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Who is Barney Frank?
Thus wrote John
Gallagher
in The
Advocate as
our government officials desperately struggled to limit the fallout from the
unfolding financial crisis.
Gallagher is right. As Chairman of the Financial Service Committee in the US
House of Representatives, Barney Frank plays a crucial role in determining in
what ways much of the bailout and stimulus money is spent. This is because the
committee over which he presides oversees the housing and banking sectors, two
industries that are at the center of the current economic crisis. But Frank's
power and influence extend beyond his chairmanship of the important Financial
Services Committee. Outspoken, smart and forceful, Frank has emerged as one of
the heavyweights in the Democrat-led House and as such instrumental in shaping
its course and agenda. There are some who think that his behind-the-scenes
influence exceeds even that of Nancy Pelosi. Whether or not this is so, there
can be no doubt that Barney Frank is currently one of the most powerful
politicians in the country.
Given his present position of influence, taxpayers may want to learn more about
the background of the man who directs how hundreds of billions of dollars of
their money is spent.
Barnett "Barney" Frank was first elected to Congress in 1981 at the age of
forty-one from Massachusetts' 4th district.
Six years later he made national news when he publicly declared his
homosexuality. By that admission he became the first openly gay member of the
House of Representatives.
In 1991, Barney Frank received an official reprimand for reflecting "discredit
upon the House." The reprimand came as a result of his relationship with a man
named Steve Gobi, a male prostitute whom Frank initially paid $80 for sex. Frank
later took Gobi to live with him in his home, making him a personal aide. He
paid him $20,000 in compensation (unreported to the IRS) and let him use his
car. Subsequent investigation revealed that in the course of their relationship,
Frank used his congressional office and stationery to fix Gobi's 33 parking
fines. Frank also used his congressional letterhead to write a reference letter
to Gobi's probation officer - Gobi was under court supervision as a convicted
felon with a prison record -- in which he gave false information. Most
damningly, the investigation found that Gobi ran a prostitution ring from
Frank's home. In his defense, Frank asserted he knew nothing of Gobi's illicit
enterprise.
The Democrat-controlled House voted 408-18 to reprimand Frank after a heated
debate during which some Republicans demanded expulsion. They pointed out that
the claim that Frank did not know of Gobi's criminal activities was incredible
to say the least.
Jeff Jacoby of The
Boston Globe summed
up their sentiments when he wrote: "Most pathetic of all was Frank's claim that
he'd been 'victimized' - that he was a just a 'good liberal' who was 'trying to
help' Gobie, but got 'suckered.'"
Frank's Democrat colleagues, however, insisted that this was precisely what
happened. During the debate, his friend Thomas Foglietta (D-PA) said, "Barney
Frank is accused of being stupid and, my friend, if being stupid were grounds
for expulsion, there'd be very few of us left here."
Although the latter part of Foglietta's statement may well be true, the first
part is decidedly not. Whatever else he may be, Barney Frank is certainly not
stupid. A former Harvard instructor, Barney Frank twice won the title
"brainiest", "funniest," and "most eloquent" member of the House in a survey of
Capitol Hill staffers. It truly strains the bounds of credulity that Frank, an
accomplished congressman and a former Ivy League lecturer, could be deceived
under his own roof by a street hustler.
After Gobi, Barney Frank become involved in another questionable - and possibly
criminally tainted -- relationship with a man called Herb Moses. Moses, whom
Frank called his "spouse," was a high-level executive at Fannie Mae from 1991
until 1998. Dubbed a "mortgage guru" by the National
Mortgage News, Moses boasted that he helped develop "many of Fannie Mae's
affordable housing and home improvement lending programs." It was, of course,
these kinds of programs that ultimately led to the collapse of the subprime
mortgage market that wiped out trillions dollars from the economy and produced
the economic turmoil that we now face. Even though there were those warning
against the precarious nature of the enterprise, Barney Frank - whose committee
oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- kept resisting reforms and besmirching
those voicing concerns.
