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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
25 May 2012
The Unraveling Myth of Watergate

It was, they said, the crime of the century. An attempted coup d'etat by Richard Nixon, stopped by two … Read More.

22 May 2012
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18 May 2012
Has the Bell Begun to Toll for the GOP?

Among the more controversial chapters in "Suicide of a Superpower," my book published last fall, … Read More.

Obama's Dilemma -- and Ours

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Seventy-one years ago this spring, after the German army had broken through the French lines, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill flew to France to consult his embattled allies on how to stop the advance.

"Where is the strategic reserve?" Churchill urgently asked the French commander in chief, Gen. Maurice Gamelin, and then he repeated himself in French: "Ou est la masse de manoeuvre?"

"Aucune," came Gamelin's reply. "There is none."

The French had no reserves to stop the Germans from overrunning their country. The Battle of France was lost.

The Obama administration, in its grand strategy to generate a rapid and strong recovery from the Great Recession, is at a similar pass. It has drawn and played all its cards: the $800 billion stimulus bill, three straight deficits averaging $1.4 trillion, the Federal Reserve's mass purchases of bad paper from the world's banks, and QE2, the monthly purchase of $100 billion in Treasury bills that ends June 30.

Yet, from the numbers that came in from May, Obama looks to be holding a losing hand. The anemic growth of the first quarter of 2011 seems to have stalled, and the prospect of a double-dip recession looms.

Though the administration anticipated perhaps a quarter-million new jobs in May, as April produced, May generated only 55,000. The unemployment rate ticked back up to 9.1 percent.

The rise in manufacturing employment went into reverse. Five thousand manufacturing jobs were lost. Consumer confidence sank.

Today 2 million homes remain vacant in the USA, putting immense downward pressure on housing prices. A fourth of U.S. homes are not worth the mortgages being paid upon them.

Says Federal Reserve Vice Chairwoman Janet Yellen, "Looking forward, I unfortunately can envision no quick or easy solutions for the problems still afflicting the housing market." Recovery is going to be a "long, drawn-out process."

A further decline in housing prices of 10 to 25 percent over the next five years, says Robert Shiller, the economist who invented the S&P/Case-Shiller index of property values, "wouldn't surprise me at all."

The economic malaise has now begun to affect the mood of the nation and its attitude toward the president.

Almost 90 percent of Americans think the U.S.

economy is terrible or poor. Sixty percent think the nation is headed in the wrong direction. Forty-eight percent expect a second Great Depression next year. Fewer than 40 percent approve of Obama's handling of the U.S. economy.

In one new poll, Mitt Romney leads the president 49-46 in a matchup in 2012.

The question Obama faces and, indeed, Congress and the nation face is: What do we do now?

Chairman Ben Bernanke of the Federal Reserve has signaled that there will be no QE3, no more Fed purchases of $100 billion a month in U.S. government paper. Buyers for that $1.2 trillion a year of U.S. debt will have to be found elsewhere.

And with the economy stagnant or sinking, the Democrats on Capitol Hill are starting to back away from any deep budget cuts, even as Republicans are now even less likely to sign on to any tax increases to reduce the $1.5 billion deficit.

Indeed, if the economy is stalled or sinking into recession, what economic theory is it that argues for austerity and tax hikes?

And the perceived economic stagnation not only diminishes the chance of a bipartisan budget deal but also points to deadlock on the debt ceiling.

Republicans are already holding out for $1 in spending cuts for every dollar increase in the debt ceiling. And the country seems to be behind the GOP position: If the Senate and White House don't agree to $2 trillion in spending cuts, we don't raise the debt ceiling by $2 trillion.

The U.S. government does not run out of money to pay its bills until August. But markets probably will be making judgments upon the likelihood of a U.S. default well before then.

How did we get here? How did the richest and strongest country in history, triumphant in World War II and the Cold War, approach so soon the condition of the late Spanish and British empires as they began their precipitous declines?

Answer: We overextended ourselves. We bankrupted ourselves.

We undertook the defense of nations all over the world having little to do with our vital national interests. We fought unnecessary wars. We doled out trillions in foreign aid to ingrates, incompetents, opportunists and thieves.

