An article the Obamatrons don't want to read

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I'm from the government and I'm here to help
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finally someone writes a "Get a Grip" article! :aktion033

Hysteria is the rage in America

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By Victor Davis Hanson
Published: November 29, 2008


Politicians now predict the implosion of the U.S. auto industry. Headlines warn that the entire banking system is on the verge of utter collapse. The all-day/all-night cable news shows and op-ed columnists talk of another Dark Age on the horizon, as each day another corporation lines up for its me-too bailout.


News magazines depict President-elect Obama as the new Franklin Delano Roosevelt, facing a crisis akin to the Great Depression. Columnists for The New York Times even dreamed that George Bush might just resign now to allow the savior Obama a two-month head start on his presidency. We are witnessing a new hysterical style, in which the Baby Boomer "me generation” that now runs America jettisons knowledge of the past and daily proclaims that each new development requires both a radical solution and another bogeyman to blame for being mean or unfair to them.

Current panic psychological
Get a grip. Much of our current panic is psychological, and hyped by instantaneous electronic communications and second-by-second 24-hour news blasts. There has not been a nationwide plague that felled our workers. No earthquake has destroyed American infrastructure. The material United States before the September 2008 financial panic is largely the same as the one after. Once we tighten our belts and pay off the debts run up by Wall Street speculators and millions of borrowers who walked away from what they owed others — and we can do this in a $13 trillion annual economy — sanity will return.

Gas, now below $2 a gallon, is still falling, saving Americans hundreds of billions of dollars. As housing prices settle, millions of young Americans will buy homes that just recently were said to be out of reach of a new generation.
If it was once considered a sign of economic robustness that homes doubled in value in just a few years, why is it seen as a disaster that they now sell on the way down for what they did recently on the way up? If we were recently terrified that gas would reach $5 a gallon, why do we now just shrug that it might fall to $1.50?
Unemployment is still below 7 percent; it was around 25 percent when Franklin Roosevelt became president. Fewer than 20 banks have failed, not the 4,000 that went under in the first part of 1933.
We have now forgotten that by year-end 2000, the American economy was sliding into recession. Lame-duck President Clinton had been impeached. Vice President Al Gore had ostracized him from his presidential election campaign.
Bush is not source of ills
George Bush is neither the source of all our ills nor the "worst” president in our history. He will leave office with about the same dismal approval rating as the once-despised Harry Truman. By 1953, the country loathed the departing Truman as much as they were ecstatic about newly elected national hero Dwight Eisenhower — who had previously never been elected to anything.

As for Bush’s legacy, it will be left to future historians to weigh his responsibility for keeping us safe from another 9/11-like attack for seven years, the now increasingly likely victory in Iraq, AIDS relief abroad, new expansions for Medicare and federal support for schools versus the mishandling of Hurricane Katrina, the error-plagued 2004-7 occupation of Iraq, and out-of-control federal spending. As in the case of the once-unpopular Ulysses S. Grant, Calvin Coolidge and Harry Truman, Bush’s supposedly "worst” presidency could one day not look so bad in comparison with the various administrations that followed. But these days even that modest assessment that things aren’t that bad — or all that different from the past — may well elicit a hysterical reaction from an increasingly hysterical generation.
 

RX Senior
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This guy is WAY off the mark. Good for him he has a cushy job writing slanted articles and giving an occasional speech.

He seems to imply that everything will just magically come around by itself. The government helped get us into this mess, they are going to have to help get us out. It's as simple as that.

"Current panic psychological" ?! Get real. There is nothing psychological about watching half your 401k get pissed away or getting laid off from a employer you have been faithful to for 15 years. It's called 'reality'.
 

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This guy is WAY off the mark. Good for him he has a cushy job writing slanted articles and giving an occasional speech.

He seems to imply that everything will just magically come around by itself. The government helped get us into this mess, they are going to have to help get us out. It's as simple as that.

"Current panic psychological" ?! Get real. There is nothing psychological about watching half your 401k get pissed away or getting laid off from a employer you have been faithful to for 15 years. It's called 'reality'.


Really Rob? And how much of the reality with your 401k is based on fear? Stocks go up and down. Most of the time based on projections. Why do you think we have a futures market?

What I would do right now is sell everything in your 401k..and when the market rebounds buy it all back.
 

I'm still here Mo-fo's
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Or tens of thousands lose their houses to foreclosure.

Davis is actually a pretty smart cat, but his blood runs Neocon red thru and thru. They're in damage control now Robbie. So worried about the tarnished legacy of their beloved brain trust.

One of his poorer attempts at scribbling and smacks heavily of sour grapes. Try again Victor.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Neocons working en masse since early fall (when it became rather evident Obama would steamroll McCain) to set up a bevy of unattainable straw men for the coming eight years.

"Will return all US military troops stateside!"
"Will balance the federal budget and create a surplus!"
"Will put a chicken in every pot and a cow in every field!"

Then in next few years, they get paid again to declare, "See, we told ya!"

Paid pundrity is not a bad biz to get into.
 

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Of course he didn't promise to "return all US military stateside" as he has promised to send even more troops to afghanistan.
He did, however, promise to end the war in Iraq. And that, to me, means getting all of the troops out of Iraq...which won't happen even in 8 years.


Neocons working en masse since early fall (when it became rather evident Obama would steamroll McCain) to set up a bevy of unattainable straw men for the coming eight years.

"Will return all US military troops stateside!"
"Will balance the federal budget and create a surplus!"
"Will put a chicken in every pot and a cow in every field!"

Then in next few years, they get paid again to declare, "See, we told ya!"

Paid pundrity is not a bad biz to get into.
 

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