I don’t always agree with everything John Stossel says, but he always has an interesting column and he is right on with this one about Bill Clinton.
Speaking of “slick willy” you should read my recent post about him. http://cyberpolyticks.blogspot.com/2012/09/slick-willy-still-has-it.html
Clinton Myths
By John Stossel 9/12/2012
Bill Clinton got rave reviews for his speech at the Democratic
National Convention. My wife said: “Clinton
was great. He made Republicans look like liars and losers.” Clinton, now a
sainted elder statesman, also gets credit for the booming economy of the ‘90s.
Today, he appears in an Obama commercial -- in full “I feel
your pain” mode -- saying that Obama “has a plan to rebuild America
from the ground up.”
When someone claims anyone can rebuild a society from the
ground up, I say he is arrogant and delusional.
Clinton then
tries to scare viewers by telling them that Republicans want to “go back to
deregulation. That’s what got us in trouble in the first place.”
Ah, the progressives’ George W. Bush deregulation myth:
Bush’s anti-regulation crusade caused our problems. This is a lie that seems
true because of constant media repetition. In fact, Bush talked deregulation
but vastly increased the regulatory state. He hired an astounding 90,000 new
regulators. Under Democrats and Republicans, regulation grows.
A rare exception was repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which
forbade financial companies from offering both commercial and investment
banking services. You know who signed that?
Bill Clinton.
He was right to sign it (backed by Treasury Secretary and
later Obama adviser Larry Summers) because outlawing full-service banking put
American banks at a competitive disadvantage.
Five years earlier, Clinton
supported the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act,
which finally legalized interstate branch banking. Federal and state laws that
forbade intrastate and interstate branch banking -- that is, diversification --
were one of the worst features of American finance. They made banks highly
vulnerable to failure of specific business centers and farm communities,
helping to make the Great Depression what it was. (By contrast, Canada
had no such restrictions and no bank failures.)
So Clinton -- not Bush -- was the bank deregulator. Were
those acts responsible for the financial debacle of 2008? No. Bear Stearns,
Lehman, etc. were not affiliated with commercial banks.
Banks got in trouble because they filled their portfolios
with securities built on shaky mortgages. And here is where Clinton
does bear responsibility.
His secretary of housing and urban development was Andrew
Cuomo, now governor of New York
and apparent presidential wannabe.
Cuomo, as Wayne Barrett wrote in the Village Voice in 2008,
made a series of decisions that “helped plunge Fannie and Freddie into the
subprime markets without putting in place the means to monitor their
increasingly risky investments. He turned the Federal Housing Administration
mortgage program into a sweetheart lender with sky-high loan ceilings and no
money down, and he legalized what a federal judge has branded ‘kickbacks’ to
brokers that have fueled the sale of overpriced and unsupportable loans. Three to four million families are now facing
foreclosure, and Cuomo is one of the reasons why.”
Barrett goes on: “Perhaps the only domestic issue George
Bush and Bill Clinton were in complete agreement about was maximizing home
ownership, each trying to lay claim to a record percentage of homeowners, and
both describing their efforts as a boon to blacks and Hispanics. HUD, Fannie
and Freddie were their instruments, and as is now apparent, the more unsavory
the means, the greater the growth. ... (Cuomo) did more to set these forces of
unregulated expansion in motion than any other secretary and then boasted about
it, presenting his initiatives as crusades for racial and social justice.”
Naturally, when Clinton’s
HUD secretary became New York’s
attorney general, he vowed to prosecute unscrupulous lenders. I’m waiting for
him to prosecute himself.
President Clinton happily takes credit for reducing America’s
budget deficit and presiding over a period of strong economic growth. But this
happened not because of wise leadership. Clinton
had the good fortune to reside in the White House just as the high-tech
information revolution kicked in and a Republican Congress stopped him from
spending what Democrats wanted to spend.
Progressives say that his increase of the top tax bracket
did not prevent economic growth, but it never occurs to them that growth would
have been even stronger had government not confiscated that money.
Sadly, most who watched St. Bill at the DNC will never know
the truth.
John Stossel is host
of "Stossel" on the Fox Business Network. He's the author of
"Give Me a Break" and of "Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity."
To find out more about John Stossel, visit his site at johnstossel.com.
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