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| Financial Reform Bill: Bureaucratic Absolutism | | Print | |
| Written by Charles Scaliger | ||
| Friday, 16 July 2010 00:00 | ||
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Nor is the bill’s size illusory. As the AP’s Jim Kuhnhenn put it: From storefront payday lenders to the biggest banking and investment houses on Wall Street, few players in the financial world are immune to the bill's reach. Consumer and investor transactions, whether simple debit card swipes or the most complex securities trades, face new safeguards or restrictions. Nobody, in other words, will be unaffected by this latest foray into federal micromanagement of the private lives of Americans. Among other things, the new bill will give vast new powers to the Federal Reserve, the secretive central bank that, more than any other single entity, has been responsible both for modern asset bubbles and the recessions and depressions that have followed them. Yet instead of being held to account for its role in creating the ongoing crisis, the Fed will now be responsible for overseeing large, interconnected financial concerns deemed large enough to pose a significant threat to the financial system should they fail. It will be the task of a separate 10-person council of regulators led by the Treasury Secretary to identify such concerns on behalf of the Fed. On the other side of the retail ledger, some of the biggest retailers also got an unjustified mandated benefit with the Durbin amendment that puts price controls on the interchange fees they pay to process credit cards. This corporate welfare for fat cat merchants will mean higher costs to consumers, community banks and credit unions. That such a truly revolutionary (in the worst sense of the term) piece of legislation has been met with only a muted response from the American public is a disappointing indicator of how few people truly cherish freedom — at least as the Founders and the first several generations of Americans understood it — in 21st Century America. Too many have now accepted the monstrous notion that Americans are too free, and one of its corollaries, that the state — not free individuals — is the best determiner of how an economy should run. As a consequence, we now have several immense new regulatory bodies charged with monitoring and regulating our every financial act. Financial privacy, as of July 2010, is officially a thing of the past. Trackback(0)
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EC
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Un-educated Citizenry "That such a truly revolutionary (in the worst sense of the term) piece of legislation has been met with only a muted response from the American public is a disappointing indicator of how few people truly cherish freedom." I see this a direct correlation to the level of education the "voters" seek. The idea of an educated citizenry is all but dead, and our freedom will follow shortly thereafter. |





Czarist Russia is looking better and better. Once a byword for bureaucratic absolutism, the apparatchiks of pre-revolutionary St. Petersburg and their endless rule-making seem positively enlightened beside some of the pieces of aptly named omnibus legislation emanating from Capitol Hill these days. The newly passed Dodd-Frank Financial Regulation Bill may be the worst yet. At 2,315 pages and 390,000 words, the bill is half the size of the entire King James Bible. It stretches credulity to believe that America’s political leaders now enact single pieces of legislation many times the size of the entire Mosaic code. But they do.

