Share674
Email This Page
add comment
Print

Excerpt: "When small-business owners were being turned down for loans at private banks and millions of Americans were being kicked out of their homes, the Federal Reserve provided the largest taxpayer-financed bailout in the history of the world to Wall Street and too-big-to-fail institutions, with virtually no strings attached. Over two years ago, I asked Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, a few simple questions that I thought the American people had a right to know: Who got money through the Fed bailout? How much did they receive? What were the terms of this assistance?"

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), 03/28/11. (photo: Getty Images)
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), 03/28/11. (photo: Getty Images)



Veil of Secrecy at the Fed Lifted, Time for Change

By Bernie Sanders, Reader Supported News

08 November 11

 

s a result of the greed, recklessness, and illegal behavior on Wall Street, the American people have experienced the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Millions of Americans, through no fault of their own, have lost their jobs, homes, life savings, and ability to send their kids to college. Small businesses have been unable to get the credit they need to expand their businesses, and credit is still extremely tight. Wages as a share of national income are now at the lowest level since the Great Depression, and the number of Americans living in poverty is at an all-time high.

Meanwhile, when small-business owners were being turned down for loans at private banks and millions of Americans were being kicked out of their homes, the Federal Reserve provided the largest taxpayer-financed bailout in the history of the world to Wall Street and too-big-to-fail institutions, with virtually no strings attached.

Over two years ago, I asked Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, a few simple questions that I thought the American people had a right to know: Who got money through the Fed bailout? How much did they receive? What were the terms of this assistance?

Incredibly, the chairman of the Fed refused to answer these fundamental questions about how trillions of taxpayer dollars were being spent.

The American people are finally getting answers to these questions thanks to an amendment I included in the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill which required the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to audit and investigate conflicts of interest at the Fed. Those answers raise grave questions about the Federal Reserve and how it operates -- and whose interests it serves.

As a result of these GAO reports, we learned that the Federal Reserve provided a jaw-dropping $16 trillion in total financial assistance to every major financial institution in the country as well as a number of corporations, wealthy individuals and central banks throughout the world.

The GAO also revealed that many of the people who serve as directors of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks come from the exact same financial institutions that the Fed is in charge of regulating. Further, the GAO found that at least 18 current and former Fed board members were affiliated with banks and companies that received emergency loans from the Federal Reserve during the financial crisis. In other words, the people "regulating" the banks were the exact same people who were being "regulated." Talk about the fox guarding the henhouse!

The emergency response from the Fed appears to have created two systems of government in America: one for Wall Street, and another for everyone else. While the rich and powerful were "too big to fail" and were given an endless supply of cheap credit, ordinary Americans, by the tens of millions, were allowed to fail. They lost their homes. They lost their jobs. They lost their life savings. And, they lost their hope for the future. This is not what American democracy is supposed to look like. It is time for change at the Fed - real change.

Among the GAO's key findings is that the Fed lacks a comprehensive system to deal with conflicts of interest, despite the serious potential for abuse. In fact, according to the GAO, the Fed actually provided conflict of interest waivers to employees and private contractors so they could keep investments in the same financial institutions and corporations that were given emergency loans.

The GAO has detailed instance after instance of top executives of corporations and financial institutions using their influence as Federal Reserve directors to financially benefit their firms, and, in at least one instance, themselves.

For example, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase served on the New York Fed's board of directors at the same time that his bank received more than $390 billion in financial assistance from the Fed. Moreover, JP Morgan Chase served as one of the clearing banks for the Fed's emergency lending programs.

Getting this type of disclosure was not easy. Wall Street and the Federal Reserve fought it every step of the way. But, as difficult as it was to lift the veil of secrecy at the Fed, it will be even harder to reform the Fed so that it serves the needs of all Americans, and not just Wall Street. But, that is exactly what we have to do.

To get this process started, I have asked some of the leading economists in this country to serve on an advisory committee to provide Congress with legislative options to reform the Federal Reserve.

Here are some of the questions that I have asked this advisory committee to explore:

  1. How can we structurally reform the Fed to make our nation's central bank a more democratic institution responsive to the needs of ordinary Americans, end conflicts of interest, and increase transparency? What are the best practices that central banks in other countries have developed that we can learn from? Compared with central banks in Europe, Canada, and Australia, the GAO found that the Federal Reserve does not do a good job in disclosing potential conflicts of interest and other essential elements of transparency.


