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John McCain Addresses the Housing Crisis
   
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Added by Garnet R. Chaney, last edited by Garnet R. Chaney on Apr 24, 2008  (view change)
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But I wonder how much I will like [McCain] if I take a closer look at him.

Let's take a closer look at one of the entries: "John [McCain] Addresses the Housing Crisis"

  • John [McCain] Addresses the Orange County Hispanic Small Business Roundtable - March 25, 2008
  • Thank you for joining me here today. I just returned from a trip overseas that included assessing the state of affairs in Iraq, the Middle East, and Europe. I will have more to say on those important issues in the days and weeks to come.

Did we hear about this in the news? According to Michael Savage, Obama told foreign press (French news) that one of the first things he wants to do after becoming president is to meet with the leaders of Muslim countries and ask them why they don't like this, and what can we do so they will like us better....

  • While I was traveling overseas, our financial markets experienced another round of upheaval. This market turmoil leaves many Americans feeling both concerned and angry. People see the value of their homes fall at the same time that the price of gasoline and food is rising. Already tight household budgets are getting tighter. A lot of Americans read the headlines about credit crunches and liquidity crises and ask: "How did we get here?" In the end, the motivation and behaviors that caused the current crisis are not terribly complicated, even though the alphabet soup of financial instruments is complex. The past decade witnessed the largest increase in home ownership in the past 50 years. Home ownership is part of the American dream, and we want as many Americans as possible to be able to afford their own home. But in the process of a huge, and largely positive, upturn in home construction and ownership, a housing bubble was created.

OK, so far, a realistic assessment. Wonder if he was like many intelligent people in California prior to 2006 that were claiming "there is no housing bubble".

  • A bubble occurs when prices are driven up too quickly, speculators move into markets, and these players begin to suspend the normal rules of risk and assume that prices can only move up - but never down. We've seen this kind of bubble before – in the late 1990s, we had the technology bubble, when money poured into technology stocks and people assumed that those stock values would rise indefinitely. Between 2001 and 2006, housing prices rose by nearly 15 percent every year. The normal market forces of people buying and selling their homes were overwhelmed by rampant speculation. Our system of market checks and balances did not correct this until the bubble burst.

OK, that's a good definition of bubble. Sadly, renters are paying the price for the speculation of their landlords.

John does a good job of defining the problem. But I found the rest of his message to be a lot weaker. More

It didn't seem to have much about dealing with securing the borders. At first I wondered if he is counting on me considering Hillary Barack Rodham Hussein Clinton Obama such an unpalatable choice, he doesn't need to deal with our borders.

Oh wait, found an article from March, let me take a close look at John McCain - On Immigration, Washington is Failing The American People


More posts tonight:

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Comparison of Presidential Candidate Positions
CNN acts like John McCain is as important as Ross Perot

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