
Protecting Capitalism Case by Case
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Narrated by:
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John McLain
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By:
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Eliot Spitzer
About this listen
Eliot Spitzer built his reputation as Attorney General of New York by redefining the role and purpose of the public prosecutor. The cases he brought against the largest corporations on Wall Street and others - both criminal and civil - targeted pervasive misconduct and structural flaws in the economy that were metastasizing in the years leading up to 2008. The cases themselves and the remedies they produced were precedent setting.
Today, after the financial crisis has exposed the faults that were brewing and the ever-expanding gap between the 1% and the 99%, it is clear that Eliot Spitzer was prescient.
This is Eliot Spitzer’s first account of the high-profile cases he prosecuted, initially as an assistant district attorney and later as Attorney General. The book is organized by the lessons that can be learned from these cases. Well-written and argued in the first person, this is an account only Eliot Spitzer could write. The book describes the tension between capitalism, for which Eliot Spitzer is a staunch advocate, and the need for government to rein in excesses and protect those who cannot protect themselves.
This is a book for anyone interested in the positive force of government and the behaviors and economic roles of the largest American corporations. Its message is that we will always need a vigilant government presence, and that ultimately American capitalism will be better for it.
©2013 Eliot Spitzer (P)2013 Audible, Inc.Editorial reviews
John McLain narrates Eliot Spitzer's first-person account of cases he prosecuted while serving as New York's Attorney General. This is nonfiction at its most riveting, and McLean's deep, booming voice adds drama to each story, or lesson, that the audiobook offers. Championing both strong government presence and sustainable capitalism, Spitzer uses his incredible real-life experiences to explain the complex economic and behavioral principles behind his own policies and politics. Listeners will be raptly attentive to the particular role of government Spitzer advocates and by the lessons Spitzer has learned from experience, which he now shares.
Critic reviews
The book also provides great explanations to the 2008 financial crisis and how it was predictable and how it was rooted in the conflict of interests practices (violation of fiduciary duties) and the structural deficiencies in the financial industry that reward irresponsible risk taking without downside on those who take the risks (using other people money OPM).
The many examples provided about anti-trust lawsuits were not only interesting stories to listen to but also very educational about anti-competition practices in the private sector that you might think they only exists in movies but they are actually a reality.
I do not agree with everything mentioned in the book such as raising taxes policy and supporting the inheritance taxes.
I believe the author Eliot Spitzer was a very effective attorney general and excellent governor of NY, he was truly a great blessing to the public sector.
I think he was a great fighter for the public interest but a poor fighter for himself, and he should not have given up because of scandal and be tooooo much apologetic about it (President Trump had much bigger scandals and became President). Media is NOT the people. We make mistakes and learn from them then move on, the enemies/opponents, of course, will take advantage of these mistakes.
I believe he should have kept fighting for himself and his public career as hard as he fought for the public interest. He was a strong defender for the public and can be a great president if he believes he can.
Great practical book
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