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Financial Regulations Don't Work

Friday, July 16, 2010 – by Staff Report

Barack Obama

Why financial reform might not work as intended ... The Senate passed financial reform Thursday, and President Obama (left) will sign it, but many of the tough decisions will be made by federal regulators. How they interpret the bill will be key ... Even before the Senate passed sweeping finance reform Thursday, House Republicans – now within range of taking back the majority in fall midterm elections – called for its repeal. It's the latest sign of how election-year politics dominated the debate over financial regulation – and how tough it could be to sustain reform over the years it will take for all elements of the law to take effect. "Because of this reform, the American people will never again be asked to foot the bill for Wall Street's mistakes. There will be no more taxpayer-funded bailouts, period," said President Obama in remarks at the White House after the Senate vote. – CS Monitor

Dominant Social Theme: This is not the right way to regulate – but eventually we will get it right.

Free-Market Analysis: Toward the bottom of this article, we will try to provide a broad and extremely simplified overview of the upcoming financial regulation package that will at some point be signed by President Barack Obama. Of course, since the final bill is over 2,300 pages and encompass some 200-plus distinctly different regulatory exercises, we don't quite see how anybody can anticipate the outcome. We will not be alone in trying.

The larger conversation encompasses a forthright and basic dominant social theme: "Capitalism is prone to error, and government corrects." How in the 21st century anyone can still subscribe to this formula, having seen the damage that government has wrought on myriad fronts, is beyond us. But nonetheless, the politicians march forward in America and elsewhere, empowered by their role as the people's representatives and shielded from any major scrutiny by major Western media the world over. Here's some more from the article:

Wall Street reform is broadly popular with American voters. But Republican leaders oppose it as a potential job killer. At the 11th hour, Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine and Scott Brown of Massachusetts came to terms with Democrats over "fixes" to the bill, allowing Democrats to break a GOP filibuster today. "This bill would not have happened without them," said Senator Reid, after the vote. But the 2,300 page overhaul also requires drafting some 200 regulations, as well as studies and extended timelines before many features of the law take effect. The fight to ensure that the intent of Congress is reflected in regulations could be as protracted as the two-year battle to pass reform ...

The lobbying for the future of financial reform doesn't end when Mr. Obama signs the law. In fact, it could be just beginning, as regulators and congressional overseers get down to the business of writing the high-stakes rules ... "By delegating so much to the regulators, Congress is inviting everyone interested in the outcome to make more campaign contributions, as they intervene in the regulatory process to influence the regulators," says Thomas Ferguson, a professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. "Nothing is settled. It's a gold mine for members of Congress."

We can see the vast scope of this bill from the excerpt above, but also the difficulties with implementing what Congress will eventually pass and the President will sign. But what is more questionable still is the exercise itself. Congress (and Western regulatory authorities generally) must have passed or at least allowed enactment of hundreds of thousands of financial rules and regulations over the past 100 years. Yet today the Western economic system is seemingly worse off than ever, with whole nation-states threatened with bankruptcy while the banking sector itself – the target of many of these regulations – has been faced generally with a kind of ruin.

According to much of the mainstream American media, Wall Street regulations are to be generally well received by the public; yet one of the architects of financial "reform", Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd is about to lose his Senatorial seat in Connecticut. According to a recent Reuters article ("Wounded Sen. Dodd Guided Wall St Reform to Victory"), "The Senate's approval of the Dodd-Frank bill, also named for Dodd's co-author, Democratic Representative Barney Frank, will be a book-end to Dodd's long legislative career. ... But as far-reaching as the bill is ... legislation it had little impact on voters' recent negative view of Dodd, said Doug Schwartz, director of Quinnipiac University's political polling unit in Connecticut."

And Schwartz adds, "I just don't think people are aware of ... Dodd's role in shaping legislation. They know about President Obama and what he's trying to do, but I don't think they're really aware of who the Senate and House players are."

The Reuters article goes on to speculate that Dodd will be honored for his role in various sorts of land-market bills, but we are not so sure. We think the disenchantment with Dodd is part of a larger anti-incumbent wave sweeping the US. Unlike past waves, we think that this one will not merely crest and subside. We think wavelets will continue and perhaps even culminate in a larger tidal wave that will in some sense change the system permanently.

We see signs of elite concern everywhere. Central bankers struggle to reflate Western economies and generally to get things running again, seemingly without much success. All this is convered in painful detail on the Internet. Meanwhile, there are increasingly aggressive attempts to regulate and censor the 'Net, which has done a great deal to enlighten people about how the system really works. These efforts are themselves proof-positive that the Internet has had an impact.

