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Thursday, March 27, 2008
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Some Days You Get the Bear
by Debra J. Saunders
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


"If the Fed can extend $30 billion to help Bear Stearns address their financial crisis," Hillary Rodham Clinton argued, "the federal government should provide at least that much emergency help to families and communities to address theirs." That's a savvy appeal to Americans' strong sense of fundamental fairness -- that if goodies go to Wall Street, then they also should go to Main Street.

Voters, like buyers, should beware. You might think that Democrats oppose the $30 billion Bear Stearns bonanza, because it's a big government bailout that rewards bad business practices.

Wrong. Like Republican presidential candidate John McCain, Clinton and her Democratic rival, Barack Obama, support the Bear Stearns deal. It's one of those things that nobody likes much, but many economists on both the left and right nonetheless support -- even if it goes against their principles of fairness or free markets.

As economist Chad Stone, of the nonpartisan but left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, explained to me, "Achieving an orderly liquidation of Bear Stearns without having a fire sale on assets is a good thing, especially if the people who made bad decisions have to take their lumps. The injection of liquidity by the Fed makes sense as a triage measure to be withdrawn when the crisis passes."

On the right, economist Irwin M. Stelzer wrote in The Weekly Standard, "The era of free-market, no-government-intervention purists is over, if indeed it ever existed."

The ugly fact is that some businesses are too big to fail when their demise would shake confidence in the market and assuming $30 billion of Bear Stearns debt could thwart a recession.

The question is: If Washington put up $30 billion for Bear Stearns, then must Washington, as Clinton suggested, throw a like amount at bad home loans?

For McCain, the answer is no. "I will not play election-year politics with the housing crisis," was McCain's answer Tuesday. McCain wants the government to focus on improving accounting practices, changing the law to protect lenders who want to cut deals with delinquent mortgagees and concentrating on helping only what he called "deserving homeowners."

Critics can dismiss McCain for calling on lenders to do what already is in their interest. But McCain is right to focus on helping people who can hold onto their homes, rather than putting off the day of reckoning for people who can't afford their homes -- and never will.

In a speech Tuesday, McCain noted that housing prices rose by "nearly 15 percent every year" from 2001 and 2006, a statistic based on Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller indexes, which measure the residential housing market in major metropolitan areas.

If you live in what was a booming housing market, you may recall that few wanted the government to step in and control the market when real estate prices rose beyond all reason to the benefit of working homeowners. Now that prices have fallen, as was inevitable, some folks want the government to step in with more bailouts.

Clinton has proposed a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures, a five-year rate freeze on sub-prime adjustable-rate mortgages and a $30 billion program to help state and local governments reduce the number of foreclosures. McCain economic adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin dismissed Clinton's plan as a $30 billion "slush fund." Obama has proposed a $10 billion foreclosure prevention program to provide foreclosure counseling and money for people who have to sell homes they cannot afford. Such proposals run the risk of keeping real estate prices inflated longer and prolonging the pain.

I have a lot of sympathy for people who bought homes that they could not afford in the mistaken belief that savvy bankers would not approve a loan that they could not pay. They reached for the American dream, and if they lose their homes, their hold on that dream will loosen as well.

But do I trust the government to spend more bailout money wisely? Au contraire, the longer the government tries to make bad loans good, the longer it will take for the market to correct. That means spending more tax dollars to make the problem worse.

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Bear-Sterns bailout
This is another slip and slide in the steady shift of the U.S. into socialism and communism. Already the congress is talking about the need for new laws in the area of mortgage dealings at the same time they are “stimulating” the economy with another welfare handout because of the mortgage mess.

We saw what congress did after the Enron debacle enacting new laws that went so far as to control who had the authority to sign individuals weekly time sheets. The only thing that was really needed was to ENFORCE the existing laws. If we had real dedicated public servants watching the bad guys and prosecuting instead of grandstanding AH’s like Spitzer Enron would not have happened.

I will guarantee that when the dust is settled on this mortgage mess we will find that a number of people at the heart of the mess committed fraud or otherwise broke the law.

Exactly what we don’t need is more new laws.

And speaking of the “stimulus” joke, by now everyone should have got their first letter from the IRS detailing how their payout will work. That letter puts paid to the lie the Democraps made in the 06 campaign about who they considered rich for the purposes of raising taxes. In the campaign the Dems said that they considered people making over 100K to be the rich “deserving of income tax increases”.

In the IRS mailing we can see that 75K is where they actually drew the line. In addition, I have yet to be able to determine if this is actually an “early” income tax refund like the last rebate, or just a give-away.

Does anyone out there actually know this because it affects how I will do my quarterly payments?

Sorry For Them
It is unfortunate that some people will lose their homes due to their over spending. When they walk away with little or nothing, isn't that about the same as if they had rented for a few years - nothing? As a taxpayer, chips fall where they may. No one is bailing me out of losing $$$$ because the price of Citigroup fell below my paying price a few years ago. Where's my bailout?

The Government Did This To Us
Between the Fair Housing Act, the establishment of Fannie Mae, and finally establishment Freddie Mack by our socialist do-gooder government, lending institutions were coerced into making subprime loans that were financed and securitized largely with government funding, oversight, and approval. Our government is at the bottom of this real estate mess. Letting them have a hand in fixing it is akin to going back to the same quack who botched an operation; didn't kill you the first time, gonna give him another whack it.

Expecting our government to fix this mess is also akin to treating narcotic addiction with a stronger narcotic. Heroine was developed by Bayer to "cure," among other things, morphine addiction. It worked great; it got addicts off morphine by hooking them on the more potent Heroine. (Now we use Methadone to treat Heroine addiction: guess which one is more addictive?)

Going back to the government to fix a mess they created is using Heroine to treat morphine addiction. The only way get clean is to go cold turkey. Keep the Feds the hell away from the real estate and financial markets.

Rich folks
My grandaughter went to college for eight years in that time she worked as many as 3 different jobs to help pay for her education.She had tremendous debt because of this.Imagine how she felt that when she filed her taxes she could not deduct her interest from her taxes because she made to much money
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