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Saturday, October 25, 2008
Wayne Winegarden :: Townhall.com Columnist
Lessons from the Housing Bubble
by Wayne Winegarden
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Learning from history requires a thoughtful analysis of what actually happened, not endlessly parroting a politically convenient slogan.  The current economic crisis is not a repudiation of free markets, nor is it a repudiation of deregulation.  Such an “explanation” is simply Barack Obama and the Democrats peddling their same discredited elixir under a new label. 

The causes of the current economic crisis are complex, and many people are at fault.  Focusing on the housing bubble, the housing crisis will define the Bush II economy just as the technology boom and bust of the 1990’s defined the Clinton economy.  While bubbles developed during both periods, from a fundamental economic perspective, the two experiences have important differences.  The lessons we need to learn from the current housing bust come from understanding these differences.

Rising wealth across the globe has increased the supply of money available for investing.  During the 1990’s, the investment funds were put to good use – funding the Internet and information technology revolution.  The investment in information technology transformed our economy.  While the real annual long-run GDP growth in the U.S. is believed to be around 2.5% - 3.0%, from 1996 through the first half of 2000, real average annual GDP growth accelerated to 4.5%.

The technology boom led to an unrivaled and sustained acceleration in productivity for the average worker.  As the productivity gains increased the effectiveness of workers, income levels for all Americans rose.  When coupled with the capital gains tax reductions of the 1990’s, the result was the late-1990’s economic boom.

Like many transformational technology revolutions – such as the railroads of the 1800’s or the automobile industry of the early 1900’s – the information technology boom was associated with financial excesses.  The life altering potential of information technology created a euphoria that was unsustainable.  The result was the boom and bust of the stock market and with it the rise and fall of many early Internet companies and icons.

Importantly, the 1990’s boom was rooted in the creativity of individual entrepreneurs.  Worldwide capital flows supported the dreams and visions of these entrepreneurs, all to the benefit of businesses and consumers worldwide.  This was not the case for the 2000’s housing boom.

During the late 1990’s, Congress, guided by “socially responsible” visions, wanted to extend the American Dream to more people.  To achieve this goal, the government unleashed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – as well as Community Reinvestment Act and Department of Housing and Urban Development regulations – to divert more money toward housing.  In so doing, a housing bubble was all but inevitable.

Certainly, flaws in the private sector significantly heightened the risk (and ultimate cost) of the housing bubble.  Poorly structured securitization left banks with “no skin in the game” when they extended mortgages.  This, along with poorly executed ratings from the ratings agencies is problematic and needs to be addressed.  But, it was the government that created the incentives to over-invest in the housing sector in the first place.  Without the government incentives, the housing bubble would not have developed.

Since 1970, residential construction activity has been typically around 4.5% of overall economic activity.  Due to the government fostered housing boom, residential construction’s share of the economy swelled to an unprecedented 6.3%.  Greater investment in housing replaced investing in other assets – including the accelerated technological investments that drove the 1990’s boom.  The implication of this change was dramatic.

As the housing boom wore on, successively greater shares of the housing stock were being purchased by borrowers that were not capable of financing the home.  From an economic efficiency perspective, the “productivity” of the money invested in these new houses was falling.  Instead of investing in new technologies that could enhance our efficiency, government incentives drove more and more money toward building houses that could not be sustained. 

Furthermore, many of the construction jobs created by the boom in the housing sector were filled by illegal immigrants, as the work and pay, while not attractive to many Americans, was attractive to this group.  The surge in illegal immigration during the housing boom, and its subsequent drop during the housing bust, is simply a rational response to the capital investments that the American economy was making.

What is troubling for American workers, however, is not the illegal immigration but the skewed capital investment.  Government policies encouraged investment dollars to be allocated toward less productive projects that will not increase worker productivity.  Without productivity growth, there is no income growth. 

The way forward takes time.  Due to the excessive build-up of unproductive homes, we must go through the process of readjusting our capital stock toward more productive uses.  Because real resources were used to build these homes, money that could have been allocated toward projects that would have increased workers incomes and our national wealth, have been wasted.  Luckily, we have already experienced much of the re-adjustment pain, although there is more to come.  Oil prices have been dropping as well, which should offset some of the pain as the affordability of food and gas should improve.

