This morning, Barack Obama is scheduled to give a speech on the economy which is a designed to push forward work on the stimulus package percolating through Congress. It will begin at 11 am ET at George Mason University in Virginia.
While the speech will not cover every contingency, I’ve gotten some preview excerpts from the transition team which give us a glimpse without giving away too many specifics. Call it a first pass at pushback against Mitch McConnell’s Do Nothing, "Screw You I Got Mine" Posse.
Thought you all would be interested in the read:
I don’t believe it’s too late to change course, but it will be if we don’t take dramatic action as soon as possible. If nothing is done, this recession could linger for years. The unemployment rate could reach double digits. Our economy could fall $1 trillion short of its full capacity, which translates into more than $12,000 in lost income for a family of four. We could lose a generation of potential and promise, as more young Americans are forced to forgo dreams of college or the chance to train for the jobs of the future. And our nation could lose the competitive edge that has served as a foundation for our strength and standing in the world.
In short, a bad situation could become dramatically worse.
…..
There is no doubt that the cost of this plan will be considerable. It will certainly add to the budget deficit in the short-term. But equally certain are the consequences of doing too little or nothing at all, for that will lead to an even greater deficit of jobs, incomes, and confidence in our economy. It is true that we cannot depend on government alone to create jobs or long-term growth, but at this particular moment, only government can provide the short-term boost necessary to lift us from a recession this deep and severe. Only government can break the vicious cycles that are crippling our economy – where a lack of spending leads to lost jobs which leads to even less spending; where an inability to lend and borrow stops growth and leads to even less credit.
That is why we need to act boldly and act now to reverse these cycles. That’s why we need to put money in the pockets of the American people, create new jobs, and invest in our future. That’s why we need to re-start the flow of credit and restore the rules of the road that will ensure a crisis like this never happens again.
That work begins with this plan – a plan I am confident will save or create at least three million jobs over the next few years. It is not just another public works program. It’s a plan that recognizes both the paradox and the promise of this moment – the fact that there are millions of Americans trying to find work, even as, all around the country, there is so much work to be done. That’s why we’ll invest in priorities like energy and education; health care and a new infrastructure that are necessary to keep us strong and competitive in the 21st century. That’s why the overwhelming majority of the jobs created will be in the private sector, while our plan will save the public sector jobs of teachers, cops, firefighters and others who provide vital services.
….
I understand that some might be skeptical of this plan. Our government has already spent a good deal of money, but we haven’t yet seen that translate into more jobs or higher incomes or renewed confidence in our economy. That’s why the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan won’t just throw money at our problems – we’ll invest in what works. The true test of the policies we’ll pursue won’t be whether they’re Democratic or Republican ideas, but whether they create jobs, grow our economy, and put the American Dream within reach of the American people.
Instead of politicians doling out money behind a veil of secrecy, decisions about where we invest will be made transparently, and informed by independent experts wherever possible. Every American will be able to hold Washington accountable for these decisions by going online to see how and where their tax dollars are being spent. And as I announced yesterday, we will launch an unprecedented effort to eliminate unwise and unnecessary spending that has never been more unaffordable for our nation and our children’s future than it is right now.
….
Now, this recovery plan alone will not solve all the problems that led us into this crisis. We must also work with the same sense of urgency to stabilize and repair the financial system we all depend on. That means using our full arsenal of tools to get credit flowing again to families and business, while restoring confidence in our markets. It means launching a sweeping effort to address the foreclosure crisis so that we can keep responsible families in their homes. It means preventing the catastrophic failure of financial institutions whose collapse could endanger the entire economy, but only with maximum protections for taxpayers and a clear understanding that government support for any company is an extraordinary action that must come with significant restrictions on the firms that receive support. And it means reforming a weak and outdated regulatory system so that we can better withstand financial shocks and better protect consumers, investors, and businesses from the reckless greed and risk-taking that must never endanger our prosperity again.
