Ron Paul's Fed Stance is Invigorating-Marketwatch
Ron Paul's Fed stance invigorating-Marketwatch
It's Ron Paul's world, we can only read about it
Commentary: Ex-presidential candidate's Fed stance invigorating
By David Weidner, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Ron Paul has America hungry.
The former presidential candidate and 11-term Republican congressman from Galveston, Texas, seems to be doing what few have succeeded at: rallying support for radical change in Washington, on Wall Street and in the world.
Paul, who rattled the Republican base with a strong showing in several primaries and caucuses last year, is upping the ante. He has a new and timely book, "End the Fed," and has been making a big media tour, including a stop on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart last Tuesday.
"It's hard to enforce the laws when the government participates in fraud," Paul told Stewart.
It's hard not to get excited or encouraged about the way Paul gets people fired up about politics. It's not just the politics, though, it's the kind of politics Paul is talking about: strict lawmaking derived from the constitution, ending trade agreements and national monetary policy.
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Like many charismatic politicians who plateau without reaching a position of potency, Paul's strength is ultimately his greatest weakness. One of his ideas in particular is just too scary, too radical, too naive and just plain stupid that it turns off people who are serious about reform, especially reform on Wall Street.
Eliminating the Federal Reserve in an idealist vacuum is a compelling idea. In today's world, however, eliminating the Fed would be tantamount to handing over the keys of our financial system to the European Union, China or any foreign economic power with a strong central bank. Yet, that's exactly what Paul wants.
"Nothing good can come from the Federal Reserve," Paul writes, saying it's "immoral, unconstitutional, impractical, promotes bad economics and undermines liberty."
Paul can argue that the Fed has been dead wrong in its policymaking. He can say it has too much power. It's too secretive. He can say it caused bubbles. He can argue that it's unconstitutional, though it's never been a cut-and-dried issue, and even the founding fathers were divided on a central bank. He can rant and rant some more.
Consider the Fed's response to the financial crisis. Under Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed has taken the opposite tack from what Paul suggests. It's tried to inflate the money supply by pouring cash into the markets. It's printed money to get more dollars floating in the economy.
Along the way, Fed policy rewarded greed and nefarious behavior on Wall Street. It reinforced the lobbyist politics of Washington. It limited impact in getting its subordinate banks to lend. The threat of inflation looms large over the dollar, and we find ourselves working harder to keep current on our debt.
Real hunger in America
But if you're a student of economics or old enough to remember the last time the Fed didn't lift a finger to help in a recession, you might remember the time that gross domestic product fell 30% and unemployment topped 20%. During the Great Depression, real Americans went hungry and by the time help arrived, it was mostly too late. It took a world war to shake off the damage. Even then it left lasting scars.
Many argue that World War II was a backlash against economic upheaval in the decade before. Even if you don't subscribe to the idea that the Fed is helping mitigate the crisis, consider the current global landscape.
In today's world a central bank is an essential economic tool. Without the Fed's power to lend, to pump in and pull money from the banking system, to control the commercial paper market and inflation, and to influence the currency, this nation would be at a serious disadvantage.
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Imagine the EU, Japan or China raising and lowering their interest rates, and buying and selling U.S. currencies and debt without something in the U.S. to act in our nation's behalf. How does a collapse of the U.S. mortgage market grab you and the home equity you worked so hard to build?
Contrast a world in which the U.S. is powerless with the one envisioned by Paul, who finds inspiration from the Austrian school of economics. His America is that of a landlocked nation in the Alps. He thinks business would function best if left on its own, that it's the government that ruins everything.
Paul is winning converts with his thinking.
Continued . . .
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ron-paul-brings-the-energy-...





















Diss-appointing
This article starts off good, but ends poorly.
But I do like this
Paul is winning converts with his thinking.
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Weidner Watch reply
A secretive cabal that can manipulate the destinies of millions of ordinary peoples through controlling the flow of money,setting interest rates, can only be one thing..pure evil.Central planning, price fixing, central banking fuels crony capitalism to the detriment of everyone else.The notion that US will be weaker without the Fed is false and misleading.The real wealth creation always comes from the creative effort of self motivated and inspired individuals, not from its parasitic gatekeepers and printers of a fiat currency.End the FED now!
Bump
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