RNC / DNC: Crisis? What Crisis?
Now they're planning the crime of the century
Well what will it be?
Read all about their schemes and adventuring
It's well worth a fee-- "Crime of the Century", Supertramp (1974)
What continues to amaze me is the not-so-benign neglect being accorded by politicians to the current financial crisis in the U.S. Granted, it's usually better being ignored by such people; and granted, the current debacle is more complicated than saying "Ken Lay is a bad man". But if you had watched the just-completed Democratic and Republican National Conventions, you wouldn't have known the U.S. is stumbling through the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Nor would you have known, of course, that we're queuing up for a bill that could exceed total Iraq War expenditures.
To prove the point to my own satisfaction, I combined the Palin/McCain acceptance speeches in one block of text, and the Obama/Biden speeches in another. I then set up some keywords to compare across the text blocks. The following summary table shows keywords in the left column, and then respective keywords counts for each party' slate in the appropriate DNC or RNC column. This isn't the usual exercise in cute tag clouds, but an attempt to understand whether important language concerning the current financial crisis penetrated the political radar over the last few weeks.
And it hasn't -- unless, of course, the repeated utterance of the word "God" came in a context more like "Oh God, we're screwed!" than I think it did.
Related Articles
|
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 24 comments:
- nukldrager
- 238 Comments
Sep 06 08:46 AM- mrresponsible
- 13 Comments
Sep 06 09:47 AM- ohm
- 22 Comments
Sep 06 10:01 AMHas anyone obtained a good correlation? Or, just a Nobel Prize?
- rusbear
- 2 Comments
Sep 06 10:36 AM- Concordius
- 2 Comments
Sep 06 11:02 AMThere are many reasons for improving the environment other than the fear of total catastrophe: If you live on the East Coast for example, and the air you breathe is polluted by power stations in the Mid-West it is easy to see why this and other, worse situations around the globe should be corrected.
Nobel prizes are not distributed willy-nilly. Perhaps you are smarter than the scientists and other persons of great intelligence who see value in the attention drawn to the possibility of industrial global deteriioration and warming.
Unfortunately, your comments may be construed as politically motivated and unhelpful.
Personally, I am in favor of the responsible use of clean Nuclear Power, or should I say Nukuler?
- drhall
- 6 Comments
My Website
Sep 06 11:21 AMAlso, just pay the grocery bills, lately this making the news too. This is bad and has no way to get better.
- carey_jim
- 409 Comments
Sep 06 11:34 AMBut the explanation is that Big Business tells the Federal Government what to do, not the reverse. When one party or the other is finally elected in November, then the left or right wing of the business class will tell the politicians what has to be done.
They don't want to talk about it now because their solutions are embarrassingly similar.
For example, as everyone knows, big pharma controls the FDA and NCI, not the other way around. Are McCain and Obama really going to argue about more or less freedom for the monopoly pharmaceutical industry and more or less control of government agencies like the FDA?
Ditto for the real estate and finance industry and their associated "regulatory" agencies.
The elected party will wait for instructions once elected. Once "in power," the think tanks and university professors will provide solutions which the politicians will pretend are their own.
Let's see, the banks and financial institutions will be bailed out if they are large enough and the smaller ones will be red meat for the large ones, people who can't afford to pay their mortgage payments will be kicked out of their houses and be given more or less freedom to sleep anywhere they want as long as it isn't in a house or apartment building ...
In response to the Russian bear, the wealthy never suffer in depressions. During the Great Depression they had a grand time. In fact, during recessions and depressions, they feel even better because they have more people fighting to work for them for lower wages. Why would you expect diners in the best restaurants of Manhattan or the members of the Los Angeles Yacht Club to be any more or less happy during a recession?
The bottom 95% of Americans need much more freedom and the top 1/2 % much less. That used to be the definition of democracy.
What political party can deliver that kind of economic freedom?
- goldenhinde
- 24 Comments
Sep 06 11:46 AMWe must raise taxes and we must cut expenditures. It is quite simple. The politicans are unwilling to tell the truth in either party and the American people don't know enough about finance to demand answers becasue they don't know what questions to ask.