We will be unlucky, however, if we take the wrong lessons from our recent history.  The housing crisis did not occur due to deregulation or a failure of the market.  What has failed is a regulatory structure that promoted “socially responsible” visions above common sense.  Time and time again, history has shown us that chasing the economic dream of a central planner ends with a crisis.  The housing bubble is simply another example.

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About The Author

Wayne H. Winegarden Ph.D. is a partner in the firm Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics.

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Failure
We do not have free enterprise, and it was socialism and fascism that failed. Our schools are socialist (owned by government) and our "private" companies are subject to such excessive regulation that the system amounts to fascism. The government demands on "private" companies for "affordable" mortgages caused the failure, and we are now starting to learn what the costs will be.

Anyone/Palin in 2008
Palin/Anyone in 2012
Obama bin Biden after Hell freezes over

Build Baby, Build
I didn’t see a word in this article that talked about the real reason for the housing problem. Have you ever heard of supply and demand? That really does apply to houses also.

It started many years ago, when the traitor Eviornuts insisted that you can’t build here, and you can’t build there.

Perhaps there was a part of your town where there was room to build 2,000 homes, but the enviornuts screamed that you might step on a mouse, so only 1,000 homes were built.

Now you go to that part your town to buy a house, and you find 5 houses for sale and 200 buyers, what happens to the price of the houses in that area. And over and over and over.

Let’s assume in another town the people in charge said, “ Screw that mouse and you enviornuts, built all 2,000 homes.” Now you go to that area to buy a house, and you might find 300 houses for sale to those same 200 buyers, so what happens to the price of the houses in that area.

Houses, as with everything that is for sale, is a matter of supply and demand. When I was born the population of the US was 128,000,000 people, and look at it now. But still the enviornuts did not want anything to be built so those hundreds of millions of people had a place to live.

In 1955 I bought a 4 bedroom house for $16,500, my income from a great job, was $6,000 a year. Using one of the Cost of Living formulas, that wage would now be $50,000, and the house would cost $127,000.

But 5 years ago that very same house, now in much need of repairs, sold for $600,000.

The wages went up 8+ times, the house went up 36+ times, only because the traitor enviornuts were able to keep the supply of homes too low.

Like they say these days, “Drill baby, Drill.” they should have said years ago, “Build baby, Build.”

Pitch it Low!!!
My early attempt at student teaching at college
made me uneasy so I asked my professor if he had any helpful suggestions. His advice to me was to "Pitch it Low". I later came to realize I should not overestimate the intelligence of people! If that sounds to harsh then let me amend: Don't overestimate how informed they are.

This article defines the problem better than any I have read but many have drawn their conclusions and the ones who insist they are due a refund of taxes they never paid will be content with "those Republicans did it for their rich friends. Remember "beanie babies and "pet rocks"? Want to argue the point?

So, in commenting on this excellent article let me add that buying a "home" is a dream realized and not a financial speculation to put you on easy street. Let me give you my example.

In 2000 my home between neighbors who are Doctors and Lawyers appraised at 500,000. Today, Zillow gives it a value of 750,000. Yes, a couple of years back the appraisal was 900,000. or so. Stay with me here>

Todays dollar is worth 28% less than in the year 2000 so in real 2000 money it is worth about $540,000. To invest $500,000 for 8 years and earn a whopping 40K is what I call making a killing in real estate! Wow! Even at $900,000. of the 72 cent dollars (650K) that yield is a staggering one and a half percent above my 6% mortgage interest.

By all means, buy a home for your family. It provides an anchor, a corner stone for building on but don't expect a profit without a once in a generation bubble and then, only if you get out at the top.

So many loonies, so little time...
I can't believe how out of touch you people are. The article had some merit, but used the facts to support the author's own wishful conclusion, not the total picture.

What's Next?
The next bubble and bust is already on the horizon. Governments want to make a market in worthless CO2. They are just layers kidding themselves. The fate of an artificial market in worthless commodity is certain to prove to be a hoax.

The housing problem
PhillipSpace gets it. A house is a place to live. It is NOT a piggy bank so you can get a low interest loan on your equity. It is not to be used to pay off your credit card debt. It is not to buy a new car or pay Johnny's college tuition. Send Johnny to the military and let the GI Bill pay Johnny's tuition. It'll be good for Johnny, the nation, and you.

