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Friday, July 25, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
by Donald Lambro
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


WASHINGTON -- Is the U.S. economy coming to the end of its slump? There are a number of signals that suggest it is, and some economists are saying we may already be in a recovery.

If so, that would be welcome news to beleaguered Americans who have been hit hard by layoffs, rising food and gas prices, mortgage foreclosures, and a bearish stock market that has been crushing 401(k) balance sheets and other worker-retirement accounts.

But last week's economic developments suggest that we may be hitting bottom and are slowly, but surely -- no doubt with some zigs and zags along the way -- beginning to turn upward.

There was, to begin with, the sharp slide in oil prices throughout midweek when a barrel of light, sweet crude fell to $124 on the New York Mercantile Exchange -- down from a record $147 a few weeks ago.

Several factors led to the price decline on the futures market, but chief among them was the Energy Department's report that domestic inventories have risen as energy demands have fallen. People changed their driving habits or have been taking mass transit more. That has led to increased oil and gas supplies and thus lower prices. The average price of gas fell a bit, too, and will likely fall more if oil goes lower.

President Bush's executive order repealing the ban on offshore oil drilling signaled that increased production may be in our future if we can overcome Democratic opposition in Congress. Whatever the reason, the decline in oil prices is the equivalent of a huge tax cut and, if sustained, would be good for the overall economy.

The decline led to a mini-rally of short duration on Wall Street that pushed up stocks and improved mutual-fund positions for the month. Bond prices fell as investors moved into stocks to catch the rise in equities, moving the interest yield on the U.S. Treasury 10-year note to more than 4 percent. The dollar has been strengthening, too, relative to overseas currencies.

Also improving the long-term outlook on Wall Street are better second-quarter corporate earnings reports that showed many companies were doing better than expected. McDonald's, AT&T and Pfizer reported upbeat earnings that signaled there's still a lot of resilience in the U.S. economy.

Even the financials were showing some life at midweek, despite the credit and mortgage debacle. Wells Fargo and troubled Wachovia, the nation's fourth-largest bank, saw its stocks jump significantly. Even so, that sector still has a long way to go before it's out of the woods.

The brightest spot in the U.S. economy was exports. The Commerce Department reported last week that American companies sold a record $1.6 trillion in goods and services overseas, and manufacturing accounted for 62 percent of those sales.

Indeed, the United States was "running a trade surplus in manufactured exports with our 14 free-trade-agreement partners," the department said.

The doom-and-gloomers are still with us, of course, and they will go to their graves forecasting that life as we know it is coming to an end and that we are in store for years of economic depression and recession.

Last week, The New York Times ran a front-page story maintaining that Americans were saving less than ever, and that their debt burden had risen by an average of $117,951 per household. And the London Telegraph says there are even harder times ahead of us, comparing today's economy to the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Wall Street economist David Malpass thinks that kind of fear-mongering is filled with manipulated statistics that ignore long-term wealth creation in our country, as well as globally. Increasingly, people are investing "for the long run -- for capital gains (not counted in savings) rather than current income -- in preparation for retirement," he told his clients last week.

Instead of a coming recession, "we think the U.S. is in gradual recovery after a sharp two-quarter slowdown, with consumer resilience more likely than the decades-old expectation of a consumer slump," Malpass said.

"Fed data shows clearly that household savings of all types -- liquid, financial and tangible -- are still close to the record levels set in September. IMF data shows U.S. households holding more net financial savings than the rest of the world combined. Consumption has repeatedly outperformed expectations in recent quarters and year," he said.

The American economy has been pounded by a lot of factors, including the housing collapse (a needed correction to bring home prices down to earth), the mortgage scandal and the meteoric rise in oil and gas prices.

But this $14 trillion economy, though slowing down, continues to grow by about 1 percent on an annualized basis, confounding the pessimists who said we were plunging into a recession defined by negative growth over two quarters. That has not happened -- yet.

Call me a cockeyed optimist, but I do not think we are heading into a recession. On the contrary, I'm more bullish than ever on our economy's long-term prospects.

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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The Government isn't finished yet
Methinks you speak too soon. Wait until the dems get in and start raising taxes at will starting in 2009. The ecomony will go into the tank ala Jimmie Carter time. Get ready for 18% interest rates, no gasoline and long lines for work.

Better dys are coming

If U.S. households hold more net financial savings than the rest of the world combined, there is no chance the rest of the world will ever catch up. Instead, the gap will grow wider even as the rest of the world also gains in net financial savings.

