Barack Obama’s Address To Wall Street

Eight months later, the work of recovery continues. And although I will never be satisfied while people are out of work and our financial system is weakened, we can be confident that the storms of the past two years are beginning to break. 

In fact, while there continues to be a need for government involvement to stabilize the financial system, that necessity is waning. . . . Unfortunately, there are some in the financial industry who are misreading this moment. Instead of learning the lessons of Lehman and the crisis from which we are still recovering, they are choosing to ignore them.  They do so not just at their own peril, but at our nation’s.

Obama’s full remarks, as prepared for delivery, after the jump.

Thank you all for being here and for your warm welcome. It’s a privilege to be in historic Federal Hall. It was here more than two centuries ago that our first Congress served and our first President was inaugurated. It was here, in the early days of our Republic, that Hamilton and Jefferson debated how best to administer a young economy and to ensure that our nation rewarded the talents and drive of its people. Two centuries later, we still grapple with these questions – questions made more acute in moments of crisis. 

It was one year ago that we experienced just such a crisis. As investors and pension-holders watched with dread and dismay, and after a series of emergency meetings often conducted in the dead of the night, several of the world’s largest and oldest financial institutions had fallen, either bankrupt, bought, or bailed out: Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, AIG, Washington Mutual, Wachovia.

A week before this began, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had been taken over by the government. Other large firms teetered on the brink of insolvency. Credit markets froze as banks refused to lend not only to families and businesses but to one another. Five trillion dollars of Americans’ household wealth evaporated in the span of just three months. 

Congress and the previous administration took difficult but necessary action in the days and months that followed. Nevertheless, when this administration walked through the door in January, the situation remained urgent. The markets had fallen sharply; credit was not flowing. It was feared that the largest banks – those that remained standing – had too little capital and far too much exposure to risky loans. And the consequences had spread far beyond the streets of lower Manhattan.

This was no longer just a financial crisis; it had become a full-blown economic crisis, with home prices sinking, businesses struggling to access affordable credit, and the economy shedding an average of 700,000 jobs each month. 

We could not separate what was happening in the corridors of our financial institutions from what was happening on factory floors and around kitchen tables. Home foreclosures linked those who took out home loans and those who repackaged those loans as securities. A lack of access to affordable credit threatened the health of large firms and small businesses, as well as all those whose jobs depended on them. And a weakened financial system weakened the broader economy, which in turn further weakened the financial system.

The only way to address successfully any of these challenges was to address them together, and so this administration – with terrific leadership by my Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner, as well the Chair of my Council of Economic Advisers, Christy Romer, and the Chair of the National Economic Council, Larry Summers  – moved quickly on all fronts, initializing a financial stability plan to rescue the system from the crisis and restart lending for all those affected by the crisis. By opening and examining the books of large financial firms, we helped restore the availability of two things that had been in short supply: capital and confidence.

By taking aggressive and innovative steps in credit markets, we spurred lending not just to banks, but to folks looking to buy homes or cars, take out student loans, or finance small businesses. Our home ownership plan has helped responsible homeowners refinance to stem the tide of lost homes and lost home values. 

And the recovery plan is providing help to the unemployed and tax relief for working families, all while spurring consumer spending. It’s prevented layoffs of tens of thousands of teachers, police officers, and other essential public servants. And thousands of recovery projects are underway all across America, putting people to work building wind turbines and solar panels, renovating schools and hospitals, and repairing our nation’s roads and bridges.

Eight months later, the work of recovery continues. And although I will never be satisfied while people are out of work and our financial system is weakened, we can be confident that the storms of the past two years are beginning to break. 

In fact, while there continues to be a need for government involvement to stabilize the financial system, that necessity is waning.  After months in which public dollars were flowing into our financial system, we are finally beginning to see money flowing back to the taxpayers. This doesn’t mean taxpayers will escape the worst financial crisis in decades unscathed. But banks have repaid more than $70 billion, and in those cases where the government’s stake has been sold completely, taxpayers have actually earned a 17-percent return on their investment.

Just a few months ago, many experts from across the ideological spectrum feared that ensuring financial stability would require even more tax dollars. Instead, we’ve been able to eliminate a $250 billion reserve included in our budget because that fear has not been realized. 

While full recovery of the financial system will take a great deal more time and work, the growing stability resulting from these interventions means we are beginning to return to normalcy.  But what I want to emphasize is this: normalcy cannot lead to complacency. 

