INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
History is important to study... if you can trust the national media to not withhold key information they don't want you to see or twist daily news to fit their agenda.
In the last 40 years, there have been nine major surveys of editors and reporters who work for national media. The most they ever voted Republican in a national election was 14%; the more common range has been 4% to 7%. This is one reason why no matter who wins a political debate, the media almost en masse repeatedly tell you their man won. And most voters who don't pay close attention will believe them. It's called coordinated propaganda.
What were the most consistently repeated and strongly asserted slogans you've heard over the last few years? "We're losing in Iraq . . . we must get out . . . it's costing us $10 billion a month we could use here at home . . . we're not any safer . . . the surge won't work."
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A year ago, vice presidential candidate Joe Biden opined that we should get out of Iraq immediately and then divide it into three separate countries. This is the sound, seasoned judgment that's supposed to compensate for running mate Barack Obama's youth and complete lack of experience with the military or America's security in a dangerous world!
Well, the surge in Iraq has worked, we are winning decisively and, as a result, now have a new democracy and strong ally in the Mideast. Meanwhile, seven years have passed since 9/11, and we still haven't had another major terrorist attack on our soil.
Yet the media give no credit at all to President Bush, the only president to do something about the terrorist attacks that we had suffered repeatedly beginning in 1992.
With the economy slowing and a weak financial market created solely by our subprime mortgage mess, what do we keep hearing now from the media in hopes the majority will believe it and vote accordingly? "The mess is caused by eight years of failed Bush economic policies, including the tax cuts for the rich that should be rescinded."
This is not the talk of a uniter of people, but rather a separator stirring up class warfare, envy and resentment. It's a stirring-up of hate in an attempt to endlessly criticize, condemn, demean and destroy every opponent.
Do you know the real cause of the out-of-control subprime loan mess that's creating so much fear and hurting every American? It's not something the media or a certain political party wants you to find out. A picture is worth a thousand words, however, and we've made notes of key events on the chart above that you can follow as we give you some key facts.
In 1995, President Clinton mandated new regulations that coerced banks to make significantly more subprime loans to inner-city residents previously viewed as unqualified buyers in high-risk areas. Banks were rated on how well they complied and faced big fines if they didn't do what government regulators wanted.
The government's worst decision was allowing and encouraging banks, for the first time, to bundle these subprime loans in giant packages with prime loans. These packages were then sold to other investors as safe because they were government-sponsored by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The first of these government-encouraged packages came to market in 1997. For the banks, they were profitable because they could be sold quickly and thereby absolve the banks of any risk in the loans they made. Many subprimes were variable-rate loans made without down payments or documentation of borrowers' incomes.
The banks could then use the money to make even more of these lower-quality, government-required loans, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bought them with virtual abandon.
It evolved into a Big Government pyramid scheme with Democrats in charge of Fannie and Freddie making large political donations to Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, Barack Obama and other politicians who continually defended the anything-goes lending of the two agencies.
In short, this was yet another well-intended, Democrat-supported,government-designed and run program that failed miserably and had the usual unintended consequences.
A few more facts:
• April 2001: The Bush administration's fiscal budget stated that the size of Fannie and Freddie was "potential problem because financial trouble of a large Government-Sponsored Enterprise could cause repercussions in financial markets, affecting federally insured entities and economic activity."
• May 2002: The Office of Management and Budget wanted disclosure and governance principles in Bush's 10-point plan for corporate responsibility to apply to Fannie and Freddie.
• February 2003: A e House Financial Services Committee, recofederal housing oversight report warned that unexpected problems at Fannie Mae could immediately spread into financial sectors.
• September 2003: Treasury Secretary John Snow, in testimony recommended that Congress enact legislation to create new agency to regulate and supervise financial activities of housing-related government entities to set prudent and appropriate minimum capital requirements.
Rep. Frank, the committee's ranking member, strongly disagreed, saying: "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not facing any kind of financial crisis . . . . The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we'll see in terms of affordable housing."
• February 2004: The president's new budget again highlighted risks of the explosive growth of these government enterprises and the then-low levels of required capital. It also called for the creation of a world class regulator. The administration determined that housing regulators of government agencies lacked the power and stature to meet their responsibilities and should be replaced with a strong new third regulator.
• February 2004: Greg Mankiw, chairman of Bush's Council of Economic Advisers, cautioned Congress against taking the strength of financial markets for granted. He too called for reducing the risk by ensuring that housing GSEs are overseen by an effective regulator.
• April 2004: Rep. Frank ignored warnings, accusing the administration of creating an "artificial issue." "People pay their mortgages," he told a group of mortgage bankers. "I don't think we are in any remote danger here. This focus on receivership, I think, is intended to create fears that aren't there."
