While on some level it’s amusing watching Paulson engage in ideological pretzeling as he now takes a strong position for the government taking equity stakes in troubled financial institutions, it is troubling on a number of fronts.
First, the proposal to do this was part of the House Dems original response to his 3 page bailout plan. It was the point most ferociously opposed by Paulson and, presumably, the Prezzz. Anything that sniffed of nationalization was anathema to them.
Second, we’ve spent nearly four weeks now fucking around with the original bailout proposal while the Administration fought off the position it is now adopting. This in the the midst of a panic. Panic’s are not thoughtful and reasonable things. They move very, very quickly. Panic’s show up because of widespread uncertainty and when you introduce additional uncertainty they get worse. You can still dial ‘em down but the price tag associated with doing so goes up the longer you take.
Third, and most important, it shows how perfectly incapable conservatism is (in its current incarnation) iof answering a crisis. We saw it first rear its head in the ridiculous House Republican proposal (a brief recap: take action that keeps the government out of the markets and does nothing to inject capital into the financial system…said injection being the only thing that has a prayer of knocking this crisis down…but is nonetheless aligned with “government bad” ideology). The fundamental belief that government is bad and should be kept out of any and all markets and choked down to the smallest possible size, works only if nothing ever goes wrong. And something always goes wrong. Katrina, anyone? The financial meltdown, anyone? Conservatism’s answer to those things, as we have seen all too clearly, is to do little or nothing. It has to do little or nothing or its core philosophical tenets are revealed as being as empty and unrealistic as they actually are. Nice work, guys.
Fourth, it reveals the limitations inherent in electing an ideologically pure but rather dimwitted figurehead as your chief executive. Where the hell has Bush been? It’s staggering that in the midst of a crisis this size the voice of the government has been an apointee and not the President. Anyone out there vote for Paulson? No…you couldn’t have. It’s what President’s are supposed to fucking do, you know? Pilot the ship through rough waters. Be the voice of reason and assurance and responsibility and leadership. Where is he? He has addressed the nation once and then, much like Katrina, after it became apparent that he absolutely had to do something. He didn’t lead. He followed.
There’s no doubt in my mind that if this happened under an Obama presidency that he would have been out in front in addressing the nation. There is also no doubt in my mind that McCain would be out in front when it comes to addressing the nation. There is no doubt in my mind that if something had happened to Obama and we had a Biden Administration that hip-shooter Joe would have been out in front. And what of Palin. I guess I’m in the camp that says we’ve seen enough of empty headed ideologically pure figureheads. My God, the woman managed to say, in the same debate, that government is the problem and needs to get out of the way and that government needs to be (in terms of the meltdown) more involved in oversight. And the staggering thing is I believe that she believes that. She has convinced me that she does not have the intellectual capacity to realize that those two positions are diametrically opposed and cannot be logically reconciled. She is the embodiment of slogan driven, liberals are bad, government is evil, brain-locked, 21st century conservatism.
What we are seeing in this meltdown is the logically absurd conclusion that today’s brand of conservatism leads to. It is mind-boggling that there are still significant numbers of people who either sell out sound decision making to the next guy who promises a tax cut, or who actually believe that it works.