Friday, October 31, 2008

Obama's "inexperience".

While experience is important, it's certainly not the most important trait of good leaders. Also keep in mind that while McCain has lots of political experience, he has less executive experience than Obama.

Here's a quote from my father that conveys my feelings exactly....using history as a guide (March 6, 2008):
"This afternoon on the way back from the polling place, I was thinking that another Illinois lad ran for president. He had some experience in the state legislature, but only two years in Congress. Not only that, he disparaged the military, opposed a war(Mexican War) and was opposed within his party by a man with substantial legislative and executive experience. Still, he wasn't half bad as a president. The capitol of Nebraska is named after him today."
For those of you who are geographically impaired, the capitol of Nebraska is Lincoln, as in Abraham Lincoln.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

2008: Start of the "Mother of all Depressions".

Whoever gets elected (looks like Obama) will have to deal with this horrible turn of events to start his presidency.

There's blame aplenty, but placing it squarely on one man's or one administration's shoulders is out of line. The past few administrations were just following policies put in place in the late 70s and early 80s. Policies and tools that were meant to curb the out of control inflation of the 60s and 70s, not the out of control credit of the past 20 years.

Oh, criminal negligence (on the part of government officials), corruption, and irrational salary explosion (especially at the top) hasn't helped...

I'm sure my Ron Paul supporting, fiscally conservative brother will chime in with more, so that's all I have to say, for now.

Monday, October 6, 2008

And so it begins...

...or ends.

If there was any doubt that the US's dominance in this world was coming to an end, the (poor/lack of) management in the sub-prime lending scandal and its culmination (for now) in the Bailout Abomination should erase whatever's left.

And Paulson has wasted no time in bringing a Goldman Sach's buddy into the fray.

Look for more cronyism, and very little in the way of substantive reform...in the short term. And hold onto your pants (if you still have them). We're in for a rough ride!

Friday, October 3, 2008

Bailout Abomination!

I was hoping that Congress would implement some oversight measures to ensure that Paulson's $250bil "slush fund for buddies" is used properly. Instead, the Senate adds tons of irrelevant (and wasteful) "pork"! The only good thing about the Senate re-jiggered bill is that it increases the FDIC limit from $100k to $250k.

Jeez! Congress's moment to shine and they end up looking no better than the Wall Street criminals that got us in this mess... Nice!