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Bill Clinton is awesome

Clinton buried Glass-Steagall, but it was already on life support. It's provisions went through a process of being rolled back since the 1950s.

That is true. However, those sections of Glass-Steagall that were specifically repealed in 1999 (then allowing insured banks from being affiliated with investment banks) were no doubt a contributor to the collapse.

Like everything, though, one link in a chain of events becomes a scapegoat. I believe there is causation to be found in Carter's CRA, I believe GWB and his relaxing of lending requirements (and especially for home equity extraction to fuel consumer spending), a huge one, imo, is the exempting derivitives from regulation, credit default swaps, the SEC relaxing underwriting criteria in 2004 .. all-in-all, both parties, every term, has done something to bring about hurried growth, make believe economy, and I believe, along the way, everyone lost track of the score. Burst. Boom.

Bottom line is the 1999 orepeal of critical components of Glass-Steagall is, in part, to blame. But the problems began long before, persisted long after, and at times, even intentionally excellerated.. even if unknowingly.
 
Good points because the Republican led congress had nothing to do with the prosperity of the 90's...

you were strangely silent in the threads about Paul Ryan's speech and Romney's professional career.

But... keep punching out the same defensive lines.... the same issues. BYU1984WOOOO!!!
 
Bill Clinton's speech at the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night reminded at least one Republican of another time the former president stepped before the microphones.

Former California Gov. Pete Wilson said Thursday at a fundraiser for GOP vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan that Clinton's finger shake was reminiscent of the time he denied engaging in sexual behavior with a White House intern, and he used the moment to jab at the former president.

https://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.c...okes-clinton-sex-scandal-at-ryan-fund-raiser/

ClintonFingerSidebySide.jpg


The Creepy Bony-fingered, pig^
 
Former FDIC head Bill Isaac on CNBC today said the the government agencies had all the tools they needed to avoid the financial crisis , but not the political will to use them.
 
Former FDIC head Bill Isaac on CNBC today said the the government agencies had all the tools they needed to avoid the financial crisis , but not the political will to use them.

even though you dislike Babe, his idea for recovery is almost exactly mine. Keep people in their homes; put money in their hands not Wall Street's.

Sure, we have the mechanisms to do this, but the only fashionable thing to do, whether you're a Dem or a Rep, is to give the money to the bankers.
 
even though you dislike Babe, his idea for recovery is almost exactly mine. Keep people in their homes; put money in their hands not Wall Street's.
Sure, we have the mechanisms to do this, but the only fashionable thing to do, whether you're a Dem or a Rep, is to give the money to the bankers.
Corrections:
1. I deny disliking Babe.
2. I agree wholeheartedly with the idea of not transferring money to Wall Street, however the details of an alternative means of recapitalizing the economy are not so easy or simple to design. There will always be issues of fairness regarding who gets subsidized.
3. I don't see giving money to the bankers as fashionable, but I could be wrong, I'd like to hear more opinions on this.
I think it is more a matter of that the people who run the financial system are almost by definition pro-banks, so that there is no serious consideration of alternative non-bank centric solutions,
 
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