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STOP the Bailout. STOP the rape of US Taxpayers. STOP the slide toward Socialism.
quesney | quesney

Posted on 09/23/2008 7:55:38 AM PDT by quesney

Rush Limbaugh
9/22/08

There's a great idea at stake here, too, and the idea is that the free market measures itself and handles itself better than the government. The great idea that we're about to throw away with this bailout is that the government can run things better. The government can take care of you, the government can insure you, the government can protect you, the government can provide for you. This is an idea which has been shown to fail around the world.

This emergency bailout friends can go either way. It can fix the underlying problem or merely represent another opportunity for another leftist hijacking. Whenever this kind of money is going to be spent by the government on something, Democrats are going to get their hands in it, and they're going to reward people like ACORN. They're going to try to. They're going to try to build on their social programming and networking here with this kind of money outstanding that is supposedly aimed at shoring up the US economy.

How many times in the last six months have we read stories about the Fed adding to liquidity here or helping this institution there? We've already had a bunch of bailouts. We've already had a government stimulus package to help the US economy, and now Obama's talking about wanting another one. These things have a history of not working. They may show short-term relief, but over the long haul, world history is replete with example after example after example that centralized economic planning does not work. The left sees this as their opportunity to change the nature and identity of this economy.

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Rep. Ron Paul
9/22/08

The worst thing we can do is perpetuate the bad policies that gave us this trouble in the first place. We borrow and spend and consume and now it's caught up to us. When the war started in Iraq, they said we'd need $50 billion...this $700 billion is just the beginning. This is Wall Street in big trouble and sucking in Main Street and dumping all the bills on Main Street. You can't solve the problem of creating money and credit out of thin air by creating more money and credit out of thin air and not changing basic economic policy. Yes, it would be painful, but it wouldn't last as long. What they're doing now is propping up a failed system so that the agony lasts even longer. Yes, they're going to be losses. But we have to live within our means. What the government is doing now is trying to prop up prices. We need a market economy and to believe in ourselves. It would be a bad year. But with this bailout, it would be a bad decade. More government. More spending. More relations. Trying to prop up a bad system. THe bubble has been blown up. It needs to deflate. This isn't saving Main Street. This is sticking it to Main Street.

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NYT
William Kristol
9/21/08

It’s not that I don’t believe the situation is dire. It’s not that I want to insist on some sort of ideological purity or free-market fastidiousness. I will stipulate that this is an emergency, and is a time for pragmatic problem-solving, perhaps even for violating some cherished economic or political principles. (What are cherished principles for but to be violated in emergencies?)

But is the administration’s proposal the right way to do this? It would enable the Treasury, without Congressionally approved guidelines as to pricing or procedure, to purchase hundreds of billions of dollars of financial assets, and hire private firms to manage and sell them, presumably at their discretion There are no provisions for — or even promises of — disclosure, accountability or transparency. Surely Congress can at least ask some hard questions about such an open-ended commitment.

And I’ve been shocked by the number of (mostly conservative) experts I’ve spoken with who aren’t at all confident that the Bush administration has even the basics right — or who think that the plan, though it looks simple on paper, will prove to be a nightmare in practice.

McCain — more of a gambler than Obama — could take a big risk. While assuring the public and the financial markets that his administration will act forcefully and swiftly to deal with the crisis, he could decide that he must oppose the bailout as the panicked product of a discredited administration, an irresponsible Congress, and a feckless financial establishment, all of which got us into this fine mess. Critics would charge that in opposing the bailout, in standing against an apparent bipartisan consensus, McCain was being irresponsible.

Or would this be an act of responsibility and courage?

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Washington Post
Sebastian Mallaby
9/23/08

With truly extraordinary speed, opinion has swung behind the radical idea that the government should commit hundreds of billions in taxpayer money to purchasing dud loans from banks that aren't actually insolvent. As recently as a week ago, no public official had even mentioned this option. Now the Treasury, the Fed and congressional leaders are promising its enactment within days. The scheme has gone from invisibility to inevitability in the blink of an eye. This is extremely dangerous.

The plan is being marketed under false pretenses. Supporters have invoked the shining success of the Resolution Trust Corporation as justification and precedent. But the RTC, which was created in 1989 to clean up the wreckage of the savings-and-loan crisis, bears little resemblance to what is being contemplated now. The RTC collected and eventually sold off loans made by thrifts that had gone bust. The administration proposes to buy up bad loans before the lenders go bust. This difference raises several questions.

Congress and the administration may not like the sound of these ideas. Taking bad loans off the shoulders of the banks seems like a merciful rescue; ordering banks to raise capital or buying equity stakes in them sounds like big-government meddling. But we are in the midst of a crisis, and it shouldn't matter how things sound. The Treasury plan outlined on Friday involves vast risks to taxpayers, huge complexity and no guarantee of success. There are better ways forward.