From 2004 to 2008 the Bush administration made 12 more attempts to get Congress to pass legislation to have safer, sounder regulatory oversight of Fannie and Freddie and capital rules. You can see them for yourself on the White House Web site. But here are a couple of examples that show how Democrats resisted:
• July 2005: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid rejected legislation on reforming Fannie and Freddie. "While I favor improving oversight by our federal housing regulators to ensure safety and soundness, we cannot pass legislation that would limit Americans from owning homes and harm our economy in the process," he said.
• August 2007: Sen. Dodd, another Democrat, ignored President Bush's emphatic calls for Congress to pass Fannie and Freddie reform legislation and called for him to immediately reconsider his ill-advised position.
Democrats have become a far-left propaganda party with the lowest-ranked Congress in history. For six years, they have consistently refused to rein in the monumentally risky subprime loans that Clinton Democrats gave birth to.
Yet, voters are blaming Republicans for this crisis and seem to think that a newcomer they know little about, despite his questionable past associates and mentors, can bring us more huge programs. These include socialize the health care system at a time when government-run systems in Canada and Britain are lower in quality and nearly bankrupt.
We will not have another 1929. The chart above shows we are in a 1937-type correction with a 1938-39 perhaps ahead. That's when England's Neville Chamberlain thought he could appease Hitler just by talking to him and getting a signature on a piece of paper that guaranteed "peace in our time."
Today, a new Hitler in Iran says he wants to have similar relations with the U.S. Are terrorists hoping that we will sign a nice agreement that gives Iran another couple of years to develop a nuclear weapon?
Finally, history shows that since World War II, our best results-oriented presidents were Truman, Eisenhower and Reagan. They were much older — in their 60s and 70s — more experienced and made sounder, more productive decisions. The three youngest presidents — Kennedy, Carter and Clinton — all had more problems, particularly with national defense and dealing with dangerous dictators that were threats to America's security.
2 comments:
Someone forwarded me the article you reference. I see you are one for facts and reason. Here's my take on the article, typos and all:
Wouldn't it be great if we the people would engage on a regular basis in critical thinking instead of allowing what we passively watch hear and read to form opinions for us! How much better a nation would we be as a whole if we turned off the ravings of Bill O'Rielly and Keith Olberman and took the time to formulate informed opinions about serious matters? Then took these informed opinions and argued with people who don't agree with us but also have informed opinions? By God but I think we'd actually get somewhere as a nation.
This article tries to pass itself off as a reasoned argument. Anyone with half of a brain and a penchant for analysis can see plainly that it's not scottish and therefore it's crap. Allow me to torpedo.
Falsity #1: There is a liberal media bias
I just ran a proquest search of scholarly journals for "liberal media bias" Since 2006 I found 3 studies done on this. 2 of 3 say that there is no media bias, either liberal or conservative. One said that there was a liberal media bias. I have attached the abstract summaries of the three studies as well as critiques and rebuttals to the third as there were questions about it's methodology. Anyone with any sort of pride in their capacities of reason would immediately take as suspect an article that comes right out the gates trying to condition it's audience. For example, I might start a conversation with someone saying, "Mac, who is a proven liar, said just the other day that....." I've preconditioned my audience to discount whatever you said and also set myself up as the moral authority with whatever I will say. This article does that with the unfounded claim of liberal media bias. And come on, he (I assume he but who knows since the author is never identified--something that should pique any critical readers interest) claims there are studies to prove this but doesn't offer up a name of a study or place them as a footnote or endnote! Some "news".
Falsity #2: Three Iraq's!?!!? Joe Biden is an idio....oh wait!
Have you read the Biden article? Here's a link to his oped in the times from 2006
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/01/opinion/01biden.html
Besides, things are already heading toward partition: increasingly, each community supports federalism, if only as a last resort. The Sunnis, who until recently believed they would retake power in Iraq, are beginning to recognize that they won't and don't want to live in a Shiite-controlled, highly centralized state with laws enforced by sectarian militias. The Shiites know they can dominate the government, but they can't defeat a Sunni insurrection. The Kurds will not give up their 15-year-old autonomy.
He's not calling for anything radical. He's offering up A solution in a public forum for debate. Novel eff'ing idea. Considering the history of the region (you have studied your British post-colonial history, right? right? We can't be good little debaters if we don't know what the F#$K where talking about!) it's not a horrible solution. My critique would be that a weak central government in Iraq wouldn't wield enough power to hold the factions together and they would ultimately fight it out for control. Further, a weak central government wouldn't allow us to exert the type of leverage that we would need to in the near future to maintain stability in the region. I'm also thinking about how an emboldened Iran might take advantage of the split to prop up the Shiite faction. That dumb Joe Biden, advancing ideas for debate.
