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Democrats Archive

Friday

8

May 2009

0

COMMENTS

The Low Hanging Fruit

Written by , Posted in Big Government, Waste & Government Reform

The great, fiscally responsible Barack Obama has finished scouring the $3.4 trillion budget line-by-line in search of waste, fraud and abuse. He announced completion of this task to the typical pomp and circumstance, acting the glorious hero returning from war despite finding a meager $17 billion worth of cuts. That’s 0.5% of the total budget, and just 4.25% of the increases Obama is already responsible for in the federal budget.

Far from a line-by-line, intensive search for failing government programs, this was nothing more than Obama sauntering up and plucking some low hanging fruit. Even then, the free spending democrats in Congress and their special interest supporters are already challenging the cuts.

A real return to fiscal sanity will require more than just symbolic cuts with one hand while the other is busy handing out record levels of new spending.  Real cuts will mean standing up to the special interests groups, yet Obama has only demonstrated an ability to pander to them.  I hold out no hope that Obama will stop playing pretend time with our budget and get down to real business.

Tuesday

3

February 2009

0

COMMENTS

What’s Good For Thee…

Written by , Posted in Taxes

Representative John Carter proposes to equalize the law for elected officials and the rest of us.  That’s right, what’s good for the tax-cheating liberal goose should be good for the gander.  Or something.

H.R. 735: Rangel Rule Act of 2009

‘Any individual who is a citizen of the United States and who writes ‘Rangel Rule’ on the top of the first page of the return of tax imposed by chapter 1 for any taxable year shall be exempt from any requirement to pay interest, and from any penalty, addition to tax, or additional amount, with respect to such return.’.

Tuesday

3

February 2009

0

COMMENTS

Saturday

31

January 2009

1

COMMENTS

Obama's Patriotism Deficient Cabinet

Written by , Posted in Taxes, Waste & Government Reform

“It’s time to be patriotic, time to jump in, time to be part of the deal, time to help get America out of the rut [by paying more taxes]”
– Vice President Joe Biden

Obama Appointments:

Tim Geithner – Secretary of the Treasury – owed $34,000 in back taxes.
Tom Daschle – Secretary of Health and Human Services – owed $128,203 in back taxes.

More to come?  How many other Obama nominees will be found out to lack patriotism, by Joe Biden’s standards?

Tuesday

9

December 2008

0

COMMENTS

Shocker: Gov. Blagojevich(D) Arrested

Written by , Posted in Waste & Government Reform

No one familiar with Chicago politics will be surprised:

Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested at his North Side home Tuesday morning. His chief of staff John Harris was taken into federal custody as well.

The criminal complaint by the FBI agents said the two had been arrested on federal corruption charges. Each were arrested on two charges of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and solicitation of bribery.

Blagojevich and Harris will have an initial appearance in U.S. District Court Tuesday.

The arrest is the latest step in a three-year probe of “pay-to-play politics” in the governor’s administration. A statement by U.S. attorney Patrick Fitzgerald said Blagojevich and Harris “allegedly conspired to sell U.S. Senate appointment, engaged in pay-to-play schemes and threatened to withhold state assistance to Tribune Company for Wrigley Field to induce purge of newspaper editorial writers.”

Federal authorities were permitted by a judge to record the governor secretly before the November election after raising concerns that a replacement for President-elect Barack Obama would be tainted.

Fitzgerald’s office said the 76-page FBI affidavit alleges that Blagojevich was taped conspiring to sell or trade Obama’s vacated U.S. Senate seat for financial and other personal benefits for himself and his wife.

According to the affidavit, Blagojevich floated the idea of “a substantial salary for himself at a either a nonprofit foundation or an organization affiliated with labor unions;” a corporate board seat for his wife worth as much as $150,000 a year; promises of campaign funds, including cash up front; and a Cabinet post or ambassadorship for himself.

Blagojevich also tried to get critical columnists fired from the Chicago Tribune.

In addition, the charges allege that Blagojevich tried to influence the composition of The Chicago Tribune editorial board in exchange for state aid to the Tribune Company, which owns the newspaper.

Fitzgerald said Blagojevich was recorded in wiretaps as saying, “Fire all those bleeping people, get them the bleep out of there and get us some support.”