  2. At a time when 16.5 percent of our people are unemployed or under-employed, how can we strengthen the Federal Reserve's full-employment mandate and ensure that the Fed conducts monetary policy to achieve maximum employment? When Wall Street was on the verge of collapse, the Federal Reserve acted with a fierce sense of urgency to save the financial system. We need the Fed to act with the same boldness to combat the unemployment crisis.


  3. The Federal Reserve has a responsibility to ensure the safety and soundness of financial institutions and to contain systemic risks in financial markets. Given that the top six financial institutions in the country now have assets equivalent to 65 percent of our GDP, more than $9 trillion, is there any reason why this extraordinary concentration of ownership should not be broken up? Should a bank that is "too big to fail" be allowed to exist?


  4. The Federal Reserve has the responsibility to protect the credit rights of consumers. At a time when credit card issuers are charging millions of Americans interest rates of 25 percent or more, should policy options be established to ensure that the Federal Reserve and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau protect consumers against predatory lending, usury, and exorbitant fees in the financial services industry?


  5. At a time when the dream of homeownership has turned into the nightmare of foreclosure for too many Americans, what role should the Federal Reserve be playing in providing relief to homeowners who are underwater on their mortgages, combating the foreclosure crisis, and making housing more affordable?


  6. At a time when the United States has the most inequitable distribution of wealth and income of any major country, and the greatest gap between the very rich and everyone else since 1928, what policies can be established at the Federal Reserve which reduces income and wealth inequality in the US?

Given the growth of the Occupy Wall Street movement and given the concerns of millions of Americans about Wall Street, we now have a unique opportunity to make significant changes to one of the most powerful and secretive agencies of the federal government. One thing is abundantly clear: Americans deserve a Federal Reserve that works for them, not just the CEOs on Wall Street.

 

Comments  

 
+54 # Rick Levy 2011-11-08 17:34
So the Federal Reserve is just one big trough where all the pigs stuff themselves.
 
 
+1 # Texas Aggie 2011-11-09 07:42
Who woulda thunk it?
 
 
+4 # AndreM5 2011-11-09 07:56
Hey, I thought that is why it was set up by the hogs themselves in the first place.
 
 
+72 # Gianni@gianniortiz.com 2011-11-08 18:14
Bernie - why don't you run for president?
 
 
+6 # tswhiskers 2011-11-09 06:01
My dream would be that Bernie is 30 years younger and running in a primary against Obama. Given his age, it is most unlikely that Bernie would or could run for president (do you rember Obama's exhausting run in 2008?). Thank God he is still in the Senate.
 
 
+5 # Lolanne 2011-11-09 07:44
Quoting
Bernie - why don't you run for president?


I second that, Bernie! I know you've said you have no interest in running for president, but you are pretty much the only sane voice I hear out of DC -- Please reconsider!
 
 
+20 # Lolanne 2011-11-09 07:51
Wouldn't you love to see a Sanders/Warren ticket??? The stuff that dreams are made of...
 
 
+2 # ER444 2011-11-09 13:17
Now that would be the "Dream Machine" !!!
 
 
+27 # MainStreetMentor 2011-11-08 20:30
I contend the current state of economic affairs (which involve/involved the Fed) could be eradicated by going to a de-centralized banking system (just as was done under President Andrew Jackson). When the central banking system became too self-indulgent and "pro-business", Jackson enaged in de-centralized banking with every state having it's own bank - and the U.S. drawing from each one. Read up on it ... it most definitely has merit when applied to the economy of today's America.
 
 
+21 # E-Mon 2011-11-09 02:56
Right on the money! (pun intended) Although I certainly agree with Mr. Sanders list and admire his bravery I can see he's missing the point when he says this.... we now have a unique opportunity to make significant changes to one of the most powerful and secretive agencies of the federal government.... Powerful and secretive YES. Agency of the federal government?? It's easy to be deceived with a name like Federal Reserve. That was the intention, but the FED is a privately owned, for profit central bank. What we really need to do is abolish the FED like you mention Andrew Jackson did with the first central bank in America. That was the first attempt by European central bankers to control/monopolize the US money supply. Their wish came true in 1913 with the passing of the Federal Reserve act. You can read about all this and allot more in "The Creature From Jekyll Island" by G. Edward Griffin. Another good source of info.... Check out "The Money Masters" on Youtube.
 
