Friday, November 14, 2008

Bailout: This Far, No Farther.

In his 1996 State of the Union speech, President Clinton said that "the era of big government is over". It probably pained him to say it, but that was where the political winds were blowing. Twelve years later, the federal government is the biggest player in the residential mortgage market and has set aside $700 billion dollars to bailout banks and other providers of credit. All of this comes after the Feds bailed out an investment bank and purchased a majority share of the world's largest insurance company. Not saited, the Democrats now want to bailout U.S. automakers. If Clinton were President today, he probably would say that "the era of big government is finally here."

The Democrats don't want to bailout the automakers, they want to bailout Big Labor. They also want to remake the auto industry into a liberal utopia where people work a 6 hour day, 4 days a week, building tiny, unsafe, electric cars with a top speed of 53 miles per hour that have to be plugged into an outlet every 6 hours to recharge. And not a normal outlet - one of those giant ones for your washer or dryer.

If the Democrats bailout Detroit, who will be next? The airlines? The health care insurers?

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Grace in Defeat

Driving to work the morning of November 5th, I heard a local conservative talk-show host utter what has now become the mantra of defeated Republicans: "I will not treat Obama the way the Democrats treated President Bush these past eight years."


At least in public, the Democrats refused to treat President Bush with respect. They cast the President and his advisers as either blundering idiots or evil geniuses out for nothing more than personal gain. They cast the American people who twice elected President Bush as a bunch of duped fools driven by fear and bizarre religious ideology. No doubt the left's estimation of the American people changed on November 4th.


But how should Republicans act in defeat? Should we wish Obama and his successful congressional Democrats luck and promise to support "our President"? Have we forgotten the Kerry-Edwards ticket's refusal to concede in 2004 when, despite President Bush's decisive victory, Kerry refused to call the re-elected President until the day after the election and even then offered no more than a few terse words? But our 2008 candidate - John McCain - seemed born to give his concession speech. And suddenly the biased media has fallen in love with McCain once again.


The country just elected a bunch of leftists to control both houses of congress and the White House. Of course, we must respect the results. But we need not act any more gracious than that. Respecting the outcome is already one step farther than Democrats ever went following the results of 2000 and 2004 when Republicans were repeatedly accused to stealing the vote in Florida and Ohio respectively. Democrats were sore losers. Perhaps we Republicans should be too.