Unfortunately, there are some in the financial industry who are misreading this moment. Instead of learning the lessons of Lehman and the crisis from which we are still recovering, they are choosing to ignore them.  They do so not just at their own peril, but at our nation’s.

So I want them to hear my words: We will not go back to the days of reckless behavior and unchecked excess at the heart of this crisis, where too many were motivated only by the appetite for quick kills and bloated bonuses.  Those on Wall Street cannot resume taking risks without regard for consequences, and expect that next time, American taxpayers will be there to break their fall.  

That’s why we need strong rules of the road to guard against the kind of systemic risks we have seen.  And we have a responsibility to write and enforce these rules to protect consumers of financial products, taxpayers, and our economy as a whole.  Yes, they must be developed in a way that does not stifle innovation and enterprise.  And we want to work with the financial industry to achieve that end. But the old ways that led to this crisis cannot stand.  And to the extent that some have so readily returned to them underscores the need for change and change now.  History cannot be allowed to repeat itself.

Instead, we are calling on the financial industry to join us in a constructive effort to update the rules and regulatory structure to meet the challenges of this new century. That is what my administration seeks to do. We have sought ideas and input from industry leaders, policy experts, academics, consumer advocates, and the broader public. And we’ve worked closely with leaders in the Senate and House, including Senators Chris Dodd and Richard Shelby, and Congressman Barney Frank, who are now working to pass regulatory reform through Congress. 

Taken together, we are proposing the most ambitious overhaul of the financial system since the Great Depression. But I want to emphasize that these reforms are rooted in a simple principle:  we ought to set clear rules of the road that promote transparency and accountability. That’s how we’ll make certain that markets foster responsibility, not recklessness, and reward those who compete honestly and vigorously within the system, instead of those who try to game the system.

First, we’re proposing new rules to protect consumers and a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency to enforce those rules. This crisis was not just the result of decisions made by the mightiest of financial firms. It was also the result of decisions made by ordinary Americans to open credit cards and take on mortgages. And while there were many who took out loans they knew they couldn’t afford, there were also millions of Americans who signed contracts they didn’t fully understand offered by lenders who didn’t always tell the truth. 

This is in part because there is no single agency charged with making sure it doesn’t happen. That is what we’ll change.

The Consumer Financial Protection Agency will have the power to ensure that consumers get information that is clear and concise, and to prevent the worst kinds of abuses. Consumers shouldn’t have to worry about loan contracts designed to be unintelligible, hidden fees attached to their mortgages, and financial penalties – whether through a credit card or debit card – that appear without warning  on their statements. And responsible lenders, including community banks, doing the right thing shouldn’t have to worry about ruinous competition from unregulated competitors.  

Now there are those who are suggesting that somehow this will restrict the choices available to consumers. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The lack of clear rules in the past meant we had innovation of the wrong kind: the firm that could make its products look best by doing the best job of hiding the real costs won.  For example, we had “teaser” rates on credit cards and mortgages that lured people in and then surprised them with big rate increases.  By setting ground rules, we’ll increase the kind of competition that actually provides people better and greater choices, as companies compete to offer the best product, not the one that’s most complex or confusing. 

Second, we’ve got to close the loopholes that were at the heart of the crisis. Where there were gaps in the rules, regulators lacked the authority to take action. Where there were overlaps, regulators often lacked accountability for inaction.  These weaknesses in oversight engendered systematic, and systemic, abuse.

Under existing rules, some companies can actually shop for the regulator of their choice – and others, like hedge funds, can operate outside of the regulatory system altogether. We’ve seen the development of financial instruments, like derivatives and credit default swaps, without anyone examining the risks or regulating all of the players. And we’ve seen lenders profit by providing loans to borrowers who they knew would never repay, because the lender offloaded the loan and the consequences to someone else. Those who refuse to game the system are at a disadvantage. 

Now, one of the main reasons this crisis could take place is that many agencies and regulators were responsible for oversight of individual financial firms and their subsidiaries, but no one was responsible for protecting the whole system. In other words, regulators were charged with seeing the trees, but not the forest. And even then, some firms that posed a “systemic risk” were not regulated as strongly as others, exploiting loopholes in the system to take on greater risk with less scrutiny.  As a result, the failure of one firm threatened the viability of many others.