 
+1 # umkcsteph 2011-11-09 06:30
Actually, the Fed is not a "privately owned, for profit central bank." It's Board of Governors is appointed by the President of the US and must be confirmed by the US Senate. Congress limits its members to serving a single (fourteen year) term. It is permitted to run a very tiny profit, but the VAST majority of the Fed's profits are turned over to the US Treasury. No privately owned firm turns nearly all of its profits over to the Treasury, allows the government to appoint its Board Members or permits Congress to tell it governing members how long they may serve. The Federal Reserve was created by Congress, and Congress can rewrite the rules whenever it wishes.

-Stephanie Kelton
 
 
+3 # panamericans 2011-11-09 10:15
Stephanie, I am afraid your logic is flawed. The Fed Reserve is private. Small profit you say? Think again, that is on EVERY dollar that is released as debt Nationally! In addition, the monetary control they have to use in favor of the Banks is unbridled...In other words,they sit in a position to make profits privately.

Why should they make ANY private profits? Eliminating this 'middleman's percentage take' would reduce the cost of borrowing for for ALL levels of government expenditure, as well as for the private sector.

I suggest you check your telephone listings. The Fed is NOT listed under government agencies. It is in the White Pages with all the other private business such as pizza joints, plumbers, dress shops, and banks etc. In other words, it is a wolf in sheep's' clothing...unless we undress it and show it for what it is.
 
 
+13 # ritaague 2011-11-09 04:23
Pres. Andy, an ancestor on my Mom's side of the family, caught hell fromthe 1%ers for inviting folks from the 99%, some who wore their muddy boots, to his inaugral party at the White House. His de-centralization of banks was a terrific move on his part to help regular folks (wish I could have been there, whispering in his ear to be far more compassionate toward our American Indian brothers and sisters).

But, family history has it, that not many years passed before my great grandfather grieved and remained silent for three days after a puppet whore for the greedy 1% was nineteenth century scammed into the presidency. Great grandpa, with plenty of political moxie, saw what was coming.

Then came the 1890's recession, and, following WWI - oh so profitable for 1%ers like a family named Bush - the Great Depression. That one, like the one we're all, worldwide, grieving through now, was the result of greedy manipulation by the 1%ers.

Lesson to be learned? Greed and power addiction (a.k.a. evil) ain't nothin' new, and it ain't goin' away.

Time to reward and honor the caring for all givers/servers (i.e. Bernie Sanders -RUN, BERNIE, RUN!!!) and penalize and punish the greedy bastards, starting with the Fed. and big, non-tax paying banks, m/i/c and oil spoilers, and Kochsucking minions of the evil 1%ers.
 
 
+5 # in deo veritas 2011-11-09 06:46
Sounds like you are referring to Benjamin Harrison, Like Bush he inherited a surpolus and blew it all putting us in the Panic of 1893. Then of course the Repugs blamed it on Cleveland so they could get Wall Street puppet McKinley into the White House and allow the jingoists to get us into the war with Spain. Sounds too familiar in light of what we have experienced in this century so far. We could cure the ignorance of the public with education and a real news media, but continued stupidity will only be cured by our death as a nation-state. Andy Jackson was always the man of the people. What a shame we don't have a president even remotely like him now.
 
 
0 # JohnCDurham 2011-11-09 08:38
The National Bank was not a Central Bank. Central Banks are the major World problem today. We need a government chartered and controlled National Bank that puts its income back to the people not the "Private Sector", ie Wall Street.
 
 
+36 # rhodge4477 2011-11-08 21:14
We LOVE you Bernie! While this is not shocking news to anyone paying attention, its nice to see it portrayed so succinctly. How do I 'forward' the article to some 'people' that should (but may not) read this? (Hey, We gotta give it a chance, right?)
In addition, these questions NEED some answers AND accountability from those so eager to 'feather their own nests' at the expense of everyone else... Madoff needs some company down there in N. Carolina!
 
