There's been questions about whether the administration pressured DOJ to investigate Fed Chair Powell. The answer is straightforward—no such directive was given. As for the president's repeated public criticism of the Fed chair's policies, that's within his right to do. Presidents have long voiced views on monetary policy and central bank decisions. The distinction between voicing political opinion and exercising improper government influence is an important one worth understanding, especially as markets react to shifting relationships between executive and monetary policy branches.
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BearMarketMonk
· 01-15 22:31
Trying to shift blame again? I've never seen such a pure excuse before.
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VitalikFanboy42
· 01-12 23:04
Uh, basically it's the kind of talk that says "we're not under pressure anymore"... Alright, I'll trust you this once, but the distinction is way too blurry.
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GateUser-4745f9ce
· 01-12 23:04
It sounds like you're just making excuses for someone, saying there's no pressure but also claiming the right to criticize... Why does this logic feel so familiar?
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ser_aped.eth
· 01-12 23:04
Hey, this way of saying sounds a bit... you know what I mean? Saying there's no pressure when there actually is?
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TokenStorm
· 01-12 23:02
Ha, it's that same excuse of "I didn't pressure anyone"... The on-chain data, however, is honest and won't lie.
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BlockchainRetirementHome
· 01-12 22:46
Ah, it's the same old spiel again, "No pressure" is enough? The market will just listen and move on, let's look at the data to speak for itself.
There's been questions about whether the administration pressured DOJ to investigate Fed Chair Powell. The answer is straightforward—no such directive was given. As for the president's repeated public criticism of the Fed chair's policies, that's within his right to do. Presidents have long voiced views on monetary policy and central bank decisions. The distinction between voicing political opinion and exercising improper government influence is an important one worth understanding, especially as markets react to shifting relationships between executive and monetary policy branches.