Bill Moyers Journal
Public Affairs Television
Transcript of April 3, 2009 interview with William K. Black
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04032009/transcript1.html
BILL MOYERS: Welcome to the Journal.
For months now, revelations
of the wholesale greed and blatant transgressions of Wall Street have reminded us that
"The Best Way to Rob a Bank Is to Own One." In fact, the man you're about to
meet wrote a book with just that title. It was based upon his experience as a tough
regulator during one of the darkest chapters in our financial history: the savings and
loan scandal in the late 1980s.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
These numbers as large as they are, vastly understate the problem of fraud.
BILL MOYERS: Bill Black was in New
York this week for a conference at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice where scholars
and journalists gathered to ask the question, "How do they get away with it?"
Well, no one has asked that question more often than Bill Black.
The former
Director of the Institute for Fraud Prevention now teaches Economics and Law at the
University of Missouri, Kansas City. During the savings and loan crisis, it was Black who
accused then-house speaker Jim Wright and five US Senators, including John Glenn and John
McCain, of doing favors for the S&L's in exchange for contributions and other perks.
The senators got off with a slap on the wrist, but so enraged was one of those bankers,
Charles Keating after whom the senate's so-called "Keating Five" were
named he sent a memo that read, in part, "get Black kill him
dead." Metaphorically, of course. Of course.
Now Black is
focused on an even greater scandal, and he spares no one not even the President he
worked hard to elect, Barack Obama. But his main targets are the Wall Street barons, heirs
of an earlier generation whose scandalous rip-offs of wealth back in the 1930s earned them
comparison to Al Capone and the mob, and the nickname "banksters."
Bill Black,
welcome to the Journal.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Thank you.
BILL MOYERS: I was taken with your
candor at the conference here in New York to hear you say that this crisis we're going
through, this economic and financial meltdown is driven by fraud. What's your definition
of fraud?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Fraud is deceit. And the essence of fraud is, "I create trust in you, and then I
betray that trust, and get you to give me something of value." And as a result,
there's no more effective acid against trust than fraud, especially fraud by top elites,
and that's what we have.
BILL MOYERS: In your book, you make
it clear that calculated dishonesty by people in charge is at the heart of most large
corporate failures and scandals, including, of course, the S&L, but is that true? Is
that what you're saying here, that it was in the boardrooms and the CEO offices where this
fraud began?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Absolutely.
BILL MOYERS: How did they do it? What
do you mean?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, the way that you do it is to make really bad loans, because they pay better. Then
you grow extremely rapidly, in other words, you're a Ponzi-like scheme. And the third
thing you do is we call it leverage. That just means borrowing a lot of money, and the
combination creates a situation where you have guaranteed record profits in the early
years. That makes you rich, through the bonuses that modern executive compensation has
produced. It also makes it inevitable that there's going to be a disaster down the road.
BILL MOYERS: So you're suggesting,
saying that CEOs of some of these banks and mortgage firms in order to increase their own
personal income, deliberately set out to make bad loans?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Yes.
BILL MOYERS: How do they get away
with it? I mean, what about their own checks and balances in the company? What about their
accounting divisions?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
All of those checks and balances report to the CEO, so if the CEO goes bad, all of the
checks and balances are easily overcome. And the art form is not simply to defeat those
internal controls, but to suborn them, to turn them into your greatest allies. And the
bonus programs are exactly how you do that.
BILL MOYERS: If I wanted to go
looking for the parties to this, with a good bird dog, where would you send me?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, that's exactly what hasn't happened. We haven't looked, all right? The Bush
Administration essentially got rid of regulation, so if nobody was looking, you were able
to do this with impunity and that's exactly what happened. Where would you look? You'd
look at the specialty lenders. The lenders that did almost all of their work in the
sub-prime and what's called Alt-A, liars' loans.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah. Liars' loans--
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Liars' loans.
BILL MOYERS: Why did they call them
liars' loans?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Because they were liars' loans.
BILL MOYERS: And they knew it?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
They knew it. They knew that they were frauds.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Liars' loans mean that we don't check. You tell us what your income is. You tell us what
your job is. You tell us what your assets are, and we agree to believe you. We won't check
on any of those things. And by the way, you get a better deal if you inflate your income
and your job history and your assets.
BILL MOYERS: You think they really
said that to borrowers?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
We know that they said that to borrowers. In fact, they were also called, in the trade,
ninja loans.
BILL MOYERS: Ninja?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Yeah, because no income verification, no job verification, no asset verification.
BILL MOYERS: You're talking about
significant American companies.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Huge! One company produced as many losses as the entire Savings and Loan debacle.
