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ResurrectionSong
Thursday, March 05, 2009Guinness and Jim Cramer are Singing the Same Song (At Least for Now)As most of you know--you’ve seen the video, I’m sure--Jim Cramer had harsh words for the White House and Obama’s decisions on the economy and how those decisions are destroying wealth in the nation. I’d say that’s undeniable: from a collapse in the stock market and housing prices that could take decades to recover and the very real possibility of inflation around the corner that will render even conservative savers’ nest eggs with tremendously less real buying power than they had just a few years ago, the wealth of millions of Americans has been brutally depleted over the last few months. These are simple facts and one wouldn’t think that they would invite much of a serious rebuttal.
The White House, though, did what it could to diminish Cramer’s words--the words of a man who has admitted to voting for Obama, for believing in Obama’s overall agenda, and for having donated money to Democratic causes in the past. In fact, in no way is Cramer removing himself from the left, but embracing a more measured approach than the administration’s headlong rush to implement sweeping changes on a very short schedule.
Cramer sounds like he’s speaking sense to me. He has a clear-eyed view of the state of our economy and it doesn’t take a prophet to see the damage coming from some of the misguided policy and tax choices Obama’s administration is working to implement. Cramer is speaking good sense.
And he continues to make sense even when he’s championing things that I would fight in the future:
Some of the arguments we have--we on the right with you on the left--can come later when the country is healthy again. Some of those arguments (about what constitutes a “fair” tax rate for whatever passes as wealthy, for example) are luxuries that we can’t afford when we’re just trying to pay the bills. Increasing taxes on the individuals and companies that keep the rest of us employed and paying our bills isn’t going to help. Increasing taxes on the folks who can invest in the new businesses, products, and ideas that fuel our economy isn’t going to help. Huge spending plans that don’t address the real needs of the country--filled with ridiculous earmarks from both parties--are luxuries that we can’t afford when we need to recover a safe climate for businesses to grow and for jobs to be created. Cramer understands that and vows to fight back against the Democrats when their policies will take our country in the wrong direction. [Would it, then, be safe to say that he hopes that Obama fails in implementing those harmful policies? Or would that be painting him with too Limbaughian of a brush?] It’s not just Cramer, though. Obviously, investors have no faith that Obama’s plans will create a secure environment for business to flourish. The market’s fall is broken by only occasional spots where bargain seekers buy in and quickly sell off--that downward trend is astonishing. Terrifying. Which brings me to the Guinness. I like Guinness; it’s tasty beer. I’m on a mailing list where Guinness sends me notes about upcoming boozing events and opportunities to try some of the other alcoholic beverages produced or imported by Diagio North America. I mostly ignore these invitations because, frankly, I don’t need anyone encouraging me to drink. I do just fine on my own. Today’s message caught my eye, though: Guinness Needs Your Help.
God knows I’m willing to help Guinness in a time of need. Here’s what they had to say:
This is all in support of AxeTaxesNotJobs.com--an effort by Diageo to encourage people to contact their representatives and ask that they act responsibly to help right America’s economy. I doubt very seriously that Diageo wants to be seen as a politically activist company in much the same way that I doubt that Cramer wants to be seen as someone fighting against a popular president or the long-term agenda that he actually believes in. But both are being moved by circumstance to actions that they wouldn’t normally take: standing athwart bad economic policies yelling, “Stop!” A crisis like this is bound to make some strange bedfellows. An painful economic crisis has--through what can only be seen as poor leadership and shortsighted policies in our political class, but especially in our White House--become something much worse: the potential for a second Great Depression. The potential for crippling unemployment and economic implosion. Good policies can help us avoid that fate, but bad policies--those that Cramer and Guinness fight against and that Limbaugh hopes will fail--will push us right down that hole. These are scary times and we all need to do what we can to head off a complete economic disaster. We can get back to arguing over the other stuff later.
Since I have borrowed so liberally from Cramer (and please do read the whole thing--it’s insightful stuff), I am going to dip into the well once more to give a good leftist the last word and to encourage you to add your voice to his:
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