Hello all this about says it all about our supposed "Bail OUT MONEY" !
Michelle Malkin -
Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson finally confirmed what lonely bailout opponents
tried to tell the American public all along: The man doesn't know what
he's doing.
Paulson
held a bazooka to taxpayers' heads. He groveled on his knees in front
of Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He lured leaders from both
political parties into linking arms in a panicked Chicken Little line
dance for the beleaguered mortgage industry. Paulson demanded an
unprecedented $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program for the good
of the country. For the health of the housing market. For the survival
of the economy. No time for deliberation. No time to review the
failures of such interventionist approaches around the world. Now, now,
now!
And now? The pulled-out-of-the-posterior "$700 billion" price tag has
ballooned into the trillions. The "mortgage industry rescue" has
expanded to banks, insurance companies, automakers, credit card
companies and possibly the entire national volume of consumer lending.
Oh, and that vaunted "TARP" component, Paulson admitted this week, is
nothing but a four-letter word that rhymes with TRAP.
In September, Paulson offered his lofty pledge: "The ultimate taxpayer
protection will be the stability this troubled asset relief program
provides to our financial system, even as it will involve a significant
investment of taxpayer dollars. I am convinced that this bold approach
will cost American families far less than the alternative -- a
continuing series of financial institution failures and frozen credit
markets unable to fund economic expansion."
Two months later, Paulson's conviction melted faster than microwaved
butter. "Our assessment at this time is that this is not the most
effective way to use TARP funds," he sheepishly told the nation
Wednesday.
Hey, who died and put Emily "Never Mind" Litella in charge of the economy?
Paulson explained at his non-mea culpa press conference that he knew
when the bailout was signed that it wasn't going to work as sold: "It
was clear to me by the time the bill was signed on October 3 that we
needed to act quickly and forcefully, and that purchasing troubled
assets -- our initial focus -- would take time to implement and would
not be sufficient given the severity of the problem."
Now he tells us? Would have been nice if he had made this clear --
quickly, forcefully and publicly -- to the Beltway stooges who were
pulling the TARP over our eyes. So much for Paulson's earnest
transparency commitments on the Hill.
Members of Congress who let themselves be bullied into switching their
votes on the bailout should be experiencing the biggest case of buyers'
remorse in U.S. history. They fell for what Nobel Prize-winning
economist F.A. Hayek called "the fatal conceit" -- the disastrous idea
that a federal bureaucrat has the knowledge to do a better job than the
private market in organizing and directing an economy. They gave
unchecked power to a single government official without a clue.
Wielding his enormous authority, Paulson is desperately throwing our
money at banks in a futile attempt to convince them to lend. Instead,
those banks are either hoarding the cash or acquiring more assets. In
other words: Paulson is helping the banks that were "too big to fail"
grow even bigger with taxpayer backing. Swell.
The White House says: "We'll just trust our treasury secretary to
implement the program." President Bush insists "government's role will
be limited and temporary." Meanwhile, Democratic Rep. Barney Frank is
shrugging off the lack of bailout disclosure by both the Federal
Reserve and Treasury. But as I reminded readers before this latest
bait-and-switch admission, Hank Paulson is not to be trusted. I repeat:
This is the man who proclaimed the subprime crisis "largely contained"
in April 2007; "near the bottom" in May 2007; and "largely contained"
again in August 2007. This is the man who pledged that he had "no
interest in bailing out lenders or property speculators" in October
2007 and couldn't "think of any situation where the backdrop of the
global economy was as healthy as it is today."
This is the man who patted himself on the back for refusing to "put
taxpayer money on the line" to rescue Lehman Brothers on Sept. 15 --
and then turned around the next day and engineered the $85 billion
taxpayer-funded bailout of AIG. This is the man who vowed he had "no
plans to insert money" into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- and then
turned around and committed $200 billion in capital and credit lines to
those corrupt, bloated, crumbling institutions.
This is the man who declared that "the worst is likely to be behind us" in May 2008.
Emperor Paulson's bipartisan courtiers in Congress berated anyone who
dared challenge his wisdom. Minority Leader John Boehner sniffed: "This
is no time for ideological purity." Well, ideological pollution begat
this mess. It's time for a fiscal-conservative counterinsurgency to
disrobe and disarm the charlatans before they do more harm.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Michelle Malkin (malkinblog@gmail.com) is author of "Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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