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Monday, October 06, 2008
Bill Steigerwald :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Government Failed Us
by Bill Steigerwald
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It's no surprise that someone who named his company FreeMarkets Inc., as founder and CEO Glen Meakem did, is a foe of the gargantuan financial bailout bill that President Bush signed into law Friday. Meakem, who calls himself "an economic conservative" and is active in Republican politics, sold his innovative business-to-business Internet company to Ariba Inc. in 2004 for $493 million. Now 44, he is the co-founder and managing director of Meakem Becker Venture Capital. I talked to him by telephone on Thursday evening, the day after the Senate passed a pork-stuffed version of the $700 billion "rescue" plan that its proponents hope will free up the country's frozen credit markets so banks can start lending again.

Q: Are you a pro- or anti-bailout person?

A: I'm against it. .... The bottom line here is that this crisis was caused by the government. They've only worsened it. They've done some regulatory things that are intelligent to try to address it, but there's been a lot of other stupid things done. This bailout package has some good things in it -- keeping 30 million people from paying the Alternative Minimum Tax. That's a good thing. Taking FDIC insurance on bank deposits from $100,000 to $250,000. There are good things. But there's just a whole sea of bad stuff in this bill. And it's $800 billion of new spending and it should be defeated.

Q: Should the market be allowed to fix the credit crisis and is there any simple way to do that?

A: Yes, the market should be allowed to fix the problem with intelligent regulation and perhaps a much-scaled-back government intervention.

Q: What is the single biggest or most important economic problem that needs to be addressed right now?

A: I think the government in the last week has already done the two key things. The SEC modified the mark-to-market rule (The act of recording the price or value of a security, portfolio or account to reflect its current market value rather than its book value), which is great. And the Fed has stopped worrying about inflation and is now worried about liquidity and deflation and they are injecting massive amounts of money into the financial system. Not bailout, give-away money, but hard loans that banks have to pay back. So I think they've already done the two key things. I think the reason the market dropped (Thursday) so much is that the market's worried that the bailout bill will pass.

Q: Do you still think, as you did on Sept. 16, that the credit crisis will work itself out in six months?

A: It's clearly gotten worse than it was three weeks ago. I think this is a one-year minimum workout period. Frankly, it depends on what happens politically. The worst thing that could possibly happen right now is increasing taxes. Of course, Barack Obama has been updating his positions. But all along he's talked about penalizing the people with capital, penalizing the people with higher incomes. Frankly, that's like going in and throwing water in the gas tank of the engine of the train.

Q: If Obama and his neo-New Deal-type thinking are in power for the next four years, can he really do more harm economically to the country than President Bush has done in the last seven years?

A: Yes. This isn't a popular statement but I would argue that Bush's economic policies have actually been very good, with the exception that the Democrats fought any reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and so this mortgage crisis that a lot of people knew was brewing got out of hand.

The fact that the crisis was unaddressed is squarely the responsibility of the liberal Democrats. They fought any reform at all. That's clearly documented. So that part of the economic failure is clearly not Bush's fault. As for the liquidity crisis, I think (Federal Reserve Chairman) Ben Bernanke has not been a very successful Fed chief. I think he misread the economy over the past year and I think they needed to put a lot more liquidity into the economy. So we can fault the Bush administration or the independent Fed for that part of it.

Q: Do you see a serious recession coming?

A: I think it depends on policy. If Obama gets elected and we raise tax rates, yes, we'll have a very serious recession. And if the government borrows tremendous amounts of money from the future and spends it on silly, stupid things, then, yes, we will have a very serious recession -- or maybe even something we could call a "New Depression." Maybe not "The Great Depression," but as you may recall from history, there were many depressions in the 19th century. We could have a depression of our own here in this decade ... . This bill would be a huge tax on our future, which would keep economic growth sluggish for a long time. There's no way to avoid bad stuff happening from this point forward, but government spending a lot of money in silly ways and borrowing that money from our future will really hurt us.

Q: How will Pennsylvania and Western Pennsylvania fare in the economic conditions we'll be facing?

A: In Pennsylvania, in general, our tax rates are still too high. We have the second-highest corporate net income tax in the country. As long as we have that we are going to be unattractive to capital and new business and jobs. That's the bad news -- that Pennsylvania is set up to be anti-business.

The good news is because we've had those bad economic policies in place for a long time in Pennsylvania, we've not been a boom economy. Especially in our part of the state, in the Pittsburgh area, we never had the big increase in home prices. We never had the boom, so we're not having the same kind of bust that Florida and Nevada and California and other higher-growth parts of the country are having. As I look at the next six months, I think we'll probably experience less pain than other places.

