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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: Belatedly, the Bad-News Bearer [Washington Post Sez It's Time to Hide the Valuables and Buy a Shotgun.]
Source: Washington Post
URL Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy ... /04/02/AR2008040203031_pf.html
Published: Apr 3, 2008
Author: Milbank
Post Date: 2008-04-03 01:28:56 by ...
Keywords: None
Views: 172
Comments: 3

It's (semi) official: We're in a recession.

The Federal Reserve chairman didn't come right out and say it in his appearance before the Joint Economic Committee yesterday, but in his carefully hedged, deliberate mumbo jumbo, Ben Bernanke delivered a message as stark as bread lines and shantytowns.

"It now appears likely that real gross domestic product will not grow much, if at all, over the first half of 2008, and could even contract slightly," he testified.

It didn't take an economics PhD to crack Bernanke's code: Two quarters of economic contraction is the common definition of a recession. "Am I correct in understanding that you now believe a recession is possible?" asked the committee chairman, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).

"A recession is possible," Bernanke affirmed, setting the news wires abuzz.

BERNANKE WARNS OF POSSIBLE RECESSION.

DOLLAR SINKS WITH US FED CHIEF SUGGESTING RECESSION IS POSSIBLE.

BERNANKE RECESSION COMMENT SENDS SHARES LOWER.

If anything, Bernanke is a bit late to the recession party. His predecessor, Alan Greenspan, wrote recently that the current financial crisis will be "the most wrenching since the end of the Second World War." And Martin Feldstein, whose National Bureau of Economic Research is the official arbiter of recessions, forecast a "substantially more severe" downturn than usual. "The situation is bad, it's getting worse, and the risks are that the situation could be very bad," he said last month.

But the Fed chairman's willingness to invoke the R-word carries particular weight because of his consistent habit of understating the nation's economic problems. Just six weeks ago, he was still forecasting "sluggish growth" for the first part of this year. Last July, he forecast that 2008 would be a time of "strengthening" above an already "moderate pace."

His view of the subprime lending debacle has been equally cheerful. A year ago, he testified before Congress that the subprime mortgage problem "seems likely to be contained." With characteristic optimism, he forecast: "We don't see it as being a broad financial concern."

With that history of prognostication, Bernanke's warning yesterday of a "possible" recession meant it might be a good time for people to hide their valuables and get a shotgun. "He came as close as he possibly could, given his responsibility to be a bit of a cheerleader," Schumer judged after the recession session.

Bernanke spoke in a weaker voice than usual. He sat on the front of his seat, hunched over the witness table, fingers tightly interlocked and veins protruding at the temple. He was still and patient as Schumer, in his opening statement, gave shrill warnings about "alarming" economic news and risk of "the kind of meltdown we saw in the Great Depression."

Sen. John Sununu (R-N.H.), whose already iffy prospects for reelection could be dashed by a recession, begged Bernanke to explain "the differences between the challenges the country was facing during the Depression and today." Bernanke, a Depression scholar, indulged Sununu in a discussion of Andrew Mellon's tenure as Herbert Hoover's Treasury secretary.

The history lesson must have inspired Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah), who traced the origins of the current mortgage crisis to the time "when people were buying tulip bulbs in Holland" -- during the 17th century. When the tulip bubble burst, Bennett explained, "the devastation that occurred in the Dutch economy destroyed it for 100 years."

But all the talk of Mellon and tulips couldn't disguise the fact that the economy is in what Bennett called a "liquidity crisis," Sununu dubbed "this crisis" and even Bernanke labeled "the financial crisis."

And Democrats on the committee were inclined to blame Bernanke for not keeping the crisis from turning into an all-out recession. "How effective do you feel when you're not having the type of impact I would anticipate you would have?" taunted Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Calif.).

The Fed chairman explained that he has been "fighting against the wind."

"I see you doing this, and I don't really see the kind of effect I would hope to see," Sanchez continued, asking what "other tools might be in your bag of tricks."

"We only have so many general types of tools," Bernanke explained.

Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) pleaded for help. "You're the expert. You're the one that we depend on. You're the superstar," the congressman said.

The superstar did not have a ready answer. "We're going through a tough period," he soothed.

But does "tough period" mean a recession? Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.) sought clarification.

"It's possible -- not certain, but possible -- that the first half of this year will be slightly contractionary," Bernanke repeated, pointing out that an official ruling would be made "well after the fact."

That answer didn't satisfy Hinchey. "I think we're in a recession now," he said. "I think we've been in a recession for some time, and I think that that recession is going to continue to get worse . . . six months from now, we may see it in a very, very bad situation."

The Fed chairman was not prepared to sound that alarm -- yet. "You know," he told the congressman, "I wish I had a simple answer for you."

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Sanchez continued, asking what "other tools might be in your bag of tricks."

"We only have so many general types of tools," Bernanke explained.

Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) pleaded for help. "You're the expert. You're the one that we depend on. You're the superstar," the congressman said.

his trust is misplaced and so was the American people's to depend on the likes of him to represent us:

"....The London Money Kings certainly prepared and engineered the panic of 1873, just as they did the crash of 1837 and 1857. We find their motive in the fact that it gave them an excuse for locking up $600,000,000, and thus causing the ruin that followed, with the hard times and low prices, in which they reaped a rich harvest of profit to themselves....."

greatreddragon.com/chap6.htm

Banksters of the Federal Reserve and The City of London deliberately caused the "Great Depression"

perfecteconomy.com/pg-con...ouis-t-mcfadden-1932.html

Billions for the Bankers, Debts for the People

www.jesus-is-savior.com/E...lions_for_the_bankers.htm

Who Owns the Fed?

www.apfn.net/Doc-100_bankruptcy.htm

www.save-a-patriot.org/files/view/whofed.html

Bernanke's warning yesterday of a "possible" recession meant it might be a good time for people to hide their valuables and get a shotgun

how convenient that the price of gasoline and food has soared, we are running out of grain and rice, and the truckers are on strike.....next all they have to do is have the strapped municipalities cut off the welfare spigot nurtured and kept in check until now....

Every Program To Defeat The West Is In Place | 100777.com He stated that in the third of these wars "WE [the Illuminati - worshippers of Lucifer] shall UNLEASH the Nihilists and Atheists, and WE shall provoke a formidable social cataclysm which in all its horror will show clearly to the nations the effects of absolute atheism, origin of savagery and of the most bloody turmoil. Then everywhere, the citizens, obliged to defend themselves against the world minority of revolutionaries, will exterminate those destroyers of civilization, and the multitude, disillusioned with Christianity, whose deistic spirits will be from that moment without compass, anxious for an ideal, but without knowing where to render its adoration, will receive the pure doctrine of Lucifer, brought finally out in the public view, a manifestation which will result from the general reactionary movement which will follow the destruction of Christianity and atheism, both conquered and exterminated at the same time." - Albert Pike, in Aug. 15, 1871 letter to Grand Master Guiseppie Mazzini (British Museum Archives)...... 100777.com/node/423

might be a good time to rephrase Shakespeare's old adage, The first thing we do is ........

The Fed chairman explained that he has been "fighting against the wind."

God willing, he ain't seen nothing yet:

"....The east wind refers to a wind of destruction ........

2. "Behold, though it is planted, will it thrive? Will it not completely wither as soon as the east wind strikes it—wither on the beds where it grew?" Ezek 17:10....." www.bible.ca/pre-british-...ism-herbert-armstrong.htm

[ See Ezekiel 17:1-10/John 15:1-2/Matthew 15:3 (edit: not Mat. 15:3.....Matthew 15:13 "Every plant not planted by my Heavenly Father will be pulled up by the roots) ]

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