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> the SEC is one of the branches of government that I trust almost as much as the FDA

Hm. I made this comment elsewhere but:

The SEC has big structural problems. Way too close of ties with the people it is supposed to be regulating.

Take the example of this SEC investigator [0] whose boss got a call from one of those Wall Street hedge funds under investigation and suddenly he's fired! Mysteriously, that boss gets a job with the same firm a few months later. Oh, the kicker? The person who made that call from the hedge fund? Appointed to be the SEC chair in 2013.

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_J._Aguirre



Well, here's my issue with the SEC that I admittedly don't have a good solution.

https://www.federalpay.org/employees/securities-and-exchange...

The general purpose of the SEC is to investigate, fine and in general "stop" financial crimes in the financial market. This, in theory, requires said investigators to be smarter than the perpetrators or at least somewhere on par. While these folks are paid really well on average... this isn't "fuck you money" like on Wolf of Wallstreet. Even "poor fuck you money" is better than what they make. While I won't dismiss the need for a lot of attorneys and accountants in their profession, 333 examiners doesn't seem adequate against a $440k average salary industry with 176k employees 2018 numbers (https://www.osc.state.ny.us/sites/default/files/reports/docu...). Unless there's much more overlap than I'm imagining.

I mean seriously, if you're smart enough for the financial industry, you need to have a much higher moral code to take the less than half rate of average salary compared to the people you're investigating. Which I'm not knocking. I always respect people who take a moral high ground stance and try to do some actionable good, especially if it's at a detriment to their own wallet. It's just, expectations need to tempered with their overall capabilities. On top, agreeing with you on structure, what kind of hell do some of these folks experience working in a government environment? How many get salty real fast and get all pissed off from the shit they deal with bureaucratic wise along with shitty pay compared to the industry's employee?

There was a line from Burn Notice that I've always attributed to this, "Fighting for the little guy is for suckers". So yea, can we all really trust the SEC? Maybe... but can you really blame them by too much regarding "issues" granted that most of any industry, especially tech & finance, is about jumping to the next better paying job? I mean think of this scenario, "You're going to get fined no matter what happens today. But I can reduce it by half if a moving box full of cash magically appears on my back porch."




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