If you're an average American, you're either 1) too busy with work, school, and family, or 2) too distracted by American Idol and World of Warcraft to find out what's going on in the world that affects you. This blog is designed to take ten minutes of your time every day so you can learn what's going on right under your nose, and become a little less ignorant than the day before.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Michelle Malkin - "Hank Paulson, Naked Emperor "

"Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson finally confirmed what lonely bailout opponents tried to tell the American public all along: The man doesn't know what the hell 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...

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."

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