Community | October 03, 2008 | 26 comments

Does the bailout bill mark the end of America as we know It?

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DandelionSalad
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by Richard C. Cook
featured writer
http://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/
http://www.richardccook.com/
October 2, 2008

Tonight the Senate passed the $700 billion Wall Street bailout bill by a vote of 74-25. This follows the rejection of the bill by the House on Monday. In an MSNBC poll, 62 percent of Americans oppose the giveaway, but the lobbyists are doing everything possible to assure the rejection is overturned. According to Bob Borosage, co-director of The Campaign for America’s Future, House leaders “are bringing in the small business lobby and the banking lobby to buy the twelve Republican votes they need.”

The Senate took up the bill in order to pressure House members who voted against it to change their positions when it returns to a vote on the House floor on Friday. This procedure may be unconstitutional, because revenue bills must originate in the House, but there is no time or political will for anyone to mount a challenge on constitutional grounds. As another means of inducement—or blackmail—the bill includes the repeal of the wildly unjust alternative minimum tax.

Every reputable economist commenting on the bill opposes it, including NYU’s Nouriel Roubini, who says the plan is “totally flawed.”

“a disgrace: a bailout of reckless bankers, lenders, and investors that provides little direct debt relief to borrowers and financially stressed households and that will come at a very high cost to the US taxpayer.”

My own view is that the plan is worse than that: a crime; grand larceny on a monumental scale.

Here’s why: We know that the debacle started with homeowner defaults on subprime mortgages and that it has now spread to other types of mortgages as foreclosures spread. We know that the unhealthy use of subprime mortgages started during the Clinton administration, as did the bundling and sale of these mortgages into mortgage-backed securities sold in the financial markets.

What has not been reported is that the Bush administration turned these acts of reckless lending into a national program of mortgage fraud. Soon after George W. Bush became president in 2001, meetings at the White House between Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and administration officials became more frequent. According to mortgage industry insiders I have interviewed, direction soon began to come down from the banks to mortgage brokers to falsify borrower income information to allow them to qualify for loans that were otherwise out of reach.

[...]

Well, it is already happening. In the post-bubble era there will be no more economic engines for the American economy. A long term recession and depression are inevitable, and they are expected by those in the know. In fact, there has been a plan in the works for a very long time to bring down the U.S. economy, and it will be happening over the coming months.

This is why the government is also preparing to implement martial law, or something close to it, in case public unrest breaks out. We will likely also see a clampdown on free speech, the right to protest, and use of the internet. Federal facilities are being prepared all around the country to backstop state prisons and local jails that are already bursting at the seams.

[...]

continued at http://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/2008/10/02/does-the-bailout-bill-mark-the-en...
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26 comments // Does the bailout bill mark the end of America as we know It?

  • DandelionSalad
  • DandelionSalad
  • 3oc
    • 0
      3oc  
    • The police are as - in the dark - as the rest of the country.

      Where their role was once to protect and serve it will shortly become - to subdue and detain.

      The individuals in the police force need to be brought up-to-date on what is really happening.

    • 3 years ago
  • Ish05
  • DandelionSalad
  • Dmitri_Molotov
  • maasanova
    • 0
      maasanova  
    • Goldman Sachs bribed the Senate

      GOLDMAN SACHS CONTRIBUTIONS:
      Obama, Barack (D-IL) $691,930
      Clinton, Hillary (D-NY) $468,200
      Romney, Mitt (R) $229,675
      McCain, John (R-AZ) $208,395
      Himes, Jim (D-CT) $114,748
      Giuliani, Rudolph W (R) $111,750
      Dodd, Christopher J (D-CT) $105,400
      Edwards, John (D) $66,450
      Specter, Arlen (R-PA) $47,600
      Emanuel, Rahm (D-IL) $32,950
      Reed, Jack (D-RI) $30,100

    • 3 years ago
  • HolyCity2012
  • DandelionSalad
  • fauxsherrrr
  • HolyCity2012
    • 0
      HolyCity2012  
    • Adolf Hitler's rise to power can partly be put down to "normal voting behaviour".

      The consequences of Hitler's election were extraordinary, but the voting behaviour that led to it was not.

      Because of the unprecedented circumstances in which free and fair democratic elections led to the antidemocratic National Socialist Party winning control of the Weimar Republic, the question of who voted for Hitler has become the most studied in the history of voting behaviour research.

      http://current.com/items/89361052_michael_badnarik

    • 3 years ago
  • SeaJade
  • WhiteNoise
    • 0
      WhiteNoise  
    • Image
    • * RIP USA REPUBLIC *
      http://current.com/items/89362640_rip_usa_republic

      First they stole their election with the help of the supreme court… nothing happened…Then 9-11 & the war based on lies… nothing happened… then they shredded the constitution, spying on everyone & firing the best US attorneys… nothing happened…then they conducted the thinly veiled Katrina ethic cleansing …nothing happened…now they are taking us all to the cleaners…can you identify a pattern here ?

      The Military is Nowhere…
      The Press is Nowhere…
      The Congress is Nowhere...
      The Senates is Nowhere...

      Is there a limit to the damage this executive branch can inflict to the USA ?

      It seems not !

      We've Been Taken Over By a Cult...

      * WAR IS PEACE, FREEDOM IS SLAVERY, IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH *

      "A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and he carries his banners openly. But the traitor moves among those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not traitor, he speaks in the accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their garments, and he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of a city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to be feared." - Cicero, 42 B.C.

    • 3 years ago
  • Paratus
    • 0
      Paratus  
    • The only good thing about the bill is the repeal of the alt min tax.
      This is nothing more than socialist plunder of the people. The taxpayer is on the hook for the bill + the interest to the Federal REserve to pay for the creation of the money not to mention the inflationary effects of the creation of the money for the act.
      We should let the bankrupt go down the tubes. We would be better off with the 1-2 year recession than the effects of this bill over the next 20 years.
      The government screwed the pooch on this. The gov. passed the bills that enabled the requirement of the bailout. Now the government wants us to believe that the people that screwed it up are the people to fix it. Hucksters.

    • 3 years ago
  • deeblackangel
  • HolyCity2012
  • ChristmasAsen
  • mtbailey
  • twodee
  • HolyCity2012
  • asherp
    • 0
      asherp  
    • mtbailey:

      Conspiracy is a crappy charge that is used to convict people who did nothing wrong ALL THE TIME-- while we're on the subject.

      Often sting operations will occur where police will do all the illegal activities, but because they are conspiring with the people they are "stinging" then those people become guilty of everything the police officer did.

      Total crap.

    • 3 years ago
  • DandelionSalad
  • SeaJade
  • maasanova
    • 0
      maasanova  
    • Riptos - we really can't do much about it because they now have the police and military in place. Our Congress is being mostly bribed, blackmailed and threatened.

    • 3 years ago
  • Riptos
    • 0
      Riptos  
    • Why are we going to let these people, give our money away that isn't just laying around... to the people who through their greed got us into this position. They need to be punished not rescued.

    • 3 years ago
  • DandelionSalad
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