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  4. Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 - Separation of Commercial and Investment banks

Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 - Separation of Commercial and Investment banks

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  • I Ian Shlasko

    I wouldn't know. Can't browse YouTube at work. If someone would care to summarize it, I'll respond.

    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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    josda1000
    wrote on last edited by
    #42

    Senator Sanders asked Bernanke if he would tell the Congress where all the money went. Specifically, to which institutions (investment firms, banks, etc). Bernanke answered "No."

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    • D Distind

      That seems to be a global figure, anything for the states, preferably with real figures backing it up? And I'm no economist, but I generally can peg more than idiots like you without thinking for all that long. That said, the fed doesn't seem to be any more responsible for this figure than anything else you've put forward. They have the ability to create 'temporary' funds, but do so at the risk of being booted. That's not really the ability to create unlimited funds, and if they tried to do such they'd be booted faster than you type insults.

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      CaptainSeeSharp
      wrote on last edited by
      #43

      Distind wrote:

      And I'm no economist

      It is very obvious.

      Distind wrote:

      I generally can peg more than idiots like you without thinking for all that long.

      Key wording here, "generally", indicating that you trick yourself into believing something illogically false to make yourself feel better, which is also very obvious.

      Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^] Sons Of Liberty - Free Album (They sound very much like Metallica, great lyrics too)[^]

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      • C CaptainSeeSharp

        Ian Shlasko wrote:

        When Geihtner (sp?) and Bernanke are pulled before Congress every few months, that's them answering to someone.

        You call this answering?[^]

        Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^] Sons Of Liberty - Free Album (They sound very much like Metallica, great lyrics too)[^]

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        josda1000
        wrote on last edited by
        #44

        That cracked me up. You just basically nailed it. The point is that Congress has no say in what the bank does. At all. Ian, distind, I hope you people get the point. Seriously, they need a check on their power. Why do you think we have a system of checks and balances? Because no one source can be trusted with unchecked power. The Fed has precisely that. They are at the top, more powerful than the Congress itself.

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        • J josda1000

          That cracked me up. You just basically nailed it. The point is that Congress has no say in what the bank does. At all. Ian, distind, I hope you people get the point. Seriously, they need a check on their power. Why do you think we have a system of checks and balances? Because no one source can be trusted with unchecked power. The Fed has precisely that. They are at the top, more powerful than the Congress itself.

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          CaptainSeeSharp
          wrote on last edited by
          #45

          josda1000 wrote:

          Ian, distind, I hope you people get the point.

          Oh, they get the point, it scares them so they block it out and manufacture a fantasy land. In Ian's case, it may be because he profits greatly from the corrupt system and nothing else matters to him. Ian works for a very profitable hedge fund in NY.

          Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^] Sons Of Liberty - Free Album (They sound very much like Metallica, great lyrics too)[^]

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          • J josda1000

            Senator Sanders asked Bernanke if he would tell the Congress where all the money went. Specifically, to which institutions (investment firms, banks, etc). Bernanke answered "No."

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            Ian Shlasko
            wrote on last edited by
            #46

            Well, that's a bit odd. I could understand something like "Not at this time," or "Not in front of the cameras," because openly naming the institutions that got bailed out would erode confidence in them, which would then cause them to be in need of ANOTHER bailout. Could understand delaying the information (Or only giving it to the finance committee in private) until after the bailed-out firms had recovered.

            Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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            • C CaptainSeeSharp

              josda1000 wrote:

              Ian, distind, I hope you people get the point.

              Oh, they get the point, it scares them so they block it out and manufacture a fantasy land. In Ian's case, it may be because he profits greatly from the corrupt system and nothing else matters to him. Ian works for a very profitable hedge fund in NY.

              Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^] Sons Of Liberty - Free Album (They sound very much like Metallica, great lyrics too)[^]

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              josda1000
              wrote on last edited by
              #47

              Yeah I figured that. He did mention that once. Funny thing is, I work for a government contractor as well. I need out.

