Progressive Senators Fight for Real Reform

Headlines blared that Senate Banking Chair Chris Dodd was done with dithering and ready to move ahead with a financial reform package without Republican support. Financial reform groups should be celebrating this as a positive move that would roll back some of the worst elements of the bill inserted during recent bipartisan negotiations, including the nutty effort to put the Consumer Financial Protection Agency into the Federal Reserve -- an institution about as popular as the IRS.

Hold the champagne. Reading between the lines, it seems that negotiations are continuing behind the scenes and ranking Republican Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL) says “an agreement is still very possible.” The little spat between Dodd and the Republicans has been beneficial, though, because it flushed out more details about the points of agreement and contention.

You can hear the bankers cheering because there appears to be agreement to shrink and defang the best part of the bill, the Consumer Financial Protection Agency. It seems destined for the basement of a failed regulatory body such as the Fed or the Treasury Department. The consumer protection agency was originally intended to be a stand-alone agency with broad authority over banks and nonbanks to crackdown on predatory mortgages, credit card fees, payday lenders and others whose abusive practices capture consumers in an unshakable debt cycle. Not only do the Republicans and the big banks want to put CFPA under the thumb of the bank-friendly Fed, an institution which completely failed to protect consumers from predatory lending in the run up to the financial crisis, they want to strip it of its enforcement authority and shoot it full of exemptions. No agency would be preferable than this type of toothless tiger.

Negotiators have failed to break up the too big to fail banks or effectively cap their size. Worse, the draft continues to exempt the most complex derivatives — including foreign currency swaps and credit-default swaps — from the requirement that they be regulated and traded on an open exchange. You remember credit default swaps. They allow parties with no insurable interest in an underlying asset (i.e., your house) take out insurance on whether or not your house will burn down. This of course gives them an incentive to torch the place. These "financial weapons of mass destruction" played a key role in the collapse of AIG and the global economy and are now being used by big American banks to torch Greece.

Janet Tavakoli, a respected financial analyst, recently called upon Congress “to act immediately to abolish credit default swaps on the United States, because these derivatives will foment distortions in global currencies and gold,” a situation that could wreak further havoc on the U.S. economy. If Congress does not close the loopholes in the bill on the derivatives front, the next crisis is assured.

Fortunately, a few brave men are willing to put the kaibosh on toothless reform. "I won't vote for a bill if the banks have control of it," Sen. Sherrod Brown, (D-OH), told CNN. In remarks on the Senate floor, Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-DE) warned he won't support "compromise measures that give only the illusion of change and a false sense of accomplishment." And Independent Senator Bernie Sanders told CNN he would vote no unless the bill includes an independent consumer regulator and tough new restrictions on banks. Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Carl Levin (D-MI) and others are fighting hard for a real "Volcker Rule" that would reinstate some of the protection for Main Street banks against reckless Wall Street gambling.

Dodd has said that he will unveil his new bill on Monday. Take your time Senator. Get it right this time. It is not an exaggeration to say that the future of the world may depend on it.

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financial reform--root of the problem

There are two topics I would like to see more discussion about:

1) Problem with stock values being the driving force behind far-reaching, socially disruptive decisions made by corporations.

I would like to see the financial reform in which the value of a stock is measured by factors other than profit of a company. Factors like quality of service, quality of life, equal opportunity, long-term commitment to communities that invest their time and money working in the company. This would reveal clear difference between companies that are beneficial to society, and those that are socially toxic. A concept of "kosher" stocks already exists. Free people, acting through their representatives, should explore that idea, and expand the number of factors that determine the value of a stock in the market. Otherwise, as profit addicts, companies will keep doing whatever they can get away with, just to make a greater profit than their competition, keep their investors' interest, and keep their stock prices high. Don't expect an addict to self-correct! It just doesn't happen.

How absurd is the situation where people are losing their jobs, and whole communities are destroyed, even though a parasitic company that benefited from their work is making huge profits? You may ridicule calls for social justice, but organized people can punish offending companies by boycotting their products and services. Moral blindness as a result of indoctrination, and lack of solidarity, is what corporations count on. But, what happens to your neighbor will happen to you.

In short, avoid the profit being used as a main measure of stock value.

2) Problem with spending level (or "consumerism"), being used as a factor to determine the health of an economy.

What if people just want to live a simple life, off their farming land, and cultivate their religious priorities? The current "progressive" global financial paradigm is strongly opposed to that. It would appear that overblown and ineffective governments need indebted taxpayers constantly on the brink of ruin to keep them motivated to work harder than ever. It is telling that this topic is neglected even by leaders who profess to be religious.

Reforming the Fed

The Federal Reserve and its Collection Agency (IRS) need to be eliminated, not reformed.

Since 1913, the Federal Reserve has presided over the dismantling of the U.S.
from the get-go. The current Depression is the final end-game as the Fed and its
horde of International Bankster Gangsters foreclose on the world.

In addition, the Federal Reserve is the Official War Party of the United States
and is directly responsible for well over 150 million deaths since WW-1, thus making the U.S. the most hated Nation in the world. The U.S./Israel alliance assures unending
Wars of Attrition in the Mid-East, making peace a virtual impossibility.

Its way past time to end the Zionist Occupation of the world, especially here in the U.S., the Premier Zionist stronghold.