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Newt Gingrich
9/21/08

We are being reassured that we can trust Secretary Paulson "because he knows what he is doing". Congress had better ask a lot of questions before it shifts this much burden to the taxpayer and shifts this much power to a Washington bureaucracy.

Imagine that the political balance of power in Washington were different. If this were a Democratic administration the Republicans in the House and Senate would be demanding answers and would be organizing for a “no” vote. If a Democratic administration were proposing this plan, Republicans would realize that having Connecticut Democratic senator Chris Dodd (the largest recipient of political funds from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) as chairman of the Banking Committee guarantees that the Obama-Reid-Pelosi-Paulson plan that will emerge will be much worse as legislation than it started out as the Paulson proposal. If this were a Democratic proposal, Republicans would remember that the Democrats wrote a grotesque housing bailout bill this summer that paid off their left-wing allies with taxpayer money, which despite its price tag of $300 billion has apparently failed as of last week, and could expect even more damage in this bill.

But because this gigantic power shift to Washington and this avalanche of taxpayer money is being proposed by a Republican administration, the normal conservative voices have been silent or confused. It’s time to end the silence and clear up the confusion. Congress has an obligation to protect the taxpayer. Congress has an obligation to limit the executive branch to the rule of law. Congress has an obligation to perform oversight. Congress was designed by the Founding Fathers to move slowly, precisely to avoid the sudden panic of a one-week solution that becomes a 20-year mess.

Question One: Is the current financial crisis the only crisis affecting the economy? Answer: There are actually multiple crises hurting the economy. There is an immediate crisis of liquidity on Wall Street. There is a longer time crisis of a bad energy policy transferring $700 billion a year to foreign countries (so foreign sovereign capital funds are now using our energy payments to buy our companies). There is a long term crisis of a high corporate tax rate driving business out of the United States. No solution to the immediate liquidity crisis should further cripple the American economy for the long run. Instead, the liquidity solution should be designed to strengthen the economy for competition in the world market...match our competitors in China and Singapore by going to a zero capital gains tax. Private capital will flood into Wall Street with zero capital gains and it will come at no cost to the taxpayer...immediately pass an “all of the above” energy plan designed to bring home $500 billion of the $700 billion a year we are sending overseas. With that much energy income the American economy would boom.

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George Will
ABC's This Week
9/21/08

When the British Labour Party was socialist, it defined socialism as government control of the commanding heights of the economy. And in Britain, at that time, it was coal, steel, and railroads. The commanding heights of the American economy are financial services, and they are now controlled by the government.

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Rep. Mike Pence (R-Ind)
9/22/08

Nationalizing every bad mortgage in America is not the answer. The Administration's request amounts to the largest corporate bailout in American history. Congress should act, but should act in a way that protects the integrity of our free market and protects the American taxpayer from more debt and higher taxes. Congress must not hastily embrace a cure that may do more harm to our economy than the disease of bad debt. And the stakes for our free market could not be higher.

Alternatives to a massive federal bailout must be fully considered and debated before Congress acts. Finally, any new expenditure of taxpayer dollars should be paid for with fiscal discipline and reform. If Congress decides to spend nearly 1 trillion dollars on a corporate bailout, it must find budget savings to prevent that cost from being passed along to the American people...We should demand consideration of free market alternatives to massive government spending and we should fight to pay for the solution through budget cuts and reform instead of more debt or taxes.

Now's the time for us to be dealing with the root causes of this economic downturn and not simply opening the cash window at the federal reserve and writing one bailout check after another.

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USNWR
9/22/08

House Democrat Peter DeFazio of Oregon had harsh words for the rescue plan...DeFazio took a shot at Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the former chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs. "He is of, by, for, and about Wall Street," the lawmaker said. DeFazio said in a single year, Wall Street bonuses exceeded $60 billion and added: "These people are out of control. They don't understand the real world. For them to talk about Main Street, and that they care about Main Street and student loans and homeowners' equity, is a bunch of B.S."

"We are the last bulwark here, the House of Representatives and the Senate," he concluded. "If this bill were to pass as proposed, we'll do an incredible disservice to the American people."

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Scoop
9/23/08

Constituents have been blowing up the phone lines on Capitol Hill, calling House of Representatives members, Republicans and Democrats, objecting to the no-strings-attached bailout, and the representatives have responded.

Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), spoke out against a bailout, calling the current proposal "cash for trash." [never thought I'd quote that man]

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9/17/08
Reuters
Gov. Sarah Palin

Earlier Wednesday in Cleveland, Palin said she was disappointed that the government needed to bail out another financial institution.

