Author Topic: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout  (Read 2340 times)

loco

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Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« on: September 29, 2008, 12:08:20 PM »
Dr. Paul gave a quick speech on the House floor this morning concerning the bailout.  Due to the nature of the debate today, he didn’t have time to read his full remarks, which were put into the congressional record and are featured below:

The process of this bailout reminds me of a panic-stricken swimmer thrashing in the water only making his situation worse. Even a “bipartisan deal”—whatever that is supposed to mean— will not stop the Congress from thrashing about.

The beneficiaries of the corrupt monetary system of the last three decades are now desperately looking for victims to stick with the bill after they have reaped decades of profit and privilege.

The difficulties in our economy will continue because the Legislative and the Executive branches have not yet begun to address the real problems. The housing bubble’s collapse, as was the Dot Com bubble’s collapse, was predictable and is merely a symptom of the monetary system that brought us to this point.

Indeed, we do face a major crisis but it is much bigger than the freezing up of Wall Street and dealing with worthless assets on the books of major banks. The true crisis is the pending collapse of the fiat dollar system that emerged after the breakdown of the Bretton Woods agreement in 1971.

For 37 years the world built a financial system based on the dollar as the reserve currency of the world in an attempt to make the dollar serve as the new standard of value. However since 1971, the dollar has had no intrinsic value, as it is not tied to gold. The dollar is simply a fiat currency, which has fluctuated in value on a daily, if not hourly, bias. This worked to some degree until the market realized that too much debt and malinvestment existed and a correction was required.

Because of our economic and military strength, compared to other countries, trust in America’s currency lasted longer than deserved. This resulted in the biggest worldwide economic distortion in all of history. The problem is much bigger than the fears of a temporary decline on Wall Street if the bailout is not agreed to.

Money’s most important function is to serve as a means of exchange—a measurement of value. If this crucial yardstick is not stable, it becomes impossible for investors, entrepreneurs, savers, and consumers to make correct decisions; these mistakes create the bubble that must eventually be corrected.

Just imagine the results if a construction company was forced to use a yardstick whose measures changed daily to construct a skyscraper. The result would be a very unstable and dangerous building. No doubt the construction company would try to cover up their fundamental problem with patchwork repairs, but no amount of patchwork can fix a building with an unstable inner structure. Eventually, the skyscraper will collapse, forcing the construction company to rebuild—hopefully this time with a stable yardstick.  This 700 billion package is more patchwork repair and will prove to be money down a rat hole and will only make the dollar crisis that much worse.

But what politicians are willing to say that the financial “skyscraper”—the global financial and monetary system-is a house of cards. It is not going to happen at this juncture. They’re not even talking about this. They talk only of bailouts, more monetary inflation, more special interest spending, more debt, and more regulations. There is almost no talk of the relationship of the Community Reinvestment Act, HUD, and government assisted loans to the housing bubble. And there is no talk of the oversight that is desperately needed for the Federal Reserve, the Exchange Stabilization Fund, and all the activities of the President’s Working Group on financial markets. When these actions are taken we will at last know that Congress is serious about the reforms that are really needed.

In conclusion, there are three good reasons why Congress should reject this legislation:

a. It is immoral—Dumping bad debt on the innocent taxpayers is an act of theft and is wrong.

b. It is unconstitutional—There is no constitutional authority to use government power to serve special interests.

c. It is bad economic policy—By refusing to address the monetary system while continuing to place the burdens of the bailout on the dollar, we can be certain that in time, we will be faced with another, more severe crisis when the market figures out that there is no magic government bailout or regulation that can make a fraudulent monetary system work.


Monetary reform will eventually come, but, unfortunately, Congress’ actions this week make it more likely the reform will come under dire circumstances, such as the midst of a worldwide collapse of the dollar. The question then will be how much of our liberties will be sacrificed in the process. Just remember what we lost in the aftermath of 9-11.

The best result we can hope for is that the economic necessity of getting our fiscal house in order will, at last, force us to give up our world empire. Without the empire we can then concentrate on rebuilding the Republic.


http://www.campaignforliberty.com/blog/?p=642

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #1 on: September 29, 2008, 12:12:10 PM »
LOL...

You do realist this means Congress listened to RON PAUL, and not BUSH/ CHENEY/ PELOSI/ OBAMA/ MCCAIN?

LMAO... about time.

loco

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #2 on: September 29, 2008, 01:09:45 PM »
LOL...

You do realist this means Congress listened to RON PAUL, and not BUSH/ CHENEY/ PELOSI/ OBAMA/ MCCAIN?

LMAO... about time.

If Ron Paul had any influence on those who voted "NO", then yes...about time.   :)

But some are crediting/blaming, Nancy Pelosi:

Republican leaders who had pushed their reluctant members for the bill blamed Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., saying that her speech during the floor debate drove away about a dozen Republicans they thought they could get to support the measure.

"I do believe we could have gotten there today if it had not been for this partisan speech the speaker gave on the floor of the House," said Boehner.
http://money.cnn.com/2008/09/29/news/economy/bailout/index.htm?cnn=yes

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #3 on: September 29, 2008, 04:16:10 PM »
Boehner only got 1/3 of his own party members to support the bill.

He can blame pelosi all he wants.  His members voted to keep their jobs in their districts.

blaming pelosi = laughable.  2/3 of Dems voted for the bill.  Less than 1/3 of repubs voted for it.

24KT

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #4 on: September 29, 2008, 05:38:06 PM »
Isn't Boehner the same cowardly blow-hard who ran for cover when it was disclosed how he had turned a blind eye to the misconduct of his fellow Republican Congressman, ...pedophile Mark Foley?
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Bindare_Dundat

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #5 on: September 29, 2008, 06:44:24 PM »

loco

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Hugo Chavez

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Bindare_Dundat

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #8 on: September 29, 2008, 07:08:58 PM »
He's been getting a lot more worked up lately, I like seeing him with a little bit of fire in the eye.  :)

stormshadow

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #9 on: September 29, 2008, 07:38:03 PM »
He's been getting a lot more worked up lately, I like seeing him with a little bit of fire in the eye.  :)

Damn, that ending was good. 

w8tlftr

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #10 on: September 29, 2008, 07:47:14 PM »
The Republican party had it's chance.

Fucking assholes.  >:(

NEITHER party wants to see that man elected POTUS.


Eyeball Chambers

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #11 on: September 29, 2008, 07:47:57 PM »
Great!
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Buffgeek

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #12 on: September 29, 2008, 07:51:30 PM »
Paul is awesome. I hope this doent get passed.

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #13 on: September 29, 2008, 07:52:07 PM »
McCain is off to save the country... Lolololololoz
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Buffgeek

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Re: Dr. Paul’s House floor remarks on the bailout
« Reply #14 on: September 29, 2008, 07:56:47 PM »
McCain is off to save the country... Lolololololoz

I read that he was originally called by Harry Reid to sway repulicans. Once it got out Harry Denied it so who knows...  McCain should have addressed this during the debate, but he didnt so: Fail.