Sadly, the larger lesson from this aspect of the story will likely be ignored.  Government involvement in business is dangerous and prone to corruption.  When a political body supplies funds, it inevitably attaches strings.  This is true whether it’s the federal government giving money to the states, or government giving money to business.   It becomes particularly problematic in the latter case, as government has the force of law behind it to create a further uneven playing field.  Politicians seem incapable of restraining themselves from exploiting this kind of arrangement.

But many of the same people in the media who will likely, and rightfully, condemn this attack on their freedom to criticize government without fear or coercive reprisals are, at this very moment, cheerleading the democrats’ efforts to gain controlling stakes in automotive and other industries.  Does anyone really think Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Barney Frank will be any better at keeping their grubby hands of private enterprise than Gov. Blagojevich?

Tuesday

9

December 2008

0

COMMENTS

Bush: The Democrat's Useful Idiot

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Labor Unions, Liberty & Limited Government

Having already decimated the free market ideology with his reckless acceptance of liberal economics, President Bush is set to deliver another blow to rational, limited government by preparing to compromise on a $15 billion bailout for the Big Three automakers.

Democrats have been frantic to get this passed while Bush is still in office. One has to wonder just why that is when Obama has already pledged support for a bailout. The democrats desperately want Bush involved because they need political cover for what is essentially a handout to the UAW. The public is against a bailout, so Democrats need a useful idiot to take the blame with them. Bush, it seems, is their man. Rather than force the democrats to wait only a month and a half until they control all branches of government, and thus would have take full political blame, Bush has once again muddied the political waters and stolen a winning issue from republicans.

Wednesday

26

November 2008

1

COMMENTS

Darfur Our Next Intervention?

Written by , Posted in Foreign Affairs & Policy

Dr. Susan Rice is now said to be the leading contender for Ambassador to the U.N. in the Obama administration. The pick would be telling in terms of the foreign policy Obama plans to pursue, and how it doesn’t square with his campaign rhetoric. In 2006 Rice argued for military action, unilateral if necessary, in Darfur:

History demonstrates that there is one language Khartoum understands: the credible threat or use of force. After Sept. 11, 2001, when President Bush issued a warning to states that harbor terrorists, Sudan — recalling the 1998 U.S. airstrike on Khartoum — suddenly began cooperating on counterterrorism. It’s time to get tough with Sudan again.

After swift diplomatic consultations, the United States should press for a U.N. resolution that issues Sudan an ultimatum: accept unconditional deployment of the U.N. force within one week or face military consequences. The resolution would authorize enforcement by U.N. member states, collectively or individually. International military pressure would continue until Sudan relented.

The United States, preferably with NATO involvement and African political support, would strike Sudanese airfields, aircraft and other military assets. It could blockade Port Sudan, through which Sudan’s oil exports flow. Then U.N. troops would deploy — by force, if necessary, with U.S. and NATO backing.

If the United States fails to gain U.N. support, we should act without it. Impossible? No, the United States acted without U.N. blessing in 1999 in Kosovo to confront a lesser humanitarian crisis (perhaps 10,000 killed) and a more formidable adversary. Under NATO auspices, it bombed Serbian targets until Slobodan Milosevic acquiesced. Not a single American died in combat. Many nations protested that the United States violated international law, but the United Nations subsequently deployed a mission to administer Kosovo and effectively blessed NATO military action retroactively.

Many on the left may be surprised at these positions. Likely, they took Democratic leaders at their word when they explained their reasons for attacking Bush on Iraq. Those of us more familiar with political history – such as Clinton’s unilateral sidestepping of the U.N. in Kosovo – and the intellectual currents driving policy debates, saw it for what it was: an argument of convenience.

Left-wing interventionists are actually more common than right-wing ones. Before the neoconservatives had won the day in establishing Republican policy, there was Secretary Madeliene Albright, who asked Colin Powell, “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?” The ironic difference between the left and right interventionists is this: on the left they only want to use force when U.S. interests are non-existent. Boondoggle that Iraq was in many ways, at least there was a debatable, though certainly plausible, claim of serving U.S. national interests in deposing Saddam. One can’t even make a pretense of serving U.S. interests in Darfur.

When the French foreign minister said, “We cannot accept either a politically unipolar world, nor a culturally uniform world, nor the unilateralism of a single hyper-power,” he wasn’t talking about Bush. The statement was made in 2000 and referred to the administration of Bill Clinton. With Clintonites now littered throughout Obama’s emerging administration, yet another reversal looks to be in order, this time on the usefulness of unilateralism and interventionism.

