from the Nation:
Give Main Street a Fair Shakeposted by Katrina vanden Heuvel on 09/22/2008 @ 6:24pm
The Administration has put a corporate-led bailout on the table with the threat that Congress pass it as is or face a worldwide economic catastrophe. We've seen this kind of shock and awe, do it our way or else, fear mongering before. Yes, action is needed, but that action must be smart, just and effective. Action must ensure that this taxpayer-funded rescue doesn't reward the very people on Wall Street who created this mess while shafting the needs of Main Street. The President, the Federal Reserve, SEC and Congressional committees responsible for regulation and oversight failed to act in the public or national interest and allowed this economic meltdown to reach crisis proportions. It's ironic that the same people and firms that preached free-market capitalism are the ones now demanding a speedy taxpayer bailout.
This bailout should be seized as an opportunity to start addressing the real economic crisis--the one on Main Street--where the struggle to make ends meet is increasingly more dire in an economy marked by job losses, crumbling infrastructure, the lowest levels of personal savings since the 1920s, Gilded Age inequality and the highest level of foreclosed homes since the Great Depression.
Attention must be paid to restoring people's opportunities and hope and addressing America's investment deficit, as Harold Meyerson laid out in a recent Washington Post op-ed:
Someone needs to invest in the United States of America. For the past decade and, in a broader sense, for the entire duration of the Reagan era, both government and Wall Street have opted not to.
So where is the commitment to reinvesting in America and its people? While billions or even trillions of taxpayer dollars are being proposed for the benefit of banks and big corporations, we also need to ensure accountability and oversight and protect taxpayers from being ripped off in a rushed, blank-check, no-strings-attached Wall Street bailout. ......(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/edcut/363206