No longer can we allow Wall Street wrongdoers to slip through regulatory cracks. No longer can we allow special interests to put their thumbs on the economic scales. No longer can we allow the unscrupulous lending and borrowing that leads only to destructive cycles of bubble and bust.
It is time to set a new course for this economy, and that change must begin now. We should have an open and honest discussion about this recovery plan in the days ahead, but I urge Congress to move as quickly as possible on behalf of the American people. For every day we wait or point fingers or drag our feet, more Americans will lose their jobs. More families will lose their savings. More dreams will be deferred and denied. And our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.
Initial impression: well-crafted words, but I’m anxious to hear about specifics. The language on enforcement is promising but, again, does this signal re-regulation as Glass-Steagall used to do or something else entirely? And, if so, what else, exactly?




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Morning Christy.
As always, the devil is in the details.
i’d like to know what obama means by this. it could mean something good – but i haven’t heard any specifics on regulation yet. and that is one of the key things that is necessary to restore confidence.
christy, if you haven’t already, would take a look at hugh’s diary, A Christmas list to fix the financial meltdown?
i know you are very busy, which is why i rarely make such a request. but this diary doesn’t take long to read and imo it’s really, really important.
thanks.
Yeah — the excerpts they gave me were clearly meant to be a teaser. Am hoping there will either be more specifics in the speech or — even better — that there will be some legislative peeks available at some point shortly as well. Devil is definitely in the details but some of this sounds potentially very good…
And as always, the Republican obstructionists, led by Boehner and McConnell, can’t wait to delay, deny and defer these plans as long as possible. They will neuter key provisions, cause Obama to concede key points and bargain away large portions of the stimuli into giveaways to the rich, such as huge tax cuts he has already conceded.
So he is going to give his speech at George Mason Univ. I thought the president was supposed to use troops for a back drop. Is Obama off in the wrong direction /s
286 hrs & 47 min
Will try and get to it — The Peanut is home on a snow day today and I have to wangle two conference calls and picking up my FIL from dialysis. (aiiiyeeee!) But will definitely put it on my “to do” list. Thanks for the heads up…tough to keep up for me these days.
Good Morning everyone….. I was wondering…… Obama wasn’t just selling it to Congress….. Get the people fired up and calling those in the plantation caucus to tell them to get the stick out of their XXX and vote for it….
Frem someone who lives at the bottom of the barrel: When will he consider the poor? We have been suffering under this “I’ve got mine, screw you” mentality for almost 2 decades now. We are punished for being poor, , forced to pay more taxes out of our income than any other class, given no chances to “move up” the economic ladder, and then told it is all our fault. I am hoping that whatever is done that everyone is included in this “economic stimulas package!
Cat In Seattle
Hey — was thinking about you this morning. How are things with you?
thanks christy. good luck with all you have on your plate.
I hope he does decide the end-run them by doing more of these public events. The more public support he can build behind a good package (assuming it’s a good package, which at this point for me is still an “if” since I don’t have details), the more the McConnell posse looks like a bunch of Ebenezer Scrooge’s doing the “are there no workhouses” line.
Only a true warrior like George W. Bush is allowed to use troops as props. It was in a signing statement.
i don’t think the dem leadership has given much thought to that. up to us to connect the dots and demand policies that reflect our values.
Not much there for us now. I am adapting to my new lifestyle, I grew up poor so it is like going back to the past. But I see nothing for us as it stands.
Health Update
Don’t want to derail the thread….. I’m getting stronger….. that Interlukin really kicked my…… actually the Mack truck didn’t just run over me but backed up several times….
I tried to link the poverty level and taxes in my comment, but it did not work, I am not sure why. Here is a link to the study that shows how the poor pays more taxes than any other class: http://www.itepnet.org/. This is nationwide and it doesn’t matter what type of revenue it is, whether income taxes, sales taxes or property taxes.
