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We haven't seen "bipartisan cooperation" like this since Washington decided to invade Iraq

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dajoki Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-08-08 09:48 AM
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We haven't seen "bipartisan cooperation" like this since Washington decided to invade Iraq
America's Economic Free Fall
By William Greider, The Nation. Posted August 1, 2008.
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/93509/america%27s_economic_free_fall/

Washington can act with breathtaking urgency when the right people want something done. In this case, the people are Wall Street's titans, who are scared witless at the prospect of their historic implosion. Congress quickly agreed to enact a gargantuan bailout, with more to come, to calm the anxieties and halt the deflation of Wall Street giants. Put aside partisan bickering, no time for hearings, no need to think through the deeper implications. We haven't seen "bipartisan cooperation" like this since Washington decided to invade Iraq.

In their haste to do anything the financial guys seem to want, Congress and the lame-duck President are, I fear, sowing far more profound troubles for the country. First, while throwing our money at Wall Street, government is neglecting the grave risk of a deeper catastrophe for the real economy of producers and consumers. Second, Washington's selective generosity for influential financial losers is deforming democracy and opening the path to an awesomely powerful corporate state. Third, the rescue has not succeeded, not yet. Banking faces huge losses ahead, and informed insiders assume a far larger federal bailout will be needed -- after the election. No one wants to upset voters by talking about it now. The next President, once in office, can break the bad news. It's not only about the money -- with debate silenced, a dangerous line has been crossed. Hundreds of billions in open-ended relief has been delivered to the largest and most powerful mega-banks and investment firms, while government offers only weak gestures of sympathy for struggling producers, workers and consumers.

The bailouts are rewarding the very people and institutions whose reckless behavior caused this financial mess. Yet government demands nothing from them in return -- like new rules for prudent behavior and explicit obligations to serve the national interest. Washington ought to compel the financial players to rein in their appetite for profit in order to help save the country from a far worse fate: a depressed economy that cannot regain its normal energies. Instead, the Federal Reserve, the Treasury, the Democratic Congress and of course the Republicans meekly defer to the wise men of high finance, who no longer seem so all-knowing.

Let's review the bidding to date. After panic swept through the global financial community this spring, the Federal Reserve and Treasury rushed in to arrange a sweetheart rescue for Bear Stearns, expending $29 billion to take over the brokerage's ruined assets so JPMorgan Chase, the prestigious banking conglomerate, would agree to buy what was left. At the same time, the Fed and Treasury provided a series of emergency loans and liquidity for endangered investment firms and major banks. Investors were not persuaded. Their panic was not "mental," as former McCain adviser Phil Gramm recently complained. The collapse of the housing bubble had revealed the deep rot and duplicity within the financial system. When investors tried to sell off huge portfolios of spoiled financial assets like mortgage bonds, nobody would buy them. In fact, no one can yet say how much these once esteemed "safe" investments are really worth.

<<snip>>

A generation of conservative propaganda, arguing that markets make wiser decisions than government, has been destroyed by these events. The interventions amount to socialism, American style, in which the government decides which private enterprises are "too big to fail." Trouble is, it was the government itself that created most of these mastodons -- including the all-purpose banking conglomerates. The mega-banks arose in the 1990s, when a Democratic President and Republican Congress repealed the New Deal-era Glass-Steagall Act, which prevented commercial banks from blending their business with investment banking. That combination was the source of incestuous self-dealing and fraudulent stock valuations that led directly to the Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed.
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RaleighNCDUer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-08-08 10:28 AM
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1. Oh, really?
"A generation of conservative propaganda, arguing that markets make wiser decisions than government, has been destroyed by these events."

I'd say it's been proved again - they have shown that they can scam their clients, make untold millions of dollars with purely paper investments, and when the paper turns out to be worthless the government will bail them out. Again, the markets succeeded in what they do, and the government failed in what it does.

Now, if the government refused to bail them out THEN the government would be making a wiser - if more painful - decision, while the wall street con men would actually suffer consequences for their bad decisions. Only that would truly destroy the conservative propaganda.
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paparush Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-08-08 10:54 AM
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2. Its time to put a stop to public bailout of private profiteers
Particularly in light of all the tax loopholes available to corps.
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dajoki Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-09-08 08:27 AM
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3. kick
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