Day
of Reckoning
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
How did the
United States of America, the richest nation on earth, whose economy
represents 30 percent of the Global Economy, arrive at the precipice
of a financial panic and collapse?
The answer
lies in the abject failure of both America's financial elite and
the political elite of both parties – the same elites now working
together to determine how much of our wealth will be needed to bail
the nation out of the crisis of their own creation.
Big Government
is riding to the rescue – saddlebags full of our tax dollars – to
save us from the consequences of the stupidity and folly of Big
Government. New York and Washington, the twin cities responsible
for the crisis, are now being hailed by the media as the 7th Cavalry,
coming to rescue a beleaguered nation.
Had there
not been a steady and constant infusion of easy money and credit
into the U.S. economy by the Fed, for years on end, a housing bubble
of the magnitude of the one that has just exploded could never have
been created.
Had the
politicians of both parties not coerced and pressured banks, S&Ls,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to make all those sub-prime mortgages,
then to tie this rotten paper to good paper, convert it into securities
and sell to banks all over the world, there would have been no global
financial crisis.
Had they
seen this coming and acted sooner, the Federal Reserve and U.S.
Treasury would not today, like Henny Penny, be crying, "The sky
is falling!" and the end times are at hand, unless we give them
5 percent of our gross domestic product to buy up suspect securities
backed by sub-prime mortgages.
Consider
what the "Paulson Plan" of Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, against
which Sen. Richard Shelby and the House Republicans rebelled, entails.
Since
Americans save nothing and have to borrow from abroad to finance
our trade and budget deficits, wars and foreign aid, what the secretary
proposes is this: that Congress authorize the Treasury to spend
$700 billion to buy up the toxic paper on the books not only of
U.S. banks, but of foreign banks operating in the United States.
According to The Washington Times, the Treasury would also be authorized
to buy up securities backed by rotten auto loans, student loans
and credit card debts.
Thus America
would be borrowing from China, Japan and the Middle East to tidy
up the balance sheets of the banks of China, Japan and the Middle
East. And all the rotten paper will be offloaded onto U.S. taxpayers,
who hopefully will be able to recoup some of their losses, because
some of the paper will be good.
Why should
we do this? Because otherwise there will be a financial panic, followed
by a market collapse, wiping out pensions, 401Ks, portfolios and
defined benefit plans of Middle America, forcing millions into bankruptcy
and millions more to put off retirement and continue working until
they drop.
In a democracy,
it is said, you get the kind of government you deserve. But what
did the American people do to deserve this? What did they do to
deserve the quality of financial, corporate and political leadership
that marched them into this mess – and that today postures as their
rescuers?
Consider
what this mess has already cost taxpayers: $29 billion to buy the
rotten paper of Bear Stearns so J.P. Morgan would buy the investment
bank; $85 billion for 80 percent of AIG to nationalize it; $150
billion in a stimulus package to flood the nation with cash; perhaps
$300 billion to bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac; and now $700
billion to begin taking the toxic paper off the hands of America's
big banks.
And even
if this is passed, say Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, there
is no guarantee this will resolve the crisis. If the $700 billion
is not provided and the toxic paper is not pulled off the books
of the world's banks by U.S. taxpayers, however, we face an almost
certain collapse, surging bankruptcies, rising unemployment, a shrinkage
of GDP and a recession, if not worse.
Yet,
the fellows who tell us we face a financial mushroom cloud over
every American city if we do not act at once to provide the $700
billion did not see this coming and can make no guarantee that this
will succeed and end the crisis.
Nevertheless,
it must be done, and done now, as collapse is imminent.
Looking
at all the money being ladled out by the U.S. government to prevent
a collapse, and the diminished revenue coming in, it is hard to
see how America avoids future deficits that reach $1 trillion a
year. These will imperil both the dollar itself and the ability
of the United States, which saves nothing, to borrow from the rest
of the world. The downsizing of America is at hand.
Yes, indeed,
we have arrived at the Day of Reckoning for Uncle Sam.
September
27, 2008
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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