Let’s take some of the points you made, the ones I can argue without going into the political realm.
1) US real-estate, not everywhere, but in a very large segment of the country, was incredibly over priced. Starter homes in San Francisco, CA topped half a million dollars. How many eighteen year olds can afford those prices? The same in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Dallas and other places, just not to that extreme. Many of the suburbs of those cities also had starter homes starting in the quarter million dollar range, again way over priced given the median income of the population.
2) Health care insurance really is not a crisis. There are plenty of organizations advertising on American television offering discount health insurance coverage. Many of them are a lot cheaper than the plans offered at work, some even cheaper than the plans offered to the United States Congress. (Not political, just their health insurance plan, not what plans they may or may not want to legislate.)
For instance, iCan insurance is offering insurance for someone in Chicago, for a family of 4 (2 adults, 2 children) in relatively good health (non-smokers that means) for as little as $127.00 a month. That’s less than many people have to pay for car insurance. So I really don’t see healthcare as a crisis of epic proportions, if you know what I mean.
3) Social Security: Many of the older generation (the first generation to collect Social Security) do in fact have the false idea that they are drawing on the savings they paid into a fictitious lock box. In reality, many of these people collected over 100% of the amount paid into the program in the first 5 years.
Part of the reason for this is that the program was only designed for 1/10th of 1% of the population to ever collect. Now we have over 90% of the population living until they can collect Social Security due to the incredibly good healthcare programs this nation has. If we wanted to restore solvency to the program, it would be realistic to increase the age a person can collect Social Security to 108 years old, up 43 years from the current 65 years old. But the older generation will never go for it, neither will the younger generation (who is currently waiting with baited breath for their parents to retire so they can get the good jobs.)
Another part of the reason that the elderly think they are collecting the money they put into the program is because they are being told that the money went into a numbered account (their social security number) and that the checks they are receiving are drawn from that account. This is patently untrue. You cannot go to the Bank of the United States of America and write a check on your account, say 123-45-6789 and have it deducted from your savings account there because no account exists for you. The money was dumped into a slush fund and used to fund various projects and back filled with IOUs.
Finally, the entire idea of Social Security was a scam on the American people in an effort to make them feel better about their situation during the Great Depression. President Roosevelt’s mother knew this, this is why she refused to pay the Social Security Taxes which resulted in the President himself having to pay her taxes to keep her out of jail.
3) I believe that if America were to open drilling everywhere in the country, allow American companies to buy the resources from the Government and sell them to the world, the price at the pump would seriously slacken. We would probably not see $0.87/gallon prices again, but realistically, I think the price of oil could drop to $65/barrel and the pump prices to $2.15/gallon. The trick here is to have energy companies pay the government (city, state, federal) XX% based on their production. The resources belong too the people, not too the government, therefore, the tax would go to offset income taxes and restore the deficit (which has never been zero in any of our lifetimes.)
4) In regards to the strength of American currency, the US Dollar is strong compared to the currency of many nations. It may or may not be stronger than the Canadian Dollar or the British Pound or the Euro. That’s not what I was attempting to say anyway. But it is strong enough that everyone on the planet knows that the dollar will be worth a dollar for as long as anyone can realistically imagine. The same could be said for the Euro, maybe even the British Pound or the Canadian Dollar (though I believe the Canadian Dollar fluctuates more often than the US Dollar has in the past century.)
5) Yes, companies are assets in many mutual funds and personal stocks. It’s called gambling. You are not guarenteed a return in the stock market. If you buy into a company and their leadership destroys the company making bad loans, or bad products or whatever, then you lose. That company should not, in my mind, be bought by the tax payers just to save you from your poor decisions.
It’s like I’ve been saying to Switch for years now. He’s lamented the fact that he’s lost a lot of money in the market. Personally, I’ve been making money left and right, except the past two weeks (and even then, with the ultra volatile nature of the market lately, I’m only down pennies on the dollar, perhaps 2 or 3%.)
Now, if I have done my homework, used the brain God gave me and made the right investments so I don’t lose my money, why should I be punished by bailing out those who did not use the brains they were given or did not do their homework or worse, relied on others only to tell them what to buy?
Should my neighbor across the street be able to walk up to me and say: “Hey, you earned $40 today, but my boss stiffed me. Give me $20 of what you earned.” Is that the society we want to live under?
Now lets expand that microcosm to the national level. If Bank of America refrained from making risky loans because they did not want the exposure, they kept the federally required assets in reserve to cover their debts and they invested wisely, why should we punish their success by buying out Freddie Mac and Freddie Mae? Why not let those two banks go under and allow Bank of America or Citigroup or another bank buy their notes instead?
To answer your last question: Yes and Yes. It is both political and correct that the bailout would happen regardless of if an election was occurring this year. The American people are a bunch of spoiled little rich kids running home to Mommy and Daddy when they got a bloody nose in the school yard of Wall Street, and like the mollycoddles they are, they will get all the sympathy their parents can dish out and none of life’s lessons they so desperately need.