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  • 11Oct

    Political Republican Opinion:

    Political Republican Opinion - US Economy on an alarming downswing

    Today, I had a newsletter forwarded to me from my brother-in-law, who subscribes to best-selling author and financial expert, John Mauldin’s, Thoughts from the Frontline newsletter. (Thank you, Mike!)

    Depending on your level of interest and understanding, it is either one of the most boring, confusing, enlightening, alarming or interesting pieces you may read in regards to the current worldwide economic crisis. The author has given permission for any and all to republish this particular newsletter because of the importance of it. The newsletter is as follows:

    Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter

    Where Do We Go From Here?

    by John Mauldin
    October 10, 2008

    Visit John's MySpace Page

    In this issue:
    Construction Lending: The Next Shoe to Drop
    Lehman at the Center
    Iceland Guarantees What?
    Letters of Credit: Going, Going Gone?
    What to Do and Where Do We Go from Here?
    London , Stockholm , and California

    I have been writing for almost a year that the next shoe to drop on US banks would be commercial construction lending. Today we look at some hard numbers. We look across the pond to sort out the problems in Europe. We look at the consequences of the losses stemming from Lehman. Then we look at one of the more serious consequences of the banking crisis, one that will bring the crisis home to you. Finally, we look at what the various governments of the world must do in response. It may not be fun, but it should be interesting. And it is important. Feel free to forward this letter to anyone who asks why we not only need the bailout but will need even more coordinated government action.

    But first, let me offer a note of optimism before I serve up the not so good news. This is not the end of the world. There are a lot of very positive things happening in the US and the world. Companies are creating new inventions. Much of the economy, including health care, is moving along fine. I have lived through two serious recessions (1973-74 and 1980-82), and the point is that a free-market economy will find a way to eventually get back to solid growth. Recessions are simply part of the business cycle. Congress cannot repeal the business cycle. This will not be the last recession of my life. I hope to live long enough to go through 4 or 5 more.

    Depressions are caused by governments making major policy mistakes. And we have made some in the areas of not regulating mortgage lending, allowing the five large investment banks to increase their leverage to 30 or 40 to one in 2004 (what was the SEC thinking?), and failing to oversee the rating agencies. That is behind us. It will make a normal recession deeper and the recovery longer, as I have been forecasting for some time.

    But as I argue below, immediate actions must be taken by the government to avoid a much deeper problem. To not take actions to stem the credit crisis would be that major policy mistake which would compound all the other mistakes. I think everyone knows the seriousness of the problem and will act. Let’s pray they do.

    But whatever happens, there will be plenty of opportunity for investors and entrepreneurs to exploit. The world is on the cusp of a remarkable explosion of new technology of all sorts that will transform our lives. This march of progress went on unchecked last century, through two world wars, major depressions, numerous smaller wars, recessions, financial crises all over the world, famines and natural disasters, not to mention a lot of man-made ones.

    The current crisis will pass. None of us will want to go back to the “good old days” in 20 years, for we will be living in the best of times. Just make sure you keep your powder dry so that you can enjoy it. And now, let’s look at some less than uplifting news.

    Construction Lending: The Next Shoe to Drop

    The Bank Credit Analyst is one of the more reliable sources I know for information. They estimate that total losses from the current debt crisis could be anywhere from $1.1 trillion to $1.7 trillion. They estimate roughly half to be in the banking sector, or around $750 billion, and almost $590 billion of that has already been written off. That means that the $700 billion from the TARP (government bailout) program may actually be enough to handle the losses and inject some actual capital into the banks. Maybe.

    The losses from subprime and other mortgage-related loans are well known. Most of those losses are in the larger banks, as smaller banks simply could not participate to any great extent. What is less well understood are the potential losses which smaller banks are in fact exposed to in the area of construction lending. Lisa Marquis Jackson, now writing for John Burns Real Estate Consulting (one of the best sources for hard real estate data), gives us some answers to the question of “how much?”

    Outside of the large home builders and developers, most of the lending for construction of homes and commercial property comes from regional and local banks. A local home builder may finance 5-10 homes, or a developer a small strip mall or apartment complex, from their local bank. Look at the graph below. Since 2001, delinquencies had been rather small and well-contained. Then starting 18 months ago, the delinquency rates started rising.