We were facing one of the largest financial crises in history and those responsible for oversight were caught off guard and without the authority to act. 

That’s why we’ll create clear accountability and responsibility for regulating large financial firms that pose a systemic risk. While holding the Federal Reserve fully accountable for regulation of the largest, most interconnected firms, we’ll create an oversight council to bring together regulators from across markets to share information, to identify gaps in regulation, and to tackle issues that don’t fit neatly into an organizational chart. We’ll also require these financial firms to meet stronger capital and liquidity requirements and observe greater constraints on their risky behavior. That’s one of the lessons of the past year. The only way to avoid a crisis of this magnitude is to ensure that large firms can’t take risks that threaten our entire financial system, and to make sure they have the resources to weather even the worst of economic storms.

Even as we’ve proposed safeguards to make the failure of large and interconnected firms less likely, we’ve also proposed creating what’s called “resolution authority” in the event that such a failure happens and poses a threat to the stability of the financial system. This is intended to put an end to the idea that some firms are “too big to fail.” For a market to function, those who invest and lend in that market must believe that their money is actually at risk. And the system as a whole isn’t safe until it is safe from the failure of any individual institution.

If a bank approaches insolvency, we have a process through the FDIC that protects depositors and maintains confidence in the banking system. This process was created during the Great Depression when the failure of one bank led to runs on other banks, which in turn threatened the banking system. And it works. Yet we don’t have any kind of process in place to contain the failure of a Lehman Brothers or AIG or any of the largest and most interconnected financial firms in our country.

That’s why, when this crisis began, crucial decisions about what would happen to some of the world’s biggest companies – companies employing tens of thousands of people and holding trillions of dollars in assets – took place in hurried discussions in the middle of the night. And that’s why we’ve had to rely on taxpayer dollars. The only resolution authority we currently have that would prevent a financial meltdown involved tapping the Federal Reserve or the federal treasury.  With so much at stake, we should not be forced to choose between allowing a company to fall into a rapid and chaotic dissolution that threatens the economy and innocent people, or forcing taxpayers to foot the bill. Our plan would put the cost of a firm’s failure on those who own its stock and loaned it money.  And if taxpayers ever have to step in again to prevent a second Great Depression, the financial industry will have to pay the taxpayer back – every cent.  

Finally, we need to close the gaps that exist not just within this country but among countries.

The United States is leading a coordinated response to promote recovery and to restore prosperity among both the world’s largest economies and the world’s fastest growing economies. At a summit in London in April, leaders agreed to work together in an unprecedented way to spur global demand but also to address the underlying problems that caused such a deep and lasting global recession. This work will continue next week in Pittsburgh when I convene the G20, which has proven to be an effective forum for coordinating policies among key developed and emerging economies and one that I see taking on an important role in the future.  

Essential to this effort is reforming what’s broken in the global financial system – a system that links economies and spreads both rewards and risks. For we know that abuses in financial markets anywhere can have an impact everywhere; and just as gaps in domestic regulation lead to a race to the bottom, so too do gaps in regulation around the world. Instead, we need a global race to the top, including stronger capital standards, as I’ve called for today.

As the United States is aggressively reforming our regulatory system, we will be working to ensure that the rest of the world does the same. 

A healthy economy in the 21st Century also depends upon our ability to buy and sell goods in markets across the globe.  And make no mistake, this administration is committed to pursuing expanded trade and new trade agreements.  It is absolutely essential to our economic future.  But no trading system will work if we fail to enforce our trade agreements. So when, as happened this weekend, we invoke provisions of existing agreements, we do so not to be provocative or to promote self-defeating protectionism.  We do so because enforcing trade agreements is part and parcel of maintaining an open and free trading system.
And just as we have to live up to our responsibilities on trade, we have to live up to our responsibilities on financial reform as well.

I have urged leaders in Congress to pass regulatory reform this year and both Congressman Frank and Senator Dodd, who are leading this effort, have made it clear that that’s what they intend to do. Now there will be those who defend the status quo. There will be those who argue we should do less or nothing at all. But to them I’d say only this: do you believe that the absence of sound regulation one year ago was good for the financial system? Do you believe the resulting decline in markets and wealth and employment was good for the economy? Or the American people? 

