I want to chime in now on the thread theme of the likelihood of the passage of this Defazio Bill. I see two equal and opposite errors. One is the Alan Farley (and many others) it will never happen mantra, and the other is the cynical one where is it almost or actually inevitable.
Both are wrong.
Someone wrote the following on my blog (his name is Chris):
"Please Kendall, letâs put this one to rest. Not even Chuck Schumer thinks itâs a good idea so I canât see this getting any traction in the Senate and maybe not even in the House either. "
Here is my response:
"Chris in #4, I would love to, and you are certainly right about Schumer. The difficulty is this has gone from being on the very fringes to slightly inside the outer edge. If you know anything about history and legislation, this is how these things get started. And when they do there are a whole lot of people that underestimate the significance of the movement thatâs taking place.
This is a bad idea. Right now, it stands little chance. HOWEVER, it is easily possible to see the pieces aligning on the chess board in such a way that it soon begins to have much more of a chance. This is especially the case because of a wave of populism and faux-populism in the country which is understandable but at the same time potentially dangerous unless properly channeled.
What is needed, therefore, is vigilance and pro-activity. And it is needed now."
http://www.kendallharmon.net/t19/index.php/t19/article/26735/#comments
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I would say the chances of passage now are maybe 10-20% but if you do not think that can change and fast you are kidding yourselves.
EVERYONE on this thread needs to read david ignatius's piece from tomorrow's washington post:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy.../11/27/AR2009112702323.html?hpid=opinionsbox1
I especially highlight these two sections--
If the Fed's projections are right, the public is going to be very angry next year -- at big business and at the elected officials who have spent trillions of dollars without putting the country fully back to work. Lou Dobbs, the voice of populist anger, may become the nation's hottest politician. President Obama, who has struggled to find a centrist consensus for economic policies, may be tossed like a cork on a stormy sea....
The politics of rage aren't pretty. But in this case, it's hard to argue that the anger isn't justified. The Fed's analysis shows what we see in the daily stock market summaries. People on the top are recovering their losses; people on the bottom are out of work and out of luck.
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Please read all the above links and stay vigilant and alert--Kendall