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Monday, March 02, 2009
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Last Optimist
by Paul Greenberg
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Every day's paper brings more Harbingers of Doom. And there are more to come. That's the message from Congress, the White House, various pundits and the ever-talking heads on television. Budget cuts at work, economies at home, the signs are everywhere. We seem to have entered the Age of Eeyore.

You can hear the gloom in the bluesy lyrics of R and B and country music, perhaps the best barometer of what Americans are feeling. (Since this recession I'm losing my baby,/ because the times are getting so hard.... --B. B. King.)

You can see the gloom in your last quarter's 401(k), read it in the news pages ("Tumbling stocks end a bleak week"), and absorb the intellectualized version of it in The New Yorker. That style-setting magazine just conducted a full-range survey of professional pessimists. Take your pick: doomers, peakists, goldbugs, dystopians in general....

All 57 varieties of the downcast are reveling in the bad news. After predicting The Great Unraveling for years, maybe decades, their hour has come. Everything's down but the price of gold, which is always the surest sign that folks are running for the exits.

Soon the hottest, latest investment advice will be to buy mattresses -- to stick your money under. We're no longer being warned that The End Is Near but that it's here.

This new, young, vibrant president of the United States keeps talking like a pallbearer. He uses terms like Catastrophic and Unprecedented. As if we're supposed to be scared into prosperity, or at least into passing another bailout for Detroit. He tells us we're facing economic conditions unknown since the Great Depression, or maybe the Beginning of Time: "We begin this year and this administration in the midst of an unprecedented crisis that calls for unprecedented action."

Unprecedented? In history? That's all history is: precedents. We may choose to rely on the wrong ones, but after all homo economicus has been through, precedents we've got. Take your pick: The stock market crash of '87, aka Black Monday. The Reagan Recession of '81-82. The Roosevelt Recession of 1937. The Panics of '07 or 1893 or even 1873. Or the long-running bust that followed in Andy Jackson's wake in 1837. Or the New Madrid of economic shocks in 1819. ... Pick your collapse.

And your remedy. There's a full menu to choose from just in the history of the New Deal, both the early and later. This president seems to pick one from List A and two from List B every day, whether they go together or not. One day he's going to spend $787 billion to stimulate the economy, or at least political patronage, and the next he's going to balance the budget. Eventually. Like the man who's going to go on a diet as soon as he gets his weight under control.

On List A are the New Deal's precedents to beware: The price-fixing NRA, FDR's decision to pull the rug out from the London Economic Conference and international cooperation in general, and his raising taxes on capital late in the 1930s, which sent the economy reeling back into the Depression. Class warfare won, the country lost.

All these bad moves have their equivalents today: the labor unions' card-check program to deny American workers the right to vote on whether to unionize; the stimulus package's Buy American clause, and this president's proposal to raise taxes on the filthy rich lest they continue to employ so many of us.

This isn't sound policy; it's demagoguery. It didn't work in 1936 and it's just as likely not to work in 2009. We learn from history that we learn very little from history.

But various parts of the New Deal have stood the test of time. Its successful innovations could still show us a way out of the current slump. For example, the FDIC, CCC, WPA, Social Security, and the HOLC -- the Home Owners Loan Corporation that refinanced the housing market.

And there's no overestimating the happy effect of FDR's buoyant confidence. The only thing we had to fear, he told us, was fear itself. But a happy warrior this president isn't. He hasn't hesitated to use fear for political purposes. It's a way to scare people into passing his program. Which may be good politics, but it's scarcely good policy.

It's one thing for a president to feed hysteria, but it's pretty bad when a supposedly objective wire service like The Associated Press plays the same game. To quote an AP dispatch that appeared in the paper as straight news the other day (February 16, 2009) -- "Passage of the stimulus measure -- unprecedented in its cost -- was a triumph for Obama as he struggles to lift the country from a financial nosedive unseen since the Great Depression of the 1930s."

Unseen since the Great Depression. A little perspective, please. To restore it, just look around. Does this country look like those Walker Evans photographs of the utterly depressed Thirties?

Let's look at the numbers: In 2008, the American economy lost 3.4 million jobs. Painful. That's 2.2 percent of the labor force.

But from November of '81 to October of '82, 2.4 million jobs were lost -- a smaller number but just as great a percentage of the smaller labor force back then: 2.2 percent.

The unemployment rate last month (7.6 percent) was far below its peak in 1982: 10.8 percent. That's when the groundwork was being laid, thanks to dramatic tax cuts, for the Reagan Recovery, one of the longest-running booms in American history.