I’ve always been a strong believer in the power of the free market. I believe that jobs are best created not by government, but by businesses and entrepreneurs willing to take a risk on a good idea.

I believe that the role of government is not to disparage wealth, but to expand its reach; not to stifle markets, but to provide the ground rules and level playing field that helps to make them more vibrant – and that will allow us to better tap the creative and innovative potential of our people. For we know that it is the dynamism of our people that has been the source of America’s progress and prosperity.

So I certainly did not run for President to bail out banks or intervene in the capital markets. But it is important to note that the very absence of common-sense regulations able to keep up with a fast-paced financial sector is what created the need for that extraordinary intervention. The lack of sensible rules of the road, so often opposed by those who claim to speak for the free market, led to a rescue far more intrusive than anything any of us, Democrat or Republican, progressive or conservative,  would have proposed or predicted.

At the same time, what we must do now goes beyond just these reforms. For what took place one year ago was not merely a failure of regulation or legislation; it was not merely a failure of oversight or foresight. It was a failure of responsibility that allowed Washington to become a place where problems – including structural problems in our financial system – were ignored rather than solved.  It was a failure of responsibility that led homebuyers and derivative traders alike to take reckless risks they couldn’t afford. It was a collective failure of responsibility in Washington, on Wall Street, and across America that led to the near-collapse of our financial system one year ago. 

Restoring a willingness to take responsibility – even when it is hard – is at the heart of what we must do. Here on Wall Street, you have a responsibility. The reforms I’ve laid out will pass and these changes will become law. But one of the most important ways to rebuild the system stronger than before is to rebuild trust stronger than before – and you do not have to wait for a new law to do that.

You don’t have to wait to use plain language in your dealings with consumers. You don’t have to wait to put the 2009 bonuses of your senior executives up for a shareholder vote. You don’t have to wait for a law to overhaul your pay system so that folks are rewarded for long-term performance instead of short-term gains. 

The fact is, many of the firms that are now returning to prosperity owe a debt to the American people. Though they were not the cause of the crisis, American taxpayers through their government took extraordinary action to stabilize the financial industry. They shouldered the burden of the bailout and they are still bearing the burden of the fallout – in lost jobs, lost homes and lost opportunities. It is neither right nor responsible after you’ve recovered with the help of your government to shirk your obligation to the goal of wider recovery, a more stable system, and a more broadly shared prosperity.

So I want to urge you to demonstrate that you take this obligation to heart. To put greater effort into helping families who need their mortgages modified under my administration’s homeownership plan. To help small business owners who desperately need loans and who are bearing the brunt of the decline in available credit. To help communities that would benefit from the financing you could provide, or the community development institutions you could support. To come up with creative approaches to improve financial education and to bring banking to those who live and work entirely outside the banking system. And, of course, to embrace serious financial reform, not fight it. 

Just as we are asking the private sector to think about the long term, Washington must as well. When my administration came through the door, we not only faced a financial crisis and costly recession, we also found waiting a trillion-dollar deficit. Yes, we have had to take extraordinary action in the wake of an extraordinary economic crisis. But I am committed to putting this nation on a sound and secure fiscal footing. That’s why we’re pushing to restore pay-as-you-go rules, because I will not go along with the old Washington ways which said it was OK to pass spending bills and tax cuts without a plan to pay for it.

That’s why we’re cutting programs that don’t work or are out of date. And that’s why I’ve insisted that health insurance reform not add a dime to the deficit, now or in the future. 

There are those who would suggest that we must choose between markets unfettered by even the most modest of regulations – and markets weighed down by onerous regulations that suppress the spirit of enterprise and innovation. But if there is one lesson we can learn from the last year, it is that this is a false choice. Common-sense rules of the road do not hinder the markets but make them stronger. Indeed, they are essential to ensuring that our markets function, and function fairly and freely.

One year ago, we saw in stark relief how markets can err; how a lack of common-sense rules can lead to excess and abuse; how close we can come to the brink. One year later, it is incumbent on us to put in place those reforms that will prevent this kind of crisis from ever happening again; that reflect the painful but important lessons we’ve learned; and that will help us move from a period of recklessness and crisis to one of responsibility and prosperity. That is what we must do. And I’m confident that is what we will do.

Thank you.


