Posted on 06/24/2011 5:16:26 AM PDT by Kaslin
History will be kind to me for I intend to write it. -- Winston Churchill
There is history -- a chronicle of human events -- and then there is perceived history. So often, the two are wildly at odds.
In 1963, a popular Democratic president was assassinated by a Marxist named Oswald, who had actually defected to the Soviet Union and returned to the U.S. with a Soviet wife, was an active member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, and had attempted to assassinate a right-wing general named Edwin Walker earlier in the year.
Yet those who write history found these facts inconvenient. They created a different history in which the "atmosphere of hate" in the southern city of Dallas, Texas, led to the terrible political violence. In other words, it was political conservatism that led to John F. Kennedy's assassination. This perceived history was recycled as recently as the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. ABC's Christiane Amanpour, interviewing Jean Kennedy Smith, noted that the Kennedy assassination was "eerily relevant" and asked Kennedy to evaluate the "political atmosphere" in the country today.
Starting just a few years after the Kennedy assassination, American liberals began to consider anti-communism a kind of mental disorder. Hostility to communism was akin to racism, sexism and other character flaws. Reagan's description of the Soviet Union as an "evil empire" cemented liberal suspicions that Reagan was a dangerous buffoon. Yet starting in 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell, liberals began to find their anti-anti-communism embarrassing. And so they created a perceived history -- one in which the Cold War was a time of consensus, a time when, as former Sen. Bill Bradley put it, "We knew where we stood on foreign policy."
More recently we've witnessed the creation of new historical narrative about the financial crisis of 2008. The perceived history, eagerly peddled by liberals and Democrats, is that the crash of 2008 was the result of Wall Street greed. It was unregulated capitalism that brought us to the brink of financial meltdown, the Democrats insisted. And they codified their manufactured history in a law, the Dodd-Frank Act, that completely avoided the true problem.
It's both surprising and gratifying, therefore, to report that a great revisionist history has just been published by none other than a New York Times reporter, Gretchen Morgenson, and a financial analyst, Joshua Rosner.
In "Reckless Endangerment," Morgenson and Rosner offer considerable censure for reckless bankers, lax rating agencies, captured regulators and unscrupulous businessmen. But the greatest responsibility for the collapse of the housing market and the near "Armageddon" of the American economy belongs to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and to the politicians who created and protected them. With a couple of prominent exceptions, the politicians were Democrats claiming to do good for the poor. Along the way, they enriched themselves and their friends, stuffed their campaign coffers, and resisted all attempts to enforce market discipline. When the inevitable collapse arrived, the entire economy suffered, but no one more than the poor.
Jim Johnson, adviser to Walter Mondale and John Kerry, amassed a personal fortune estimated at $100 million during his nine years as CEO of Fannie Mae. "Under Johnson," Morgenson and Rosner write, "Fannie Mae led the way in encouraging loose lending practices among the banks whose loans the company bought. A Pied Piper of the financial sector, Johnson led both the private and public sectors down a path that led directly to the credit crisis of 2008."
Fannie Mae lied about its profits, intimidated adversaries, bought off members of Congress with lavish contributions, hired (and thereby co-opted) academics, purchased political ads (through its foundation) and stacked congressional hearings with friendly bankers, community activists and advocacy groups (including ACORN). Fannie Mae also hired the friends and relations of key members of Congress (including Rep. Barney Frank's partner).
"Reckless Endangerment" includes the Clinton administration's contribution to the home-ownership catastrophe. Clinton had claimed that dramatically increasing homeownership would boost the economy, instead "in just a few short years, all of the venerable rules governing the relationship between borrower and lender went out the window, starting with ... the requirement that a borrower put down a substantial amount of cash in a property, verify his income, and demonstrate an ability to service his debts."
"Reckless Endangerment" utterly deflates the perceived history of the 2008 crash. Yes, there was greed -- when is there not? But it was government distortions of markets -- not "unregulated capitalism" -- that led the economy to disaster.
nearly?
It’s still twitching.
but, their mission is not yet accomplished...
the economy is resembling a giant whale, thrashing and groaning in bloody water as the democrats stand on deck and continue to harpoon it, and the GOP tries to get them to agree to gentlemen’s rules on placement of the deck chairs
Right. I believe Boehner will raise debt ceiling then all h will break loose.
[ the GOP tries to get them to agree to gentlemens rules on placement of the deck chairs ]
BUT the TpCaucus is throwing some harpooners overboard..
AND a few deck chair manipulators as well..
And Bush bragged about his home ownership programs for poor minorities with bad credit making it easier for the banks to make risky loans eventually leading to massive forclosures in poor hispanic areas Arizona and Nevada and Florida as well as flipping in those areas. Republicans hands are not clean in this either although neither party gets it right.
It was : Low interest rates by the Fed for an extended period, removal of the down payment requirement, change in capital gains taxes on homes law (encouraging flipping), home ownership promotion for the poor by BOTH(yes) parties, and yes a blind eye by everyone because everyone loves a housing prices bubble party, they just hate the resulting hangover, and then try to fix it with more drinking in the morning.
Don’t forget Jimmy Carter’s law that was passed where banks had to have a certain amount of high risk housing loans !
—bflr—
Interesting imagery you two have used. I guess that would extend to Obama as Ahab, with a burning desire/drive to take down the whale?
JFK wasn’t that popular by the end of November of 1963. The Camelot myth was created after his assassination and he went to Dallas to try to build support for his policies in anticipation of his re-election bid in 1964. Dems HAVE destroyed the economy. Barney Frank and Chris Dodd were largely behind the market crash in 2008. The market was manipulated with the backing of the media to get 0bama elected. It worked and since he was inaugurated in 2009, (we should go back to when the House was overtaken by Dems in 2007), the policies of this regime have been set to destroy the economy.
the white whale, at that
Spend now cut later save government jobs. Boner Plan A.
It is fairly easy to see, now that the talks have collapsed, what the progressive Marxists in government game plan is. They intend to do nothing and then blame republicans. The debt will be serviced, no default will occur, but SS checks will stop, military pay will stop and the entire US media will be calling for Boehner head. If the GOP is smart they will raise the ceiling no strings and move on to the 2012 election. In this PR battle they do not stand a chance.
As Mona said:
In "Reckless Endangerment," Morgenson and Rosner offer considerable censure for reckless bankers, lax rating agencies, captured regulators and unscrupulous businessmen. But the greatest responsibility for the collapse of the housing market and the near "Armageddon" of the American economy belongs to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and to the politicians who created and protected them. With a couple of prominent exceptions, the politicians were Democrats claiming to do good for the poor
Once the Democrats had the policies in place, do you think the GOP had anywhere near the power to reverse it?
Literary interpretation can be fun, despite the drudgery my junior-year English teacher in HS tried to make it...:-)
Yeah, whatever happened to Pelosi’ ‘pay-go’ scam anyway?
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