Falsity #3: The Surge worked, we're winning the war and Iraq is a democracy
What? Since when? We're winning? Holy crap, someone better tell JFCOM and CENTCOM because we're sure as hell still deploying troops there. First of all, there is a common media narrative that the surge and only the surge caused the decrease in sectarian violence in iraq. If that we're the case why didn't we "surge" earlier? The answer is that the ground work was laid by a) the Sadr militias continued ceasefire, b) the ethnic cleansing ran out of neighborhoods that needed ethnic cleansing, and c) most importantly the Sunni Awakening. These three things preceded the surge and set the conditions to allow an expanded military presence to capitalize and increase security so that the Iraqi politicians would get off their asses. So far they have not gotten off their asses. Second, we're winning? Is A.Nonymous, the author, a scholar of Carl Von Clausewitz, Baron Jomini, Liddell Hart? Or perhaps he studied Gallieni in French North Africa? Maybe he's a specialist of the Boer wars? An avid reader of Charles Callwell? He's such the scholar he can actually tell us what winning means? As Gen Petraeus said recently, there is no hill for us to take, plant the flag, declare victory and go home. Counterinsurgencies don't work that way. Sorry to disappoint but todays war isn't like the battle of the pacific in WWII where we island hop our way to victory. Finally, Iraq is not a democracy. If it were, we wouldn't need to be there anymore.
SubFalsity #3a: No attack on US soil since 9/11
Yeah, so? I get the impression that our author thinks that invading iraq prevented a follow on terrorist attack. I guess his geography skills suck as bad as his reasoning skills. So that we're clear, the terrorists are in Afghanistan and along the Afghan/Pakistan border. That's where Osama and his pals are. They are not in Baghdad. They never were in Baghdad.
Falsity #4: Obama engages in hate speech.
Though I couldn't find this supposed quote, "The mess is caused by eight years of failed Bush economic policies, including the tax cuts for the rich that should be rescinded." I will point out that Obama has stated that if we're in a recession he would not rescind the bush tax cuts. No big deal, right? Since most people read passively, they won't pick up on this subtle perversion of truth. But no problem, we're all lemmings who couldn't argue our way out of a wet paper bag. Anyway, the Anonymous authors bigger point is that this is tantamount to hate speech. What? Hello? Turn on your rational thinking caps! Igniting class warfare? And how dare he criticize his opponents tax policy position! Wake up! That's what he's supposed to do! He didn't call George Bush a level II functional illiterate! He's criticizing tax policy for goodness sake.
Falsity #5: The facts about the facts.
Again, our anonymous author is asking us to set truth aside to support his (not even a little bit biased although he rails against media bias) article. Truth be told, there is PLENTY of blame to go around on this mess we're in. I'm not too well versed on fiscal matters but I know enough about government to know that GW has had a republican majority for six of the eight years he's been in office. I also know a bit about how the legislative body is set up. So. Rep Frank could not be the ranking member of the HFS committee because there was a Republican majority in congress at the time. See how that works? Just facts, stupid little things. In July 2005 there was no such person as Senate Majority leader Harry Reid because, again, it was a REPUBLICAN MAJORITY in the senate! I keep tripping on facts here. Dammit! So, how did Democrats fail for six years to do anything? Because they've only held the majority for two years. Two years! I'm not defending them, I'm just pointing out facts. Again, plenty of blame to go around and no one is immune. So how dare the voters blame the Republicans who have controlled the legislative and executive branches of government for six years. The nerve of those stupid voters expecting congress to do something. Shit! They were busy raising money from donors for their reelection campaign funds.
Dregs:
1. Yes, the old guilt by association game. Assuming ones readers are boobs allows one to advance an idiotic argument.
2. Obama and socialized medicine OOOOHHHHHH scary word. Socialism=bad scary! Look, I can argue against socialized medicine because I actually have an informed opinion on the rights of man and the role of government. It's not that hard, really. But let me point out that the beginning and end of this line of attack is the phrase "socialized medicine." That shouldn't serve to convince anyone one way or the other. But it does. Fools.
3. Somehow the line of argument that the market is in a correction phase leads to Obama is Neville Chamberlain and Iran is Pre world war II Germany. I know this article lacked any sort of thesis statement, but how did we get to international politics and how am I to believe the A.Nonymous is any sort of expert? Quick, ask him to differentiate between the principles of foreign relations realists and foreign relations idealists! What are the fundamental differences between 1939 Germany and 2008 Iran! Does he think that Iran is going to Nuke Israel? What would they gain? What would they lose?
