- Any Inquiry must be fully public, to the point of live television broadcast of all proceedings. Imagine a case of not one, not two, but six largest hospitals in the nation recording serial acts of systemic malpractice that were to result in some Euro 70 billion worth of damages. Would Mr Cowen call for a closed-doors inquiry?
- Any Inquiry must be swift and must lead to convictions and severe punishment of anyone found guilty of malpractice or non-fulfillment of duties (including public officials in charge of regulatory and supervisory functions, should they be found guilty). Imagine a total collapse of six largest bridges in the country at the peak traffic - would Mr Cowen sum up the situation as 'We are where we are, now is not the time to deal with the past'?
- Any Inquiry that does not cover Nama and Banks Guarantee scheme will simply fail to deliver full account of the causes and the full extent of the damages caused by the current crisis. This is why I oppose an idea of the 'wise men'-drafted preliminary report to set terms of reference for the second stage inquiry. Given this Cabinet will be selecting the 'wise men', I have serious doubts as to the integrity of the process or the group put in charge of restricting any direction of the future inquiry.
After all, am I the only person one noticing the complete and total ethical collapse of our social system that takes ordinary folks' money to pay the cost of the full and unlimited guarantee of the (largely) foreign bondholders in Irish banks, while their own deposits are now under the risk of being covered by a limited guarantee up to Euro100K?
1 comment:
Fundamentally the banking inquiry will be a political stunt and prove to be a complete and utter fizzer, there will be no strong recommendations,
or as they say in America Constantin, "passing the buck"
Patrick
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