    Again, note that these are delinquency rates for business loans from banks and not for individual mortgages.

    Over 16% of loans made for condominium construction are now delinquent. Loans made for single-family home construction are only slightly more than 12% overdue. But that masks a much bigger problem. Single-family loans account for 86% of all for-sale residential construction loans outstanding.

    The good news is that for the top 100 banks by size, single-family loans make up only 2% of the total. But that small portion totals $245 billion. And condos add another $41 billion. That puts almost $40 billion at risk of default at today’s delinquency levels.

    It will be worse for many smaller banks, as they have larger commercial construction loan portfolios. As noted below, this may require some proactive action on the part of regulators.

    Lehman at the Center

    Now we know the consequences of allowing Lehman to fail. The severity of the credit crisis was deeply, severely worsened by the failure of Lehman. Based on the results of the credit auction today, sellers of protection will need to make cash payments of more than $270 billion, BNP Paribas SA strategist Andrea Cicione said in London. Some funds may be forced to dump assets to meet the payment demands if they haven’t hedged.

    How much of that debt will eventually have to be absorbed by various government programs or direct capital infusions? It is too soon to say, but you can bet it will be a lot.

    If there is any good news to this, it is that much of the write-downs have already been made. It now looks like the Lehman CDS market sorted itself out with no failures, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association.

    We have dodged a huge bullet. But the anguish this has put the credit markets through the past month was avoidable. The CDS markets MUST be made to migrate to a regulated clearing entity like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Next week would be a good time. While there have been serious losses by various players in other exchange-traded markets, there was no systemic risk, as everyone knew the value of their various securities, whether futures or options or other derivatives, and knew they would get their full value when sold.

    With Lehman, no one really knew until late today. Thus banks and hedge funds had to sell anything they could in order to meet possible payments or losses, which caused wildly swinging prices in every market.

    It is my bet that future memoirs of the various main actors and books on the credit crisis will look back at the failure of Lehman as the proverbial “last straw” for the unregulated CDS markets.

    Iceland Guarantees What?

    Let’s get this straight. Iceland is a country of 300,000 people. I’ve never met an Icelander I didn’t like. They are an extraordinary people. A few decades ago, they made their money on fishing, farming, and trading. Then they discovered banking and started to take deposits from anywhere and everywhere and make loans outside the country. Soon, the various banks’ assets were over $140 billion, about 10 times the total GDP of the country, and they had far more foreign depositors than citizens. With foreign reserves of just 2 billion Euros, what could the government do if there was a crisis?

    Now Iceland has had to take over the banks and guarantee deposits. They also had to turn to Russia for a loan. Does anyone think Putin would hand out a no-strings-attached loan? Russia needs a refueling station for its Navy and will likely get it.

    Note that Iceland gave its citizens the ability to withdraw money but did not extend that same privilege to the citizens of other countries. England and the Netherlands have already gone to court.

    As noted by good friend Dennis Gartman this morning, “Since then, things have only gotten worse, with the UK government moving to freeze the assets of Icelandic companies in the UK, and Her Majesty’s government has said that it will take whatever further actions it deems necessary to protect the assets of British companies and citizens currently held in Iceland, doing ‘whatever is necessary to recover [our] money.’

    “Thus, not only are banks fearful of lending money to banks; and not only are banks fearful of lending money to individuals and/or companies; and not only are individuals and/or companies fearful of lending money to the banks, but now nations are fearful of lending to other nations. This is Smoot-Hawley writ large, and of all of the circumstances that have prevailed in the course of the past several days, this is the worst; this is the most difficult to deal with. This is madness.”

    As noted last week, Ireland set off a feeding frenzy when it guaranteed all deposits in its banking institutions. Five billion Euros poured in over the last week. One by one, European governments are having to guarantee their loans to keep money from leaving their institutions.

    Let’s look at the Irish guarantee on the face of it. There are six Irish banks, holding assets of $576 billion. That works out to three times Ireland’s gross domestic product, or about $200,000 for every working person in the country. (Bedlam Asset Management) Yet depositors flooded them with money in just a few days.

