Joseph A. Palermo

Joseph A. Palermo

Posted: September 30, 2008 12:08 AM

Defeating the Bailout Looks Like Another Republican Ploy

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The Hill reported today: "Unlike the three-hour vote on the 2003 Medicare drug bill, House Republican leaders did not put much pressure on their rank-and-file members to back the rescue package." John Boehner, Roy Blunt and other "leaders" of the House Republicans thought they could strike a public pose as if they really cared about the credit seizure that looms over the country while secretly hoping to pin the bill's passage on Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer, (and by association, Barack Obama). Republican House members would then be free to return to their home districts and run against the "Democrat" bailout. They wanted Speaker Pelosi to pass the bill without much Republican cover so they could tell their constituents that the Democrats were just "picking the taxpayers' pockets again." In 2003, when the House Republicans were in the majority and wanted to pass a sweetheart deal for their corporate benefactors in the pharmaceutical industry they had no problem "whipping" up enough votes. Just ask Billy Tauzin and Tom DeLay. But when the economy is teetering on the verge of a severe credit crisis they refuse to put in the extra effort. They wanted the bailout to pass without many Republican votes so they could blame the majority and milk it in the remaining weeks until the election.

The No Child Left Behind and the Patriot Acts were "bi-partisan"; the Medicare prescription drug bill that forbids the federal government from volume buying pharmaceuticals was "bi-partisan"; the Authorization to Use Force in Iraq was "bi-partisan." The deregulatory fervor that included the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999, which knocked out a pillar of the New Deal regulatory banking reforms, was also "bi-partisan."

And now we're being told that the $700 billion Wall Street bailout bill is a really great thing, in part, because it is "bi-partisan."

Whenever you hear the word "bi-partisan," even during the waning hours of the Bush years, it usually means something very bad is about to happen.

In principle, I do not support this bailout bill. I agree with the critical flaws in the bill that Dennis Kucinich articulated this morning on Amy Goodman's show, Democracy Now! I don't believe in a government welfare program for Wall Street swindlers who had the audacity to pump up the paper value of one of their hidden, unregulated derivatives, "credit default swaps," from $631 billion in 2001 to $62 trillion in 2008! I think some people should be indicted; some people should go to jail.

These crooks have the economy in a vise so we must give them what they want because if we don't it's going to bring "this sucker down" (to paraphrase President George W. Bush). If the government does not ease jittery stock markets by pumping fresh cash into the system and taking on Wall Street's toxic derivative sludge the ensuing credit seizure could slam the economy into a years-long depression. It would then take billions and billions of dollars to try to prime the pump. The bailout bill was a desperate attempt to keep a recession from becoming a depression.

The gap between the super rich and everybody else has grown for decades, and the ruling elites are geniuses at passing the costs of their reckless speculation onto the backs of working people. All of a sudden I hear Bush Administration mouthpieces such as the billionaire Henry Paulson, who in the past have told us that we are all on our own and we shouldn't rely on government for anything, speak about "our" financial markets as if working people have been the ones swapping "collateralized debt obligations" and "hybrid debt instruments." We now hear from the dead duck Bush regime: "All for One and One for All!" The whole damn mess would be nothing but a bad joke if the situation were not so dire. There is going to be real suffering soon among our society's most vulnerable people. Whatever Congress decides to do or not do the economy is already tanking and hurting working people across the country. I would rather see the leaders of this nation stabilize the markets at least until the Obama Administration can take over and begin the long arduous process of cleaning up after the worst president in American history. It is my hope we can seize the opportunity this crisis presents, hold President Obama's feet to the fire, and construct a new social compact in this country, a New New Deal.

The Hill reported today: "Unlike the three-hour vote on the 2003 Medicare drug bill, House Republican leaders did not put much pressure on their rank-and-file members to back the rescue package." Joh...
The Hill reported today: "Unlike the three-hour vote on the 2003 Medicare drug bill, House Republican leaders did not put much pressure on their rank-and-file members to back the rescue package." Joh...
 
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This article is absolutely on target.
The Republicans are a P.O.C.S. on America (Political Organized Crime Sybdicate), R-POCS..
Has anyone else considered that this crisis may be a last chance for GW Bush and the R-POCS to "repay" thier big monied, banking and financial sector friends for generous past financial support to R-POCS.
$700 billion as relief from thier own stupidity.
On top of that they will be consolidating the banking and financial services sectors into four "trillion dollar" mega-corporations without any government interference. In fact isn't it convenient the FDIC has actually been pushing the "failed" corporations to: Bank of America; CitiGroup; JP Morgan-Chase; and Wells-Fargo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 AM on 09/30/2008
- ohioan73 I'm a Fan of ohioan73 24 fans permalink

The Republicans screwed themselves when they decided to blame a speech that hurt their feelings on the reason they voted no. Its been a very entertaining news day because of that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 AM on 09/30/2008
- Claude203 I'm a Fan of Claude203 78 fans permalink
photo

Best quotes in a great article:

"Whenever you hear the word "bi-partisan," even during the waning hours of the Bush years, it usually means something very bad is about to happen."

"I don't believe in a government welfare program for Wall Street swindlers who had the audacity to pump up the paper value of one of their hidden, unregulated derivatives, "credit default swaps," from $631 billion in 2001 to $62 trillion in 2008!"

This is exactly what I've been wanting to hear. Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 AM on 09/30/2008

Excellent article

"I would rather see the leaders of this nation stabilize the markets at least until the Obama Administration can take over and begin the long arduous process of cleaning up after the worst president in American history."

This is what I would like to see too. Stop this bailout now. We should have a Democratic (or bipartisan) bill that protects the working people and small businesses and any other businesses that have plaid it straight. There are other means to start the cleanup process- a bill that would appeal to the Republican dissenters at least in the ways that would not just continue the unregulated free for all would satisfy almost everyone who really counts in this debacle and would pass on both sides of the Congress.

Put some brakes on the free fall from the bottom up and then do the rest once Obama is in office. There is no way this should cost 700 bil or anything close to that. There is no way we should be bailing out any of the criminals who caused this. That is what the people of this country want- Demo and Repub.

Despite the histrionics, his bailout failed on its merits and it never should have been voted on. Now we can work on a new bill and watch how the economy does NOT collapse.

It would also give time to the FBI and other investigations to do their jobs. This is what the Bush people wanted to avoid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 AM on 09/30/2008

I have to agree on the failed votes- I think that the Republicans expected more Democrats to vote yes. The excuse coming out right after the vote about Pelosi's speech hold no weight. There was not one Republican that would say that was the reason. I think Beynor and co tried to pull a fast one and got caught. I think that Pelosi and democrats were thinking just that. I do think it will not help Republicans in the long run as investors watch their money disappear before the plan is finalized and know it was their fault. More blue votes?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 AM on 09/30/2008
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