Comparisons to the 1930s are even less realistic. In the early '30s, jobs were being lost at triple today's rate. By the time FDR was inaugurated in 1933, a quarter of the country was jobless. Over 10,000 banks would fail that year compared to a couple of dozen last year. That number can't even compare to the more than 3,000 lost in the savings-and-loans debacle of 1987-88.

You bet times are tough. But this is a joyride compared to the Great Depression. And it is precisely because of the lessons learned in the 1930s, or that should have been learned in that decade of trial and error, that we'll pull out of this nosedive. Unless we all -- passengers, crew and control tower -- just throw up our hands in panic.

Maybe my lonely optimism is some kind of genetic defect. Or at least an acquired characteristic. I can remember my father recounting all the businesses he'd failed at in his younger days. A grocery store (just keeping inventory drove him crazy) and a laundry (he was stinkbombed out of business when he declined to pay protection money in Al Capone's Chicago), and even a restaurant (he loved being a host but couldn't take the hours).

But if he was broke from time to time, he was never poor, which can be more a state of mind than a balance sheet. Ben Greenberg may not have known what an entrepreneur was, given his third-grade education and immigrant-boy background, but he was one. After a childhood of privation in Poland, he never even noticed the Depression in this country. A congenital optimist, he was about the most American character I've ever known. If he failed at one pursuit, and he did at more than one, he'd succeed at another. Something would turn up. And it always did. Maybe because he was always looking for one. He couldn't pass a piece of land or an abandoned house without wondering if it was a good buy.

It's not as if life comes with any kind of guarantee; it's a gamble from conception. It's also a marvel. I wouldn't give up on America so fast. The economy will boom again, and then bust again. It's called the business cycle. Something will turn up. And when it does, a lot of folks who've just lost their job may look back on having to find another, or maybe a whole different line of work, as the best thing that ever happened to them.

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USA R.I.P.
I enjoyed this article because it put our current crisis into perspective but it also produced for me the perfect metaphor for this president who cries doom and gloom every time he speaks.

He is the Chief Undertaker.

Booming economy
I also believe the economy will boom again, but it will take a lot longer with Obama trying to control everything.

I heard today that AIG is getting another "loan". I wonder how many we will give them before we realize that they don't know what they're doing and let them go broke?

Chief Gravedigger
At first, it seemed as if the president was trying to lower expectations with his continual gloom-and-doom talk. Even now that he got his way with the pig roast he and his cronies foisted on us, he continues to tell us that we're heading for the soup lines tomorrow. I guess the best comparison we can make is that he's Carter on steroids.

Optimism???
I would share your optimism but for the totally inept bailout-stimulus-mortgage bailout -spend-spend-spend mentality of the current administration.

But then this is not about fixing the economy and never has been. I don't think we're going to like the new America.


Jerseyvet, I like your metaphor

Gloom And Doom
I see nothing gloomy about the president. He goes to the mic and teleprompter with his gloom and doom speech,but looks relatively happy to me.

I don't think he is at all worried that he is the spokesman for the destruction of our way of life ,as we know it. I say spokesman,because I don't think for one second,he is the author of these programs.

It is George Soros,Nancy( Pop-up) Pelosi,Schumer,Dodd and the other left wing loonies who wrote this boondoggle.

Social Engineering
J-10: you are right. The "stimulus" plan has nothing at all to do with our current economic slump.

It's all about social engineering: creating a crisis, then proclaiming to be the fix for the crisis via ever-expanding governmental entitlement programs, and the eventual micro-management of the government into every aspect of our lives. Oh, and in the process, stripping the states of their sovereignty.

Rowly
It is George Soros,Nancy( Pop-up) Pelosi,Schumer,Dodd and the other left wing loonies who wrote this boondoggle.
========

Wouldn't you like to have a litter of pups out of this bunch?

Marty
Oh, and in the process, stripping the states of their sovereignty.
========
The first battle of this war was fought in the 1860's. I'm curious to see if the obamatrons want to push for round two.

Booming Boomers
It will boom again, unless thirty million boomers tell the Obamamaniac, his socialist brethren and the unions to put their bailout/blackout where the sun don't shine.

Matriarch re: AIG
AIG insured crud in twenty countries (that they admit to). It appears that the American taxpayer is now bailing out the world.

Also, what is a company that advertises annuity programs (to seniors) doing insuring that Fannie Mae-backed mortgages (low-income mortgages) are sound?????

