SHUT UP SHUT UP SHUT UP! I am so tired of these liberal references:
- eight years of failed policies
- the failed Bush years
- eight years of Bush economics
- get us out of this mess that Bush created
Our economic woes have NOTHING to do with Bush. The massive spending at the END of his term was based on the pack of lies our “best financial minds” sold to Bush and the Democratic-led Congress. We were in the midst of a post 9-11 economic recovery and were at nearly full employment two years ago. Give me the Bush economy ANY DAY over Obamanomics.

President Obama more than once took shots at the Bush administration by mentioning the mess that he has inherited. This is directly in line with the campaign mantra of “eight failed years of Bush policies” that half of America bought into. But when you look at the facts you learn that Obama is on the team that helped create the problem we are facing. This has been well documented (and equally ignored by Democrats and their pet press cronies). Despite 9/11, Bush II enjoyed a strong economy for six years. What changed? 1) Democratic control of Congress, and 2) the much anticipated burst of the housing bubble. Republicans don’t entirely own this process, in fact, Democrats own the vast majority of the responsibility. But that’s not what the President said in his first press conference this week. (for some perspective on the first presser, read this and/or this.)
“As I said, the one concern I’ve got on the stimulus package, in terms of the debate and listening to some of what’s been said in Congress is that there seems to be a set of folks who — I don’t doubt their sincerity — who just believe that we should do nothing.”
As Ed Morrissey said yesterday, Republicans in both the House and Senate have offered at least two alternative stimulus packages. None of them demanded that Obama “do nothing”. In fact, it was the Congressional Budget Office and not Republicans that suggested that doing nothing might have a better effect than the Obama/Pelosi/Reid stimulus bill.”
Nancy Pelosi, Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, among others, are in complete denial of how this crisis was created. And Team Obama campaigned on the “eight years of failed Bush policies” slogan that is frankly a bald-faced lie. In fact, according to Barron’s, “Contrary to a view popularized during the 2008 presidential election season, the current economic crisis was not the result of deregulation. The Bush administration made many mistakes, but deregulation was not one of them. Not only was there no major deregulation passed during the past eight years, but the Bush administration and a Republican Congress approved the most sweeping financial-market regulation in decades.”
Let me repeat that. “The Bush administration and a Republican Congress approved the most sweeping financial-market regulation in decades.” Even Liberal financial genius George Soros has opined on the cause of the crisis.
Consider how the crisis has unfolded over the past eighteen months. The proximate cause is to be found in the housing bubble or more exactly in the excesses of the sub-prime mortgage market. The longer a double-digit rise in house prices lasted, the more lax the lending practices became. In the end, people could borrow 100 percent of inflated house prices with no money down. Insiders referred to sub-prime loans as ninja loans—no income, no job, no questions asked.
Our economic situation was not created by “eight years of failed Bush policies.” It was not created by big oil or Dick Cheney. It was born in1977 under Jimmy Carter in the form of the CRC; it was strengthened in1995-1999 by Bill Clinton and Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin. Rubin “brokered a deal between the administration and Congress that allowed banking deregulation to move forward. Shortly after the compromise was reached, Rubin took a top position at Citigroup, which went on to embark upon mergers that would have been rendered illegal under Glass-Steagall. As the New York Times put it, Rubin would be leading “what has become the first true American financial conglomerate since the Depression”—a conglomerate that could exist only because of legislation he had just shepherded through Congress.” (source)
Our liberal friends are saying “But Bush was a de-regulator! It was the deregulation that did it man!” Wrong. GWB started raising red flags in 2001, and disclosed at a Congressional hearing in 2003 that “a new agency would have been created within the Treasury Department to assume supervision of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored companies that are the two largest players in the mortgage lending industry.” What was the Democratic response to this suggestion? ”These two entities — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — are not in a financial crisis,’‘ (source: see 2:25) said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee in 2003. Personally, if we can jail the CEOs of Enron and Worldcom, I think Frank should be in jail for his poitical and financial negligence. He is willfully denying the truth that has put America in a scary place.
So, I implore President Obama to stop with the scare tacticts and stop with the lies. Stop blaming the previous president for the country’s woes and start doing something about it. And I don’t mean do anything, I mean do the right thing. Swift, knee-jerk actions made under diress do not usually have positive outcomes. Slow down, think this through. And for God’s sake please include both parties in the problem solving process. Nancy Pelosi’s exclusionary leadership is in direct conflict with her campign promise of a more cooperative, collegial approach that allowed for dissent and debate. Fifty Democrats are asking for help to control the Speaker, but I don’t think it is working. Maybe a cage match between Pelosi and Obama is needed to determine who is actually leading our country?
“Failed policies of the past eight years…” is a phrase we’ve heard a lot lately. If you are an Obama supporter it is probably written on your bathroom mirror. It is such a strong undercurrent of the campaign that both Biden and Obama started their very first answers in their recent debates with this very phrase. Now, depending on what topic you are talking about you could be correct, the past eight years can be considered a failure. I think that with regard to government spending and border security the Bush administration has been a dismal failure. But our crashing economy is not due to Bush or his administration.
Team Obama has latched onto the term “deregulation” and liberals own control if it in political discussions. Yes, the housing crisis, the failure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the result of too little regulation and control. But this environment was created not by President Bush, but by government backed pressure applied by Fannie Mac with origins to the CRA of 1977. But even if you don’t consider the CRA and actions of groups like ACORN significant factors, and you must bitterly cling to the term “deregulation,”please remember that it was Bill Clinton, not George Bush, who signed massive deregulation legislation in 1999. Democrats will not face the music, they are not capable of admitting their mistakes. And please note that I voted for Clinto in both elections. I’m speaking factually, not emotionally.
It was Republicans that suggested iin 2003 and 2005 that Fannie Mac needed stronger oversight. It was Democrats that fought against such legislation., In fact, it was Democrats saying as recently as last year that lending caps for Freddie Mac should be raised (a.k.a. deregulated even more). Now, in the midts of a market nosedive and a completely failed $700B bailout, it is these very same Democrats, including Barack Obama, that are screaming and pointing fingers at George Bush and Republicans. I guess it is this sort of blatant denial of reality that makes you a successful politicians. The hypocrisy of Democrats is mind bolggling to me. Yet, much to my significant dismay, I am honestly afraid that the Obama marketing machine is too powerful. Their massive text messaging network and repetitious brainwashing of charisma drunk lemmings has reached epic proportions. I’m fond of the phrase “beware of the power of stupid people in large numbers.” This election could be the ultimate case study of that concept.