The trouble with "regulating" the Internet is that the damage has already been done and many are aware of the Internet as a liberating force in their lives. Thus any attacks on the Internet only reinforce a perception of government double-dealing and corruption. This is why dominant social themes are so important to the power elite. These fear-based promotions, if effective, prompt people to VOLUNTARILY give up wealth and power. But when pre-emptive legislation is passed without proper groundwork, it merely looks like a power grab. And this is where the elite and its regulatory structure are now. The process is too obvious and will likely reinforce negative trends rather than ameliorating the problem.

This regulatory problem extends to the financial reform bill as well. The trillions that the elite has lavished on too-big-to-fail firms are going to have a slow-motion effect on the credibility of the entire system. Because the bailout occurred in the Internet era, it was carried out in a "live" fashion and the issue of money creation (money from nothing) became perfectly clear to average Westerners, especially Americans. Previously it may have been thought that only one man in a million might understand the questionable practice of printing fiat money, but now a lot more do. And many may have wondered why counterfeiting itself is illegal when a small, powerful group of men do it without oversight on a regular basis.

Cynicism is a growing feature of modern-day, Western life. And the financial reform bill soon to be signed will do nothing help abate this trend. We promised a brief overview and we will provide one here as quickly and succinctly as possible. First, a recent summary from Reuters ("Wall Street Reform Clears Congress") as to what the bill contains: "Wall Street had fought bitterly to derail the legislation, which leaves few corners of the financial industry untouched. It establishes new consumer protections, gives regulators greater power to dismantle troubled firms, and limits a range of risky trading activities in a way that would curb bank profits."

Our summary as briefly and brutally as possible: The regulation will not do anything positive. It is 2300 pages of minutiae that basically rearranges the deck chairs on the Titanic. If it does do something, it will likely be along negative lines. That's because it gives the US government blunt empowering language to shut down too-big-to-fail financial firms. You can bet over time that most too-big-too-fail firms will be protected one way or another and the legislation will be aimed at shutting down smaller, feisty competitors that pose a threat to vested interests.

Western economies blow up over and over again because power-elite-installed mercantilist central banks print too much money causing first booms and then busts. There is no regulatory authority on earth that can control this process unless it seeks to do away with central banking itself and attempts to return society to honest money and honest private banking.

Conclusion: Financial regulation, especially, is something of a fraud. Over and over, industry participants are further regulated whenever the system blows up while those who have provided the tools, the means and the methods either avoid censure or are actually empowered. In today's Internet era, we wonder how much longer such a situation can continue without considerable push-back.




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  Posted by Sovereignjim on 07/19/10 12:24 AM

Attempting to regulate fraud is itself fraud. The SEC is a perfect example of this fact. Fractional reserve banking is fraud. Selling anything you do not own and cannot produce is fraud. Derivatives including short selling are fraud. Selling derivatives created from non existing things sold short is fraud. Regulating the purchase to only AAA rated items when the AAA rating is a fraud is also a fraud.
Woe is us!

  Posted by Bobby on 07/18/10 04:35 AM

The Daily Bell is correct, at best Obama is a good follower but hardly qualifies as a good leader. Its too bad that america must consume its middel class to sustain its ambition. Unlike the swiss we have no dispossessed Jewery to extract wealth from. Just think it is easy to criticize when one can make enoourmous profits off of monies which will never be claimed. the Nazis did not cease to exsist they retired to Switzerland.

  Posted by Clayton Smith on 07/17/10 02:25 PM

@ Bionic Mosquito,

I agreed with your assertion concerning the possibility of a Third Party in our immediate future, however, that is why I spoke of a "Movement" preceding it. I have a more complete idea of this outlined, but it would be inappropriate at this time and in this format to present it.

@ Jennie Queenie,

Thank you for your positive feedback. I see from reading your posts that you have your feet on the ground and are applying that practical perspective that is so lacking in the more abstract fringes of the Freedom Movement. Even now, enmeshed in the darkness and hopelessness as we are, small but significant things can be accomplished given sufficient confidence, perseverance and focus.

There are immediate issues all around us on the local level that give us ample opportunities to practice activism. It is in this practice that we can develop our leadership and organizing skills. This is a project that will take the next century to complete (if completion is ever possible, I think it not), but it must start somewhere, so why not have it start with me (or you, or whoever, wherever).