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              • I Ian Shlasko

                Well, that's a bit odd. I could understand something like "Not at this time," or "Not in front of the cameras," because openly naming the institutions that got bailed out would erode confidence in them, which would then cause them to be in need of ANOTHER bailout. Could understand delaying the information (Or only giving it to the finance committee in private) until after the bailed-out firms had recovered.

                Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                josda1000
                wrote on last edited by
                #48

                Don't you understand? If they went bankrupt instead of being bailed out, the economy would have been fine. People that lost money in the banks that went bankrupt should know better... it's called "fractional reserve"... they don't have the money! People that lose their jobs in the banks would just get relocated to new businesses or neighborhood banks. Those big banks SHOULD go down! Don't you see that? Like CSS says... of course you do. You just have a vested interest in this. (I don't mean to offend, I just hope you see the light, honestly. You should know me by now.)

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                • C CaptainSeeSharp

                  josda1000 wrote:

                  Ian, distind, I hope you people get the point.

                  Oh, they get the point, it scares them so they block it out and manufacture a fantasy land. In Ian's case, it may be because he profits greatly from the corrupt system and nothing else matters to him. Ian works for a very profitable hedge fund in NY.

                  Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^] Sons Of Liberty - Free Album (They sound very much like Metallica, great lyrics too)[^]

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                  Ian Shlasko
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #49

                  Actually, we're only somewhat profitable right now. I do NOT work for one of the big firms (Though I did in early '08, and got laid off along with most of the rest of the company). My firm is NOT a public company or a commercial bank. We did NOT get a penny of bailout money. Going to keep trying to insult me, or would you like to get back to the actual discussion?

                  Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                  • I Ian Shlasko

                    Actually, we're only somewhat profitable right now. I do NOT work for one of the big firms (Though I did in early '08, and got laid off along with most of the rest of the company). My firm is NOT a public company or a commercial bank. We did NOT get a penny of bailout money. Going to keep trying to insult me, or would you like to get back to the actual discussion?

                    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                    josda1000
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #50

                    Do you work for a smaller company now? Just curious man.

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                    • J josda1000

                      Don't you understand? If they went bankrupt instead of being bailed out, the economy would have been fine. People that lost money in the banks that went bankrupt should know better... it's called "fractional reserve"... they don't have the money! People that lose their jobs in the banks would just get relocated to new businesses or neighborhood banks. Those big banks SHOULD go down! Don't you see that? Like CSS says... of course you do. You just have a vested interest in this. (I don't mean to offend, I just hope you see the light, honestly. You should know me by now.)

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                      Ian Shlasko
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #51

                      josda1000 wrote:

                      People that lost money in the banks that went bankrupt should know better...

                      It's a fair point, but you're not seeing the indirect effects. Let's look at 401k accounts, to start... Tax-deferred retirement accounts... Not social security or government funding. This is people putting away money for the future, so they can retire comfortably. Well, here's the first list of big 401k providers that I stumbled upon (Outdated by a few years): http://www.workforce.com/tools/hot_list/HL01_30_06.pdf[^] #1. Fidelity. 11 million participants (People with retirement accounts). #2. Hewitt Associates. 5.4 million participants. #3. Merrill Lynch, part of Bank of America. 3 million participants. Just looking at the top three... Hewitt is just fine, but Fidelity and Merrill both needed a bailout. If they went down, that's 14 million people who would have lost their retirement savings. I think you can see where I'm going with this... After 401k, you can look at pension funds. Then you can look at the mutual funds that invested in these firms, and which 401k and pension funds were invested in THEM. That's the real problem... Everything is so intertwined that if a large firm collapses, it can hurt millions and millions of people. That's the "Too Big To Fail" problem. So yes, the big firms DID deserve to collapse... But did everyone invested indirectly in that firm deserve the same?

                      Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                      • J josda1000

                        Do you work for a smaller company now? Just curious man.

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                        Ian Shlasko
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #52

                        Yes. A small group of hedge funds that's a subsidiary of a large non-financial/tech company. I think we only have a couple hundred employees worldwide, if that.

                        Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                        • J josda1000

                          Which is the whole point of auditing them. Because otherwise, they can get away with what they want. They simply must be audited, even if they'd done nothing wrong. We just need to keep them in check.

