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Lipstick on a Bailout
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
This time last
week, the biggest bailout in the history of the world seemed to
be a fait accompli. Last weekend, the Fed Chairman and the Secretary
of the Treasury had harsh words of doom and gloom for Congressional
leaders, with the rest of the administration parroting along, and
by last Monday it seemed both parties were about to fall in line
and vote our Republic away by socializing the banking industry through
this bailout.
Foolish business
behavior was about to be rewarded, and propped up a little longer,
the bubble blown a little bigger, and our coming Depression made
that much greater, but then something happened on the way to the
House floor.
Citizens made
their voices heard.
The real story
behind the story in Congress this week was the thousands of calls
and emails sent to Representatives, clogging up inboxes and even
slowing down the House internet system. Slowly, like the Titanic
turning around, sentiments on the Hill shifted, and we heard Congressmen
capitulating and changing their tune a little, desperately trying
to find ways to salvage the bailout without completely enraging
their constituencies.
Now
we hear about taxpayer protections, about golden parachutes, and
about other nuances that hardly cover up the fact that we would
be creating more money out of thin air and further devaluing the
dollar! The problem is not HOW the government is spending this money;
its the fact that the government is spending this money. We
dont have it. We are already nearly $10 trillion in debt,
not including unfunded liabilities. We already spend about $1 trillion
a year we dont have on our overseas empire. Now nearly $1
trillion more is somehow supposed to magically appear and solve
all our problems! No creating more money might delay the
inevitable for some well-connected banks on Wall Street, but in
a few weeks we will find ourselves right back in this same position,
but much poorer.
The unfortunate
thing is that weve already spent at least $700 billion on
other bailouts that did not solve the problem. And while all this
negotiation was taking place, the auto industry was quietly bailed
out, with no controversy, no discussion, to the tune of $25 billion.
Inevitably,
it appears Congress will call their constituents bluff and
the bailout will pass, because that is the habit Wall Street and
Washington have fallen into. People are right to be concerned about
our financial future. Ive been talking for 30 some years about
reasons we need to be concerned and change our ways. We find ourselves
now in a position of no good options, and no silver bullets. But
the worst thing we can do is to compound our problems by intensifying
the mistakes of the past. We do have tough economic times ahead,
no doubt, no matter what we do, even if we do nothing. The question,
is will we have the courage to take our medicine now and get it
over with, or will we prolong the misery for many years to come?
Im less and less optimistic about the answer to that question.
See
the Ron Paul File
October
2, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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