO DIE SOONER OR LATER. WATCH AND SEE.
http://www2.goldmansachs.com/our-firm/about-us/leadership/board-of-directors.htm...
* At a Glance
* Our Story
* Business Principles
* Leadership
* Diversity and Inclusion
* Business Continuity
Board of Directors Executive Officers Management Committee Managing Directors
Lloyd C. Blankfein
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Jon Winkelried
President and Co-Chief Operating Officer
Gary D. Cohn
President and Co-Chief Operating Officer
John H. Bryan
Claes Dahlbäck
Stephen Friedman
William W. George
Rajat K. Gupta
James A. Johnson
Lois D. Juliber
Edward M. Liddy
Ruth J. Simmons
John F. W. Rogers
Secretary to the Board
SEE ALL
Lloyd Blankfein
Lloyd C. Blankfein
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Mr. Blankfein has been our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer since June 2006 and a director since April 2003. Previously, he had been our President and Chief Operating Officer since January 2004. Prior to that, from April 2002 until January 2004, he was a Vice Chairman of Goldman Sachs, with management responsibility for Goldman Sachs’ Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities Division (FICC) and Equities Division (Equities). Prior to becoming a Vice Chairman, he had served as co-head of FICC since its formation in 1997. From 1994 to 1997, he headed or co-headed the Currency and Commodities Division. Mr. Blankfein is not on the board of any public company other than Goldman Sachs. He is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Harvard University Committee on University Resources, the Advisory Board of the Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management and the Governing Board of the Indian School of Business, an overseer of the Weill Medical College of Cornell University, and a director of the Partnership for New York City and Catalyst.
Jon Winkelried
Jon Winkelried
President and Co-Chief Operating Officer
Mr. Winkelried has been our President and Co-Chief Operating Officer and a director since June 2006. Previously, he had been the co-head of Goldman Sachs’ Investment Banking Division since January 2005. From 2000 to 2005, he was co-head of FICC. From 1999 to 2000, he was head of FICC in Europe. From 1995 to 1999, he was responsible for Goldman Sachs’ leveraged finance business. Mr. Winkelried is not on the board of any public company other than Goldman Sachs. He is also a trustee of the University of Chicago.
Gary Cohn
Gary D. Cohn
President and Co-Chief Operating Officer
Mr. Cohn has been our President and Co-Chief Operating Officer and a director since June 2006. Previously, he had been the co-head of Goldman Sachs’ global securities businesses since January 2004. He also had been the co-head of Equities since 2003 and the co-head of FICC since September 2002. From March 2002 to September 2002, he served as co-chief operating officer of FICC. Prior to that, beginning in 1999, Mr. Cohn managed the FICC macro businesses. From 1996 to 1999, he was the global head of Goldman Sachs’ commodities business. Mr. Cohn is not on the board of any public company other than Goldman Sachs. He is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as a member of the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association and as a trustee of the Gilmour Academy, the NYU Child Study Center, the NYU Hospital, the NYU Medical School, the Harlem Children’s Zone and American University.
John H. Bryan
John H. Bryan
Mr. Bryan is the retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Sara Lee Corporation. He served as its Chief Executive Officer from 1975 to June 2000 and as its Chairman of the Board from 1976 until his retirement in October 2001. Mr. Bryan has been a director of Goldman Sachs since November 1999. He is on the board of one public company in addition to Goldman Sachs: General Motors Corporation. Mr. Bryan is the past Chairman of the Grocery Manufacturers of America, Inc. and the past Vice Chairman and a current member of The Business Council. He also served as Co-Chairman of the World Economic Forum’s annual meetings in 1994, 1997 and 2000. In addition, Mr. Bryan is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as a Life Trustee of The University of Chicago, as the past Chairman and Life Trustee of the Board of Trustees of The Art Institute of Chicago, as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Millennium Park, Inc., and as the past Chairman and a current member of The Chicago Council on Global Affairs; he is also the past Chairman of Catalyst.
Claes Dahlback
Claes Dahlbäck
Mr. Dahlbäck currently serves as a Senior Advisor to Investor AB, a Swedish-based investment company, and is also a Senior Advisor at Foundation Asset Management, which is owned by three Wallenberg Foundations and which acts as advisor to the Foundations with respect to their holdings. He previously served as Investor AB’s nonexecutive Chairman from April 2002 until April 2005, its Vice Chairman from April 1999 until April 2002 and its President and Chief Executive Officer from 1978 until April 1999. Mr. Dahlbäck has been a director of Goldman Sachs since June 2003 and is not on the board of any other public company.
Stephen Friedman
Stephen Friedman
Mr. Friedman has been Chairman of Stone Point Capital, a private equity firm, since June 2006; prior to that, he was engaged as a Senior Advisor to Stone Point Capital since May 2005. Mr. Friedman has been Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York since January 2008. He has been Chairman of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and Chairman of the Intelligence Oversight Board since January 2006. He served as Assistant to the President for Economic Policy and Director of the National Economic Council from December 2002 until December 2004. From 1998 until December 2002, Mr. Friedman was a senior principal of MMC Capital, the predecessor of Stone Point Capital. He retired as Senior Partner and Chairman of the Management Committee of The Goldman Sachs Group, L.P., our predecessor, in 1994, having joined the firm in 1966. Mr. Friedman has been a director of Goldman Sachs since April 2005 and is not on the board of any other public company. He is also a board member of the Council on Foreign Relations, a non-profit organization.
