Posts Tagged federal reserve

Senator Landrieu’s office explains why she hasn’t co-sponsored the bill to audit the Fed

July 15, 2009

Just got off the phone with Senator Mary Landrieu’s office. The aide I spoke with told me that Mary hasn’t yet signed on as a co-sponsor to S.604, “The Federal Reserve Sunshine Act of 2009,” because . . .

The Federal Reserve is a private institution, and Mary isn’t sure whether the federal government has the authority to conduct an audit.

So, just like that, Mary Landrieu’s office confirmed one of the most controversial assertions made by those of us who want to abolish the Federal Reserve. For years we have been told how wrong we are, that the Fed is most certainly an arm of the government.

It looks like Mary Landrieu agrees on that point. But now she is using it as a way to protect the bankers.

Hard to blame her, though. After all, they are the ones who put her in Washington.

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I Light a Candle for Old Hickory

JULY 10, 1832 (WASHINGTON, D.C.) — President Andrew Jackson today struck the first blow in ridding the nation of its central bank, the Second Bank of the United States. Jackson returned to the Senate, unsigned, a bill that would have extended the bank’s charter for another 15 years. The current charter is due to expire in 1836.

 Along with the unsigned bill, Jackson sent a message explaining the reasons for his veto. A key portion of his veto message focused on monopoly, privilege, and favoritism:

 “It is to be regretted that the rich and powerful too often bend the acts of government to their selfish purposes. Distinctions in society will always exist under every just government. Equality of talents, of education, or of wealth can not be produced by human institutions. In the full enjoyment of the gifts of Heaven and the fruits of superior industry, economy, and virtue, every man is equally entitled to protection by law; but when the laws undertake to add to these natural and just advantages artificial distinctions, to grant titles, gratuities, and exclusive privileges, to make the rich richer and the potent more powerful, the humble members of society-the farmers, mechanics, and laborers-who have neither the time nor the means of securing like favors to themselves, have a right to complain of the injustice of their Government. There are no necessary evils in government. Its evils exist only in its abuses. If it would confine itself to equal protection, and as Heaven does its rains, shower its favors alike on the high and the low, the rich and the poor, it would be an unqualified blessing.”

 Tragically, 81½ years from now, on December 23, 1913, the Sixty-Third Congress will reintroduce central banking to the United States by passing the Federal Reserve Act. Through its monetary policies, the Federal Reserve will gradually destroy the nation’s currency to the extent that the American economy will collapse in the early 21st century.

 Sorry about that.

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 JULY 10, 2009 (FRONT GATE OF JACKSON SQUARE, FRENCH QUARTER, NEW ORLEANS, LA., AFTER GATES HAD BEEN LOCKED) — On the 177th anniversary of Andrew Jackson’s veto of the bill to recharter the Second Bank of the United States, James Hines of SaintsAndFools.com and Tom Kowitz of OurTimeToStand.com memorialized the event at Jackson Square in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Kowitz’s account appears below:

 So, I’m heading home from work at 5:25 on a Friday evening, when my cell phone rings. It’s my good friend James Hines calling to see if I would like to go with him to Jackson Square in the French Quarter to light a candle in honor of Andrew Jackson. ‘Nuf said. Of course I would.

 Fast-forward to about 7:45. The gates of Jackson Square are locked. No big deal — we’ll light our candles at the front gate.

 Turns out we have 13 candles. Bad luck? Good omen? Bad omen?

 Well, for James, the original 13 colonies come to mind. Maybe a good omen. But for me, the year 1913 comes to mind. Maybe a bad omen.

 Candles in place, I ask James for a match.

 Long pause.

 James didn’t bring matches. Or a lighter. Another problem. Not an insurmountable one, however, as we spot a few groups of people smoking vegetation of varying degrees of legality. James scores us a lighter pretty easily.

 Finally, down to business. Except the breeze that kicked up was just weak enough to not notice at first, just strong enough to blow out the candles every few seconds. Another problem.

 While we’re fighting the breeze and struggling to get all 13 candles lit at the same time, it occurs to me that it might be interesting to try to communicate with Andrew Jackson. After all, we’re in a place with more mediums per city block than anywhere else in the world. And not only that, they all accept fiat money! I explain all this to James, but he doesn’t seem to like the idea. He’ll light a candle for Andrew Jackson, but that doesn’t mean he wants to talk to him.

