As I said yesterday, the $700 billion bailout is a failure and waste of public money.  All democrats have done is complain, and as usual, offered no solutions of their own except to find a way to blame republicans.  John McCain has stepped up with other conservatives to offer an alternate resolution that won’t waste as much tax dollars as the bailout plan.

“U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., may be throwing a monkey wrench into efforts to pass a $700 billion bank bailout, instead favoring alternative plans that looks to free up capital and credit markets via tax and regulatory relief while allowing financial institutions to temporarily skip dividend payments to shareholders.

Republican and Democratic officials in Washington said McCain was offering alternatives Thursday to the $700 billion plan backed by the Bush administration, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke and U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

That plan has the federal government acquiring bad mortgage assets from struggling banks with the goal of keeping them afloat and allowing more credit to flow.

McCain appears to be siding with conservatives and House Republicans who question the bailout and its costs to taxpayers as well as government rescuing private lenders and perhaps taking ownership stakes in rescued banks.

The alternative plan allocates less public money and relies more on tax breaks, lifting regulatory barriers and using less bailout-oriented mechanisms to free up capital and credit. It also seeks to create a privately funded mechanism to ensure mortgages and mortgage-backed securities.”

I’m not sure yet what will happen with the debate tonight, but we have seen who the real leader in tough times is, and the polls are already showing it.  While McCain is trying to help solve the problem, Obama is worried about what will happen to his debate.  I guess he doesn’t want to lose all those hours practicing in front of a teleprompter.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Sep 26, 2008

The problem with Obama is he is incapable of staying on message.  He HAD a winning one with "multi-tasking" and then backed off at the first little sign of criticism.  I am beginning to believe that his problem is the exact opposite of Kerry's.  IN other words instead of sticking with a failed message too long, he is dropping winning ones too quickly.

on Sep 26, 2008

So McCain's an economic genius that will fix the country, eh?

Well, good luck with that.  I'm glad he responded so quickly...around a week since this became a problem.  Good reflexes...and conveniently interferes with the debate.

Wonder if there will be any other issues that coincide with debates...or we'll never get to see them duke it out.

~Zoo

on Sep 26, 2008

Well, good luck with that. I'm glad he responded so quickly...around a week since this became a problem.

McCain tried to reform this years ago.  When is Obama going to respond instead of worrying about his campaign?  Still waiting from that call from Pelosi I guess.

on Sep 26, 2008

Island Dog

McCain tried to reform this years ago.  When is Obama going to respond instead of worrying about his campaign?  Still waiting from that call from Pelosi I guess.

When you say that what you mean is that he once, two years ago, in his decades as a senator, he warned about the Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae? That doesn't mean McCain gets to call himself a financial reformer. He's consistently voted for less regulation of the financial markets (per Katie Couric's interview with the Beauty Queen).

on Sep 26, 2008

Still waiting from that call from Pelosi I guess.

Wrong chamber - Reid.

on Sep 26, 2008

I saw reports on the new that seem to show that maybe if we hold back a bit on this "bailout" that the markets may actually correct themselves. A few examples are JP Morgan acquiring WaMu and Warren Buffet paying 5 billion for Goldman Sachs. I admit I know very little if anything about the stock market and these companies merging or buying each other out. But that sounds like a good thing to me in a way.

So McCain's an economic genius that will fix the country, eh?

Actually, Obama is the one who thinks he can solve all of our problems and he can do it while multitasking a radio station and sending a text while driving. McCain simply has a plan to avoid using so much of the tax payers money. A plan, not a solution, a plan.

Well, good luck with that. I'm glad he responded so quickly...around a week since this became a problem.

Well thank you. I hope it works out too.

Good reflexes...and conveniently interferes with the debate.

Smart politics. Hmmm, McCain sounds better and better every time.

Wonder if there will be any other issues that coincide with debates...or we'll never get to see them duke it out.

Come on now Zoo. Do you really wanna have Obama ridiculed on live TV? I mean, he does a good job all by himself as it is every time he does not have a teleprompter there to help.

on Sep 26, 2008

He's consistently voted for less regulation of the financial markets (per Katie Couric's interview with the Beauty Queen).

And?  Less regulation is not a bad thing, and regulation isn't the cause of this problem.

 

Wrong chamber - Reid.

Yes, but isn't Pelosi pulling Obama's strings?

on Sep 26, 2008

I saw reports on the new that seem to show that maybe if we hold back a bit on this "bailout" that the markets may actually correct themselves. A few examples are JP Morgan acquiring WaMu and Warren Buffet paying 5 billion for Goldman Sachs.
Not bloddy likely!  Have you seen what happens to the stock exchange when they hint one way or another on the bailout?  If we hold back then confidence in our system will be lost, people will make a run on their banks, our dollar will be worthless and we'll be in a new depression.  I'm not saying that the $700 billion is the answer.  I do believe they need to do something before the opening of the market on Monday.

on Sep 26, 2008

Yes, but isn't Pelosi pulling Obama's strings?

Do you realize how gross the image you just put in my mind is?  Ewwww!

on Sep 26, 2008

Hussein continues to show his "LEADERSHIP" through his vote, his total now is "PRESENT 160 TIMES" BECAUSE THERE IS NO TELEPROMPTER IN FRONT of his face telling him how to vote and he gets confused very easy

on Sep 27, 2008

Less regulation is not a bad thing, and regulation isn't the cause of this problem.

Maybe you should look up the Glass Steagall Act that was enacted during the Great Depression and then look up the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act which repealed certain parts of it in 1999.

 

on Sep 27, 2008

Maybe you should look up the Glass Steagall Act

Maybe you should look up the CRA.  That is the root of the problem.

on Sep 27, 2008

Maybe you should look up the CRA. That is the root of the problem

No it isnt.....Most of those loans are not ARM's...And part of fixing the GSA's involves expanding CRA in order to get some of the bad ARMs that were made by Mortgage companies not related to CRA switched over to Fixed Rate loans that are lower risk.

http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS135259+07-Jan-2008+BW20080107

on Sep 28, 2008

No it isnt.....Most of those loans are not ARM's

ARMs are only part of the problem.  The problem is people getting loans they cannot afford.  And what did the CRA do?  Make home owenership "affordable" to those that could not before, and are defaulting now.  YOu keep trying to bob and weave around the truth.  The truth is that the CRA is just "Good intentions" in bad legislation.  The CRises was caused by democrat politicans wishing to protect their pork so protecting the rotten institutions until the rot showed through the exterior.  But then it was too late (you do no see the rot in a tree until it falls).

You brought up ARMs.  But that is just a dodge to deflect scrutiny of the core problem.  The whole reason that home ownership worked in the past is that  it does require discipline.  And that has to be learned while saving for a down payment.  WHen you give something to someone - the value is diminished since they did not earn it.  And so with diminished value, there is less incentive to protect it "They gave it to me, they will save it for me!"

It does not and cannot work that way.  Even in communist countries, people are not "given" a house to abuse.  They are "rented" one to take care of.  WHich they probably do not anyway, but then that is Comrade's problem.

on Sep 29, 2008

“U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., may be throwing a monkey wrench into efforts to pass a $700 billion bank bailout, instead favoring alternative plans that looks to free up capital and credit markets via tax and regulatory relief while allowing financial institutions to temporarily skip dividend payments to shareholders.

I guess it is obvious by now that McCain was clueless to what the problem actually is seeing how his statement does nothing to address it. Not only would these things not solve the credit problem but it would also make it harder for banks to raise more capital.

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