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Waterboard the Fed?
American taxpayers have the right to know where the trillions of dollars being pledged in their name are going
To my knowledge, no one has proposed waterboarding the US Federal Reserve. But the hostile reaction of much of the country's political leadership to suggestions that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) audit the Federal Reserve Board might lead people to think that waterboarding was being called for.
The basic story is straightforward. The US Congress has lent more than $700bn, via the Treasury, to bankers at below market interest rates through the troubled assets relief programme, or Tarp. This was to keep the banks from going belly up. At the same time, the Fed has lent more than $2 trillion to banks and non-financial institutions to maintain liquidity in the financial system.
The congressional oversight panel, led by Elizabeth Warren, has frequently complained that the Treasury has not always been altogether forthcoming in providing information about its lending practices under the Tarp. However, there is at least a public paper trail. We can find out how much money each bank received and under what terms.
By contrast, there is no public paper trail for the Fed's loans, even though it has more than three times as much money outstanding as does the Treasury through the Tarp. The Fed has only provided aggregate information on the amount of loans in each of its various lending programs, and general information on the terms of the loans and the types of collateral received.
However, it is not possible to find out in detail how much money Goldman Sachs borrowed, for example, at what interest rate, and which assets it posted as collateral. The Fed has explicitly refused to make information about specific borrowers public. In fact, the inspector general who has the responsibility for overseeing the Fed told congress that she does not have this information. Apparently the Fed doesn't even trust its inspector general with information on its lending practices.
It is difficult to understand the rationale for this secrecy. There may be times where it is necessary for America's central bank to lend money to a bank without immediately making the information public in order to avoid a panic. However, it is difficult to understand why this information cannot be made available weeks or even months later. After all, this money does not belong to the Fed - it belongs to us.
The proposal for a GAO audit of the Fed is a first step towards reasserting democratic control over this institution. In many respects, the Fed has more direct control over the direction of the economy than the president or congress, yet it carries through its actions largely outside of the public's view.
Furthermore, it is structured so that the banks have a hugely disproportionate influence over the Fed's actions. The Fed's 12 district bank presidents are appointed through a process dominated by the banks within each district. These 12 presidents sit on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the Fed's key decision-making body on monetary policy, far outnumbering the seven governors who are appointed through the democratic process. (Only five of the 12 bank presidents are voting members of the FOMC. The president of the New York Fed is always a voting member. The other 4 voting positions rotate among the other 11 districts.)
In a democracy, it is difficult to justify a situation in which the most important economic policy making body is, by design, more answerable to the banking industry than democratically elected officials. The Federal Reserve Transparency Act is a step toward making the Fed accountable. It would simply require that the Government Accountability Office audit the Fed's books and report to Congress on the bailout and other issues.
While more than 130 Republican members of the House of Representatives have signed on as co-sponsors of the bill, just over 30 Democratic members are co-sponsors. No one in the Democratic leadership has signed onto the bill. It is difficult to reconcile the Democrats' position with President Obama's often- repeated commitment to transparency. The resistance to transparency at the Fed will only encourage the public to believe that there actually is something to hide.
The Fed bears primary responsibility for the economic collapse. Alan Greenspan failed to take any steps to rein in the housing bubble and arguably even promoted it. It was inevitable that the collapse of an $8tn bubble would lead to a serious downturn of the sort that we are now seeing.
This incredible failure of the Fed should raise fundamental questions about its structure. Certainly it would be a positive step if the Fed were more answerable to democratically-elected officials and less accountable to Wall Street bankers. A GAO audit would be a big step in the right direction.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllThe hell with waterboarding the Fed...ABOLISH THE FED...and rid the country of the disease that's killing all but the rich and the banksters.....the debt based currency system...legal usury. NOW!
And while we are at it, re-investigate 9/11 and throw the whole damn Bush cabal in prison...along with anyone who did their bidding through fear, intimidation and blackmail....
http://www.israelshamir.net/Contributors/
Collateral_Damage_911.pdf
And please let me know if anyone can dispute any of the documentation in the above article.
The Federal Reserve is the hub of the legalized organized crime that is destroying the US and will ultimately destroy the world. Abolishing the Fed would be a good first step in breaking up organized crime.
angryoldman, thanks for your comments and link.
War is only one of the two major devices of Empire in overcoming superficially democratic Republics --- and in the case of the U.S. two shocks were required to finish the job:
9/15 (08) [the date when Lehman was pushed into bankruptcy to “ignite” this economic shock and collapse] was the 'second shoe dropping' of the 9/11 twin "Shock Doctrines" against the last vestiges of the American democratic Republic.
9/11 was 'Shock Doctrine' applied in a 'kinetic' attack.
9/15 was 'Shock Doctrine' applied in an 'economic' attack.
The distinctly non-humorous irony is that even Hitler did not need two Reichstag fires to “ignite” and transmogrify the German Republic into the Nazi Empire.
But now it can be clearly seen that it required two separate, but coordinated 'shock doctrine' attacks (one kinetic, and one economic) to push the U.S. from its previous decades of veiled control by the global ruling-elite 'corporate financial Empire', that had been controlling our country behind the facade of its two-party 'Vichy' sham of democracy, into this overt control that we are now seeing with the Empire's overt domestic ‘looting’ of our country, and an overt expansion of a multiplicity of foreign ‘wars’ for oil territory through-out the Middle East and South Central Asia.
