Skip to main content

We have a brand new position in Washington (Just what we needed!)... A new "credit czar" for the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Something Ron Paul calls in his latest article "This new bureau, which represents nothing more than another layer of useless Washington bureaucracy".

Dr. Paul says:

quote:

"The appointee named to run the bureau is an Ivy League professor. By her own admission she is an academic, not a business person. She has very little real world business experience with the highly complex financial instruments she will oversee. The administration has done nothing to refute her characterization by some in the financial press as an anti-business, ivory tower leftist with an aversion to free market principles."


As always with Paul, and almost never with his colleagues, first are the Constitutional issues:

quote:

"Outrageously, she has been appointed as a "special advisor" to design and lead the bureau, but the administration has not disclosed the exact length of her term. There will be no Senate confirmation hearings, nor will the public or the financial industry be allowed to comment on her appointment. We simply are expected to accept the appointment of an enormously powerful regulator without question, and without regard to the constitutional requirement that the Senate advise and consent with regard to her appointment. This means you, as a voter and citizen, effectively have no say whatsoeverfor the duration of her appointment. In the meantime, she has unprecedented new powers over private business decisions."


He then goes on to explain this is just more of the same incompetent, clumsy "solutions" from DC:

quote:

"The truth is that this new bureau is just more of the same ineffective and damaging regulation we typically get from a crisis. Just as the FDA serves big pharmaceutical companies, not patients, and just as the SEC serves Wall Street, not investors, this agency will end up serving the banks. All regulatory agencies eventually become co-opted by the industries they regulate, and they become chiefly concerned with restricting the entry of new competitors and protecting market share for the big players. This new bureau is not likely to straighten out Wall Street, so much as it will instill a false sense of security in the public about banking and investing again.

No bureaucrat, no federal agency, and no ivory tower academic can replace the regulatory powers of the free market."


And of course we get the real "common sense" and constitutional solution from Dr. Paul:

quote:

"Real reform starts with transparency and an adherence to the rule of law. The administration would do well to adhere to the law, rather than shoving a new economic czar down our throats without congressional involvement. Real reform would mean taking steps toward restoring sound money and getting back to the Constitution. The Constitution does not allow for favors to special interests, or handing out public money to keep private businesses afloat. The Constitution necessitates a small, impartial government that first and foremost, protects liberty, and sees all citizens as equal. It does not recognize a special banking class."

**************************

The Constitution. Every Issue, Every time. No Exceptions, No Excuses.

 

"When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. When the government fears the people, there is liberty."---Thomas Jefferson

 

"That's what governments are for... get in a man's way."---Mal Reynolds Capt. of Serenity, "Firefly-Class" spaceship

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

quote:
Originally posted by Ronnie P.:
Well we can see what these consumer protections the Obama administration has given us means. It means the banks are credit card companies are just shifting around their fees. They will figure out how to make the same or more than they made before these "reforms".


Based on what you just posted, it is obvious that the banks and credit card companies (which are banks for the most part) need strict regulation. The wily manner in which they embrace schemes and devices to frustrate the intent of the law is evidence enough of that. And a very smart lady such as Ms. Warren, who really knows her stuff, is a better person to design an agency to regulate them than would be some insider from the banking sector.

Tell me Ronnie, now that the rate of interest banks pay the Fed is near zero, why has there not been any corresponding decrease in the rates those same banks charge their credit card customers? The answer: G R E E D! Or what some would call the "free enterprise system."
quote:
now that the rate of interest banks pay the Fed is near zero, why has there not been any corresponding decrease in the rates those same banks charge their credit card customers? The answer: G R E E D! Or what some would call the "free enterprise system."


No one who understands both banking and free enterprise could ever confuse the US banking industry as a free enterprise system.
quote:
Originally posted by dolemitejb:
quote:
now that the rate of interest banks pay the Fed is near zero, why has there not been any corresponding decrease in the rates those same banks charge their credit card customers? The answer: G R E E D! Or what some would call the "free enterprise system."


No one who understands both banking and free enterprise could ever confuse the US banking industry as a free enterprise system.


Agreed--which is why I referred to banking as something "some would call the 'free enterprise system.' Calling it that does not make it that.
quote:
Originally posted by beternU:
quote:
Originally posted by dolemitejb:
quote:
now that the rate of interest banks pay the Fed is near zero, why has there not been any corresponding decrease in the rates those same banks charge their credit card customers? The answer: G R E E D! Or what some would call the "free enterprise system."


No one who understands both banking and free enterprise could ever confuse the US banking industry as a free enterprise system.


Agreed--which is why I referred to banking as something "some would call the 'free enterprise system.' Calling it that does not make it that.


Yes, but it is those mostly on the left who will be quick to blame current problems in banking/finance, wall street, etc. as "capitlalism" run amok..."free enterprise" greed, etc...

Nothing could be further from the truth...because nothing about those enterprises resemble anything "free market".
quote:
Originally posted by beternU:

Tell me Ronnie, now that the rate of interest banks pay the Fed is near zero, why has there not been any corresponding decrease in the rates those same banks charge their credit card customers? The answer: G R E E D! Or what some would call the "free enterprise system."


Is this not what the government is doing? Wanting more of my hard earned money for their own greedy ways. Power!
So who is right in the matter and who is wrong?

Is it right for the government to take our hard earned money to pay for someone's paycheck who does not want to work?

Is it right for the government to take our hard earned money to pay for someone elses healthcare when I have to pay for my own?

Is it right to take our hard earned money and send it off to develop other countries while destroying ours?

OR!!

Is it wrong of me to want to keep and use my money as I see fit. Since I did work my butt off for it?

Just a few questions about your beloved Obama's government or should I say Crime syndicate.

Add Reply

Post

Untitled Document
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×