Too many Americans bought houses for the wrong reason. You don't buy a house so it will increase in value and so you can make money. If you do that, you deserve to be caught in the present situation.

A house is to keep the rain off your head. It's a place to raise children and have neighbors, It is a place to have a LIFE. Anyone buying a house for any other reason is at risk and when the payment for taking that risk comes due, we have a housing crash.

The democrats are mostly responsible through Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae for the present mess, but they had a LOT of help from many Americans who have their priorities all messed up. It looks like this financial situation has only begun and before it is all over, there is going to be a HUGE realighnment of those priorities. There are few things like hunger to make a person realize what he ought to do first.

False Markets
Winegarden has it right. I just wish he would have hit it harder. There is no question that restrictive zoning contributes to the supply vs demand equation, but the real culprits here are Fanny Mae, Freddie Mac and Congress. They created a huge oversupply of money that had no foundation - they literally flooded the market with counterfeit paper money that created a false real estate market. The leveraged funny money created an exponentially huge supply of the counterfeit money through the artificial home values the false market created.

Private enterprise does what it does very well - it puts all available capital to use fueling new businesses and jobs. Then, just like the person who unwittingly buys stolen property, the law confiscates the property and the buyer is screwed. The bubble not only burst but it implodes wiping out far more than housing values. And this time The Law and The Villain are the same entity.

Who was the driving force behind creating this false market? Congress. Who in Congress? Democrats. Who will be the super-majority if Obama is elected? These same self-righteous villains who will be even less encumbered than ever before to serve themselves at our expense.

A Bubble By Any Other Name
Tech got too large and burst. It left many workers unemployed and many investors with lower monetary worth. Same happened with the housing bubble. The lesson in all this is to diversify. Tunnel vision is dangerous to the health of the nation and its individuals. Spreading your investments over several types of entities may seem boring is the only safe way to protect your interests.

Re: A Bubble By Any Other Name
The lesson in all this is to diversify.

True for individuals and private enterprise, but false when it comes to Government. The lesson is to keep the government within the boundaries that our forefathers wisely intended. I know that ship sailed a long time ago but we can continue to try to elect conservatives and pray they will remain conservatives once they have arrived in Washington D.C. If we do that over a period of time we'll contain and maybe even reduce government's reach. If not, well... there's no amount of diversifying that will help the individual or private enterprise.

Talk show hosts can help McCain win!
Dear Wayne,

Talk show hosts can explain how the Democrats are responsible for our economic crisis, but you need video or audio evidence to really convert doubters by showing clips of Maxine Waters, Nancy Pelosi, Chris Dodd and a host of other Democrats defending Freddie Mac, Fanny Mae and Raines.
“A picture is worth a thousand words”
See the videos that expose how the Democrats caused the economic Crisis. See and hear them defend Fannie MAE,
Freddie Mac and Raines. See a Clip of Bill Clinton blaming the Democrats.
http://www.teleprompterpresident.com/2008/09/shocking-video .html
Or google “teleprompter unearthed Democrats in their own words covering up Fannie Mae”.

This wonderful video clearly explains how it all happened at:
http://www.teleprompterpresident.com/2008/10/fnc-fbn-inves- 6.html
or google the phrase "Teleprompter saving our economy”.

Every American should know who caused our financial collapse which resulted in our 401Ks and our home values to sink in value. We have been betrayed, not by the greed of the banks, but by our congressmen who caused this to happen.

Have your listeners send emails with the videos to their friends. Can you spread the word to other talk show hosts?
Bob Bryant
9o8-879-7186
Cell 973479-8330
Email netc@comcast.net

Winegarden overlooks one lesson..
His analysis is correct as far as it goes but he fails to explain why "rising wealth across the globe has increased the supply of money available for investing", as he puts it.

The economic meltdown was the direct result of George W Bush's $3 trillion addition to our national debt since he took over, including his unfunded war in Iraq. He paid for it, all $600 billion of it thus far, simply by adding it to the debt. The Chinese and Japanese alone hold more than $2 trillion of the debt much of it created since the war began.