William George
William W. George
Mr. George was Chief Executive Officer of Medtronic, Inc. from May 1991 to May 2001 and its Chairman of the Board from April 1996 until his retirement in April 2002. He joined Medtronic in 1989 as President and Chief Operating Officer. Mr. George is currently a Professor of Management Practice at the Harvard Business School and was formerly Professor of Leadership and Governance at the International Institute for Management Development from January 2002 until May 2003, Visiting Professor of Technology Management at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne from January 2002 until May 2003 and an Executive-in-Residence at the Yale School of Management from September 2003 through December 2003. Mr. George has been a director of Goldman Sachs since December 2002. Mr. George is on the boards of the following public companies in addition to Goldman Sachs: Exxon Mobil Corporation and Novartis AG. In addition, he is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as a board member of the World Economic Forum USA and as a member of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Rajat K. Gupta
Rajat K. Gupta
Mr. Gupta has been Senior Partner Emeritus of McKinsey & Company since 2003. He previously served as McKinsey & Company’s Worldwide Managing Director from 1994 until 2003. Prior to that, Mr. Gupta held a variety of positions at McKinsey & Company since 1973. Mr. Gupta has been a director of Goldman Sachs since November 2006. Mr. Gupta is on the boards of the following public companies in addition to Goldman Sachs: AMR Corporation, Genpact LTD and Procter & Gamble. He is also an independent director of Qatar Financial Authority. He is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as Chairman of the Board of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Chairman of the Board of the Indian School of Business and the Associates of the Harvard Business School, a member of the Advisory Board of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, the Dean’s Advisory Board at Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management and the Dean’s Council of the Harvard School of Public Health and Co-Chair of the American India Foundation. Mr. Gupta also served as the United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Advisor on UN management reform.
James A. Johnson
James A. Johnson
Mr. Johnson has been a Vice Chairman of Perseus, L.L.C., a merchant banking and private equity firm, since April 2001. From January 2000 to March 2001, he served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Johnson Capital Partners, a private investment company. From January through December 1999, he was Chairman of the Executive Committee of Fannie Mae, having previously served as its Chairman and Chief Executive Officer from February 1991 through December 1998 and its Vice Chairman from 1990 through February 1991. Mr. Johnson has been a director of Goldman Sachs since May 1999. Mr. Johnson is on the boards of the following public companies in addition to Goldman Sachs: Forestar Real Estate Group, Inc., KB Home, Target Corporation and UnitedHealth Group Inc. In addition, he is affiliated with certain non-profit organizations, including as Chairman Emeritus of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, as a member of each of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Friends of Bilderberg, the Council on Foreign Relations and The Trilateral
Career Johnson has long been
Career
Johnson has long been one of Washington's most prominent leaders, holding leadership positions in business, the arts, and politics.
Johnson began his career as a faculty member at Princeton University, later moving on to the United States Senate as a staff member and to the Dayton-Hudson Corporation (now Target Corp.) as director of public affairs. He was executive assistant to Vice President Walter Mondale during the entire Carter Administration (1977-1981). Later, he founded and headed Public Strategies, a private consulting firm, from 1981 to 1985 before leaving for Lehman Brothers.
From 1991 to 1998, he served as chairman and chief executive officer of the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), the quasi-public organization that guarantees mortgages for millions of American homeowners. Previously, he was vice chairman of Fannie Mae (1990-1991) and a managing director with Lehman Brothers (1985-1990).
As of 2006, he is a vice chairman of the private banking firm Perseus LLC, a position he has held since 2001. He is also a board member at Goldman Sachs, Gannett Company, Inc., a media holding group, KB Home, a home construction firm, Target Corporation, Temple-Inland, and UnitedHealth Group.
Johnson has also served as chairman of both the Kennedy Center for the Arts (1996-2004) and the Brookings Institution (1994-2003). He is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Friends of Bilderberg, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Trilateral Commission.
On May 22, 2008, Democratic Party officials confidentially divulged that Obama had asked Johnson "to lead the process" for selecting Obama's running mate.[1] On June 4, 2008, Obama announced the formation of a three person committee to vet vice presidential candidates, including Johnson.[2] However, Johnson soon became a source of controversy when it was reported that he had received loans directly from Angelo Mozilo, the CEO of Countrywide Financial, a company implicated in the U.S. subprime mortgage lending crisis.[3] Although he was not accused of any wrongdoing and was initially defended by Obama on the grounds that he was simply an unpaid volunteer, Johnson announced he would step down from the vice-presidential vetting position on June 11, 2008 in order to avoid being a distraction to Obama's campaign. [4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_A._Johnson_(businessman)
Hell, Rothschilds
Hell, Rothschilds Goldman-Sachs get funny money hot off the 24 hour presses at below-market-rates--lol--even below The Orders homegrown terrorist, home-printed funky mimeographed clothesline funny money RATES, so why the fuck shouldnt Countrywide Subprimate Niggers and Spics give Fannie Mae Subprimate Niggers and Spics Jim Johnson the same special deal--gotta pass on the savings for ripping off worldwide Aryans to the tribe.
Pretty cool check kiting merry-go-round---from subprimate masses to Fannie Mae to Goldman-Sach...courtesy Federal Reserve...to guileless, worthless-note-purchasing Aryan chumps in Europe. A regular Wal Mart-Costco warehouse of funny money by the forklift, direct from kikery to chimps while Aryans foot the bill, their daughters get raped and murdered, and their sons get shit educations. How goddamned charming. You can really see the anti-Semitism and how kikery has been shamelessly wronged. Wish I could get the supers job for the janitorial contractor on their buildings. Id be on easy street.
These fuckers make the Weimar Republic look like historys greatest upstanding fighters of governmental and societal criminality.
That guy who heads up
That guy who heads up Countrywide reminds me of Paul McCartneys new girlfriends father. Or at least, her kike fathers friends.
I hope the transportation
I hope the transportation costs for Brinks to shuffleboard all that jew 3 card monte money around the DC corridor arent too high--otherwise, we might be facing an additional incremental interest rate adjustment, up or down or tossed out of helicopters, as the case may be.