Ordinary Americans are paying to bail out reckless investors who gambled their money away on "risky" technology start-ups.
Chris Garaffa told Sputnik that venture capitalists were lobbying hard for the US government's emergency takeover of California's Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), which went insolvent last week after a sudden run by its crisis hit tech-sector depositors.
That wave of major withdrawals exposed a black hole in its asset portfolio of government bonds, which had been undermined by the Federal Reserve's decision to hike interest rates in the face of rampant inflation — ultimately caused by President Joe Biden's sanctions on Russia.
"We have bailed out a number of venture capitalists and investors who provide actually no real benefit to Silicon Valley, to the world, except the fact that they have money and they choose to give it to what turned out to be some pretty risky investments," Garaffa said.
"That's how we should be looking at this," he added. "The class divide between those of us who just provided the money to save those who invest, who put their investments in SVB, and the people who actually put the investments in SVB."
The commentator said the likes of German tech magnate Peter Thiel, Sam Altman — founder of 'startup accelerator' Y Combinator — and IT sector investor Jason Calacanis had been "spent all weekend basically on Twitter, on podcasts and blogs" arguing that the US treasury should bail out the failed bank for the sake of "you know, job creation and stuff like that."
Those "super wealthy angel investors and venture capitalists" are "some of the same people who are saying... we can't or shouldn't be spending money to solve the... homeless crisis in California" or that student debt is "a problem of the individual," he said.
"But when it comes to their investments, in fact, then we should all take responsibility for their so-called bad choices," Garaffa pointed out. "I say they should all just learn how to code and get a job."