It cannot start if we allow ourselves to suffer defeat at the beginning from hearts filled with doubt and fear. Freedom is the Good Cheer, the Friendly Force, the birthplace of Faith, Hope and Charity. Freedom is that necessity for Creativity. Freedom is the Life Giver, the source of our Continuance and our Abundance. Beyond pro-life is Pro-Living!

My best wishes for the success and happiness you find in your local work in CT. Peter Schiff is trying to shake things up there. So there is something already in the works to get involved with.

  Posted by Michael Hodgkiss on 07/17/10 11:01 AM

Nothing has been regulated. It seems everything we hear these days is Orwellian "New Speak".

Regulation is not regulation, Health care is not health care. and on and on.
Here is LPAC's take on this bill.
LAROUCHEPAC:
Economic Collapse
Frank-Dudd Bill Will Increase the Derivatives Cancer—As Intended
July 17, 2010 • 8:34AM

Forget all the malarkey you are hearing and reading about "regulation" and "financial reform"—good, bad, or indifferent. The real-world result of the Frank-Dudd bill passed by the Senate Thursday will be to open the floodgates for the bankrupt banks to further increase their cancerous derivatives bubble, which is responsible for blowing out the world financial system. "The ugly truth is this bill will make our system more vulnerable, not less," former SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt wrote in the July 14 Daily Beast.

Just such a free rein to frothing-at-the-mouth speculation was of course precisely the bill's intention, once Glass-Steagall had been read out of consideration, as Lyndon LaRouche repeatedly warned.

Major banks such as JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs have been preparing for the new bill and retooling for months. JP Morgan has 90 project teams that meet daily to review the rules, the New York Times reported July 15, and they and others are "building up their derivatives brokerage operations. Their goal is to make up any lost profits—and perhaps make even more money than before—by becoming matchmakers in the vast market for these instruments... [They] will turn derivatives trading from a highly profitable niche into a more volume-based business."

The combination of the passage of Frank-Dudd and the SEC tap on the wrist (it didn't even qualify as a slap) for Goldman Sachs, added up to a banner day for the City of London and Wall Street. "Brokers cheered the bill in the financial district pubs," Germany's Handelsblatt reported, while the Financial Times smugly noted that the "financial services sector...should now feel mightily relieved."

  Posted by Bionic Mosquito on 07/17/10 02:44 AM

Clayton, thank you for your post. One area where I humbly disagree -- I do not look for hope in a new, third party. I see how quickly the Tea Party has been co-opted. The US has had a Libertarian Party for years -- never more than 1% of the vote for President.

The population is not educated to the point where a majority will vote the "right" way in an election. With public funding of education, do not look for this to change. (By the way, perhaps the best "tool" the PE ever developed for the toolkit).

This system changes when the promises are broken -- much higher taxes on the middle class, and much lower benefits in various pension and medical schemes. When these are broken, people will look to more local solutions. Read Creveld. He and others believe we are seeing the end of the nation-state and a move toward smaller political entities. The internet certainly has the power to educate people enough for this.

  Posted by Jeannie Queenie on 07/16/10 08:16 PM

Clayton, thank you for articulating so eloquently what is at stake. If many more had your insight we would be halfway to resolving this crisis. Be assured there are other believers.

I joined a tea party patriot group months ago, but getting a little miffed, for their sole focus is on candidates for this November. Although I am a conservative, I don't see the Republicans living up to their conservative mission.

Whereas my fellow tea party patriots see changing seats on the Titanic as the answer, I see hugh problems with our not so Good Ship Lollipop where most of middle america end up as suckers. This out of control government is sticking us with insurmountable debt.

From what I have seen here in CT, the pickings for fall elections are slim, with the exception of a couple fellows in our group that are running for office. It's clear to me that they don't stand a chance of winning. Neither of them are corruptible, and are just plain spoken and honest as the day is long. Their main concerns are in line with The Tea Party Patriots focus on both Limited Constitutional Government, Fiscal Responsiblity and Free Markets.

Clayton, you reflect my view that a new party is required for both parties have too baggage from the past. Scott Brown disappointed us already where many had seen a good possiblity. I see a glimmer of hope in the growing numbers of Tea Party Patriots nationwide. For a peek at which states are growing their ranks visit this site....

Click to view link It is hopeful!

  Posted by Clayton on 07/16/10 04:36 PM

What we are witnessing is exactly how the regulatory process comes into being. Virtually every bit of past and current regulatory code and enforcement mechanism undergoes the same type of inception, fleshing out and final initial implementation.