    This is a sign of panic. One goes where one can, trying to protect what one has. On the face of it, how could Ireland really guarantee all the deposits? Yes, there are real assets against the loans, but at what price? Could Ireland borrow enough to make good on even a portion of those assets, should they decide to walk? This is sheer panic.

    Letters of Credit: Going, Going Gone?

    Just as the business world is dependent upon commercial paper as its life blood, the world of global trade depends on letters of credit (LOC). Without LOCs, the world of trade quickly freezes up.

    If you are a manufacturer of a product and want to sell to someone outside your borders, you typically require a letter of credit from the buyer before you load any cargo at a port. A letter of credit from a prime bank is considered to be proof of your ability to pay. It not only can be a source of ultimate payment, it can be a source of inventory financing while goods are in transit.

    And if you are a business which is buying a product, you do not want to release money until you know the product is on the way. There are buyer’s and seller’s agents who make sure these things happen seamlessly, and world commerce had grown because of it.

    Now we are starting to get anecdotal evidence that this extremely vital market is also freezing up. If you think the problems stemming from a meltdown with the commercial paper markets are threatening to the world economy, they are small potatoes when compared to a seizure in the letter of credit markets.

    I had been thinking about this for a few weeks. Then an article posted on Naked Capitalist caught my eye. Quoting:

    “At the end of the day, if every counterparty is bad then you don’t have a market and you don’t have an economy. I spoke to another friend of mine this afternoon, whose father has been in the shipping business forever. Pristine credit rating, rock solid balance sheet. He says if he takes his BNP Paribas letter of credit to Citi today for short term funding for his vessels, they won’t give it to him. That means he can’t ship goods, which means that within the next 2 weeks, physical shortages of commodities begin to show up. THE CENTRAL BANKS CAN’T LET THAT HAPPEN OR WE HAVE NO ECONOMY, LET ALONE A CREDIT SYSTEM.”

    And they quote the following story from The Financial Post of Canada :

    “The credit crisis is spilling over into the grain industry as international buyers find themselves unable to come up with payment, forcing sellers to shoulder often substantial losses.

    “Before cargoes can be loaded at port, buyers typically must produce proof they are good for the money. But more deals are falling through as sellers decide they don’t trust the financial institution named in the buyer’s letter of credit, analysts said.

    “‘There are all kinds of stuff stacked up on docks right now that can’t be shipped because people can’t get letters of credit,’ said Bill Gary, president of Commodity Information Systems in Oklahoma City. ‘The problem is not demand, and it’s not supply because we have plenty of supply. It’s finding anyone who can come up with the credit to buy.’

    “So far the problem is mostly being felt in U.S. and South American ports, but observers say it is only a matter of time before it hits Canada. ‘We’ve got a nightmare in front of us and a lot of people are concerned it’s going to get a lot worse,’ said Anthony Temple, a grain marketing expert based in Vancouver.

    “Access to credit is key to the survival of maritime trade and insiders now say the supply is being severely restricted. More than 90% of the world’s trade by volume goes by ship. ‘The credit crisis has made banks nervous and the last thing on their minds is making fresh loans,’ Omar Nokta, an analyst at investment bank Dahlman Rose, said in an interview with Reuters.

    “While shipping has always been a cyclical industry whose fortunes rise and fall with the global economy, analysts said the current crisis over the drying up of credit is something they have never seen before.”

    If banks are refusing to go into the LIBOR market and lend to each other, then why would they want to take a letter of credit either? At first, it will be a small trickle, which is how the commercial paper meltdown started. Then it will be a flood.

    The one good sector in the US is its export sector. Start slowing that down due to a lack of ability to ship or receive payments and see what happens to an already shrinking economy. If anyone wants to see how the credit crisis can affect Main Street , look no further.

    It is hard to overstate the problem and the potential for it to create a true economic meltdown. It must be dealt with, and soon. See more below.

    What to Do and Where Do We Go from Here?

    The credit markets are frozen. Period. The chart below shows one week LIBOR going back for four years. Notice the gradual rise into 2005? It was a lock-step move with the Fed funds rate. And the less smooth drop was also in concert with the Fed funds rate. The recent spike is not responding to this week’s Fed funds cut. The spreads are wider than ever. The problem is not just the price of LIBOR. There is no trading at any price. The LIBOR market is a fiction today. And left unchecked, this lack of dealing with other banks will spread to letters of credit and the international trade markets.

