Quantcast Diagnosis: Crisis-itis
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Poor and Stupid

How big government, big business, big media and big academia block your road to financial freedom- and tell you it's for your own good.

Diagnosis: Crisis-itis

Posted on 08/13/2007 19:52:05 | Link | Post Comment
My DC-insider friend "Mick Danger" has some thoughts about the subprime mess on Wall Street, Main Street, and K Street:
The news breaks and Democrats rush to fix it. ?Subprime? borrowers got too much money to buy homes they can?t afford. Was that the start of the problem? What ends it? What if those who provided this kind of debt lose money? Think they do that again?

Way back when this story first broke, Hillary jumped in with a jumble of bailout and get tough. She sure is trigger-happy about providing "leadership" (which to her means she gets more power and you have less money). Barney Frank and Chris Dodd are ready to deploy those battleships Fannie and Freddie to do something, if only those ships weren?t in dry-dock for repair.

How much of this crisis even lasts until the congressional recess is over? Well, you don?t understand Washington much if you don?t recognize that a crisis doesn?t end until they have ?done something.? Wanna bet that something isn?t going to be good?

President Bush wants the markets to work this all out. That?s the right instinct and it might be his Administration?s policy; the trouble is not what he says, it?s him saying it. This is a time to instill confidence and he has a hard time doing that, which is unfortunate for all of us.

Where is Paulson, btw? Standard operating procedure is that you put the Treasury Secretary out front to explain, calm and, sometimes, to defend and/or propose.

Beware the White House economic staff -- they get caught up in the tornado; moreover, they are just as vulnerable to crisis-itis as folks on the Hill.

What is ?crisis-itis?? It is my own diagnosis. It is a form of dementia where the inflicted believes his or her own self worth rises as the situation he monitors worsens. In all cases, the inflicted greatly exaggerates his or her control over events, as well as the size, duration, and impact of those events. In extreme cases, the inflicted seeks to worsen the crisis to inflate his or her self esteem.

If Congress must do something, then it should pass a law requiring all crises to occur during congressional recesses.

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