Friday, May 7, 2010

Big Brother to Monitor Your Bank Account?

The Patriot Post ran this article recently. It shows just another step by this administration to control every move made by American citizens, especially those who oppose the flagrant violations of the US Constitution.  While it appears they have back off from a separate Office designation to do their evil deeds they have now included such authority into the functions of the FDIC.  It's all about deception, not transparency that was promised by this administration.  For those who are not too blind to see it is very transparent as to what this administration is seeking to accomplish.

The power of Banks and Congress were something to be leery about according to Jefferson. If you are not familiar with the warning  I refer you back to last weeks post on the thoughts of Jefferson concerning the powers of Banks.  Here is just more proof of that danger via the promise of  Hope 'n' Change. My question is, who, in their right mind, needs it or wants it?

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who didn't see fit to pay his own income taxes, may soon have the authority to watch over your financial transactions, thanks to a new federal agency that would be created in the Democrats' financial overhaul bill. The Office of Financial Research, straight out of a George Orwell novel, would serve as a central repository of transaction records generated at private financial companies. Geithner, along with an unspecified number of bureaucrats that he hires, will have unlimited access for "statistical analysis and research" of the nation's financial institutions -- supposedly for the purpose of spotting systemic problems that will allow them to act before another meltdown.

This agency is the latest in the series of unconstitutional power grabs that Democrats have grown accustomed to since Barack Obama became president. It violates American citizens' Fourth Amendment guarantee of security in their "persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures" and its imprecise language leaves plenty of room for expanding the agency's activities without congressional approval. The type of information access that Democrats seek would not have enabled them to prevent the financial meltdown of 2008, but it would allow bureaucrats who work for this agency the opportunity to share their privileged information with the private sector one year after leaving the agency. So, ironically, the Office of Financial Research simply presents our bloated government even more opportunity for further corruption and mismanagement of the economy.

2 comments:

Always On Watch said...

Timothy Geithner, who didn't see fit to pay his own income taxes

We are living in surreal and Orwellian days!

Always On Watch said...

it would allow bureaucrats who work for this agency the opportunity to share their privileged information with the private sector one year after leaving the agency

Gah!

Better set up identity-theft protections as individuals, then.