There’s something ironic about watching the same Gucci loafer-wearing, steak-gargling Wall Street CEOs who blew up the world economy in 2008 now wringing their manicured hands over the horrors of the current trade war.

You’d think someone kicked their Labradoodle and peed in their pinot noir. But no—what’s really happening is that America is finally trying to cut itself a better deal at the global poker table, and these financial fat cats are losing their minds because the house (them) is finally getting screwed.

Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, David Solomon of Goldman Sachs (aka DJ D-Sol—because when he’s not foreclosing on your grandma, he spins house music as a hobby), and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America—you remember these guys, right? Yeah, the same dudes who helped orchestrate the 2008 mortgage crisis like it was a Vegas magic show gone nuclear.

These are the guys who got bailed out with our tax dollars, bought third yachts, and then had the brass balls to tell you how you needed to live within your means.

Now they’re on CNBC, lips quivering like Botoxed Instagram influencers, warning us about the damage of tariffs and the volatility in the markets. Translation: “My quarterly bonus might not hit eight figures this year, and that’s very upsetting, Chadwick.”

Let’s rewind for a second.

The Big Short Wasn’t Just a Movie. It Was a Blueprint of How Wall Street Operates.

Remember The Big Short? Steve Carell and Christian Bale basically turned a spreadsheet into a psychological thriller. That film showed the average American how Wall Street was a snake pit of leveraged lies and synthetic horse crap being packaged as “triple-A” investments. The real life villains—Lehman Brothers, AIG, JPMorgan, Goldman—were shoving garbage into the financial system like frat boys loading a cannon with tequila-soaked lies. And when it blew up? We paid for it.