My point being that the poor pay the highest price for our infrastructure, while it is the upper income folks who get all the perks and use it more. the poor pay as high as 17% of their incomes in taxes, while the rich pay 1-5%. There are far more poor than rich.
If we are the biggest revenue base then, when will we get the same consideration as other classes?
Cat in Seattle
The thing I find most amusing about Obama going to George Mason is that one of his more wingnutty economic critics is a professor there. He’s taking it right to this guy’s lap. Cracking me up.
If we could all just say ‘enough’ to the continual Republic lies aout their economic strategies, we could have the necessary honest discussions about actually fixing things.
How are you managing during the flooding? I understand from friends and relatives living in Cap. Hill that it’s bad in the outlying areas, some bridges closed, 5 highway closed in spots, but not into metro Seattle. Yet.
Take good care.
The troops are under strict orders not to cast their boots at him. Besides they are much harder to unlace surreptitiously.
Morning Christy,
The 800# gorilla in the room is the war department.$ 600 + billion , homeland security $ 200 or so billion and off the book wars $ 200 billion, at least. Adds up to a trillion to me.
May be we’re overdue for a major course correction as to where we spend our limited resources.
Like the entirely useless nuclear arsenal.
But you know I want to drive an S class benz but I, not wanting squander the kids meager inheritance, won’t allow it.
I think we’ll see movement very shortly in Congress on a host of legislation that was stalled due to veto threats from Bush or obstruction in the last Congress from the Blue Dogs and the GOP. The numbers have shifted on a number of issues, and we should see introduction of things like SCHIP, the Ledbetter pay equity bill, Head Start funding and child nutrition.
I’ll have a lot more on all of these in the days ahead…promise.
I just use my two adult kids…. my son is two semesters away from graduation from ASU, working part time and makes between $15-18K…. my daughter is a manager of a national retail store (not a big store) and makes a around $40K…. my son who really needed the bigger tax rebate got the lesser amount and does pay more taxes.
Dang is it tax time again….. grrrr
AMG SL65? Go for it & come right by and give me a ride! He said greedily! *G*
So why is PEBO’s program 30-40% the same?
At least he didn’t invoke bloody “bipartisanship.”
((((((katymine))))))
thank you for the update. was wondering how your scans went….. hugs and good thoughts sent your way.
Hey how about floating some “USA Energy War Bonds” Just maybe a war on energy might pull us out of a “looming depression!,” by creating jobs and stimulating the economy to address a real need. Energy Corporations might not like it but a reduction in per capita energy costs in America might provide considerable resources/liberty to revive this dying economy? We all experience the “trickle up effect” when gas went from 4.75 to 1.59 per gallon. We all have more money/liberty in our pockets now that gas has dropped in price. Yet all other consumer goods have dropped little. Seen this “play” before? I do believe Obama gets it. Vast fortunes wasted could have and should have been better spent with a better return on Investment than that which we have today! None!
Morning Christy & pups. Seems I’ve been hearing a lot of R’s warning about opposition & obstruction without offering alternative solutions (in fact Andy Card was on the Joe & Mika show this am). What I haven’t been hearing from R’s is the alternatives. So, my guess is oppo & obstruct is all they bring to the table.
Will Reid, who has demonstrated he is willing to ignore a Senator’s hold, as in the case of Dodd on PAA, make this a policy and start doing the same to all these frivolous Republican holds on every piece of consequential legislation that comes to the Senate? Is he going to be the Man, at last? It certainly will put an end to Mitch’s chuckling…
I find it a little curious that this speech would be occuring at the same time as Daschles confirmation hearing. There should be some significant clues as to where health care might be going during this hearing.
286 hrs & 29 min
Dya think?
If I had an answer to that question, I’d give you one. But I have no idea…I can’t predict behavior from any of these folks, it’s too variable. All I can do is help bring on the pressure and vociferously object to staffers where I think it’s needed…and sometimes, that’s enough to push something over the top. More of that, please.
the problem with some of the these policies, as good as they are, is that they don’t get to the causes so that instead of arguing about treating symptoms we’re doing the things we need to so that no one goes without food, health care or education.
it is throwing us crumbs.