Subsequent to this will come the feedback loops, which are the reflection of the public's as well as the bureaucratic responses, and most importantly, the effect they will have on the direct parties in interest, whose campaign contributions are the "mother's milk" of politics. Then we will actually find out what has been done here.

The marketplace costs of these uncertainties are uncertainties all of their own, and although not exactly quantifiable are nonetheless certain to increase costs all around. The natural course of self adjustment in the system (i.e. suffering losses because of poor risk management and a faulty view of the future) having been derailed, a continuation of the underlying and unaddressed systemic contradictions will lead to yet another crisis. This next crisis will see a repeat of all of the above, only on a level of magnitude much larger then the one we face today.

Two questions emerge out of this observation. One is how does this regulatory code making process work, and secondly, what can the individual do to protect themselves from the negative consequences inherent in it?

Since the past is prologue, the hacks who inhabit the Congress are seen as needing to do something to remedy their previous mistakes. Their first task then is to make their previous mistakes someone else's. So committee meetings are held to establish evil doers.

Once a suitable set of scapegoats have been identified and vilified, they can get down to the work of shaking these people down through the mechanism of campaign contributions, plum jobs for unemployed cousins and staff workers, etc. This is just the first shakedown. The big ones lie ahead. After this the members of Congress can do what they truly love to do most, which is Grandstanding.

But first some focus groups have to be held to determine exactly what the public wants to do to the scapegoats. Then the members can rail against the suppose abuses and make demands for the called for pounds of flesh. This may even help generate campaign contributions from their local constituents.

Allow me to stop for a moment to remind the reader that these Congresspersons are for the most part completely ignorant of the issues involved. It is rare indeed to ever hear any intelligent commentary on any subject whatsoever from these people. What they are specialists in is demigoguery, obfuscation, pandering, cheating, extorting, and self-love.

As a result, they leave the actual writing of the legislation up to their staffers and the consultants that their staffers hire. These folks are themselves only one or two steps up the chain of knowledge concerning the issues to be dealt with. What comes out in the end is a vast potpourri of generalizations, usually overreaching in many regards and generally deficient enough in specifics not to create panic in the various industries to be effected.

Once the bill is passed and signed, the prideful chest-beating can take place before the cameras and the leading sponsors of the bill can parade themselves before all the softball news shows and MSM paper interviews. All this free publicity further enhances their capacity to solicit future campaign contributions.

Because of the obvious shortcomings in the legislative process, this pack of generalizations is just a skeleton and will be fleshed out in subsequent meetings between the parties in interest, which are the bureaucrats, the public advocacy groups and the industries in question. These meetings take place at the great convention center halls in the hotels in and around DC. They are dominated by lawyers.

Dickens would have understood it clearly. Here where the reality of the new law will take shape and is where the big shakedown occurs, out of the sight of the public view. Here is the Sausage Factory that Bismarck spoke of. We only find out what has been done months or years later when we encounter the limitations on our own sphere of action that these regulatory codes have imposed.

Between the Health Care legislation and this new bill to further regulate the financial industry, we have over 5000 pages of stuff to work out. This is a field day for the legal profession. Not only has this administration seen fit to rescue and subsidize Wall Street, but also all the connected legal operators in DC and NYC. And I thought they were looking out for the little guy.

What can honest hard-working productive people do about this? Just look at the sellout, Scott Brown, the once Great White Hope from Mass. and you can see how little one can count on the Republican Party for change and relief.

In my opinion, it is further reinforcement for the need to hunker down. Neither of these pieces of legislation will be repealed unless and until a decidedly different Congress, Senate, and Presidency is in power and the public is so afraid of its own immediate survival that its members are willing to do the unthinkable and be willing to take greater responsibility for their own individual lives and as a result cut the Central Government down to a size in which it is a small fraction of what it is today.

The existing political parties are not up to this task. So a peaceful transition requires a new Party and this new Party must be pre-staged by a new mass movement whose agenda clearly states this as its principle end and subordinates all other ends to its, including the Empire and all the flag waving idiocy associated with it. It must be a true People's Movement intent on the establishment of Peace, Freedom, and Justice.

The kind of legislative process we have been bludgeoned with during our lifetimes has put our own government in a state of war with our own Civil Society. I for one cannot remember a time when I could say that I lived in the House of Peace. What the State calls Peace is really just Submission. Submission is a supreme form of personal defeat. It is the end of the Creative Life and the entrance into the realm of Living Death. Where there is no true Peace, there cannot either be Freedom nor Justice. The conscious interaction of these three categories is what separates Humanity from the Animal Kingdom. It is becoming profoundly urgent that this is understood by more then a select few.