4. Usually the last paragraph in an argumentative paper is a summary of the points made and a conclusion. So am I to believe that they best our no-named author has to offer is--Vote for McCain because he's older than Obama?
Look, I'm by nature conservative. I would prefer a conservative style of governance. It's no slight against those who prefer a progressive style of governance. They've thought it through and decided they want their government run differently. Put us all in a room together and let us figure out the best way to go forward. What I am absolutely intolerant of is an intellectually ignorant populous that doesn't know HOW to think and is perfectly content in said ignorance to allow someone to tell them WHAT to think.
What you forwarded was not a conservative view. It was not a history lesson. It was not a valid analysis of the economic crisis. The author should be taken outside and beaten with a large fish.
Thoughts?
Appendix as promised:
Measuring Media Bias: A Content Analysis of Time and Newsweek Coverage of Domestic Social Issues, 1975-2000*
Tawnya J Adkins Covert, Philo C Wasburn. Social Science Quarterly. Austin: Sep 2007. Vol. 88, Iss. 3; pg. 690, 17 pgs
Abstract (Summary)
Objective. This study is an effort to produce a more systematic, empirically-based, historical-comparative understanding of media bias than generally is found in previous works. Methods. The research employs a quantitative measure of ideological bias in a formal content analysis of the United States' two largest circulation news magazines, Time and Newsweek. Findings are compared with the results of an identical examination of two of the nation's leading partisan journals, the conservative National Review and the liberal Progressive. Results. Bias scores reveal stark differences between the mainstream and the partisan news magazines' coverage of four issue areas: crime, the environment, gender, and poverty. Conclusion. Data provide little support for those claiming significant media bias in either ideological direction. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Study of Partisan News Readers Reveals Hostile Media Perceptions of Balanced Stories
Kyun Soo Kim, Yorgo Pasadeos. Newspaper Research Journal. Athens: Spring 2007. Vol. 28, Iss. 2; pg. 99, 8 pgs
Abstract (Summary)
Niven also found little evidence of partisan media bias.5 Entman suggests that the liberal bias charge against the media is largely unfounded,6 although some scholars argue that the American press has been more liberal or conservative, reflecting the climate of the country at certain times.7 That finding leads one to speculate that audiences' personal characteristics (particularly partisanship) may be much more important than news media in shaping perceptions of news bias.8 Indeed, group membership or partisanship has been found to play a role in the perception of media bias regarding partisan issues such as the Middle East conflict.9 This tendency for partisans to see news coverage as biased against their own side is consistent with the more general "hostile media phenomenon," which suggests people on opposing sides of an issue often judge the same news story as biased against their own views.10 The "hostile media" perception may help to explain why the press receives widespread criticism as being pro-left or pro-right, especially if partisans happen to see even a balanced press as leaning in favor of their opponent. Issue importance is also an important factor for the hos tile media perception22 although most people are also prone to biased perceptions.23 For example, while this study found the HMP present only among pro-life college students, there was no HMP of similar magnitude among pro-choice partisans, for whom the issue may have held lesser importance.
A Measure of Media Bias
Tim Groseclose, Jeffrey Milyo. The Quarterly Journal of Economics. Cambridge: Nov 2005. Vol. 120, Iss. 4; pg. 1191
Abstract (Summary)
We measure media bias by estimating ideological scores for several major media outlets. To compute this, we count the times that a particular media outlet cites various think tanks and policy groups, and then compare this with the times that members of Congress cite the same groups. Our results show a strong liberal bias: all of the news outlets we examine, except Fox News' Special Report and the Washington Times, received scores to the left of the average member of Congress. Consistent with claims made by conservative critics, CBS Evening News and the New York Times received scores far to the left of center. The most centrist media outlets were PBS NewsHour, CNN's Newsnight, and ABC's Good Morning America; among print outlets, USA Today was closest to the center. All of our findings refer strictly to news content; that is, we exclude editorials, letters, and the like. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
http://www.brendan-nyhan.com/blog/2005/12/the_problems_wi.html
http://158.130.17.5/~myl/languagelog/archives/001169.html
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/001301.html
I gave you a platform-what began as a "reasoned" argument soon fell apart. Perception is ones reality and clearly your "reading" of this piece is different than mine. You write as an angry person-nice try with vulgar language mixed in with self righteous statements of your own. You hint that you stand apart from any partisan position yet you arguments are elitist at best.Mind your temper-good man!
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