All that phoney money floating around in the global markets had to go somewhere and much of it went into mortgage backed securities, particularly the subprime variety, because they paid higher returns than the over-sold U.S. treasury securities. That's why loans were given to people who couldn't afford them - because they paid better returns than Treasuries.

But then the bottom fell out of the domestic Real Estate market because it was a bubble waiting to burst for years and it finally did burst.

That made all those Mortgage backed securities vitually worthless overnight, and down went the banking system along with them.

So don't blame the Democrats for not minding the store. It was all that phoney money that Bush printed during his six years of war that had to go somewhere and ended up, much of it, in the U.S. housing market.

Proof of Democrats fault
Please watch this video, which shows the desperation with which the Republicans and the regulators argued, begged and pleaded in vain with Democrats Lacy Clay, Gregory Meeks, Maxine Waters, Artur Davis, Barney Frank, and others to investigate Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. See with your own eyes and hear with your own ears how the Democrats defended Raines and insisted there was nothing irregular there. This is extremely urgent: http://www.lawatchdog.com/DemocratsCausedFinancialCrisis10 0708.html

Good article, but so sad ...
The other day on HGTV, one of my favorite stations, the program, "What Is My House Worth?" was showcasing a lovely, newer house, one of those McMuffin square, large boxes. The couple, who had resided there for a couple of years, wanted to sell so they could move to California. The profit from the sale would finance, not only the move, but the downpayment for another house. It was hard not to notice they had very little furniture in this huge house, witness a wooden dinette and 4 chairs under the beautiful chandelier.

The realtor was telling the family that, yes, they had a very nice house, but they were also surrounded by new homes with more amenities and a lower price, then gave them the terrible news that what they owed on the house was actually more than the house was worth. So, its actually selling for what they needed was more a wish than a reality. And, they couldn't get out of it what they would still owe on the mortgage.

I think there are many people in this predicament, having bought beyond their means and owing more than what the real estate is worth in today's dismal market.

One Born Every Minute
We didn't learn any lessons from this recent financial crisis.

First, it was a fake crisis anyway, brought on just before the election to ensure a GOP defeat.
Nothing was fixed, no one was punished. The very people who caused it received $$Millions and are the chairmen of the congressional committees investigating the "crisis". They will drag others up before them and lay the blame on them. We will reelect all the real culprits.

Have you noticed that nothing's in the news about who caused the meltdown? Isn't this odd? The Lenni Riefenstahl media is looking under Sarah Palin's dress, but they don't care who stole $$One Trillion.

Soon after the election we will learn that the Feds are back in the business of guaranteeing loans to the same types of loser who can't afford to pay them back. And I don't mean white, gainfully employed, law abiding, tax paying chumps. I mean all the other hyphenated "Americans".

They'll be back descending on good neighborhoods all over the country, letting their properties decay, defaulting on their loans, so that our properties decline in value and our interest rates go up to pay for their mismangement.

And we'll have to hear day after day, all day, for the rest of our lives how racist and intolerant we are. That will be our reward for being suckers.

Crisis...
"The housing crisis did not occur due to deregulation or a failure of the market."

No, it came about as the result of the increased expense of government under Bush. An enormous amount of money spent, financed through inflation, which necessarily chopped household incomes with higher prices. And there seems to be no end to the spending, and, therefore, no near end to economic decline in this country, especially with Democrats taking over.

Re: Winegarden overlooks one lesson..
Not buying the "Bush printed all that phony money" argument. National debt as a percentage of GDP is well within historical averages. It still boils down to our government meddling in the free market making it less and less free. "We the people" are incurring the always unforeseen consequences of the government's meddling. Increasing the demand for homes with cheap and easy money that was readily available to nearly anyone was a significant factor in driving home prices up. Government incentives to financial institutions to trade in the paper that the funny money loans were written on fanned the flames. When the ponzi scheme reached its inevitable conclusion and all that phony capital vanished lots of people lost their jobs, me included. Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Henry Waxman, Lacy Clay, Gregory Meeks, Maxine Waters, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid all still have their jobs and are busy fixing the problem. How scary is that? It would be nice to see all those legislators lose their jobs this Nov. 4th, at least those up for election, but I'm not holding my breath.

