The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change

The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change



Alexis de Toqueville

The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.
Alexis de Tocqueville

The United States Capitol Building

The United States Capitol Building

The Constitutional Convention

The Constitutional Convention

The Continental Congress

The Continental Congress

George Washington at Valley Forge

George Washington at Valley Forge


Friday, February 18, 2011

Another Liberal Ponzi Scheme

From The American Thinker:

February 17, 2011


Another Liberal Ponzi Scheme

By Michael Fraley

History appears to be repeating itself. Consider the following logic:

•1. Green energy needs more access to money.

•2. Banks should be encouraged to loan them this money.

•3. This will only happen with government intervention.

•4. So-called "green bonds" are the instruments for hiding the risk.

As reported in an article on Energy Central, this is, in essence, the conclusion of a study by Barclays and Accenture.



The issuance of so-called green bonds would be the mechanism, or the means by which primary loans could be packaged and re-sold in secondary markets to pension funds, institutional investors and individuals. While the results of that study pertain solely to Europe's transition to a low-carbon society, their findings are also pertinent to renewable energy markets both in the United States and around the world.





This seems strangely similar to another scheme hatched in the U.S.:





•1. Low income home buyers need more access to money.

•2. Banks should be encouraged to loan them this money.

•3. This will only happen with government intervention.

•4. Mortgage derivatives are the instruments for hiding the risk.

Once again, ignoring the lessons of history, denying basic economic principles, and throwing common sense to the winds, liberal elitists are hatching another Ponzi scheme to prop up a pet cause which the free market will not sustain.





"The path to a low carbon Europe has largely depended on government initiatives," says Peter Lacy, managing director of sustainability services, Europe, Africa and Latin America, Accenture. "High public sector debt and maturing technology now mean that private sector capital, primarily intermediated by banks, must be provided to accelerate the investment we need to meet our 2020 goals... Accenture goes on to say that the European nations would assume too much risks [sic] if they tried to do it alone. Literally, trillions must be financed."





So, what they call "maturing technology" in one breath, they acknowledge in another as being too risky for governments already wracked with debt. So with the backing of the World Bank, these so-called green bonds have come to the rescue!





"Tackling climate change is going to take immense resources that will only come from a well-orchestrated flow of public and private finance," says Robert Zoellick, head of the World Bank. "This transaction is an important early effort to show one way in which this can be done," referring to partnership with several Scandinavian institutional investors that raised $350 million.





And not to be left on the sidelines, there is a push for the U.S. to get a piece of the action:





An ad hoc group calling themselves The Coalition for Green Bank is pushing for a U.S. agency that would provide a comprehensive range of financing support to qualified clean energy and energy efficiency projects. It espouses a green bank to be capitalized with $10 billion through the issuance of green bonds. The bonds would be issued by the U.S. Department of Treasury, not to exceed $50 billion.





So, in the name of a controversial, unproven scientific hypothesis, once again, the economies of the world might well be thrown under the bus. "Green Bank is a critical step towards facilitating green power development while meeting the primary objectives of carbon reduction and economic stimulus," says Todd Filsinger, president of Filsinger Consulting. "The environmental benefits are unprecedented and have the potential to drive US emissions to 1990 levels by 2020."





Sure, U.S. emissions might well be falling significantly after this new next government intrusion into the marketplace comes crashing down, taking the economy even further down with it. Just as certainly as low income mortgages were bound to fail en masse, so too will the many unviable "green" technologies eventually fall. At some point, someone will have to pay the piper, and rest assured, it will be, in the end, our children and grandchildren.





What do you want to bet that it won't be the elites or the "green bank" that gets the blame? Will it perhaps be the fault of those greedy Wall Street bankers? Personally, I'm betting it will all be George Bush's fault.

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