1. Demand a hearing where the bank executives have to answer questions--under oath--about the actual negotiations, or lack thereof, that led to these loans; about the actual condition of each of the borrowing banks, and whether that condition differed from the public statements made by the banks at the time.
2. Require the recipient banks to use this previously undisclosed gift--i.e. the profit they made by investing this almost interest-free money--to write down the value of mortgages of those who are underwater. The loans to the banks were meant to solve a short-term liquidity problem, not be a source of profits to fund bonuses. In other words, take back the profits and put them to a public use.
3. Require the government officials responsible for authorizing these loans to explain why there was no effort made to condition these loans on changes in policy that would protect the public going forward.
4. Ask congress to examine every filing and statement made to Congress by the banks about their financial condition and their indebtedness to see if any misrepresentations were made in an effort to hide these trillions of dollars of loans. Misleading Congress can be a felony, and willful deception of the Congress to hide the magnitude of the public bailouts should not go unprosecuted.
5. Demand that politicians return all contributions made by the institutions that got hidden loans. Pressure the politicians who continue to feed from the trough of Wall Street, even as they know all too well how the banks and others have gamed the system and the public.
How is it that we spend more on health care but get worse health outcomes than other countries do?
For every dollar we spend on health care (a highly disproportionate amount of which goes to care for the rich), we spend an additional 90 cents on social services. In our peer countries, for every dollar spent on health care, an additional $2 is spent on social services. So not only are we spending less, we're allocating our resources disproportionately on health care.
Recent studies have shown that countries with high health care spending relative to social spending had lower life expectancy and higher infant mortality than countries that favored social spending. While the stagnating life expectancy in the United States remains at 78 years, in many European countries it has leapt to well over 80 years, and several countries boast infant mortality rates approximately half of ours. In a national survey conducted by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, four out of five physicians agreed that unmet social needs led directly to worse health.
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