 
+34 # dorianb@fuse.net 2011-11-08 21:34
BERNIE SAUNDERS FOR PRESIDENT! THE 99% WILL SUPPORT YOU!!! WE NEED A GREAT MAN LIKE BERNIE SAUNDERS TO RUN IN 2012 B/C OUR COUNTRY IS IN A MORAL AS WELL AS AN ECCONOMIC CRISIS.
 
 
+33 # tonenotvolume 2011-11-08 21:45
This revelation makes me ill. Having read about this recently, I was shocked, outraged, scandalized,dis gusted, and stunned by Mr. Sander's explanation. Rhetorically speaking, I wonder why this isn't XXL print headline news in every newspaper around the world. I know, I know, the crooks won't squeal on each other. The "Thin Green Line" must be broken!
 
 
+14 # Vivelevin 2011-11-08 22:17
Bernie Sanders amazingly takes on the Federal Reserve. This is an exposé of the abuses of the Fed and how they are shrouded in secrecy. I love where he says, "Talk about the fox guarding the henhouse!" We are really getting some wake-up calls and I thank everyone one out there protesting in the OWS movement, and also news reporters and a few Senators like Bernie Sanders, and soon-to-be-Senator Elizabeth Warren who courageously turn on the lights in those dingy back rooms (which are probably really lavish penthouses at the finest hotels in the world) where the bloodsuckers are meeting trying to figure out how they are going to bleed us more. We see what heretofore we didn't see or didn't want to see thanks to a courageous few...and that few is growing into a major force. Change is coming.
 
 
+12 # James Marcus 2011-11-08 22:35
Seems to be a lot of misunderstandin g (much of it quite deliberate) about the Fed. Talk of how 'we might reform it' 'what its responsibilitie s to consumers are'.... The Fed is a private Corporation. Private Corporation. There is nothing 'Federal' about it, except the deliberately misleading name.
It is and always has been a Den of Thieves. Masterminds of selfishness, disguised as a public entity.
 
 
+17 # jwb110 2011-11-08 22:37
I want to know why Ben Bernanke was not held in Contempt of Congress for not answering the question asked of him? I also want to know why the SOB isn't in jail?

OK, OWS, the next place to set up camp is the Fed!!!!
 
 
+11 # panamericans 2011-11-08 23:43
Why should ANY of the Shareholders of the Federal Reserve be private banks? Why isn't the Federal Reserve an entity owned entirely by the US Government? Why is it necessary for private 'shareholders' to profit from Federal Reserve lending?
 
 
+3 # Charles3000 2011-11-09 00:58
The power of banks comes from their right to engage in fractional reserve banking. The reserve rules are not simple but result in banks being allowed to issue about 92 cents out of every new dollar entering the US economy, the other 8 cents being used essentially to reduce US national debt. This practice should be ended. It can be ended by returning to banks the gold held by the Fed for them, the only basis for the present practice. Then let banks print their own money and fail if they print too much. US dollars printed by the government should be either spent or loaned at interest. Banks should be free to use their gold as backing for their "bills" or use US dollars, their choice. This would result in two types of money in the US economy; US dollars as now used and the bills printed by the free banks, each bank designing their own "bills" in gold denominations or "dollar backed", the choice of free banks again. Under this free bank system banks would still be free to issue new dollar backed notes or gold backed notes but they would also be free to fail if they operate at a risky reserve level. The present Fed technical staff should be retained to advise the US Treasure on how much money to print, spend and loan to businesses and to individuals. The link between the Fed and banks should be severed. The present Fed would then serve the US Treasure and the American people.
 
 
+21 # overanddone 2011-11-09 02:28
Instead of falling in behind Senator Sanders, the so called progressives in Congress and in the Senate, choose to stay mute and hope he goes away and their access to wall street money continues. The recent report showing how many millionaires are in Congress is all we need to know about who the winners and losers will be in America.
So Far Bernie is a voice in the wilderness, not because he is not on TV, he gets decent and deferential press coverage but because democrats refuse to get on board, to enact real change for real people.
 