Leverage of 2, 3, 5, 10, and 20 to 1, a bigger stake, and compounding make it inevitable. Add the world’s biggest pools of Christians, Jews, and world-brain-drained, high IQ people. The result is the best chance of benevolent world government ever.

Europe is dying. Asia, stunted always by lack of a phonetic written language, the caste system, and relative lack of empathy for any but family, has bred itself into below average verbal IQ and above average visual-spatial IQ, but is now prospering using written English and Western ideas, technology, investment, and demand for its labor. Yet it does not have the business, educational, financial, and intellectual firepower to catch up to America.

The subprime meltdown has just triggered the biggest American excess profits tax ever in destroying $ trillions in market values. Congress got a new $ trillion credit line. Thus the bailouts.

If the Bush tax cuts expire, tax rates are raised, or universal healthcare is delivered as Obama has promised, the economy will falter. The Democrats will be out. So none of the three will happen.

Tax rates should be chosen to maximize, not to shrink, tax revenues. Funding accelerated expansion of our bloated, ineffective, quack-ridden (Russet's cardiologists), healthcare establishment would foreclose a growing chunk of future, higher priority, discretionary spending.

Lambro doesn't have a clue either
"There are a number of signals that suggest it is, and some economists are saying we may already be in a recovery."

What signals? There are economists to support any point of view you wish to take.

I believe in America's ability to innovate around its problems but we usually do it in reaction to some major economic downturn. What we have had under Bush/Clinton/Bush is a rigged economy whose underlying decay have been masked by negative real interest rates and runaway government spending. I am hearing former Fed governors declaring that the US government is reaching its limit for printing money to avoid every market correction and unless things change soon (cut spending and re-regulate markets efficiently), we are about to go through a very difficult period of stagflation.

It doesn't matter that most of our industries are doing well, the banking problem is not going away and when banks don't lend, businesses shrivel for lack of capital to grow. The fact that investors are cynical as can be these days about government, regulators and creative accounting, there is much to be done in restoring confidence in our capital markets before we can expect a robust economy to return. It could be several years.

Like they used to say in the 1930s, "Prosperity is just around the corner." Yeah but where is the corner? Economists haven't been right about many things this decade.

The government...
is about to pass a bailout bill for Fannie/Freddie. I can't believe it's done running up inflation. We already have the prescription drug benefit, which is permanently. The economy will not be what it was before Bush. Too much spending with hefty inflation to pay for it.

I GUESS THERE IS NO SUCH THING
as a major government caused economic down turn that cannot be made worse, much worse, by a little more government intervention. And I think that increased intervention is on the horizon. It's just too bad that the common sense solution, turn it over to the Dems, will be like turning the fire department over to the local arsonists.

Actually...
it's always darkest just before utter blackness.

Ford retooling cost make................
Headlines as if Ford was loosing 6.5 billion dollars. Wrong, it is a re investment to meet demand, Ford ran out of Fuel efficient cars and TRUCKS, So did Honda, Toyota, Nissian, GM, and many more, unless you count those tiny little itty bitty shoe size autos the Japs build for tike size people. Nice cars, good mileage but why to low to the ground and small.
Ever see one with four people in it doing 90 and it just bounced up a bit. They farted!
But my point is, they are all retooling to make more vehicles, but Ford was lamblasted.
Sounds like liberals after a conservative guys.

Now what gave you that..................
Impression? You remember your childhood camp out adventures, our read it in a science book somewhere.
Price of fuel is down for two reasons and two reasons only, Iran got around us and forced a meeting of upper level cabinet members to talk and They got the workings of a troop withdrawl from Iraq which they also wanted.
Nothing more, nothing less.
I agree in some fashion with Fbrosius that the average person is well fed up with Congress and the Politicians.
One wants to many rules and laws, while the other wants none or not enough. Business has failed because of loop holes that let them go abroad to make items sold as, Made in America.
We need new jobs that pay decent wages and provide decent health care for families, Less give aways to those that never worked or looked for a job. No more free College for women that cannot keep their legs closed and have children who do not know there fathers. Dad needs to start paying for his three minutes of fun.
No bail outs for crooked loans or companies that pray on those that want but cannot afford it. Let them do long time, not a few years, more like decades.
Get rid of the me me groupies and replace them with best hired for the job.

