What Should Uncle Sam Do?

 
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That Washington has not learned this simple lesson is shown by the proposal—supported by both Fed chairman Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Paulson—to put investment banks under the supervisory wing of the Fed. There you go again, as Ronald Reagan would say. This will remake the swashbuckling investment banks—inveterate and successful risk-takers—into incipient Fannies and Freddies, gambling with taxpayer money and growing flush with the lack of market discipline.

Not to worry, we will be told. The Fed will be on watch. Is this not the same Fed that—together with its brother bank regulators—allowed the heavily regulated banks to fail in underwriting subprime loans and set up off-balance-sheet investment vehicles? Washington is a strange place; every time regulation fails, Congress gives us more of it.

© 2008

 
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  • Posted By: melbee1971 @ 09/19/2008 10:26:28 AM

    Comment: As a public high school teacher, the current state of our public (and private) institutions reflect our values as a society, from my point of view. I ask all readers to consider this comparison of the following American institutions: Wall Street, Financial Powerhouses, and our public schools...

    We are bailing out these failing institutions with taxpayer dollars. The state of our public school system continues to decline. Bailouts and deregulation and more money for failing financial (private) institutions. But increased regulation and LACK of financial support for our PUBLIC SCHOOLS - does this tell us something about our overall priorities as a nation? Are we reaping what our leaders have sown for us?

    Think about this, voters PLEASE! Not just for the sake of your own personal interests, but for the sake of our country.

    Good teachers are being laid off and class sizes are growing. No child left behind is a law that requires improvements without the promised funding to implement these improvements. And our schools are listed as "failing schools" losing support from the federal government who "regulated" the schools in the first place.

    What is left in our public schools is often a stressed out skeleton staff that does not have the resources to properly educate our students, our future, which we would hope will lead us someday.

    More evidence is proving that No Child Left Behind (an unfunded mandate) has actually lead to increasing drop outs of our high school students. PLEASE don't blame the teachers for this. We don't want any child to fail. We are working as hard as we can. We are not "in it for the money."

    Meanwhile, these corporate lobbyists have effectively secured deregulation and what they consider "optimal" conditions for their financial success (deregulation). And a few well-connected people have lined their pockets with enormous amounts of other peoples' money.

    This sort of short-term gain at the expense of long-term growth way of thinking have really infected our entire way of running our society.

    Unfortunately middle and lower class young people (the MAJORITY) of our future do not have the money or the resources to hire corporate lobbyists. Their teachers and their schools have very limited resources. And there is little to NO organized efforts to effectively support the reform and progress to lead our public schools to educate and prepare our future.

    In every other developed and developing country we compare our students' progress with, there is a clear and dedicated effort to improve, fund, and prioritize education. We are and will be competing with these nations. In America, we are starving our schools while bailing out reckless fat cats who've thrived on greed. Is this the American Way? Or have we lost our way?

    Let this be a lesson. Hopefully (as we say in class) we will learn from all of this and use it to improve, grow, and succeed.

  • Posted By: samser @ 08/05/2008 3:20:48 AM

    Comment: In my opinion, (1) top executives for the duration of the bailout should not receive more than $500,000 annual compensation, and they should be obliged to stay on the job for a minimum of 3 years, until the mess they created is solved, if they fail to stay to solve the problem they should be penalized with a minimum of $1,000,000 fine, and (2) the government (The People) must get 10 percent of their current outstanding shares, as compensation for the risk being taken.

    Sam Serr
    Toronto, Ontario (Canada)

  • Posted By: samser @ 08/05/2008 3:18:51 AM

    Comment: In my opinion, (1) top executives for the duration of the bailout should not receive more than $500,000 annual compensation, and they should be obliged to stay on the job for a minimum of 3 years, until the mess they created is solved, if they fail to stay to solve the problem they should be penalized with a minimum of $1,000,000 fine, and (2) the government (The People) must get 10 percent of their current outstanding shares, as compensation for the risk being taken.

    Sam Serr
    Toronto, Ontario (Canada)

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