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Wednesday, January 16, 2008
Michelle Malkin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Wanted: A "Suck It Up" Candidate
by Michelle Malkin
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Poll
Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


I need a man. A man who can say "No." A man who rejects Big Nanny government. A man who thinks being president doesn't mean playing Santa Claus. A man who won't panic in the face of economic pain. A man who won't succumb to media-driven sob stories.

A man who can look voters, the media and the Chicken Littles in Congress in the eye and say the three words no one wants to hear in Washington: Suck. It. Up.

The Michigan primary put economics at the top of the political radar screen, and the Democrat presidential candidates have been doling out spending proposals, stimulus packages, housing market rescues and other election-year goodie pledges like Pez candy dispensers gone haywire. Which leading GOP candidate represents fiscal accountability and limited government? Who will take the side of responsible homeowners and responsible borrowers livid at bipartisan bailout plans for a minority of Americans who bought more house than they should have and took out unwise mortgages they knew they couldn't repay?

I don't want to hear Republicans recycling the Blame Predatory Lenders rhetoric of Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and Jesse Jackson. Enough with the victim card. Borrowers are not all saints. There's nothing compassionate about taking money from prudent, frugal families and using it to aid their reckless neighbors and co-workers who moved into McMansions they couldn't afford or went crazy tapping their home equity and now find themselves underwater.

Economist Tyler Cowen points out the problem of predatory borrowing -- something you never hear politicians spotlight. He notes, "As much as 70 percent of recent early payment defaults had fraudulent misrepresentations on their original loan applications," according to research on more than three million loans done by BasePoint Analytics. "Many of the frauds were simple rather than ingenious. In some cases, borrowers who were asked to state their incomes just lied, sometimes reporting five times actual income; other borrowers falsified income documents by using computers. Too often, mortgage originators and middlemen looked the other way rather than slowing down the process or insisting on adequate documentation of income and assets. As long as housing prices kept rising, it didn't seem to matter."

Message to Washington: Stop treating every defaulting borrower like Mother Teresa.

At last week's Fox News debate in New Hampshire, the He Men of the GOP field went all mealy-mouthed when asked about the signs of recession. Mitt Romney asserted our need to "stop the housing crisis." Does he mean the government should insulate borrowers and lenders from culpability? Continue to artificially prop up housing prices? If so, why? If not, then what?

Last month, Mike Huckabee told an NPR reporter unequivocally that it "is not the purpose of government to prop people up from every poor decision they make." Amen, Rev. Huckabee. But at the New Hampshire debate, he sheepishly avoided tough pronouncements and instead voiced support for President Bush's Hillarycare-Lite housing bailout approach since it "didn't involve tax dollars." Yet.

Huckabee is comforting himself and his followers with semantic self-delusion. The Bush measures, including a subprime interest-rate freeze, a proposed expansion of the freeze to cover prime-rate borrowers, and a push to increase the availability of so-called jumbo mortgages and lift the $417,000 loan cap, are the camel's nose under the tent. Eventually, responsible taxpayers will pay.

As for "Straight Talk" Sen. John McCain, he immediately pitched federal education and job training programs for laid-off workers. "We need to go to the community colleges and design education and training programs so that these workers get a second chance. That's our obligation as a nation." It is? This is conservative? This is the alternative to Clintoncare? No, this is Clintoncare. Why can't Americans be expected to pay for their own schooling and retraining?

Fred Thompson, supposedly the conservative's conservative, asserted the need for a fiscal stimulus: "I think that has to be considered somewhere along the line if the economy calls for it."

McCain and Romney want expansion of the Federal Housing Administration to allow borrowers to refinance -- on the backs of taxpayers. Rudy Giuliani wants government aid for borrowers who were "cheated." No word on what he would do to borrowers who did the cheating.

As we head toward Super Tuesday, the subprime mess and the economy will dominate -- and the Do Something Democrat candidates will turn their spigot of overextended homeowner sob stories on full blast. Do Republicans want a clear alternative to liberal-nomics? Or will you settle for a lip-service conservative who will reward fiscal recklessness with only slightly less government intervention than the Dems?

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About The Author

Michelle Malkin makes news and waves with a unique combination of investigative journalism and incisive commentary. She is the author of Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild .

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©Creators Syndicate
Well said, Michelle
We have wandered so far from the Constitution it's ridiculous. These are actually all issues addressed in that musty and ignored document.

As Madison wrote: "I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on the objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents."


Today, the way things are, Madison probably couldn't get elected to his city council.

This really has got to come to a screeching halt.


BrianR
is correct, by asserting that Madison could not get elected to his city council. Increasingly, we are voting for someone who "says what voters want to hear" and then has their own agenda. We, the voters are left to divine what their real agenda really is. With the Democrats, we know its worse than they really say, with Republicans, we can only hope they'll be more conservative than they can let on. But, would it be interesting to hear someone really stand up and say what they mean? And what might the response be from the public? We may never know.

We know, profblog
Ron Paul says what he means, and he means to revert to constitutional government.

The response has been less than stellar. Some of that is Dr Paul himself (age, delivery, polish etc), some by idealism (if Paul were president tomorrow, the Fed won't go away and we have troops home overnight), some by misrepresentation (Paul is not an is not an isolationist, but a non-interventionist).

But mostly, people don't want to know.

