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R Paul's "Audit the Fed" has 24 Senate co-sponsors
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Thu Apr 30, 2009 6:54 pm    Post subject: R Paul's "Audit the Fed" has 24 Senate co-sponsors Reply with quote

Dear Friends,

As we reflect on President Obama's first 100 days in office, the hundreds of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts of Wall Street and the just passed budget, a staggering $3.4 trillion boondoggle, I wanted to share some good news with you.

As I write, H.R. 1207, my bill to audit the Federal Reserve, currently has 110 cosponsors in the House of Representatives. This piece of legislation is perhaps the most important of my career, and I thank you for your continued support in sending me back to Congress to fight for it.

A broad coalition of Representatives has joined with me in supporting your right to transparency at the Fed. For example, Rep. Tom Price (GA), head of the conservative Republican Study Committee, and Rep. Lynn Woolsey (CA), former head of the liberal Progressive Caucus, have both cosponsored the bill. Americans from all over the political spectrum are demanding an audit of the Federal Reserve. And with good reason!

Since its inception, the Federal Reserve has operated without sufficient transparency or accountability to the American people. In fact, current law specifically excludes the Fed from audit or real congressional oversight. No government agency has such an utter lack of sunshine.

The Federal Reserve has created and dispersed trillions of dollars in response to our current financial crisis. Of course, I am among the most outspoken critics of the bailouts, but Americans across the nation, regardless of their opinion of the TARP program, want to know where that money has gone and exactly how much has been spent.

H.R. 1207 will open up the Fed's funding facilities, such as the Primary Dealer Credit Facility, Term Securities Lending Facility, and Term Asset-Backed Securities Lending Facility to Congressional oversight.

Additionally, audits could include discount window operations, open market operations, and agreements with foreign central banks, such as the ongoing dollar swap operations with European central banks.

By opening all Fed operations to a GAO audit and calling for such an audit to be completed by the end of 2010, the H.R. 1207 would achieve much-needed transparency of the Federal Reserve.

Times are tough, and we continue to hear a stream of bad news. But I will continue to stand up for you in Congress and fight for our American traditions, to protect our Liberty and for an Audit of the Federal Reserve.

Thank you again for your support. I could not continue my fight without you.

In Liberty,

Ron Paul

www.RonPaulforCongress.com


Last edited by bacasper on Mon Sep 14, 2009 10:46 pm; edited 8 times in total
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mole



Joined: 06 Feb 2003
Location: Act III

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 9:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The gall of this slimebag Bernanke.
What say ye of this display of nose-thumbing at the US?
If *I* walked in and talked to my boss like that, I imagine I'd be fired.
Oh, I forgot. He has no boss, yet dictates the monetary policy of the greatest economic power in the world.
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djsmnc



Joined: 20 Jan 2003
Location: Dave's ESL Cafe

PostPosted: Wed May 06, 2009 9:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I recently had the opportunity to see Ron paul speak in person. A great man he. And an astonishing amount of campus support.
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Thu May 07, 2009 8:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yes, it is a real shame that Ron Paul was never given a real chance at the presidency.

If he had, we would be on our way out of this economic disaster with relatively little pain now instead of digging our way in deeper with lots of pain later.
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Thu May 07, 2009 9:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

If it had one milllliiooonnn sponsors, the bastards would figure out a way to ignore it or if pushed, merely fudge the numbers.

Ultimately, the system will fail. That's all reform minded people have to look forward to now.
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mole



Joined: 06 Feb 2003
Location: Act III

PostPosted: Fri May 08, 2009 11:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I extend all due deference to mises and other intellectuals here,
but I don't think these types are gonna "Git 'er done."
If it all falls apart, it won't be because we extremists didn't try.

H.R. 833 looks doomed for now, but H.R. 1207 holds a lot of promise.
UPDATE: 143 cosponsors.
Kind of like antigunners whittle away at the Constitution with the ultimate goal of a gun-free world,
hopefully we can blow open the criminality of the Fed, and eventually get it abolished.

http://wethepeoplefoundation.org/UPDATE/Update2009-05-08.htm

Quote:
In 1910, a group of the world's most powerful financiers traveled incognito by train one night from New Jersey to Jekyll Island, Georgia to covertly design the strategic, political and legislative foundation needed to install the privately-owned banking cartel that we now know as the "Federal Reserve System."

