Following is an editorial from the New York Times from about a month ago, kind of on the other side.
Quote:
OP-ED “Regulate, Don’t Split Up, Huge Banks”
By STEVEN RATTNER
Published: July 31, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/opini ... ction.html [click upper right to skip ad]
“ . . . So the bank merger frenzy that Mr. Weill set off in the late 1990s was not the proximate cause of the financial crisis. Nor was the concentration of our banking system, which is less centralized than those in Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland and many other countries.
“What brought our financial system to its knees was old-fashioned poor management that expanded the banks’ portfolios and activities too aggressively without sufficiently robust risk controls, enabled by lax (or nonexistent) oversight by regulators. Many of those excesses were concentrated in the housing sector, where a now legendary bubble formed without regulators or industry leaders recognizing it. . . ”
Now, perhaps the NY Times invites a variety of editorials, on a variety of points of view, okay, sure, to some extent.
But also, me personally, I think they are probably more pro-establishment, rather than liberal.