"Disappointed that taxpayers are called upon to bail out another one...it's understandable but very, very disappointing that taxpayers are called upon for another one," she said.

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Reuters
9/23/08

"In my judgment, it would be foolish to waste massive sums of taxpayer funds testing an idea that has been hastily crafted and may actually cause the government to revert to an inadequate strategy of ad hoc bailouts," Shelby said. Lawmakers on both extremes of the political spectrum assailed the plan as a massive, poorly conceived bailout.

In an expansion of its original proposal, the Bush administration is asking for broad power to buy up virtually any kind of bad asset — including credit card debt or car loans — from any financial institution in the U.S. or abroad in order to stabilize markets..There still were divisions on which tottering financial firms would be helped and what kind of assets the government could buy as part of the bailout.

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MSNBC
9/22/08

Steve Ebels, who owns a heating business, said he already lost much of his life savings when a general contractor he was doing work for went belly up, leaving Ebels with a pile of bills for materials and labor he had already invested in the project...And that is perhaps the biggest reason why Ebels, 51, would like to see the failed Wall Street titans pay for the actions that have led to this crisis. If he has to start over because of a soured business deal, he figures, so should they.

“I would just like to see some way that these people are held personally accountable,” he said. “We’ve got to do more of that in this country: personal responsibility and accountability...All (the bailout) does is transfer all the indiscretions of all these people onto the shoulders of the taxpayers,” he said.

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Michele Malkin
9/22/08

Both parties in Washington are about to screw us over on an unprecedented scale. They are threatening us with fiscal apocalypse if we don’t fork over $700 billion to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and allow him to dole it out to whomever he chooses in whatever amount he chooses — without public input or recourse. They are rushing like mad to cram this Mother of All Bailouts down our throats in the next 72-96 hours. And right there in the text of the proposal is this naked power grab: “Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative agency.”

Stop.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bailout; financialcrisis
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To: quesney

I hear everyone say stop the bail out but I don’t see any alternatives offered. If the bail out goes through, cut the interest rates to these outfits to 4% instead of the 6-6 1/2%. Punish these outfits, don’t just bail them out.


21 posted on 09/23/2008 8:35:35 AM PDT by RC2
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To: Attention Surplus Disorder
“It’s yet another money-toss that is sure to benefit his pals and is sure to generate a priveleged class of insider corpse-pickers, all at our expense”

This is totally untrue. This is a plan to purchase illiquid mortgage based securities from financial institutions. These packages are worth far more than the accounting rules allow them to be represented on the books. When the situation is resolved taxpayers will benefit from these purchases because the mortgage based securities will increase in value.

22 posted on 09/23/2008 8:35:35 AM PDT by detective
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To: cripplecreek

“This is money being taken from me. Trying to pretend it’s not is a lie.”

You miss the whole point of what is really going on. The money the Federal government will pay to purchase these illiquid mortgage based securities comes from the taxpayers but the securities that will be purchased will increase in value. Therefore the taxpayers and the government will profit. And the liquidity problems facing our financial system will be greatly improved.


23 posted on 09/23/2008 8:41:12 AM PDT by detective
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To: quesney

I did manage to get through to Carl Levin and Tim Walbergs office. I told them that there is no legitimate reason to punish the responsible people for the actions of the irresponible.


24 posted on 09/23/2008 8:41:49 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Paying taxes for bank bailouts is apparently the patriotic thing to do. [/sarc])
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To: detective

Look, I don’t care how much lipstick you put on that pig. I was a responsible buyer and bought a home I could afford. Now I’m supposed to pay for the failures of others.


25 posted on 09/23/2008 8:44:52 AM PDT by cripplecreek (Paying taxes for bank bailouts is apparently the patriotic thing to do. [/sarc])
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To: Hawthorn

“When it comes to this issue, Michelle Malkin and other normally reliable conservatives are teetering on the brink of mind-boggling insanity. The consequences of a major financial panic are truly too horrible to contemplate, yet Michelle and others want to fiddle while Rome may soon go up in smoke. Action must be taken right away, or we may see a genuine Armageddon within a week or two. You must come to your senses and realize that we’re potentially facing a total meltdown of the world financial system — where almost everything you and Michelle and I have invested in the stock market, retirement pensions, insurance, corporate bonds and money market accounts could evaporate overnight. Moroever, those who own their homes debt-free could see most of their equity vanish almost as quickly. How would you and Michelle like that?”

Newt Gingrich and others offer concrete free-market proposals that would strenghten rather than weaken our economy in the short- and long-term. Slash the capital gains tax now, for starters.


