Show your support by purchasing VDARE.com merchandise.
VDARE.com's Amazon connection has been restored! Remember to enter Amazon via the VDARE.com link and we get a commission on any purchases you make—at no cost to you!
"Elections don't matter!"
conservatives have long groused.
"No matter
who you vote for,
things never change."
Well, we may have an exception here.
Scott Brown told Massachusetts' voters if they elected
him to what
David Gergen calls
"the Kennedy
seat"
in the Senate, he would go to Washington and run a sword
through Obamacare.
Thirty-six hours after Brown's triumph, a disconsolate
Nancy Pelosi emerged from the House Democratic caucus
to announce that the votes were not there to pass a bill
that had, on Christmas Eve, gotten 60 votes in the
Senate.
A 78-seat Democratic margin is apparently insufficient
to save a health care reform bill that is the highest
priority of a Democratic president elected just a year
go.
What argument is then left for Democratic control of
Congress?
The shock wave from Brown's victory also appears to have
killed cap-and-trade and immigration reform. Democrats
are in open flight.
For what Massachusetts revealed is that this Congress,
where Democrats still hold 59 percent of the Senate and
59 percent of all House seats, is no longer
representative of America, if ever it was.
We have a center-left Congress imposing a minority
ideology on a center-right country.
Obama has gotten the message. Thursday, doing a
passable imitation
of William Jennings Bryan,
he ripped the Wall Street banks
and endorsed "the
Volcker Rule" to force Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan
Chase to divest themselves of their hedge funds and
stock-trading operations, or lose their protections as
banks.
Panic is also evident in Harry Reid's caucus, where the
Brown victory put in sudden doubt Obama's nomination of
Ben Bernanke to a second term as chairman of the Federal
Reserve. Sens. Russ Feingold and Barbara Boxer
immediately bailed on Bernanke, as has Sen. McCain.
Liberals are asking why they should go to the wall to
confer a second terms on a Fed chairman appointed by
George W. Bush.
Reacting to the president's attack on the Street and the
sudden peril to Bernanke's reappointment, the Dow went
into a three-day dive that wiped out 5 percent of its
value. Should Bernanke be rejected, it is said, the
effect on Europe's markets will be like that on Europe's
monarchs when news arrived that Louis XVI had gone to
the guillotine.
"Chairman Bernanke helped the president ... steer
through some very turbulent times and rough waters,"
said
the White House Monday.
Fine. But was not Ben in the wheelhouse when we hit the
iceberg? And never saw it. In his first two years, did
he not preside over an
easy money policy
that fueled the
housing boom
that created the housing bubble, the popping of which
brought on the crisis from which the good professor has
helped to save the republic?
If a snoozing camper's unattended fire sets Yellowstone
ablaze, do we single him out for honor for alerting the
Park rangers and leading a bucket brigade?
Paul Volcker, the Fed chairman who wrung inflation out
of the economy to prepare the ground for the Reagan tax
cuts,
said of his harried successor,
"Bernanke has
been through a fire, and given the experience he has
had, he's a lot more ... qualified than he was four
years ago." Were Bernanke to be rejected, Volcker
added, "I don't
think that would be received well here or abroad."
But if rejection of Bernanke would cause turmoil in U.S.
and world markets, what does that say about the real
stability of the system? And is it not time we stopped
treating the Fed as a holy of holies?
In 1913, when the Fed was created with the duty of
preserving the dollar, one 20-dollar bill could buy one
20-dollar gold piece. Fifty 20-dollar bills are needed
today to buy one 20-dollar gold piece. Under the Fed's
custody, the U.S. dollar has lost 98 percent of its
value.
Against the euro, in the George W. Bush decade, the
dollar lost close to half its value.
The dollar is the storehouse of our wealth. Has the Fed
faithfully safeguarded that storehouse? Was it not
Thomas Jefferson who
taught us,
"In questions of
power let us hear no more of trust in men, but bind them
down from mischief with the chains of the Constitution"?
Every monetary crisis is a result of Fed action or
inaction, for the Fed controls the money supply. As
Milton Friedman
wrote in the book that won him a
Nobel,
the Fed's easy money fueled the market bubble that burst
in 1929. In our time, the Fed fueled the dot-com bubble,
the stock market bubble and the housing bubble. Bubbles
appear when money is created faster than the supply of
goods that money buys.
This populist uprising is a product of rage and
revulsion at the Washington and Wall Street elites, the
unindicted co-conspirators who created this crisis,
neither of which has paid a price commensurate with what
they did to the country.
Let this rebellion not end until all receive their just
desserts, and we get real
"change we can
believe in."
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction to
VDARE.COM readers; his book State
of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America, can
be ordered from Amazon.com. His latest book
is Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How
Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost
the World,
reviewed
here by
Paul Craig Roberts.