John McCain, Phil Gramm, modernization act and Wallstreet bailout

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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-...s-crystal-ball
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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Who was President in 1999?

Did the President sign the bill?

just wondering
 

I'm still here Mo-fo's
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:pope:

Most of the rednecks out in middle america don't have a clue. This was one of the most significant triggers to ending up where we are now.

Fuck Graham (remember we are a nation of whiners) and McVain.

:103631605
 

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The other side of the pancake starts with Bill Clinton giving the pen he used to sign the repeal to Sandy Weill from Citi who keeps it framed in his office. It continues with Robert Rubin bolting from his position as Clinton's Treasury Secretary to join Citi, with an outlandish salary, the very next week. Don't think for a second the Dems weren't gaining heavily from this.

Secondly, the Glass-Steagall Act had been stabbed repeatedly since the 70s by both parties, Gramm and Clinton were the ones who gave it the death stab.
 

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I agree with all that has been said here.

If big banking and big business can corupt our elected officials with their money what can we little guys do??
 

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:pope:

Most of the rednecks out in middle america don't have a clue. This was one of the most significant triggers to ending up where we are now.

Fuck Graham (remember we are a nation of whiners) and McVain.

:103631605
The Glass-Steagall Act was an absolute disaster. The more obvious cause of the mortgage mess is the Federal Reserve. Less knowledgeable people don't understand why every 7 years or so people start acting ostensibly irrational by making bad investment decisions. It isn't that people are acting irrationally, it's that these banks basically had to make these investments because the Fed was pumping up the money supply so much that all the extra money had to find a place somewhere and it ended up in houses. The Fed created a financial tsunami that everyone had to get involved in and ride it out.
 

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I bet Wright Patman is mumbling in his coffin "I told you so".
 

Uno

Ban Teddy
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Who was President in 1999?

Did the President sign the bill?

just wondering

this goes both ways... everyone is always crying about how people are blaming bush for the state of the country...

top 3 names on the list when it comes to this mess for me are clinton, bush, greenspan (not in any order)
 

I'm still here Mo-fo's
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The Glass-Steagall Act was an absolute disaster. The more obvious cause of the mortgage mess is the Federal Reserve. Less knowledgeable people don't understand why every 7 years or so people start acting ostensibly irrational by making bad investment decisions. It isn't that people are acting irrationally, it's that these banks basically had to make these investments because the Fed was pumping up the money supply so much that all the extra money had to find a place somewhere and it ended up in houses. The Fed created a financial tsunami that everyone had to get involved in and ride it out.

Not saying I necessarily disagree with you, but I'd expect nothing less coming from an anarcho-capitalist.

:103631605 :thumbsup:

How's things going Levee? You finish school yet? Working on that Master's now?
 

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