walk softly and carry a big stick, that one, junket

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walk softly and carry a big stick

speak softly and carry a big stick, talk softly but carry a big stick, talk softly and carry a big stick, walk softly but carry a big stick, teddy roosevelt 

Or speak softly and carry a big stick, which is what Teddy Roosevelt said. Or talk softly, but carry a big stick, which is what McCain said last night’s debate, in which misquotes, mistakes, and lies were rampant.

Not that it was a bad debate, by any means.

But, as Wired reports, it’s no wonder everyone’s confused about issues these days if politicians themselves bumble through copious fibs and flawed statements:

Bloggers and micro-bloggers on Twitter spent the evening sifting through the fibs and exaggerations that the presidential candidates put forth during their televised town hall meeting with voters Tuesday evening in Nashville, Tennessee.

Both the Annenberg Public Policy Center’s Factcheck.org and National Public Radio’s Vox Politics blog provided updates at a furious rate Tuesday night. NPR solicited the help of the public by asking them to do a little bit of real-time research and tweet their findings using #factcheck.

Both the candidates were caught on items that ranged from slight misquotes to outright mischaracterizations of the other’s position.

Which brings us to the economy. The Fact Check Wire points out the two candidates’ stated reasons for the failure of the US financial system:

McCain: Obama didn’t sign a bill to “reign in” the financial markets. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are to catalyzed the crisis.

Obama: Systemic lack of oversight and deregulation caused the problem.

FactCheck.org Factoid #1: Both candidates speak the truth.

Factcheck.org Factoid #2: McCain waited until 2005 to sign a regulation bill. Kind of late, seeing as the housing bubble popped two months later.

While we’re fingerpointing, why not blame everyone? Here’s the list I’ve gathered so far:

1. The Clinton administration, which supported the same deregulation now under scrutiny.

2. Alan Greenspan, who had evidence that the thing was gonna blow in the early 200s, but failed to act on it.

3. The Bush Administration, whose hands-off approach allowed a monster to grow in Wall Street’s shadows.

4. Henry Paulson, who, as former CEO of Goldman Sachs, only ever had big firms’ interests in mind, and is now pandering to them at the expense of the United States citizen.

5. Aggressive lenders, who tricked unknowing Americans into buying crappy loans.

6. Americans, for being so credit-dependent and ignorant with their money.

7. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, for implementing the New Deal that laid the groundwork for this whole mess in the first place.

8. Housing speculators, who caused the housing bubble to grow as big and fat as it did.

9. Jimmy Carter (I’m not sure how this one works, but a commenter on this blog yesterday blamed him).

10. Taxes. Taxes messed the whole thing up.

11. The System. It’s The System’s fault, and The System must be brought down.

12. Blame? It’s the beginning of the Apocalypse! This is supposed to happen, and greedy America deserves it, anyway.

OK, folks, I know you have more people and concepts to blame for this thing. Who else can you think of?

that one

mccain that one, mccain calls obama that one, obama that one, that one debate, that one obama 

I wasn’t quite sure what to make of this when it happened. It sounded demeaning, but it happened as I was writing one of my posts. So I didn’t get a chance to listen closely enough on the first round. But you be the judge … mccain that one

junket

aig junket, aig 400 000 junket, junket definition, define junket, aig 400 000 

Obama talked about AIG executives on a junket which was apparently true, but they were from the clean side of the company, the insurance side, not financial products division. That’s an important distinction.

McCain says Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lit the fire of the mortgage crisis. Most people would say that they played a part but there was much more to it than that. Securitization of mortgages played a big role because it meant mortgage servicers had no real incentive to impose strict credit standards on borrowers. And there were key players as well, like overly aggressive mortgage brokers.

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One Comment

  1. Sam
    Posted October 8, 2008 at 5:29 am | Permalink

    McCain acknowledged that he lost the debate tonight
    http://tubedirect.net/index.php?q=McCain-debate-tonight

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