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Elizabeth Warren Profiled


Warren suggested a Financial Product Safety Commission in a 2007 article; Obama proposed it to Congress in June as the Consumer Financial Protection Agency. Speculation is (wishes?) she could head the agency. Bloomberg.com profiles her life:

Warren began at George Washington at 17. At 19, she married mathematician Jim Warren, who worked at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, and finished her degree at the University of Houston. They divorced in 1978. Her second husband, Bruce Mann, is Harvard’s Carl F. Schipper Professor of Law and author of 2002’s “Republic of Debtors: Bankruptcy in the Age of American Independence” (Harvard University Press, 358 pages, $29.95).

Warren said she doesn’t know her credit score — “I assume it’s good” — and maintains zero Visa and MasterCard balances.

“Credit cards are like snakes: Handle ‘em long enough and one will bite you,” she said. “You have to remember what are incomes to banks are outgoes to families.”

Obama, with whom she attended a campaign event during the presidential race, read her work before proposing the consumer agency, according to Warren. [...]

In her role overseeing the TARP, Warren has been critical of the administration, accusing the Treasury Department of undervaluing the stock warrants that were supposed to compensate taxpayers when banks repay their bailouts. A lack of transparency about how TARP functions “erodes the very confidence” it was to restore, her committee said in a report.

Named in May as one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World, Warren teaches three days a week at Harvard, flying to Washington and New York for meetings, sometimes stopping just long enough to charge her laptop.

Sample critic:

“It is positively Orwellian that, through this legislation, Democrats will empower an unelected bureaucrat to tell their fellow citizens whether or not they can fly on an airplane, take a vacation or purchase a home,” Representative Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican on Warren’s TARP panel, said Oct. 22.

Orwellian to limit borrowing when excessive, under-capitalized, over-extended lending is what brought capitalism to near total collapse? I don’t think so! On top of her Harvard salary and income from nine books (two authored with her daughter) her TARP job paid $114,733.04 through Sept. 30. She’s worth every penny!

  • TheMagicalSkyFather
    Elizabeth Warren 2016, lets bring down that debt!!!!!

    K its a pipe dream but she is pretty freakin awesome if you ask me.
  • vey9
    I think that it is positively Huxleian "in the year of our Ford" to allow corporations to allow excessive undercapitaization to bring our country to it's knees. But that is what happened.
  • DLS
    "Orwellian to limit borrowing when excessive, under-capitalized, over-extended lending is what brought capitalism to near total collapse"

    Of course. Even the basics are wrong here. The reform should be directed at the lending (the lenders).
  • DLS
    "Financial Product Safety Commission," on its face, is a very stupid name.

    On the other hand, her review of TARP represents real good being done. (It made news here in Detroit.)
  • vey9
    Yes, it does. Although we have been told that government is bad for business, isn't it odd when business runs to government for help? Be that TARP, or be that the GM bailout or be that "Chapter 11."

    Chapter 11 is a new concept, not available to any other forms of business. It allows a business to screw it's creditors without "dying." We, as individuals, can't do that. This is but only one example how corporations have more rights than natural born people.
  • ProfElwood
    "Chapter 11 is a new concept, not available to any other forms of business. It allows a business to screw it's creditors without "dying." We, as individuals, can't do that."

    Chapter 11 bankruptcy is a form of bankruptcy reorganization available to individuals, corporations and partnerships.
    http://www.moranlaw.net/chapter11.htm
  • spirasol
    YES! Warren for President. Wow, imagine a Warren-Nader ticket!
  • tidbits
    Elizabeth Warren is one the brightest, most aticulate and honest voices eminating from Washington, Cambridge or wherever she happens to be. Her views and explanations should be mandatory reading/listening to anyone concerned with our nation's economy.
  • DLS
    "Wow, imagine a Warren-Nader ticket!"

    That's what we don't want, regulators openly polticized while also pursuing a Nader-fascistic agenda that no doubt would include federal corporate charters, more federal officials embedded in corporations, and all kinds of lunacy like "social responsibility," "Israel divestiture," and leftist political platforms specified in annual reports of corporations.

    That Warren is at odds with smucks like Geithner and others at Treasury, on the other hand, is okay.
  • tidbits
    DLS - "lunacy like 'social responsibility'...in annual reports of corporations".

    Even for you that's a classic. FYI, corporations have been flaunting their social responsibility for, well, ever.

    You do make me laugh though. I guess I'll thank you for that, my self proclaimed "moderate" friend.
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