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March 24, 2008
Oh No! Not Plan "B"
By Mike Folkerth
And you think things were bad before, wait until you read plan "B"
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Good Morning out there to the live and sane, your King of Simple News is on the air.
U.S.NEWS: Alan “Cash” Greenspan in past days said, “The current financial crisis in the US is likely to be judged in retrospect as the most wrenching since the end of the Second World War.” He also said that, “It will end eventually when home prices stabilize and with them the value of equity in homes supporting troubled mortgage securities.”
To Mr. Greenspan’s remarks, I say this, “Put a cork in it.” Why would anyone listen to a guy who led us into this mess with reckless monetary practices and who also said that housing would make a soft landing? Or who said that the housing sector was not large enough to bring down the entire economy. The three strike rule has to apply and Cash is out of the game.
With the U.S. fighting wars on three fronts, it seems that the greatest casualties for Middle America are coming from the battles being waged against Wall Street and Washington DC, with Iraq coming in a distant third.
I say we pull the presidential and congressional troops out of the Washington D.C. demilitarized zone and send them home. After all, some of these people have been on extended tours and we need a rest from them. It has to be the water.
I want to lay out the risks of the new economic recovery plan, should it not work as planned. Or more aptly; when it doesn’t work as planned. I’ll abbreviate this as much as possible in the interest of eye strain.
The U.S. is up to our eyeballs in debt to a degree that it is necessary to put $10.00 on deposit in order to borrow five. This situation is described in economic terms as “really, really bad.” It could however be rectified if everyone made more money with which to pay interest on new loans that the government prays daily you that you are dumb enough to take out.
The simplified method of raising wages across the board would be to raise the minimum wage to $20.00 per hour. The only thing that keeps Congress from doing just that, is input from some of the Congressional aids who graduated from 8th grade and have pointed out that it would bankrupt every business in America except Wal-Mart.
Okay, then its plan “B” known as the backdoor approach, which is to lower interest rates to the level of a snakes belly in a wagon track, prop up the banks, order a dozen new printing presses, and pass out money to the point where a dollar isn’t worth spit. Looks good to me.
When this plan reaches the desired result of a corn dog costing 10 bucks, employers will be forced to either raise wages to keep employees from starving to death on the job or firing them and taking the companies production to China.
But more importantly the dollar will be so worthless that it will take $100,000 to buy a nice wall tent, making existing housing appear cheap. “AH-hah, so that’s plan ‘B’,” I hear you say. I was nearly blinded by the lights coming on out there.
So there you have it, the “inflation based back door economic recovery program.” What could possibly go wrong?