When the Bush administration proposed that oversight of Fannie and Freddie be
transferred to the Treasury Department, Frank strongly opposed the plan,
claiming:
"These two entities... are not facing any kind of financial crisis... The more
people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies,
the less we will see in terms of affordable housing."
Frank continued to claim almost until the day of the collapse that the two
mortgage giants were financially sound. If we lived in a sane world, Barney
Frank would be compelled to testify about his culpability in the current crisis
and what role his romantic involvement with Herb Moses -- as well as the campaign
contributions he
received from Fannie and Freddie -- played in his shilling for these two
moribund institutions.
Commenting on his shenanigans, Jeff Jacoby observed that under normal
circumstances Frank's questionable relationships could have well landed him in
prison. Voters in his very liberal congressional district, however, have awarded
him with a string of easy re-elections.
In his public life Barney Frank is known as a civil rights hawk. A feisty
progressive activist, Frank has poured much of his energies into the area of
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) issues. One of his great
achievements was the founding of the National
Stonewall Democrats, a gay activist arm of the Democrat Party that brought under
one umbrella previously unaffiliated LGBT clubs across America. Describing
itself as "a grassroots force for social change," the organization is
headquartered in Washington, D.C. and currently oversees more than 90 local
chapters. The organization'
As could be expected from the founder of the National
Stonewall Democrats, Barney Frank voted �no' on constitutionally defining
marriage as one-man-one-
Throughout his career Frank has pushed for the decriminalization of medical
marijuana. He recently extended the scope of his efforts to the public at large.
Last year he introduced a bill called the Personal
Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 2008,
which would have removed federal penalties for the possession of up to 100 grams
(3.5 oz) of the drug. Although Frank often talks about the "silliness" of
jailing people for possessing small quantities of the substance, 100 grams is
actually a large amount, which, by most accounts, makes for more than 200 doses.
According to a recent analysis by High
Times magazine,
100 grams of most marijuana strands goes for more than $1000 at street prices.
Defending his bill, Frank said that it was "time for the politicians to catch up
with the public on this." Frank words almost make it look like it is a common
thing for Americans to walk around with $1000 worth of cannabis in their
pockets.
In 2006, Frank voted against the Respect
for America's Fallen Heroes Act, a bill aimed at restricting protests and
demonstrations at soldiers' funerals. The measure passed unanimously in the
Senate with Frank being one of only three legislators in the House who voted
against the Act.
In 2003 Barney Frank voted against the Partial-Birth
Abortion Ban Act, a brutal
procedure during
which a baby -- often viable -- is killed in the birth canal by having its skull
pierced and its brain sucked out. In addition, Frank also voted against the Unborn
Victims of Violence Act and
against the criminalization of taking of minors across state lines by non-family
members to circumvent abortion laws. Not surprisingly, Frank's voting record
earned him a 100% rating from NARAL.
In the area of national defense, Barney Frank has for years advocated a 25
percent reduction in the overall military budget of the United States. Earlier
this month, he wrote in a piece that
ran in the Nation,
"[I]f we do not make reductions approximating 25 percent of the military budget
starting fairly soon, it will be impossible to continue to fund an adequate
level of domestic activity even with a repeal of Bush's tax cuts for the very
wealthy."
He then challenged those who call for fiscal responsibility to first look "where
our spending has been the most irresponsible and has produced the least good for
the dollars expended - our military budget."
All those who care about the future of this country should be greatly concerned
that Barney Frank, a leftist radical who publicly flaunts his homosexuality, is
presently one of the most powerful politicians in America. His recent actions
and statements make it amply clear that he will seek to use his present
influence to implement as much of his extreme agenda as he possibly can. Given
his party's hold on the White House and Congress his efforts may be successful.
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Modified Thursday, December 24, 2009 Copyright @ 2007 by Fathers' Manifesto & Christian Party |
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