Obama: 'Epidemic of irresponsibility' : The Swamp
The Swamp
Chicago Tribune
Posted June 20, 2009 10:00 AM

The Swamp

by Mark Silva

President Barack Obama, proposing a new Consumer Financial Protection Agency and an array of new regulatory powers for the Federal Reserve and others, faces an uphill fight in Congress over new mechanisms that the administration calls necessary to avert another financial crisis.

"An epidemic of irresponsibility took hold from Wall Street to Washington to Main Street,'' Obama says in today's weekly radio and Internet address. " And the consequences have been disastrous. Millions of Americans have seen their life savings erode; families have been devastated by job losses; businesses large and small have closed their doors.

"In response, this week, my administration proposed a set of major reforms to the rules that govern our financial system; to attack the causes of this crisis and to prevent future crises from taking place; to ensure that our markets can work fairly and freely for businesses and consumers alike,'' he said.

See the address above, and read the text below:.

The text of the president's weekly address:

"As we continue to recover from an historic economic crisis, it is clear to everyone that one of its major causes was a breakdown in oversight that led to widespread abuses in the financial system. An epidemic of irresponsibility took hold from Wall Street to Washington to Main Street. And the consequences have been disastrous. Millions of Americans have seen their life savings erode; families have been devastated by job losses; businesses large and small have closed their doors.

In response, this week, my administration proposed a set of major reforms to the rules that govern our financial system; to attack the causes of this crisis and to prevent future crises from taking place; to ensure that our markets can work fairly and freely for businesses and consumers alike.

We are going to promote markets that work for those who play by the rules. We're going to stand up for a system in which fair dealing and honest competition are the only way to win. We're going to level the playing field for consumers. And we're going to have the kinds of rules that encourage innovations that make our economy stronger - not those that allow insiders to exploit its weaknesses for their own gain.

And one of the most important proposals is a new oversight agency called the Consumer Financial Protection Agency. It's charged with just one job: looking out for the interests of ordinary Americans in the financial system. This is essential, for this crisis may have started on Wall Street. But its impacts have been felt by ordinary Americans who rely on credit cards, home loans, and other financial instruments.

It is true that this crisis was caused in part by Americans who took on too much debt and took out loans they simply could not afford. But there are also millions of Americans who signed contracts they did not always understand offered by lenders who did not always tell the truth. Today, folks signing up for a mortgage, student loan, or credit card face a bewildering array of incomprehensible options. Companies compete not by offering better products, but more complicated ones - with more fine print and hidden terms. It's no coincidence that the lack of strong consumer protections led to abuses against consumers; the lack of rules to stop deceptive lending practices led to abuses against borrowers.

This new agency will have the responsibility to change that. It will have the power to set tough new rules so that companies compete by offering innovative products that consumers actually want - and actually understand. Those ridiculous contracts - pages of fine print that no one can figure out - will be a thing of the past. You'll be able to compare products - with descriptions in plain language - to see what is best for you. The most unfair practices will be banned. The rules will be enforced.

Some argue that these changes - and the many others we've called for - go too far. And I welcome a debate about how we can make sure our regulations work for businesses and consumers. But what I will not accept - what I will vigorously oppose - are those who do not argue in good faith. Those who would defend the status quo at any cost. Those who put their narrow interests ahead of the interests of ordinary Americans. We've already begun to see special interests mobilizing against change.

That's not surprising. That's Washington.

For these are interests that have benefited from a system which allowed ordinary Americans to be exploited. These interests argue against reform even as millions of people are facing the consequences of this crisis in their own lives. These interests defend business-as-usual even though we know that it was business-as-usual that allowed this crisis to take place.

Well, the American people did not send me to Washington to give in to the special interests; the American people sent me to Washington to stand up for their interests. And while I'm not spoiling for a fight, I'm ready for one. The most important thing we can do to put this era of irresponsibility in the past is to take responsibility now. That is why my administration will accept no less than real and lasting change to the way business is done - on Wall Street and in Washington. We will do what is necessary to end this crisis - and we will do what it takes to prevent this kind of crisis from ever happening again.

Thank you.''

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Comments

So, if the failure was in Washington, too, how does more Washington oversight make matters better? And will this oversight be any better than what has taken place in Illinois these past 8 years? Better than what has taken place in Crook County and the City of Chicago for decades now?
While there certainly were some people in the business end who let the markets down, committed some crimes, the fact is it was Washington that failed the most. Chris Dudd and Barney Frank both watched out for Fannie and Freddie and both were the leading causes of the mortgage meltdown, not to mention the Clinton-era laws that required lenders to give mortgages to people who couldn't afford them. The Bush administration warned Washington of the problems back to 2004, but the Democraps, lead by Dudd and Frank wanted nothing to do with preventing the problems!


Obama, though not perfect, is trying to get across the importance of family support even when a father is not present. He didn't have a father and yet he was raised with responsibility. He didn't use his obvious "blackness" as an excuse for he wasn't allowed the crutch. He was raised to be self reliant ... it's a good message.

By the way, it was the same message Michelle learned...


Geez, I like that idea of more government oversight too. We need to watch out for the crooks and fraud merchants, especially in the WS private sector. At the same time what are we witnessing from the Obama admin.? Noooh, tell me it not true! Yes sir reee!, the firing and stifling of our independent government watchdogs, the inspector generals, for causes that smell of nothing more than protecting political cronyism and hindering legitimate inquiries into questionable and possible government waste and fraud, especially in those WH "non-political' cubby programs staffed by Democract political operatives. And to hoot all of us, even the House Dems., those champions of Congressional investigations, are suddenly silent concerning any and all matters that bear witness to the same devious political operatives. And this from Mr. "hope and change" to rid us of politics as usual (must also include Nancy "they lied to me" Pelosi, who gave us the new non-partisan House). Yes Mark, even your own Chicago Trib. ( see Kass's Sunday column) has a great insight into Obama's not so now non-transparent reality that he is nothing more than a mortal man of Chicago politics given cover by the slobbering lovefest media that is failing to investigate the truth. What a shame and a stain on journalism, fast losing their creditably on being our independent watchdogs, becoming lapdogs of Obama and the WH propaganda.


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