Not even close to the same thing.
Getting the money back out of a failed bank's assets can take years and you'll still only net about fifty to seventy cents on the dollar best case. Hell they're still trying to unwind the shitplile over at Lehman and it's been five years.
If you want to get into banking reform that will again separate the I banks from the commercial banks, impose more capitalization requirements, and curb speculation from the I'm wholly in favor. Those kinds of topics should not be debated while the industry burns however.
If any banks assets are currently worth 50-70 cents on the dollar than they are currently insolvent and the FDIC should have stepped in long ago. Furthermore, a mistake of that magnitude constitutes fraud and the people responsible should have the full force of the justice department come down on them. Even better, if the FDIC follows the law and rules set for it they should almost never lose money and if they do it should be a very small amount.
Then again, we did recently make accounting fraud legal, just for the banksters of course, as another step to "solve" this crisis. I mean everyone knows that simply pretending you have more money always solves the problem of not having enough money, right...