    The G-7 group of nations is holding an emergency meeting this weekend. As I write this, reports are coming in that there are serious disagreements as to what to do. They cannot even agree on a press release.

    Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker urged that “all of them [the G-7 nations] now admit or all of them own up to the fact their own banks are going to need support,” in an interview on PBS Television’s Charlie Rose Show yesterday.

    The real leadership and innovation in the banking crisis seems to be coming from London. UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling told Bloomberg Television that “It is absolutely essential that the world’s largest economies act together, and act together now.” Darling wants countries to guarantee lending between banks, either by turning central banks into clearing houses for the loans or having governments back them. (Bloomberg)

    Sadly, he is right. It has come to that. We are close to the point of no return. Now, we are not talking about bailing out financial institutions. We are literally talking about saving the world economic system. Failed bank lending and a large decrease in letters of credit would guarantee a deep world recession. The last depression produced severe political backlash and a world war.

    Frankly, it is simply not worth the risk to say that we should sit back and let the markets work. They are not working, and there are no signs they will. As with a patient whose heart has stopped, it is time to apply the shock treatment.

    What should we do? We must simply guarantee LIBOR (interbank) lending worldwide for some period of time (say 3-6 months) or until banks can trust each other’s balance sheets. With the Lehman crisis going on, with more mortgage credit problems being revealed, no one knows what their own exposure is, let alone what the exposures of other banks are. Until that dust settles, the LIBOR market will remain frozen. The longer this is allowed to continue, the worse the problems will be. And it needs to be handled on a coordinated basis.

    Banking is truly global. The system cannot just be guaranteed by England or the US . It must be done in concert with all major nations contributing their share. Businesses must be able to trade across borders through banks that will accept one another’s letters of credit.

    Second, we must consider direct investment in some banks. This should be done as preferred shares, with the view to eventually selling the paper back into the market. To make sure that money is not invested poorly or on bad terms, the various governments should invest alongside private investors, on the same terms. If a bank cannot find private investors willing to invest alongside the government, then they should be quietly assisted into the arms of stronger banks. Banks that are too big to fail must be taken over.

    Businesses must have access to credit as well. They cannot get it from banks with impaired balance sheets. This is critical to world trade as well as local commerce.

    Third, for a short period of time, all bank deposits in the US must be guaranteed. Weak banks must be absorbed into stronger banks as soon as possible. There are banks with large construction loan books in the hardest-hit parts of the US housing crisis, and they need to be put down as quickly as possible. We are already seeing deposits leave banks, many of them small, due to depositor concerns that small banks will not be seen as too big to fail. This must stop. A blanket guarantee will help.

    Fourth, mark-to-market rules must be reconsidered. A blanket one-size-fits-all rule clearly does not work and is part of the problem. As I have documented for the last month, there are numerous assets that have a market price far below their intrinsic value. That is because there are simply no buyers. If everyone is selling in order to raise capital, then that will drive down prices to bargain levels below intrinsic value. That does not mean the asset in question would not have a higher value in a market not in crisis.

    These are extraordinary times. I know there will be those who believe the markets should be allowed to work or simply want those who created the crisis to pay. I do understand the anger. I too am angry, and have been for a long time. Those of us who saw this crisis coming are frustrated that no one bothered to pay attention.

    But now that we are in it the midst of the crisis, there is no going back. We must look forward and do what we can to avoid an even worse crisis and potential depression. I believe we can do so if governments act promptly.

    We are already in what will prove to be one of the longer recessions on record. If we look at the Leading Economic Indicators, which have about a 9-month forward-looking view, it will be late next year before we start to grow once again. Given that everything peaked last October through January (sales, employment, etc.), it is likely that the recession will be dated from the beginning of this year.

    Long-time readers know I have been wary of the stock market for several years, suggesting that investors either avoid stocks or have close stop losses. No one taking my advice is long-only this market. Not that I have been perfect, but as it turns out, I was right on this one.

