Listen to WPR online Return to the WPR Home Page
Kathleen Dunn
from Wednesday, August 15, 2012 at 10:00 PM
President Bush signed the Troubled Asset Relief Program into law almost four years ago. The TARP was instantly controversial. Even though most of the money has been repaid, many analysts believe that the TARP created a dangerous precedent and did not include sufficient regulation of the industry it helped to save. This hour, Kathleen Dunn talks to the former Special Inspector General for the TARP, who sharply criticizes both political parties' closeness with Wall Street. Guest: Neil Barofsky - Former Inspector General in Charge of Oversight for TARP and Senior Fellow at New York University School of Law. His new book is Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street

Downloaded programs can be played at any time in the future from your PC, copied and played on your portable MP3 player or even burned onto CD's for playback in your car or home stereo. Please note however that you may not sell, edit or otherwise modify the content of these programs. Also we must limit each visitor to 20 downloads per day. All programs are copyrighted by University of Wisconsin-Extension. More questions? See our FAQ Page

Please note that the amount of time required to download a one-hour WPR program will vary depending on the speed of your internet connection. See the table (right) for estimated download times.

Once you click on the "Start Download Now" button below, the download dialog window may not appear for several seconds. Do NOT click on the button more than once or your download request may be refused.

ConnectionSpeedEst. Time
Dial-Up50 Kbps50 Minutes
DSL Line250 Kbps10 Minutes
Cable Modem1 Mbps2 Minutes
High Speed Cable5 Mbps30 Seconds
Corporate LAN10 Mbps15 Seconds

Please click only ONCE
When you start the download, several dialog boxes may appear on your screen:
  1. If a "file download" box appears, simply click the "SAVE" button.
  2. If a "Save-As" box appears, locate a folder where you want to save the MP3 program file and click "SAVE".
  3. Some browsers will automatically save the file to a pre-determined location (often to your desktop or Documents folder).
  4. A "Download Progress" box may appear showing the file downloading to your PC. When the download is completed, you may receive a final "Download Complete" indication. You can then CLOSE this dialog box.
  5. Mac Users: iTunes may automatically launch and start playing the file after it's downloaded.
The WPR Homepage   |   WPR Archives Index Page   |   Become a Member



HOME | ABOUT | PROGRAM INDEX | MEMBERSHIP | SPONSORSHIPS | WPR NEWS
IDEAS NETWORK | NEWS & CLASSICAL NETWORK | RADIO STORE
LIVE STREAMS | AUDIO ARCHIVES

For questions or comments about our programming, call Audience Services
at 1-800-747-7444, email us at listener@wpr.org, or use our Online Feedback Form.
View our Privacy Policy.   Send comments about our website to webmaster@wpr.org.

©2013 by Wisconsin Public Radio - a service of the
Wisconsin Educational Communications Board
and University of Wisconsin - Extension.