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Reply #40: By old hands, do you mean the ones that deregulated the mortgage industry [View All]

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Truthiness Donating Member (65 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-22-08 10:23 AM
Response to Reply #39
40. By old hands, do you mean the ones that deregulated the mortgage industry
Bill Clinton is as much to blame for the mortgage crisis as anyone, for repealing the Glass-Stegall Act:

When Franklin Roosevelt took office, both the President and Congress knew the banking crisis demanded immediate action. The result was one of the crown jewels of the New Deal: the Glass-Steagall Act, officially known as the Banking Act of 1933. Glass made sure the bill forbid banks from getting into the investment business. In addition, the bill established the Federal Deposit Insurance Company, which protects our bank deposits....

The repeal of one of the most important pieces of legislation in this nation's history came about as a result of another Clinton "triangulation," the wobbling attempt to find the middle of the road that has somehow managed to pass for a philosophy with many Democrats for over two decades. As former Clinton former campaign Richard Morris once described it, you move a little to the left, a little to the right. I'd love to hear Clinton give that explanation to a foreclosed home owner today.

With the stroke of a pen, Bill Clinton ended an era that stretched back to William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson and reached fruition with FDR and Harry Truman. As he signed his name, in the whorls and dots of his pen strokes William Jefferson Clinton was also symbolically signing the death warrant of Liberal America and its core belief in the level playing field that had guided the Democratic Party. But it was the gift of the pen to Sanford Weill and its assuming an honored place on the Wall of Me that rubbed salt in the wound.


http://www.progressivehistorians.com/2007/11/bill-clintons-role-in-mortgage-crisis.html

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