    I have been fielding calls all week asking me if I think we are close to a bottom in the stock market. And my answer is, we are close to a short-term bottom, but I think we will trade lower over time due to what I think are going to be poor earnings for the next few quarters. If you are a trader (and that means you have been doing it for some time - not the time to get on the job training!), then maybe you can catch a rebound, which is overdue. But (and here is the big caveat) if there is no global coordination on some or all of the recommendations I made above, this is not going to be pretty. It will end in tears. Let’s hope the authorities can get their collective act together.

    The next two weeks I’ll send a two-part letter on the longer-term investment view and how you should position your portfolios. Stay tuned.

    Your hoping we see some positive news this weekend analyst,

    John Mauldin
    John@FrontLineThoughts.com

    Copyright 2008 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

    The Political Republican Opinion Blog Quote of the Day: “In my many years, I have come to the conclusion that one man is useless, two is a law firm and three or more is a Congress.” - John Adams

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  • 10Oct

    Political Republican Opinion:

    Political Republican Opinion - bailout pork It’s not hard to pinpoint when it happened. It was back in October of 2008, nearly forty years ago, when the government passed the largest bailout in US history. That was the last year there was a Republican president and the beginning of the end of the Republican Party.

    That was the last year, in fact, that there was any political Party that was capable of challenging the Democratic Party. Disgruntled Conservatives left the Republican Party in droves following the 2008 election. Their Party’s representatives in Congress and even their presidential candidate had lost track of the Conservative core values that the Republican Party had been based on, moving so far to the Left, that they had become almost indistinguishable from Democrats.

    They tried to reorganize. You remember the new Conservative Party that surfaced in 2012, right? Maybe not. They never even made it onto a ballot and all but disappeared twelve years later. You still hear from a few of their more hard core members every now and then, vowing that they will make a comeback. Even the Libertarian Party has more pull than they do. They at least make it onto the ballot, splitting the vote with what’s left of the Republican Party. (Why either Party even bothers to challenge the Democratic Party year after year is beyond me.) I’m sorry … I digress.

    Those who created the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 were obviously brilliant men. They were visionaries; they were men who somehow knew what it would be like today, in 2048. I shudder to think where we would be as a country had they not thought about adding all of the little extras that came along with the bank bailout. People scoffed at the time, complaining about the extra $100 billion that was added to the bill. (What a ridiculously small sum of money that seems like today.) Many people, particularly Conservatives, complained that they needed less government in their lives, not more. It’s amazing, in retrospect, that such short-sighted people were ever allowed to make policies in this country.

    One of the most brilliant pieces of the legislation was the elimination of the 39-cent excise tax on children’s wooden arrows. I know that 39 cents doesn’t sound like much now, with even a pack of gum costing ten dollars and all, but it sure made a difference then. (I remember when you could get a whole pack of gum for 75 cents but it was deemed to be bad for the environment – something about the harmful effects to the one-eyed wandering whippoorwill, I recall. The taxes they have added to it for environmental cleanup have made chewing gum a luxury item now.) Sure, they explained that it was a move meant to save a toy company in Oregon from going out of business, but we know now how important that add-on to the bailout bill was.

    Can you imagine what it would be like now if that important item hadn’t been added? When the Democrats replaced retiring judges with more Liberal ones, they all but eliminated the 2nd Amendment. Maybe it’s just that I’m getting too old now and my mind isn’t what it once was, but I can hardly remember what it felt like to hold a gun. Criminals still seem to be able to get their hands on them whenever they want, though. (Where they get them, I’ll never know.)

    Thank God goodness our kids learned how to shoot with bows and arrows! Just last week, the cops had to retrieve the bodies of three would-be burglars from the house three doors down. I’m told that little Jimmy (he’s a lot older now, but he’ll always be “little Jimmy” to me) only had to use three arrows to take them down; one for each. Two got it through the heart and the other went right through the bastard’s eye socket, penetrating his brain. That’s some kind of shooting!

    It’s alarming, however, that the Democratic Party is now considering a ban on bows and arrows and equally ironic, since they were the ones who added it to the original Bailout Bill. I don’t know how we’ll ever put meat on the table without them. It’s almost impossible to kill a deer with a knife! What the heck; the whole country’s going vegetarian anyway, it seems. I hear they are going to add a new bailout for a toy pea shooter company, however, so maybe all hope is not lost!