Very gentle hugs, hon…and enormous good thoughts headed your way along with some prayers.
One step at a time, though. Some stop-gap crumbs are desperately needed while they sort out the bigger picture details. Without them, things are going to get even worse than they already are. Some communities, requests for free school lunch are up 60% in some states. They can’t wait on expansion on that and a few other stop-gaps.
have only been watching for a couple of years, but reid’s behavior has seemed extremely consistent. :(
I hope it helps your posts to have stats like what I have provided to show in your wonderful comments about the burden the poor have taken. Most people think the poor are a “burden” when in fact we are carrying the REAL burden and paying the bills for the rich. I am SO glad you are writing about Head Start and those things. These programs are important. Thanks from the bottom of my heart for your concern.
Love Cat
I wonder why he is giving it at 11:00 am on a Thursday. In my opinion this
is the kind of speech that needs to be given at 7:00 pm on a Sunday evening.
Most Americans will only hear this after it has been edited and filtered by the talking heads.
i’m not arguing against crumbs. what i am trying to point out is that there are no signs of things getting sorted out – only hundreds of billions of dollars, maybe trillions, being stolen from the american people. money that could be used to provide for people who need it instead of their friends at citigroup.
Keep fighting, katymine. We’re pulling for you.
Thanks for the post, Christy. Like selise, I’m intrigued by the words about returning regulation to the financial markets. If they are followed with action, that will be good for all of us.
I hear ya — I just don’t have any real answers beyond what we all already know. Hopefully, I’ll get some on my calls today — but I’m not banking on getting everything for a few more weeks. I think they are all sorting things out as they go because every time we turn around the economic numbers look worse and worse…honestly, I think everyone is sort of groping through this together at the moment.
That is certainly what I’ve been hearing…attack in horrible, insulting, scary terms and rant and offer nothing but criticism.
Are you getting any sense that those who Rubin acolytes who eagerly killed Glass-Steagall are having a change of heart?
The worst one is ….. where is the money coming from…… that is easy…. we are spending $4,000 a second (yes a second) in Iraq……. A couple of seconds would pay for health insurance for me for a year……
Wait until you seem the Dec employment report, out tomorrow morning at 8:30aET. Don’t know what the expecttions are, but my guess is that it will be a lot worse than expected.
Just read it. Thanks. It sums up the whole economic situation/policy issues succintcly.
Obama’s stated priorities include “health care.” Unless we go to single-payer health care, as in John Conyers’s brilliant H.R. 676, it seems to me that our present for-profit “health care” will strangle whatever else we may do to save our economy. Yet this could be an opportunity to generate support for changes we should undoubtedly be making anyway.
E.g., veteran political journalist Robert Kuttner (Obama’s Challenge: America’s Economic Crisis and the Power of a Transformative Presidency, 2008, p. 29), estimates that we could get $650,000,000,000 per year — per year — to finance not only universal health care but also good wages for non-outsourceable human service jobs, repair of infrastructure, etc., thus:
1) Restore pre-W Bush tax structure re those
making more than $250,000 per year: $150,000,000,000
2) Shift IRS auditors now auditing ordinary
Americans back to auditing tax shelters
used only by the richest Americans: $300,000,000,000 in unpaid taxes annually — staggering.
3) Bring U.S. troops home from Iraq: $100,000,000,000
4) Institute a very small tax on purely
speculative investments: $100,000,000,000
And this is even without defunding Star Wars! (which Kuttner does not mention here).
The IRS auditor deployment strategy was new to me.
I’d also add that single-payer health care seems to me the only way that the U.S. will get effective preventative health care. When payment for medical costs is split among a plethora of insurance companies, none has an incentive to provide good preventative care: its insureds of today might well have gone to another company in a year or two, and anyway it can always protect its profits by denying care. So even a law requiring all Americans to buy health insurance will not improve preventative care (and yes, I live in Massachusetts).
