From the Least Likely Sources
by: Les Carpenter
Rational Nation USA
Birthplace of Independent Conservatism
Several months after the Federal Reserve initiated it's experiment to spur economic recovery by buying large quantities of federal debt The New York Times is reporting most economist now view the effort as disappointing.
Of course The New York Times failed to make mention of the fact that Sarah Palin had figured out the plan wouldn't work back in November.
From the New York Sun:
It seems we ought to trust less the views of the so called "experts" and begin placing more trust in those folks with just good old fashioned common sense. Ya think?
More at The Lonely Conservative and Professor Jacobson's Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.
More Discussions @ Memeorandum
Rational Nation USA
Birthplace of Independent Conservatism
Several months after the Federal Reserve initiated it's experiment to spur economic recovery by buying large quantities of federal debt The New York Times is reporting most economist now view the effort as disappointing.
But most Americans are not feeling the difference, in part because those benefits have been surprisingly small. The latest estimates from economists, in fact, suggest that the pace of recovery from the global financial crisis has flagged since November, when the Fed started buying $600 billion in Treasury securities to push private dollars into investments that create jobs.
As the Fed’s policy-making board prepares to meet Tuesday and Wednesday — after which the Fed chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, will hold a news conference for the first time to explain its decisions to the public — a broad range of economists say that the disappointing results show the limits of the central bank’s ability to lift the nation from its economic malaise. {Read More}
Of course The New York Times failed to make mention of the fact that Sarah Palin had figured out the plan wouldn't work back in November.
From the New York Sun:
The big question as Chairman Bernanke gets set for his first quarterly press conference is how Sarah Palin was able to figure out sooner than everyone else that the Federal Reserve’s campaign of quantitative easing wouldn’t work. Disappointment in the Fed’s policies is being reported this morning at the top of page one of the New York Times. It reports that “most Americans are not feeling the difference” from the Fed’s “experimental effort to spur a recovery by purchasing vast quantities of federal debt.” It reports that “a broad range of economists say that the disappointing results show the limits of the central bank’s ability to lift the nation from its economic malaise.”
It’s a terrific story, and well-timed, given that on Wednesday Mr. Bernanke will break tradition and meet with the press. It is part of the Fed’s effort to get ahead of what is emerging as a public relations catastrophe, as gasoline is nearing six dollars a gallon at some pumps, the cost of groceries is skyrocketing, and the value of the dollars that Mr. Bernanke’s institution issues as Federal Reserve notes has collapsed to less than a 1,500th of an ounce of gold. Unemployment is still high. Shakespeare couldn’t come up with a better plot. But how in the world did Mrs. Palin, who is supposed to be so thick, manage to figure all this out so far ahead of the New York Times and all the economists it talked to? {Read More}
It seems we ought to trust less the views of the so called "experts" and begin placing more trust in those folks with just good old fashioned common sense. Ya think?
More at The Lonely Conservative and Professor Jacobson's Le·gal In·sur·rec·tion.
More Discussions @ Memeorandum
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