It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.

Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.

Thank you.

 

Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.

 

List of people opposed to investigating the FED

page: 1
6

log in

join
share:

posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 08:35 AM
link   

The following individuals whose primary goal in life is getting tenure and publishing a textbook, yet believe they have a voice in deciding whether over 300 million American people should know just whose interests the Fed so staunchly protects, have issued an open letter to Congress and The Executive Branch, demanding that no one ever dare tinker or have audit powers over the private institution that is the Federal Reserve.



Ricardo Caballero MIT

Kenneth French Dartmouth College

Robert Hall Stanford

Anil Kashyap Chicago Booth

Pete Klenow Stanford

Frederic Mishkin Columbia

Thomas Sargent NYU

Michael Woodford Columbia

Andrew Abel Wharton School,University of Pennsylvania

Daron Acemoglu MIT

Michael Adler Columiba University

Yacine Ait-Sahalia Princeton University

Fernando Alvarez University of Chicago

Scott Anderson Wells Fargo & Co.

Cliff Asness Managing and Founding Principal, AQR Capital Management LLC

Paul Asquith Massachusetts Institute of Technology

David Backus NYU

Dean Baim Pepperdine University/UCLA

Ravi Bansal Duke University

David Bates University of Iowa

Andrew Bernard Dartmouth College

Richard Berner Morgan Stanley

George Borts Brown University

Scott Brown Raymond James & Associates

Markus K. Brunnermeier Princeton University

Ralph C. Bryant Brookings Institution

Michael Carey Calyon Securities (USA) Inc. Credit Agricole Group

Christopher Carroll Johns Hopkins University

Martin Cherkes Columbia University

Diego Comin Harvard University

Jernej Copic UCLA

Dora Costa UCLA

Steven Davis University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Angus Deaton Princeton University

Davide Debortoli University of California, San Diego

Eddie Dekel Northwestern University

Harold Demsetz UCLA

Scott Desposato University of California, San Diego

Douglas Diamond University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Peter Diamond MIT

Francis X. Diebold University of Pennsylvania

Avinash Dixit Princeton University

Matthias Doepke Northwestern University

Darrell Duffie Stanford

Pierre Collin Dufresne Columbia

Martin Eichenbaum Northwestern University

Andrea Eisfeldt Northwestern UniversityKellogg School of Management

Jeffrey Ely Northwestern University

Eduardo Engel Yale University

Eugene Fama University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Henry Farber Princeton University

Roger Farmer UCLA

Jon Faust Center for Financial Economics, Johns Hopkins U.

Michael Feroli J.P.Morgan

Wayne Ferson U.S.C.

Kristin Forbes MIT-Sloan School of Management

Mark Gertler New York Univiersity

Marc Giannoni Columbia University

Simon Gilchrist Boston University

Robert J. Gordon Northwestern University

Roger Gordon UCSD

David Greenlaw Morgan Stanley

Gene Grossman Princeton University

Steffen Habermalz Northwestern University

James Hamilton University of California, San Diego

Gary Hansen UCLA

Robert Hansen Tuck School, Dartmouth College

Gordon Hanson UC San Diego

Milton Harris University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Tarek Hassan University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Zhiguo He Chicago Booth

John Heaton University of Chicago

D. Lee Heavner Analysis Group, Inc.

Christian Hellwig UCLA

Gailen Hite Columbia Business School

Yael Hochberg Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University

Stuart Hoffman PNC Financial ServicesGroup

Bengt Holmstrom MIT

Bo Honore Princeton University

Peter Hooper Deutsche Bank

Takeo Hoshi University of California, San Diego

Christopher House University of Michigan

Peter Howitt Brown University

Chang-tai Hsieh University of Chicago

Ellen Hughes-Cromwick Chief Economist, Ford Motor Company

John Huizinga University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Erik Hurst University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Ravi Jagannathan Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University

Dana Johnson Comerica Bank

Karen Johnson Federal Reserve Board of Governors (retired)

Charles I. Jones Stanford University, Graduate School of Business

Paul Joskow MIT

Matthew Kahn UCLA

Juno Kang The Bank of Korea

Steven Kaplan University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Bruce Kasman J.P. Morgan Chase

Peter Kenen Princeton Uniiversity

Ralph Koijen University of Chicago Booth School of Business

David Kotok Chariman, Central Banking Series, Global Interdependence Center, Philadelphia, PA.

Arvind Krishnamurthy Northwestern University

Rafael La Porta Dartmouth College

David Lake University of California, San Diego

Bruce Lehman UCSD

Nan Li Ohio State University

Hilarie Lieb Northwestern University

John Liew AQR Capital Management

Juhani Linnainmaa University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Andrew Lo MIT

Kevin Logan Dresdner Kleinwort

Guido Lorenzoni MIT

Hanno Lustig UCLA Anderson

Louis Maccini Johns Hopkins University

Burton Malkiel Princeton University

Eric Maskin The Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University

Robert McDonald Kellogg School, Northwestern University

Daniel McFadden University of California, Berkeley

Doug McMillin Louisiana State University

Rajnish Mehra UC Santa Barbara

Robert Mellman J.P. Morgan

Robert Merton Harvard University

Laurence Meyer Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC

Atif Mian University of Chicago

Gregory Miller Suntrust Banks, Inc.

