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Agency Girl
Goes Wild
By Katie Kieffer
7/11/2011
Elizabeth
Warren has literally gone
wild. No, she did not strip off her matronly suit on a Girls Gone Wild
spring
break tour bus. Rather, she appears to be on a mission to strip
Congress, small
businesses and individual Americans of authority by instituting her own
rules
for how to play the financial game on both Wall Street and Main Street.
Liberals
in the media hail Warren as
the “protector of the middle class.” Warren may genuinely care about
the middle
class. Her own mantra is: “Dang gummit, somebody has got to stand up on
behalf
of the middle class!” Sadly, she does not understand the free markets
that
prevent the middle class from slipping into poverty.
She
only understands rules. Before
teaching law (man’s rules) at Harvard Law School, she taught Sunday
school
(God’s rules). Warren loves rules so much that the Ten Commandments and
the
Constitution are not enough for her. She wants more.
Last
July, President Obama signed the
Dodd-Frank financial-regulatory-reform bill. Among other things, this
bill
ushered in a new government agency called the Consumer Financial
Protection
Bureau. The President selected Warren to design this agency since it
was her
idea in the first place (she wrote an essay in 2007 that planted the
idea in
his mind.) Then, he named Warren his “assistant” and “special adviser”
to
Secretary of the Treasury.
Time
Magazine reports that
big-government advocates like Stephanie Taylor of the Progressive
Change
Campaign Committee hope that the President will go one step further.
Even
though “(T)he bureau is still establishing the exact scope of its
authority… ,”
Time reports, “Taylor’s group is urging Obama to take the provocative
step of a
recess appointment of Warren during one of the many weeks Congress will
be away
this summer.”
The
Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau will open on July 21. The agency cannot formally act or issue
rules
until it has a director. President Obama has delayed naming Warren to
the head
of the agency in part because of the heated pressure he has received
from
Republicans in Congress.
Despite
this ambiguity, the agency is
already working on projects such as the “Know Before You Owe” campaign
to
simplify mortgage application paperwork, reports the New York Times.
But,
do we really need another
government agency with extra-Congressional authority? An agency that
wants the
Federal Reserve, not Congress, to set its budget? An agency developed
by the
same woman (Warren) who oversaw the highly-criticized $700 billion
financial
industry bailout?
Warren
defended her new agency to
Michael Moore in an interview for the DVD version of his film,
“Capitalism: A
Love Story,” saying: “You can’t buy a toaster in America that has a
1-in-5 chance
of exploding, but you can buy a mortgage that has a 1-in-5 chance of
exploding,
and they don’t have to tell you about it.”
Does
Warren want financial companies
to write contracts at a second-grade level because she assumes
consumers are
too dumb or lazy to read the fine print? She tells Time Magazine that
consumers
shopping for loans, “… drown in a sea of words that are theoretically
disclosures, but they scream, ‘Don’t read me.’”
Mortgage
brokers do not go to bed at
night dreaming up confusing fine print clauses. Financial companies
write
lengthy contracts partly to comply with existing regulations and to
protect
theselves from consumer lawsuits. And Warren wants more bureaucracy?
Since
Warren loves to throw out
appliance analogies, I’ll throw one back at her: Any legitimate
appliance
company in America provides its customers with a way to voice concerns
and
complaints. You can speak with a customer service representative in
person or
call a customer service line to negotiate a full or partial refund.
But,
if you dislike policies from
unelected government agencies like Warren’s Rule Warehouse, you don’t
have a
voice. Ironically, federal agencies fail to adequately protect
consumers
because they don’t give consumers sufficient and reasonable say in
their
operation and direction.
When
government agencies create rules
without proper input from voters and Congress, the rules will likely be
anti-capitalist policies that are extremely difficult to overturn.
When
Congress acts, you do have a
voice because you elect your congresspeople; you can email, Tweet,
Facebook or
call their offices to complain, and, you can vote them out of office.
This
new agency could cost financial
institutions devastating amounts of money to restructure and dub down
their
financial products so that your dog can understand them. These costs
will be
passed along to the consumer, not to the government. Competition in the
private
sector will motivate consumer finance companies to improve, not
government
growth.
Whether
the President appoints Warren
or not, her wild hand built this house of cards. It is time to reign in
agency
power under Congress’ legitimate authority.
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