 Next thing we know, a group of vampire hunters shows up at the front gate. The leaders of the Vampire Tour make it clear that they are licensed vampire hunters. They can’t believe that someone else would try to occupy this particular space at this particular time. They are incredulous that we don’t know that the front gate of Jackson Square becomes their box office at 8 o’clock every evening. Sheesh!

 So now we have another problem. And if there’s anything worse than vampire hunters, it’s vampire hunters with a license from the city. These guys are well-connected not only with local vampires, but with local bureaucrats. James and I don’t want any trouble, so we ask for just a few minutes while we fight the breeze.

 At this point, James informs the leaders of the Vampire Tour of the amazing coincidence: We are vampire hunters, too! After all, we’re going after the Federal Reserve, perhaps the world’s most formidable vampire!

 Which leads to the highlight of the evening:

 One of the leaders of the Vampire Tour recommends we read The Creature From Jekyll Island. Now, that happens to be the most informative and powerful book I’ve ever read, and it changed my life. I’ve recommended it to more than a thousand people over the years, so it’s particularly delightful to have a vampire hunter recommend the book to me at the very moment I’m honoring the man responsible for knocking off the Fed’s predecessor.

 Soon the breeze dies down, and we quickly get all 13 candles lit at the same time. We leave them there, burning, along with a copy of Andrew Jackson’s veto message to the U.S. Senate.

 Here’s to you, Old Hickory.

   

 

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Ben Bernanke concerned that HR1207 would be destructive to the financial system and the dollar

From the LRC Blog:

“My concern about the legislation is that if the GAO is auditing not only the operational aspects of the programs and the details of the programs but making judgments about our policy decisions would effectively be a takeover of policy by the Congress and a repudiation of the independence of the Federal Reserve would be highly destructive to the stability of the financial system, the Dollar [emphasis mine] and our national economic situation.”

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/028422.html

He says this during the playing out of what many are calling Great Depression 2.0.  By the way, did you know that the Great Depression happened about two decades after the creation of the Fed?

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All Our Economic Woes: Blame Them on the Fed

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Change You Can Believe In: Obama Wants Fed to Have Even More Power

Change You Can Believe In:

Obama Wants Fed to Have Even More Power

Below is an article that appeared on bloomberg.com June 17. The text that looks like this is from the article. [I have provided editorial commentary in text that looks like this.]

But first . . .

A financial system based on sound money does not need much regulation. A system based on “debt money” — our current system — is destined to fail, no matter how much regulation is in place. Okay, so here’s the article . . .

 Obama Lays Out ‘Sweeping Overhaul’ of Financial Rules

June 17 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama proposed the most sweeping overhaul of the U.S. financial regulatory system in 75 years, seeking to correct a “cascade of mistakes” that toppled major securities firms, froze credit markets and destroyed $26.4 trillion in stock market value around the world.

[Precisely. The “cascade of mistakes” started with the passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 and eventually left us with fiat money that has lost more than 95 percent of its value. They’re robbing us blind, and now that we’re on to them, they pretend that they have just been making “mistakes” all these years. That’s like a gang breaking into your house, loading 95 percent of your stuff into a moving van, and convincing the cops that  it was all a “mistake.”]

The proposal, much of which will be subject to approval by Congress, adds an additional layer of regulation for the biggest financial firms.

[Now there’s a great idea. If only we had more regulation, all would be well. Problem is, the system is inherently fraudulent and rotten to the core, and no amount of tinkering by bureaucrats is going to fix it.]

It would create an agency for monitoring consumer financial products, make the Federal Reserve the overseer of companies deemed too big to fail, and bring hedge and private equity funds under federal scrutiny.

[Just what we need: Another agency, and the Federal Reserve overseeing our largest companies. Who will oversee the Federal Reserve? Who will guard the guards?]

“This was a failure of the entire system,” Obama said at a White House event that included the leaders of the Treasury, the Fed and other regulatory agencies. “An absence of oversight engendered systematic, and systemic, abuse.”