 
+9 # RLF 2011-11-09 04:30
Another fact for Bernie...When we, the 99%, are subjected to austerity by our national and local governments so that big banks that have irresponsibly loaned too much to these entities don't lose money...we are once again bailing out the banks. The huge Republican deficits we have seen since Reagan which have been accompanied by huge tax cuts for bankers...not to speak of all of the unpaid for wars, leave us no choice but to default on this stupid debt which never should have been run up to start with. Default and start over...like Brazil...say 'go to hell bankers' and get control of our government back. It will be a hard ten years but better after that.
 
 
+12 # mwd870 2011-11-09 05:17
I hope the Advisory Committee grows lots of sharp teeth and maybe some long claws to rip apart every liar and thief that offered or accepted money they don't deserve and doesn't belong to them, then consipired to keep it secret from the American public. Not that I support violence.

That kind of money would have made a huge dent in the country's debt. I love Bernie Sanders too.
 
 
0 # futhark 2011-11-09 06:16
No mention here of the guy who started the whole "audit the Fed" movement, Rep. Dr. Ron Paul of Texas, inconveniently a Republican.
 
 
0 # mwd870 2011-11-09 08:10
I don't disagree with everything Ron Paul says/does, just most of it.
 
 
+1 # grindermonkey 2011-11-09 06:39
The phrase "Ponzi scheme" should be replaced by the phrase "Bernanke deception."
 
 
+1 # Dale 2011-11-09 07:21
Finance capital is now highly concentrated into conglomerate groups. The 10 largest conglomerates hold more than 60% of U.S. financial assets, compared to 10% in 1990. This constellation—n ot established industrial giants like GM or the high tech innovators like Microsoft—is the center of economic power in the U.S. Money, systemic direction, and political power now reside in a financial oligarchy. All of President Obama´s top appointments to the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department, the National Economic Council, down to the President´s Chief of Staff and Budget Director, are from or closely linked to the Wall Street conglomerates. Plutocracy rules economic policy, government is of, by, and for financial capital, and not just in Washington but in the European Union as well. And Obama´s appointments to Defense and CIA, Bush era warriors, complement the plutocracy, just as the business of Wall Street and the Military-Industrial Complex are interrelated.

For an extended analysis of finance capital and its international consequences see www.posterours.com/troporg
 
 
+2 # Texas Aggie 2011-11-09 07:38
People like Rep. Paul keep blathering about the Fed because of some supposed unconstitutiona lity about it or similar quibbles. The problem that Bernie just outlined for us is far and away a lot more important and has a much greater influence on our country and our personal lives than the various quibbles of the libertarians. These are the problems with the Fed that need to be addressed.
 
 
0 # KittatinyHawk 2011-11-09 16:22
Ron Paul put his moeny where his mouth is and worked with someone like Bernie Sanders than there would be a more plausible reason to believe him. No sooner do you look at some of his statements as being clear and he goes and says the most stupid ones...believe today we are looking at his okaying dirty air.
Thanks so much, Congress just dismantled everything we worked on for 40 years and this man believe we should allow more Pollution. sorry Paul should take his doctorate and go under a rock
 
 
-6 # fhunter 2011-11-09 07:44
All these horrors developed under of our CLUELESS President. Fire them! Bernanke, Geithner, Obama.
 
 
+3 # Holyone 2011-11-09 08:03
YES, Why was Bernanke not held in contempt. He is a Public servant who should have to answer to someone about his actions. He is not self employed.

It is an excellent idea to have the 99% to go to the FEd Reserve and let them know that the People hold them accountable.
 
 
+5 # Buddha 2011-11-09 08:07
And people say that the OccupyWS protests are misguided. Anybody who looks at this, and sees the truth how Wall St controls the levers of political and economic power in our nation, and yet isn't going to their local Occupy protest as often as they can get there to lend their voice and presence to the movement, is a part of the problem themselves. Silence Gives Consent - Plato
 
 
+2 # Craig Jones 2011-11-09 10:14
All you needed for a bank bailout was to be registered as a bank and fax a simple one page request form to the Feds and the money was there. Far less scrutiny than federal loans to Solyndra or any other alternate energy start up. Vote the Bums Out.
 
