Enforce the immigartion laws and deport illegal aliens and CA could get back on it's feet instead they provide safe havens for ilegals.
Also, it seems bad policy to continue to build homes in dangerous locations where they are repestedly destroyed by nature and are rebuild at taxpayer expense.
Stop the insanity!
Blogs Martha's
Barney Frank wants to Bailout California
- May 16, 2009 21:47:34
- Read all 55 comments
- +3 raves
California wants a piece of TARP
By Michelle Malkin • May 14, 2009
Hey, the amorphous TARP bailout program has been used for everything else under the sun, why not as a cover for debt-laden California?
Barney Frank thinks it’s a peachy idea:
California Treasurer Bill Lockyer on Wednesday formally requested federal help to backstop a wave of short-term borrowing the cash-strapped state will need to undertake this summer.
In a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, Lockyer asked the government to in effect guarantee the state’s debt against default, so that investors would be willing to provide the financing at reasonable interest rates…
…Major banks typically provide that guarantee, but Lockyer said they aren’t willing this time to do so on their own.
“The enormous size of the required funding together with the state’s current credit condition and the continued weakness of the municipal finance market . . . make it highly unlikely that the state can access the short-term market for its borrowing based on its own credit,” Lockyer told Geithner.
As the state’s cash shortage has worsened in the recession, Lockyer has for months been lobbying for some kind of federal backstop on new debt issuance, which he has said should be extended to all state and local governments to help pare their borrowing costs.
Lockyer has an ally in Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), the chairman of the House Financial Services committee.
Although Frank is in the process of drafting legislation that could create a long-term federal reinsurance program for municipal bonds, it isn’t clear what can get through Congress, or how quickly. Frank told Bloomberg News on Tuesday that he was “working with the administration now . . . to do something short-term” for California.
Lockyer said he believed that the Treasury could create a debt-backstop plan under terms of the financial-system bailout bills passed by Congress in 2008 and this year.
Under his proposal, major banks would provide their customary guarantees of the state’s short-term debt, and the Treasury then would agree to stand behind the banks: If the state couldn’t repay the debt on time the Treasury would agree to buy the debt, becoming a creditor to the state.
Although critics say U.S. help for California would discourage the state from solving its structural budget problems, Lockyer has insisted that his plan wouldn’t be a federal handout. The state would pay a fee to the Treasury for the temporary backstop, he said.
Riiiiight. And next they’ll tell us that taxpayers will actually make money off this “investment.”
Message from taxpayers to Washington: Let California fail.
http://michellemalkin.com/2009/05/14/california-wants-a-piece...
By Michelle Malkin • May 14, 2009
Hey, the amorphous TARP bailout program has been used for everything else under the sun, why not as a cover for debt-laden California?
Barney Frank thinks it’s a peachy idea:
California Treasurer Bill Lockyer on Wednesday formally requested federal help to backstop a wave of short-term borrowing the cash-strapped state will need to undertake this summer.
In a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, Lockyer asked the government to in effect guarantee the state’s debt against default, so that investors would be willing to provide the financing at reasonable interest rates…
…Major banks typically provide that guarantee, but Lockyer said they aren’t willing this time to do so on their own.
“The enormous size of the required funding together with the state’s current credit condition and the continued weakness of the municipal finance market . . . make it highly unlikely that the state can access the short-term market for its borrowing based on its own credit,” Lockyer told Geithner.
As the state’s cash shortage has worsened in the recession, Lockyer has for months been lobbying for some kind of federal backstop on new debt issuance, which he has said should be extended to all state and local governments to help pare their borrowing costs.
Lockyer has an ally in Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), the chairman of the House Financial Services committee.
Although Frank is in the process of drafting legislation that could create a long-term federal reinsurance program for municipal bonds, it isn’t clear what can get through Congress, or how quickly. Frank told Bloomberg News on Tuesday that he was “working with the administration now . . . to do something short-term” for California.
Lockyer said he believed that the Treasury could create a debt-backstop plan under terms of the financial-system bailout bills passed by Congress in 2008 and this year.
Under his proposal, major banks would provide their customary guarantees of the state’s short-term debt, and the Treasury then would agree to stand behind the banks: If the state couldn’t repay the debt on time the Treasury would agree to buy the debt, becoming a creditor to the state.
Although critics say U.S. help for California would discourage the state from solving its structural budget problems, Lockyer has insisted that his plan wouldn’t be a federal handout. The state would pay a fee to the Treasury for the temporary backstop, he said.
Riiiiight. And next they’ll tell us that taxpayers will actually make money off this “investment.”
Message from taxpayers to Washington: Let California fail.
http://michellemalkin.com/2009/05/14/california-wants-a-piece...
Top Comment
About Me
Recent Posts
SodaHead Hot Trends



I say, give the Chinese back their damn money and tax the hell out of all the imports and American labor will return! Whether you choose to buy American or Chinese, it won't matter, higher tariffs will mean that more of our money will stay here in the long run!
F*ck you, Barney!
Also, it seems bad policy to continue to build homes in dangerous locations where they are repestedly destroyed by nature and are rebuild at taxpayer expense.
Stop the insanity!
I think the movie stars should bail out California. Most of them voted for the current bunch of incompetents running DC. They could even make a movie about it.
The let people build houses where they shouldn't. They let them do this without any insurance strictly for this purpose.
Fires and mudslides and everything else. Then the government always come along to bail them out.
I'm sick of it.
I live in Washington. We had record snow this year. No one bailed us out. We shoveled and drove in it and got
along. We helped our neighbors and they helped us.
I'm tired of cleaning up after people that choose to be the way they are.
Unless they reform, and that's not gonna happen.
Plus, anything that Barney Frank says is "good" can't be.
What will it take for us to know that we can't trust the government with our money?? And being from Michigan, another state that is in HORRIBLE shape - I wouldn't want a bailout for us either.
And last but not least - I think Barney Frank is the LAST person anyone should be taking seriously in regards to financial matters.