| Economic Falsehoods in Obama’s Address to Congress | | Print | |
| Written by Thomas R. Eddlem | ||||||||
| Wednesday, 25 February 2009 04:47 | ||||||||
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Obama correctly said that “it is only by understanding how we arrived at this moment that we’ll be able to lift ourselves out of this predicament.” But his remarks reveal he doesn’t know — or care — how the economic crisis started. It certainly reveals a less-than-honest view of the deficit his administration inherited from the equally fiscally irresponsible Bush administration: “My budget does not attempt to solve every problem or address every issue. It reflects the stark reality of what we’ve inherited — a trillion dollar deficit, a financial crisis, and a costly recession.” Obama was not fully honest in saying that he “inherited” a trillion dollar deficit. It’s only a $1.2 trillion-dollar deficit because as president-elect he strongly supported the first $700 billion Bush-era bailout package just before he took office. Had he opposed it, the bill might have failed and the deficit would have been similar to last year’s $450 billion deficit. And now the deficit is closer to a $2 trillion deficit, after the passage of Obama’s most recent $787 deficit “stimulus” bill. Although there’s no evidence Obama signed the “stimulus” bill with a pen using red ink, he might as well have. The federal government is planning to add every penny of the spending increases and tax cuts in the “stimulus” bill onto the deficit, and the text of the bill acknowledges this truth. The bill raised the national debt limit by slightly more than the $787 billion cost of the legislation. Statement: “People bought homes they knew they couldn’t afford from banks and lenders who pushed those bad loans anyway.” Correction: The lowering of lending standards was not the result of just about every Wall Street banker suddenly — and all at the same time — becoming corrupt and losing the ability to make money. Sometimes individual crooks like Bernie Madoff emerge in business, but markets don’t go corrupt en masse after decades of operating competently. Instead, the lowered lending standards were led and underwritten by the congressionally chartered mortgage subsidy banks, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. And federal regulations often required private banks to dole out loans to bad risks under the guise of subsidizing loans in neighborhoods with minorities through the Community Reinvestment Act and backed up by the threat of costly lawsuits and fines. Statement: "Regulations were gutted for the sake of a quick profit at the expense of a healthy market.” Correction: There’s no doubt among anyone paying attention that the recession was created by government rather than a result of a lack of government, regulations or otherwise. The Federal Reserve Bank — chartered by Congress — created the crisis by suppressing interest rates for more than 10 years (beginning in 1995) that led to the housing bubble. It was the Fed that ruined an otherwise healthy market. Statement: “A surplus became an excuse to transfer wealth to the wealthy instead of an opportunity to invest in our future.” Correction: This is a clear reference to the Bush-era tax cuts that allowed the American people to keep more of their own money. It’s also an equally clear indication of where Obama is coming from in his worldview. He speaks of a “transfer” of “wealth to the wealthy” as if the people’s money was government’s to dole out as it wills. Your wealth is not your own, Obama says. Everything belongs to government, and whatever scraps government allows you to keep is a privilege and a “transfer” from the common wealth bank that is government. "Investment" is simply a rhetorical device to refer to "government spending" for Obama. Obama blaming bankers for the banking crisis is a bit like saying that wet streets cause rain. * * * Unfortunately, Obama’s false conclusions on the economy have led to proposals that will make the economic crisis worse. Obama called on Congress to “move quickly on legislation that will finally reform our outdated regulatory system.” By that, he doesn’t mean decrease the negative influence of government on the market: “It is time to put in place tough, new common-sense rules of the road so that our financial market rewards drive and innovation, and punishes short-cuts and abuse.” A more “common-sense rule of the road” would instead be to stop government from creating recessions through meddling in the banking and financial sectors of the economy. Photo: AP Images
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Don
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Are you really this stupid or do you try extra hard at it? For the love of god, will the republican party ever get it's collective head out of it's arse?! If you actually believe the dribble you wrote, please go back and re-check your facts and you will find out you sir are in total error. The FED, did not cause this problem, they lowered the rates to avoid inflation, which is the other side of the problem. What actually caused this problem was the Bush administration that removed the restriction from banks to doing comprehensive financial background checks prior to loaning businesses and individuals money and then passing the risk in the form of securities onto unknowing investors who took out insurance policies on those risks. When the house of cards the banks had created collapsed, which it was going to do sooner or later, the banks and investors who got caught short went to the insurance companies to get relief, but the insurance companies wrote more policies than they could cover and so a domino effect started... the housing bubble started it but the insurance and banking industries set the wheels in motion once Bush got rid of the banking restrictions in favor of a free financial market. Banks can not rely on their own ethics to govern themselves, greed is a poor motivator for honesty. So go back and check your facts, you'll see that President Obama was telling the truth and you need to go back to finance 101. A true JEFFERSON Republican, not a Christian Republican. |
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Alex Eaton
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A response to this idiot You are full of it. George Bush pushed for bankruptcy reform and in fact his largest contributor MBNA mostly wrote the bill. Face it dip-s**t the dems pushed the Community Reinvestment Act which created the climate for fannie and freddie to boss these banks into making sub-prime loans available or else. The scheme backfired and now these Banks want to stay alive anyway they can. They feel like they are owed it considering they took the risks shoved down their throats by Uncle Sam. It all started with our old friend Jimmy Carter. |
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President Obama made a number of false statements in his 
