The 2008 meetings involved Paulson and Bernanke. I’m sure GW was involved too although probably didn’t understand it. That means the executive and the fed were tied in together. Tim Geithner (one of the Fed bank chiefs) and CEOs of Citigroup, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, etc. would also be heavily involved in the bailout plans—Geithner later becoming treasury secretary under a completely different administration. Some of these bank/investment players being directly involved in the setup for the collapse to begin with. Congress would approve it.
In just that one instance you had the Fed, the executive, and Congress all being in on it. As well as most major banksters.
So I don’t know where you’re getting the idea the Fed is acting alone in any of this. Or that it’s really any secret. They’re not. Chiefs of most of the banks and investment companies, the executives (from whatever administration), and Congress are all knee deep in the shenanigans and monitization of our public debt. At the loss of our buying power. Even Trump is a part of the act (no matter what I might like about other stuff he does he’s a Keynesian too, and is no stranger to using other people’s money to fund his ventures. Win or lose).
Other than the likes of Ron Paul and some other isolated libertarians and crusaders no one from Congress looks into things much nor do they want to. Why do you think any thoughts of any audit of the Fed brought up in Congress die out quickly and never gain any traction ? Republicans or democrats ? They don’t know and they don’t want to know. They don’t care. They only care that they’re found a willing partner in being able to endlessly spend in debt and when they can’t raise tax revenue enough to cover cash flow borrow endlessly —with the Fed having their back by devaluing our currency (erasing a portion of their public debt) to support their spending habits. You’ll see no supporters of Hayek in our government; it’s a sea of Keynesians. And Keynesian economics always fails because it assumes one can get something for nothing.
Ya never get something for nothing in economics. Inflation is the most evil tax there is because it’s devastating, subtitle, and hits those at lower income levels or fixed income the hardest. Especially those who’ve been fiscally prudent and spent within their means all their life, and put away money for later life. That buying power gets erased.