| Obama's New Course: More of the Same | | Print | |
| Written by Charles Scaliger | ||||||||||||
| Thursday, 08 January 2009 11:18 | ||||||||||||
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The very latest recipient of federal government largesse is beleaguered Chrysler Corporation, a company that will likely not survive the first quarter of 2009, let alone the next calendar year, without declaring bankruptcy. Yet the federal government saw fit to bestow $4 billion on Chrysler, probably to bail out prominent shareholders before the inevitable bankruptcy. Meanwhile, the federal government continues to prosecute the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a myriad other military projects overseas, as well as preside over a vast array of welfare programs and subsidies. Despite tens of trillions of dollars of debt and unfunded financial obligations, the federal government continues to borrow and spend as though money grows on trees — which, in the presto-chango economics of fiat (unbacked) paper money, it does. Enter Barack Obama, a fresh face, saddled with endless wars, a federal government drowning in debt, and a host of other intractable problems brought about by decades of federal corruption and abuse. Throughout his campaign, Obama, exuding competence and confidence, promised change to a war- and recession-weary American public.
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William Murray
said:
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The waking to reality Finally someone has the guts to tell it like it is. This country is on the verge of a financial collapse and Obama is the first one to address it. We all must support him because he is not only sincere but has the people and our nation's interest at heart at well. |
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Orwell
said:
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... I have little hope that the new administration will come to the rescue of America. Wall Street greed and the SEC looking the other way for political reasons has doomed the United States to a fate that the Russian Federation is now experiencing. Capitalism does not work. Let us all enjoy the coming hard times and remember who the crimals were. |
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Dawn
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... Money is the root of all evil. It is influencing decisions in education, government, health care, and about every other area of American life. What happened to a doctor working for a chicken dinner, a politician going to Washington to make America a better place, and a teacher making life better for her students because she loves kids? It always costs more for government programs than what it would cost citizens to do themselves. "What can we do for our Country?" I wonder if so many bailouts would have been needed if that question had been asked-Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country. We need to pray for wisdom for our leaders, and for God's mercy toward our nation. |
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President Bush leaves office amidst the greatest economic calamity in several generations, perhaps ever. The federal budget deficit is poised to triple last year's record $400 billion, rising to a projected $1.2 trillion, perhaps far more. Trillions too have been added to the national debt by a desperate Bush administration and craven Congress, most to bail out America's corporate and financial oligarchs.