The only reason that….
… the price of oil came down is that Bush lifted the oil drilling ban…. You want it to come down even faster? Well do you? Start actually drill new oil wells because then and only then will anyone see America was not bluffing. You DRILL and the price will come down. . . Oh! And who is it that is now arming his country with Russian weapons to protect his country from America with I might add American Oil Money from buying his crude?????

Is Bush paying you to say this stuff??
Subject: Sunday , July 20, 2008

Lawmakers Could Consider Gas Tax Hike, After Gas Tax Holiday Fails
Sunday , July 20, 2008

with a prod from the construction industry — that having $9 billion less to spend on highways could create a pre-election specter of thousands of lost jobs.

Let me see now: People are buying less gas because they can’t afford it and that means a shortfall from the gas tax. Also the price of “EVERYTHING” has gone way up to build / maintain / fix the federal road system. So; in order to put more money back into the system we need to raise the gas tax ten cents. Otherwise construction workers will be out of a job. We can lay off the auto workers, factory workers and restaurant workers however heaven forbid you lay off high paid construction workers! Better yet “If you can’t afford to build it, you do what the rest of us do, SAVE the money until you can. Heck no, the Gov can’t do that they have the answer in just raising the tax.

Things are all well and fine in America just ask what the economist says “and some economists are saying we may already be in a recovery.”
I say bull breath! Bank lose 6.2 million this quarter, more and more people are out of a meaningful job. People are openly asking for congresses head because of the bad job they are doing and we are in a Recovery????? Do you live in America today?

Lambro writes:
It's Always Darkest Before the Dawn
====
Go back and find a single article this guy was not talking about the economy as full of sunshine.
Now all of a sudden he slips past all his former articles talking in upbeat fashion like drum beating to a song full of day light, suddenly mentions how dark it has been but only in the context of the coming sunshine of a new day.

You will never get the admission from this guy there is a problem for this nations economy.

Suck up his malarky if you want to, but I suggest you search for a more honest look at what all is going on in the economy.
Its is not good for America, it is good for the globalist international bankers and corporations, the ones Lambro works for.

Never voted democrat in my life
jjv writes:- 8:28 AM EST

There are NO Rep claiming the economy is booming at this time despite the fact we are still enjoying the longest uninterrupted string of quarterly growth in our nations history.
====
ts:
Well yeah, if you just want to look at the international corporations and ignore the inflation of the "dollar" which is not a US Dollar.Its a bank note that is an IOU.

Ignore the working class and destruction of the middle class all across America.
Out sourcing manufacturing while bring in millions of laborers to work in retail outlets
This is not a political issue, but a serious one for everyone of us no matter what ones politics are.
===


jjv writes:
Liberals are desperate to believe in and actually cause by their gloom and doom rhetoric a serious economic downturn. Misery is all they know and nothing is ever good, all is bad and getting worse. The sky is falling, the glass is half empty.
===
ts:
This is mostly true, and the liberals are using the economy for its political games, but the republicans are handing them lots of ammo for the war of words.

Lambro would talk about the profits of the soup makers if all Americans were getting fed in soup lines.
Don't be so naive


Katie, 8:37 post
Quote: "Automakers should have been building fuel efficient vehicles for years."

Katie, the reason the automakers were making all those big SUV's and pick-em-up trucks is because that's what the people were buying. They were also making small cars, and they have since about 1970. I am 55 years old and have never owned a car that had more than 4 cylinders. (I currently drive a 2003 Saturn Ion with about 130.000 miles on it.)

The fact is that the automakers WERE making fuel-efficient cars, but the people wanted that big, shiny, dual-wheels-in-the-rear pick-up that was half the size of a battleship and got 12 mpg going downhill with a good wind behind.

Markets give people what they want. If GM and Ford had made only Saturn Ions in 2003, they would have gone bankrupt.

Because of high fuel prices, now people have changed and want small cars

End of the dollar = "higher oil prices"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXZoN2N7NKU


Fav Quote
The title of the article is one of my favorite quotes because it is soooo true. I have always found it incredibly uplifting just as this article is.

However we are only at the dawn is steps are take to secure it. Such as allowing us to drill and deregualating.