Related Topics: wall street, Barack Obama
  • Latest on Swampland

    Morning Must Reads: Accommodation

    Romney: 'I Misspoke'HuffPost Politics

    Not Farewell, But Fare Forward

    Five years ago, I opened up my e-mail to find a message from Priscilla Painton, then-executive editor at TIME. “No, this is not a solicitation to buy a subscription,” she began, before telling me that the magazine was looking for a new politics editor and asking whether I was interested. I don’t entirely remember what my initial reaction was, but I believe it involved a happy dance around the apartment.

  • square1

    There are those who would suggest that we must choose between markets unfettered by even the most modest of regulations – and markets weighed down by onerous regulations that suppress the spirit of enterprise and innovation.

    Truly, Obama is the undefeated heavyweight champion of beating up on strawmen.

  • deconstructiva

    Have banks, brokers, and AIG finally realized it’s a bad idea to literally bet the house on derivatives and swaps based on bad mortgages sold to people who often couldn’t afford them – and at a market peak to boot? But I digress.

  • gysgt213

    “Unfortunately, there are some in the financial industry who are misreading this moment. Instead of learning the lessons of Lehman and the crisis from which we are still recovering, they are choosing to ignore them. They do so not just at their own peril, but at our nation’s.”
    .
    Michael-They are not misreading this moment. In fact they are reading it perfectly and accurately because there is nothing. Absolutely nothing being proposed or done by the Obama administration, the congress or the fed that should give them a moment’s pause to consider changing their ways.
    .
    Further, they caused this crises and then they stole a lot of tax payer money. They got away with and they will do it again. There is nothing to stop them.

  • gysgt213

    Here is an example of someone in the system actually doing the right thing and calling everyone on their bullsh*t. Something the Obama Adminstration is certainly “not doing.” This is what being held accountable looks like.
    .
    Judge Rejects Settlement Over Merrill Bonuses
    .
    A Federal District judge on Monday overturned a settlement between the Bank of America and the Securities and Exchange Commission over bonuses paid to Merrill Lynch executives just before the bank took over Merrill last year.
    .
    The $33 million settlement “does not comport with the most elementary notions of justice and morality,” wrote Jed S. Rakoff, the judge assigned to the case in federal court in Lower Manhattan.
    .
    The ruling forces the S.E.C. to go back to the drawing board. The commission can either renegotiate the settlement or take the case to court. The S.E.C. could also drop the case.
    .
    The case involved $3.6 billion in bonuses that were paid by Merrill Lynch late last year, just as that firm was about to be merged with Bank of America. Neither company provided details of the bonuses to their shareholders, who voted on Dec. 5 to approve the merger.
    .
    The judge focused much of his criticism on the fact that the fine in the case would be paid by the bank’s shareholders, who were the ones that were supposed to have been injured by the lack of disclosure.
    .
    “It is quite something else for the very management that is accused of having lied to its shareholders to determine how much of those victims’ money should be used to make the case against the management go away,” the judge wrote.
    .
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/15/business/15bank.html?_r=1&hp

  • freeinpa

    And here is someone else calling the Obama administration on their BS including one of Obamas advisers.

    Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) — Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize- winning economist, said the U.S. has failed to fix the underlying problems of its banking system after the credit crunch and the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

    “In the U.S. and many other countries, the too-big-to-fail banks have become even bigger,” Stiglitz said in an interview yesterday in Paris. “The problems are worse than they were in 2007 before the crisis.”

    Stiglitz’s views echo those of former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who has advised President Barack Obama’s administration to curtail the size of banks, and Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer, who suggested last month that governments may want to discourage financial institutions from growing “excessively.”

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aSbIT8GZjdKI

  • grape_crush

    Something the Obama Adminstration is certainly “not doing.”
    .
    [Um...]

    The SEC consists of five Commissioners appointed by the President of the United States with the advice and consent of the United States Senate. Their terms last five years and are staggered so that one Commissioner’s term ends on June 5 of each year. To ensure that the SEC remains non-partisan, no more than three Commissioners may belong to the same political party. The President also designates one of the Commissioners as Chairman, the SEC’s top executive. However, the President does not possess the power to fire the appointed commissioners, a provision that was made to ensure the independence of the SEC.

