John McCain, Phil Gramm, modernization act and Wallstreet bailout

Spytheweb

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In 1933, a few years following the stock market crash, Congress passes the Glass-Steagall Act, in hopes that regulating banks will help prevent market instability, particularly amongst Wall Street banks. The purpose of the act is to separate commercial banks that focus on consumers from investment banks, which deal with speculative trading and mergers.

The Glass-Steagall Act provided the proper oversight and entity separation that would prohibit banks and other financial companies from merging into giant trusts (conflict of interests) -- giant trusts or corporations being more powerful, naturally, and having the seemingly limitless capital to lobby their corporate interests, however, with a very myopic scope (particularly when it comes to factoring in potential losses -- most banks, as seen in contemporary times, chose not to anticipate losses in the mortgage market; they presumed home prices would continue to appreciate).

In 1999, former Senator Phil Gramm (who is, incidentally, Senator John McCain's economic adviser and cochairs his presidential campaign) set out to completely gut the Glass-Steagall Act, and did so successfully, replacing most of its components with the new Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act: allowing commercial banks, investment banks, and insurers to merge (which would have violated antitrust laws under Glass-Steagall). Sen. Gramm was the driving force behind the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, as he had received over $4.6 million from the FIRE sector (Finance, Insurance and Real Estate donations) over the previous decade, and once the Act passed, an influx of "megamergers" took place among banks and insurance and securities companies, as if they had been eagerly awaiting the passage of Gramm's Act. Everything in between Glass-Steagall and Gramm-Leach-Bliley (i.e. Savings and Loan crisis/bust) was, in large part, the incubation period for what would take place over the nine years that would follow the passage of Gramm's Act: an experiment in deregulation.

http://bravenewfilms.org/blog/55532-byron-dorgan-s-crystal-ball
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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--just wanted to let you know troops deaths in Iraq for Sept were all time low--8

You might pass that on to your media/blogs--as you all have seem lost your reporting skills at same time ;)
 

Spytheweb

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--just wanted to let you know troops deaths in Iraq for Sept were all time low--8

You might pass that on to your media/blogs--as you all have seem lost your reporting skills at same time ;)

The US military, meanwhile, reported at least 25 soldiers killed in September, according to independent website www.icasualties.org, compared with 23 in August.

Along with 440 Iraqis.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20081001/wl_mideast_afp/iraqunresttoll

1374093.800042.jpg
 

Terryray

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Glass-Steagall Act was passed in 1933 (concerning the banking regulations all are discussing now) in response to the non-problem of mixing commercial and investment banking (paper here on it--warning pdf).

It was repealed in 1999 (the banking regulation part), but the largest investment banks didn't wanna merge with any boring commercial banks (even tho very smart to do--banks diversified in banking activities spreads risk and makes them stronger and better able to survive bad times, as paper cited shows)--until these past few weeks--things changed!

These investment banks (Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns) suffered from sinking mortage fund market, problems of which our fine gov't contribute so much to and didn't change despite many warnings, and were saved only by mergers with commercial banks -- which they couldn't do before the repeal in 1999.

So many thanks to Phil Gramm (helps having a senator with a Phd in economics) or we'd be in bigger mess right now.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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The US military, meanwhile, reported at least 25 soldiers killed in September, according to independent website www.icasualties.org, compared with 23 in August.

Along with 440 Iraqis.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20081001/wl_mideast_afp/iraqunresttoll

1374093.800042.jpg

I see Spy your using the liberal/democratic version thats like to include accidents along with those killied in combat to inflate the #'s.

U.S. combat deaths fell to eight in September, down from 12 last month and vastly reduced from 43 in September last year, statistics from independent Web site www.icasualites.org showed.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081001/ts_nm/us_iraq_deaths_1

Nothing I like better than exposing you bozo's for what you are. :)

Have to really look hard on your source to find this-

http://icasualties.org/oif/HostileNonHostile.aspx

Hostile 8
non hostile 17

I know your speechless--AGAIN
 
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