But Michelle, we deserve to be coddled
We're Americans, we deserve to be bailed out by Uncle Sam when we make stupid financial decisions like taking out variable rate mortgages when fixed rates are at historic lows.

And doggone it, we deserve to go to Disney World even if we max out our credit cards doing it.

And we deserve to have wars where nobody dies. Or better yet, no wars or a big expensive military to guard our freedom. We're Americans, freedom is our birthright. We shouldn't have to protect it or fight for it. If we would just pack up our jets and GI Joes and bring them home, nobody in the world would hate us. It makes us sad when other countries hate us.

And we deserve to have "free" healthcare but not pay any extra taxes to pay for it. And if anybody wants to come to America, we should let them, because it's really, really mean to keep them out.

Yes, we're Americans and it's our RIGHT to have it all and not to have to pay for it.

And make no mistake, if some presidential candidate says I'm not a victim or that I don't deserve to have everything I want, I won't vote for him (or her)! You can take that to the ballot box.

We get the politicians we deserve. Our politicians aren't about to get a backbone before the electorate does.

5 stars
LOL Michelle, you start this column with “I need a man”. I can hardly wait for YLG to get here and comment on that. I can, however, wait an eternity for the trolls to come and spew venom.

Yes the polls yesterday said that in Michigan the key issue is the economy because of the high unemployment and “bad” economy in Michigan. However, the same polls showed that it is more of a perception issue than a real issue. Yes unemployment is higher in Michigan than in other places but if you compare it to what it used to run 10 or 15 years ago, even Michigan’s unemployment seems benign. This is further backed up by the standard line from these polls which is “I’m doing OK but everyone else is hurting”. What this is indicative of is the new media doom and gloom on the economy. The only time I have ever heard the news media talk about a “good economy” was during the 2000 election talking about the “Clinton economy”. LOL, during the actual Clinton years the media never talked good about the economy. In actuality the economy is doing good, unemployment is still historically low, and the housing market is simply adjusting from some irrational exuberance. Of course if you are one of the unemployed it seems much worse.

On top of all this the Lamocrats want to hand out rebate checks. The only thing rebate checks will do is give us more deficit spending. Rebate checks are absolutely worthless for improving the overall economy. If they were serious they would be looking at making the tax cuts permanent and eliminating the AMT. That will never happen though as the last Democrat president to actually call for a tax cut was JFK.

Well, they are all coming here to SC now where the big issue is supposed to be illegals.

health care is a major issue
And here we are the day after Michigan’s primaries, with more votes going to Republicans than Democrats. Do Michigan voters not understand why more cars are now being made in Canada than Michigan? Can anybody spell “health care?” Is mandating people or employers to buy health care the solution?

I don’t think so. There is one best answer, and that's a Medicare-for-all system that puts the health care burden on taxpayers rather than employers. And until we accept that, and sideline the insurance industry and their money, it’s going to be more of the same for some time to come.


Are we having fun yet?
And I'd have to ask: Are we having fun yet?

To those who support the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, I just have to ask: How are you liking it so far?

Let’s look at what we got in the deal:

· With a massive tax cut in a time of war, Bush converted a $300 billion budget surplus into an overnight $600 billion deficit, and it’s been downhill ever since.

· Our nation sits on the brink of a recession — potentially worse than 1929 – all thanks to arrogant politicians and a corrupt political system.

See more at: http://MoneyedPoliticians.net

Jack Lohman

NO..NO..NO!!
Eventually the time may come, (sooner rather then later?), when we "sheep" must leave the "shepards'" (Democrats&Republicans) and strike out on our own! Ah perchance to dream..A Third Alternative!! No more political lawyers and slanted opinionated pundits telling us where and when to graze before they slaughter us for food and wool! What say you?

SPOT-ON!
Somehow the liberals and their RINO buttbuddies can pass the greed and stupidity of those who "played" the housing market with ARMs and "interest-only" mortgages into our fault.

If it had played out for them, would those same whiners seek to share THEIR profits with us?

Yeah, like liberals cutting taxes!

Got a MUST SEE video of Katy Kourik in all her liberal stupidity and not one but TWO shining examples of liberal hypocrisy!

http://noliberalspin.townhall.com/Default.aspx

Liberal hypocrisy? Say it ain't SO! haha.


Boutte
PAUL!? haha. The cheese has slid off of that clown's cracker. His racist rants can be read at the below link.

http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=e2f15397-a3c7-472 0-ac15-4532a7da84ca

Too bad Paul was born about 160 years too late. He might have made a good POTUS around 1840!

jlohman
You wrote -
"To those who support the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, I just have to ask: How are you liking it so far?"

My wife and I are middle income and have both benefited quite nicely from these "tax cuts for the wealthy". We like it. We would like to see it again. We have nothing against anyone receiving a tax cut. I love rich people. I hope to be one some day and might have the chance if we can keep liberals away from taxes...

What you fail to understand is that the Bush tax cuts, as all tax cuts do, generated an increase in revenue for the government.

Your figures regarding the deficit are way off. The president has cut the deficit in half in less time than projected. If we could get the Dims in congress to stop earmarking billions of dollars in pork to bring home to build new fountains at the local high schools, we might be able to get out of debt a little quicker. (Liberal translation: read cut government spending on entitlements and other wasteful spending.)