Are We About to 'Starve' the Unemployed? [View article]
How is it that otherwise intelligent people can liberate one party or the other from involvement in the government as if the 'innocent' were blindfolded and tied up behind a tree pleading to be set free and 'fix' the problems brought on by too much government intervention?
Both parties created this mess by allowing Greenspan, and then Bernanke, free reign to run slipshod all over the economy in order to promise their constituents exponential quality of life upgrades at the expense of future Americans.
There has been much warning, beginning in 2002, about the interest rates and GSEs bringing too much attention to the housing sector. To frame this as a partisan, "free market" problem is not doing reality any favors.
I'm an independent and think that Bush policy was misguided and maybe even a little evil. But the Democrats did nothing but sit back and push lending to people that should not have been borrowing.
I welcome your perusal of this excellent article about the fact that both parties are now ensconced in a game of protecting their seats and accommodating their real constituents. Powerful banking and corporate interests:
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How is it that otherwise intelligent people can liberate one party or the other from involvement in the government as if the 'innocent' were blindfolded and tied up behind a tree pleading to be set free and 'fix' the problems brought on by too much government intervention?
Jan 09 08:26 am
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All Comments by Citizen X »Are We About to 'Starve' the Unemployed? [View article]
Both parties created this mess by allowing Greenspan, and then Bernanke, free reign to run slipshod all over the economy in order to promise their constituents exponential quality of life upgrades at the expense of future Americans.
There has been much warning, beginning in 2002, about the interest rates and GSEs bringing too much attention to the housing sector. To frame this as a partisan, "free market" problem is not doing reality any favors.
I'm an independent and think that Bush policy was misguided and maybe even a little evil. But the Democrats did nothing but sit back and push lending to people that should not have been borrowing.
I welcome your perusal of this excellent article about the fact that both parties are now ensconced in a game of protecting their seats and accommodating their real constituents. Powerful banking and corporate interests:
www.downsizedc.org/blo...
Representative Ron Paul (R) on the housing bubble in 2002:
www.house.gov/paul/con...