In addition, absent single-payer there’s no effective incentive for preventative measures that require federal government action, rather than increased access to the medical system. One examples is getting the lead out of U.S. children’s toys. In European countries, the country as a whole through single-payer would pay for lead poisoning resulting from lead-filled toys. So the EU is adamant about keeping the lead out, and Chinese toy companies reportedly maintain separate, no-lead production lines for export to the EU.
As long as private insurance companies can simply protect their profits by denying care, or hiking their premiums (or both), will we ever have an incentive to, e.g., remineralize our sadly depleted soil, and thus prevent the multitude of chronic ailments that adequate mineral intake can prevent? I doubt it. Single-payer, however, would let us connect the dots.
I’m getting a sense that eveerythingis on the table at the moment — because Obama isn’t taking any of it for granted and he’s expecting people tho challenge their own assumptions because what we’ve previously done obviously isn’t working out as well as people inflated it to be. Beyond that, though, I know what you know. But I do get the sense that deeper questions are being asked at a number of levels — but whethr the answers wil be what I think is best or something else? I’ve got no feeling on that at this point.
My gut says it will be a mix, but it’s just a guess…
So true…there will be some talk about the risk from MIC, but then snort at the tit. Maybe it we did not have all this hardware, we would work a little harder to get along out there.
I think so, too. Just a gut feeling based on how things are here…but it feels bad, doesn’t it?
don’t expect you to have answers – unless you’ve been taking mind reading lessons and not letting us know about your new abilities? *g*
… just taking a look at what the evidence is so far.
who could have predicted?
I wish I did, though. It’s driving me crazy how opaque everything has been. I understand it sort of has to be that way given that you can only have one president leading this at a time…but it sucks to have to just sit back and play guessing games.
I’ve read that NY, NJ, Ohio, North Carolina and New Mexico computer and/or phone systems crashed with the volume of new and existing unemployment filings. Their IT systems cannot handle the traffic.
Christy – He’s even got the military with him on this:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/politi…..tico/17180
“While Americans have always been willing to serve, too many of the young people we need for military service today are inadequately prepared because they lack a high school diploma or because they are in poor physical shape or have a criminal record.
In fact, over 72 percent of 17- to 24-year-olds do not meet the basic educational, physical and moral standards required for service…The most important long-term investment we can make for a strong military is in the health and education of the American people. If we want to ensure that we have a strong, capable fighting force, we need to help America’s youth succeed academically, graduate from high school and obey the law.
The most reliable way to achieve these goals is by providing at-risk children with quality early childhood education. ”
This Op-Ed was written by the following: “Army Gen. Hugh Shelton served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1997 to 2001. John H. Dalton served as secretary of the Navy from 1993 to 1998.”
Do you have a link on that? Missed that…
I just flipped over to cnbc to see if I can learn what the expectations are for tomorrow’s numbers.
State unemployment claim systems overwhelmed
Just one state….
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/200…..t_glitches
“Initial impression: well-crafted words, but I’m anxious to hear about specifics. The language on enforcement is promising but, again, does this signal re-regulation as Glass-Steagall used to do or something else entirely? And, if so, what else, exactly?”
Yes, this reminds me of the campaign meme: “he gives good speech.”
CNN reported this morning that Obama said he is also going to tackle Social Security and Medicare which may be a sign that the elderly will be paying for some of what he wants. We need the lemon pie not just the meringue.
This economic crisis is a manifestation of a much deaper malady in capitalism. That is the catering to short term greed. Corporations are rewarded for profits now not long term planning. Investment firms that handle money are rewarded for short term gains not long term plans. Peoples retirement funds (401K & IRAs) are with these firms. Look at what happens when a company announces mass layoffs. Yay they are going to make more money their stock values go up. Look they are going to ship jobs overseas yay they are going to make more money. Up with their stock values. Wall street is not your friend.
