Jay Ambrose

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U.S. is sleep-walking to socialism

By: Jay Ambrose
Examiner Columnist
March 31, 2009

President Barack Obama has just fired the chairman of General Motors, and if that doesn’t give you pause, here are some other interesting items.

The administration is trying to figure out how to seize troubled companies and the House threw a hissy fit aimed at undoing perfectly legal private contracts
“We own AIG,” said Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, speaking on behalf of the federal government as he tried to justify some sort of renewed, murderously angry French Revolution, this one in our country and aimed at executives receiving bonuses.
Unusual for him, Frank spoke some truth – the government is acting as if it owns much of the private economy. The most recent example of this is the administration task force that told GM chairman Rick Wagoner he’d better hit the road if he wanted his company to receive more federal aid and then laid out a detailed plan of operations for the firm.
As badly as auto executives have performed, can anyone really imagine the federal government can do it better? This is the same federal government, remember, that lost $3 billion last year running a monopoly Post Office and that has run up $40 trillion or more in unfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare. That’s a figure that some experts say could make the misfeasance of private companies seem like spit in the ocean.
The Obama solution to the moment’s economic crisis has been socialist takeover, spend, spend, spend, and plans for an extended welfare state along with regulatory fervor.
The bank interventions smell an awful lot like a Japanese program that is said to have caused a decade of stagnation. Even Europeans have been aghast at the spending, which has not worked in similar situations in the past and is opposed by at least 200 American economists, including Nobel Prize winners.
 We already have welfare state aplenty – a lion’s share of the budget goes to this end even as leftists continue to overstate our supposed lack of a safety net. That some don’t have health insurance is a real problem, but is often equated with lack of medical care – either an outright lie or pure ignorance speaking – and we are continually misled to believe that some 46 million citizens cannot obtain health insurance. The actual number is more like 10 million, and most of them are without it only temporarily.
Heavy-handed regulation did not save some other societies from the downturn. The issue for us is as much what the next problem will be as what the current one was, and no one knows. The left wants to skip over its own culpability – how congressional Democrats, as well some Republicans, got in the way of mortgage-financing reforms the Bush administration sought at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
I join with those saying the economy is overregulated, costing businesses tens of billions that do little to no good while piling one encumbrance on another, and that any halfway intelligent stimulus package would get rid of regulations that can’t make it past a cost-benefit analysis.
 
Other steps would be to lower spending, enforce employer laws on illegal immigration and get rid of the payroll tax, in time replacing it with some less job-inhibiting means of providing revenue essential for entitlements.
Free enterprise, which has given humanity extraordinary material blessings on top of the liberty it affords us, has not disproved itself with this crisis, whereas socialism has disproved itself everywhere it has been tried. We can move closer to that system – and to hyperinflation and other catastrophes – or we can come to our senses.
Examiner columnist Jay Ambrose is a former Washington opinion writer and editor of two dailies. He can be reached at: Speaktojay@aol.com.
 



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

avery

Apr 1, 2009

We are making serious mistakes that will cause widespread pain to all of us. I can only hope they are not fatal mistakes.

 

De Anna

Apr 1, 2009

We have to stop this and stop it NOW!!! This fiasco happening in our government is selling us down the river into socialism. We are the "Land of the Free" not the "Land of Obama, Congress & Senate". American citizens must wake up before it is too late.

 

mitch

Apr 1, 2009

Obama's agenda is not by accident. He is securing the votes of millions of have-nots for years to come. People who don't believe in working to achieve the American dream. As a liberal democrat, he also believes that the have-nots have been short changed by the Amercian free enterprize system. Never having had a real job, he is governing from an academic perspective. Not being a student of European history, he is destined to make the same welfare mistakes that Europe is trying to climb out of. What's left of the private sector should raise hundreds of millions of dollars and hit the airwaves to espouse the benefits that our founding fathers tried to preserve. To let people know that American capitalists are best at creating wealth, which creates jobs and opportunities.

 

Concerned

Apr 1, 2009

What do you suggest? What should be done for those who had a job - who are now unemployed? Regardless of how much you TALK about capitalism, no company will be able to invest or hire, if no one is buying or a significant portion of the population is unemployed. This talk of socialism is disturbing, because as we all know, there has been a form of government support to the populist for years - unemployment insurance, medicaid, medicare. The issue is to find a balance. Again, what do you propose? Specifically, what should the government (oops)industry do that was not available to them prior to Jan 09, and why did not capitalism avoid this mess? It was not solely the actions of Congress, because no business will enter into any agreement/contract, unless they see a benefit in the action ($$$$)- pure capitalism. There are many options available that must be considered and I will submit that the solution will involve a combination of the government, industry, and each individual.

 

Logician

Apr 1, 2009

"'We own AIG,' said Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, speaking on behalf of the federal government as he tried to justify some sort of renewed, murderously angry French Revolution, this one in our country and aimed at executives receiving bonuses." ...And the award for ridiculous and hyperbolic allusion of the day goes to Jay Ambrose!

 

Logician

Apr 1, 2009

'We already have welfare state aplenty – a lion’s share of the budget goes to this end even as leftists continue to overstate our supposed lack of a safety net.' Not even if we accept this false dichotomy of 'welfare spending vs. miscellaneous' is this accurate. For FY2008 defense spending was the largest single part of the budget, even when excluding the supplemental spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Beyond the intellectual dishonesty of the 'lion's share' idea, in this same sentence there is a pathetic 'appeal to ridicule' involving what 'leftists' may want. Yet this is only one of numerous straw man arguments in this article--please learn to avoid logical fallacies in the future, Mr. Ambrose.

 


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