Q: Who do you think will win Pennsylvania on Nov. 4 and who's going to be the next president?

A: I strongly support John McCain. I think he's the better of the two options. Right now the chances are that Barack Obama is going to be our next president, based on the polls I'm seeing. I think regular people are making the same mistake that they made in reaction to the Great Depression.

They think the problem is a failure of capitalism, is a failure of markets, is a failure of banks and bank executives. The truth is, the failure is a failure of government policy. My fear is that because people think it's a failure of capitalism, they are going to vote for the anti-capitalist candidate. If I was going to bet today, I'd say that is what we are going to get and it's going to be a very tough four years.

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About The Author
Bill Steigerwald, born and raised in Pittsburgh, is a former L.A. Times copy editor and free-lancer who also worked as a docudrama researcher for CBS-TV in Hollywood before becoming a reporter for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and a columnist Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Bill Steigerwald recently retired from daily newspaper journalism..
 
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Oh my basic economics and we sleep
Of course the credit market will correct itself! If banks want to stay in business and turn a profit they must lend! Its just basic economics!

Now there's a news flash!
When has the government ever NOT failed those foolish enough to rely on it?

Just wait till the pols get their hands on healthcare....

guys please......
The current economic crisis demands that we understand John McCain's attitudes about economic oversight and corporate influence in federal regulation. Nothing illustrates the danger of his approach more clearly than his central role in the savings and loan scandal of the late '80s and early '90s.
John McCain was accused of improperly aiding his political patron, Charles Keating, chairman of the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association. The bipartisan Senate Ethics Committee launched investigations and formally reprimanded Senator McCain for his role in the scandal -- the first such Senator to receive a major party nomination for president.
At the heart of the scandal was Keating's Lincoln Savings and Loan Association, which took advantage of deregulation in the 1980s to make risky investments with its depositors' money. McCain intervened on behalf of Charles Keating with federal regulators tasked with preventing banking fraud, and championed legislation to delay regulation of the savings and loan industry -- actions that allowed Keating to continue his fraud at an incredible cost to taxpayers.
When the savings and loan industry collapsed, Keating's failed company put taxpayers on the hook for $3.4 billion and more than 20,000 Americans lost their savings. John McCain was reprimanded by the bipartisan Senate Ethics Committee, but the ultimate cost of the crisis to American taxpayers reached more than $120 billion.
The Keating scandal is eerily similar to today's credit crisis, where a lack of regulation and cozy relationships between the financial industry and Congress has allowed banks to make risky loans and profit by bending the rules. And in both cases, John McCain's judgment and values have placed him on the wrong side of history.

The government did not fail us.
The government screwed us; and, we didn't even get kissed.

Production vs. meddling
I like that guy, but I would differ on one point. It is not taxes that will be the determinant of the economy's future. (The instability of our currency right now is of far more concern anyway!) Rather, it will be the nature of upcoming rules and regulations which will determine whether we will go into a depression or not. If we have extensive interference in the free market, production won't occur. A depression is a period of extreme loss of value production. Government can fiddle this way or that, directly or indirectly, with the currency, but in the final analysis, it is whether the private sector can produce enough things of value that is what matters.

We ain't gonna bailout California
Those commie socialists can stop spending so much or go broke.

"The Government Failed Us"--No Sheite
Sherlock?!
Of course it did! It is always going to and the more opportunities you give it the more it will! The more power, the bigger the failure!
Our Founders knew this. Most Americans for a couple hundred years too. BUT,roughly 2/3s or more Americans TODAY don't seem to GET that. After all THEY are the MORONS who put the WORST CONGRESS IN HISTORY IN THERE and KEPT SENDING THEM BACK!

When it gets obvious to the rest of you that our fellow citizens who keep doing this to us are NOT going to "change", every succeeding generation gets worse, youth are voting in larger and larger percentages and voting more and more dumbolcrap commieqer, the more Reconquistaed we get the more DC/CQ, when you realize they WON'T "change" how you going to DEAL with that? They are mentally DEAD, if you want to change the continued bad results arising from those dead minds you are going to have to complete the process. No other way. Permanent and Total “Retirement” and “Recycling.”
They are going to keep voting for Government to Screw us. You want them to stop voting that, you are going to have to make it impossible for them TO vote. That presents you with limited options to accomplish that task. Just depends on how bad it has to get for you.
mick

