Posts Tagged ‘free markets’

Prosperity depends on healthy free markets

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

John Chettle’s piece in the Weekly Standard absolutely says it all.  The President’s mistakes all stem from two things.  First, he has the wrong orientation towards economics.  He believes – quite sincerely but wrongly – that free markets are the problem and that unless they are minutely controlled by Washington they will do bad things to America.  Second – and this is where he differs from other liberal Democrats like Hillary Clinton – he is not experienced enough to be willing to question his ideology when it conflicts with reality.  A wiser leader would know not to have tried the current policies in the first place.  A more experienced leader would be open to the obvious reality that the policies are failing and in fact have become the problem.  So the President continues to do the wrong things in the worst possible way:  to burden the economy with taxes and regulations and to impose the taxes and regulations with so much uncertainty that business people literally do now know how to plan for the future.

All of this would be interesting if it were just an academic exercise.   But it’s not.  It’s hurting people, and of course people who were most vulnerable in the first place are in the greatest danger now.

Moving forward, it will be necessary to reverse these policies but also to discredit them.  The objective must be to restore the bipartisan consensus – which the President has disrupted – that prosperity is essential to everyone’s agenda, that prosperity depends on healthy free markets, and that the government must therefore respect the private economy.

A slip, not a fall

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010
The quote from Pravda in an Investors Business Daily was interesting.  Remember how the Obama Administration wanted to change the world’s view of America?  They’ve accomplished that.  The Russians are laughing at us.
But the Russians have engaged in wishful thinking about the United States before.

When Abe Lincoln was walking to the Springfield courthouse to see the returns from his Senate race against Stephen Douglas – a race he lost – he lost his footing in the darkness and almost tumbled down a hill.  But he righted himself, and immediately the thought came to him:  “This is a slip –not a fall.”  We will look back at this time and say the same thing.  As troublesome as the current policies are, the forces of recovery are already loose in the country.
It’s a slip, not a fall.