BILL MOYERS: Which company?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
IndyMac specialized in making liars' loans. In 2006 alone, it sold $80 billion dollars of
liars' loans to other companies. $80 billion.
BILL MOYERS: And was this happening
exclusively in this sub-prime mortgage business?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
No, and that's a big part of the story as well. Even prime loans began to have
non-verification. Even Ronald Reagan, you know, said, "Trust, but verify." They
just gutted the verification process. We know that will produce enormous fraud, under
economic theory, criminology theory, and two thousand years of life experience.
BILL MOYERS: Is it possible that
these complex instruments were deliberately created so swindlers could exploit them?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Oh, absolutely. This stuff, the exotic stuff that you're talking about was created out of
things like liars' loans, that were known to be extraordinarily bad. And now it was
getting triple-A ratings. Now a triple-A rating is supposed to mean there is zero credit
risk. So you take something that not only has significant, it has crushing risk. That's
why it's toxic. And you create this fiction that it has zero risk. That itself, of course,
is a fraudulent exercise. And again, there was nobody looking, during the Bush years. So
finally, only a year ago, we started to have a Congressional investigation of some of
these rating agencies, and it's scandalous what came out. What we know now is that the
rating agencies never looked at a single loan file. When they finally did look, after the
markets had completely collapsed, they found, and I'm quoting Fitch, the smallest of the
rating agencies, "the results were disconcerting, in that there was the appearance of
fraud in nearly every file we examined."
BILL MOYERS: So if your assumption is
correct, your evidence is sound, the bank, the lending company, created a fraud. And the
ratings agency that is supposed to test the value of these assets knowingly entered into
the fraud. Both parties are committing fraud by intention.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Right, and the investment banker that we call it pooling puts together these
bad mortgages, these liars' loans, and creates the toxic waste of these derivatives. All
of them do that. And then they sell it to the world and the world just thinks because it
has a triple-A rating it must actually be safe. Well, instead, there are 60 and 80 percent
losses on these things, because of course they, in reality, are toxic waste.
BILL MOYERS: You're describing what
Bernie Madoff did to a limited number of people. But you're saying it's systemic, a
systemic Ponzi scheme.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Oh, Bernie was a piker. He doesn't even get into the front ranks of a Ponzi scheme...
BILL MOYERS: But you're saying our
system became a Ponzi scheme.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Our system...
BILL MOYERS: Our financial system...
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Became a Ponzi scheme. Everybody was buying a pig in the poke. But they were buying a pig
in the poke with a pretty pink ribbon, and the pink ribbon said, "Triple-A."
BILL MOYERS: Is there a law against
liars' loans?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Not directly, but there, of course, many laws against fraud, and liars' loans are
fraudulent.
BILL MOYERS: Because...
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Because they're not going to be repaid and because they had false representations. They
involve deceit, which is the essence of fraud.
BILL MOYERS: Why is it so hard to
prosecute? Why hasn't anyone been brought to justice over this?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Because they didn't even begin to investigate the major lenders until the market had
actually collapsed, which is completely contrary to what we did successfully in the
Savings and Loan crisis, right? Even while the institutions were reporting they were the
most profitable savings and loan in America, we knew they were frauds. And we were moving
to close them down. Here, the Justice Department, even though it very appropriately
warned, in 2004, that there was an epidemic...
BILL MOYERS: Who did?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
The FBI publicly warned, in September 2004 that there was an epidemic of mortgage fraud,
that if it was allowed to continue it would produce a crisis at least as large as the
Savings and Loan debacle. And that they were going to make sure that they didn't let that
happen. So what goes wrong? After 9/11, the attacks, the Justice Department transfers 500
white-collar specialists in the FBI to national terrorism. Well, we can all understand
that. But then, the Bush administration refused to replace the missing 500 agents. So even
today, again, as you say, this crisis is 1000 times worse, perhaps, certainly 100 times
worse, than the Savings and Loan crisis. There are one-fifth as many FBI agents as worked
the Savings and Loan crisis.
BILL MOYERS: You talk about the Bush
administration. Of course, there's that famous photograph of some of the regulators in
2003, who come to a press conference with a chainsaw suggesting that they're going to
slash, cut business loose from regulation, right?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, they succeeded. And in that picture, by the way, the other three of the other
guys with pruning shears are the...
BILL MOYERS: That's right.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
They're the trade representatives. They're the lobbyists for the bankers. And everybody's
grinning. The government's working together with the industry to destroy regulation. Well,
we now know what happens when you destroy regulation. You get the biggest financial
calamity of anybody under the age of 80.
