Thanks Obama.....Fed Tries To Keep Financial Industry Bailout Secret

The hypocrisy of the Fed is appalling, as is that of Obama who re-nominated Fed chair, Ben Bernanke, who was either ignorant or incompetent about the out of control, deregulated by Clintonites in cahoots with the GOP financial industry which caused the horrific economic disaster under Bush.  Yet this criminal financial industry was bailed out, no questions asked, by Bush, a giveaway continued by the Obama administration.

Obama and Bush, Greenspan and Bernanke are financial industry flunkies.

The president, like his GOP and Clintonite predecessors, is Pinocchio when its comes to transparency and truth.

As Chris in Paris at Americablog writes:

"Wouldn't it be nice to know what really happened behind closed doors? If our government is going to talk about openness and transparency then perhaps - crazy thought, I know - they ought to actually deliver openness and transparency. The more the Fed moves to keep the bailout details secret, the more voters will be suspicious of the deep connections linking government and industry. It does make one wonder if those links are even more extensive than we currently know.

"Let's have the ugly details.

The U.S. 2d Circuit Court of Appeals denied the Fed's motion on Friday to rehear the case in which Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News and News Corp's Fox News Network sought information on the U.S. central bank's emergency lending programs that began in late 2007.

The programs, designed to shore up the financial markets, more than doubled the Fed's balance sheet to well over $2 trillion, especially in the wake of the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers.

The Fed maintained that disclosing the information sought by the news outlets under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) could stigmatize banks, causing a loss of confidence that could lead to deposit runs and the demise of some lenders. The Clearing House Association, a group of major U.S. and European banks, supported the Fed's efforts.

 

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