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Wall Street Weekly | 10/30/2009 12:00 pm

Liz Peek: Grandiosity, Not Common Sense, Drives Health-Care Bill

© Shutterstock

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 10/26) 

Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.

The stock market cheered the resurgent economy yesterday, after losing ground for four days in a row. The 3.5% gain in real GDP was welcome but, since nearly half of the improvement came from the Cash for Clunkers program, I wouldn’t break out the bubbly quite yet.

ISI Group notes that economic recoveries historically mirror the extent of the downturn; the worse the falloff, the faster the bounce-back. They say that, given the recession-caused 3.8% collapse in GDP, the quarter should have jumped 10%. No one was looking for that kind of pop, given the debt load and job anxieties still weighing on Americans. Indeed, today’s report that consumer spending sank 0.5% in September (the biggest drop in nine months) underlines the fragility of the recovery. For further proof, just ask the 530,000 newly laid-off Americans that went looking for unemployment insurance last week.

HSBC’s economists had forecast 4% growth for the quarter. They were too bullish because they overestimated the government’s stimulus spending. The shortfall was in outlays from the cities and states, which unexpectedly turned down. This raises an interesting question, no doubt being asked by the 26 million Americans looking for full-time jobs. What ever happened to the stimulus program?

We do not have to risk fundamentally weakening the health care currently found satisfactory by nearly 80% of Americans.

If you’re wondering where our $787 billion went, visit the Recovery.gov website. The quick answer is … nowhere. Out of the entire program, only $173.2 billion has been paid out. Of the $14 billion in federal contracts awarded so far, for example, only a little over $2 billion has been received. There are some terrific projects that have received funding, though. My particular favorite is the $219,000 spent on a study of the sex lives of freshmen women at Syracuse University. You might prefer the "Week Mapping Radioactive Rabbit Feces With Detectors Mounted on a Helicopter Flying 50 Feet Over the Desert Scrub," which cost $300,000. If you’re a golfer, you’re probably thrilled with the $5,500 tax credit being applied to the purchases of golf carts.

Some of these projects make me chuckle, but the failure to create jobs for Americans is no laughing matter. A story in today’s Financial Times points out that "more than 8 out of 10 U.S. stimulus dollars spent on wind energy farms have gone to foreign companies." Cash that has gone to wind farms has funded 4,500 jobs overseas. Oops.

Well, after all, it’s the government, and no one expects perfection, or timeliness, or accountability. Then why in heaven’s name are we about to allow the government to interfere in our health care? It is inconceivable to me that Democrat leaders in the House and Senate and the Obama administration are bulling ahead with health-care legislation that Americans do not want, that we cannot afford and that is likely to detract seriously from the most pressing issue before us: putting people back to work.

Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and President Obama have reinvigorated the so-called "public option" based primarily on a couple of recent polls that say that Americans favor a government-run insurance program. Everyone should look up the actual WSJ/NBC poll that supposedly "green lighted" the public option. Early on, respondents are asked if the country is headed in the right direction. Over half (52%) say no, up from 43% in April. The sixth question asks people whether they approve (43%) or disapprove (48%) of the way Obama is handling health-care reform. In answering question No. 10, 48% of those surveyed say the government is doing too many things, while 46% say it is not doing enough. Responding to question 26, 42% said they think the president’s health plan is a bad idea, versus 38% who think it is a good idea, and in the follow-up 40% think that the legislation will make their health care worse (vs. 21% who think it will get better) and 47% think the cost will go up, while 13% think it will go down. Does this group sound enthusiastic about more government involvement?

268 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Callie O

Americans have plenty to "whine" about right now!  Just released - the story of CITI’s bankruptcy.  Know who’s been approved to get paid first out of that suit?  Not the traditional creditors, then bondholders (translates taxpayers)….

Nope, it’s Goldman Sachs!  Right…ol’ Timmy Geithner’s alumnus.  Goldman Sachs has had its hands on truckloads of money ever since this administration took office.  Billions in the bailout.  Closing of its competitors by the powers that be.  And not a word of protest, unless some federal judge exposes this last corruption.

The New York Times article relating this stated this administration is being re-labeled "Government Sachs." 

This isn’t the same old corrupt Washington we’ve seen for years.  This is corruption grandioso…this is corruption with raisins!!

