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11 Ordinaryslut Szh 2010 02 Ceo Tekst1 Doc Ordinary Slut President Obama Promotes Tougher Rules on Wall Street to Protect Consumers - 新闻英语听写 - 资料酷 料酷英语论坛最酷的英语学习论坛 - n词酷 11 Ordinaryslut Szh 2010 02 Ceo Tekst1 Doc Ordinary Slut
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11 Ordinaryslut Szh 2010 02 Ceo Tekst1 Doc Ordinary Slut President Obama Promotes Tougher Rules on Wall Street to Protect Consumers - 新闻英语听写 - 资料酷 料酷英语论坛最酷的英语学习论坛 - n词酷 11 Ordinaryslut Szh 2010 02 Ceo Tekst1 Doc Ordinary Slut
11 Ordinaryslut Szh 2010 02 Ceo Tekst1 Doc Ordinary Slut
President Obama Promotes Tougher Rules on Wall Street to Protect Consumers
Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
September 19, 2009
Leaders of the world’s largest economies will gather next week in Pittsburgh for the second time this year. The first meeting of the G-20 nations in April came at the height of the global financial crisis – a crisis that required unprecedented international cooperation to jumpstart the world’s economies and help break the downward spiral that enveloped all our nations.
At next week’s summit, we’ll have, in effect, a five-month checkup to review the steps each nation has taken – separately and together – to break the back of this economic crisis. And the good news is that we’ve made real progress since last time we met – here at home and around the world.
In February, we enacted a Recovery Act, providing relief to Americans who need it, preventing layoffs, and putting Americans back to work. We’ve worked to unlock frozen credit markets, spurring lending to Americans looking to buy homes or cars, take out student loans, or finance small businesses. And we’ve challenged other nations to join us not only to spur global demand, but to address the underlying problems that caused such a deep global recession in the first place.
Because of the steps taken by our nation and all nations, we can now say that we have stopped our economic freefall. But we also know that stopping the bleeding isn’t nearly enough. Our work is far from over. We know we still have a lot to do here at home to build an economy that is producing good jobs for all those who are looking for work today. And we know we still have a lot to do, in conjunction with nations around the world, to strengthen the rules governing financial markets and ensure that we never again find ourselves in the precarious situation we found ourselves in just one year ago.
As I told leaders of our financial community in New York City earlier this week, a return to normalcy can’t breed complacency. To protect our economy and people from another market meltdown, our government needs to fundamentally reform the rules governing financial firms and markets to meet the challenges of the 21st century. We cannot allow the thirst for reckless schemes that produce quick profits and fat executive bonuses to override the security of our entire financial system and leave taxpayers on the hook for cleaning up the mess. And as the world’s largest economy, we must lead, not just by word, but by example, understanding that in the 21st century, financial crises know no borders. All of us need to act more responsibly on behalf of a better economic future.