On the good ship USA, George W. Bush has abandoned the bridge and is
in the main cabin working deals for his…business associates. What’s
he’s doing exactly you can read about elsewhere. Let it be enough to
say that whatever he’s doing, he’s doing for others (bless his Texan
heart) and by others I don’t mean you and me. It is a time honored
tradition, all presidents do it as they leave office – the worst was
Carter. It ensures that favors are repaid, that their personal future
is underwritten - who knows the why? It just is. Clinton earned $110
million since leaving office; that shows you how important these last
minute deals are. Oops, reportedly are.
I’m bringing this up to show that while GWB is busy in his Nero-esque
fiddling, the wheel house is empty while our economic engine room
burns. He’s left the fighting of the fire to a reputed economic
arsonist and a group of amateur economists who have no idea what
they’re doing. I refer to all economists as amateur as they are but
academic soothsayers. Relics of the 1970s who have survived by
confusing employers into thinking they are an essential part of
economic planning. They are, in reality, as incapable of predicting
the future as a stopped clock; which, admittedly, is right twice a day
which explains their occasional success.
Oh, they know what they’re doing alright, they just can’t explain why.
Despite their abounding ignorance, this group of merry men frequently
demonstrates their insecurity through the sheer contempt they have for
the American people; the very people who’s money they are plundering
in their grand experiment.
Don’t believe me?
How then can you explain the increase in bailout money from the $700
billion that we told congress not to give out (and they did anyway) to
$8.5 trillion as reported by Bloomberg News.*
How indeed? When Bloomberg News asked for information as to the
beneficiaries of this opulent and generous granting of public funds
they were politely told to ‘f**k-off’ and have had to resort to suing
the Fed under the auspices of the Freedom of Information Act to find
out more.
The loud hissing sound is Paulson hosing the economic Hindenburg with
the fire hose of borrowed public funds. Public money spent without
authority; without seeking permission; without personal consequence or
recourse. Much of which is being borrowed from the Chinese, good
friends of Paulson when he worked on Wall Street. He had 70 trips
there in his career. Am I the only one who sees a screaming neon sign
of conflict of interests here? Anyone?
Will all of this expenditure work? Nobody knows. An economic meltdown
like this only happened once before, during the great Depression. At
that time the Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon advised letting the
market settle of its own and in doing so to “purge the rottenness out
of the system.” President Hoover rejected this advice and started
numerous programs which didn’t work. It took a world war to get the
economic engine started again.
So what’s different now? This time the Fed is hyper-aggressively
injecting more money into the system that we’ve got – borrowing cash
based on the perceived strength of the U.S. system. They're sailing us
into Terra incognita - uncharted territory. Early results show that we
may well be peeing onto a gasoline fire; the results are not good. In
fact, they’re dreadful; nothing is happening. Except of course that
the Wall Street bankers got their gambled money back and Americans
will end up with near un-repayable national debt.
Paulson’s confident demeanor at press conferences laminates a very
real fear that the economy may not recover as a result of Fed action.
He has no idea whether it will work or not. He does know however that
he’s got an unlimited budget and until January 20th has the power to
do whatever he wants before he may have to retire and live off his
$700 million in personal wealth. Poor fellow. Soooo in touch with the
common man.
In the mean time, fellow countrymen, we have been bent over a barrel
without so much as a kiss. Our future, the future of our children is
being squandered by an absent lame duck president and his appointees
who have nothing to loose by spending our money. If it doesn’t work,
Paulson will stand there, bank notes bulging from his and his banker
buddies pockets, hands upturned, with a look of feigned anxiety on
their faces as they plead to a broke country that “they tried.”
They'll survive.
The question is. Will we?
*Fed
Risks ‘Spitting in the Wind’ With New Aid Pledges
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aqVbqmFMfB9k