[Yes, the entire system indeed failed. But not because of an absence of oversight. While strict oversight could have prolonged the failure (which may have ultimately made it even worse), all the oversight in the world can’t maintain a rotten system forever. The collapse of this house of cards was inevitable, as is the collapse of the next one they slap together. The Federal Reserve was created in 1913, ostensibly due to a systemic failure. In 1933, FDR was forced to confiscate much of the country’s gold because of a systemic failure. In 1945 they gave us Bretton Woods, because of a systemic failure. In 1971, Bretton Woods failed. In 2008, the current version failed. In 2020 . . . ]

The announcement marks the beginning of what promises to be a political battle that’s likely to alter the president’s plan, with Republicans criticizing it as an expansion of government power over the economy.

[The Republicans are right to be concerned about the expansion of government power over the economy, but they have done nothing over the years to rid us of the root of the problem: the Federal Reserve, fractional-reserve banking, and the legal-tender laws  that  force us to use those ridiculous Federal Reserve Notes. It’s hard to take the Republicans’ complaint seriously.]

Obama, who has called the “sweeping overhaul” of regulations one of his top domestic priorities, said he wants to sign legislation by the end of the year.

[You want “sweeping overhaul”? Then sign a bill that abolishes the Federal Reserve, outlaws fractional-reserve banking, and repeals the legal-tender laws. Anything short of this will surely fail (see above).]

The administration’s proposal comes after a year of shocks on Wall Street and a credit crunch that contributed to the worst U.S. recession in half a century. Since September, the government has been forced to spend billions of dollars bailing out such firms as Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp., American International Group Inc., General Motors Corp. and housing finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

[“(T)he government has been forced to spend billions of dollars bailing out” these failed companies? FORCED? No, the government CHOSE to bail them out. It was We the People who are forced to pay for it.]

OTS Eliminated

While lax government regulation helped lead to the crisis, Obama suggested the changes he’s proposing don’t fully reshape U.S. oversight. Aside from eliminating one banking agency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, it leaves much of the current system in place — a nod to the difficulties of getting a law passed amid congressional and interagency turf battles.

[“(L)ax government regulation” did not help “lead to the crisis.” This crisis, or calamity, or catastrophe, or collapse — pick your ‘C’ word — was inevitable. More regulation may have forestalled the ‘C’ word, which may have made it even worse. What led to the ‘C’ word was a rotten, fraudulent foundation.]

“More can and should be done in the future,” a White Paper laying out the details of the plan said. “We focus here on what is essential: to address the causes of the current crisis, to create a more stable financial system that is fair for consumers and to help prevent and contain potential crises in the future.”

[Yes! Finally!! If they’re truly going to “address the causes of the current crisis” and “create a more stable financial system that is fair for consumers and to help prevent and contain potential crises in the future,” it can only mean that the Federal Reserve will be stripped of its powers, legal-tender laws will be repealed, and fractional-reserve banking will be outlawed. We’re saved! Um, except White Papers have been known to lie.]

Edward Yingling, president of the American Bankers Association, said his group has some “real concerns” about the consumer protection measures.

[Don’t worry about it, Ed. You and your bankster cronies will still have your incredible superpower that lets you create money out of someone else’s debt!]

Regulatory ‘Burden’

“For community banks that had nothing to do with this crisis, this will be massive regulation that will burden them with new costs,” Yingling said as he arrived at the White House for the announcement.

[Um, Ed? Any bank that creates money out of someone else’s debt (and ALL banks do that) has contributed to this crises. ALL banks practice fractional-reserve banking, so NO bank “had nothing to do with this crisis.”]

David Hirschmann, president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s capital markets center, said the largest American business lobby group is disappointed with the plan.

“While the administration has made several positive recommendations, we’re concerned that overall, the proposal simply adds to the layering of the system without addressing the underlying and fundamental problems,” he said. “We can’t simply insert new regulatory agencies and hope that we’ve covered our bases.”

[Right on, Dave! Every word of it is right on! But how would you propose we address “the underlying and fundamental problems”? How many of the Federal Reserve’s powers would you take away? How loudly will you scream to outlaw fractional-reserve banking? How hard will you lobby for the repeal of the legal-tender laws?]

Finishing Legislation

Democratic Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said the proposal is an “important step” toward revamping the regulatory system and that Congress will get the legislation to the president’s desk before the end of the year.

[I feel much better already, knowing that the federal government is going to take an “important step.” Congress has an excellent record in taking just the right steps, doesn’t it?]

