House, Senate leaders finalize details of sweeping financial overhaul
6/25/2010 11:36:17 AM
What solution would you recommend?
6/25/2010 11:39:49 AM
^^ That's right, Dodd and Frank were front-and-center on it, back when the Republicans had control of the House of Representatives.
6/25/2010 11:51:04 AM
^^I'd recommend running a legitimate budget, auditing the Federal Reserve, and letting businesses that make poor decisions fail.^This has nothing to do with who was "in control of Congress." Take the partisan blinders off for a minute. Chris Dodd and Barney Frank are both on record as saying very early on that Fannie and Freddie were not any kind of risk, and that everything was fine. They thought the GSEs were great and would keep on trucking. They did not see the subprime mortgage crisis coming. They do not know what caused the subprime mortgage crisis. They're trying to regulate the outcomes of the crisis, without understanding the root causes.Barney Frank and Chris Dodd have both been pawns for the Federal Reserve. They've done everything possible to stand in the way of a true audit.
6/25/2010 1:24:57 PM
I'm not against regulation of the derivatives market. I don't think we should ban them, but there should definitely be more adult supervision. Not sure what they mean by "failing financial firms" in terms of when the government can intervene.
6/25/2010 1:26:39 PM
The crappiest part to me is:
6/25/2010 1:30:37 PM
Maybe not the consumers directly, but at least someone is looking out for the banking cartel, right?
6/25/2010 1:31:47 PM
Atleast it still has to pass Congress. Im actually interested to see if Republicans oppose it at all.
6/25/2010 1:48:59 PM
Well, at least a few Republican's are opposed to it....
6/25/2010 1:52:40 PM
Depending on which economists you believe, the crisis was either exacerbated by or directly caused by the implicit promise of creditor bailouts. As this law would institutionalize this promise of bailouts for creditors, it should make the problem of systemic collapses larger and more frequent in the future. Depending, of course, how good a job the new super-regulator does at reading the minds of financial actors... [Edited on June 25, 2010 at 2:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/25/2010 2:29:32 PM
just remember. you've got the wonderful CFPA that will help regulate those evil lenders. well, except for the auto companies. looks like the unions won again.
6/25/2010 2:52:28 PM
6/25/2010 6:22:05 PM
6/25/2010 11:26:31 PM
Government being God is a non-partisan issue. Please don't confuse the words of small government Republicans with their actions.More on this reform bill from Barryhttp://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/06/stop-the-next-crisis-this-wouldnt-have-stopped-the-last-one/
6/26/2010 9:58:36 AM