Due diligence is in the eye of the beholder. Larry Lindsey got fired for saying the Iraq war could cost $200 billion dollars. Sec'y Rumsfeld said that was way off base.
Rummy was right: Lindsey underestimated the cost by a factor of four or five, and the clock is still running.
Have prolonged low interest rates been in the interest of taxpayers, or have they been more a political expediency to keep credit churning and delay more or less inevitable corrections, such as the one we should have had in 2001? Where was the unbiased study on that?
Was there any due diligence on behalf of the US taxpayer for TARP or the emergency facilities of the US Federal Reserve in 2008-9, or again, wasn't all that more intended to benefit banks, bank receivers and the likes of AIG? All our government did by way of restraint was to keep the bailout approriation under $1Trillion. That's not counting QE or any of the Fed pawnshops that gave out cash loans in exchange for financial dreck. (All in all, the bailout comes to $13-14 trillion so farI think.)
And speaking of the TARP, isn't the FDIC required by law to take action BEFORE an insured bank poses any substantial risk to the US taxpayer?
Medicare part D? Estimates way low again...
Don't get me wrong, mikesatx, I don't think your emphasis on protecting the US taxpayer is wrong. I just don't think our government, Red or Blue, respects that anymore. Spending is power. If you think otherwise, I'd be very interested to know why.