A penny saved  is a penny earned

Here we go again

 

HI AGAIN.     THIS IS A TOPPER

HERE IS THE OTHER ONE I WOULD LIKE YOU TO PUT YOUR IMPUT .I HOPE AND PRAY THAT B.O. GETS TIRED OF WALKING WITH THE DEVIL AND COMES TO HIS SENCES OR WE GET ALOT OF PEOPLE COMING TO THEIRS AND TAKE A GOOD LOOK TO WHAT IS HAPPENING

EVERYDAY.   EVERYDAY   EVERYDAY

BEFORE ITS TOO LATE.  B.O. THINKS THERE IS ONLY ONE WAY    HIS     WRONG...NOT TRUE.

=========================================

Obama warns Wall Street not to bl

NEW YORK -Lecturing Wall Street on its own turf, President Barack Obama warned financial leaders not to use the recovering economy to race back into "reckless behavior" that could cause a new meltdown. He declared that a bailout-weary public will not break their fall again.

 

IS HE TRYING TO UN DO WHAT HE CHANGE IN THE FIRST PLACE ??????????MAYBE I WILL GET SKINNY ALSO=====

=================================================

 

Obama insisted Monday that there is an urgent need for tighter financial regulation, and he cautioned his audience not to try to block it.

OOOOOOOOOOOOOKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK  SURE B.O.

=====================================================

He spoke on the first anniversary of the collapse of the Lehman Brothers investment bank, the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and a stark reminder of the financial crisis that spread into a deep recession despite huge federal bailouts of major companies.

"It is neither right nor responsible after you've recovered with the help of your government to shirk your obligation to the goal of wider recovery, a more stable system, and a more broadly shared prosperity," Obama said in a stern bid to boost his regulation proposals.

==================================================

YA THINK !!!  ABOUT TOO LATE I THINK !!!!!!!!!!

==================================================

The president's speech reflected public sentiment that taxpayers were immeasurably harmed from last year's financial collapse — and that, barring change, it could happen again. As investment giants return to profit, millions of Americans are still coping with unemployment, home foreclosures and retirement portfolios that got washed away in the storm.  ==========

 

THAT WS THE CHANGE HE PROMISED ???????????

==============================================

 

For symbolic emphasis, Obama spoke from venerable Federal Hall on Wall Street.

"Unfortunately, there are some in the financial industry who are misreading this moment," Obama told a quiet audience of leaders from the investment sector.

 

"So I want them to hear my words,===========

 

HERE WE GO AGAIN    HIS WORDS" Obama said.

 

"We will not go back to the days of reckless behavior and unchecked excess that was at the heart of this crisis. ... Those on Wall Street cannot resume taking risks without regard for consequences."

Afterward, he joined former President Bill Clinton for lunch at a New York restaurant.

================================================

WHY DO THEY TELL US ABOUT HIS FOOD WHEN THEIR SO MANY PEOPLE OUT HERE THAT IS HUNGRY AND GOING TO FOOD PANTRYS.    " WHO  CARES "

===============================================

WONDER HOW MUCH THAT COST.?  FEED A FAMILY THAT IS HUNGRY   OR SEVERAL, THE WAY WE HAVE CUT BACK.

OH  MAYBE HILLARY PAID FOR IT ??????  THINK ???

===============================================

The White House announced Obama would address the annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative Sept. 22 while in New York for the United Nations General Assembly meeting.

The public is still edgy about Wall Street and the economy. A year after the meltdown, seven of 10 Americans lack confidence that the federal government has taken safeguards to prevent another financial industry meltdown, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll.

Yet Obama's reach goes only so far; his bid for huge regulatory change is up to Congress.

The president's plan has yet to gain serious traction on Capitol Hill, as Democratic leaders have been consumed by the health care debate and staff members are still wrestling with the complexities. The plan is being fought by a determined financial services lobby with a major assist from big business groups, and infighting among regulators who oversee the various portions of the sprawling financial architecture has further slowed the process.

But the sluggish pace is expected to pick up in coming weeks. Democrats aim to stick to their promise of completing the bill by year's end, a timeline Obama badly wants to keep, but they face long odds.

Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, who once considered being Obama's commerce secretary, was among GOP lawmakers who responded to the president's message with caution.

He said, "We must be wary of the reality that — in an attempt to address yesterday's failures — Congress will put in place regulatory schemes which will fundamentally undermine risk taking."

Anticipating such criticism, Obama shot back against those pushing for less regulation.

"Do you really believe that the absence of sound regulation one year ago was good for the financial system?" he said. "Do you believe the resulting decline in markets and wealth and unemployment, the wrenching hardship that families are going through all across the country, was somehow good for our economy?"

He also told Wall Street that it had no need to wait for new laws to begin helping consumers with straight talk in the meantime.

Much of Obama's speech amounted to a recap of his proposals, first outlined in June.

He has sought tougher capital requirements for banks, arguing that banks' buying of exotic financial products without keeping enough cash in reserve was a key cause of the crisis. He wants more openness for the markets in which banks trade the most complex products.

Obama's plan also would give the Federal Reserve new oversight powers and impose conditions designed to discourage companies from getting too big. And he proposes a consumer protection agency to make rules for financial products, so people know what they're buying.

The House Financial Services Committee, led by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who supports much of Obama's plan, is expected in October to take up the first piece of the legislation, one that would establish an agency focused on consumer protections. The panel has already passed legislation intended to curb excessive compensation at financial institutions.

Obama's plan could face significant revisions in the Senate, where Democrats have joined Republicans in questioning whether more power should be given to the Federal Reserve.

Industry is working particularly hard to kill or at least weaken the consumer protection agency idea, which it says will lead to increased costs for consumers, and various corporate interests are fighting the new rules for complex financial transactions, arguing they could stifle legitimate commerce.

Meanwhile, Obama made sure to dole out credit Monday — to his own administration.

He introduced his economic team and said its "outstanding leadership" of a financial stability plan helped the system emerge from crisis.

Obama warned against complacency but said: "We can be confident that the storms of the past two years are beginning to break."=============

 

THATS WHAT HE THINKS HUH.  SWISH YOUR MAGIC WAND—

 

Associated Press writers Anne Flaherty and Julie Hirschfeld Davis contributed to this story from Washington.ock tighter regs

LETS STAY TOGETHER ON THIS PLEASE.

GOD BLESS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA & WHAT IT STANDS FOR

NANADEE  Cool

 

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Best Answer

 
321 helpful answers

What comes around goes around.

I actually avoid watching anything that has to do with that idiot.

Posted 2009-09-27T05:54:12Z
tre1129 was invited by Yedda to answer this question.

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2438 helpful answers

 

 

Nanadee,

    Don't you get tired of listening and seeing Obama make speeches?

I'm sick and tired of his rhetorics......FrownFrownFrown

Posted 2009-09-15T11:35:25Z
 
175 helpful answers

A penny saved  is a penny earned

thanksdblady.  Wink

Posted 2009-09-21T21:02:59Z

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