Tuesday

21

October 2008

0

COMMENTS

Spend And Spend (And Tax!)

Written by , Posted in Taxes

Barney Frank, still beholden to the failed policies of Keynesian economics, wants government to spend away!

Never mind the last 8 years we’ve spent criticizing Bush’s deficit spending (which only an idiot could have taken for anything more than an argument of convenience), it’s time to spend, spend, spend! Oh, and we’ll throw on some more burdensome taxes on “the rich” once we’ve got you all sufficiently distracted. As a stuffy conservative who doesn’t like change, it’s almost comforting to see that Democrats haven’t changed a lick, and are still singing the same tired old tune. Unfortunate for my wallet, though.

Hat tip: Say Anything Blog

Thursday

16

October 2008

0

COMMENTS

Thanks For Electing Me, You Racists!

Written by , Posted in Election Time, Identity Politics

Jack Murtha continues the if-you-don’t-vote-for-Obama-you’re-a-racist parade, going so far as to insult his own constituency:

Mr. Murtha said it has taken time for the state’s voters embrace a black presidential candidate.

“There’s no question Western Pennsylvania is a racist area,” said Mr. Murtha, whose district stretches from Johnstown to Washington County. “The older population is more hesitant.”

Bitter clingers, no doubt.

Wednesday

24

September 2008

5

COMMENTS

What Really Happened In The Financial Market

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government, Waste & Government Reform

The False Explanation

You’re going to hear a lot of stories in the coming days, and probably have heard a few already. Following the high profile collapse of the giants in the financial sector, there are going to be a number of groups jumping to advance their agenda by telling you falsehoods about who is to blame. Socialists, statists, anti-capitalists and all manner of other market and freedom haters are already jumping to lay blame at the feet of capitalism. Yet many of these people have themselves played a part in this mess. The Obama campaign is already out to make “deregulation” a dirty word, and has released an ad making two false claims: first, that deregulation had anything to do with the financial crises and, second, that allowing competition in health care would create a similar situation. Even the New York Times, criticizing the ad for its falsehoods, acknowledged that “[deregulatory changes] were viewed by many as having benefited consumers by encouraging competition, and those changes have not been linked to the current crisis.” But in order to advance the socialist regulatory agenda, it is constantly necessary to demonize the free market.

The most hypocritical market-basher, by far, is long-time Democratic Party embarrassment Barney Frank. Frank has been making the rounds dispensing his distorted account of what has happened. For instance, he attributed AIG’s troubles to “lack of regulation,” and self-righteously declared, “the private market screwed itself up and they need the government to come help them unscrew it.” On the overall financial meltdown he says, “Some private-sector people made irresponsible decisions because there wasn’t adequate regulation.” Not quite. There was inadequate regulation, but of government, not the private-sector. It is government policy and government sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that are the drivers of this meltdown. And when it came to regulating their behavior, Barney Frank was a chief roadblock.

Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government.

In 2003 President Bush attempted to address the problem created by Fannie and Freddie’s insulation from market incentives. The President proposed an agency to oversee the quasi-governmental companies. Democrats, bought and paid for by F&F, were strongly opposed.

Granted, I would have preferred that President Bush had chosen market incentives over regulation by cutting Fannie and Freddie loose from government altogether. But, and this is a big but, if government is going to insist on socializing risk, it’s better that it also provide even a crude form of accountability (and crude is all the accountability government can muster compared to markets), to make up for it. Leaving F&F roaming free as part-private and part-governmental, with the dueling and often contradictory missions it implies, without either market or government forms of accountability, was the worst possible solution. It’s also the one Barney Frank demanded when he opposed Bush’s effort and declared that, “[Fannie and Freddie] are not facing any kind of financial crisis,” before also concluding, “The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.” And that is exactly what led us to this mess: the government’s reckless demands for “affordable housing.”

A Government Created Mess

In 1977 a Democratic Congress, working with a Democratic President, produced the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The CRA forced banks to make unsound loans to poor, uncreditworthy borrowers, all in the name of liberal fairness. Required to keep extensive records of their minority lending practices, banks became targets of racial shakedown artists. If they weren’t satisfied with a bank’s submission to their extortionist demands, they could have them denied the right to expand or merge with other banks.