Is this movement confined to the USA? Not at all. But the opportunities here are better than elsewhere, although the obstacles are more subtle. We still have memory in our founding and in its founders of the debate concerning Natural Law and the inalienability of Rights and the duty of the Government with regards to the governed. We have that memory in our old gospel of the supremacy of Moral Authority over Power and of the role of Love and spontaneous blessings that come from living the Compassionate Life. If change is to come, it will start here. If not, it will likely wait perhaps another thousand years, until after this deluge of corruption, ignorance and stupidity has taken its course.

Reply from The Daily Bell

So eloquent. Thank you for producing this.

  Posted by Jim Jones on 07/16/10 03:15 PM

The American politicians thinks the American people are idiots. In the next breath they say the reform "wall street" regulations are well received by the public.

The politicians that passed this bill didn't read it and the (Idiots), American public, can't read or understand it. So, how can it be well received? They still don't fully understand the The Health Reform Bill, and neither does the politician.

More and more regulations = larger and larger government.

Fix the problem, don't regulate it.

  Posted by Jeannie Queenie on 07/16/10 01:13 PM

Yes, indeed DB, regulation is a fraud, especially when the powers that be intentionally do not regulate the very program/agency that brought down our economy in the states...namely that of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. These two lending govt programs were under the aegis of both Obama and Barney Frank before the ship sank.

I ran across this recently by one Mike "Mish" Shedlock of Global Economics Analysis. He asks, "Can I ask a simple question: Who does not have a house that wants one and can afford one, and does not need money from the government to buy one, and is not in danger of losing their job? Supposedly there is a recovery underway. Recovery my ass."

The FHA agency head, David Stevens at the Mortgage Bankers Association conference in May:"This is a market purely on life support, sustained by the federal gov't.Having FHA do this much volume is a sign of a very sick system." This was in reference to both FHA, FMFM.. "The FHA and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which regulators seized in 2008, have been financing more than 90 percent of U.S. home lending after a retreat by banks and the collapse of the market for mortgage bonds without government-backed guarantees.

'The FHA, which backs loans with down payments as low as 3.5 percent, insured $52.5 billion of home-purchase mortgages in the first quarter, compared with $46 billion of purchases of the debt by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac'--this data from Washington-based Potomac Partners.

You can read this in its entirety here....
Click to view link

The US is about to experience its next second wave of foreclosures which it is said, will exceed that of the first one. Additionally, banks are sitting on hugh commercial real estate loans. As long as our economy is in the tank, folks are not buying goods, which does not help stores, hence more malls shutting down in the future.

So we already know that Obummer and Barney Frank via freddie and fannie, was the catalyst for destroying the economy, So isn't it a bit strange that now they finger point to banks and leave freddie and fannie off limits to regulation. Talk about crooked Chicago politics. Right here in my state of CT, we see one more facet of that blatant crookedness with our senator. This one is a gem.

'In a bid to stem taxpayer losses for bad loans guaranteed by federal housing agencies Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac, Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn) proposed that borrowers be required to make a 5% down payment in order to qualify. His proposal was rejected 57-42 on a party-line vote because, as Senator Chris Dodd (D-Conn) explained, "passage of such a requirement would restrict home ownership to ONLY THOSE WHO CAN AFFORD IT" Can you believe this??

I can't add anything to this. But remember that old cowboy, John Wayne, He sums up what these leftist liberal democratic loonies are about with this truer words were never spoken ditty: "Life's Click to view link's even tougher if you're stupid."

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the link. Connecticut is a high-tax state.

  Posted by Noah on 07/16/10 01:12 PM

Which is to say, financial "reform" will "work" exactly as intended: not at all.

  Posted by Noah on 07/16/10 01:07 PM

There is a reason legislation runs 2000-3000 pages these days, and that is because these bills typically are intended to achieve the opposite of what they propose to achieve. Lobbyists need to use a lot of words when writing legislation to ensure the lawmakers passing the law either don't know what they're reading or, more commonly, don't read it at all. The sausage they're making needs more spice than ever to help hide the fact that it has no meat.

The true and only purpose of Financial Reform: next time this type of disaster happens, it can be "fixed" (with our money, of course) without creating such an ugly public spectacle. The violent purse-snatching will be replaced with smooth pickpocketing so we will never know which well-dressed fellow made off with our wallet (since that fellow is a pal of the cops, it is quite important he remain unseen). This age of increasing transparency that demands accountability must come to an end!