We promised all our seniors Social Security and subsidized medical care for the rest of their lives and failed to put the money away to pay for it. We dropped half of U.S. wage earners off the tax rolls while creating a mammoth welfare state to dwarf anything Norman Thomas and his Socialists dreamed of in the 1930s.

Not only for the United States but also for the West, the days of wine and roses are over.

To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
There is nothing we can do about the past. And, no one seems to be addressing the future, and what to do about it. The Obama administration and the Fed are engaging in extend and pretend, while Republican austerity proposals will only make things worse.

We seem to be repeating history. We made this mistake in 1937. The Japanese made the same mistake a couple decades ago. Now we're making it again. When you have a big bubble crash, you have to get rid of the private debt and losses to recreate demand. You can do it quickly with debt restructuring at the bank level (We passed this opportunity up.), or reduce the recovery time by deficit spending at the federal level on real productive activities that increase demand, not bailing out banks. Or you can extend and prestend for a decade or two with half measures as we are doing now. Or, you can do what Republicans seem to want to do, attack the federal deficit with austerity measures while unemployment is still high and the economy is still in trouble. This will ensure further deflation, and a likely depression.

Federal deficits can be paid off after the economy recovers with a little help from "financial repression", i. e. low interest rates, some inflation, and some reduction in the value of the dollar, the least worst alternative. No matter which alternative you choose, the piper must be paid.

It's time now to consider restructuring of outstanding private debt, breaking up the big banks that caused the problem, beefing up our industrial base and infrastructure again with federal programs, reducing our military presence around the world, taxing capital at the same rates as labor to reduce the size of the FIRE sector, and start putting money into the hands of people who will spend it, not sit on it and wait for another bailout. The real problem is that neither party has the courage to to what's needed.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Elwood Anderson
Thu Jun 9, 2011 5:49 PM
-------DOESanyone expect things to 'get better', or even 'change' with ANY of
these CFR/RIIA Tavistock Institute front candidates?
Comment: #2
Posted by: free bee
Fri Jun 10, 2011 3:47 AM
"How did we get here?"

Moral decadency. We could have survived "dol[ing] out trillions in foreign aid to ingrates, incompetents, opportunists and thieves" if we were not ourselves ruled by ingrates, incompetents, opportunists and thieves; that is, people just like ourselves.

When a people are morally pure, like milk, the cream rises to the top. When they are morally a cesspool, the scum rises to the surface.
Comment: #3
Posted by: cathy jones
Fri Jun 10, 2011 7:25 AM
The root of the fiscal problems of our nation is the 18th century solutions that the republicans are promoting for 21st century problems. It is the fool's quest for Adam Smith's "society of perfect liberty" based on small govt, low taxes and privatization. And 200 years of history is available to substantiate the failures of such policies: to lift an economy, to grow jobs, to decrease poverty and enrich the lives of the many. What is even more egregious is that history correctly demonstrates that such fiscal policies are more suited for a plutocracy and are damaging to evolving democracies. Reagan's VOODOO ECONOMICS does in fact have a basis in history with the same results we are experiencing today. Where the social safety net declined there was increased poverty and unemployment. Tax cuts did not create jobs and the wealth flowed to the top. I do not question the motives behind such flagrant denial of historical facts by the republcans and the damage they are deliberately inflicting on our economy but they are harming our country and a bad piece of history is repeating itself. A lot of people continue to suffer because of their failure to act responsibly. Buchanan really needs to look at the evidence that is plentiful instead of repeating false ecoomics which is ideology over evidence.
Comment: #4
Posted by: CarmanK
Fri Jun 10, 2011 1:21 PM
When you put the clowns in charge, don't be surprised when a circus breaks out.


-peace out
Comment: #5
Posted by: Soothsayer
Sat Jun 11, 2011 9:32 AM
"Globalism, 'Free Trade' and EUGENICS (--and btw TREASON)
are always Intertwined. ALWAYS."
-ALAN WATT
(essential online coverage)

----That's right! ----ALWAYS

GET BEYOND the stale formulations of Nixon/MAO sellout and TREASON sideman
---and now current prime cover man and apologist for the RED China op.

GET BEYOND Rockefeller CNP member ---'CON-servative' Pat Buchanan.
Comment: #6
Posted by: free bee
Mon Jun 13, 2011 7:24 PM
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