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*~1Best~*

09/23/08 5:25 PM

#365383 RE: OptionMonster #365381

~~~>> Shelby is a complete naive nut and obviously a part of the old Greenspan-Paulson gang scam which started during Clinton.

He said, "markets need to sort it out". What a nut ball tossing American wealth to a bunch of crooks without check-n-balances. The banking committee has done nothing for decades.

Bunning is just the same.




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H.y.p.o.crite ~ Senate Banking Committee ~

They are nothing but oxymoron ritual wasting money and time to go through nonsense for decades.

They have not solved or prevented any problems except going through puppet shows wasting time and money.

They are nothing but an idiotic puppet scammers.

WHAT HAVE THEY DONE DURING THE LAST DECADES?! NOTHING

In fact, they are a part of the grand scam.


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The United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs has jurisdiction over matters related to: banks and banking, price controls, deposit insurance, export promotion and controls, federal monetary policy, financial aid to commerce and industry, issuance of redemption of notes, currency and coinage, public and private housing, urban development and mass transit, and government contracts.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senate_Banking_Committee








EZ2

09/23/08 5:30 PM

#365384 RE: OptionMonster #365381

LOL ~~~ nothing better than a "grizzled old Detroit Tiger" to set the record straight !!!

Loved him as a TIGER..........admire him as a "no kool-aid drinking" Senator :-)



Jim Bunning's first game as a major league pitcher was on July 20, 1955. He pitched for the Detroit Tigers from 1955 to 1963, moving to the Philadelphia Phillies from 1964 through 1967, to the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1968 through the middle of the 1969 season, finished the 1969 season on the Los Angeles Dodgers, and returned to the Phillies in 1970, retiring in 1971. He wore uniform number 15 on the 1955 Tigers, switched to 14 in 1956, which was the number he wore for the Tigers, Phillies, and Pirates until he was traded to the Dodgers in 1969. For the Dodgers, he wore number 17, but returned to number 14 when he returned to the Phillies, who retired the number upon his election to the Hall of Fame.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Bunning