Robert Moffitt Johns Hopkins University

Stephen Morris Princeton University

Dale Mortensen Northwestern University

Giuseppe Moscarini Yale University

Tobias Moskowitz University of Chicago, Booth School of Business

Stefan Nagel Stanford

Maurice Obstfeld University of California,

Berkeley Lee Ohanian UCLA

Maureen O’Hara Cornell University

Stavros Panageas University of Chicago BoothSchool of Business

Dimitris Papanikolaou Northwestern University

Robert Parry President & CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Retired

Lubos Pastor University of Chicago BoothSchool of Business

Lasse H. Pedersen NYU

Monika Piazzesi Stanford

Keith Poole University of California, San Diego

Giorgio Primiceri Northwestern University

Valerie Ramey University of California, San Diego

Enrichetta Ravina Columbia University

Esteban Rossi-Hansberg Princeton University

Michael Rothschild Princeton University

Tano Santos Columbia Business

School Ulrike Schaede University of California, San Diego

Richard Schmalensee MIT

Martin Schneider Stanford

Kermit Schoenholtz NYU Stern School of Business

Jay Shanken Emory

Robert Shiller Yale University

Hyun Shin Princeton University

Stephen Shore Johns Hopkins University

Costis Skiadas Northwestern University

Matthew Slaughter Dartmouth College

James F. Smith Kenan-Flagler Business School, UNC-Chapel Hill

Chester Spatt Carnegie Mellon University

James H. Stock Harvard

Rene Stulz The Ohio State University

Amir Sufi University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Joseph Swanson Northwestern University

Vefa Tarhan Loyola University Chicago

Edwin M. Truman Peterson Institute for International Economics

Harald Uhlig University of Chicago

Andrey Ukhov Northwestern University

Sergio Urzua Northwestern University

Chris Varvares Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC

Pietro Veronesi University of Chicago

Paul Wachtel New York University, Stern School of Business

Richard Walker Northwestern University

Mark Watson Princeton

Shang-jin Wei Columbia

David Weil Brown University

Pierre-Olivier Weill UCLA Economics

Burton Weisbrod Northwestern University

William Wheaton MIT

Michael Whinston Northwestern University

Mirko Wiederholt Northwestern University

Mark Witte Northwestern University

Tiemen Wouteren Johns Hopkins University

Jonathan Wright Johns Hopkins University

Wei Xiong Princeton University

Stanley Zin New York University


More details here
dprogram.net...

the puppets unmasked!




posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 08:57 AM
link   
Why do these college/university idiots oppose investigating the FED...unless... they are the FED.



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 09:04 AM
link   
Well there is a Rothschild in the mix:


Michael Rothschild Princeton University

I wonder if that is a coincidence?



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 09:39 AM
link   
reply to post by warrenb
 


AWESOME LIST! Star and Flag.

Perhaps some analytic legerdemain can be applied to this list..., I may return with some input for you...



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 10:49 AM
link   
Thank you for the "hit" list Warren....very much appreciated...makes my job a ton easier



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 03:13 PM
link   
Most of these guys email addresses can be dug up on line through the colleges they serve at.

If someone takes the time to look up these guys email addresses, please post them here so others don't have to do the work.

I've prepared an email draft for those who want to send them a piece of their mind but don't want to take the time to research and write it.

---------------------------------------


Dear Prof. X.

It has come to my attention that you recently signed a petition requesting that the private Federal Reserve bank be protected against a full GAO audit. As I understand it, you feel the Fed's independence in policy making is essential to maintaining the economy.

Good sir, we know that:
1. Goldman Sachs has close ties to the current treasury secretary.
2. Goldman Sachs donated a million dollars to the current administrations campaign.
3. The former Treasury Secretary was a Goldman Sachs CEO.
4. Special Assistant to the Treasury Secretary Neel Kashkari was a former Goldman Sachs VP responsible for engineering the TARP bailout.
5. Goldman Sachs received a 12 billion dollar payday on the tax payer dime, made possible by the Federal Reserve system through the AIG bailout.
6. Lehman who was Goldman's competitor was allowed to fail.
7. Stephen Friedman, who is chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is also a director of Goldman Sachs Group.

Given these facts, is it not prudent to assume there could be some very serious conflicts of interest at the private Federal Reserve bank that might be uncovered in a full GAO audit?

I fail to understand how AUDITING the private Federal Reserve bank is impacting their POLICY. Allowing transparency of the banking system through an open audit is not the same as government dictating to the Fed how they must set policy. However it might uncover things such as the Federal Reserve's involvement in suppression of gold market prices, deals with foreign central banks that are setting political policy outside the scope of our elected government, and massive conflicts of interest within the banking industry.

I respectfully ask that you rescind your name from the petition in light of these disturbing facts.

Thank you for your time,

X



[edit on 17-7-2009 by mnemeth1]



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 10:58 PM
link   
Instead of asking "should the FED be audited" perhaps we need to ask "does the so-called gov't have the legal/commercial capacity to audit the FED?" I'd it probably doesn't, as the FED is owned/controlled by America's creditors. Debtors are already in dishonor and thus in an inferior position.



posted on Jul, 17 2009 @ 11:18 PM
link   
I think it is time, WE THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, write our own little letter to congress saying the audit must go through and if this gets burried, it could be possibly the biggest travesty in this country's history!!!



new topics

top topics



 
6

log in

join