Showing posts with label bailout. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bailout. Show all posts

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Republicans reveal their Big Government side for political gain

Originally posted at The Desk of Brian, www.deskofbrian.com: http://sites.google.com/site/thedeskofbrian/state-of-the-nation/republicansrevealtheirbiggovernmentsideforpoliticalgain


Attention all you Tea Party members, Tea Baggers if you watch MSNBC, this is an update for all of the naive FOX watchers and Republican loyalists -- they are lying to you.

President Obama spoke again this week to support financial regulatory reform. Blaming "lobbyists" and corruption is always at the core of his lectures while proclaiming we can't allow "history to repeat itself"

You may have heard tough language of opposition, especially from Scott Brown: "Shame on the president" as Brown "complained that President Barack Obama was derailing bipartisan negotiations on Wall
Street reform
for short-term political gain." (Politico article, see below)



I heard and saw clips as I surfed through the news. Of course, the Republicans hot air will fill a room if it will benefit their political gains.

Because the Massachusetts Senator said this:


"The bottom line is, where there are problems [on Wall Street], we
should fix them. I’m not
going to vote on anything or make any statements until I read the
bills,” (adding he'd take a hard look at the proposals and get up to speed)


Where's all of Scott Brown's Ronald Reagan language about "government being the problem, not the solution"?

All we have to do is look to the former Republican Presidential nominee John McCain, who


"... formed an unlikely alliance with Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) to
propose reinstating the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act, which
separated commercial banking from investment banking. That law was
repealed in the late 1990s, and many critics say it allowed for the
growth of mammoth and risky
investment banks. Fully reinstating the law would be further
than the Obama administration has proposed."
-Politico

One aide said McCain's vote on Financial Regulatory Reform will "will depend entirely on his analysis of how it plays among Arizona
primary voters"


Politics...Politics...Politics.



“I’m looking at everything. I have not made any decisions.” - Olympia Snowe


“We need to prevent large financial firms from holding taxpayers hostage. I’m still looking at issues.”
- Susan Collins



“I think we all want to see financial regulation take place; I really do. These things
are very solvable. It just takes a little grind-it-out work.” - Bob Corker



The letter to Harry Reid from the Republicans stated:



"As currently constructed this bill allows for
endless taxpayer bailouts of Wall Street and establishes new and
unlimited regulatory powers that will stifle small businesses and
community banks."


In Senator Richard Shelby's letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner we read how this is a slush fund for the Treasury to use as
they see fit, would encourage bailout over bankruptcy and explain how
this is the government running financial interests.



That is what the Tea Party and many motivated individuals are fighting to stop. Unfortunately, the Republicans are no different that their socialist counterparts on the far Left - power is more important and they don't care what we think.


Do NOT be fooled by the liars on the right. Look at their voting records, read between the lines and find the Constitutionalists that will fight to save this country.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Dubai: Is it too Big too Fail?



Beyond the Tiger Woods headlines was the reports of the collapse of Dubai. The glamorous fairy tale that was being built in Dubai is marred in late bills and the collapsing world economy.

The UAE has bought $10 billion in bonds to assist the bailout as construction and expansion plans screeched to a halt. From WSJ.com: "The Dubai government said in a statement Sunday it would issue $20 billion in long-term bonds, and that the first installment of $10 billion was fully subscribed by the U.A.E.'s central bank."1

Let the borrowing begin.

From that same article, the UAE stated: The bond issuance will provide Dubai "with the necessary liquidity to substitute the liquidity that has dried up globally in the last 12 months and accordingly meet all upcoming financial obligations" -- doesn't that sound like TARP

Throw some cash at the problem, call is "liquidity" and watch the disastrous pattern repeat itself.

"Dubai's once-soaring real-estate market comes crashing down. Falling prices, some down by 50% or more, have burned speculators who never intended to hold on to properties in the first place. Sales have plummeted, crimping cash flow for developers -- which are now scrambling to shed employees, cancel or postpone billions of dollars worth of projects and extend installment plans to avoid missed payments.

Banks, meanwhile, aren't lending to buyers or to developers."

Dubai’s ruler Sheik Mohammed bin Rushad Al-Maktown told media critics to "shut up," and sought to assure international investors that all was well with Dubai’s finances.


This is the worldwide collapse with the exact same language, problems and results.

The sooner the crisis is accepted and faced head-on, the sooner recovery can actually occur.


This isn't just a financial crisis, this is the first sign of financial collapse for a sovereign state. At home we see the pending bankruptcy of several states: California, New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island...how long do they have?









1. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123532630416442781.html

http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/article/108269/in-wake-of-dubai-trying-to-predict-the-next-blowup

http://www.americanbankingnews.com/2009/11/28/dubai-seeking-options-amidst-debt-collapse-banks-await/