FROM
JEROME CORSI'S RED ALERT
Obama's
G20 plan kisses off Declaration of Independence
New
international board to intervene in decisions about U.S.
companies
Posted: April 08, 2009
8:32 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
At the G20 meeting in London, President Obama agreed to
create of an international board with authority to
intervene in U.S.
corporations
by dictating executive compensation and approving or
disapproving business management decisions,
Jerome
Corsi's Red Alert reports.
"By agreeing to the stipulations in this document,
President Obama gave the blessing of the United States to
the G20 decision to elevate the Financial Stability Forum
into the Financial Stability Board," Corsi wrote.
"The United States has only one vote in the newly
constituted Financial Stability Board, a group that will
be largely controlled by European central bankers."
The new global regulator now has the authority to examine
all U.S. banks, brokerage firms and corporations –
including non-financial companies such as the Big Three
automakers – to examine operations and determine risk.
The Financial Stability Board then has the international
authority to set policies in these corporations, including
compensation packages the private boards of directors in
the examined companies decide to pay top executives and
senior managers.
Morris charged that the Obama administration, by agreeing
to create the Financial Stability Board, has gone beyond
nationalizing U.S. corporations, to
"internationalize" U.S.-based corporations under
the control of this new global regulator.
While the G20 focused on regulating risks in hedge funds
and derivatives, the authority of the Financial Stability
Board extends to any banking, brokerage or business
practice by a major U.S. corporation that the Financial
Stability Board on its own authority determines is unduly
risky.
Under the premise that the IMF and the Financial Stability
Board would have the ability to make
loans
to important U.S. corporations, the IMF and the Financial
Stability Board become the effective global regulators
over the corporate world, superseding all U.S.
governmental authorities, including the Federal Reserve,
the U.S. Treasury, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation and a host of corporate regulators, including
the U.S. Department of Commerce and the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Red Alert's author, whose books "
The
Obama Nation" and "Unfit for Command"
have topped the New York Times best-sellers list, said no
appeal procedure to any U.S. court or regulator is
specified by the G20 communiqué as recourse for a U.S.
company that wants to contest a decision by the Financial
Stability Board as incorrect, unfounded or otherwise
overreaching.
Corsi received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in
political science in 1972. For nearly 25 years, beginning
in 1981, he worked with banks throughout the U.S. and
around the world to develop financial services marketing
companies to assist banks in establishing broker/dealers
and insurance subsidiaries to provide financial planning
products and services to their retail customers. In this
career, Corsi developed three different third-party
financial services marketing firms that reached gross
sales levels of $1 billion in annuities and equal volume
in mutual funds. In 1999, he began developing
Internet-based financial marketing firms, also adapted to
work in conjunction with banks.
In his 25-year financial services career, Corsi has been a
noted financial services speaker and writer, publishing
three books and numerous articles in professional
financial services journals and magazines.
For more information on "internationalizing"
U.S.-based corporations and for financial guidance during
difficult times, read
Jerome
Corsi's Red Alert, the premium, online intelligence
news source by the WND staff writer, columnist and
author of the New York Times No. 1 best-seller, "
The
Obama Nation."
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