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What does remembering ourselves mean? It essentially means coming back to life- re-membering.
Gerald Epstein
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Gerald Epstein
Age: 83 †
Born: 1935
Born: November 6
Died: 2019
Died: February 18
Author
Psychiatrist
Life
Essentially
Coming
Means
Remember
Doe
Back
Self
Mean
Remembering
More quotes by Gerald Epstein
The Fed has a lot of power in the economy because it has a big impact on the supply and cost of credit, that is, interest rates. It also plays a key role in supervising banks and historically has seemed to take it easy on the banks when it shouldn't have, such as in the lead up to the financial crisis.
Gerald Epstein
Here's the interesting thing: the fact that QE and lowering interest rates almost to zero has worsened inequality, does not mean that raising interest rates will help reduce inequality.
Gerald Epstein
When we give up our goals and concentrate diligently on the practices of our lives, we increase self-mastery and move toward the invisible universe, toward Spirit, to receive the wonders and miracles the universe has to offer us.
Gerald Epstein
People in America get really angry at the Federal Reserve and at the money system in general during economic crises. The Fed draws hostility because of its power, its insulation from democratic accountability, its lack of transparency, and because of its historical and structural connections to finance.
Gerald Epstein
QE and other aspects of Fed policy increased inequality pretty significantly. This is reinforced if you take into account all the other non-standard measures the Fed used to bail out the banks early on in the [2008] crisis.
Gerald Epstein
The right wants to destroy the power of the Fed to increase the power of finance and the progressives want to reorient the Fed so that it will stop protecting the interests of finance and protect the interests of the broader population instead.
Gerald Epstein
Increases in interest rates normally worsen inequality, at least partly by reducing employment and wage growth.
Gerald Epstein
Critics, often for good reason, are concerned that the Fed is wielding its vast powers in the interests of the banks and not in the interests of the people. After the financial crisis, Americans have perceived that the banks have been bailed out, but a significant proportion of the population is still in serious economic trouble.
Gerald Epstein