September 22, 2008 Bailing Out Wall Street: An Amnesty For StupidityIs it fair that businessmen who fail in neighborhood stores have to close shop and often sell their homes, while Wall Street titans are spared the consequences of monumental stupidity and greed? No, it is not fair. Yet, Treasury's Hank Paulson may be right. To save the sheep who might have been wiped out in a general financial panic, we may have to save the pigs. Life is unfair, said JFK. Yet, this is going to be the mother of all bailouts. Paulson will be voted by Congress authority to spend $700 billion, 5 percent of our gross domestic product, to buy all that toxic paper stinking up the books of our biggest banks. And this is not the first such bailout of foolish and incompetent financiers and politicians. In 1975, when its cravenness to extortionate union demands had bankrupted New York, the Big Apple had to be rrescued by Gerald Ford. Marion Barry's In the Reagan era, it was Chrysler.. Later that decade, Citibank, Chase-Manhattan and Bank of America were staring into the abyss, as Latin American regimes, to whom they had lent scores of billions, were balking at paying their debts. Uncle Sam stepped in. Then came the Mexican and Asian financial crises and the U.S.-IMF bailouts of the 1990s. The Mexican bailout was as much a rescue of Goldman-Sachs as Mexico City, aas Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin's old firm was choking on all its Mexican paper. The great myth is that
these 1990s bailouts were models of For the countries bailed out, like Who ultimately paid for the Mexican
bailout? Middle-class American families have
paid and paid—in lost jobs, lower wages, a falling
median income—to save the big banks from the
consequences of their follies. And those bank bailouts
are behind the trade deficits that set five records in
the Bush era, reached 6 percent of GDP, forced huge Having bailed out
"Europeans
on left and right ridicule U.S. money meltdown,"
ran the Los
Angeles Times headline. How will the bailout work? Will
every bank that brings in toxic paper be able to dump it
on the Treasury? Will the Treasury buy securities based
on subprime About one thing we may be sure. The As for the promises and plans of
Barack Obama and
John McCain—be it for national health insurance or
middle-class tax cuts—they are going by the wayside. For
the Looking at the federal budget—the
five or six major items are Social Security, Medicare,
Medicaid, defense and interest on the debt. All are
going up, as tax revenues fall. Add the cost of two wars
and a bailout of
"There is a great
deal of
ruin in a nation," Adam Smith once consoled a
friend who lamented that We are about to test Smith's proposition. 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 |
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