Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at bankster.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Bankster.
Examples
-
Just like 9/11, just like the Bankster Bailout, just like health care.
-
Of course, the fiscal policies of The One and his Bankster masters are only increasing the likelihood of hyperinflation.
The Wall Street rants, and gets it wrong (Jack Bog's Blog) 2009
-
So it's full steam ahead for Bankster Jr. Now maybe SB Randy will take him to the Ringside for more plotting of of evil-doings.
-
And I believe as we head towards election time with leaders whose only plan for creating new jobs is a few more workers manicuring soon-to-be even bigger Bankster bonus-fueled estates coupled with a few more government handouts, this lesson will be learned once again.
Dylan Ratigan: Wall Street Reform: Politicians Lie, Media Applauds, America Suffers 2010
-
The terrorists to be feared are actually the Wall Street Bankster, Peak OIl Gangsters, and the Military-Industrial - Insurance profiteers mentioned by Bruce.
Statement of 911 Widows In Response to 12/25 Terror Attempt 2010
-
The terrorists to be feared are actually the Wall Street Bankster, Peak OIl Gangsters, and the Military-Industrial - Insurance profiteers mentioned by Bruce.
Statement of 911 Widows In Response to 12/25 Terror Attempt 2010
-
First let me say that self-selected Bankster subscribers are generally a bunch of, well, angry Americans.
-
Jobs with Justice, SEIU, AFL-CIO and the broad coalition Americans for Financial Reform are all calling for a teeny tiny Bankster tax, 0.20 percent, on the sale or purchase of a share of stock, bonds or derivatives, which would would help us to recoup our losses and put the money to work rebuilding America.
-
When the debate on the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform bill was signed into law, the Bankster brigade generally gave the bill an "F," especially for failing to cut the "too big to fail" financial institutions down to size or restore depression-era Glass-Steagall protections.
-
One Bankster subscriber said: "the legislation is basically a Trojan horse that is a 'gift' for the people on the surface, but actually contains the seeds of a future defeat."
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.