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                          Ian Shlasko
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #53

                          As I keep saying, they ARE audited. They even post the audits on the web for the general public. Ron Paul probably just wants to look through their books himself, instead of letting an independent auditing firm do it.

                          Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                          • I Ian Shlasko

                            josda1000 wrote:

                            People that lost money in the banks that went bankrupt should know better...

                            It's a fair point, but you're not seeing the indirect effects. Let's look at 401k accounts, to start... Tax-deferred retirement accounts... Not social security or government funding. This is people putting away money for the future, so they can retire comfortably. Well, here's the first list of big 401k providers that I stumbled upon (Outdated by a few years): http://www.workforce.com/tools/hot_list/HL01_30_06.pdf[^] #1. Fidelity. 11 million participants (People with retirement accounts). #2. Hewitt Associates. 5.4 million participants. #3. Merrill Lynch, part of Bank of America. 3 million participants. Just looking at the top three... Hewitt is just fine, but Fidelity and Merrill both needed a bailout. If they went down, that's 14 million people who would have lost their retirement savings. I think you can see where I'm going with this... After 401k, you can look at pension funds. Then you can look at the mutual funds that invested in these firms, and which 401k and pension funds were invested in THEM. That's the real problem... Everything is so intertwined that if a large firm collapses, it can hurt millions and millions of people. That's the "Too Big To Fail" problem. So yes, the big firms DID deserve to collapse... But did everyone invested indirectly in that firm deserve the same?

                            Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                            josda1000
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #54

                            And that's why I say that you should actually keep some money in either dollars (savings accounts like 401K is ok, but I mean liquid accounts), or gold/silver. because things like this can happen. and you KNOW that those two businesses should have apparently failed, from your findings. You actually kind of helped my case. NO government money should have gone into the private sector like that. It's precisely unconstitutional. BUT the way they got around it is by using the Federal Reserve, a private bank. That's the only way they got around it. It is immoral what they did, for one thing. Stealing from the public to give it to a few banks/institutions and their members. Once this system collapses, we'll have to go back to our American roots, it's the only way.

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                            • J josda1000

                              Senator Sanders asked Bernanke if he would tell the Congress where all the money went. Specifically, to which institutions (investment firms, banks, etc). Bernanke answered "No."

                              I Offline
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                              Ian Shlasko
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #55

                              Oh, by the way... If you're curious: http://money.cnn.com/news/specials/storysupplement/bankbailout/[^]

                              Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                              • I Ian Shlasko

                                Yes. A small group of hedge funds that's a subsidiary of a large non-financial/tech company. I think we only have a couple hundred employees worldwide, if that.

                                Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                                josda1000
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #56

                                Wow that is amazingly small. Glad to hear you're not hit by the problem. Whether we agree or not lol

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                                • J josda1000

                                  And that's why I say that you should actually keep some money in either dollars (savings accounts like 401K is ok, but I mean liquid accounts), or gold/silver. because things like this can happen. and you KNOW that those two businesses should have apparently failed, from your findings. You actually kind of helped my case. NO government money should have gone into the private sector like that. It's precisely unconstitutional. BUT the way they got around it is by using the Federal Reserve, a private bank. That's the only way they got around it. It is immoral what they did, for one thing. Stealing from the public to give it to a few banks/institutions and their members. Once this system collapses, we'll have to go back to our American roots, it's the only way.

                                  I Offline
                                  I Offline
                                  Ian Shlasko
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #57

                                  josda1000 wrote:

                                  and you KNOW that those two businesses should have apparently failed, from your findings. You actually kind of helped my case.

                                  I do agree that the big firms DESERVED to fail. Yes, they did stupid things. Yes, they deserved to face the consequences. But their failure would have screwed far too many people, many of which didn't even know their money was at risk.

                                  josda1000 wrote:

                                  It is immoral what they did, for one thing. Stealing from the public to give it to a few banks/institutions and their members.

