and he threw a perfect game too!

http://www.vintagecardtraders.org/virtual/pseudo/71t_jim_bunning.jpg

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"Now I am become Death, the destroyer of Democrats." - Sarah Palin, Sept 4, 2008

Right Wing Mike
http://www.cafepress.com/rightwingmike


--- On Fri, 9/26/08, Bob Calco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Bob Calco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [OT] Wow, someone in Congress gets it...
> To: "'ProFox Email List'" <[email protected]>
> Date: Friday, September 26, 2008, 4:34 PM
> In this case, Jim Bunning of Kentucky:
> 
> http://tinyurl.com/4rwnns
> 
> A long read but well worth the time. I post it here in its
> entirety for
> posterity's sake.
> 
> - - -
> Thank you, Mr. President. I rise to speak about the current
> economic
> situation and the bailout bill that will soon be coming to
> the Senate floor.
> 
> Let me start by saying that I am just as concerned about
> what is going on in
> the financial markets and the economy as everyone else. I
> know there are
> extreme tensions in the credit markets and those problems
> could soon have an
> impact on businesses and individuals who had nothing to do
> with the mortgage
> mess. However, I do not agree that the bill coming to the
> Senate will fix
> those problems.
> 
> I also strongly disagree with the Senators who have come to
> the floor and
> declared that this crisis is a failure of the free markets.
> No, the root of
> this crisis is a failure of government. It comes from a
> failure of
> regulation and, most importantly, monetary policy. In the
> long term we
> certainly need to update our financial regulation to
> reflect the realities
> of our modern economy, but it is just plain wrong to blame
> failures of our
> regulations and regulators on the markets.
> 
> A little history is in order here. Our financial
> regulations are based on
> structures put in place during the Great Depression. Our
> laws simply do not
> reflect the current landscape of the financial markets.
> Once upon a time,
> banks may have been the only institutions that were a
> danger to the entire
> financial system, but it is clear that other institutions
> are now so big and
> connected that we cannot ignore them in the future. Also,
> many of today's
> common financial instruments did not exist twenty years
> ago, much less when
> our laws were written.
> 
> But our regulatory structure is not the only problem. The
> real fuel for the
> fire of this crisis has been the monetary policy of the
> Federal Reserve. I
> have been a vocal critic of the Fed for many years, and
> have been warning
> that their policies would hurt Americans in the short and
> long term. For
> most of those years I did not have much company, but I am
> glad that many
> economists and commentators have recently joined me in
> criticizing the Fed.
> 
> During the second half of his time at the Fed, former
> Chairman Alan
> Greenspan tried to micro-manage the economy with monetary
> policy. Any
> economy is going to have its ups and downs, and it was
> foolish to try to
> stop that. But Chairman Greenspan did it anyway. By trying
> to smooth out
> those bumps, he over-shot to the high and low side,
> creating bubbles and
> then recessions.
> 
> I have spoken many times on the floor about the Fed's
> policies that led to
> the housing bubble, but a few parts are worth repeating.
> Everyone remembers
> the dot-com bubble, which was itself partly a result of
> easy money pumped
> into the system by the Fed in the late 1990's. Well,
> Chairman Greenspan set
> out to pop that bubble and kept raising interest rates in
> the face of a
> slowdown, driving the economy into recession.
> 
> In order to undo the problems created by his tight money,
> he then overshot,
> taking rates to as low as one percent for a year, and below
> two percent for
> nearly three years. In turn, that easy money ignited the
> housing market by
> bringing mortgage interest rates to all time lows. Low-cost
> borrowing
> encouraged excessive risk-taking in the financial markets,
> and led investors
> to pump borrowed funds into all kinds of investments,
> including the various
> mortgage lending vehicles.
> 
> In 2004, he encouraged borrowers to get adjustable rate
> mortgages because of
> all the money they would save. Four months later, he
> started a series of 17
> interest rate increases that helped make those mortgages
> unaffordable for
> the hundreds of thousands of borrowers who listened to his
> advice. I warned
> him about this advice the day following his speech, but
> that warning fell on
> deaf ears.
> 
> Then in 2005, rising interest rates and house price
> appreciation overcame
> the ability of borrowers to afford the house they wanted.
> To keep the party
> going, borrowers, lenders, investors, rating agencies, and
> everyone else
> involved lowered their standards, and kept mortgages
> flowing to less
> creditworthy borrowers, who were buying ever more expensive
> houses.
> 
> Chairman Greenspan also let investors and homeowners down
