Saturday, February 2, 2008
Jim Bunning, the lone vote against Bernanke
“You play a pretty good fiddle boy but give the devil his due.”
-Charlie Daniels
It would be easy for me to avoid saying something positive about Kentucky Senator Jim Bunning. We differ on many issues. We rarely support the same candidates. His prickly personality does not make him a media darling.
Having said that, I would be remiss if I did not give Senator Bunning his due.
On one of the important decisions facing the country, Bunning was right and every other United States Senator was wrong.
In 2006, Bunning was the only Senator to vote against Ben Bernanke as Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.
There were 20 members of the Senate Banking committee. Only Bunning said no. Bernanke then breezed through the full Senate on a voice vote.
Bunning took some serious heat. He was voted one of the nation’s “Five Worst Senators” by Time Magazine.
I wonder if Time Magazine will allow a recount.
If other Senators had listened to Bunning, we might have avoided a recession.
An economic downturn is the result of many events but the Federal Reserve Board can make it less painful.
The Federal Reserve Board is a risk manager for the nation’s economy.
A fire fighter puts out a fire but a risk manager keeps a fire from starting.
Bernanke hasn’t been a risk manager, he’s been an arsonist.
My high school history teacher said that the Federal Reserve Chairman was more important than the President.
My teacher grasped something that 99 United States Senators did not.
Before entrusting our economy to a Federal Reserve Chairman, the Senate needed to perform due diligence. They needed to make sure we had the best person for the job.
Bernanke’s confirmation “hearings” were a love fest with a minimum of vetting.
Only Bunning noticed that Bernanke had never worked in the private sector. Ben had never met a payroll or earned a return for stockholders. Bernanke only accomplishment had been hanging out at the Princeton faculty club.
Real world economics differ from the textbook models. A great Federal Reserve Chair, Paul Volcker, understood both.
I’m not sure Bernanke understands either.
Bernanke breezed through confirmation hearings and people hooted at Bunning.
I doubt Time Magazine’s editors are laughing at Bunning now. If they are in good spirits, they haven’t checked their stock portfolio lately.
There are hoards of people calling for Bernanke’s head. Even those who suck up to Ben admit that “he made a few mistakes.”
Those “few mistakes” put us in a recession.
If Bernanke had dealt with sub prime mortgages before they became a crisis, we would have avoided a recession.
If Ben had been aggressive in cutting interest rates before the stock market went into free fall, we would have avoided a recession.
If Bernanke had not appeared completely clueless, he would have given the business community confidence. Instead, we got a recession.
Bunning’s fellow Senators don’t want to admit they screwed up. They want to cover their tracks by handing out $150 billion in tax rebates.
Our grandchildren and great grandchildren will be paying for the ill advised rebates. We are currently paying for Bernanke’s mistakes.
Since the United States Senate gave Bernanke a 14 year term, we can’t get rid of Ben until 2020. I wonder what the economy will look like then?
Going against the crowd is a lonely position.
In 1964, Oregon Senator Wayne Morse was one of two Senators who voted against the Gulf of Tonkin resolution that authorized America’s further involvement in the Vietnam War.
I don’t know if Time listed its “five worst senators” in 1964 but Morse would have been on their list. Four years later, the people of Oregon voted him out of office.
It took awhile but history has given Wayne Morse his due.
I’m giving Senator Jim Bunning his due now.
Don McNay is Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group and author of Winner, Losers and What to Do When You Win the Lottery. You can write to him at don@donmcnay.com or read his award winning column at www.donmcnay.com
Monday, January 28, 2008
Notes from Don McNay
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Saturday, January 26, 2008
Addicted to Spending
Addicted to Spending
I said no, no, no.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
College Students Need to Learn About Money
Thursday, January 17, 2008
McNay to sign his new book at Eastern Kentucky University to benefit Society of Professional Journalists.
Author and syndicated columnist
The presentation will take place in the
All proceeds of the book signing will be donated to the
In his second book, McNay gives practical financial advice including what to do if you win the lottery. He also reflects on the worlds of gambling, addiction, celebrities and business.
He chronicles the saga of several Powerball winners who have lost their money or had bizarre things happen to them.
McNay’s previous book, The Unbridled World of Ernie Fletcher, sold well and was critically acclaimed.
Also on the 23rd, McNay will appear on The Pulse with Leland Conway on WLAP-AM in
For more information about
For more information about Winner and Losers, go to www.sonofagambler.com
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Lottery Winner Outed
Lottery Winner Outed
Gonna Take your mama out all night.
Yeah, we’ll show her what it’s all about.
Scissor Sisters

As a test, I went to extensive lengths to see if I could identify the winner. I couldn’t. The trust officers did their job.
If my third cousin wants my car, he had better start sucking up now.
It has been said that over 90% of lottery winners blow through their money. I hope that Mr. Huff is not one of them.
Saturday, January 5, 2008
Where I'm going to live when I get home?
Where I'm going to live when I get home?
-Billy Ray Cyrus (known forever as Hanna Montana's dad)
It's 2 am on New Year Eve (actually New Years Day) and I am watching a man frantically move out of his rental house.
It is the end of the month, on a cold, windy and miserable night. The guy is loading a truck as fast as he possibly can load.
I suspect that the landlord's New Year's will start finding that the tenant skipped out.
I wonder how many times that the scenario will play out around the country this year.
We have heard a lot about people who can't pay their "sub-prime" mortgage and can't afford their home. We don't hear much about renters.
Sub-prime borrowers make up a small part of the housing market. Some homeowners are hurting but the people crying the loudest are big Wall Street financial firms who got greedy and stupid.
Companies like Citi and Merrill Lynch made dim-witted decisions. Those decisions only effected the sub prime marketplace. It has no correlation to the man doing the 2 am furniture run in a snowstorm.
When you skip out on your rent, it usually means you are out of money.
A big portion of the country lives in rental housing. With gasoline, food and heating prices rising, they are feeling pinched. If they work in housing or construction, they are really hurting.
I've owned or rented a home for 30 years. I've never been late on a rent or house payment. It is the only type of payment I have never been late on.
When I was in graduate school in 1981, I had $10 a week to spend on food. I ate one meal a day, used lots of coupons (I didn't know how to cook) but made the rent each month.
When I started my business, times were very tough and I maxed out every form of credit I could find. They turned off the gas in my apartment. For 3 months, I had to take cold showers and use paper plates. I didn't have heat (it was summer) or hot water but I paid the rent on time.
I knew where I was going to live when I got home. I was never going to take a chance on losing it.
Not everyone stresses the importance of paying their rent like I do.
I briefly owned an upscale rental home and got burned on the deal. The renter was a corporate executive with nice furniture and a brand new (leased) Audi. He gave me a sad story the first month. The second month he skipped town in the middle of the night.
I got a judgment against him for the balance of the lease and spent the next 15 years trying to collect. He moved in an underground world. I got his wages garnished for a week in
Good for the child. Not so good for the deadbeat hero. I was able to attach another paycheck before he moved again.
The guy had nicer furniture than I did. He wanted to live in nice places. He just didn't want to pay for them.
When I watch someone moving in the middle of the night, I don't know the real story. I don't know if it is someone who is unemployed or at the end of their financial rope. I don't know if it someone who can't handle money or in a house too expensive for them.
It could be the man is moving to a nicer place and chose 2 am on New Year's Eve as the best time to make it happen.
He could be a sign of economic blight or just be a guy with strange moving habits.
Whatever his motivation, where he is going to live when he gets home will be different this year.