Remember to enter Amazon via the VDARE.com link and we get a commission on any purchases you make—at no cost to you!
Obama's Dilemma -- and Ours
Seventy-one years ago this spring, after the German army
had broken through the French lines, British Prime
Minister
Winston Churchill
flew to France to consult his embattled allies on how to
stop the advance.
"Where is the strategic reserve?"
Churchill urgently asked the French commander in chief,
Gen. Maurice Gamelin, and then he repeated himself in
French:
"Ou est la masse de manoeuvre?"
"Aucune,"
came Gamelin's reply.
"There is none."
The French had no reserves to stop the Germans from
overrunning their country.
The
Battle of France
was lost.
The Obama administration, in its grand strategy to
generate a rapid and strong recovery from the Great
Recession, is at a similar pass. It has drawn and played
all its cards: the $800 billion
stimulus bill,
three straight deficits averaging $1.4 trillion, the
Federal Reserve's mass purchases of bad paper from the
world's banks, and QE2, the monthly purchase of $100
billion in Treasury bills that ends June 30.
Yet, from the numbers that came in from May, Obama looks
to be holding a losing hand. The anemic growth of the
first quarter of 2011 seems to have stalled, and the
prospect of a double-dip recession looms.
Though the administration anticipated perhaps a
quarter-million new jobs in May, as April produced, May
generated only 55,000. The unemployment rate ticked back
up to 9.1 percent.
The rise in manufacturing employment went into reverse.
Five thousand manufacturing jobs were lost. Consumer
confidence sank.
Today 2 million homes remain vacant in the USA, putting
immense downward pressure on housing prices. A fourth of
U.S. homes are not worth the mortgages being paid upon
them.
Says
Federal Reserve Vice Chairwoman Janet Yellen,
"Looking forward,
I unfortunately can envision no quick or easy solutions
for the problems still afflicting the housing market."
Recovery is going to be a "long, drawn-out process."
A further decline in housing prices of 10 to 25 percent
over the next five years, says Robert Shiller, the
economist who invented the S&P/Case-Shiller index of
property values,
"wouldn't surprise me at all."
The economic malaise has now begun to affect the mood of
the nation and its attitude toward the president.
Almost 90 percent of Americans think the U.S. economy is
terrible or poor. Sixty percent think the nation is
headed in the wrong direction. Forty-eight percent
expect a second Great Depression next year. Fewer than
40 percent approve of Obama's handling of the U.S.
economy.
In one new poll,
Mitt Romney leads the president 49-46
in a matchup in 2012.
The question Obama faces and, indeed, Congress and the
nation face is: What do we do now?
Chairman Ben Bernanke of the Federal Reserve has
signaled that there will be no QE3, no more Fed
purchases of $100 billion a month in U.S. government
paper. Buyers for that $1.2 trillion a year of U.S. debt
will have to be found elsewhere.
And with the economy stagnant or sinking, the Democrats
on Capitol Hill are starting to back away from any deep
budget cuts, even as Republicans are now even less
likely to sign on to any tax increases to reduce the
$1.5 billion deficit.
Indeed, if the economy is stalled or sinking into
recession, what economic theory is it that argues for
austerity and tax hikes?
And the perceived economic stagnation not only
diminishes the chance of a bipartisan budget deal but
also points to deadlock on the debt ceiling. Republicans
are already holding out for $1 in spending cuts for
every dollar increase in the debt ceiling. And the
country seems to be behind the GOP position: If the
Senate and White House don't agree to $2 trillion in
spending cuts, we don't raise the debt ceiling by $2
trillion.
The U.S. government does not run out of money to pay its
bills until August. But markets probably will be making
judgments upon the likelihood of a U.S. default well
before then.
How did we get here? How did the richest and strongest
country in history, triumphant in World War II and the
Cold War, approach so soon the condition of the late
Spanish and British empires as they began their
precipitous declines?
Answer: We overextended ourselves. We bankrupted
ourselves.
We undertook the defense of nations all over the world
having
little to do
with our
vital national interests.
We fought unnecessary wars. We doled out
trillions in foreign aid
to
ingrates, incompetents, opportunists and thieves.
We promised all our seniors Social Security and
subsidized medical
care for the
rest of their lives
and failed to put the money away to pay for it. We
dropped half of U.S. wage earners off the tax rolls
while creating a mammoth welfare state to
dwarf anything
Norman Thomas and his Socialists
dreamed of
in the 1930s.
Not only for the United States but also for the West,
the
days of wine and roses
are over.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction to
VDARE.COM readers; his book State
of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America, can
be ordered from Amazon.com. His latest book
is Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How
Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost
the World,
reviewed
here by
Paul Craig Roberts.