Well DUH! part 2
I started looking for the Current Day John and Sam Adams years ago. Haven't found them yet.
Wake me when you are actually ready to solve the problem, to get American Revolution Part 3 ready to roll over the people who need killn.
Since Red Freddy and the 30's we've been being herded the wrong way down the "Follow the Moderate Road" to the Socialist Abyss. Nearly 80 years! How we better off? Convince me you can change it at the ballot box after 80 YEARS of failure, folks. 80 years of continual steady drift in the WRONG direction toward our DESTRUCTION. Convince me!
I’d say: “Wake me when you’re ready to fight!” But that’s not and never will be the issue, people! Wake me when you are ready to KILL people, when your perceive your sacred Liberties and Property and Person sufficiently threatened to KNOW it’s you or them. THEN you will be ready to MAKE “Change” FOR THE BETTER that actually ACCOMPLISHES something...
Until then it's just going to continue to get worse, 4 years of Bammiecommie or 4 years of Mac the Knife. 4 more years of the WORST GOVERNMENT in our History! Your neighbors are going to keep voting for it folks. WHEN you going to stop them--permanently?

mick

Mick - the worst Congress
--
The Big Mick complains:

"...roughly 2/3s or more Americans TODAY don't seem to GET that. ['The more power, the bigger the failure!'] After all THEY are the MORONS who put the WORST CONGRESS IN HISTORY IN THERE and KEPT SENDING THEM BACK!"


Here's the problem, Mick.

Yes, the majority of Americans *know* that we've currently got the worst Congress in history, and they voice that opinion steadily and angrily.

No, however, the majority of individual survey respondents in any given Congressional district or state *don't* think that THEIR OWN particular congresscritters (in the Senate or the House) are responsible for making the Congress - as a whole - so friggin' awful.

Either that or these American citizens don't find anything any more appetizing about the opposition candidates being offered by the Tweedle Dee faction of the Boot-On-Your-Neck Party as an alternative.

Remember, Mick, to be blamed for the choice you make, you have to have *HAD* a choice in the first place.

Between the Rockefeller Republicans and the National Socialists, we *DON'T*.


I'm from New Jersey.

Lautenberg and Menendez and that suite of socialist sonsofbitches in the House, voted permanently into office by those motherpoking Mets fans in the northern counties.

Need I say more?





=====
"Anybody that wants the Presidency so much that he'll spend two years organizing and campaigning for it is not to be trusted with the office."

-- David Broder

RealCon - on Rotarian socialism
--
RealCon provides an excellent link to a 2007 blog entry by Greg Swann, entitled "Hillary Clinton and Rotarian Socialism: What's wrong with the NAR?"

The subject of Rotarian socialism - the central principle of the economic policies rammed down our collective throat by the Rockefeller Republicans and, indeed, the Republican Party since its nominal founding - has been a focus for me since 1985, when Greg Costikyan included the basis of an efficient definition in the Designer's Notes of his wargame *Pax Britannica*.

It runs something like:

"Three cheers for free enterprise, and keep them government grants, subsidies, parities, sweetheart deals, quotas, set-asides, tariffs, trade agreements, regulations, no-bid contracts, and bailouts a-coming!"


I think that this is the basis for RealCon's rage at the "neoconservatives" and other unthinking GOP suck-ups here on Townhall.com.



=====
"We are apt to think of Communism as being Capitalism’s natural enemy, but there is another, perhaps more insidious foe to unfettered laissez faire. I call it Rotarian Socialism, just to give it a name. Rotarian Socialism is legislation written by and for the membership of a politically-powerful elite. Most of the criticisms you hear about Capitalism are in fact criticisms of Rotarian Socialism.

Truly free markets require freedom, not laws. ... The solution to its problems — and to ours as members — is not more Rotarian Socialism but less, ideally none."

-- Greg Swann

--

Jail Them
Start with these few:
Chris Dodd
Barney Franks
Maxine Waters
Raines
Garelick
Barack Obama
Then progress to everyone engaged in "cooking the books" at Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Investigate for prosecution the executives at Countrywide, AGI, and all the financial institutions that sell, manage, or advise on stocks and the economy. Place on hold all bank accounts of any executive receiving obscene bonuses within 2 years of any company that goes bankrupt.

You know the speaker is phony...
...when they use the words "free-market" and "intelligent regulation" in the same sentence.

Democrats disguising their own failures
For several years now DEMOCRATS have been in charge of both Congress and the Senate. They've been calling the shots. Yet, for those same years they have been consistently blaming Republicans for our declining economy. Are Democrats simply trying to disguise the fact that THEY REALLY ARE INEFFECTIVE? It would appear that way!

Warrior:
Your list is incomplete without Bush, McCain, and a host of Republican names. To assume many R's were not complicit in a fraud of this magnitude is naive.