BILL MOYERS: But I can point you to
statements by Larry Summers, who was then Bill Clinton's Secretary of the Treasury, or the
other Clinton Secretary of the Treasury, Rubin. I can point you to suspects in both
parties, right?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
There were two really big things, under the Clinton administration. One, they got rid of
the law that came out of the real-world disasters of the Great Depression. We learned a
lot of things in the Great Depression. And one is we had to separate what's called
commercial banking from investment banking. That's the Glass-Steagall law. But we thought
we were much smarter, supposedly. So we got rid of that law, and that was bipartisan. And
the other thing is we passed a law, because there was a very good regulator, Brooksley
Born, that everybody should know about and probably doesn't. She tried to do the right
thing to regulate one of these exotic derivatives that you're talking about. We call them
C.D.F.S. And Summers, Rubin, and Phil Gramm came together to say not only will we block
this particular regulation. We will pass a law that says you can't regulate. And it's this
type of derivative that is most involved in the AIG scandal. AIG all by itself, cost the
same as the entire Savings and Loan debacle.
BILL MOYERS: What did AIG contribute?
What did they do wrong?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
They made bad loans. Their type of loan was to sell a guarantee, right? And they charged a
lot of fees up front. So, they booked a lot of income. Paid enormous bonuses. The bonuses
we're thinking about now, they're much smaller than these bonuses that were also the
product of accounting fraud. And they got very, very rich. But, of course, then they had
guaranteed this toxic waste. These liars' loans. Well, we've just gone through why those
toxic waste, those liars' loans, are going to have enormous losses. And so, you have to
pay the guarantee on those enormous losses. And you go bankrupt. Except that you don't in
the modern world, because you've come to the United States, and the taxpayers play the
fool. Under Secretary Geithner and under Secretary Paulson before him... we took $5
billion dollars, for example, in U.S. taxpayer money. And sent it to a huge Swiss Bank
called UBS. At the same time that that bank was defrauding the taxpayers of America. And
we were bringing a criminal case against them. We eventually get them to pay a $780
million fine, but wait, we gave them $5 billion. So, the taxpayers of America paid the
fine of a Swiss Bank. And why are we bailing out somebody who that is defrauding us?
BILL MOYERS: And why...
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
How mad is this?
BILL MOYERS: What is your explanation
for why the bankers who created this mess are still calling the shots?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, that, especially after what's just happened at G.M., that's... it's scandalous.
BILL MOYERS: Why are they firing the
president of G.M. and not firing the head of all these banks that are involved?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
There are two reasons. One, they're much closer to the bankers. These are people from the
banking industry. And they have a lot more sympathy. In fact, they're outright hostile to
autoworkers, as you can see. They want to bash all of their contracts. But when they get
to banking, they say, âcontracts, sacred.' But the other element of your
question is we don't want to change the bankers, because if we do, if we put honest people
in, who didn't cause the problem, their first job would be to find the scope of the
problem. And that would destroy the cover up.
BILL MOYERS: The cover up?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Sure. The cover up.
BILL MOYERS: That's a serious charge.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Of course.
BILL MOYERS: Who's covering up?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Geithner is charging, is covering up. Just like Paulson did before him. Geithner is
publicly saying that it's going to take $2 trillion a trillion is a thousand
billion $2 trillion taxpayer dollars to deal with this problem. But they're
allowing all the banks to report that they're not only solvent, but fully capitalized.
Both statements can't be true. It can't be that they need $2 trillion, because they have
masses losses, and that they're fine.
These are all
people who have failed. Paulson failed, Geithner failed. They were all promoted because
they failed, not because...
BILL MOYERS: What do you mean?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, Geithner has, was one of our nation's top regulators, during the entire subprime
scandal, that I just described. He took absolutely no effective action. He gave no
warning. He did nothing in response to the FBI warning that there was an epidemic of
fraud. All this pig in the poke stuff happened under him. So, in his phrase about legacy
assets. Well he's a failed legacy regulator.
BILL MOYERS: But he denies that he
was a regulator. Let me show you some of his testimony before Congress. Take a look at
this.
TIMOTHY
GEITHNER:I've never been a regulator, for better or worse. And I think you're right to say
that we have to be very skeptical that regulation can solve all of these problems. We have
parts of our system that are overwhelmed by regulation.
Overwhelmed by
regulation! It wasn't the absence of regulation that was the problem, it was despite the
presence of regulation you've got huge risks that build up.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, he may be right that he never regulated, but his job was to regulate. That was his
mission statement.
BILL MOYERS: As?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
As president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is responsible for regulating
most of the largest bank holding companies in America. And he's completely wrong that we
had too much regulation in some of these areas. I mean, he gives no details, obviously.
But that's just plain wrong.
