Living in the Lib Bubble Makes Them Lose
It Seems Like Dems Are Struggling to Handle the Chaos Created by Unterscharführer...
Why a Former SC State Rep Vented About the Supreme Court Ruling on...
Jill Biden's Answer to This Question About the 2024 Election IS NOT What...
Why Graham Platner Had to Return to Maine Quickly Last Night
The Dems Suffering Through Another Wave of Biden-Induced Political Nausea. That's Such a...
We Knew the LA Mayor's Results Wouldn't Be Called, but These Drunk Pratt...
The Collapse Was Not an Accident
Difficult Freedom or Easy Tyranny: Which Will America Choose?
A Mouthful of Deception
John Cornyn Is Crashing Out Over His Horrendous Electoral Loss
Playing With Fire – Tehran's Deadly Gambit As Economic Collapse Looms
Europe Needs Patriotism
When Businesses Leave, They Likely Won’t Be Back
Biden's Privacy Panic: 50 Years on the Taxpayer Payroll, Now Suddenly Shy About...
OPINION

Saving the Republic from Saving Itself

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Saving the Republic from Saving Itself

The further we get away from those fateful election of 2008, the more revisionist history takes hold. 

Most recently, I keep hearing how the choice for the next election is between the guy who saved us from the Great Depression Part II and everyone else who wants to take us back to the policies that created those problems. 

Advertisement

I’m told by people of all political persuasions that if the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Treasury, and the President hadn’t acted, I’d probably be in a bread line right now. 

Fortunately, my memory is not as clouded as many others. 

Hank Paulson (then Secretary of the Treasury), on that memorable Thursday evening, went to Congress and met with a select group of congressmen and senators, in addition to Ben Bernanke (Fed Chairman) and Tim Geithner (President of the New York Fed.) 

Paulson stated that if $700 billion wasn’t authorized immediately, then the financial world as we knew it would end. 

There would be colossal financial and economic chaos, even martial law, and it would be on the heads of those in that room. 

He needed the money to buy the toxic assets (mortgages) from the banks. 

Those comments terrified everyone. 

Heck, they would have terrified me, too.   

The gun sounded, and we were off to the races: TARP, TALF, stimulus, credits, clunkers, etc.  Time simply doesn’t allow me to describe all the public fleecing machinations that occurred over the past few years in the name of saving the Republic. 

The reality was that the Republic was not in danger of a Depression at that point, though it may be now.  Rather, the danger at that time was the collapse of large businesses such as banks, automobile manufacturers, and insurance companies. 

Like any business cycle, there would have been winners and losers, with the winners ready, willing, and able to replace the losers, no matter how big.  Unfortunately, that pattern was interrupted so that certain well-connected entities could be saved.  Think UAW.

Advertisement

That interruption disturbed the natural order of the economic cycle, and created “too big to fail.” 

Ben Bernanke recently stated “We don’t have a precise read on why this slower pace of growth is persisting.”  Ben’s answer could be found by looking back at that fateful Thursday evening in 2008.  If Congress had simply said “no” back then we would be celebrating growth and not creating revisionist history.


See also these top features from Townhall Finance:
The Ticker Daily Market Commentary
Bob Goldman Feelings
Jack Bouroudjian NLRB: All the President's Union Henchmen
Bill Tatro Saving the Republic from Saving Itself
Mike Shedlock CT Unions Vote For Layoffs
John Ransom Email, Hate Mail and Comments from Readers

Join John Ransom on Facebook and follow him @Twitter 

email: thfinance@mail.com

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement