by Brian Wolfman
The Washington Post strikes again, with more than a dozen articles today on the U.S. financial crisis and the Bush Administration's non-laissez faire approach to fixing it. To give you a flavor, the lead article, entitled "Historic Market Bailout Set in Motion," begins as follows:
"The Bush administration yesterday proposed a historic $500 billion bailout of financial firms that would let the government rather than the cold judgment of the marketplace decide the winners and losers from the crisis that has shaken the U.S. economy for the past year."
I wonder if President Bush now thinks he should have lost confidence in "the cold judgment of the marketplace" a little sooner than he did. I'm not being facetious; I truly wonder whether, given an opportunity to turn back the clock, he would have pushed for banking and other controls far sooner than he did, or whether his overall faith in the market remains the same.
Here are links to today's other Washington Post pieces:
Five Days That Transformed Wall Street (a chart taking the reader through this tumultuous week event by event)
Transcript: Bush Remarks on Financial Crisis
Bush Press Conference (video of Pres. Bush explaining why massive government intervention was required)
Bailout Is As Big As Budget for the Pentagon (Wow!)
Convincing Congress -- A Joint Decision to Act: It Must Be Big and Fast
Tossing Aside History, Convention, and a Few Cliches
U.S. Stock Markets Soar on Financial Rescue Plan
Bush Urges Congress to Enact Rescue Plan


let the brain damaged dumb Americans who can't add but want it NOW crash and burn... along with button pushers working in the banks. The minority majority will bring this country down...Look at the election. Just think of the tax liability on the middle class..who do have a brain...Europe's looking better every day!
Posted by: jim | Saturday, September 20, 2008 at 12:34 PM