What You Need to Know About the Glass Steagall Act
In: Money|News|Politics
21
Mar
2009
News Articles About the Glass Steagall Act:
- - The West Virginia Public Service Commission's Consumer Advocate Division wants the agency to take another look at Frontier Communication Corp.'s acquisition of Verizon's landline network in the state.
- - Pikeville Police claim Patrick Yates used his state credit card to buy gas, then sell it for a cheaper rate and pocket the money.
- - The southbound lanes of I-77 have now reopened after a tractor-trailer accident.
- - Marshall University says single-game football tickets are about to go on sale.
- - Firefighters say a home was already engulfed in flames by the time they got on the scene.
- - One man is dead after a head on collision in Eastern Kentucky.
- - Two people are in custody after a disturbance ends in gunfire.
- - HARRISBURG — U.S. Senate candidate Joe Sestak didn’t spare fellow Democrats from blame Monday for supporting a financial services deregulation bill a decade ago that he now views as a key ingredient in Wall Street’s meltdown and the national recession.
- - A woman has been stabbed several times at a bar in Clendenin.
- - A special committee met for the first time to discuss what to do with the former Dow Tech Park.
Blog Posts About the Glass Steagall Act:
- - U.S. physical economist Lyndon LaRouche yesterday stated that "NAWAPA and Glass-Steagall are life and death issues, immediately-urgent life and death issues for every decent citizen of the U.S., among other people. And no compromise is ...
- - Paul Craig Roberts on Glass-Steagall, Free Trade and the Dangers of an Evolving 'Oligarchy of Private Interests'. Free-Market Thinking. Dominant Social Themes. Power Elite Memes exposed. Ron Paul and Libertarians. Ludwig von Mises and ...
- - The Volcker Rule could well operate to diminish the size of the megabanks, as the Glass-Steagall Act did in the wake of the Great Depression, ushering in 70 years of unprecedented financial stability. Unfortunately, Dodd-Frank waters ...
- - As the cause is national and international, the only solutions begin on a national level, with Glass-Steagall. Looking for local causes is insane, but it is happening nevertheless. The latest example of this is New Orleans Mayor Mitch ...
- - The Banking Act of 1933, widely known as the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, separated banking according to the types of banking business - commercial banking and investment banking. It was passed when a large portion of the U.S. banking ...
- - Glass-Steagall was one of the signature legislative achievements of the New Deal, and there are few better illustrations of the deep hostility of the modern Democratic Party and of Obama in particular to the heritage of Franklin D. ...
- - That sounds a lot like Johnson wants to roll back much of the banking de-regulation that occurred in the 1990s, a decade that saw the repeal of regulations like the Glass-Steagall Act (the law that separated traditional banks from ...
- - On the one side, is the post-Obama era, punctuated by the immediate re-imposition of the Glass-Steagall law, and the launching of an actual physical economic recovery. On the other side, is the British program of destruction of the ...
- - Richard Burr (R., N.C.) tells National Review Online that instead of debating how the Volcker rule fits, “we ought to go ahead and reinstitute Glass-Steagall,” the 1933 law that separated commercial banking from investment banking and ...
- - The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 effectively removed the separation that previously existed between Wall Street investment banks and depository banks and has been blamed for exacerbating the damage caused by the collapse of ...
Tweets About the Glass Steagall Act:
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