You are all wrong
The housing debacle came about because the morons in NY and California bought cottages for $600,000 you can buy here in KY for $60,000.

RE: You are all wrong
Very fine and well thought-out response, Shubi. Calling people morons advances the credibility of your argument immediately. But, you're right. I think all 30 million of us in CA should move to KY tomorrow (I won't speak for New Yorkers). Oh... by the way, what do you think would happen to the value of your $60,000 home if that happened?

Glad you're happy in Kentucky. Sorry you're such a bigot regarding NY and CA residents. But, believe it or not, there are plenty of good reasons people would be willing to pay $600,000 to live CA or NY and there is a reason that people would only pay $60,000 to live in the same house in Kentucky. It has to do with markets, jobs, income potential, supply and demand, as well as climate, geography and a variety of other personal preferences - not because they/we are morons.

This is not a put-down of Kentucky. Kentucky is a beautiful state and a fine place to live, if that's what someone chooses. And that's one of the great thing about this country. We are still permitted to choose where we live. And we are free to make those choices based on a number of free market and personal choice factors.

Failure to understand the meaning of a free market and what it means to this country and society at large will only lead to more government meddling and the socialization of our choices so that I know longer will have the freedom to be a moron who owns a $600,000 house in CA that would only cost me $60,000 in KY.

Wayne
Time to blame the private mortgage lenders and Wall Street investment banks. All those re-fi letters you got in the mail, the past few years(one a day, no?) came from organizations outside the government regulatory process.

Wall Street would accept a mortgage from anyone with a pulse, bundle into a Collateral Mortgage Obligation and sell it for a lot of money. Unfortunately, they saddled these CMO's with credit default swaps and other heavily over-leveraged financial derivatives that they themselves didn't understand. The real estate market sunk which their quant models had NOT predicted. Oops!!

Did you see last Monday in the WSJ that JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs volunteered to go into the regulatory US banking system? They figured the government could run their business better than their own business plans. It has all been a big disgrace!

Though Fannie and Freddie have a share of the blame, I can't really put any of the blame on the Community Re-Investment Act.

It seems that for the past fews years, that I had heard a lot about 'Predatory Lending'. A situation where, instead of the government forcing lenders to lend more, that their could have been some rules to slow down too much lending.

According to the WSJ there were many states that wanted to institute their own rules, protecting their state's citizens, but the Bush administration opposed this, due to their core belief in democratic centralism, otherwise known as the Unitary Executive Theory and also known 100 years ago as Bolshevism.

voting Republican will lead to demise
John McCain, yesterday said, "It's not government's job to redistribute wealth, but to create it."

True, then vote Democrat. Under Bubba's reign the stock market tripled, mostly, because the sound "tax and spend" policies of the 90's was eventually going to bring the deficit to zero.

Under George Bush and the Republican Congress' 'reign of error' the deficit has more than doubled. The stock market has lost 20% due to the Republican mantra of cut taxes and spend even more.

Don't forget, the entire war in Iraq has been financed by sending IOU's to China, UAE, Japan, Singapore, Saudi Arabia to name a few. This is wealth-redistribution from Americans to foreigners, plain and simple. And you can thank the Republicans for this.

Phillup Space Made a Bundle
But suppose Phillup Space "Pitch It Low" had just bought his $500,000 house in 2000 for 20%, or $100,000, down. If it is now worth $750,000, that's a 250% gain on the $100,000 initial investment in 8 years, or an average 31.25% per year. If he paid $500,000 cash, he is a fool. Had he bought as many houses out of the $400,000 saved by putting only $100,000 down on his house, with a down payment that would reduce costs of ownership to zero, he might have bought another 2-3 houses and gained $750,000 to $1 million instead of a mere $250,000. Does he not understand why the rich get richer? They continuously use down payment leverage, the 1031 exchange, take depreciation, mortgage interest, and local property tax deductions, save tax-free, and invest tax-free.

Correction: Waste v. House Productivity

“Skewed capital investment.” As in marginally useful new drugs with horrendous side effects that unpatentable treatments put to shame? We know how to prevent and cure our major chronic diseases, including low IQ, but application of this know-how would eradicate 2/3 of healthcare and a good chunk of school spending and lawmaker graft.