In 1994 Clinton revamped the CRA and kicked off a new wave of reckless lending. This is where Freddie and Fannie jumped in to corner the market on bad loans, loans which wouldn’t have ever been made if rules requiring money down and sufficient sources of income hadn’t been thrown out the window in the name of racial equality.

Another contributing government factor was the loose monetary policy pursued by the Fed. By keeping interest rates too low, the Fed contributed to an influx of dollars into the market. When money is created faster than productivity warrants, it results in a misallocation of resources in certain assets, creating “booms.” Former vice president and economic advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas, Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr., blames the Fed for not properly weighing the costs of their inflation targeting methods:

In a vibrant market economy with technological innovation and ever new profit opportunities, the monetary policy that maintains price stability in consumer goods (or zero price inflation) requires substantial monetary stimulus. That stimulus will have a number of real consequences, including asset bubbles. These asset bubbles have real costs and involve misallocations of capital. For example, by the peak of the tech and telecom boom in March 2000, too much capital had been invested in high-tech companies and too little in “old economy firms.” Too much fiber optic cable and too few miles of railroad track were laid.

The Democrats’ Revolving Door

While government policy was meddling with the financial markets, government officials made themselves quite comfortable in the financial sector. Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government. Franklin Raines, currently Barack Obama’s financial advisor and former Clinton era budget director, spearheaded Fannie Mae into countless Enron-style accounting manipulations and scandals. Foreshadowing the left’s current strategy to peg their failures on advocates of free markets, Raines derided those who pointed out his companies risky and shady practices as “ideologues” trying to “undermine” Fannie Mae.

Jim Johnson, also a former Fannie CEO and a board member of Goldman Sachs, is a policy advisor who was chosen by Obama to lead his vice-presidential selection team. Johnson was forced to fall on his sword when it was revealed he and several other prominent democrats received special perk loans from Countrywide Financial’s CEO Angelo Mozilo. With no banking or financial experience whatsoever, Jamie Gorelick, former Deputy Attorney General under Clinton, was appointed Vice Chairman of Fannie Mae in 1997, and got fat off of Raines’ accounting scandals. Rahm Emanual, the 4th highest ranking democrat in the House, was similarly shuffled onto Freddie’s board after leaving the Clinton White House.

Meanwhile, their Democratic colleagues who remained in government were assured their part of the take. Chris Dodd, now Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, raked in the most from Freddie and Fannie, at $165,000. Perhaps these donations are what Dodd had in mind when, in July, he referred to Fannie and Freddie as “fundamentally sound and strong.” Number 2 on the graft list is Barack Obama, who took in over $125,000 in his short tenure in the Senate. The government’s pet mortgage lenders further feathered their nests by opening “partnership offices” in the district of key members of Congress, where they could funnel millions of dollars to their supporters. The bribes paid off. Compared to IndyMac, which didn’t offer democrats any protection money and was thrown to the wolves by Chuck Schumer, Fannie and Freddie are now looking at billions in taxpayer support.

It’s not hard to see why, when President Bush sought to counter Fannie and Freddie’s government created incentives for recklessness, he was fought by Democrats at every turn. According to the White House, 17 attempts at reform were blocked by democrats. Government’s inability, thanks to Democratic cronyism, to replace the market checks which it destroyed by demanding reckless behavior on the one hand, and subsidizing risk with an implied guarantee on the other, provided the perfect financial storm for disaster.

One would think it would be difficult for those on the left to so easily absolve themselves of any responsibility, while simultaneously blaming those who attempted to stop them from creating this disaster, but that is exactly what they’ve done. Phil Gramm, who sought to relax the Democratic created requirements that banks issue risky subprime loans, has been tagged a “deregulator,” which is, in their view, automatic proof of guilt. Barack Obama blames the problem, as he does everything, on “Bush-McCain,” even as he found room in his campaign for those actually responsible and belongs to a party which protected Fannie and Freddie from reform. In short, the left is trying to rewrite history even as it’s being made. The ink hasn’t yet dried on the reporting of their government sponsored mess, and already they are blaming those who believe in freedom and oppose their interventionist programs. They think the failures of government should justify yet more government. They are wrong and their lies shouldn’t be allowed to disguise this fact.