Angel - National Socialist effectiveness
--
Gripes Angel:

"For several years now DEMOCRATS have been in charge of both Congress and the Senate. They've been calling the shots. Yet, for those same years they have been consistently blaming Republicans for our declining economy. Are Democrats simply trying to disguise the fact that THEY REALLY ARE INEFFECTIVE? It would appear that way!"


Not just that. Remember, the National Socialists -

-- -- (( why does anybody still call them "Democrats"? )) -- --

- were in power for far longer before the (nominally) conservative Republican takeover in 1994, and have been substantially aided and abetted by the Rockefeller Republican ("Rotarian socialist") majority dominating the GOP since ... well, poking *FOREVER*.

Consider that the National Socialists - Franks and Dodd and Waters and Pelosi and the rest of that diseased and Christless crew - actually wanted this to happen.

They *PLANNED* it.

The National Socialists want supreme power.

(( Any argument on that? ))

Like the rats they are, what they want is nothing compared to the damage they're willing to do in the process of getting it.

Completely ruin the American economy?

Hey, ya gotta break eggs to make an omlette!

And thus we can conclude that the National Socialists were - and are - perfectly willing to drag down the whole nation (hell, the whole world) into catastrophe if it puts them in power.

Dangerous friggin' people, no?

Again, so why the hell is anyone still calling them "Democrats"?

--

sj doc
Excellent discussion. Especially love "Rotarian Socialism".

My congressman, Jo Bonner, voted for this trillion dollar gift to Wall Street and then wrote us a two-page letter about how he is really a Conservative but just this one time had to go with the Democrats. Truth is, he is a conservative in talk but a socialist in deed.

Ultimately, we the people are responsible for allowing these thieves to stay in power. The Constitution is in peril, but we can still vote them out. I WILL vote against Bonner this time, no matter who opposes him.

Will you do the same in your district?

P - Could a 7th Cavalry trooper...?
--
...following Custer into the field on 25 June 1876 have won the Battle of the Little Big Horn all by himself?

P asks:

"Ultimately, we the people are responsible for allowing these thieves to stay in power. The Constitution is in peril, but we can still vote them out. I WILL vote against Bonner this time, no matter who opposes him.

"Will you do the same in your district?"


Kid, I live in New Jersey's 1st Congressional District.

Jim Florio's old district, currently represented in the house by an intelligent but oleagenous infant named Rob Andrews.

The local Republican Party (hah!) keeps putting up useless nonentities who are Christie Todd Whitman knock-offs at best. None of them have the proverbial nitrocellulose dog's chance of chasing that asbestos weasel, Andrews, through even a frosty morning on any given Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

The problem with democracy - also known as "majoritarian totalitarianism" - is that you need a majority of sane, lucid, responsible, intelligent, reasonably well-educated people to make it work.

You're looking for that in Camden and Gloucester Counties?

Hah!




=====
"We are so concerned to flatter the majority that we lose sight of how very often it is necessary, in order to preserve freedom for the minority, let alone for the individual, to face that majority down."

-- William F. Buckley, Jr.

Bill
Every Conservative I know,wants the government to "Butt-Out". Yet the government must protect "US" from our own ignorance. Economics is taught at every secondary school in the WORLD,there are even elementary schools, that teach the subject. Americans are now being taught a critical lesson; You are on your OWN!!! Put down the Beer and read a book. Workers have no idea, as to the wealth they give-away due to their own ignorance. Economics is not easy for the best of students,especially NOW... You'd better get started!!!

Obama's ACORN
Barack Obama and his favorite organization, ACORN, are up to their ears in this subprime scandal. Go to the National Review website for a story on how ACORN has lobbied and threatened banks for years to grant mortgages at low interest rates to people without funds to pay them off. They started at the local level and finally reached Congress and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Congressional Democrats accommodated their wishes including Obama, their mentor and sugar daddy.

Obama's ACORN Seeded a Disaster
Barack Obama and his favorite organization, ACORN, are at the root of this financial disaster. ACORN for years threatened banks in order to persuade them to grant subprime loans. But it really didn't become effective until it reached Congress and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Under pressure the Democrats accommodated their wishes and allowed millions of worthless subprime loans. Obama encouraged the scam, funneling out largess to ACORN and getting campaign contributions from this radical organization. The story is on National Review's website: must reading for every liberal posting on this site.

Mark
McCain was exonerated.

SJ Doc
Yes similar situation here. Bonner can`t lose but what other recourse have we than to vote against these weasels?

You see, they have us...We are forced to pay for their excesses at the threat of a jail sentence. Those with less to lose can take to the streets, but if we wish to retain our freedom and the things we have worked for, we must keep our heads down and pay up.

Much like the founders, if we seek true freedom, we must risk everything.
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