Most people think the SEC is an independent government regulatory body that looks after the best interest of the public.
At least that’s how it was in the beginning.
During the heart of the Great Depression, in 1934, Franklin Roosevelt founded the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
It was designed to be an independent government agency to protect investors by enforcing securities laws…a noble cause, indeed.
It followed the path of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 which separated banks, brokerage firms and insurance companies from doing business together.
And that was because their collusion caused the Great Depression.
The laws worked exactly as intended.
Both agencies helped keep corruption under control and there were very few large bank failures and no financial panics.
However, in 1999, Bill Clinton signed a law to repeal neuter the Glass-Steagall Act, opening the floodgates for the biggest financial mergers in history.
If you look back since 1999, you’ll see the destructive wave that the big banks have left in their path.
And since then, the SEC has been infiltrated and controlled by numerous Wall Street crony capitalists.
The SEC