    Something the Obama Administration maybe can’t do, Gunny?
    .
    The hilarious thing is freeper in the comment above actually arguing for tighter government regulation of the market…which is what’s being said will happen in the text of Obama’s speech…

  • freeinpa

    grape_crush

    What is funny is that liberals think they understand conservatives and that they want nothing but the wild west for markets. What is not surprise, you are wrong again. The banks should be limited in the size and scope of what they do because of the government guarantees that is provided. If given that structure and they still crash and burn, they should fail just like any other business.
    And the regulators should not be Congress! That means no guidelines as to who and when they lend, no CRA or other Congressional mandates that impact capital or returns.

  • gysgt213

    grape_crush-I should have made myself more clear, what I was referring to is that fact the Obama administration at every turn seems to want Wall Street to fix itself and not hold anyone accountable.

  • grape_crush

    The banks should be limited in the size and scope of what they do because of the government guarantees that is provided.

    Limited by whom?

    If given that structure and they still crash and burn, they should fail just like any other business.

    Who gives them that structure?

    And the regulators should not be Congress!

    If not Congress, then who?

    That means no guidelines…

    So how is that any different than being a ‘wild west for markets’? I’m honestly interested in hearing your explanation.

  • grape_crush

    Yeah, that’s one of my criticisms as well. This whole ‘giving them the opportunity to do the right thing’ works if everyone is fundamentally good and honest.
    .
    Problem is that everyone doesn’t approach policymaking in the same way. Obama’s been slow-ish in breaking out the steel-toed boots to go stomp on some toes, which is sometimes necessary. It’s a bit frustrating.

  • James, Los Angeles

    Michael, there’s some good, constructive reporting you can do, and something that will probably keep you in with the in crowd. You can giggle and short with your fellow frat-boys, and do us, in the audience, a solid as well. What’s not to like?

    There are those who would suggest that we must choose between markets unfettered by even the most modest of regulations – and markets weighed down by onerous regulations that suppress the spirit of enterprise and innovation

    Please find out who exactly “those” silly, silly people actually are who suggest that “we must choose” “markets weighed down by onerous regulations that suppress the spirit of enterprise and innovation.”

    NOTHING is more irritating than straw men like this. Bush did it all the time, it worked. Now, be a reporter and find out who “those” people are. Please.

    Then report back to us.

  • http://www.tophealthinsurancecompanies.info/add-your-comment/ Add Your Comment: « Top Health Insurance Companies

    [...] more from the original source: Add Your Comment: Share and [...]

  • square1

    Spare yourself the headache, grape_crush. You’re not going to get a coherent explanation from these wingnuts.

    There are only three things that need to be understood.

    First, they will grab any argument at any moment as a club to beat their opponents. Today, “the Nobel Prize- winning economist” Joseph Stiglitz’ analysis serves as a useful weapon against Obama. Tomorrow, Glenn “Chairman Mao” Beck will demand that Obama purge and denounce Stiglitz when Stiglitz makes some economic noise that upsets the Right-Wing media.

    Second, there is no internal logic to any of their “arguments”. Do not be “interested” to hear more about seemingly bizarre and self-contradictory statements. There is no there there.

    Third, wingnuts view all issues through a prism of racial and social tribalism. Every issue is about blaming and punishing minorities for everything.

    They don’t even try to hide it anymore. Don’t you love the widespread use of the Obama-Joker image among the Tea-Baggers? The President is wearing a White mask. Very subtle guys. What’s that? The Dark Knight is just a logical cultural touchstone for the Medicare set? Got it.

    This, plus the the ridiculous challenges to Obama’s birth certificate. Blaming the mortgage crisis on the Community Reinvestment Act. Rallying around the New Haven Firefighters case and attacking Sotomayor. The attacks on ACORN and the sneering use of “community organizer” as a slur.

    I love that last one. Can someone please explain the non-racist explanation for attacking the very concept of working to empower people within minority communities?

  • gysgt213

    “This whole ‘giving them the opportunity to do the right thing’ works if everyone is fundamentally good and honest.”
    .
    Ronald Reagan use to use the phrase “trust but verify” all time.
    .
    While I was in the Marines during both of his terms we adopted that phrase as leaders of junior Marines. What I think it meant to us was that we trusted our junior Marines do to their jobs and follow the rules and regulations, but as leaders it was our job to ensure they were doing those jobs correctly and in accordance with rules and regulations. The rules and regulations kept us all out of trouble and made managing a complex machine that much easier. People who strayed were caught and corrected pretty quickly. Before too much damage could be done.
    .
    I think the folks on Wall Street are fundamental honest, but our economy is way to complex not to verify.