 
+1 # wrodwell 2011-11-09 11:56
While we can always count on Independent Bernie Sanders to speak up as champion of the 99%, it's the deafening sound of silence on the part of Democrats that's so troubling. While the Trickster Trio of Bohner, Cantor and McConnell are heard and seen spinning their lies and deceptions on a daily basis, we rarely if ever see their Democrat counterparts saying much of anything. This tells me they either have nothing of import to say or they're in a state of acquiescence. Bernie Sanders has emerged as THE lone voice of the people in the entire United States Congress, so now's the time to think about a ticket comprised of Bernie Sanders for President and Elizabeth Warren as VP. Clearly, Obama and the entire Democratic party have been a disappointment and should be replaced. And with the Republicans running the absolute worst field of wanna-be right wing nut jobs ever, now's the best opportunity to achieve the real change the country so desperately needs, not the mere "chump change" that Obama and the Dems have produced so far. If we don't make a meaningful change within this narrow window of time and the spineless Dems are defeated by a drugged-up Rick Perry and his Republican thugs, the Taliban Texan would take America back to medieval times with his belief in Creationism and his reputation for pay-to-play corruption. Bernie Sanders for President - before it's too late.
 
 
+2 # angelfish 2011-11-09 12:14
I don't see why, if the Fed could finance SIXTEEN TRILLION DOLLARS to the Financial Institutions in America, WHY can't they give Low/No Interest loans to EVERY Tax Paying American in this Country! If they were to give the PEOPLE that kind of money, their Mortgages would be paid off, their cars, Student Loans, Medical bills, in essence, EVERYTHING they owed could be taken care of! The economy would BLOOM, jobs would become available and the Country might, once again, flourish! Giving the Foxes the money has done EVERYTHING for the Foxes (as evidenced by their continued greed in giving themselves special benefits and Bonuses while sitting on piles of money, refusing to lend it to those in need) and NOTHING for the People! Keep up the good work, Bernie! Hold their feet to the fire and keep the faith! Next year at this time you will have Elizabeth Warren in Washington to strengthen your hand! The only other face that deserves a place on Mount Rushmore is YOURS! God Bless you and keep you safe!
 
 
+2 # KittatinyHawk 2011-11-09 16:29
I hope he gets answers, People ask and they laugh at us. This list should be put in every paper until it is answered.

People voted yesterday and I believe we got some spirit back. Let's start showing the Committees, SubCommittees, and Agencies we are going to Audit and start asking all of them for a list of what they do, what they have done to help USA, perhaps with the answers we will know what the next step is.

Candidates are needed for Democratic Party or a New Party. Clean Up America


With Holidays coming we are asking to Buy American, think about not using your credit cards. Let's buy with cash this Holiday Season, check Labels, we can keep the momentum going for OWS with simple gestures.
 
 
+2 # reiverpacific 2011-11-09 17:17
It's not just the Federal reserve which is waffling around and being obtuse. How the hell can we take the so-called Credit Bureaus seriously? They have the power to "Yea" or "Nay" any business or individual's credit-worthiness but are also private and are financed by the banks. Just THREE agencies for the whole country!
They are incompetent, inaccurate, hard to deal with and deliberately obtuse to the benefit of all large private lending institutions in a kind of revolving door structure excluding most of us. Just try to get an error amended!
Of course there are other huge problems but nobody seems to be looking at this (are they sacred cows or untouchables?).
If the Credit Unions gain more clout through transfers from the big banks, they could perhaps link with regional or state banks to form their own lending criteria in a kind of pool agency and take past "no-fault" misfortune into account instead of just slamming doors!
That's my proposal and I intend to write to my Oregon Senators, Governor and Mr Sanders to get this much-neglected component of the depression out.
I'd love to see Bernie Sanders run for President too but I think that he's realistic about the concrete wall of the status-quo and is more effective as a strident, forthright and truthful voice as an independent and proud Socialist!
 
 
+3 # Paul Scott 2011-11-09 20:29
There is a simply explaination why this has not been on the Evening News. The Evening News is the 1%.
 
 
0 # lin96 2011-11-10 01:04
Watch Alan Grayson go after Ben Bernanke.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AB_9m0eNso
 
 
0 # lin96 2011-11-10 01:11
Alan Grayson with the Inspector General of the Fed regarding missing money.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=GYNVNhB-m0o
 
 
0 # karlseidel 2011-11-10 11:35
RICO
 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.