286 hrs & 6 min
cnbc reporting that Marc Rich may have been a Madoff victim.
So true, the old hammer and nail theorem.
That’s a misrepresentation of what he said — he was asked directly about whether there would be consideration of entitlements along with other economic factors and he said “yes.” He didn’t say there would be changes, merely that there would be consideration of the whole of the economic factors.
He has already said during the campaign that they would look at upper limit SS income caps for folks who don’t depend on the benefits. Whether he meant more than that, though, is an open question. I’ve got inquiries in to the transition team on that — will let you know if I hear back…
Break out the teeny karma violins…
“Corporations are rewarded for profits now not long term planning.”
*laughs* With the new corporate welfare of bailout system they are now rewarded for losses, too.
Thanks -s-
Heh. I resisted the schadenfreude in my original “reporting” comment.
obama really should address these “bailouts” as “entitlement programs that cost America the most”
then he can shut up the pie whole from those that want “entitlement programs reduced”
I think you’re right, but it may have something to do with walking the tightrope of saying what has to be said without accomplishing a de facto coup d’ etat prior to inauguration. Just a guess.
I hate to see anyone get defrauded, truly. But honestly, that just shouts karma, doesn’t it? The more information that comes out about the Madoff mess, the more bizarre it all seems…
Why did PEBO select George Mason as the venue? If we’ve learned anything in the past 8 years, it is that the spectacle: play acting and setting become increasingly important. I don’t know much about George Mason, but there must be a reason he selected that university rather than Columbia, Harvard, Chicago, Princeton, to name a few that his family has links with.
Think it was KO who said who would ever “invest” with someone whose name is “made-off?”
It certainly has hurt a lot of worthy non-profits. I have already heard from a lot of organizations that have been impacted by a substantial loss of funding due to Madoff.
It has been eight damn hard years. Consider the world the Bush was inaugurated into as opposed to the one Obama faces.
Not all, but one hell of a lot of the misery that this country and the world is now enduring, is a consequence of Bush’s incompetence. I wonder what the world might look like if Gore had been our President for the last eight years.
It’s been incredibly damaging not just for nonprofits who have, in some cases, lost close to entire operating trusts, but also educational institutions. Didn’t I read somewhere that a couple of NY universities had a lot of their educational trust monies invested with him? What a nightmare…
The Innocence Project of Texas lost a *lot* of their funding to Madoff ponzi scheme.
http://ipoftexas.org/madoff-sc…..-can-help/
So no one knows why PEBO chose George Mason?
It’s a good-sized venue near DC, and while some of its departmental faculties may be a nests of wingnuttery, the school overall isn’t. It’s a university where he had strong support from students, in the county that won Virginia for him. I wouldn’t read too much into it.
Impossible for a Republican to privatize Social Security but may well be possible for a Democrat. The Nixon to China scenario. No Democratic President could “open” up China but a Republican could.
I do know one of his big econ critics teaches there — called him a quasi-socialist during the campaign. So maybe it’s an “in your face” maneuver? Beyond that, I don’t know…
Had forgotten about the county — yeah, they were crucial for his win, too. So it’s more likely a thank you for all the student GOTV work, with the plus of the above in-your-face mention as an added bonus. *g*
New post up.
Half an hour to go until Boom Boom makes his speech.. Market is down 106 It will be interesting to see where it goes.
To privatize social scurity he’d have to pass something through Congress. Not. Gonna. Happen. Have you met the AARP? People defrauded by now-defunct investment schemes? Our craptastic economy? People who are worried sick about their already shrinking pension plans?
At our local Dem meeting last night, someone was saying that if he’d had the speech at the sports arena there, he probably could have filled it. :-)
One of the groups I was thinking of! They do such important work here, as you well know. I hope we are able to take up the slack.
have you seen dean baker’s diary: President-elect Obama Suggests Defaulting on the National Debt?
here’s the bit that jumped out at me:
that’s not increasing revenue by lifting the caps – that’s a reference to spending.
from dean’s link:
i sure hope that was misreported. will look for the transcript….
