Anonymous wrote:There's no way. Could you imagine the collapse if they stopped insuring bank accounts?
Anonymous wrote:I feel like the billionaires should also be against this right? I know most of their money is tied up in investments but they have to have some bank accounts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've started withdrawing money from my bank account. I'm not ready to pull out all of my cash yet. I haven't fully accepted that the FDIC will fail.
If FDIC insurance goes away, that is game over for the banking system worldwide. It would be so destabilizing that the US would not recover and it would take every other country down, too.
FDIC as an agency could go away. But the essential function of insuring deposits will have to be taken over by Treasury or whatever.
You’d need an act of Congress to do this. There’s multiple precedents in the last few decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've started withdrawing money from my bank account. I'm not ready to pull out all of my cash yet. I haven't fully accepted that the FDIC will fail.
If FDIC insurance goes away, that is game over for the banking system worldwide. It would be so destabilizing that the US would not recover and it would take every other country down, too.
FDIC as an agency could go away. But the essential function of insuring deposits will have to be taken over by Treasury or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:clean it up. Dismantle if necessary
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've started withdrawing money from my bank account. I'm not ready to pull out all of my cash yet. I haven't fully accepted that the FDIC will fail.
If FDIC insurance goes away, that is game over for the banking system worldwide. It would be so destabilizing that the US would not recover and it would take every other country down, too.
Anonymous wrote:I've started withdrawing money from my bank account. I'm not ready to pull out all of my cash yet. I haven't fully accepted that the FDIC will fail.
Anonymous wrote:I've started withdrawing money from my bank account. I'm not ready to pull out all of my cash yet. I haven't fully accepted that the FDIC will fail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminating the FDIC does not mean eliminating deposit insurance. That could be done through a department at Treasury. Its supervisory responsibilities could be re-allocated to one of the other bank regulators.
The Corporation is a stand alone entity on a statutory basis. No EOs or anything like that underpinning its
Its deposit insurance function and oversight powers cannot be transferred to Treasury or another agency without changing the law. We already have a modern history of precedent - OTS having its responsibilities transferred to the Fed/FDIC/OCC by Dodd Frank Act, FSLIC went insolvent during S&L Crisis and powers transferred to FDIC by FIRREA Act of 1989.
You can’t just shunt the FDIC into the Treasury without Congress acting.
Why would they do that?
Because they are power hungry narcissists who can't get it through their thick skulls that anyone else has any intellect at all or any relevant experience.
They just want to FEEL THE POWER and they've spent one too many drug fueled nights thinking up this stuff that has very little relationship to the reality we live in. They are broken, broken people who don't feel empathy anymore because they think it's weak and stupid.
Anonymous wrote:clean it up. Dismantle if necessary
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminating the FDIC does not mean eliminating deposit insurance. That could be done through a department at Treasury. Its supervisory responsibilities could be re-allocated to one of the other bank regulators.
The Corporation is a stand alone entity on a statutory basis. No EOs or anything like that underpinning its
Its deposit insurance function and oversight powers cannot be transferred to Treasury or another agency without changing the law. We already have a modern history of precedent - OTS having its responsibilities transferred to the Fed/FDIC/OCC by Dodd Frank Act, FSLIC went insolvent during S&L Crisis and powers transferred to FDIC by FIRREA Act of 1989.
You can’t just shunt the FDIC into the Treasury without Congress acting.
Wanna bet?
Okay, so they are saying you shouldn't do this, not that you can't.
The reason this PP is saying that you shouldn't do it is not just because it is illegal, which, we all know is not something your crowd cares about at all, but because it would actually break it whole cloth and you won't be able to just patchwork it back together without risking the shattering of our banking framework.
Even if you don't care if you break the banks or the monetary structure of our economy (because Crypto, obviously) literally everyone else in the US other than very poor people will care.
Breaking it whole cloth is the intention!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminating the FDIC does not mean eliminating deposit insurance. That could be done through a department at Treasury. Its supervisory responsibilities could be re-allocated to one of the other bank regulators.
The Corporation is a stand alone entity on a statutory basis. No EOs or anything like that underpinning its
Its deposit insurance function and oversight powers cannot be transferred to Treasury or another agency without changing the law. We already have a modern history of precedent - OTS having its responsibilities transferred to the Fed/FDIC/OCC by Dodd Frank Act, FSLIC went insolvent during S&L Crisis and powers transferred to FDIC by FIRREA Act of 1989.
You can’t just shunt the FDIC into the Treasury without Congress acting.
Wanna bet?
Okay, so they are saying you shouldn't do this, not that you can't.
The reason this PP is saying that you shouldn't do it is not just because it is illegal, which, we all know is not something your crowd cares about at all, but because it would actually break it whole cloth and you won't be able to just patchwork it back together without risking the shattering of our banking framework.
Even if you don't care if you break the banks or the monetary structure of our economy (because Crypto, obviously) literally everyone else in the US other than very poor people will care.
Breaking it whole cloth is the intention!