Sunday, February 19, 2017

Dodd Frank vs Scott Tipton

In Scott Tipton's last email, he is very critical of the Dodd-Frank act as a reform on the financial industry in favor of a "Financial CHOICE act". As a legislator, I don't know much about this new attempt at financial regulation, and would like to know more. A little research tells me that it would be a significant roll-back on control measures against some of the more wealth, powerful, and likely sociopathic people in our society.

Scott Tipton voiced support for smaller, local, community banks, but one mention by the New York Times, claims, "One provision would allow some of the largest banks to exempt themselves from some regulatory standards if they maintained an important ratio of capital to total assets at 10 percent or more." I find myself in favor of rolling back regulations on certain slices of our society, but rarely do I feel like regulations should be slackened on the largest, biggest and most powerful. I am sure we can find common ground in that concept; the federal government must be regulated because of its size and power--so must big banks.

The creator of this "CHOICE" Act, Mr. Hensarling, is rather untruthful when he says“It is the president’s own Dodd Frank that codified into law taxpayer bailouts,” Hensarling said. “Again, all you have to do is look into Title I and Title II of Dodd Frank, you will see the ability to designate firms as too big to fail and they are backed up with something called the Orderly Liquidation Authority which is a taxpayer bailout fund which can borrow trillions and trillions of dollars of taxpayer money in order to resolve large Wall Street banks.”

The Orderly Liquidation Authority, rather, forces the financial institution themselves to liquidate and pay, rather than the government facing another bailout. It is a complete re-arrangement of purpose.

Monday, February 13, 2017

Natural Resources in the 115th Congress

I was happy to see a call to defend our natural resources for Colorado citizens in Scott Tipton's last email. I am very worried that the federal government will seek to weaken access to this public resource in the 115th congress and push control of federal land onto states which cannot possible manage it.

However, a news article attached to the bottom me worry that this is exactly how they plan to protect it. If Tipton and the Congress are "troubled the BLM disregarded requests from western counties, farm bureaus, and Congress...input", wait until private citizens, corporations, or an over-taxed State management agency is in control. They are not so burdened by a requirement to take into consideration many view-points. Just because other views are chosen over yours doesn't mean they weren't considered; it might instead mean there were more voices for the other side. That is kinda how the BLM operates.

There are many conservative constituents in Colorado who don't realize how much the Federal government works to protect their public resources and provide broad access to public lands. If we lose them to state or private interests it will be devastating to recreational tourism and recreation, among other considerations. Because of a recent severance tax decision, our state cannot protect our lakes this year from invasive Zebra and Quagga mussels, which have devastated fisheries in all states surrounding us.

I would like to know how a state like Colorado could possibly manage any additional land, and if there is any plan for this.

Beware the Rich People.

#RichPeopleSuck

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Uncouth (adj)

Someone at Merriam-Webster is as outraged, sick, and tired as they ought to be.

Every single word of the day for the last few weeks has been pretty appropriate.

Such as Uncouth.

The distinguishing feature of the 45th 'president' of the United States of America.

Good Chapters: