Check out the video with accompanying text from Robert Reich at this link. Text below.
"Mitt Romney's reaction to J.P. Morgan Chase's mounting losses from
reckless trades is 'the market will take care of it.' His spokesman says 'no taxpayer money was at risk' so we don't need more financial
regulation. Romney has even promised to repeal Dodd-Frank if he's
elected president.
Yet at the same time, Romney has come out strongly against same-sex
marriage. He's also against abortion. He has no problem with government
intruding on the most intimate of decisions a person makes.
He's got private and public morality upside down. He doesn't want to
regulate where regulation is necessary -- at the highest reaches of the
economy, where public immorality has cost us dearly, and will cost even
more unless boardroom behavior is constrained. Yet he wants to regulate
where regulation is least appropriate -- at the level of the individual,
in bedrooms and other intimate spaces, where private morality should
govern.
This is a dangerous confusion. It should be a matter of personal
choice whom to marry and when to have children. But it is undoubtedly a
matter of public choice whether big banks should be allowed to take the
kind of risky bets that plunged the economy into the worst downturn
since the Great Depression, and whether people with great wealth and
should be able to buy our democracy with huge campaign contributions."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.