amusing. yer gayboy Cohen is an idiot. always with the far left it's "Republicans caused this!" with massive deregulation. didn't happen. there was no massive regulatory rollback on banks. blame Trump? this guy has a bronze TDS Cobb up his ass. Cohen is completely wrong, as usual, for spewing far left nonsense claiming it would have prevented this collapse.
the reality is that SVB is a boutique bank not open to average joe customers and they put all their eggs in one high risk game .. venture capitol. a notoriously high risk low profit game. oh they make bank when they fund the next google, but the other nine ventures of ten fail. most startups fail. does this idiot Cohen think regulation would have prevented this? over time 90% of startups fail. how's Cohen going to stop that with regulations?
what a idiot. Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
those safety brakes would not have made a difference keeping tank trains safe O thought he was doing a favor, but it really didn't do anything. still had train derailments year after year with no sign of reduction.
the banks were already deregulated prior to trumps involvement.
who passed the law to repeal a depression era law to ban banks being involved in the stock market?
cite what law trump repealed? Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
S.2155 - Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
S.2155 Section by Section Summary
Fact Sheet: The Senate’s Bipartisan Dodd-Frank Rollback Bill
Make no mistake, S. 2155 is the second part of a massive corporate giveaway. The corporate tax cuts passed in December 2017 were a windfall for big banks—and big banks are again winners in this legislation.
If enacted, the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act would represent the most significant rollback of financial reform since Dodd-Frank was passed in the wake of the 2007–2008 financial crisis. At a time when the banking sector is thriving—and just received a massive windfall through the recent corporate tax cut giveaway—it makes no sense to loosen the regulations on the largest banks in the country or to weaken important protections for homebuyers and homeowners. History makes clear that bankers and policymakers are not the ones who bear the immense burdens of a financial crisis.