In the past two years, there have been more losses than during any other two-year period in history.
Not "than during any other two-year period since the Great Depression."
In history.
Insurance Companies and Catastrophe Claims?
No.
Wall Street?
No.
Weis. See generally Thayer Evans, "Commitment to Notre Dame Is No Joke For Top Recruits" (New York Times Nat'l Ed., Sports Section, p. 6, col. 1, Sunday, January 4, 2008).
And the destruction of an enormous amount of the value established by the Notre Dame Fighting Irish Football Team before he came.
So, does Mr. Weis work for Wall Street, that he too still has bonuses to expect and a job to hold at a time when demonstrated incompetence and previously unseen failure, seem to be guarantees for securing a personal portfolio while other people suffer the consequences instead?
There should be no reward for demonstrated incompetence. There should be shame in producing previously unseen failure. That there is a reward, and there is no shame, are evidence of a much greater problem than some people may have realized before now.
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