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The Return of 'Social Utility'
Townhall.com ^ | April 28, 2010 | Tony Blankley

Posted on 04/28/2010 8:06:31 AM PDT by Kaslin

In the last few weeks, I have found myself debating on radio and TV programs whether various financial instruments have any social utility -- any "real world" purpose other than "speculation or gambling." (Disclosure: I give professional advice to a number of financial organizations.)

My first instinct was to defend various derivatives as serving useful purposes: to hedge against various risks -- such as currency fluctuation or aviation-fuel price rises, to promote innovation, competition, efficiency and liquidity (paraphrasing Lawrence H. Summers, Alan Greenspan, Arthur Levitt and William J. Rainer from a 1999 Clinton administration report.)

I pointed out that creating a venue to which community banks could sell their mortgages freed up their capital to make more home loans, thus creating more homeowners. That is why Franklin D. Roosevelt set up Fannie Mae in 1938. Secondary markets tend to enlarge the primary market. This is good.

Short-selling, which is now being attacked as immoral, can be well defended in the words of Dean Baker, writing at the American Prospect: "Short-selling can play a very important role in the market. If informed investors recognize that a stock is overvalued, they perform a valuable service by selling it short and pushing down its stock price. This can both deprive the company of capital and be a signal to other actors in the market that the company might not be as healthy as is generally believed.

"The economy would have benefited enormously if large numbers of traders had shorted Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac four years ago when they were buying up hundreds of billions of mortgages issued to buyers who bought homes at bubble-inflated prices. This would have stopped the bubble years ago. Similarly, we could have prevented the financial chaos at Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Bear Stearns and the rest, if traders had recognized their financial shenanigans and aggressively shorted their stock. In the same vein, heavy shorting by informed investors could have prevented the boom and bust of the tech bubble."

One could go on making rational arguments to irrational people. But the very idea of being asked to defend freely entered transactions on the grounds of "social utility" is socialist-Marxist bunk. What in the world is "social utility"? And who gets to say so? Why is making a profit as an athlete or a politician better than making a profit as a banker or insurance salesman?

As Ayn Rand explained so long ago: "When the 'common good' (i.e., social utility) of a society is regarded as something apart from and superior to the individual good of its members, it means that the good of some men takes precedence over the good of others, with those others consigned to the status of sacrificial animals. It is tacitly assumed, in such cases, that 'the common good' means the good of the majority as against the minority or individual."

It seems unfathomable that after a century of constant failure by every "social utility-minded" government on the planet, that today in 2010, the American government must be re-educated to that history of failure.

Yet, we have heard recently from Democrats in Washington that Wall Street makes too much money and is too big a share of the American economy. Compared to what? The financial juggernauts of Libya, Romania or the Congo? Or for that matter France, Russia or Spain. Or for that matter Japan, Saudi Arabia or China (yes, China with its fraudulent banks and corrupt, finagling government).

Well, one of the reasons our economy continues to amount to 25 percent of all human economic activity on this planet (although our population is less than 5 percent) is because a free, risk-taking, innovative Wall Street has been the financial capital of the world. Yes, we have busts from time to time. But our booms have outdone our busts. That's why we have been the leading economy on earth for over a hundred years.

But now the current majority in Congress and the White House (and their fellow thinkers in the media) seem to be possessed of cobwebbed, left-wing social utility theorems compounded by mental devolution to the historic idiocies and bigotries that our ancestors in the Old World -- in their ignorance -- imputed to money lenders, bankers, the Bavarian Illuminati, the House of Rothschild, etc.

Shakespeare's moving, but anti-Semitic "Merchant of Venice" seemed to make a re-appearance in The Washington Post's lead Sunday story headlined: "Cheers at Goldman as housing market fell; Executives reveled in bets made against the market."

"Take then thy bond, take thou thy pound of flesh; But, in the cutting it, if thou dost shed One drop of Christian blood, thy lands and goods Are by the laws of Venice confiscate Unto the state of Venice." -- Portia, "Merchant of Venice," Act IV, scene 1.

The flagrant Securities and Exchange Commission charge of civil fraud against Goldman Sachs last week, followed by Congress' release of embarrassing interoffice Goldman Sachs e-mails on Sunday, are obviously intended to set a moral tone for the final stage of the financial re-regulation bill currently before the Senate.

It would seem that statism, historical amnesia, economic ignorance and bigotry are the mental and moral dispositions that will be shaping the passage of our financial re-regulations bill in the Senate this week.

The current, ill-fated 111th Congress continues to blunder its way into our history books along with the dreadful 94th (cut off money to South Vietnam in 1975, lost the war and triggered the Cambodian genocide); 71st (1929-1930, passed the Smoot-Hawley Act, which led to the Great Depression); 63rd (1913-14, passed the 16th Amendment -- income tax; the 17th Amendment -- direct election of the Senate; and creation of the Federal Reserve, which led to weakening of the states, encroachment of the federal government); and 33rd (1854-55, passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which quickened steps to the Civil War). A couple of more destructive laws enacted and the 111th will be No. 1.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: deathofthewest; marxism; obamacide; suicide

1 posted on 04/28/2010 8:06:31 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Nothing to worry about. Especially when a government panel gets around to determining the social utility of our lives. It’s for the common good, you see.


2 posted on 04/28/2010 8:38:05 AM PDT by Noumenon ("Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed, that he has grown so great?" - Julius Caesar)
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To: Kaslin
As Ayn Rand explained so long ago:

Wall Street neocons sell-out conservative Christian values to the lowest bidder.

3 posted on 04/28/2010 8:41:55 AM PDT by Willie Green ("You can observe a lot just by watching.")
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To: Kaslin

So was Blankley opposed to the bailouts of Wall Street? He didn’t bring that up in this article.


4 posted on 04/28/2010 8:45:09 AM PDT by secretagent
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To: Kaslin

Funny that Tony fails to mention the Depression era Congress that passed Glass Steagall, which served us well for over 60 years.

And that he fails to mention the Clinton era Congress which passed Graham-Leach-Bliley in 1999, and The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, both of which opened the door to the disaster which followed.


5 posted on 04/28/2010 8:51:05 AM PDT by Pelham (Obamacare, the new Final Solution.)
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To: Kaslin

There’s a difference between ‘shorting’ and ‘naked shorting’.

Just days ago a GS trader who was miffed by being dropped from a hearing blew the whistle on collusion among the Federal Reserve, JP Morgan Chase and HSBC in shorting and naked shorting of PM markets and full reimbursement of losses sustained thereof.

A couple of days later another whistle blower independent of the first corraborated with more information.

Over the years it has been as obvious to me as heavy smoke and screams of suffering people that a fire is raging in the markets of manipulation caused in no small part by certain players in shorting/naked shorting of markets. And the naked shorting has been confirmed.

But the issues are too obtuse for most Americans, hence the crimes go largely unnoticed and unenforced.

That Tony Blankley chooses to ignore this aspect of nonfree trading markets means he is too tied up in his position as commentator to venture out on this limb. He would be cut off at his knees by market players that control just about everything including the financial media.

But then he chooses to perpetuate the myths. Either he is ignorant or he is aware but chooses to feed the myths, either way he has no excuse for someone in his position.

He was an important part of Newt Gingrich’s reign. He has outlived his prominance and is now consigned to spineless RINO market commentary. What a shame.

We need erstwhile republicans to regroup and go agressive, damn their cushy perks and positions. We need revolutionaries, not power suited media groupies.


6 posted on 04/28/2010 9:01:57 AM PDT by Hostage
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