BILL MOYERS: How is this happening? I
mean why is it happening?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Until you get the facts, it's harder to blow all this up. And, of course, the entire
strategy is to keep people from getting the facts.
BILL MOYERS: What facts?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
The facts about how bad the condition of the banks is. So, as long as I keep the old CEO
who caused the problems, is he going to go vigorously around finding the problems? Finding
the frauds?
BILL MOYERS: You--
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Taking away people's bonuses?
BILL MOYERS: To hear you say this is
unusual because you supported Barack Obama, during the campaign. But you're seeming
disillusioned now.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, certainly in the financial sphere, I am. I think, first, the policies are
substantively bad. Second, I think they completely lack integrity. Third, they violate the
rule of law. This is being done just like Secretary Paulson did it. In violation of the
law. We adopted a law after the Savings and Loan crisis, called the Prompt Corrective
Action Law. And it requires them to close these institutions. And they're refusing to obey
the law.
BILL MOYERS: In other words, they
could have closed these banks without nationalizing them?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, you do a receivership. No one -- Ronald Reagan did receiverships. Nobody called it
nationalization.
BILL MOYERS: And that's a law?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
That's the law.
BILL MOYERS: So, Paulson could have
done this? Geithner could do this?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Not could. Was mandated--
BILL MOYERS: By the law.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
By the law.
BILL MOYERS: This law, you're talking
about.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Yes.
BILL MOYERS: What the reason they
give for not doing it?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
They ignore it. And nobody calls them on it.
BILL MOYERS: Well, where's Congress?
Where's the press? Where--
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, where's the Pecora investigation?
BILL MOYERS: The what?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
The Pecora investigation. The Great Depression, we said, "Hey, we have to learn the
facts. What caused this disaster, so that we can take steps, like pass the Glass-Steagall
law, that will prevent future disasters?" Where's our investigation?
What would happen
if after a plane crashes, we said, "Oh, we don't want to look in the past. We want to
be forward looking. Many people might have been, you know, we don't want to pass blame.
No. We have a nonpartisan, skilled inquiry. We spend lots of money on, get really bright
people. And we find out, to the best of our ability, what caused every single major plane
crash in America. And because of that, aviation has an extraordinarily good safety record.
We ought to follow the same policies in the financial sphere. We have to find out what
caused the disasters, or we will keep reliving them. And here, we've got a double tragedy.
It isn't just that we are failing to learn from the mistakes of the past. We're failing to
learn from the successes of the past.
BILL MOYERS: What do you mean?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
In the Savings and Loan debacle, we developed excellent ways for dealing with the frauds,
and for dealing with the failed institutions. And for 15 years after the Savings and Loan
crisis, didn't matter which party was in power, the U.S. Treasury Secretary would fly over
to Tokyo and tell the Japanese, "You ought to do things the way we did in the Savings
and Loan crisis, because it worked really well. Instead you're covering up the bank
losses, because you know, you say you need confidence. And so, we have to lie to the
people to create confidence. And it doesn't work. You will cause your recession to
continue and continue." And the Japanese call it the lost decade. That was the
result. So, now we get in trouble, and what do we do? We adopt the Japanese approach of
lying about the assets. And you know what? It's working just as well as it did in Japan.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah. Are you saying
that Timothy Geithner, the Secretary of the Treasury, and others in the administration,
with the banks, are engaged in a cover up to keep us from knowing what went wrong?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Absolutely.
BILL MOYERS: You are.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Absolutely, because they are scared to death. All right? They're scared to death of a
collapse. They're afraid that if they admit the truth, that many of the large banks are
insolvent. They think Americans are a bunch of cowards, and that we'll run screaming to
the exits. And we won't rely on deposit insurance. And, by the way, you can rely on
deposit insurance. And it's foolishness. All right? Now, it may be worse than that. You
can impute more cynical motives. But I think they are sincerely just panicked about,
"We just can't let the big banks fail." That's wrong.
BILL MOYERS: But what might happen,
at this point, if in fact they keep from us the true health of the banks?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Well, then the banks will, as they did in Japan, either stay enormously weak, or Treasury
will be forced to increasingly absurd giveaways of taxpayer money. We've seen how horrific
AIG -- and remember, they kept secrets from everyone.
BILL MOYERS: A.I.G. did?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
What we're doing with -- no, Treasury and both administrations. The Bush administration
and now the Obama administration kept secret from us what was being done with AIG. AIG was
being used secretly to bail out favored banks like UBS and like Goldman Sachs. Secretary
Paulson's firm, that he had come from being CEO. It got the largest amount of money. $12.9
billion. And they didn't want us to know that. And it was only Congressional pressure, and
not Congressional pressure, by the way, on Geithner, but Congressional pressure on AIG.
