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GOP Protects Soldiers' Right to be Fleeced

Nov 28, 2010
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Speaking of rights....

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Majority Republicans quietly inserted language into the gigantic defense legislation that would override a Pentagon push to enhance consumer protections for men and women in uniform. Flaws in the current rules have allowed lenders to trap military families in loans that cost two, five, and even ten times as much to repay as what the loan was actually worth.

Pentagon officials laid out plans in 2014 to revamp the rules that protect armed forces families from unscrupulous financial firms, after multiple analyses of how lenders use loopholes in the 2006 Military Lending Act (MLA) to target soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines. But a subcommittee draft of the NDAA would prohibit the Department of Defense (DOD) from implementing the rules it wants until it conducts a further study of the current rules and submits the findings to Congress. The Pentagon would have to submit that report within the next year, and couldn't implement any new MLA rules until 60 days after delivering it to lawmakers.

Such study would be redundant. Congress already instructed DOD to study the MLA rules back in 2012, and the department reported its findings last year
 
Speaking of rights....

LINK


Majority Republicans quietly inserted language into the gigantic defense legislation that would override a Pentagon push to enhance consumer protections for men and women in uniform. Flaws in the current rules have allowed lenders to trap military families in loans that cost two, five, and even ten times as much to repay as what the loan was actually worth.

Pentagon officials laid out plans in 2014 to revamp the rules that protect armed forces families from unscrupulous financial firms, after multiple analyses of how lenders use loopholes in the 2006 Military Lending Act (MLA) to target soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines. But a subcommittee draft of the NDAA would prohibit the Department of Defense (DOD) from implementing the rules it wants until it conducts a further study of the current rules and submits the findings to Congress. The Pentagon would have to submit that report within the next year, and couldn't implement any new MLA rules until 60 days after delivering it to lawmakers.

Such study would be redundant. Congress already instructed DOD to study the MLA rules back in 2012, and the department reported its findings last year


I bet they still support the troops!!!
 
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