    Another stroke of pure genius in the 2008 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act was the tax breaks that the bill gave to US wool manufacturers that use imported yarn. Since it was deemed cruel to sheep, we are no longer permitted to shear the wool from them in this country. Middle East nations have a whole new industry because of this and we gladly pour money into their economies for both sheep and llama wool.

    The Democrats who were chiefly responsible for the legislation realized that the carbon emissions taxes that they added to the bill would drive up the price of fuel needed to heat homes around the country. Since only the richest people, most of them Congressmen, can afford to heat their homes now that gas is over fourteen dollars per gallon, the lower priced wool sweaters have been just what the doctor ordered. (Okay, perhaps that is just an assumption on my part. I have been waiting to see my doctor for over six months now.) Nevertheless, the men who constructed the bailout bill will forever be hailed for their foresight.

    The Act appropriated money for wool research, as well. This research uncovered remarkable breakthroughs related to wool. Scientists discovered that the reason that wool shrinks when it is made into a sweater and gets wet but does not shrink when it is on a lamb that gets caught in the rain, is because a sheep’s skin excretes oils that prevent the shrinkage from occurring. The research was unfortunately a waste of money, however, since businesses are no longer allowed to use oil for anything but the few vehicles like airplanes that still must use it.

    Another positive outcome of the bailout bill was the provision that forced insurance companies to include mental health and substance abuse as part of the packages that they offer. Many people, Conservatives in particular, were distraught after losing half of their savings in 2008. The most affluent really blew a gasket in subsequent years as their tax brackets eventually reached 90%. Even the working class was initially affected. Unemployment reached 18 percent as more and more business owners could not afford to pay their employees and others still, had to shut their doors.

    People were a mess. Many turned to drink, becoming alcoholics while others went in for the harder drugs. Others just … well … lost their marbles (I think we are still allowed to use that term. If not, this will probably be my last public posting). You can still see some of them talking to themselves on the street – the ones who refused out of pride, to accept any help from outsiders (poor souls).

    It took awhile, but people finally got used to the new world order and America’s place in it. People were weaned off of alcohol and hard drugs and those that were institutionalized became cured with the advent of a new pill called Nuphoria. Nearly 70% of the adult population is now taking advantage of the low-cost drug that just seems to make things better. You’ve heard the commercials … “Nuphoria … When life is getting you down, it takes the edge off – available at all convenience stores, supermarkets and now vending machines.”

    You practically never even hear anyone argue anymore. In fact, now that I think of it, I don’t remember when the last time was that I even heard a disagreement. Things are much better now!

    I, myself, would like to thank Bill W. for his guidance and for letting me believe in a higher power (we’re not allowed to use the word “God” anymore, but you know what I mean). I never would have been introduced to AA had it not been for the persistence of the early government-run health care program that I was forced to be a part of. Nowadays, the AA chapters have all but closed. Nuphoria made them irrelevant. Once again, I digress …

    Not everything in the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 worked out. It wasn’t the Democrats’ fault, however. There was a provision added to the Bill that extended tax relief to motor sports racing facilities. This was absurd, in retrospect, since there hasn’t been a legally sanctioned auto race in this country for more than two decades. What a waste of fuel that ridiculous sports was! The only reason it was added to the Bill, I’m told, was to gain the votes of Republican Senators who lived in states that housed these now-defunct racing facilities.

    If any of you remember horse racing, you’ll recall that it was also banned (I think it was sometime just after 2010) because of the cruelty to the poor animals that were used in that barbaric “sport.” You can still place bets on video racing, at least. The “drivers” of those vehicles really know their way around a joystick. That new twelve-year-old kid, Bobby Cartwright, has really taken the world by storm. (If only I had the reflexes I used to have, I’m sure I could have made it in that sport!)

    Another ridiculous add-on to the Act was the extension of economic credit for American Samoa. We gave that island to China to pay off a portion of the debt we owed to them in 2012, I think.

    All in all, however, no one could argue with the fact that the Democrats behind the Bailout Bill really knew their stuff. (Of course, no one would dare argue anyway, less they be institutionalized and placed on a Nuphoria drip). When history looks back on this century, it will surely list the creators of the Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 right up there with Thomas Jefferson!