Frank said lawmakers may make some changes. “Not every specific will come out the same way but I think the fundamental purposes that he is seeking to accomplish will be embodied in the bill,” he said outside the White House after Obama spoke.

[That’s the spirit! Let’s give the American people some good old-fashioned bipartisan compromise. It’s what we’ve always done, and the country is in great shape as a result! What could possibly go wrong?]

The finance panel has already begun work on some elements of the plan and should be ready to mark up legislation next month, Frank said.

[Isn’t it comforting to know that we have bureaucrats working on a “plan” that will dramatically affect our lives?]

Republican Representative Scott Garrett of New Jersey said the president’s plan “stays at square one on the big issues. It creates a cycle of more bailouts.”

“It perpetuates what we’ve had in the past,” said Garrett, a member of the Financial Services committee.

[Great, Scott! Nice to hear that you don’t want to perpetuate what we’ve had in the past. So when will we see your name on legislation to abolish the Federal Reserve, outlaw fractional-reserve banking, and repeal the legal-tender laws?]

The new Consumer Financial Protection Agency would oversee products from mortgages to credit cards. It would have authority to ban “unfair terms and practices,” punish companies for violations with fines and penalties and write rules to set higher standards for banks and non-bank companies.

[The most unfair practice of all is the creation of money out of someone else’s debt. The most unfair terms of all are charging interest on money created on the spot, and forcing everyone to accept these ridiculous Federal Reserve Notes as money. I wonder if the new Consumer Financial Protection Agency will start there. Um, probably not.]

A re-named regulator, known as the National Bank Supervisor, would watch over federally chartered lenders. It would assume the duties of the OTS and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

[A re-named regulator! Now there’s change you can believe in!]

Fed’s Role

The central bank would get responsibility to oversee all systemically risky financial firms, a move that aims to eliminate gaps in oversight that contributed to the collapse of Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last year. The Fed would monitor not only banks but large financial companies, such as insurers or hedge funds, whose interconnections in the financial industry mean their failure would endanger the system.

[Ingenious solution: Give even more power to the very people who got us into this mess. It comes as no surprise, though. In fact, probably everyone with a decent understanding of the history of the Federal Reserve saw this coming. In every crisis, it seems the Fed has always been granted more power despite a deplorable track record.]

“These firms should not be able to escape oversight of their risky activities by manipulating their legal structure,” the White Paper said. Through higher capital requirements and stronger regulatory scrutiny “our proposals would compel these firms to internalize the costs they could impose on society in the event of failure.”

[Blah, blah, blah. These firms wouldn’t need so much oversight and regulatory scrutiny if the system were based on a sound currency. Why doesn’t Mr. White Paper argue for that?]

Emergency Lending

The Fed, while gaining a bigger role as the systemic regulator, would have some of its emergency lending power curbed. The plan calls for the Treasury secretary to approve in writing any emergency funding.

[Ah, yes. More power to the Fed. Has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it: “systemic regulator.” And here’s yet more change you can believe in: The Treasury secretary will absorb some of the Fed’s emergency-lending powers. Changing bureaucrats like that is like changing your underwear with your neighbor.]

The central bank must also conduct a study of its structure under the administration’s plan. The Treasury and outside experts “should have substantial input into the review and the resulting report” on the Fed’s governance study, the paper said.

The Treasury can propose changes to the central bank’s structure “to improve its accountability and its capacity to achieve its statutory responsibilities.”

[Maybe I’m reading too much into this, but it seems to be an attempt to derail the bills to audit the Federal Reserve (H.R.1207 and S.604), or at least provide some talking points to those who will oppose those bills.]

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said he sees “no plausible alternative” to having the Fed oversee institutions that pose system-wide risk. “We’re redrawing the boundaries of authority,” he said.

[By saying he can’t see a “plausible alternative” to this ridiculous plan, Timmy has confessed to being utterly clueless. Sounds like a good name for a band: Utterly Clueless Timmy.]

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Are We Being Looted?

We’re just a bunch of ordinary guys over here at Our Time To Stand. We believe in core principles around the money issue. It’s non-partisan and is a question or right and wrong, not right and left. Usually we try to stick with the facts and the issues, but I must confess to being more than a little concerned. So, a disclaimer is in order: this is an editorial. My opinion. Period. When you understand the money issue, you understand what wealth really is, and how it can be stolen by swapping warehouse receipts with central-bank-issued “notes“. And you didn’t feel a thing!

