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Townhall Finance
This Will Leave a Mark: More Bi-Partisan "Reform"
By John Ransom
Jul 03, 2013 

The economy today, in this Fourth of July week for 2013, waits in breathless anticipation of our newest declaration of dependence. 

Sometime this week, jobs data, housing data and some other data export manufactured by the federal government will result in someone, somewhere- perhaps even in the stock market- doing something. 

And when that happens regulators, media mavens, talking heads, politicians, special interests, and Mayor Bloomberg, will all say with the pride of a collective: “See? We did that,” as if “nothing” would happen without the beneficent government first allowing it. 

So it goes today in the United States Senate, where the burning issue for money and markets is to replace one bad, failed, impossible utopia, with another slightly less-worse utopia that will fail as well. 

Because today in the corridors of misshapen power, the Ds and the Rs are talking about the American Dream, the dream of homeownership, and how they might turn that into votes. 

The Senate is working on a plan to “reform” housing in the country so that…nothing… really… changes. 

It’s called Corker-Warner Housing Reform. 

And it goes to show that you can fool all of the media some of the time, and some of the media all of the time and all of the media all of the time as long as you get two beltway insiders from different parties to support it and tack on the word “reform.” 

They are going to give this so-called “reform” a patina of change by folding up the really bad ideas called Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and turning into a new scheme called the Federal Mortgage Insurance Corporation. 

The idea is that the federal government will now formally “insure” mortgages, whereas before the arrangement was more like a wink and a nod to the investment market that of course IF the real estate crashed- which of course THAT will never happen- the federal government would step in as guarantor of last resort for real estate. 

Now the Senate is proposing to eliminate the government ambivalence and state plainly: “We are the insurer of FIRST resort.” 

And in the name of everything that blasphemes the Holy, they will call the plan “bi-partisan.” 

Because you see the biggest problem that most people have with the economy is that it crashed in 2008. Bad economy, bad, bad economy, they think to themselves, like an economy is a poorly trained dog that just needs the right commands... 

Read the rest of the article at Townhall Finance



 
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