Here's what FOX News, an organization that takes a very conservative
approach to journalism has to say about the financial crisis...


Lawmakers Balk at Bush Administration's Approaches to Financial Crisis
Thursday , September 18, 2008

WASHINGTON — Republican and Democratic members of Congress lashed out
the Bush administration as well as each other Thursday in increasingly
explosive exchanges that cast blame on one another for Wall Street's
recent meltdown.

Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke were expected to meet with members of Congress
from both parties at 7 p.m. at the Capitol, FOX News has learned. The
exact purpose of the meeting wasn't immediately clear.

Lawmakers complained they have been sidelined as the administration
bails out big money institutions, and argued that had they been
involved the decisions may have been different.

This week, Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy protection, Merrill
Lynch rushed into the arms of Bank of America and the Federal Reserve
announced an $85 billion bailout of insurance giant American
International Group, or AIG.

Irritated Republicans griped they were given little notice. Annoyed
Democrats argued the financial crisis is not their fault.

"The cracks were showing as the value of mortgage-based securities
slipped day by day by day. And the president and his supporters in
Congress repeatedly chanted — and still chant the mantra today — that
'the fundamentals of our economy are strong,'" Sen. Hillary Clinton
said, taking a stab at GOP presidential candidate John McCain who
uttered those words to much criticism Tuesday.

"Republicans in the Congress feel like we could have had and should
have had more information sooner," said House Minority Whip Roy Blunt
of Missouri.

"Once again the Fed has put the taxpayers on the hook for billions of
dollars to bail out an institution that put greed ahead of
responsibility and used their good name to take risky bets that did
not pay off," said Sen. Jim Bunning, a Republican from Kentucky.

Bunning has introduced a bill that would strip the Federal Reserve of
its authority to use taxpayer dollars to bail out private companies
like AIG.

"The only difference between what the Fed did and what Hugo Chavez is
doing in Venezuela is Chavez doesn't put taxpayer dollars at risk when
he takes over companies. He just takes them," Bunning said.

"I have said on more than one occasion that I don't think the Federal
Reserve can handle the powers they have and this irresponsible bailout
just proves my point," he continued.

Particularly peeved by the short notice given to House leaders about a
private briefing Tuesday night by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, congressional leaders
are proposing legislation that would give Congress a say in any
bailout plan.

"They were not there asking us to do anything," Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid said of the briefing. "They were there telling us what they
were going to do."

Lawmakers say they were taken by surprise by the Fed bailout of AIG,
arguing Paulson had said just a day earlier that further bailouts were
not on the horizon in the aftermath of the government's refusal to
intervene to save Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

As the Wall Street crisis unfolded this week, Republicans and
Democrats also turned their weapons on each other.

Reid and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer on Thursday called
Republicans "total failures" in legislating issue from health care to
toy safety to housing to the financial markets.

"We need senators, House members and president committed to change,"
Reid said.

"Republicans were wrong on Iraq and they neglected Afghanistan where
terrorism was launched against this country," added Hoyer.

In response, House Republicans blamed Democrats for the economic
crisis, saying they used the wrong approach in dealing with housing
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both of which were bailed out
earlier this month.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd and House Financial
Services Committee head Rep. Barney Frank "built up protectorates here
on Capitol Hill around Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac," said Rep. Michelle
Bachmann, R-Minnesota.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi "has been very clear that this Congress has
taken action to deal with the financial mess created by the Bush
administration due to lack of oversight and responsible regulation,"
Pelosi spokesman Nadeam Elshami said in response to complaints.

As the Federal Reserve announced that banks and Wall Street firms have
ramped up borrowing from its emergency lending program, Frank, a
Democrat from Massachusetts, said he was shocked to learn Bernanke has
the power to lend up to $800 billion. In the aftermath the AIG
takeover, Frank said Congress would consider setting terms for future
government interventions.

"It has to be done, I think, in a reasonable way in a democracy, with
some criteria," Frank said. "It shouldn't be one man with $800
billion."



On Sep 22, 2:30 pm, Philobealo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>    Suckling at the government teat for their entire lives, libs drain
> and drain our economy to the point where they have now broken the
> banking system. IF there's gonna be a bailout, I want to make sure
> that the government TAKES those foreclosures from brokeback, broke-ass
> libs and kicks them out on the street where they belong.
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