You’re going to cause us to break down. On the up-side, there’s only twelve more days of the Bush Administration and only twelve more days for the acronym PEBO. The other derogatory nicknames, I guess we’ll have to live with.
Maybe not today or tomorrow but in 4, maybe 6 years, who knows. Americans have a very, very short memory.
Gee, that’s better than the 12 days of Christmas, isn’t it? There is a song in the air, and not the Chipmonks. Thanks
Lol. I guess that for each day we get rid of some of those lords a-leaping, gold rings, and that partridge in a pear tree.
Crosstimber, Unfortunately, although there are only 12 more days W. will be President, I fear we will be living with his incompetentcy for the rest of our lifes.
Very true. In 2000, I wouldn’t have believed it possible.
Off the topic- Never did get reply from Cat in Seattle as to how things are going there with all the recent flooding. I wish you well, Cat and stay safe. For all you breakfast club commenters still around, here are 3 flood stories from today’s Seattle P-I that were just sent me-
“Posted by pennyws at 1/7/09 10:10 p.m.
Yeah, uh, I live in Puyallup and the water is right outside my home. I’m totally gonna drown in all this water, but I wanted to share my flood related story anyway.
Posted by jambi at 1/8/09 6:22 a.m.
I was smart enough to pay attention to the flood-plain maps and built on higher ground. Hard to believe that folks don’t think the world sucks otherwise we would all fall off, right??
Posted by Charlatan at 1/8/09 7:06 a.m.
Here’s a funny little flood story: Our business, a wine shop, got wiped out in LAST year’s floods because the City of Woodinville didn’t do what it’s supposed to do to keep Little Bear Creek clear of fallen trees and one of those darned little suckers (actually it was a great big sucker) floated downstream, lodged in the city’s culvert, and caused a flood! And they STILL haven’t either acknowledged that they were at fault OR done a friggin’ thing about restitution for wiping our our life savings!
Isn’t that hilarious?”
Salon, today, naming the devastation. I, too, would not have imaged the grinning Gov, dolt from TX could have been such a tragic tool.
Dean Baker has a new post front-paged: “President-elect Obama Suggests Defaulting on the National Debt”
Well, it is clear that the centerpiece of Obama’s recovery plan is a big stimulus plan. But mostly this speech is pablum.
He doesn’t say how big the stimulus will be.
He doesn’t say how he wants it divided up. (So far it looks like about 40% will go to fairly non-productive tax cuts.)
He says that 3 million jobs will be saved or created. (His use of the word “saved” makes this bullshit. He can just randomly say that any job not lost was saved. So this looks like a very weak commitment to job makng. If jobs are created he will take credit for it. If this doesn’t happen he will still take credit for jobs “saved”.)
And the fact that he lumps credit, distressed homeowners, banks, and regulation into a single paragraph says that these aren’t his top priority and that he doesn’t have a real plan with regard to them. And the assertion that maximum measures will be taken with regard to the bailout f financial companies looks like pure BS. You have to remember that Obama was the primary force behind getting the goofy and wasteful $700 billion Paulson bailout passed.
Shorter version: This is going to be a scatter shot, not comprehensive plan. It still hasn’t been thought through. The stimulus is its centerpiece, and it hasn’t been completely thought through here. It has a chance of keeping us out of depression but it is unlikely to get us out of recession and its inefficiency will considerably worsen the country’s debt and postpone any eventual (and sustainable) recovery.
Thanks for the perspective, Christy. It’s hard to be patient when things are crumbling while Nero W. Bush fiddles. So many progressives have determined that the honeymoon is over and we still haven’t even consummated the marriage yet. Jan. 20 can’t come soon enough–for us, for the economy, or for the Middle East.
It is emblematic that the delivery of the speech takes place at GMU home and breeding ground of Cato and AEI wonks (wanks). This choice of location is very telling, in other words.