    The Political Republican Opinion Blog Quote of the Day: A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor, the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government.” – Thomas Jefferson

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  • 05Oct

    Political Republican Opinion:

    As is normally the case on Sundays, I haven’t had the time to delve into the finer aspects of the political news of the day. I’ve had football to watch, chores to do, football to watch, a new sidebar featuring Halloween masks to create, football to watch.

    I did happen to stumble upon the latest in a series of new Republican attack ads. It is about time the Republican Party, in general, and the McCain campaign, in particular, started fighting back. Obama is running some of the most misleading ads I have ever seen in a political campaign. Here is one that questions Barack Obama’s frienship with William Ayers:



    My favorite new ad proves how Democrats are entirely to blame for the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac bailout. Assuming that all undecided and non-Kool Aid drinking Democrats have any brains at all, they might actually wake up and see that the candidate that is offering hope and change, is change that we cannot possibly hope to afford:



    Finally, I found another ad that focuses on the poor decisions that Obama has made in his choice of friends. This one concentrates on Tony Rezko and even throws Joe Biden into the mix:



    The Political Republican Opinion blog will continue to scour the Net to bring you the latest in conservative political views … even during football season :(

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  • 01Oct

    Political Republican Opinion:

    Political Republican Opinion - ObamAcorn Finally, the latest version of the “bailout” bill has removed the provision that gave groups like ACORN a 20% stake in the profits that should be going to the American taxpayers who will be funding the proposed bailout. Before getting into ACORN, however, we need to first take a look at a law passed and refined during the last two Democratic Presidents’ administrations that led directly to the United States’ current financial crisis. That law was called the Community Reinvestment Act.

    The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) was passed during the Carter Administration to prevent banks from targeting only wealthier neighborhoods with their services; a practice known as “redlining.” The purpose of the CRA was to ensure that under-represented populations were able to obtain credit, including home ownership opportunities and commercial loans to small businesses.

    In 1993, Bill Clinton ordered new regulations for the CRA that allowed for even greater access to mortgage credit for inner city and distressed rural communities. The new regulations set up numerical benchmarks that banks had to maintain to get a satisfactory CRA rating. By using federal home-loan figures that were broken down by neighborhood, income group and race, community organizing groups were encouraged to complain (and sue) when banks were not loaning enough money to certain income brackets, neighborhoods or racial groups. It also allowed these community organizers to collect a fee from the banks for marketing loans to these groups so that the banks could maintain their quotas. Enter ACORN …

    The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) is a large, radical community organizer group (currently under investigation for embezzlement, voter fraud, and misuse of taxpayer funds, amongst other things) that took advantage of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) and pressured banks with racial lawsuits to give credit to people who could not afford them. Tactics employed by ACORN also included breaking into bank officials’ private offices, terrorizing bankers and their families at their homes and staging large demonstrations inside the lobbies of banks.

    ACORN was not originally as adept as it is now at its intimidation tactics. After graduating from Harvard Law School, Barack Obama was brought into the Chicago branch of ACORN to train the leadership of community organizers in ACORN about the ambiguities of the CRA that they could use to leverage banks into providing loans to people who could not afford them. Obama sought out and received ACORN’s political endorsement for not only his State Senate seat, but also sought out and received their endorsement for the presidency. It is important to point out here that Obama reminded ACORN of his long-standing ties with the organization while seeking their endorsement and that he helped direct tens of millions of dollars in government grants to ACORN and liberal groups like them. The law firm he worked for also represented ACORN.

    So, it would seem that Barack Obama has had some input into the current economic crisis. Not the credit that he took on the floor of the Senate today, when he told of all of the things he had outlined in his “plan,” many of which are included in the current bailout bill - a plan that was constructed while Obama was too busy campaigning to show up in Washington, saying “if you need me, call.” No, his credit runs deeper than that. He is directly involved in the process that caused the banking industry crisis by helping to pressure bankers into providing funding to people who could not afford a mortgage to begin with.

    And, what do we have to look forward to in the future? Barack Obama is still saying that the government needs to give money to these same homeowners so that they can pay for mortgages they never were able to afford. I shudder to think of how far Obama will go if he wins the election. All I know, is it’s certainly not change I can believe in!

    For more information on Barack Obama’s ACORN ties, I encourage all readers to visit Stanley Kurtz’ article on the National Review Online, “Inside Obama’s Acorn.”

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