The slide not nearly over
Our government has been spinning data for a long time to make us think all is well, or it will get better.
Our industry has fallen so far behind, it will take decades to recover it's prominence.
Example: Automakers should have been building fuel efficient vehicles for years. Instead, they bought the lie that fuel would be affordable. Auto workers are out of jobs, plants are closing. How many years will it take to re-tool those plants to build anything comparable to the high quality, fuel efficient and technologically superior vehicles other countries produce?
Many more products can be produced more cheaply elsewhere. We're top heavy with debt and we're in trouble.
It is high time that people understood we must conserve instead of spend. Save instead of buy on credit. That message won't be presented.
Kate from Alabama

No kiddin', David...
"The bright spot was exports?"

LOL...What else would you expect when the value of our dollar has been slipping precipitously over the past year and a half, due to the massive overexpenditures of our government on our behalf. So nice that The Taxpayers have bottomless pockets, eh?

Things will get worse way before they get better. We've only just begun. Hold on for a chaotic ride.

Donald
Some "Economist" think, that the American economy is in "Recovery".Who are these most "Brilliant" people?Please pray tell!You are "Lying" again,to the American readers.I don't particularly like you,but I am going to help you.If you want an example of the American economy in movement,monitor Latvia.I could help with more information,but I won't!!!

Clueless
Whoa! The Republican talking points clearly state that the economy is in a boom,
*********************************************
There are NO Rep claiming the economy is booming at this time despite the fact we are still enjoying the longest uninterrupted string of quarterly growth in our nations history.

Liberals are desperate to believe in and actually cause by their gloom and doom rhetoric a serious economic downturn. Misery is all they know and nothing is ever good, all is bad and getting worse. The sky is falling, the glass is half empty.

To be a Democrat is to be miserable and worse to want others to be as miserable as they are.


Delusional
FTA: "beleaguered Americans who have been hit hard by layoffs, rising food and gas prices, mortgage foreclosures, and a bearish stock market "

Whoa! The Republican talking points clearly state that the economy is in a boom, that layoffs are balances by new jobs, that only a very small number of homes are being forclosed on, and that, in fact, things are going great and have been going great ever since Bush assumed office in 2000. Those who think differently are "whiners".

Now Lambro trumpets the recovery from a downturn that his cohorts on the right have denied has been happening. How can one recover from something that didn't happen?

Lambro's article is just the updated version of last month's talking points.

Too bad you do not know
What the Constitution says

====

Oilpatch Mercenary writes: - 1:07 AM EST


And besides that, any Ron Paul supporter can tell you that prosperity is unconstitutional until the Federal Reserve is abolished
====
Guess you do not understand who has created all the debt, and why the Constitution outlawed fiat paper as payment for debt.
Pity you will not take the time to learn the Constitution but have time to make uneducated remarks about it.

Economy - Hyperinflationary Depression
This is America's endgame with Obama as president. Bresinsky a globalist who ran Obama and Carter's campaign is pushing for World Government. The Depression will give them the opportunity to put a regional/world govt. in the US. The United States is the governments "Test Case" around the world.

ENDGAME - BLUEPRINT FOR ECONOMIC & GLOBAL ENSLAVEMENT.

Part 1:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkLNiv6EP-I

Part 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=phnvLzWdLEI&feature=related

Part 3:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0Wpa3k2UpI&feature=related

Part 4:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KpOARKxs_Wg&feature=related

Part 5:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIK8tSb72P8&feature=related

Part 6:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMla4y99bsw&feature=related

Part 7: (Global Uniform Market & Standards/Global Carbon taxes, footprints)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mMGLOwBMVo&feature=related

Part 8: (Right to Bear Arms & Regional Toll Roads - NAU Tribunal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAwMN7NerdU&feature=related

Arrest That Lambro!
Doesn't he know that economic good times are against the law until Obama gets elected?

And besides that, any Ron Paul supporter can tell you that prosperity is unconstitutional until the Federal Reserve is abolished.

Last but not least, good news degrades the environment, impoverishes the Third World and is all a plot by the Zionist neocon conspiracy! Take that on your next vacation or cruise ship.

Bah! Humbug! Where is Joe McCarthy, now that we need him?


You've got guts Lambro
Considering a Judge & a Councilman in Dallas consider the words "Black Hole" to be racially insensitive there will probably be many of the regular Kos-Kiddie/Huff-Po types trolling TH who will surely accuse you of racism for using "Darkest" (to describe bad) and "Dawn" (to describe good) in your title for this article.

W/O=

There are houses that cover the debt too
Are we forgetting those mortgages have a solid home as collateral. Also the top 20 percent of the loss is often covered. So do not let these billion dollar losses scare everyone. They are paper losses without any actual accounting.

Don Jones
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