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Rattled nerves in O.C.

FINANCIAL SYSTEM IN CRISIS / PUBLIC REACTION

September 30, 2008|Mike Anton and Tony Barboza, Times Staff Writers

Congress blinked, Wall Street tanked and the mood Monday on Main Street pingponged in a narrow range between angry and anxious.

"Oh my gosh!" Christine Anderson, 62, of Huntington Beach exclaimed when told that Congress had defeated a $700-billion economic bailout proposal. "I thought it was a done deal. I know something has to be done, and it's scary."


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The view from the 46th Congressional District of conservative Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach), one of 133 Republicans who voted against the plan put forward by the Bush administration, is one of deep mistrust of politicians and business leaders.

Whether they supported or opposed the bailout, taxpayers in this coastal district largely agreed that the worst is far from over -- and that any light at the end of the tunnel is likely to be a freight train.

"People think it's never going to rain, and then it does," said Robert Lade, 66, a retired lawyer in Costa Mesa. "I knew they [Wall Street bankers] were going to wreck the situation by over-speculating."

To Lade, the idea of spending such a massive amount to buy bad investments would be akin to trying to extinguish a fire with $100 bills.

As the market tanked Monday, Lade read a newspaper's business section at a Starbucks and contemplated his next move. Even though his stocks have declined, he plans on "riding it out."

He believes Congress should resist pouring taxpayer money into financial markets that may plunge further.

"You want to promote public confidence and show that you're doing something, but you don't want to waste the public's money if you haven't hit the bottom of the market," Lade said. "Nobody in Congress wants to get tagged with a recession or depression. They want to be able to blame the failure of the bailout on the other party. It's a political dance."

The size of the bailout stunned Joe Villines, 44, a Costa Mesa insurance adjuster who said he trades stocks every day.

"I'm totally against it," he said of the bailout. "We shouldn't be spending my tax dollars and all our tax dollars on idiots that knew what they were doing. . . . They were trying to cram it down our throats. The president is going to be gone soon, so I think he is trying to bail out his cronies."

Villines doesn't buy the dire predictions that the economy will collapse if a bailout isn't done.

"We will weather [this] but we'll do it a lot better without bailing out these idiotic companies and their speculations," he said. "Let them fail. Other companies will come to take their place."

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