The Next Federal Reserve Chair will Decide the Fate of Dodd-Frank

Gerald Epstein: Larry Summers is the chief architect of the financial crisis and should not be chief regulator of the financial system.


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  1. Violence is not necessary to bring down the monetary syndicate.

    Positive Action and Disruptive Inaction are all we need.

    Colorado is not under the control of the bankers for this very reason.

    Reply
  2. lucky for you Prot! You can now listen to Gerald Epstein to give you false subversion never talking about why and how the Fed is a fraud in the first place.

    Epstein says… Ruben pushing for him, Geitner pushing for him… then he asks why??? and gives some bogus answer to his own retarded question.

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  3. Another reason I can't stand the PERI institute, their focus is on the most ridiculous things. Yes Summers should never be the Fed chair, NO ONE should be. They imply someone "good" could become the Fed chair instead. The Fed does no good.

    Even when it "smooths things over" it doesn't see to the treatment of a problem, it's like a pain killer that allows it to fester longer and stop actual healing from taking place.

    The Fed has to go, and be replaced by NOTHING.

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  4. The Federal Reserve is a SCAM!! They get away with loaning money out of thin air with interest. If I did that I would go to jail but they get away with it? End the criminal private central bank NOW!!!

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  5. Larry Summers is Jewish
    Bernanke – Jewish
    Greenspan – Jewish

    Former World Bank heads… Wolfensohn & Wolfowitz
    Former IMF – Strauss-Kahn
    Goldman Sachs gets $10B bailout, then outsources to Singapore & gives big bonuses

    Paramount Studios -Grey
    Warner Bros -Meyer
    Walt Disney -Iger
    Viacom -Redstone
    Time Mag -Stengel
    US News -Zuckerman
    Google -Page
    Facebook -Zuckerberg
    LA Times – Hartenstein

    From your money to your media, a small group of people are in control. That's not healthy.

    Reply
  6. Harvard's Toxic Swaps: Interest Rate Bets Cost It Billions
    In 2004, Summers put interest rate swaps on Harvard's books for its cash account. Later, Harvard had to pay $1 billion to get out of them. In October 2008, Harvard was in such fiscal hot water that it had to borrow $2.5 billion from the commonwealth of Massachusetts, almost $500 million of which was used within days to exit the swap
    agreements Harvard entered these in to finance a Summers-led expansion in
    Allston, Mass..

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