In 1913, this private banking cartel was quietly and fraudulently granted power by the U.S. Congress to conjure the currency of our nation out of limitless debt. For almost a century it has effectively bankrolled (through populist fraud, political deception, and financial alchemy) a broad array of escalating, unconstitutional acts by the federal Government. These acts, in violation of the fundamental Rights of the People, have taken our Republic - and the Liberty of the People - to the brink of ruin.
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 8:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/09/AR2009050900428.html

Quote:
AP sources: Obama wants Fed to be finance supercop

WASHINGTON -- The Federal Reserve could become the supercop for "too big to fail" companies capable of causing another financial meltdown under a proposal being seriously considered by the White House.

The Obama administration told industry officials on Friday that it was leaning toward making such a recommendation, according to officials who attended a private one-hour meeting between President Barack Obama's economic advisers and representatives from about a dozen banks, hedge funds and other financial groups.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other officials made it clear they were not inclined to divide the job among various regulators as has been suggested by industry and some federal regulators. Geithner told the group that one organization needs to be held responsible for monitoring systemwide risk.
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Pluto



Joined: 19 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 8:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The Fed is in some serious need of free market competition.
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 8:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

mises wrote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/09/AR2009050900428.html

Quote:
AP sources: Obama wants Fed to be finance supercop

WASHINGTON -- The Federal Reserve could become the supercop for "too big to fail" companies capable of causing another financial meltdown under a proposal being seriously considered by the White House.

The Obama administration told industry officials on Friday that it was leaning toward making such a recommendation, according to officials who attended a private one-hour meeting between President Barack Obama's economic advisers and representatives from about a dozen banks, hedge funds and other financial groups.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other officials made it clear they were not inclined to divide the job among various regulators as has been suggested by industry and some federal regulators. Geithner told the group that one organization needs to be held responsible for monitoring systemwide risk.

I saw that piece earlier, and I think my eyes just glazed over. Kinda reminds me of A Separate Reality.

Anyway, it is now virtually impossible to maintain any illusions about just who this Obama guy is working for: the finance capitalists who financed his campaign from the beginning and who completely populate his cabinet.

I told you so.
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 8:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah, you're right.

But he is a political beast. I like the guy, but I don't think he is dogmatic or strongly ideological. When he realizes that this path leads to a Republican congressional victory and then Repub prez, he'll change.

The 3,4,5th years of this depression will have a deep psychological impact on the population. Obama needs to understand how done as prez he is if in 3 years if America is not recovering and the banksters are buying a new batch of Lambo's every 6 months. Hope and Change are great platitudes, but when common people are out of money, out of a job and see Goldman's and Obama screwing them they'll turn on Hope and Change pronto, and Sarah Palin will even see like a good pick.


Last edited by mises on Sat May 09, 2009 2:23 pm; edited 1 time in total
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 9:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Here's how the Fed a super-regulator will work:

Quote:
WSJ reports that after �intense bargaining,� the Fed �significantly scaled back� its estimates for banks� capital shortfalls. Indicative of this was the unexpected change in its methodology for measuring bank capital. Instead of tangible common equity, the Fed used a less stringent measure it calls �Tier 1 Common Capital,� heretofore (virtually) unknown.

http://optionarmageddon.ml-implode.com/2009/05/09/stress-test-bargaining-dealing-with-the-devil/

I've been watching this who debacle for about two years now with interest and sometimes disgust. But it has just gone too far. I am very fond of the United States and the American people and seeing such a great country totally eaten away from the inside out by some easily controlled bankers really is quite sad. In my quasi-professional opinion, the US will not recover until big banks fail/are nationalized.


Last edited by mises on Sat May 09, 2009 2:02 pm; edited 1 time in total
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bacasper



Joined: 26 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 10:12 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

mises wrote:
In my quasi-professional opinion, the US will not recover until big banks fail/are nationalized.

I am afraid you may be right about that.

I heard a report that all the big banks are on track to award record bonuses to their executives once again, sometimes to the tune of 2/3 of the company's profits. All this while making loans virtually impossible to get, gouging credit card interest rates, and this having been made possible by TARP and the bailouts.

