Don't worry. The Republican Socialist Party will have government pay you to continue being an idiot.http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070831/bush_housing_slump.html?.v=2
8/31/2007 7:28:42 AM
YOU HAVE NO IDEA!NO IDEA!!11
8/31/2007 7:35:10 AM
8/31/2007 7:48:15 AM
Fucking stupid. Let's encourage retarded behavior!!!
8/31/2007 9:39:10 AM
8/31/2007 9:55:56 AM
8/31/2007 10:43:25 AM
And to think, most of these guys are probably libertarians.
8/31/2007 11:48:32 AM
Libertarians are libertarians all the time, they realize capitalism must allow for some people to fail in bad times because that is how the market gets rid of the idiots (survival of the fittest). In time that will allow new businesses to start up and thrive. They do not go asking for government handouts when the s*** hits the fan. These guys are corporatists - their purpose for government is to act as an ancillary escape valve for their business. There's more to being a libertarian than being for tax cuts. You actually have to reduce government so that in the future tax raises won't be needed, like to cover a housing bailout for example.A good quote I've seen a lot in the last couple weeks:Capitalism without failure is like religion without sin, it does not work.http://michellemalkin.com/2007/08/31/bush-pulls-a-hillary-on-housing/[Edited on August 31, 2007 at 12:01 PM. Reason : /]
8/31/2007 11:54:42 AM
take that malkin shit out of here
8/31/2007 6:17:23 PM
the problem with libertarians is that they forget about the peasant mob[Edited on August 31, 2007 at 7:04 PM. Reason : s]
8/31/2007 7:02:23 PM
9/1/2007 12:26:57 AM
Yes, they would be more prudent. But as history demonstrates, they are unlikely to be sufficiently prudent to prevent financial crisis. Therefore, it turns out that the best policy is to pretend you are never going to rescue anyone, and then once the cards collapse try to rescue everyone. This is because once the crisis hits there is no way to only save prudent firms, since the nature of a crash or crisis is that prudent firms also get pulled down. But if we do as we say, and never rescue anyone, then we introduce a similar moral hazard. If the system is going to crisis and collapse every decade or so due to irrational speculators, what is the benefit of being prudent in long term investments when you still lose everything? Why not join the irrational speculation and try to make all the money you can before crisis develops?
9/1/2007 8:53:18 AM
The boom/bust cycles are more the result of incorrect signals sent to the market from gov't interference and so-called controls. If the market was allowed to operate more freely, there wouldn't be as many mistakes made by misinformed participants.
9/1/2007 11:39:20 AM
any bailout of individuals or corporations is fucking wrong.Everyone who's getting burned on the real estate/mortgage debacle needs to take their lashes and move on. It's nobody's fault but their own. Fuck our government if they bail anyone out.
9/1/2007 12:52:45 PM
This kind of crap happens all the time, from both sides,and yet so many people still can't seethat the Republicans and Democrats are opposites ends of the same singular ideology.We live in a one party state people, open your eyes.
9/1/2007 1:49:44 PM
my eyes are open. thx 392
9/1/2007 3:38:02 PM
Hmm, yes, perhaps the frequency is made higher by government interference and the like, but the occurance of irrational exhuberance does not require government. It is a natural phenomenon of the human psyche, after-all. And it is not a function of just letting the idiots go bankrupt: they tend to take non-idiots with them into bankruptcy, disrupting the banking system, and slowing (or even reversing) money creation. the resultant deflation hurts everyone in every sector, not just the idiots. So while doing nothing does punish the idiots more than if you did something, you are allowing the bad decisions of the few to punish the many, perhaps severely (30% unemployment or so).
9/1/2007 4:32:18 PM
like it or not, there's something to be said for temporarily helping private citizens avoid homelessness. That's almost an economic death sentence - not akin to "take their lashes and move on"Now, when it comes to corporations, the same doesn't necessarily apply, although there can be some exceptions (bailout of the airlines after 9/11, for example)everything is good in moderation - the government can help a family make its mortgage payments for 4 months and avoid having to pay for a lifetime of prison and social services after the 8 year old kid is forced out onto the streets with his homeless parents and falls in with gang activity
9/1/2007 4:52:53 PM
9/2/2007 1:48:34 PM
we have a winner. good job Solinari with another dumb assertion. Good game bobby for the quick and simple response.
