It's been nearly a week since Sarah Palin posted on her Facebook Notes page, but she broke the drought tonight:
Institutionalizing Crony CapitalismBlogger reaction...
In the wake of the recent financial meltdown, Americans know that we need reform. Not only have many individuals learned lessons about personal responsibility through this, but we’ve been able to engage in a discussion about government’s appropriate role.
The current debate over financial reform demonstrates what happens when political leaders react to a crisis with a raft of new regulations. First off, the people involved in writing government regulations are often lobbyists from the very industry that the new laws are supposed to regulate, and that’s been the case here. It should surprise no one that financial lobbyists are flocking to DC this week. Of course, the big players who can afford lobbyists work the regulations in their favor, while their smaller competitors are left out in the cold. The result here are regulations that institutionalize the “too big to fail” mentality.
Moreover, the financial reform bill gives regulators the power to pick winners and losers, institutionalizing their ability to decide “which firms to rescue or close, and which creditors to reward and how.” Does anyone doubt that firms with the most lobbyists and the biggest campaign donations will be the ones who get seats in the lifeboat? The president is trying to convince us that he’s taking on the Wall Street “fat cats,” but firms like Goldman Sachs are happy with federal regulation because, as one of their lobbyists recently stated, “We partner with regulators.”
They seem to have a nice relationship with the White House too. Goldman showered nearly a million dollars in campaign contributions on candidate Obama. In fact, J.P. Freire notes that President Obama received about seven times more money from Goldman than President Bush received from Enron. Of course, it’s not just the donations; it’s the revolving door. You’ll find the name Goldman Sachs on many an Obama administration résumé, including Rahm Emanuel’s and Tim Geithner’s chief of staff’s.
We need to be on our guard against such crony capitalism. We fought against distortion of the market in Alaska when we confronted “Big Oil,” or more specifically some of the players in the industry and in political office, who were taking the 49th state for a ride. My administration challenged lax rules that seemed to allow corruption, and we even challenged the largest corporation in the world at the time for not abiding by provisions in contracts it held with the state. When it came time to craft a plan for a natural gas pipeline, we insisted on transparency and a level playing field to insure fair competition. Our reforms helped reduce politicians’ ability to play favorites and helped clean up corruption. We set up stricter oversight offices and ushered through a bi-partisan ethics reform bill. Far from being against necessary reform, I embrace it.
Commonsense conservatives acknowledge the need for financial reform and believe that government can play an appropriate role in leveling the playing field and protecting “the dynamism of American capitalism without neglecting the government’s responsibility to protect the American public.” We’re listening closely to the reform discussion in Washington, and we know that government should not burden the market with unnecessary bureaucracy and distorted incentives, nor make a dangerous “too-big-to-fail” mentality the law of the land.
- Sarah Palin
Ed Morrissey at Hot Air comments on Gov. Palin's op-ed:
"The large players usually get deeply involved in supporting the politicians in both parties that write the regulations, and that usually means the regulations wind up working for them than against them. That’s the kind of crony capitalism about which Palin warns in her essay, and she saw it first hand in Alaska."Stacy McCain observes:
"Notice that she links and name-checks my buddy J.P. Freire... If this politics thing doesn’t work out for the Gov, she certainly shows promise as a blogger."Don Surber:
"She showed her economic knowledge today. Unlike Obama, she is willing to takke on Goldman Sachs instead of taking on $1 million from Goldman Sachs."Be John Galt:
"She lays it all out: the effect lobbyists will have in drafting any regulations, the advantage huge institutions – particularly those that are well-connected – will have over smaller ones, how campaign contributions buy influence and the questionable relationship between members of the Obama Administration and major financial institutions, particularly Goldman Sachs."- JP
If Palin wrote this herself, she's brilliant. If she merely found the right person to write it and then endorsed it, she's still brilliant for doing so.
ReplyDeleteThis entry covers a difficult subject in a way that's easy to understand.
I agree with your appraisal of the communication, but am dismayed at your consideration that she may not have written it. She's FAR more intelligent than the MSM and the Leftist whackos want us to believe. When appropriate, she quotes others and/or gives credit to the ideas of others. She's HONEST! As for her ability to render the complex into simplicity, we don't refer to her as the "Arctic Fox" for nothing.
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