  Posted by B.Benhamid on 07/16/10 01:00 PM

Fool-me-once-shame-on-you-fool-me-twice-shame-on-me.

  Posted by TeresaE on 07/16/10 12:55 PM

This fiasco, 'er bill, soon to be law, will have the exact same effect that EVERY law that allegedly "protects" me, or my children, results in.

Bigger mega-nationals, tons of graft and corruption, a huge pricetag and more money out of MY pocket.

Here are a handful of laws Congress created:

Child's lead law " increased kids clothing & toy pricing by 20-30%, Mattel posts record profits, small American manufactures are closing/off shoring and the government gets another layer of bureaucracy and lobbyists to fund their parties and campaigns.

"...Sudafed (pseudo-ephedrine)/Crack drug law (I have no idea which bill this idiot law was attached to): Increased the price of my allergy medicine by 1000%, I had to register and show identification every time I bought it, the crack epidemic has since grown worse, "cookers" have figured out new chemicals to use, Mexico now boasts hundreds of sudafed factories (and newly rich "industrialist") and crack is still the SAME exact price it was 30 years ago.

Senior Prescription Drug Coverage " increased my dad's prescription cost from less than $1000 to over $5000 and he only makes $15k a year. Prepare for what is coming for the rest of us.

CanSpam Act " you notice less spam? neither do I, huge new bureaucracy and expense I do notice.

2005 Bankruptcy Act and assortment, doubled minimum payments and allowed the banks to triple " or worse " our interest rates while simultaneously trashing the credit scores of those that pay our bills.

If we don't fire Congress this fall, America as we know it, or remember it, is done for. They are all guilty, both sides, everyone of them with the exception of Ron Paul.

  Posted by Adrian W. on 07/16/10 12:33 PM

Still waiting for the "Audit the Fed" bill to pass. Strange how many politicians lip serviced their agreement on it. Then voted against it in the eleventh hour.. Hope voters take note in this year's elections. I think competing currencies would aid in filtering out alot of this Fiat Monetary garbage, both politically, and economically.

  Posted by Bill on 07/16/10 12:02 PM

I just checked and the heavily regulated state controlled People's Bank of China is doing quite well. At one point in time the USA banking industry had 5 lobbyists for each lawmaker. FED insiders are in every administration regardless of which branch of the Republicrats are in office. The Banks were the force behind the explosion of Derivatives which led to the Great Recession. This coupled with unregulated lending practices which sold homes to people who could not afford them.

  Posted by Ken on 07/16/10 09:56 AM

Yeah, Fannie and Freddie are not included because those agencies are favorites of Frank and Dodd and caused the melt down in the first place while contributing to democrat candidates and offering multi-million dollar salaries to "retired" democrat bureaucrats. They know not to kill the golden goose.

  Posted by TMoore on 07/16/10 09:52 AM

"This bill represents the most significant overhaul of the financial system since the 1930s. But serious work remains: the proof of the bill's worth will come not from what is written in the bill, but how the regulators interpret the bill, write the rules and then enforce them," says John Taylor, president and CEO of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition.

Simply stunning. How the regulators 'interpret' the bill? Write the rules? Leaving aside the tiny fact that the bill has no basis in Constitutional authority, why, especially do our Dear Leaders bend themselves to task of drafting the, er, legislation to begin with? This isn't law, it's Lewis Carroll on mind altering drugs...

  Posted by Stas on 07/16/10 09:28 AM

The REGULATIONS are for those that write the regulations.
Obama's flunckies Dodd and Frank gave their disertation for their cronies. After obama is gone there will be another group that will generate another 2500 pages of BS.
You cann't change criminal to become a saint when he is a clinck.

  Posted by Victor Barney on 07/16/10 08:29 AM

Financial Regulations Don't Work? That depends, doesn't it? I mean it worked for the racist Hitler, it worked for Russia's Lenin and Stalin(at least Nationalist), our Racists Wilson and FDR, China's Mao, etc., etc.! So it works for "individual" evil purposes, I guess!

  Posted by Bob Hand on 07/16/10 08:20 AM

Another incredible aspect of this Financial Reform bill just passed is that it is called the Dodd-Frank Bill. With the primary authors being Sen. Chris Dodd and Rep. Barney Frank, the two Congressmen most responsible for the financial crisis we now experience, what can you possible expect good from this debacle. As someone once remarked: "If your house is on fire, do you call the arsonist back to salvage it?"

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