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The Price of Congress’ Crazy Rage

This has been a bad week for American leadership, and next week could be worse. In trying to calm the country, Barack Obama made one joke too many while lawmakers in Washington spent their time acting out the worst stereotypes of politicians as fools, cowards and knaves.

“Congress,” writes New York Times business columnist Joe Nocera, “with its howls of rage, its chaotic, episodic reaction to the crisis, and its shameless playing to the crowds, is out of control. This week, the body politic ran off the rails.

“There are times when anger is cathartic. There are other times when anger makes a bad situation worse. ‘We need to stop committing economic arson,’ Bert Ely, a banking consultant, said to me this week. That is what Congress committed: economic arson.”

The scorched earth from that diversion now litters the battlefield of next week’s crucial fight over how to clean out toxic assets from the paralyzed banking system. But how can there be a rational discussion of the Administration’s plan to partner with private investors after all this madness? How do people in Wall Street now feel about making deals with a government held hostage by lunatic lawmakers?

When Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner unveils his plan, there will be serious doubts, some of which are surfacing beforehand. Paul Krugman predicts:

“In effect, Treasury will be creating–deliberately!–the functional equivalent of Texas S&Ls in the 1980s: financial operations with very little capital but lots of government-guaranteed liabilities. For the private investors, this is an open invitation to play heads I win, tails the taxpayers lose…”

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3 Responses to “The Price of Congress’ Crazy Rage”

  1. river says:

    how very true. . .if only we could all rise to a greater level of maturity. . .

  2. Don Quijote says:

    How do people in Wall Street now feel about making deals with a government held hostage by lunatic lawmakers?

    What Lunatic Law Makers?

    Generally speaking, the American Public does not follow politics, and law makers can pretty much do whatever they please, but at this point in time, when the Middle Class has seen it's 401Ks turn into 201Ks, the law makers having read the opinion polls, and noticed that people are now paying attention, they know damn well that if they give anything to Wall Street, they will be challenged in primaries and will lose the next election.

    As for those of you who think that the populace should learn it's place and let their betters run the show, all I have to say is tough, you should have kept the greed-heads under control.

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