Rumsfeld and The Pentagon’s Missing $2.3 Trillion

So, Rumfeld appears on TV in 2001 to explain that we can’t account for $2.3 trillion dollars of money at the Pentagon. According to “GlobalSecurity.org”, the Chinese military spending that year was around $17 billion. By my reckoning – OK, the GCalTool from Ubuntu 8.10 – we are missing around 135 times the Chinese military budget. Am I the only one who thinks that could be significant?

Bernie Sanders and the Missing $2.2 Trillion At The Federal Reserve

We’ve already covered this, but it bears repeating. Bernie Sanders asked Bernanke of the Federal Reserve what he did with $2.2 trillion. Come on Ben, tell me. Ben just said “no”! Is it just me, or is that a look of pure, unadulterated arrogance on Bernanke’s face; a kind of “you can’t touch me” confidence? So, Ben. What did you do with it?

Rep. Alan Grayson and the Federal Reserves’ Inspector General: $9 Trillion, I Dunno

They claim they don’t know what happened with $9 trillion. “Looking into it.” “Got my best people on it.” “I’ll have my people talk to their people.” They don’t care, do they. They think we can’t touch them. They think we’re either too stupid to understand the Fiat currency system, or so invested in its corruption that we won’t rock the boat. I’m sorry Federal Reserve. We are starting to see through you.

A Few Trillion Here, A Few Trillion There

… pretty soon you are talking about some serious money. Am I the only one who thinks we’re being looted? Does it look to you like some people are gathering up all they can? Making hay while the sun shines. Stealing your money, my money, your children’s, grand-children’s, and great grand-children’s money. We have a system that allows private banks to sell a nation into servitude and you are happy as long as they don’t mess with your flat screen, six-pack and game. WAKE UP! Make a stand for principle. Turn off the left. Hannity and Rush are no solution. We must reform the monetary system.

End the Fed. End the Fraud

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A Failure of Capitalism? Really?

.. maybe it’s a failure of Government-sponsored corporatism.

Let’s not get caught up in the great distraction that is the left/right political circus.  The reason we have such greed and fraud is because of Government regulation, whether “left” or “right” is in power. First a principle:

Fractional Reserve Banking = Fraud (legalized fraud)

“But the Government stands up for the little guy.” — ‘Conventional’ Wisdom

Every corporation, in some form, receives the protection of Government.  A corporation is a legal entity given privileges and protections that an individual does not have.  In reality, it exists in a Government file folder, and is given legal force by the Government.  Banks are just special corporations that are offered all of the normal protections, but are also allowed to commit fraud, charge you for it, and charge you to protect themselves from failure!

Our system of banking is a Government/Banking partnership.  Ever wondered why both Bush and Obama are surrounded by Wall Street insiders?  Even if there were some kind of regulatory failure, do we really trust the same people that raped and pillaged the Social Security and Medicare trust funds, created unfunded liabilities of $99.2 trillion dollars, and launched an endless series of unconstitutional foreign wars, to oversee anything but their own enrichment?

Let’s Compare Wal-Mart to a Bank

Is fractional reserve banking fraud?  You be the judge.

  • If Wal-Mart sold the same physical item to 10 different people, the managers would go to jail for fraud.
  • Have you ever heard of a “run on Wal-Mart”?
  • Why not?
  • Because the product is really there.
  • Does the government need to insure Wal-Mart’s “deposits” (inventory).
  • No – because the product is really there.
  • Have you ever heard of a “run on a bank”?
  • Yes, and why?
  • Because the money isn’t really all there.
  • The bank gives 10 people a claim to the same dollar, we call it fractional reserve banking, and “economists” claim it creates wealth.  (It does for the banks.)
  • The government prevents this fraud from being exposed by “insuring” the deposits, and creating trillions, confiscated from your back pocket in the form of inflation, to bail out the banks when the marketplace attempts to correct their fraudulent activities.  (Drive them out of business.)
  • The Government is not protecting you, it is protecting the system.
  • Every dollar is loaned into existence and “leveraged” 10:1.
  • The leveraging is called “fractional reserve”, and it is a legal form of fraud, giving 10 people a claim to the same actual dollar.
  • Your “asset” (your dollar) is somebody else’s liability.
  • Why do you think it is labeled a “Federal Reserve Note”?
  • There is no realistic cap on how many dollars the government and the banks can create – together.  (Remember its a partnership.)
  • When they inflate, inflate, inflate it will eventually reverse.
  • The resulting recession is merely the marketplace attempting to correct the imbalance.  (The “marketplace” is just you and me voting with our wallets in mundane, everyday, voluntary activities.)

