Read the full article. He's clearly positive on the bailout and explicitly says the government's first reaction about how to "save" the banks was the "right one".
Case in point, it turns out, is the banking crisis. It
sure looks like the government’s first impression about
how to save the banks was the right one, after all
And here is that quote in context:
Thanks largely to actions taken by the Federal Reserve,
the commercial paper market has thawed, and banks are
lending to each other again — if not to the rest of us.
Customers aren’t racing to pull their money out of the
banking system and stuff it under a mattress.
Most important, the government has made clear it will not
allow a major bank to default, to avoid the replay of the
Lehman catastrophe. (Though it would have been nice if Mr.
Geithner, who had been involved as head of the New York
Fed, had acknowledged that the Lehman default was a
terrible mistake. Instead, he fell back on the old “there
was nothing we could do” dodge. Not exactly confidence-
inspiring.) The government showed its determination to
stick by this thinking when it rushed in to shore up the
faltering Bank of America.
That is a highly supportive take on the bailout, at the time it was happening.