Where Congress
said, "We will not give you a single penny more unless we know who received the
money." And, you know, when he was Treasury Secretary, Paulson created a
recommendation group to tell Treasury what they ought to do with AIG. And he put Goldman
Sachs on it.
BILL MOYERS: Even though Goldman
Sachs had a big vested stake.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Massive stake. And even though he had just been CEO of Goldman Sachs before becoming
Treasury Secretary. Now, in most stages in American history, that would be a scandal of
such proportions that he wouldn't be allowed in civilized society.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah, like a conflict of
interest, it seems.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Massive conflict of interests.
BILL MOYERS: So, how did he get away
with it?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK: I
don't know whether we've lost our capability of outrage. Or whether the cover up has been
so successful that people just don't have the facts to react to it.
BILL MOYERS: Who's going to get the
facts?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
We need some chairmen or chairwomen--
BILL MOYERS: In Congress.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
--in Congress, to hold the necessary hearings. And we can blast this out. But if you leave
the failed CEOs in place, it isn't just that they're terrible business people, though they
are. It isn't just that they lack integrity, though they do. Because they were engaged in
these frauds. But they're not going to disclose the truth about the assets.
BILL MOYERS: And we have to know
that, in order to know what?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
To know everything. To know who committed the frauds. Whose bonuses we should recover. How
much the assets are worth. How much they should be sold for. Is the bank insolvent, such
that we should resolve it in this way? It's the predicate, right? You need to know the
facts to make intelligent decisions. And they're deliberately leaving in place the people
that caused the problem, because they don't want the facts. And this is not new. The
Reagan Administration's central priority, at all times, during the Savings and Loan
crisis, was covering up the losses.
BILL MOYERS: So, you're saying that
people in power, political power, and financial power, act in concert when their own
behinds are in the ringer, right?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
That's right. And it's particularly a crisis that brings this out, because then the class
of the banker says, "You've got to keep the information away from the public or
everything will collapse. If they understand how bad it is, they'll run for the
exits."
BILL MOYERS: Yeah, and this week in
New York, at this conference, you described this as more than a financial crisis. You
called it a moral crisis.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Why?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Because it is a fundamental lack of integrity. But also because, if you look back at
crises, an economist who is also a presidential appointee, as a regulator in the Savings
and Loan industry, right here in New York, Larry White, wrote a book about the Savings and
Loan crisis. And he said, you know, one of the most interesting questions is why so few
people engaged in fraud? Because objectively, you could have gotten away with it. But only
about ten percent of the CEOs, engaged in fraud. So, 90 percent of them were restrained by
ethics and integrity. So, far more than law or by F.B.I. agents, it's our integrity that
often prevents the greatest abuses. And what we had in this crisis, instead of the Savings
and Loan, is the most elite institutions in America engaging or facilitating fraud.
BILL MOYERS: This wound that you say
has been inflicted on American life. The loss of worker's income. And security and
pensions and future happened, because of the misconduct of a relatively few, very
well-heeled people, in very well-decorated corporate suites, right?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
Right.
BILL MOYERS: It was relatively a
handful of people.
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
And their ideologies, which swept away regulation. So, in the example, regulation means
that cheaters don't prosper. So, instead of being bad for capitalism, it's what saves
capitalism. "Honest purveyors prosper" is what we want. And you need regulation
and law enforcement to be able to do this. The tragedy of this crisis is it didn't need to
happen at all.
BILL MOYERS: When you wake in the
middle of the night, thinking about your work, what do you make of that? What do you tell
yourself?
WILLIAM K.
BLACK:
There's a saying that we took great comfort in. It's actually by the Dutch, who were
fighting this impossible war for independence against what was then the most powerful
nation in the world, Spain. And their motto was, "It is not necessary to hope in
order to persevere."
Now, going
forward, get rid of the people that have caused the problems. That's a pretty
straightforward thing, as well. Why would we keep CEOs and CFOs and other senior officers,
that caused the problems? That's facially nuts. That's our current system.
So stop that current system. We're hiding the losses, instead of trying to find out the real losses. Stop that, because you need good information to make good decisions, right? Follow what works instead of what's failed. Start appointing people who have records of success, instead of records of failure. That would be another nice place to start. There are lots of things we can do. Even today, as late as it is. Even though they've had a terrible start to the administration. They could change, and they could change within weeks. And by the way, the folks who are the better regulators, they paid their taxes. So, you can get them through the vetting process a lot quicker.
BILL MOYERS: William Black, thank you very much for being with me on the Journal.
WILLIAM K. BLACK: Thank you so much.