                                  Well, look at it this way... Option 1: Do nothing. Firms collapse. A significant percentage of the population loses their life savings. Big firms get what they deserve. Option 2: Spend taxpayer money. Firms stay up. People keep their life savings. Big firms get away with their idiocy. It was a lose-lose situation, and they picked the lesser of two evils.

                                  Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                                  • I Ian Shlasko

                                    Oh, by the way... If you're curious: http://money.cnn.com/news/specials/storysupplement/bankbailout/[^]

                                    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                                    josda1000
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #58

                                    That's an interesting find... very cool. i'm glad they have the info.

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                                    • I Ian Shlasko

                                      josda1000 wrote:

                                      and you KNOW that those two businesses should have apparently failed, from your findings. You actually kind of helped my case.

                                      I do agree that the big firms DESERVED to fail. Yes, they did stupid things. Yes, they deserved to face the consequences. But their failure would have screwed far too many people, many of which didn't even know their money was at risk.

                                      josda1000 wrote:

                                      It is immoral what they did, for one thing. Stealing from the public to give it to a few banks/institutions and their members.

                                      Well, look at it this way... Option 1: Do nothing. Firms collapse. A significant percentage of the population loses their life savings. Big firms get what they deserve. Option 2: Spend taxpayer money. Firms stay up. People keep their life savings. Big firms get away with their idiocy. It was a lose-lose situation, and they picked the lesser of two evils.

                                      Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                                      josda1000
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #59

                                      yeah we could disagree on this forever lol it's all good

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                                      • J josda1000

                                        Wow that is amazingly small. Glad to hear you're not hit by the problem. Whether we agree or not lol

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                                        Ian Shlasko
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #60

                                        Actually, when the mortgage crisis started, I was working for Bear Stearns. Got laid-off when J.P. Morgan bought us. No, I wasn't anywhere NEAR the branch of the company that imploded... I never even met the guys in that department. Ironically, I was one of the lucky ones... Since we went down first, the Fed basically TOLD J.P. Morgan to buy us, so I got a standard severance and all that. When Lehman went down soon after, I heard the people essentially came in the next morning and were told "Get your #(%*& and get out." Me, I used the time off to write my first novel :) Oh, and by the way... I know I get a lot of flak in this forum whenever this debate starts, for being in the financial industry... Just keep in mind that I'm not one of the millionaires... In this industry, tech guys are bottom feeders. Unless you've got a PhD in mathematics and are writing quantitative analysis algorithms (Not ashamed to admit that stuff is WAY beyond me), you just make a decent salary, not an extravagant one.

                                        Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Author of Guardians of Xen (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novel)

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                                        • J josda1000

                                          And that's why I say that you should actually keep some money in either dollars (savings accounts like 401K is ok, but I mean liquid accounts), or gold/silver. because things like this can happen. and you KNOW that those two businesses should have apparently failed, from your findings. You actually kind of helped my case. NO government money should have gone into the private sector like that. It's precisely unconstitutional. BUT the way they got around it is by using the Federal Reserve, a private bank. That's the only way they got around it. It is immoral what they did, for one thing. Stealing from the public to give it to a few banks/institutions and their members. Once this system collapses, we'll have to go back to our American roots, it's the only way.

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                                          R Offline
                                          ragnaroknrol
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #61

                                          josda1000 wrote:

                                          And that's why I say that you should actually keep some money in either dollars (savings accounts like 401K is ok, but I mean liquid accounts), or gold/silver. because things like this can happen.

                                          I'd like to point out the incredible stupidity of this statement. You know why banks exist? To keep your money safe. That's what it boils down to. When you hear about some old timer that had all their money stolen by a thief because it was stuffed in a mattress, you shake your head. They aren't getting it back. A bank is insured. A bank keeps it safe and in exchange uses it to make more money. Ian even pointed out there were 401Ks at risk, and you STILL acted like your point was valid. No one keeps gold at home in vast quantities because they would quickly lose their money to a robber. The security required to keep your money safe from robbers that know every person with a nice house has a large wad of cash in it would wipe out any savings. I suppose we should go to our American roots. You know how to ride a horse and chop wood? Far too many people want to go back to a system that just plain didn't work well and won't work with the numbers we deal with nowadays.

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