Do We Have a Captalist System?

No.  It is corporatism.  Government by, for, and of, big corporations – particularly the banks.  (Take a look at H.R. 875.  Supposedly about food safety, it should be called the “Agri-Business Take Over and Elimination of Independent Food Production Act”.  It’s written by congresswoman DeLauro whose husband is a Monsanto executive!  And she’s Democrat, supposedly standing up for the little guy.  You can’t make this stuff up …)

Big corporations want regulation.  Why compete in the marketplace when you can just cozy up to politicians and have them write laws in your favor?  It is a mechanism used to support cartels and prevent competition.  It is a restraint on trade.  And who trades?  You and me!  We trade!  Trade is the basis of a civilized society.  It is nothing more than mutual interdependence, creating social order and raising the standard of living for all people.  We rely on each other to survive!

You can not have capitalism, nor a free market, with a central bank and fractional reserve banking.

How Do We End the Fraud?

Like the Constitution, the US Dollar is just a “goddamn piece of paper” (thanks George W).  So what gives it value?  Simple – one statement:  “THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE”.  Through government fiat (force) you are compelled to take it.  This is why it is called a fiat currency.  Without the government force, you and I would rather have something of value in exchange for our labor.

Remove the language and the house of cards that is our banking cartel would come crashing down.  Capital would once again return to the people where it belongs.  It is your labor that creates products and services.  It is your labor that is taxed to save the banks.  It is your labor that keeps the real economy functioning.  It is your purchasing power that is eroded by the inflationary, fiat currency system.

Repeal Legal Tender Laws.  End the Fed.  End the Fraud.

Imagine if you had the power to create money.  Would you use it to shape the world to your own benefit?  Do you think the banks do?  Do you think the Federal Reserve does?  Not to think so is naive.

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Senate Bill S.604 – Thanks Senator Vitter

So, by now most of us are familiar with House Bill H.R. 1207 introduced by Representative Ron Paul. The house bill would make it legal for the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to audit the Federal Reserve. (Yes, that’s right, the same Federal Reserve that will not tell us where $9 trillion went, is not allowed to be audited right now … unless they say we can!)  That House bill is now up to 232 Cosponsors!

Senate Bill S.604

H.R. 1207 has a related bill in the Senate: S.604.  This bill is vitally important, but is currently struggling with only two cosponsors. I am pleased to say that one of them is our Senator David Vitter. Thank you Senator for taking a stand with us. We appreciate your courage – and believe me, standing up to the international banking elite takes courage.

To the other Senators, with the exception of Senator Jim DeMint and the sponsor Bernie Sanders: SHAME ON YOU! Who do you represent? The people or the banking elite? Bernie Sanders found out who is in control when he asked Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to tell him what the Federal Reserve did with $2.2 trillion of our money. Bernanke’s answer was short and to the point: “No”.

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Steve Scalise Cosponsors H.R.1207

Great news! According to “THOMAS Library of Congress”, Representative Steve Scalise finally co-sponsored H.R. 1207.

Steve Scalise Cosponsors H.R. 1207 on 5/20/2009

Thanks to all who signed the petition.  We know there were not thousands of signatures, but we know that each of you who signed the petition share our concern about the financial health of our country.  And here is an entertaining coincidence: Representative Scalise just happened to cosponsor the resolution on the day that your petition was delivered to him!  Steve, we’ll give you both the benefit of the doubt and kudos for great timing!

H.R. 1207 Now Cosponsored by 40% of the House

As I write, 175 out of 435 Representatives now cosponsor this landmark legislation, including 30 Democrats.  This is just the start of our pressure.  We need to make sure this gets through the house and that the Senate hears our voices.

How to Contact Representative Scalise

We suggest you contact Steve Scalise via his website and thank him for cosponsoring H.R. 1207.

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