Dispatches is up, on the financial reform bill that is not really financial reform.
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Dispatches is up, on the financial reform bill that is not really financial reform.
Grassroots, my Progressive Populist column, is on the move to bring some accountability to Wall Street.
This is not a perfect bill, but it is the kind of legislation that could push us toward a more democratic central bank. What I find intriguing is the way the Republicans have signed on to legislation they never would have endorsed — have never endorsed in the 20-some-odd years that Ron Paul has been proposing it — mostly because Barack Obama’s financial team is opposed.
Now, being on the opposite side from Larry Summers and Tim Geithner is not necessarily a bad thing, but you know that their motivation has nothing to do with policy and everything to do with politics.
In any case, why stop with an audit. Let’s take it a step — or many steps — farther. Let’s smash the current arrangement and craft a new one that will be responsive to the American people rather than the banks.
William Greider, in The Nation, offers a list of prescriptions that have merit, legislation on the table in both houses that could become law if enough lawmakers are willing to break with the banks and do their jobs. They include:
So, whatever happens to the Paul plan, let’s hope it is the first step toward real reform of our distorted financial system.