The stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed were caused in part because so many investors blindly put their money into stocks they knew nothing about. During the 1920s it was often impossible for an investor to find out what a corporation was planning to do with its money, who was running the corporation, and many other vital things. Congress responded by passing the Securities Act of 1933, which required acorporation to divulge more information about itself before it could seek money for a new stock issue. What kind of law did the Congress create? Explain the relationship between voters, Congress, and the law.
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