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LA Times blogger defends payday lending

March 11, 2008 | LA Times, media coverage, positive media coverage | Comments (0)

A Los Angeles Times blogger agrees with former Sen. George McGovern that the government should stay out of the business of restricting credit.  Money quote:  “Government is almost as good at quashing economic activity in the hood as it as at complaining about the lack of opportunity in the inner city.”

George McGovern gets blogged

March 10, 2008 | Wall Street Journal, media coverage, positive media coverage | Comments (0)

George McGovern’s column in the WSJ advocating for freedom of choice on everything from healthcare to payday loans has prompted a lively debate in the blogosphere.  

Check out  http://tailrank.com/5344099/Freedom-Means-Responsibility for all of the latest discussions from all sides of the aisle.  

“Since leaving office I’ve written about public policy from a new perspective: outside looking in. I’ve come to realize that protecting freedom of choice in our everyday lives is essential to maintaining a healthy civil society.

Why do we think we are helping adult consumers by taking away their options? We don’t take away cars because we don’t like some people speeding. We allow state lotteries despite knowing some people are betting their grocery money. Everyone is exposed to economic risks of some kind. But we don’t operate mindlessly in trying to smooth out every theoretical wrinkle in life.”

Blogoshpere latching onto McGovern’s Journal piece

March 7, 2008 | positive media coverage | Comments (0)

Ankle Biting Pundits, a well-known conservative blog, has highlighted today’s McGovern piece in the Wall Street Journal.   Another respected blog, EconLog also posted comments on this insightful op-ed.

George McGovern on payday lending: Freedom means responsibility

March 2, 2008 | Wall Street Journal, customers, industry, media coverage, positive media coverage | Comments (0)

Former Democratic presidential candidate and South Dakota Senator George McGovern has an outstanding piece in Friday’s Wall Street Journal on the problems with “economic paternalism,” in the effort to ban payday advances.  Here are a few choice quotes:

“Payday lending bans simply push low-income borrowers into less pleasant options, including increased rates of bankruptcy. Net result: After a lending ban, the consumer has the same amount of debt but fewer ways to manage it.”

But McGovern goes beyond the mere mechanics of how banning or restricting payday advances hurts consumers.  He offers insight into the very foundations of individual liberty and how it’s engrained in American society and culture:

 

“Since leaving office I’ve written about public policy from a new perspective: outside looking in. I’ve come to realize that protecting freedom of choice in our everyday lives is essential to maintaining a healthy civil society.”

At the risk of getting too classical, your Payday Pundit is reminded of this gem from Italian statesman and poet Dante Alighieri which well parallels the sentiments in McGovern’s WSJ piece:

 

“Mankind is at its best when it is most free.  This will be clear if we grasp the principle of liberty.  We must recall that the basic principle is freedom of choice, which saying many have on their lips but few in their minds.”

Seems we could use a little more 14th Century wisdom in the 21st Century.