Wednesday, October 20, 2010

UK Spending Review hits after poorly regulated banker's failures rip public services, jobs, armed forces & consumer protection apart

HMS Ark RoyalHMS Ark Royal, scrapped along with the rest of us to pay off banker’s debts. ON the day it has been announced nearly 500,000 public sector jobs are to go, as well as £7 billion slashed from the welfare budget, Police funding cut by 4% a year & the retirement age to rise from 65 to 66 by 2020 – to name but a few of Chancellor George Osborne’s decisions in the spending review, and reflecting on developments earlier in the week where we were told our armed services are to be cut to the bone, and then some, perhaps we should take a minute out to remember exactly why this is happening, and exactly who is responsible.

Fred GoodwinSir Fred Goodwin who ruined the Royal Bank of Scotland, dubbed “The World’s Worst Banker” by the media. Exactly why these cuts are happening and exactly who is responsible are not difficult questions to answer. The reckless actions of our bankers through the lack of regulation in the banking sector caused it, by bringing down many of the UK’s ‘premier’ financial institutions to the point the former Labour Government had to use massive amounts of public money to prop up the likes of the Royal Bank of Scotland, HBOS & others.

Lack of regulation is nothing new however, as thousands of consumers of legal services in Scotland discover every year, as well as tens of thousands of consumers a year in England & Wales. Since before I can remember, the Scots legal profession have ripped-off the public on an almost unregulated basis. Complaints, scandals, financial turmoil, client losses, you-name-it, was all guaranteed to be covered up by one self regulator in Scotland, the Law Society of Scotland, and one self regulator in England & Wales, the Law Society of England & Wales.

Now in 2010, with regard to legal services, the rest of the UK has moved on, with Law Society of England & Wales no longer controlling regulation of the UK’s legal services marketplace or, crucially the vast amounts of money which flow within it. However in Scotland, the exact opposite is true, with Law Society of Scotland still ruling the roost on every issue imaginable such as regulation, complaints, deciding who can provide legal services to the public, how much can be charged by way of fees, and inevitably also controlling exactly who among us can actually have access to justice and who cannot.

The Law Society of Scotland even controls financial claims made against [equally-as-reckless-&-corrupt-as-the-bankers] Scots law firms who will still continue to dominate Scotland’s legal services market, dressed up by the Law Society as providing access to justice, however in reality they operate little more than the same multi billion pound business full of scandals, financial crashes & fraud run by many of our less than glorious bankers who have, fortunately for them, found new highly paid jobs to keep their billionaire lifestyles going, while the remainder of the UK ends up on the scrap heap, along with the Ark Royal.

Without doubt, lack of regulation in the banking sector has ripped our country’s public services, armed services, and economy clean apart. Politicians have since claimed they have done everything to prevent this happening again, and will ensure the bankers pay it all back. Personally, I doubt many believe this. The bankers will not pay it back. They couldn’t really care less about the rest of the country, as we found out in a BBC Scotland report “Trust me, I’m a banker” although the programme must have been so good, its no longer available on the BBC’s iplayer to watch again.

So, tough new regulation for bankers so we never have another banking crisis again, ever, in the history of the planet. I don't think so. However, no tough new regulation for the billions of pounds of consumer’s money swishing around law firms in Scotland’s legal services market. No, that would be just too much regulation and too much consumer protection for Scots, and anyone who argues we should have increased and fully independent regulation of legal services in Scotland and all those billions sloshing around in it under the control of one, very closed shop unaccountable self regulator, is just plain wrong, right ?

A reminder of exactly what happened at the Royal Bank of Scotland, which cost us billions to bail out, sacrificing thousands of jobs, livelihoods & even the prestige of the country to do so, while also reminding us of who defended the actions of those who caused it :

Ex-Law Society Chief Exec, now University of Glasgow Legal Practice Director Douglas Mill said Sir Fred Goodwin’s failure was down to lack of regulation ! (click image to watch video)

Justice ? or just us who would allow it ? Ex-Bank boss Goodwin who ruined the bank (and the country) gets huge pension, keeps knighthood while bringing UK's Treasury, public services & armed forces to their knees. (click image to watch video)

A nice little earner for Sir Fred Goodwin, and he mostly got away with it … (click image to watch video)

6 comments:

  1. ITS NOT ALL BAD NEWS ! AT LEAST SOME LAWYERS ARE GETTING THE SACK TOO !

    http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/scotland/Leading--law-firm-to.6590144.jp

    Leading law firm to axe staff

    Published Date: 20 October 2010
    By SHÂN ROSS

    ONE of Scotland's leading law firms is to axe legal staff due to the downturn in the economy, it was confirmed last night.

    McGrigors, which employs about 800 people across the UK, plans to cut about 40 senior associate and other lawyer posts as well as a number of support staff. Posts at partner level are not being targeted.

    The firm has three offices north of the Border - in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen - as well as others in London, Manchester and the Falkland Islands. Jobs losses are expected to be across its operations in Scotland, England and Northern Ireland.

    A spokesman for McGrigors, which in June was named National Law Firm of the Year by the Lawyer magazine, said: "Unfortunately, over the past 12 months it has become increasingly clear that an immediate recovery is not going to emerge, and that we are instead facing a sustained period of market uncertainty - particularly while the effects of the public sector spending review become clear.

    "For this reason, we have decided to take steps to restructure the business in a way which more closely reflects client demand. I am sorry to confirm that we yesterday entered into a redundancy consultation."

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  2. and his nibs doesnt even have the decency to hand back his knighthood after ruining the country

    so much for titles !

    Mill's defence of him is really pathetic

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  3. My own opinion is this whole cuts thing is a bit of a distraction because there are too many people in the public sector anyway so time to have a clear out even if it was all caused by the bankers who deserve vilification all the way to hell as far as I am concerned!.

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  4. The bankers support lawyers when they need it so they dont get regulated and then the lawyers support the bankers when they need it so they dont get regulated.

    A perfect vicious circle but I could tell you a good use for the scrapped Ark Royal if you could find a way to stuff it with all those crooked lawyers !

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  5. A perfect vicious circle but I could tell you a good use for the scrapped Ark Royal if you could find a way to stuff it with all those crooked lawyers !

    stuff it full of lawyers and sink it ??

    Isnt that what they call A GOOD START !!

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  6. What a mess Peter. Fred the Shred, Mill, Cameron, Osbourne, the latter two say we are In this economic disaster together, but I do not see politicians, bankers or Mill suffering the consequences.

    It is not only time to end self regulation, it is time for a repeat of the protests Thatcher's community charge triggered.

    Salmond will scream about the cuts, but he will be selective, by not criticising Mill's flock who screw clients and legal aid every day.

    This liberal conservative arrangement will reap the whirlwind because the Cleggs Cameron's & Osbournes are not In it with the electorate, they will not lose out. We are facing a winter of discontent. state actors always seem to be above the consequences of their actions.

    ReplyDelete

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