AIG - Down to Zero
Become a member: Subscribe
Solari’s Building Wealth materials are organized to inspire and support your personal strategic and financial planning.

Missing Money
Articles and video discussions of the $21 Trillion dollars missing from the U.S. government
No posts
AIG – Down to Zero

It would appear that AIG is selling everything but it’s black budget operations, which the government will then essentially own. Sounds a bit circular to us but that is how document management on very big frauds seem to go these days. Only the Treasury and the Fed will know where all that money went and no amount of Freedom of Information requests and subpoenas will require them to tell.
AIG: Doomed to Fail?
CNNMoney.com (28 Apr 09)
2 Comments
Comments are closed.
Our mission is to help you live a free and inspired life. This includes building wealth in ways that build real wealth in the wider economy. We believe that personal and family wealth is a critical ingredient of both individual freedom and community, health and well-being.
Nothing on The Solari Report should be taken as individual investment, legal, or medical advice. Anyone seeking investment, legal, medical, or other professional advice for his or her personal situation is advised to seek out a qualified advisor or advisors and provide as much information as possible to the advisor in order that such advisor can take into account all relevant circumstances, objectives, and risks before rendering an opinion as to the appropriate strategy.
Be the first to know about new articles, series and events.

2 Comments
-
The bailed-out insurance giant AIG has come under intense criticism for handing out hundreds of millions in bonuses to top executives and billions in payments to other financial firms, all while receiving taxpayer aid. But new disclosures on its handling of insurance claims add a fresh angle to the ongoing scrutiny of AIG. According to the investigative website ProPublica, AIG and other top insurance companies have routinely denied medical benefits to civilian contractors wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many workers have returned home to face long, grinding battles for basic medical care, artificial limbs and psychological counseling.
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/4/28/injured_war_zone_contractors_fight_to
-
These insurance companies don’t limit denials to returning workers. I have direct knowledge that State Farm and Allstate routinely deny claims. This practice includes far more than AIG. AIG, however, may be the tallest non-paying insurance hawk at the trough. The movie “The Rainmaker” comes to mind . . . .
Comments are closed.
The bailed-out insurance giant AIG has come under intense criticism for handing out hundreds of millions in bonuses to top executives and billions in payments to other financial firms, all while receiving taxpayer aid. But new disclosures on its handling of insurance claims add a fresh angle to the ongoing scrutiny of AIG. According to the investigative website ProPublica, AIG and other top insurance companies have routinely denied medical benefits to civilian contractors wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many workers have returned home to face long, grinding battles for basic medical care, artificial limbs and psychological counseling.
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/4/28/injured_war_zone_contractors_fight_to
These insurance companies don’t limit denials to returning workers. I have direct knowledge that State Farm and Allstate routinely deny claims. This practice includes far more than AIG. AIG, however, may be the tallest non-paying insurance hawk at the trough. The movie “The Rainmaker” comes to mind . . . .