Author Topic: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight  (Read 1592 times)

Colossus_500

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No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« on: October 07, 2008, 12:44:21 PM »
Welfare state failures are at bottom of crisis
Star Parker


As our financial markets totter, as homes go into foreclosure, as Wall Street executives lose millions, as Americans have more and more difficulty getting loans, can anyone be happy?

Certainly. Those on the left who now, with unbounded glee, pen obituaries for the free market.
 
One can sense their joy as they have, they think, the last laugh.

Bernie Sanders, the far left senator from Vermont, was almost giddy on Larry Kudlow's TV show recently to hear free-marketer Kudlow endorse the bailout and tell Kudlow that he is glad to see he has become a socialist.
 
The Washington Post's Harold Meyerson writes, "The old order -- the Reagan-age institutions built on the premise that the market can do no wrong and the government no right -- is dying."
 
And, of course, there's the thrill in seeing greedy Wall Street capitalists laid bare for the heartless, exploitive monsters they are and see justice done as they fall by the free market sword by which they lived!
 
But, in fact, what we are watching is not a failure of markets, but the latest failure of the welfare state. The sad part is how few who wield political power seem to understand, or want to understand, that this is what's happened.
 
As the details behind the current debacle are unraveled, we see how government created one more entitlement -- the right to own a house -- and then devised an array of programs to subsidize in various ways "affordable housing." Like all welfare programs, the subsidies succeeded in influencing behavior, but the wrong behavior.
 
The greedy part, or, if one wishes to be forgiving, the confused part, of the Wall Street guys is their willingness to play ball with politicians over these years in turning our free country into a welfare state. Wall Street has regularly been a generous contributor to politicians who love to grow government and use it as a tool for social policy.
 
These smart investment bankers, commercial bankers, and traders could have gotten plenty rich, and stayed that way, by encouraging solid institutions to build our country properly. If anyone should appreciate the power of freedom and markets and want to encourage the proper role of government, the integrity of private property, and the care and nurturing of American families, you'd think it would be our financiers.
 
But instead of recognizing basics -- the principles of limited government and traditional values -- and fighting political pressures to undermine these basics, our financiers were happy to support the welfare state model.
 
They should have appreciated, as we must appreciate today, that the problem is not a failure of freedom and markets but of eroding the pillars and principles that make them possible and functional.
 
The best housing program this nation could have is for the government to stay out, let the price of real estate and credit reflect true realities of supply, demand, and risk, and let private people decide for themselves what they need to do and how hard they need to work to acquire what they want.
 
As the institution of government grows, we sadly watch the collapse of the institutions that really sustain growth of home ownership: American marriage and families.
 
According to the Census Bureau, the single largest incidence of homeownership, 86.3 percent, is among married-couple families. Yet, traditional families now amount to barely more than a quarter of our households.
 
And, sadly and ironically, the problem of family structure is most severe in low-income communities where government housing policy has been most targeted.
 
Social and economic policy are not separate universes but part of one fabric of institutions and laws that sustain freedom and prosperity.
 
Those who want to use the current crisis as an excuse to expand government and welfare state policies contribute to laying the foundation for our next crisis.

 
Star Parker (parker@urbancure.org) is president of CURE, Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education and author of three books. This column is printed with permission.

George Whorewell

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #1 on: October 07, 2008, 03:01:35 PM »
Of course he should mention this, but he wont, because he wants to get elected. He now has to say what the idiots in the media and easily swayed public want to hear. I mean for god sake, he wont even highlight the fact that the democrats and Obama in particular ignored Freddie and Fannie despite Republicans urging additional oversight-- McCain even authored one such bill himself in 2005, and nothing was done. Obama and detestable frauds like Chris Dodd blame Bush for everything from the extinction of dinosaurs to slavery, and on this issue they blame him with impunity without acknowledging the fact that this disaster is of their own making.

The media gives hypocrits like Dodd a pass and says nothing when Nancy Pelosi blames what happened on the Bush administration. The result is that McCain is losing on the economy, which is completely absurd in light of the fact he tried to straighten this mess out before it started. The media doesnt mention how Dodd leads the senate in campaign contributions from both freddie and fannie when he is the chairman of the banking comittee responsible for oversight, or how Obama has recieved 100k+ from both instutitions despite only being a senator for three years and employs how many former employees of fannie mae on his campaign staff?

The hypocrisy is sickening and nobody is paying attention. Now we will have a sham of a debate that will do nothing for either candidate except tell us shit we already know, with a bunch of staged questions from audience dweebs. 

Straw Man

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #2 on: October 07, 2008, 03:22:14 PM »
Sub Prime Loans are not the same thing as Fannie/Freddie/CRA/ACORN etc...

This problem was caused by the deregulation of the commodities market, the explosion in credit defualt swaps and the advent of sub-prime loans (and to a slightly lesser extent) Alt-A loans.


Hugo Chavez

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #3 on: October 07, 2008, 03:26:08 PM »
What a bunch of crap.  Welfare for the corporations right.  This is the third republican created collapse.  Talk about that is what we should do.

Trickle down is a complete failure, it's a joke.  Reagan is a fucking joke.

We should also talk about Bush, I just heard he actually threatened Martial Law in America if they didn't pass the bailout bill.  Bush is a Joke.

headhuntersix

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #4 on: October 07, 2008, 03:30:33 PM »
Well without Reagan u would be free to fully experience communism first hand.
L

garebear

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #5 on: October 07, 2008, 03:33:54 PM »
Well without Reagan u would be free to fully experience communism first hand.

Yes, and Reagan could squat over 5 tons. He was a Superman, and anything ( good ) that happened while he was alive was the direct result of his actions.

G

George Whorewell

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #6 on: October 07, 2008, 03:35:42 PM »
Great points Hugo. What was I thinking.  ::)

Hugo Chavez

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #7 on: October 07, 2008, 03:39:35 PM »
Bush threatened martial law...


Straw Man

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Re: No one is talking about this, McCain should mention tonight
« Reply #8 on: October 07, 2008, 04:57:53 PM »
Well without Reagan u would be free to fully experience communism first hand.

wow I had no idea - please elaborate