It was PT Barnham who said: Never overestimate the intelligence of the American people.
- Chris White
- 26 Comments
Sep 06 12:00 PMIn 1932 FDR did not associate with Hoover's policies, despite immense pressure to do so, but only talked in general about his, and ran his "forgotten man" campaign. Not so bad seeming now as then, but the next shoes to drop will for sure be economic as well as financial. The present silence for sure will not last past next March!
- Severina
- 1 Comment
My Website
Sep 06 12:13 PM- Abe Fadley
- 5 Comments
Sep 06 12:14 PM- limitout
- 6 Comments
Sep 06 12:34 PM- User 118015
- 269 Comments
Sep 06 12:39 PM- irondoor91
- 119 Comments
Sep 06 01:12 PMA case in point is the recent "stimulus" package. Why was the $150 or so billon the right number? Why not $1.5 trillion? That seems to be the number for the debt crisis, doesn't it. If they would just print and distribute the $1.5 Trillion where it was needed, the debt/credit problem would be solved and Americans would be able to own their homes debt-free. That would then free up a lot of cash flow to buy all the new "stuff" that everybody needs and keep factories around the world humming.
And talk about a vote getter! Just have Congress authorize the Fed Reserve to pay off all debt owed to credit card companies, auto financing, businesses, etc. While they are at it, they can nationalize Fred and Fan and retire all that debt. They could also start paying 20% interest on CD's so retired folks can have a decent standard of living, while at the same time passing a law that says it is illegal for stocks to go down. That would solve the 401-k problems and encourage folks to put money into the stock market.
See how easy it would be?
- opinionated
- 6 Comments
Sep 06 01:20 PMContext is everthing!
- User 181432
- 1 Comment
Sep 06 02:24 PM- STEVE35
- 9 Comments
My Website
Sep 06 03:52 PM- carey_jim
- 409 Comments
Sep 06 05:00 PMDon't forget that we live in a country where three times as many people can name the three stooges as can name three Supreme Court justices.
Er, what crisis did you have in mind, anyway?
I would wager that no more than one out of a hundred Americans know what the letters RNC and DNC stand for, not to speak of what the crisis IS.
Probably even fewer know what the letters DNA stand for. But then we know that Evolution is only a theory so what difference does it make?
- henarl
- 170 Comments
Sep 06 06:31 PM- henarl
- 170 Comments
Sep 06 06:34 PM- henarl
- 170 Comments
Sep 06 06:38 PM- Dirtt
- 26 Comments
Sep 06 09:27 PMIf we don't stop talking about and
If we don't stop trying to enlighten and
If we don't stop lifting the wool over their eyes and
If we don't stop feeling livid, angered, disgraced
Then they will get away with it.
This is not like coming home from an overly long visit to the In-laws only to find the car wrecked and house trashed by wasted teenagers. It's the moment you found out that someone emptied your bank accounts too.
We KNOW money went from the GSE's to 527 Groups which "TA DAAA" over course went into congressional campaigns all over the nation. I wouldn't be shocked if 100 out of 100 senators have blood on their hands. And the House. Oh My God. Carnage.
So why not start by having the 527 Groups pay the money back to us? Simple start. EH. And then the Jamie Gorelick's and the Frank Raines' and the Susan Molinari's of this disgraceful chapter in American history can spend a little time to think about new careers in a federal concrete cell complete with Chinese steel bars.
And THEN we will pay for the damage the "wasted teenagers" did to the precious house.
- User 240862
- 3 Comments
Sep 07 01:31 AMref: Dirtt . . . .
If we don't stop talking about and
If we don't stop trying to enlighten and
If we don't stop lifting the wool over their eyes and
If we don't stop feeling livid, angered, disgraced
Then they will get away with it. . . . .
In the U.S.A., "The two party system has worked VERY well ! . . . . .
"For the two parties !"
ref: Rhodesia er/ Zimbabwe, formerly fed it's neighbors . . . . of course, Zimbabwe has only one party . . . and the citizens are NOT invited !
Roy Stewart,
Phoenix AZ
- User 250896
- 2 Comments
Sep 07 03:26 AM