  • nflfoghorn

    Ray-gun’s speechwriter’s “Trust but verify” actually means “don’t trust.”

  • fhmadvocat

    freeinpa,

    Did you read what you just wrote? “The banks should be limited in the size and scope of what they do” Whom do you propose set up such limits? “And the regulators should not be Congress!” Read your Constitution! All legislation orginates from Congress. Many conservatives argue that the executive branch exercises power not properly given to it (i.e. Kay Bailey Hutchinson) and they have a point.

    The truth is once upon a time banks were limited in what they could do. Thanks to your friends who put forth the argument of “unfettered markets”, we had the economic crisis.

    Well, I guess a true “Conservative” would argue we need to put banks back in the place they were before the Reagan Revolution. However, polical Conservatives are resisting such measures.

  • yoshiattack

    Do you actually want an explanation?

  • freeinpa

    It should be similar to the Federal Reserve in that it only reports to the Congress. It should have more regulatory powers than the Fed currently has. The Fed as structured has 2 principle obligations price stability and full employment. They can limit capital structure by raising the required reserve capital as the bank grows.

    Congressional meddling into the operations needs to be kept to a minimum. And it will be required that the Fed make policy based on economic principles not political ones. Some of that independence of the Fed has been compromised since around 1999 when it was determined to end the bear market on Wall Street at any cost. Recessions and 9/11 forced the Fed to push on a string. There was further evidence in the economic crisis that Congressional meddling in Fannie and Freddie damaged the housing markets. Despite protests to the contrary by Barney Frank, he shares as much responsibility as those on Wall Street for the collapse of the financial system. For some silly reason Congress is convinced that not only should we never have a down market or economy but they can actually stop or fix one.

  • freeinpa

    It is confirmed. The Left has launched a new McCarthyism- They now find a racist under every bed, behind every door. Dare to disagree- you are plain and simple a racist.

    Attacks on ACORN? It seems the Democratic majority in the Senate agrees that this organization is corrupt when it voted to withold funding. The

    The Obama Joker pictures? Funny it is the same photo the left used with Bush.

    You are paranoid an d psychotic. You mock Beck and Palin as intellectual inferiors and yet they would need at least 3 lobotomies each just to come near you.

  • http://phd9.blogspot.com Paul Dirks

    It’s always scary when freep seems to make sense. Much of our County’s dilemma can be traced to problems inhherent in Human nature and hence Democracy. Everybody on the planet wants something for nothing. Republicans insist tyhat we can have a functioning government without taxes and many Democrats seem to think that the amount that Corprations skim off the top and provide executives is more than enough to save our economy.
    .
    (I’m aware of the Kleinian nature of the previous sentence but I think it remains a useful generalization)
    .
    If we were serious about anything we’d be shifting large areas of responsibilties back to the States, supporting tax increases to pay for them (as well as to make up current shortfalls) and we’d continue to rely on the Federal government to protect us from foreign attack and to protect minority rights where local Governments can’t be trusted to do so.

  • formerlyjames

    Well, this just proves it. Obama is a communist. No doubt about it. Control the fat cats? Folks, I am here to tell you that is pure unadulterated communisism. We got trouble right here in River City. Yes, you and me. Are your kids sneakin around with sin sin on their breath? Yes we got trouble. Putin will be our next Sec of Defensiveness and War and Osama will be our next Sec of Statelessness and holy ruler. Oh, my, oh, my. What is the world coming to? We can only look forward to the next one with virgins and happiness for all.

    We need a Constitutional Amendment. No Government Control of anything. It’s worked in the past and it will work now. Let’s get this thing going. I will appear at as many TeaParties and IdiotsConventions as I can to light this candle. There will be a collection during my Service, but Miracles will be evident and we will praise Jesus and Save America. Amen.

  • freeinpa

    This may come as a surprise to you as well. Conservatives do not believe in zero taxes. They believe in paying minimal taxes that are used effciently for government functions that are outlined in the constitution. They are against providing or being everything to everybody. This was a land founded on providing equal opportunity and not equal outcome. Much of what the federal government proposes to do today should be shifted back to the states with the federal government providing a structure to ensure things are done effectively and not to provide unfunded mandates to the states.

blog comments powered by Disqus