J-10
Oh yes!! They wouldn't be pedigrees...just a litter of plain old curs.

What a terrific column.
There is indeed imminent sense in the notion that everything would be just fine if government just stuck to governing. Obama and his policies are a plague on the American spirit.

I admire Greenberg's optimism.
It is hard to share it when the President is the doom and gloom cheerleader. Even a cynic would be appalled by his blatant political maneuvers. I have never seen such hubris. You would think that, with the whole (financial) world is calling him an horese'sa$$, he would go shopping for saddles.

Mr. Greenberg, a question:
Is it optimism or simply plain old fashioned denial?

It can't happen here? Right.

Mr. Greenburg
Your father, God rest his soul, was the embodiment of the spirit that made America the greatest nation on earth. I hope you and all other Americans understand that what your father represents is the antithesis of the America Obama represents. Your father is Obama's enemy. He has to destroy what your father brought to America in order to build what he sees as the perfect society. That society will not include those like your father.

Obama will fail to create that perfect society. What he wants can't be done because human beings don't act as Obama thinks they should. That isn't to say our nation will survive. What we have can be destroyed as it has been in many other countries. Maybe Obama will be satisfied with that.

Mr. Greenberg, an answer
What he is saying is that this is not nearly the Depression. And he's right. It could happen here but it has not yet. And may not.

Chuck Reply #14
A question: with all due respect, did you miss all the facts permeating Mr. Greenberg's analysis?

Just wondering . . .

Chuck
You must be one of the COW's village idiots. STFU.

We at my house have no job, a rent and a mortgage to pay as of a week ago. Nobody is buying my house and the money will run out in April.

I have no doom and gloom. I know that there should be some light at the end of the tunnel. But Obama is forcing a crisis that is unnecessary. You can see it in the numbers.

Since when has printing money, and spending it before the wealth is created led to prosperity? The answer to that- NEVER!

marcmat
It wasn't the facts of the column that I was taking issue with, since I tend to agree with him on them.

It was the implications of this comment:

"The economy will boom again, and then bust again. It's called the business cycle. Something will turn up."

"SOMETHING" will turn up? That's what his optimism is based on?

Chuck
Fair enough regarding the facts, but why the implication then that Mr. Greenberg is in "denial"? Denial of what? If his point is that history shows that we go through good times and bad, and that the solution is to weather the bad times and do what we can as individuals to pull ourselves up until things improve, why should he be forced to acknowledge otherwise? Just because Barack Obama says so?

Maybe I'm dense, but I'm still not getting you.

THE PRICELESS PSLAM
OBAMA IS MY SHEPHERD, I SHALL NOT WANT.

HE LEADETH ME BESIDE THE STILL FACTORIES.

HE RESTORETH MY FAITH IN THE REPUBLICAN PARTY.

HE GUIDETH ME IN THE PATH OF UNEMPLOYMENT.

YEA, THOUGH I WALK THRU THE VALLEY

OF THE BREAD LINE, I SHALL NOT GO HUNGRY.

OBAMA HAS ANOINTED MY INCOME WITH TAXES.

MY EXPENSES RUNNETH OVER MY INCOME.

SURELY, POVERTY AND HARD LIVING WILL FOLLOW ME ALL THE DAYS OF HIS TERM.

FROM HENCE FORTH WE WILL LIVE ALL THE DAYS OF OUR LIVES IN A RENTED HOME WITH AN OVERSEAS LANDLORD.

BUT I AM GLAD I AM AN AMERICAN, I AM GLAD THAT I AM FREE. BUT I WISH I WAS A DOG AND OBAMA WAS A TREE.




marcmat
"If his point is that history shows that we go through good times and bad, and that the solution is to weather the bad times and do what we can as individuals to pull ourselves up until things improve, why should he be forced to acknowledge otherwise?"

Well, because history also shows us that sometimes things DON'T improve and counseling his readers to ignore looming storm clouds as an alternative to preparing for the worst is Pollyana-ish and a disservice.

Like I say, perhaps if he concluded his article with something more substantive than "something will turn up" by which I might be able to have confidence that Obama and his handlers are not preparing for institutionalizing massive economic and political realignments that favor their benighted perpsective and are going to be a disaster for this country, I might have come away with a different opinion of it.

But at this point, after reading it, I can only conclude that he either doesn't have a clue or is merely trying to avoid the obvious.

And his admiration for FDR indicates the former. So, why should I take him and his counsel seriously?


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