Also in the article:  "Goldman Sachs’ new top lobbyist was recently the top staffer to Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., on the House Financial Services Committee chaired by Frank. Michael Paese, a registered lobbyist for the Securities Industries and Financial Markets Association since he left Frank’s committee in September, will join Goldman as director of government affairs, a role held last year by former Tom Daschle intimate, Mark Patterson, now the chief of staff at the Treasury Department.

And the Fed is crawling with Goldman Sachs protogés.  CORRUPTION RULES!!

On another front, Nancy Pelosi’s new 1,990 page government takeover of health bill is being called the worst piece of post-New Deal legislation ever to appear in Congress. 

The Journal says it will create an "unrepealable middle class
entitlement" that will cause taxes to "rise precipitously" and
will result in "all medicine" being "rationed via politics." The
CBO cost estimate is coming in at $1.055 trillion and that’s
just scratching the surface. The Journal says  "ObamaCare will
be lucky to cost under $2 trillion over 10 years; it will grow
more after that."

Go here to access Wall Street Journal’s excellent analysis of
what it calls the "worst bill ever":

http://www.grassfire.net/r.asp?U=22654&CID=122&RID=22152068

 

How anyone can defend this bunch of Corruptus Vomitus abomination calling itself Congress is more than the logical human brain can digest.

 

By Callie O on 11/02/2009 6:46 pm
Deni G
Oh I see the problem. The human brain does not really digest. That particular task is accomplished by … wait for it… the human ‘digestive system’. Hence the name.
By Deni G on 11/04/2009 10:40 am
Callie O

Ah! - a would-be scholar amongst us! 

There are, Deni G, many definitions of the word "digest."  One is, as you say, the breakdown and assimilation of food in the stomach, etc.

Another is:

To think over and arrange methodically in the mind; to reduce to a plan or method; to receive in the mind and consider carefully; to get an understanding of; to comprehend. [Webster’s Dictionary]

So you see, Deni G, you don’t get a star on your post for this one.

By Callie O on 11/04/2009 3:12 pm
Deni G
Ha haha ha! Boy you guys have like totally no sense of humor.

I was referring to your use of the word digest, which in fact resembles “to change, esp. in the mouth, stomach, and intestines by the action of gastric and intestinal juices, enzymes, and bacteria, into a form that can be absorbed by the body” much more so, than ‘arranging, considering and especially comprehending’.

Stars for everyone!

Even the post-digested.

Because we care.
By Deni G on 11/06/2009 10:37 am
Callie O

You guys?  I’ve never been accused of having no sense of humor.  In fact, my specialty is humor.  Guess I just didn’t catch your "joke."  Possibly because I was in the "Congress sucks" mode.

I’ll be more innuendo-aware next time.

 

By Callie O on 11/06/2009 11:08 am
Glenda Glynn

My goodness there must be some kind of award we can bestow on Pelosi.  Between she and the "Fava Bean" lady from New York - maybe your "Corruptus Vomitus" award would qualify.  Congress would come in a distant second to these two losers.  And, of course, lest we forget Goldman Sachs — perhaps a three way tie!

Callie, I love that expression.  I think it best describes this administration and all of the Washington elite!  You are "on" this evening. 

By Glenda Glynn on 11/02/2009 8:25 pm
Seana Thompson

Wow! All of this fuss and it looks like the majority of people on here want some type of Government health care! The only ones who don’t are those who get health care that is more comprehensive than the rest of us. Why do we Americans agree about health care that is proven to work in other countries, and yet is ran by the government? France, Italy, European countries in general tend to be healthier, and live longer than Americans. If National health care is such a danger, why are they all so healthy? If I don’t use my money to pay for my health, am I so selfish as to tell others that I could help them but won’t? Odds are that at some point I will use it and and they will help pay for me, then. I may not make it to retirement age, but I would like to save for Social Security. I do not mind if I am helping to pay for others now. Someone will pay for me later. We Americans are a stingy lot, aren’t we? I am a Special Ed. Teacher in North Georgia. The majority of students are on assistance and cannot afford basics like dental visits. Tell them that you can enjoy your insurance, but they can just suffer. I dare you.

 

By Seana Thompson on 11/06/2009 2:04 pm