9/2/2007 3:05:14 PM
1. this is not a bailout. make sure you read up on it before you go calling it a bailout.2. when the plebeians don't get their grain, there will be blood on the streets.3. read what LoneSnark writes. i can't say it any better
9/2/2007 3:48:32 PM
^bobby already summed up why Lonesnark and you are both wrong.Foreclosure only wipes out a burden, it doesnt remove the source of income. Unemployment is not going to rise. And it will hurt us FAR worse to continue to prop up the un-natural subsidized growth of our housing and lending markets, because it's going to cause an even LARGER fall down the line. A small fall now would be much easier to bear for everyone involved. The bigger the descrepency gets, the more everyone is going to get hurt by it in the end.
9/2/2007 3:55:44 PM
I am talking generally as to why we have a Federal Reserve Bank which, BTW, with no direction from congress is playing lender of last resort throughout this entire situation. It doesn't matter whether congress votes to bail out homeowners or not, the Fed is already providing loans to all takers, even those individuals unable to pay the money back. As such, we don't need a bailout from congress, the Fed already has the system covered.
9/3/2007 9:38:36 AM
9/3/2007 12:33:38 PM
Hmm, the problem of bad credit does not go away in a few months. It doesn't go away for years. But landlords have means of dealing with high risk tenants: it's called a deposit. The deposit can be two months or rent or more, something they should have because if they're being foreclosed then they have probably not paid for housing in months. As they knew they were going to be on the street, hopefully they saved all that money up to use as collateral in a rental property.
9/3/2007 3:29:01 PM
true, true, but when the scope is suddenly increased dramatically, there can be unintended consequences to letting capitalist tough-love take its course...I think the peasant mob bears repeating:[Edited on September 3, 2007 at 7:22 PM. Reason : s]
9/3/2007 7:20:13 PM
Are you fucking kidding? No one is going to revolt because some fucking idiots don't understand what interest rates are. The tough love of 1981 was much worse than this, and no one did shit.
9/3/2007 10:02:02 PM
I'd prefer the tough-love. Why do we care about what happens among the general public? We are a part of the peasant mob. I doubt TWWers on here are part of the social elite that run the country and control the banks with teh j00z.
9/3/2007 10:05:38 PM
I don't foresee a violent revolution being very successful.
9/4/2007 12:22:35 AM
while i don't really agree with him about this matter, i think i should point out that the revolt of the peasant mob doesn't have to be--and in our country, wouldn't be--a violent uprising.
9/4/2007 12:47:55 AM
Peasant mob? 0.33% of U.S. households are facing foreclosure. If all of them got together it would be some riot, but I doubt all of them would be willing to cross the country just to start the revolution.
9/4/2007 1:44:13 AM
What part of adjustable rate mortgage didn't those borrowers understand?
9/4/2007 2:16:17 AM
9/4/2007 7:06:40 AM
Actually, to the best of my knowledge Carter's policies were quite good. He started the policy of deregulation and appointed an inflation hawk as Fed. Chairman (Paul Volker). By the time Reagan won election all he had left to do was cut taxes, Carter had already started the ball rolling on everything else. Now, Nixon was a populist bastard, enacting ruinous price controls and driving inflation.
9/4/2007 8:44:17 AM
close enough. my point wasn't presidential, it was policy
9/4/2007 9:49:02 AM
9/4/2007 10:01:44 AM
9/4/2007 10:16:56 AM
9/11/2007 8:01:53 AM
Ah ha. I was about to make that comment and I see you have already done it.Even if your point was about policy, you cited the wrong policy in making your point, so just what the fuck were you trying to say?
9/11/2007 8:31:52 AM
I think you really need to lookup the definition of socialism.And also point out other socialist countries that carry as much debt as the United States.Also, if you want to be extremely technical then you'd state that the money for any bailout would, ironically, most likely come from some of the same foreign financial sources that fueled the original housing boom.
9/11/2007 1:49:28 PM