Quote from the1:
I couldn't agree more. Houses should be left to fall to their intrinsic value but that would trigger TARP 2.0 with an attitude.
Yes, and? In Asia in 1997-98 that is exactly what happened. The governments did not have welfare states to fund, and they did not have enough money to bail out the banks. So the banks basically went bust en masse. By 1999 the economy was rebounding rapidly and by 2000 the economies were back to normal, they then grew for a whole decade before the 2008 recession, and in 2009 and this year they are growing normally again.
In other words, the economy had 18 bad months as the market cleared and badly-managed businesses went broke, then without any government interference it rebounded as the stronger surviving companies picked up the slack, hired the cheap unemployed workers, and started delivering products and services at lower prices that people could afford. Governments did not take on debt of 100%+ of GDP to cripple future generations.
Meanwhile Japan did exactly as you said and endured 20 years of stagnation.
The relative performance of Asia vs Japan, and nowadays Asia vs the west, shows that a big government that "helps" the economy during recession is a terrible disaster that spells long-term societal bankruptcy and ruin. Keynesian policies didn't work in the 1930s (where unemployment was 10-20% for the whole decade), they didn't work in Japan for 20 years, they didn't work in the 1970s, and they won't work now.