Clinton created the mortgage crisis by repealing the Glass-Steagall act of 1933. The Glass-Steagall act, among other things, created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, FDIC, which limited banks ability to speculate with mortgages and also prohibited bank affiliated holding companies from owning other banks.
I went and looked this one up, and Adam is correct on Clinton signing the repeal into law. However, the Republican Congress pushed it through on party lines so IMO both political parties are "at fault". I would also agree that the repeal of this act helped set up the current economic crisis.
I dunno about the pen part, IMO it's irrelevant.
One thing about all economies, they live and die on people spending. If enough people spend money, the economy grows. If enough people save money instead, the economy will shrink. The old economy was built upon credit rather than actual money spent, so it was one big bubble just waiting to pop on any one factor. The sub-prime lending fiasco happened to be the pin that popped the bubble, but there were plenty of other factors that could have killed the economy.
This is the way I see the Cash for Clunkers program and the other stimulus packages that the administration is tossing out there. Yes, they are mortgaging our future for the present. How different is this than any other administration? Bush Jr did it, so did Clinton, Bush Sr and most of the Presidents before them, for whatever reasons they found at the time. In this case, the administration is trying to get folks spending again. Yes, folks will likely be spending money they don't have. But that's a different problem. If enough people spend money, the economy will grow again; businesses will make money, they will buy products to sell, hire employees, etc. Which also makes more money flowing into the government's hands, a handy "side-effect".
Once economic growth is restarted, then debt reduction can be looked at. Without growth (and more tax revenue), paying off the debt will either involve more taxes or cutting programs, which no one wants or can afford.
Is the Cash for Clunkers system perfect? Heck no. Will it fix the economy all on its own? Of course not. But if it turns out to help boost the economy a little bit, the administration can try other similar programs to keep boosting the economy little by little until it grows on its own.
Want a car analogy? You were out for a Sunday drive, and while you were busy staring at a hot chick your foot slipped off the clutch and stalled your 'Stang. (economy bubble burst). How embarrassing. Just your luck, your starter has just failed (banks failing, no credit available). Now, you could just wait and see if your starter will decide to work (no gov't stimulus) (very unlikely), or you could try to push-start it (gov't stimulus) (might work if you can get the car rolling).
IMO, the gov't is at least trying something to get the economy rolling again. Sure beats sitting around and letting that hot chick get away.
