I have
written before about the tyro Senator from Massachusetts , Elizabeth Warren … see: Lizzy ... basically commending her for putting a bevvy of bank regulators on the hot
seat for not bring criminal charges against any banking types for the 2008
financial meltdown. Since then Senator
Warren has, from her position on the bench of the Senate Banking Committee,
embarrassed two more sets of financial officials testifying there:
1) She asked
the Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, why the “too big to fail”
provisions of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law have not yet been fleshed
out and implemented. She said that not
only have the big financial-center banks gotten bigger since this act was
passed, but that they are benefiting from a money-cost differential
between themselves and the smaller regional banks ... to the tune of something like
$83 billion per year. (See: Huffington Post Story). Bernanke gave a dismissive response even
after Warren
kept pressing him on this issue. (I must
add however that, after Bernanke’s testimony was over, one could see Warren rushing up to the
Fed Chairman as he was exiting the hearing room, presumably with some
backtracking words.)
2) And, more
recently, Senator Warren pressed Treasury officials as to why officers of HSBC
bank have not been prosecuted (and/or had serious sanctions imposed on the bank) for
laundering considerable drug money whereas minor drug dealers end up in the
poky, see: Reddit Reference.
(HSBC did pay a $1.92 billion fine which
seems to indicate that these were pretty serious offenses.)
Please don’t
misunderstand me. Although I commend Ms.
Warren on her aggressive cross-examination style from the bench of the Senate
Banking Committee, I still have serious questions about her own ethics
regarding her long-ago claims of minority Native-American status … and the character weakness she displayed in how she ran her campaign against the incumbent Senator
Scott Brown. So I am conflicted about
my above paeans for this woman ... but I
do hope she continues her aggressive judicial ways from the bench.
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