26 posted on 09/23/2008 8:47:14 AM PDT by quesney
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To: detective

Thanks for clearing this all up, Sherlock. Here I was thinking this was a bad thing, when in fact the taxpayers should be grateful to the `Masters of the Universe’ for giving us these great investment opportunities!


27 posted on 09/23/2008 8:49:24 AM PDT by tumblindice (A republic, if you (free men) can keep it.)
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To: cripplecreek

uhh.....i think its too late to stop it. they are threatening to tak our childrens college funds and lifetime savings of seniors to pay for their bad behavior.
The more u give them the more they need. We are toast.


28 posted on 09/23/2008 8:50:32 AM PDT by dalebert
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To: Hawthorn

No, we understand exactly what we’re talking about.

Better free and broke than a serf to our new socialist overlords.

Let it burn, I sez.


29 posted on 09/23/2008 8:50:55 AM PDT by absalom01 (Walk without rhythm, and you won't attract the Worm....)
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To: Attention Surplus Disorder

well said.


30 posted on 09/23/2008 8:52:59 AM PDT by quesney
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To: cripplecreek

“I was a responsible buyer and bought a home I could afford. Now I’m supposed to pay for the failures of others.”

You are referring to the Democrat plan to provide mortgage relief which they propose being added to the original proposal. I also oppose using taxpayer money to reward people for taking out mortgages that they could not afford. I was referring to the original proposal for the government to purchase illiquid mortgage based securities.


31 posted on 09/23/2008 8:57:36 AM PDT by detective
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To: detective
Secretary Paulson has done an excellent job over the past year preventing the problems created by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from getting worse.

Are you related to him? This is one of the silliest things I've seen posted today. Paulson is a Wall Street insider's insider and his loyalties are with his fellow elite hacks, not with the American people.

32 posted on 09/23/2008 8:57:57 AM PDT by Prokopton
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To: tumblindice

If you don’t understand what is really going on then please don’t use sarcasm and ridicule to argue for your position.


33 posted on 09/23/2008 8:59:35 AM PDT by detective
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To: Prokopton

No, I’m not related to him. I just understand what is really going on.


34 posted on 09/23/2008 9:01:20 AM PDT by detective
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To: detective

You don’t have the slightest way of making that assertion, because while the direct mortgage based components might be reasonably, if not bargain priced at 20 or 30 cents or 50 cents or 60 cents, there are default swaps that are flat out zeros. The default swaps are arguably between 20 and 30 times bigger than the face values of the direct mortgage based debt, and we have looked behind the skirts of FNM & FRE and LEH and BSC and we have seen by multiple example, in each and every case, that these folks were geared nominally 30:1. Until those swaps are placed on an exchange where a third party can vet the financial capacity of the counterparties, like the OCC or the CFTC, there is no way whatsoever to gauge the depth of this hole. It is unknowable. Never mind expanding the so-called plan to include personal loans, car loans, mattress loans, big screen loans, automaker loans, and there is no way to arrange the winners and losers hierarchically. Except that the money center banks will, by the very nature of their ability to act and lobby and the “ears” they have, will dominate. They will also dominate the flea-market at the end.

I’m not willing to grant Paulson unlimited power to work this out for his buddys’ benefit.


35 posted on 09/23/2008 9:01:30 AM PDT by Attention Surplus Disorder (Tired from wondering whether we wake up in the newest socialist country tomorrow.)
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To: detective

But you do know what’s going on, yet you persist in making this absurd argument that the taxpayers may, no, *will* actually benefit from this game of Three Card Monte, with Paulson shuffling the cards back & forth.
You’ve got the nerve of a bur-diddly-gurglar, neighbor.


36 posted on 09/23/2008 9:05:24 AM PDT by tumblindice (It's eazy Japaneezie, as easy as knittin' kitten britches, where's the Red King, where'd he go?)
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To: Hawthorn

Let it burn. We will rebuild from scratch. But if this goes through, they will OWN us forever...and our grandchildren will hate us for selling themm out. They will be slaves and learn that it was our generation that gave America away to 3rd world aliens and Asian bankers.


37 posted on 09/23/2008 9:06:23 AM PDT by Jack85321
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To: Hawthorn
The consequences of a major financial panic are truly too horrible to contemplate

The panic spreading socialist mantra du jour.

38 posted on 09/23/2008 9:11:32 AM PDT by Mojave
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To: quesney

www.fedupusa.com


39 posted on 09/23/2008 9:12:27 AM PDT by nicola_tesla ("Life is Tough... It's Worse When You're Stupid".... John Wayne)
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To: detective
the securities that will be purchased will increase in value.

If that were true, they could sell on the free market without the bailout.

40 posted on 09/23/2008 9:14:35 AM PDT by Mojave
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