It's been more than 12 months after the giant financial crisis of 2008.
Obama was elected 12 months ago.
And yet, we still see no signs of reform in the financial sector.
Oh, sure, Obama went thought the charade of "reigning in" executive compensation - by cutting it in half, instead of setting a fixed dollar limit. And it doesnt' apply to the big financial firms like Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan, because those firms paid back their TARP bailouts to escape from this rule.
But all joking aside, notice that there has been:
No attempt to reinstate the Glass-Steagal act.
No splitting up the financial giants so they are no longer "too huge to fail."
No mass firing of members of the SEC over Madoff and over the bogus Bank of America settlement with the SEC, which was tossed out by a federal judge for being just more of the same crime BofA was accused of in the first place - defrauding and injuring BofA stockholders.
We heard talk of some new regulatory agency, which has apparently been buried in the mud.
But there are simpler things the government could have been doing in the past 12 months, and they haven't been done.
The Democrats used to accuse the Republican of blocking their efforts at reform. Where's their excuse now?
Obama was elected 12 months ago.
And yet, we still see no signs of reform in the financial sector.
Oh, sure, Obama went thought the charade of "reigning in" executive compensation - by cutting it in half, instead of setting a fixed dollar limit. And it doesnt' apply to the big financial firms like Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan, because those firms paid back their TARP bailouts to escape from this rule.
But all joking aside, notice that there has been:
No attempt to reinstate the Glass-Steagal act.
No splitting up the financial giants so they are no longer "too huge to fail."
No mass firing of members of the SEC over Madoff and over the bogus Bank of America settlement with the SEC, which was tossed out by a federal judge for being just more of the same crime BofA was accused of in the first place - defrauding and injuring BofA stockholders.
We heard talk of some new regulatory agency, which has apparently been buried in the mud.
But there are simpler things the government could have been doing in the past 12 months, and they haven't been done.
The Democrats used to accuse the Republican of blocking their efforts at reform. Where's their excuse now?