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The New York Times? Crusade Against The New York Times? Crusade Against The New York Times? Crusade
FrontPage Magazine ^ | Ann Coulter

Posted on 01/23/2002 8:20:54 PM PST by VinnyTex

The New York Times? Crusade Against Capitalism

FrontPageMagazine.com | January 24, 2002

BEFORE THE NEW YORK TIMES starts running "Portraits in Grief" of former Enron employees, it's worth remembering that even after the collapse, Enron stock is still worth more than the entire Social Security "trust fund."

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Liberals have suspended their typical class envy paradigm long enough to weep huge crocodile tears for the almost-rich. Weren't these the precise people we were trained to hate in the '90s as they high-fived one other amid extravagant claims of retirement by age 40?

Schadenfreude has turned pretty quickly to lachrymose liberal pity. Poor ghetto blacks must be transfixed by the turn of events that supplanted them with erstwhile "yuppie scum" as the new class war victims.

When this much bathos is expended on middle-class white people with stock portfolios, liberals are up to no good. The only coherence to the Times' contradictory crusades is that they want to scare people from investing.

The Times is openly rooting for a prolonged recession, if not a depression. They are desperately trying to destroy people's faith in the market, in 401(k)s ? in capitalism. When President Bush merely acknowledged that the economy was in a recession, liberals screamed that he was "talking down the economy." But now liberals want to wreck the country to help the Democratic Party.

A continuing weak stock market would serve the Democrats' short-term interest of bashing Bush and their long-term interest of keeping Americans dependent on the government.

Thus, the Times cites Enron in order to sneer about the "view" that investing in the market would provide Americans with robust retirement funds. It refers to the "now dormant" idea of privatizing Social Security. Even the Times' pet cause of campaign-finance reform is somehow more urgently needed in the wake of Enron's collapse. (But Enron's demise raises no questions about its support for Kyoto.)

The morality play being touted in the Times concerns "the plight of loyal workers who lost retirement savings while company officials cashed in $1.1 billion in stock." This puts a human face on the Times' vicious attack on "the integrity of markets."

Not so fast.

Even if Enron executives had sold no stock whatsoever in 2001, Enron shares would still be worthless. Enron executives may well be guilty of criminal misconduct: That is a separate, discrete matter to be determined by the justice system. But contrary to hyperventilating media stories, there is no causal relationship between the boss selling his stock and the employees' losses.

The ineluctable fact is: Enron had a faulty business model and the company went bankrupt. Whenever a company collapses, the people who own it (stockholders) lose money. That's why people always tell you not to put all your money in a single company's stock. Enron employees had 18 investment options, but many agreed to invest heavily in the high-flying company stock.

The only beef Enron employees have with top management is that management did not inform employees of the collapse in time to allow them to get in on the swindle. If Enron executives had shouted, "Head for the hills!" the employees might have had time to sucker other Americans into buying wildly over-inflated Enron stock. Just because your boss is a criminal doesn't make you a hero.

The billions of dollars Enron employees "lost" in paper profits they had gained only in the last few years. Between 1997 and 2000, Enron stock quadrupled in price, while the Standard & Poor's 500 index edged up only a few percentage points. In 2000, Enron stock was trading at an astronomical 66 times recent earnings.

Until 10 minutes ago, people who made a quick buck in the stock market were dot-com millionaire yuppie scum. Now when the market collapses before they can cash out, they are "the tale's most sympathetic characters, its victims."

Compared to what the stock was worth in 1997, Enron employees lost an average of about $20,000 per employee in the largest company failure in U.S. history. I've lost more money on Social Security in that time, and no one's weeping for me.

Liberals have leapt on Enron's collapse to try to persuade Americans to avoid the market altogether. They would prefer that the middle class put all its money in a sock. The stock market, the Times instructs, is not for the little people because ? as the headline on the cover of the Week in Review proclaimed ? "The Rich Are Different. They Know When to Get Out."

Manifestly, the rich do not know when to get out. Otherwise, we wouldn't be hearing about the ripple effect of Enron's collapse hitting the likes of Citicorp ? despite the lobbying efforts of billionaire Democrat Robert Rubin.

The rich do, however, have more money, a point the Times tortures endlessly. The lesson the Times wants the middle class to glean from this is: Do not invest in the market! End hope! Trust Big Brother.


Ann Coulter is a bestselling author and syndicated columnist. Her latest book is High Crimes and Misdemeanors: The Case Against Bill Clinton


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 01/23/2002 8:20:54 PM PST by VinnyTex
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Sumethin went wrong with the title. Ohhh well. LOL
2 posted on 01/23/2002 8:24:50 PM PST by VinnyTex
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To: VinnyTex
"They are desperately trying to destroy people's faith in the market, in 401(k)s ? in capitalism."

Personally I think faith is a pretty poor guide for investment.

3 posted on 01/23/2002 8:41:31 PM PST by Tauzero
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To: VinnyTex
A recent poll I heard about on Fox News today says that most people, something over 80 percent, do not blame the recession (or whatever it is) on Republicans, most blame it on Clinton. The few rest blame it on normal business cycles, or the September 11 attack on the nation. Wish I could remember the poll name--maybe someone can refresh my memory.
4 posted on 01/23/2002 8:47:12 PM PST by Judith Anne
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To: VinnyTex
"Liberals have leapt on Enron's collapse to try to persuade Americans to avoid the market altogether. They would prefer that the middle class put all its money in a sock."

One does not need to be liberal to believe that most people who are moving into and staying for the time being in cash equivalents will be better off.

"The lesson the Times wants the middle class to glean from this is: Do not invest in the market! End hope! Trust Big Brother."

That may be the Times' message, but staying in a (still) overpriced U.S. equity market is hardly the only alternative to relying on the state for retirement. And market timing hardly equates to relying on the state.

5 posted on 01/23/2002 8:50:11 PM PST by Tauzero
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To: Judith Anne
Our current recession began while Billy Boy was still in office (during the fourth quarter, I believe); and certainly 9.11 helped it along. How truly encouraging that Americans are aware that George W. is not responsible for it. Perhaps more and more people are refusing to be spoon-fed by the mainstream media.
6 posted on 01/24/2002 10:43:50 AM PST by Joan912
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To: Joan912
I agree. I was so pleased to see it. I think I'll check around at Fox News to see if there's an article to post about the poll...
7 posted on 01/24/2002 11:56:29 AM PST by Judith Anne
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To: Joan912
Here's a quote from Mort Kondracke, commenting on that Gallup poll:

KONDRACKE: OK, but going into this election, the polls strongly indicate that the Republicans are ahead on the economic issue, the – if you ask people, Who do you blame for the, for the recession? either the Clinton administration or Usama bin Laden or Congress is to blame, not Bush. And if you ask whose economic policies do you favor, the Republicans come out with a 44 to 35 percent lead.

That comes from this web address: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,42359,00.html One of these days I'll learn to make a link....;-D

8 posted on 01/24/2002 12:06:50 PM PST by Judith Anne
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