| Will the U.S. Learn From Japan? | | Print | |
| Written by John F. McManus | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuesday, 15 September 2009 08:00 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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If the Obama economic team (Geithner, Summers, and Volcker, along with recently re-anointed Fed Chairman Bernanke) really wanted to steer the United States out of the economic doldrums, they could learn from Japan’s experience over the past 17 years. The once-booming Asian nation saw its inflation-created bubble explode in 1992. Government program after government program has been tried to reverse Japan’s doldrums, but the nation is still stuck in its long-standing recession.
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Bonnie
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Remains to be seen... I wish Japan well. Nonetheless, it remains to be seen whether or not the LDP and the DPJ are really opposites, or merely two sides of the same coin as the Democrats and Republicans are in the United States. |
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Thomas Paine
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Looking ahead carefully We must really guard against a very likely outcome: The Banking establishment is already preparing to topple Obama as they did Carter with 20% interest rates in two years. (That they can already justify today if they want to). This sounds good on the surface, however,what they will set in place is a more fascist regime than we've ever seen. One that would make Bush look like JFK. They will set up a false Republican win where the public thinks we are going back to small government (with an emphasis on Nation Defense of course). But watch who they put in at VP (probably Rudy Guliani). We must get people like Ron Paul in the forefront, so the future is not controlled by the banking cartel. |
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Bonnie
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A Ron Paul Whitehouse would be nice, but... What we really need is 218 Ron Paul's in the House of Representatives. While this alone would not reverse the damage that has been done to the Republic, it would stop the NWO dead in its tracks by pulling the purse strings closed. With 218 Ron Paul's in the House, another 51 in the Senate, and one in the Whitehouse we could begin to take the country back. We could also do it with 290 Ron Paul's in the House and 67 in the Senate, and to perdition with whoever is at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Dump the 17th Amendment and take back this nation one Congressional district at a time. |
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kim
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Will the U.S. Learn from Japan.. No matter what happens I never forget that G-d said in His Word, that all governments are ran by the god of this world, that what was, will be because there is nothing new under the sun. Like in the days of Noah were,so shall it be in the last days..I wonder sometime if anyone even asks themselves what the days of Noah were like..Even G-d repented that He even made men they were so evil. I used to ask, Where is the Church? Now I know they have forgotten their G-d, or joined up with the evil government. some don't want to loose their 501, tax break, but G-d said whereever the money comes from we are a slave to. G-d calls in Apostasy..If the church was not fallen, and all stood up for HIS WORD, and people would humble themselves and repent and turn back ot G-d, which I never hear HIS NAME and now can't even be mentioned in the White house to say nothing of schools or anyplace else..If we the people would STAND, and fight the good fight things would be different but they follow the money rather than stand against the evil..IN the end if they don't wake up they will be waving good-bye to our great Republic. |
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aaron
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Too late...... "Voters here must be made aware of the consequences of more government programs so that they don’t follow Japan’s lead by applying more poison when an already-applied dose has made the nation sicker." Didn't we just do that a year ago? |
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“Imagine a team of doctors who think more poison is the solution to poisoning.” That’s the attention-getting opening sentence leading off an invitation to attend a conference exploring the disaster known as the Obama administration. Good analogy! The team of experts currently running this nation has been administering its own type of poison to combat our nation’s economic downturn. Predictably, the recession isn’t ending. Instead, the nation wallows in a self-imposed and deepening quagmire.
Japan’s defeated leaders insist they tried everything. And they really did except for the one solution needed above all: get the government out of the way and let the people solve the problem. Japan’s central bank lowered interest rates, increased the money supply, and issued loans to businesses. The government created massive public works programs. There were bailouts for companies and banks, and some were nationalized. And on top of all of this, stimulus packages shoveled money at the people. But after 17 years of all of this governmental action, Japan’s long stagnation continues.
