By Mathew Carr
March 13, 2024 — I’ve been calling for some people to resign because there’s too much concentration of power at the top … and it’s not working out for the rest of us.
…plus …see the details here:
First, Bloomberg and Carney
My two Linked In posts from two weeks ago (I repeated the post):
Mike Bloomberg, Rob Verdonck, Heather Harris, Jamie Dimon , Mark Carney, Aaron Canty, Ken Cooper are you part of the 0.1% helping the 99.9% or working to suppress the rest ?
I invite you to make a choice.
If the former …. can you tell me how you are helping, if you would be so kind? How can you show that it is genuine and not a pretence, given the widening equality gap?
Do you (still) say climate whistleblowing wasn’t / isn’t a thing … given the seriously big jump in global temperatures the past 12 months or so?
Why did the Bloomberg Navex whistleblowing system become an “ethics” system?
If you’re really just about the 0.1%, why not own it?
Are you REALLY serious about 2030 Sustainable Development Goals? How do I show that?
Why did Bloomberg claim it didn’t know about my climate whistleblowing, Aaron, even though you specifically told me Bloomberg did not offer whistleblower protection (even though by UK law you should have offered it)?
[Note: I’ve been fighting for almost four years unfair judicial decisions that found against my unfair-dismissal lawsuit. I was sacked by Bloomberg News in May 2020. And yes I’m still going on about it because it’s a huge miscarriage of justice. Despite my loss in the courts, it’s still the case that Bloomberg, Carney and Dimon should give up at least some of their selfish power because they are making the world worse, not better…as I predicted would happen. See link at bottom for more. Even if I’m wrong about my unfair dismissal, I’m not wrong about how the unfair market structure benefits only a few …and everyone is beginning to realise this. These people — the 0.1% — are not getting their wealth and power via hard work and endeavour …they are getting it by rigging the markets …or by being middle men that get too much for doing too little.]
Jamie, given your recent fine for breaching whistleblowing laws (see below), do you think there is a cultural problem in the banking industry in relation to those speaking up against wrong doing? Or is the culture of wrong doing coming from the top?
Mark, how responsible is Goldman Sachs for the bad behavior / greed in banking and the bad regulation of banking, do you think? You spent 13 years at the investment bank, from 1988 to 2003. During your time there, you worked in their offices in Boston, London, New York City, Tokyo, and Toronto. You’ve since been a bank regulator. But were you not captured by the banks? You are in a good position to know.
Mark and Mike, do you have conflicts of interests in seeking to protect the climate and support the fossil fuel and banking sectors?
Shouldn’t you resign from your climate envoy roles because of your repeated failures to slow climate change? If not why not?
Sincerely, Mathew
(PS I’ve previously called for Bloomberg to be broken up)
Global sea-surface temperature surges so far this year

Jamie Dimon should resign as JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO because of this below …and
And even this week he is trying to stop the Fed from cutting interest rates – he’s only wanting more massive profits for his bank, which has made billions of dollars from higher rates (because he does not immediately pass on the higher rates to savers). He’s not for improving society and eroding the inequality gap. We’ve had enough of this type of so-called leadership. It’s selfish and serving mainly the 8 million most rich and powerful people on earth (the 0.1% who are suppressing, containing and abusing the 99.9%).
The mainstream media rely on revenue from banks to survive. That’s why they are not questioning the lopsided narrative.
It’s the biggest stitch up in global history.

Source CarrZee, Google Gemini

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