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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bonnuss_in_austin who wrote (275931)7/16/2002 11:08:20 AM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 769670
 
LOL!

I'm naive about the markets????

You post this silly story ........

HAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHA

I used to think you were just a bile filled dip who let your partisanhsip get the better part of your judgment. However, maybe you are just plain stooooopit!!



To: bonnuss_in_austin who wrote (275931)7/16/2002 12:37:24 PM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Respond to of 769670
 
July 15, 2002

Hence, Loathed Melancholy

By WILLIAM SAFIRE

ONDON

The poet John Milton had a message applicable to the "new economy" enthusiasts who stampeded world stock markets to
unsustainable heights: "Hence, vain deluding Joys. . . ." (Hence is now "Gedowdaheah.")

But Milton is the patron saint of contrarians. He has another, quite different message for the mindless herd now divesting in despair.
To pessimaniacs dumping stocks in a rising economy, the contrarian suggests: "Hence, loathed Melancholy. . . ."

Europeans wish America would cheer up. Complaints about U.S. arrogance and unilateralism pale when our market locomotive stops
chugging. The Melancholy gripping investors, which has knocked American industrials down by a third, has spooked investors on
this side of le despond; English, French and German indexes have been clobbered harder. Hegemony talks: Rarely have Europeans
antipathetic to America manifested such a sympathetic reaction.

If Communism were still in business, headlines would proclaim a "crisis in capitalism," with workers exploited by corrupt bosses and
a class revolt inevitable.

But the capitalist system is not in crisis. In recent months, it has been doing what it is supposed to do in the wake of every speculative
binge: correcting itself. After a bubble bursts, people who have been deliriously blowing bubbles demand to know: How could "they"
have done this to us? But we, the investing people, have done it to ourselves — as we do in almost every generation.

Because nobody likes to admit to self-delusion, we are scaping every goat in sight.

We wuz robbed, say investors and employees of the Enrons — but outright crookedness, highly publicized, is a relatively minor
cause of the current furor. Show trials of the fraudulent few will deter other executives from breaking existing law.

We wuz conned, say buyers of hot stocks of companies with inflated earnings — and so we were in Andersengate. But the market is
properly punishing a profession that followed Mel Brooks rules. By selling stock in miscreant client companies, investors are casting
out top executives who conspired to rip off stockholders, lawyers who slashed corners and directors in conflicts of interest.

We wuz manipulated by analysts who were no more than touts, betraying their customers for a piece of the banking action. With
their character in question, investment banks and brokerages are sheepishly trying to earn back their reputations "the hard way."

We wuz misinformed (from a tart Humphrey Bogart line in "Casablanca") by financial media that failed to dig into rosy press
releases or challenge the celebrity culture that made dot-com demigods out of financial half-wits. The cautionary voices of Floyd
Norris of The Times, Robert Samuelson of The Washington Post and Allan Sloan of Newsweek and relatively few others were
unheeded in the cacophony. But yesterday's lapdogs have turned into a wolfpack, savaging reputations to satisfy popular demand for
vengeance.

We wuz too loosely self-regulated. The lax good-ol'-boy stock exchanges and lazy credit agencies — with much to answer for — are
scrambling to tighten standards to restore trust, which they belatedly realize is their stock in trade.

All this self-correction is well underway. And after every period of excess, government correction is added. Congress and the last few
administrations left the S.E.C. understaffed and overconfident; it is now running scared. New accounting rules will be imposed;
sweetheart loans to executives will be stopped and stock options treated by companies like other compensation. Perhaps, as long
urged in this space, the antitrust division of the Department of Justice, the F.C.C. and F.T.C. will stop supinely okaying the
megamergers that feed egos and starve competition while adding mountains of dangerous debt.

But in all these blame-casting we-wuzzes, we fail to realize that the fault, dear Brutus, lies within ourselves. Individual investors, even
in an era of pension funds and expert money managers, have a responsibility to assess their risks and to resist the roar of the crowd.
Let's face it: too many of us abandoned common sense and grabbed for that pie in the sky.


Now the crowd is swearing off even good pie on the table. Contrarians are therefore thinking: is the time drawing nigh to begin a
program of investment? Our adviser, who shouldst be living at this hour, would say:

Hence, loathed Melancholy . . .