Heck of a job, George and Barack!
Yes, angryoldman, as you suggest a reinvestigation of 9/11 (particularly in light of, and correlated with the attack of 9/15 (08) would be very revealing.
However, only a massive, coordinated, and solidarity-based movement by the working-class of all effected countries can now arrest this march of global EMPIRE.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Mr. Baker is well aware that the Fed is independent and does not submit to oversight. It was created to allow a handful of banks to regulate and control the economy; but it is not even wholly American owned.
The Fed needs to be eliminated; but, the two Presidents who tried (Lincoln and Kennedy) were both assassinated.
We the people must rise up and take back (well, we never had it) our government.
They hate us because of our freedom! Right, and I have this bridge....
Come on! Let's face it. At least from 1913 and the making of the fed and other scams, the Capitalist system is a thorough going criminal enterprise. Rigged merely to serve the needs of a few. Legalized extortion, which will remain until we the people take our Patriotic blinders off.
In fact this so called "Democracy" is currupt to its core.
You'all have a good day now. . .
You mean, "state" capitalism, right? Clearly, rigging the laws of government to benefit any particular enterprise, under threat of force, like the legal tender laws, is not a free market of voluntary participants -- or even close to that ideal.
Please consider going back a little further than 1913, though, into the history of fractional reserve banking, the inherently fraudulent activity that the Fed centralizes as a Congressionally created cartel.
After all, this money does not belong to the Fed - it belongs to us.
-------------------
Wrong.
Nothing belongs to us...
...Except the responsibility to pay it back, with interest.
Our job is to keep the bankers fat and happy so they can finance their wars and run their pyramid schemes.
Cygnus-X1-isaHole May 26th, 2009 9:53 am..............Reality's hell, isn't it??
When you have time, read The Iron Mountain Report..helps one to understand WHY things are the way they are...especially here in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, INC.
It says FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE right at the top of the paper tickets in my pocket, and not UNITED STATES NOTE, but since I am not a citizen of the FEDERAL RESERVE then I guess it isn't really my money after all.
Great article, though. HR1207, HR2424, S604 all call for Fed transparency and need support.
"...Except the responsibility to pay it back, with interest."
And where does that money for the interest come from? From other people borrowing money of course. The entire economy is based on ever increasing levels of debt. This is part of the "miracle" of compound interest. To own a bank is to own a currency printing press. Usury. Fractional reserve lending. FRAUD. FRAUD. FRAUD.
I have nothing more to say, here. I agree with everyone before me1
If Kucinich can't get more support for his bill I assume he'll support 1207. I'd rather see the Fed nationalized- he was gonna introduce a bill to do that. Why would anyone but the owners want these industries/institutions in the private sector and thus unaccountable to the public?
It would be pointless to waterboard the FED or its beneficial owners.
Even if you managed to do so they would, like the poor souls waterboarded for Cheney's erotic pleasures, tell you the truth: which you would not be able to recognize.
Failed People = failed government.
"This incredible failure of the Fed..." Just like 911 apologists who claim the Bush administration was incompetent, what makes anyone think the Fed failed? Read Shock Doctrine. Things went according to plan - it's just that we all were/are on the wrong side of the plan.
Dean Baker writes: "While more than 130 Republican members of the House of Representatives have signed on as co-sponsors of the bill [the Federal Reserve Transparency Act], just over 30 Democratic members are co-sponsors. No one in the Democratic leadership has signed onto the bill."
This reminds me of the politics of the original TARP legislation late last year when Paulson was yelling "the sky is falling" and the first TARP bill was defeated, mostly by Republicans calling for fiscal conservativsm. Then came arm-twisting and bribes, and a TARP bill passed. That was one of the very few times I thought the conservatives were standing for something valid, but then they sold out.
Congress is populated by overpaid whores.
-30-
"Congress is populated by overpaid whores."
------------------------------------------
As it should be. Whereever and whenever money rule there must be overpaid whore. For 300 years moneied men were the lowest class in Japan. Chinese valued merits and education way higher than faceless money for millennia. Worship of money on such scale as in this country is rather abomination in the long course of human history, a culmination of but one trend that ought to be exterminated by blood and iron.
First Bolshevik attempt to do it 1917 in Russia caused international moneied men to go banana. But they will destroy themselves as surely as plague destroys sick body. They eminently will get their own recepy of shock therapy. It will be real bloody but humanity will come out of it much leaner.
If water-torture - er, I mean, waterboarding - actually worked, then, maybe... of course, we're not talking hardened "evil-doers" here - chances are, just the threat of, say, a few years in the state pokey would be enough to force the Fed Board of Govs to squeal like stuck little piglets...
That's all if "Frankly, they own the place" weren't true. But it is. And rarely do the owners order themselves tortured for info by those they own...
The day is coming -- and coming soon -- when every dime spent and every dime received by the government, will be recorded in a public database. Those who currently own us will, of course, fight against this, but they are powerless to stop it.
Greed what a lovely sin.