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Commentary
Page
We
invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject submissions,
but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions expressed
in articles we publish......MORE
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Cheap Political Theater
by Thomas Sowell,
Townhall.com
Death threats to executives at AIG, because of the
bonuses they received, are one more sign of the utter
degeneration of politics in our time.
Congressman Barney Frank has threatened to summon these
executives before his committee and force them to reveal
their home addresses-- which would of course put their
wives and children at the mercy of whatever kooks might
want to literally take a shot at them.
Whatever the political or economic issues involved, this
is not the way such issues should be resolved in
America. We are not yet a banana republic, though that
is the direction in which some of our politicians are
taking us-- especially those politicians who make a lot
of noise about "compassion" and "social justice."
What makes this all the more painfully ironic is that it
is precisely those members of Congress who have had the
most to do with creating the risks that led to the
current economic crisis who are making the most noise
against others, and summoning people before their
committee to be browbeaten and humiliated on nationwide
television.
No one pushed harder than Congressman Barney Frank to
force banks and other financial institutions to reduce
their mortgage lending standards, in order to meet
government-set goals for more home ownership. Those
lower mortgage lending standards are at the heart of the
increased riskiness of the mortgage market and of the
collapse of Wall Street securities based on those risky
mortgages.
Senator Christopher Dodd has played the same role in the
Senate as Barney Frank played in the House of
Representatives. Now both are summoning government
employees and the officials of financial institutions
before their committees to be lambasted in front of the
media.
Dodd and Frank know that the best defense is a good
offense. Both know how hard it would be to defend their
own roles in the housing debacle, so they go on the
offensive against others who are in no position to reply
in kind, given the vindictive powers of Congress.
This political theater is in one sense
cheap beyond words. In another sense, it is costly
beyond words.
It is cheap because the politicians who are creating
this distraction from their own role also voted for the
very legislation that enabled contracted bonuses to be
paid by companies like AIG that received government
bailout money. If members of Congress can't be bothered
to read the laws they pass, then they have no basis for
whipping up lynch mob outrage against people who did
read the law and acted within the law.
Just as everyone seemed to be a military expert a couple
of years ago, when it was chic to say that the "surge"
in Iraq would not work, so today everyone seems to be an
expert on executive pay.
Whether the particular executives who received bonuses
were the ones responsible for AIG's problems, or were
among those who warned against those problems, is
something that those of us on the outside don't know.
That includes those in politics and the media who are
making the loudest noise.
The politicians claim to be protecting the taxpayers'
money. But having politicians trying to micro-manage any
business is far more likely to make those businesses
lose more money, including the taxpayers' money.
Securities based on risky mortgages are what toppled
financial institutions but it was the government that
made the mortgages risky in the first place, by making
home-ownership statistics the holy grail, for which
everything else was to be sacrificed, including
commonsense standards for making home loans.
Politicians and bureaucrats micro-managing the mortgage
sector of the economy is precisely how today's economic
disaster began. Why anyone would think that their
micro-managing the automobile industry, or executive pay
across a wide sweep of other industries, is likely to
make things better in the economy is a mystery.
The real point is to pander to envy and resentment
against people who make a lot of money. Envy is always
referred to by its political alias, "social justice."
But to put the lives of the wives and children of
executives at risk for the sake of Beltway grandstanding
shows how low our political saviors have sunk.
Thomas Sowell,
Townhall.com
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Accra, March 29, Ghanadot - The Senior National Team
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