“Skewed capital investments.” As in removing forever from the tax rolls billionaire fortunes and transferring them tax-free to tax-free private governments like endowments and foundations? What would be the growth of the number of such fortunes well as tax revenues, jobs and new technologies were it not for these Pharaoh-like, rule-from-the-grave transfers.

Would not the rich likely double every 5, 10 or 20 years. And, since these top 0.1% people pay 25% of all income taxes, whereas 47% pay zero, does it not make sense to grow these whales and leave even more of the minnows alone. Are not the rich far more likely risk takers to invest in growth industries and new technology and create new jobs than endowments and foundations?

When households double up, when people buy homes close to the best schools and colleges, when people double their down payment in 5 years, sell or refinance and invest the proceeds in a new business or an apartment building, is that not real productivity growth.

More Drival!
I find it difficult to follow Mr. Winegarden's logic. When senator's and representatives support legislation providing ANY buyer the ability to borrow 100 plus of the equity in a home, therein creates the bubble that will break. Paint Carter and Clinton perfect if you will, but laying this disaster on George W. is irresponsible. Any good real estate appraiser would laugh at a 100% plus equity loan, and we did. Fox has been very effective in explaining the whys and wherefores of the housing market and it primarily falls at the feet of Democratic administrations.

The facts and nothing but the facts!
Yes, Congressional liberals were and are responsible and Senator Obama, himself, was waist deep in contributions from FNMA. Congress should be investigated by a Special Prosecutor or someone outside of themselves, but as a former real estate agent I witnessed other situations which in my mind were part and parcel to this crisis.Overpriced listings, discount brokers who failed to divulge service levels and left sellers to fend for themselves and buyers who bid well over asking price are as responsible and must take part in the blame; just as many agents, brokers and lenders who put pocketbook before principle. Many are upside down on their mortgage and this was inevitable because home prices could not retain the pace with which they rose. With all of the laws passed to regulate the real estate industry, everyone found a way to maneuver around them, and this is far and away from the subprime crisis. This will take time to repair and hopefully Congress as well as everyone else has learned their lesson, but probably not.

Kool-Aid Alert!
Definition of insanity:
1)Be shown irrefutable evidence that "back-door socialism" --planned, facilitated and defended by the likes of Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Chuck Schumer, the CBC, ACORN, Nancy Pelosi, etc.---kicked off this economic meltdown via government-mandated subprime loans.
2)Proceed to give that crowd, under the aura of The Chosen One, complete federal control.
That makes as much sense as appointing an arsonist to be Fire Chief. Is there Kool-Aid in the national water supply?

2 SHUBI
You are so right! Your comment is spot on, what peole don't get is that they are not making land anytime soon, and if you have children the prospect of them taking on the "homestead" where ever that might be has been lost in America!

Sell it, loose it, and live happily ever after in a manufactured retirement home in Florida!

Well we now see that this chapter in yet another Social Engineering pamphlet has not really worked out as planned.

Shubi, you rightly mentioned NY and the outrageous speculation that has gone on here in the last 10 years. NYC is one thing but smaller residential neighborhoods have been hit and hit hard by speculators. Take a small cape on a 50 x 100 plot, along with seated in government, mostly one brain cell liberal Democrats, and you got a Mcmansion squeezed in under revision of the zoning codes while adopting a "Master Plan". That's big here in liberal Dem Country!

Outcome; All other homeowners, families just starting out, retired seniors in that neighborhood are now "REASSESSED" , Annually at the inflated value of the MC Manison next door, regardless if it sits empty, over leveraged, in foreclosure, unsold.

So here we sit, with bloated budgets at the local, state and municiable level based on what is nothing more then a derivative swap on property assessment, that yes I have to say it agin , that one brain cell liberal democrates thought would go on for ever.And yes they were supported in this by the rating agencies.













From NY
There is much to said here, and each article here on TH raises many issues,but all speak to the same principle of what it means to be an American.

This is the question, all of us who now appear to be the "FRING" want answered, truthfully and honestly.

No one is giving us are right to speak,we the bakers, the candel stick makers, the fabric of our communities, will be silenced, not quite for once and for all, but quite possibly for a very long time.

With that I would urge that each and everyone of us run for office at the local level.

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