How did we get into this mess in the mortgage banking industry? And how will we get out now?
Even to an average investor like me it is clear that the debacle on Wall Street is not just a little kink in the circulation of the nation's money supply. Clearly the Fed and Bush Administration have recklessly disregarded their duty to operate our government as a guardian of its citizens' rights. An illegal war in Iraq and the billions George Bush is spending now can only add to this serious domestic financial crisis. John McCain, who knows little of economic policy, will further erode the stability of the markets with his Bush-like policies if he is elected on November 4.
Those who consider themselves to be no-tax, Grover Norquist-like free-market conservatives will righteously retort some sound bites of supply-side Reaganonomics to make their arguments, but they are hollow and unsubstantiated by our own market experts.
Just one example for the sake of conversation comes from this week's edition of Barron's, a publication noted for its very conservative point of view on fiscal matters.
Stephanie Pomboy, the founder of the economic consulting firm MacroMavens, who has been right repeatedly in forecasting the severity and duration of the housing and credit crises said, "Once again, we can't resist pointing out that had Paulson (Secretary of the Treasury) and his bailout crew used their powers for 'good' from the get-go, they could have saved a lot of time, energy and, most importantly, money. Had they simply established a fund to buy up the surplus housing inventory, presently valued at just over $1 trillion, they could have stitched up this wound for less than they've spent layering Band-Aid after Band-Aid on top of it."
These crazy shifts by the Bush Administration between radical free market laissez fairism and heavy-handed government intervention make it very apparent Republican officials in Washington, D.C. can't exercise the necessary professional detachment needed to fix this crisis in the U.S. economy. To illustrate that point, just note the behavior of the foreign markets in Russia and China on Friday of this week.
The waste, greed and wretched excess going on in the corporate world has been rewarded by both federal bailouts and golden parachute deals to departing incompetent executives. The reckless government borrowing to finance wars and now bailouts has added to an estimated $53 trillion in government obligations. We have dug a hole we may never get out of.
On the state level, despite last-minute wrangling Friday, we still have an irresponsible budget which also relies on borrowing. While workers are now off the hook to pay an extra 10 percent upfront in taxes, we are left with a shaky lottery financing scheme which will need to be approved by the voters next year.
The tyranny of the Republican minority and the 2/3 vote requirement in the State Legislature has left us with little choice but to borrow our way through to the next year or make deep cuts to education and services for the poor.
These rigid, no-compromise minority Republican ideologues in the state need to go, along with the failed economic policies of the Bush administration.

Democracy Watch is a blog devoted to debunking extreme right wing Republican rhetoric, media, printed material, blogs, videos and all campaign TV ads that are untrue.

Good job, Helen! This administration has been an abject failure. There is no doubt in my mind that George W. Bush will go down in the history books as the worst president on record.
And Treasury Secretary Paulson will go down in history as the inept crony that he is. Everyone lauded him as understanding the markets because he was from that world. Turns out he's like every other Cabinet choice by Bush--a fox guarding the hen house. One month ago he's touting how strong the economy is. Now that Wall Street has crumbled under the unforeseen consequences of that shadow economy, he proposes a plan that gives him basically unfettered powers to buy and sell all kinds of financial instruments with virtually no oversight by Congress. Excuse me?!
This will go down as the biggest economic rape of the middle class in the history of this country.
We are witnessing the total meltdown of the bankrupt political and fiscal policies of the CURRENT Republican Party. For nearly two decades, the laissez-faire, private/self-interest wing of the Republican Party spent time pruning their party of reasonable, fiscally responsible members in the name of Republican Party "loyalty."
In doing so, they lost sight that the private and public sectors are interdependent and uprooted capitalism from the necessary grounding -- adequate regulation -- that allows it to thrive.
In thwarting the development of adequate tax policies, the Right Wing ruling faction has dried up the proper circulation of capital.
Tony Strickland has been a lead spokesman and advocate for these policies bearing these poisoned economic fruits.
It's time to weed out those who sowed these shortsighted, self-serving policies.
NO to Strickland.
NO to the politics of self-interest.
NO to fiscal irresponsibility.
NO to his brand of the Republican Party.
Publius,
Don't forget, in 2004, the Democrats fought hard against restrictions that were proposed for Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, after it was discovered that their accounting and lending practices were highly questionable. They cried out about how these two institutions were the only hope for lower income folks to get mortgage loans. Well, as it turned out, these Fannie Freddie-backed loans made up a large percentages of those that defaulted.
Thanks Barney Frank, Rita Walters, and Nancy Pelosi!!!