Got the exact numbers for us?
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Sat May 09, 2009 2:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

bacasper wrote:

I heard a report that all the big banks are on track to award record bonuses to their executives once again, sometimes to the tune of 2/3 of the company's profits. All this while making loans virtually impossible to get, gouging credit card interest rates, and this having been made possible by TARP and the bailouts.

Got the exact numbers for us?


Though the industry is smaller, bonuses are expected to return to 2006 levels. And the banks are starting to hire again. They won.
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ontheway



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Location: Somewhere under the rainbow...

PostPosted: Sun May 10, 2009 7:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

mises wrote:
Here's how the Fed a super-regulator will work:

Quote:
WSJ reports that after �intense bargaining,� the Fed �significantly scaled back� its estimates for banks� capital shortfalls. Indicative of this was the unexpected change in its methodology for measuring bank capital. Instead of tangible common equity, the Fed used a less stringent measure it calls �Tier 1 Common Capital,� heretofore (virtually) unknown.

http://optionarmageddon.ml-implode.com/2009/05/09/stress-test-bargaining-dealing-with-the-devil/

I've been watching this who debacle for about two years now with interest and sometimes disgust. But it has just gone too far. I am very fond of the United States and the American people and seeing such a great country totally eaten away from the inside out by some easily controlled bankers really is quite sad. In my quasi-professional opinion, the US will not recover until big banks fail/are nationalized.




And this is why the Fed cannot manage the dollar even with a computer cruching the numbers to manage the money supply. The Fed will reprogram the computer. They will lie, cheat and steal. They always have, from day one. It's in their nature. They are incapable of changing their nature.


We have to go on a 100% gold standard and abolish the Federal Reserve.

The Federal Reserve is so dishonest that no matter how dire the situation, no matter how blatantly they have caused the calamity, no matter how stern the criticism, they have broken their promises, again and again, before the sound of their words could travel from the Chairman's lips to your Congressman's ears.
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mises



Joined: 05 Nov 2007
Location: retired

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 5:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

mises wrote:
If it had one milllliiooonnn sponsors, the bastards would figure out a way to ignore it or if pushed, merely fudge the numbers.


Quote:
Handwritten Notes Show Fed Oversight Bill Neutered On Senate Floor
digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Handwritten Notes Show Fed Oversight Bill Neutered On Senate Floor

Legislation to give Congress greater oversight of the Federal Reserve was severely watered down on the Senate floor Wednesday in private negotiations between two powerful Republican senators.

Thanks to an overlooked document posted on the website of Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the top ranking Republican on the Finance Committee, voters can virtually watch the water being dumped into the brew that Grassley had hoped to force the Fed to drink. (See the document at the bottom of this story.)

On page five of Grassley's amendment, he intends to give the Comptroller General of the Government Accountability Office power to audit "any action taken by the Board under...the third undesignated paragraph of section 13 of the Federal Reserve Act" -- which would be almost everything that it has done on an emergency basis to address the financial crisis, encompassing its massive expansion of opaque buying and lending.

Handwritten into the margins, however, is the amendment that watered it down: "with respect to a single and specific partnership or corporation." With that qualification, the Senate severely limited the scope of the oversight.

On the Senate floor, Grassley named the top Republican on the banking committee, Richard Shelby of Alabama, as the man pouring the water.

"Although I would have preferred to include all of the Fed's emergency actions under 13(3), in consultation with Senator Shelby I agreed to limit my amendment to actions aimed at specific companies," said Grassley.

"This modified version of the amendment does not give GAO authority to look at all of that additional taxpayer risk. It is much narrower than the one I originally filed, but it is a reasonable step in the right direction, and it does not threaten monetary policy independence."

The original version of the amendment also scratches out congressional authority to oversee Fed actions as they relate to the TARP bailout or "similar authority that the Board exercises under urgent and exigent circumstances."
Story continues below

The Senate walked right up to the edge, thought about auditing the Fed, and with the stroke of a pen, backed off. (Or maybe it was a pencil.)

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/05/08/handwritten-notes-show-fe_n_200515.html
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