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To: E. Charters who wrote (80512)1/5/2002 9:44:51 PM
From: d:oug  Respond to of 116759
 
Ralph Nader's Not Kind + Not Nice = Survival of the E.C.(s)

Subj: [GATA] Federal Reserve must be held accountable
Date: 1/5/02
From: LePatron@LeMetropoleCafe.com
To: dougak@not kind and not nice.com

Le Metropole Members,

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

Ralph Nader's latest newspaper column, appended
here, describes the conference he has called for
Monday in Washington about the work of the Federal
Reserve. GATA Chairman Bill Murphy will attend and
call attention to the Fed's role in surreptitiously
suppressing the gold price.

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

* * *

By Ralph Nader

The Federal Reserve wields enormous power over the
national economy. Its decisions have a major impact on
every citizen. Jobs, shelter, and the quality of life are
greatly affected by what the Federal Reserve decides
on monetary policy.

Yet the Federal Reserve is allowed to make its decisions
in secret. The transcripts and minutes of the meetings are
carefully "sanitized" before they are released. For example,
when the Federal Reserve voted to lend money to Mexico,
the Fed's records were carefully redacted to keep the
details of the transactions secret.

In a recent article in Barron's Magazine, Dr. Robert
Auerbach, who investigated the Federal Reserve as staff
economist for the Banking Committee of the House of
Representatives, recounts numerous incidents in which
Fed minutes were destroyed or heavily edited when the
Fed made critical decisions.

Auerbach, other economists, and long-time observers of the
Federal Reserve will be gathering at the National Press Club
in Washington on Monday to discuss what goes on behind those
tightly-locked doors at the Federal Reserve.

In sponsoring this conference, it is my hope that we can
place a spotlight on this dark corner of our democracy
and begin a campaign for a more open process in establishing
economic policies that affect the daily lives of working families
and well-being of the entire economy.

The kind of secrecy and closed-door government carried out
by the Federal Reserve has no place in a democratic system.

In addition to exemptions from open government requirements
such as the "Sunshine Act, " the Federal Reserve does not
face the normal checks and balances of the congressional
appropriations and budget process. It drafts its own
budgets and spends whatever it desires without seeking
permission from Congress. It is little wonder that the
Federal Reserve feels free to operate as virtually a
separate government.

One of the experts who will appear at our conference is
William Greider, a long-time journalist, who wrote the book
"Secrets of the Temple," a carefully researched tome
which has become a must-read for students of the Federal Reserve.

Keynote speaker for the conference will be James Galbraith,
Ph.D at the LBJ School of Government at the University of
Texas, who has written and lectured extensively on the
Federal Reserve and who is rapidly becoming the nation's
most outspoken and best informed critic of the the Federal
Reserve and monetary policy.

In addition to setting interest rates in carrying out
monetary policy, the Federal Reserve has wide-ranging
regulatory power for consumer protection over the financial
ommunity. It is strange indeed that this power would be
exercised by the current chairman of the Federal Reserve,
Alan Greenspan, whose past would give little comfort to
anyone who believes in regulatory protections.

Greenspan was an early follower of Ayn Rand, the leader
of theObjectivists, an anti-government collective. Greenspan
collaborated with Rand in writing "Capitalism: the Unknown
ideal," in which he denounced regulation, particularly
consumer protections and anti-trust laws, which he described
as "cardinal ingredients of welfare statism."

Later Greenspan became a lobbyist for the financial
industry against regulation and represented some of the high
flyers-like Charlie Keating of Lincoln Savings, who
plundered the savings and loan industry.

So we plan for our conference to take a deep look at
how well this former foe of regulation is representing the public
in his current position as chief government
regulator of banks, big financial services corporations,
and the economy.

The conference is titled "The Federal Reserve-Reality
versus Myth." We hope that our panel of experts will be
able to unravel some of the myths that have allowed the
Federal Reserve to escape accountability for so long to
the detriment of the vast number of working Americans
and our democratic system of government.

-END-

All the best,
Bill Murphy
Le Patron, lemetropolecafe.com



To: E. Charters who wrote (80512)1/7/2002 9:21:53 AM
From: Bill Grant  Respond to of 116759
 
>>Nice guys finish last -- Casey Stengel.<<

Leo Durocher.(;>)

BG