At times--many times, actually--it appears that Right and Left
live in parallel universes. Take Al Hunt, for example, a
long-time Wall Street Journal staffer now at
Bloomberg. He finds fault with Republican criticism of
Barack Obama's drive to turn over not just the American economy
but American society to the government. No surprise
there. Hunt, a thoroughly likable character, long has been
advocating more expansive and expensive government.
However, Hunt's argument is that we are in the economic mess
today because, apparently, we just lived through a horrid period
when Milton Friedman was in charge.
Yet most of the carping is either irresponsible -- a business
news cable network demagogically sought to frighten people --
or the same old stale alternatives: more tax cuts for the
wealthy, smaller government and more deregulation. It's as if
the last eight years have been expunged.
There's a lot of blame for today's economic mess to go around,
but when over the last eight years did we see smaller government
and deregulation? It was a time of unprecedent spending
increases, punctuated by the biggest expansion in the welfare
state in four decades and continued centralization of power in
Washington. Some Lefties even talk about the time of
laissez faire, as if the IRS, SEC, Federal Reserve, FTC, Justice
Department, Treasury Department, OSHA, FCC, FDA, Department of
Labor, Comptroller of the Currency, multitude of other alphabet
federal agencies, and host of state and local bodies didn't
exist.
Indeed, it would be nice if Hunt & Co. would explain how
the worst excesses of government which did so much to create and
exacerbate the housing crisis represented "smaller government and
more deregulation." You know, like the expansive Fed
monetary policy, congressional pressure on banks to lend in
poor neighborhoods irrespective of creditworthiness through the
Community Reinvestment Act, and appallingly irresponsible
financial behavior of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Unreality on the Left — But As For Me .addtoany_share_save
Real American| 3.14.09 @ 1:23PM
It's like the old spending cut argument. If the Dems want to
increase a particular spending item by 10% and the the GOP
proposes only increasing it by 5%, then the Dems complain that
the GOP is cutting spending on that item. Of course, that's
ludicrous, but provides insight into where the Dems start out in
their thinking. They want complete government control of just
about everything. Everything else is limited government and
laissez faire.
Also, Democrats are just insane.
BD57| 3.14.09 @ 4:13PM
Hunt's just repeating the mindless tripe of "talking points" -
what's extraordinary is people like him think they're smart &
well-informed.
"Take Al Hunt, for example, a long-time Wall Street Journal
staffer... "
Another brilliant example of how under the Democrats, dumb is the
new smart.
The scary part -- someone at the WSJ employed this less than
stellar intellect.
mike ryan| 3.16.09 @ 10:39AM
Its amazing how tax cuts for "the rich" created this mess,
according to the Obama administration. They trot out this trope
at every opportunity to push for tax increases. Would somebody
explain to me how the Bush tax cuts (which actually caused the
top 1% of earners to pay more of the goverments cost) caused the
financial crisis? But, the Obamacons are all over the Sunday
shows saying so and noone is challenging them.
MT| 3.17.09 @ 12:36AM
I've always thought that Al Hunt looks like a stupid man;
everytime he opens his mouth he confirms it.
Pingback| 3.14.09 @ 9:00AM
Unreality on the Left — But As For Me links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:
Real American| 3.14.09 @ 1:23PM
It's like the old spending cut argument. If the Dems want to increase a particular spending item by 10% and the the GOP proposes only increasing it by 5%, then the Dems complain that the GOP is cutting spending on that item. Of course, that's ludicrous, but provides insight into where the Dems start out in their thinking. They want complete government control of just about everything. Everything else is limited government and laissez faire.
Also, Democrats are just insane.
BD57| 3.14.09 @ 4:13PM
Hunt's just repeating the mindless tripe of "talking points" - what's extraordinary is people like him think they're smart & well-informed.
kingfish| 3.14.09 @ 6:58PM
Simple. In 2004 the SEC removed the leverage limits. If not for that, you wouldn't have seen the 20,30, and 80 to 1 ratios that crashed the markets.
Jack Bauer| 3.14.09 @ 9:00PM
"Take Al Hunt, for example, a long-time Wall Street Journal staffer... "
Another brilliant example of how under the Democrats, dumb is the new smart.
The scary part -- someone at the WSJ employed this less than stellar intellect.
mike ryan| 3.16.09 @ 10:39AM
Its amazing how tax cuts for "the rich" created this mess, according to the Obama administration. They trot out this trope at every opportunity to push for tax increases. Would somebody explain to me how the Bush tax cuts (which actually caused the top 1% of earners to pay more of the goverments cost) caused the financial crisis? But, the Obamacons are all over the Sunday shows saying so and noone is challenging them.
MT| 3.17.09 @ 12:36AM
I've always thought that Al Hunt looks like a stupid man; everytime he opens his mouth he confirms it.