> by failing to
> police the banks and other lenders as they wrote ever more
> risky loans.
> Regulated banks were allowed to keep their most risky
> assets off the balance
> sheet. Even worse, he refused to use the powers Congress
> gave the Fed in the
> Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act in 1994 to oversee
> all lenders,
> even those not affiliated with banks. His refusal to reign
> in the worst
> lending practices allowed banks and others, including
> Fannie Mae and Freddie
> Mac, to write the loans that are now at the center of the
> mortgage crisis.
> Chairman Ben Bernanke finally issued rules under that law
> in July, but that
> was far too late to solve the problems.
> 
> Before turning to the coming legislation, I want to mention
> a few more
> failures of government that directly contributed to this
> mess. Federal
> regulations require the use of ratings from rating agencies
> that have proven
> to be wrong on the biggest financial failures of the last
> decade. The
> Community Reinvestment Act forces banks to make loans they
> would not
> otherwise make based on the credit history of the borrower.
> The Securities
> and Exchange Commission under former Chairman Donaldson
> failed to establish
> meaningful oversight and leverage restrictions for
> investment banks.
> 
> Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac used the implied backing of the
> government to
> grow so large that their takeover by the government
> effectively doubled the
> national debt. And they were pushed by their executives and
> the Clinton
> Administration to loosen their lending standards and write
> the loans that
> drove the companies to the point of being bailed out by the
> taxpayers.
> 
> Finally, the same individuals who have come to this
> building to ask for the
> latest bailout set the stage for the very panic they are
> using to justify
> the bailout. The Secretary of the Treasury and the Fed
> Chairman set
> expectations for government intervention when they bailed
> out Bear Stearns
> in March. The markets operated all summer with the belief
> that the
> government would step in and rescue failing firms. Then
> they let Lehman
> Brothers fail, and the markets had to adjust to the idea
> that Wall Street
> would have to take the losses for Wall Street's bad
> decisions, not the
> taxpayers. That new uncertainty could be the most
> significant contributing
> factor to why the markets panicked last week. What is more,
> the panic today
> is a result of the high expectations set last week when the
> Secretary and
> Chairman announced their plan. When resistance in Congress
> and the public
> outrage over the plan became clear, the markets walked back
> to the edge of
> panic.
> 
> Now I want to talk about the bailout bill that we expect to
> have on the
> Senate floor soon. The Paulson proposal is an attempt to do
> what we so often
> do in Washington - throw money at a problem. We cannot make
> bad mortgages go
> away. We cannot make the losses that our financial
> institutions are facing
> go away. Someone must take those losses. We can either let
> the people who
> made bad decisions bear the consequences of their actions,
> or we can spread
> that pain to others. And that is exactly what Secretary
> Paulson proposes to
> do - take Wall Street's pain and spread it to the
> taxpayers.
> 
> We all know it is not fair to ask the taxpayers to pick up
> Wall Street's
> tab. But what we do not know is if this plan can even work.
> All we have is
> the word of the Treasury Secretary and the Fed Chairman.
> But they have been
> wrong throughout this whole housing mess. They have
> previously told us that
> the subprime problems would not spread and that the economy
> was strong. Now
> they say we are on the edge of a severe recession if we do
> not pass this
> bill.
> 
> Well, I am not buying it, and neither are many of the
> nation's leading
> economists. If some sort of government intervention is
> needed to fix the
> mess created by the government failures I talked about
> earlier, we need to
> get it right. Congress owes it to the American people to
> slow down and think
> this through. We need to know that whatever we do is going
> to fix the
> problem, protect the taxpayers, not reward those who made
> bad decisions, and
> make sure this does not happen again. But we can not do
> that in one week as
> we are all trying to rush home. Congress needs to take this
> seriously and
> stay here until we find the right solution, not just throw
> 700 billion
> dollars at Wall Street as we walk out the door.
> 
> Now, Mr. President, before I yield the floor, I ask
> unanimous consent that
> the two letters I mentioned from economists opposing the
> bill, along with an
> article from the New York Times from 1999 about the Clinton
> Administration
> pushing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into risky loans, be
> printed in the
> record following my remarks.
> 
> I yield the floor.
> - - -
> 
> What he said.
> 
> - Bob
> 
> 
> 
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