ww3?last time things got this bad it directly lead to ww2 and that was really the only thing that pulled the world out of itwill it take a massive war to pull the world out of this? where will it come from? what will be its form?think outside of the box as well. maybe it won't have to be a military war. maybe not even a violent war. maybe a philosophical or sycological war. Maybe a transofmation/EVOLUTION in human society as we know it?
10/10/2008 3:29:24 AM
:carl face:will somebody suspend this doofus already?
10/10/2008 3:32:38 AM
WETHEDUMBASS
10/10/2008 4:53:19 AM
I guess it could lead to WWIII. It could also lead to a temporary economic slowdown coupled with new financial regulations and practices in order to prevent it happening again.Of course, "last time things got this bad" is a pretty difficult thing to pin down, isn't it? We've had bad economic times since the depression, and unless the invasion of Granada was a lot more brutal than it's made out to be I think we came through it relatively conflict-free.
10/10/2008 4:57:47 AM
lmfao@transofmation
10/10/2008 5:01:19 AM
this guy gets to make threads in Soapbox??
10/10/2008 9:12:04 AM
10/10/2008 9:20:48 AM
[Edited on October 10, 2008 at 10:16 AM. Reason : dpost]
10/10/2008 10:16:33 AM
The similarity to be wary of is the panic and frustration of the populace. During the 1930s, many people lost faith in capitalism. Many countries turned to socialism. Americans even skirted with socialism with the election of FDR.When times get tough, people are easily led into more gov't power and control...when often just the opposite is more helpful.
10/10/2008 10:37:30 AM
10/10/2008 10:40:38 AM
No amount of knowledge of history would prevent a stock market crash. What reading history should affect is how people respond when they do crash.
10/10/2008 10:45:14 AM
^ Yeah, even when you have someone like Warren Buffet warning people. The few people who understand history and are paying attention are often unable to keep the rest of us from stampeding off a cliff.
10/10/2008 10:45:46 AM
^Exactly. It's not very difficult to see the signs... Usually you can just look for overly optimistic mindsets thinking they can make millions by doing nothing (e.g. Dotcoms, house flipppers)http://money.cnn.com/2008/10/10/pf/minds_over_money.moneymag/index.htm?
10/10/2008 2:58:06 PM
10/10/2008 4:42:02 PM
long live walmart
10/10/2008 4:45:56 PM
10/10/2008 4:55:47 PM
Well, the events of today are probably a fatal blow to American preeminence on the global stage. However, I doubt that this is the end of the United States or a harbinger of global war. The modern global structure is very different from that of 1929. While there are certainly a few potential flash points here and there, I don't think we're setting the stage for any sort of inevitable conflict.What we probably will see is the slow decline of what I consider the Western consensus. The idea that free markets and liberal democracies are the best ideology. Globalization will probably slow, and this will have tremendous impact for many nations, not just the industrialized states that have benefited but also from many of the developing states that have aggressive, export oriented economies as well who up to this point have benefited from the open markets of the West. I worry more about the decline of liberalism however; I think one of the selling points to liberalization of values has been the economics that go with it, and as the economics break down, it could have a negative impact on the move towards human rights and equality as well.
10/10/2008 5:32:58 PM
10/10/2008 6:15:14 PM
the treaty that ended WW1 directly led to WW2
10/12/2008 7:55:15 PM
10/12/2008 9:25:44 PM
So it'll lead to a quagmire?
10/12/2008 9:30:18 PM
the current economic downturn will lead to temporary uncertainty, fear mongering, exploitation of the situation for political/personal gain, and an eventual upswing with conditions as good as or better than the previous situation. just like every other downturn. let's just hope that it does not lead to more programs resembling socialism.
10/12/2008 9:36:39 PM
wellDecember 12, 2012 is just over 4 years away... [Edited on October 12, 2008 at 9:40 PM. Reason : asdfghjk]
10/12/2008 9:38:57 PM
^^^ it's already a quagmire^ and 9 days later on the 21st is the prophesied end of the world![Edited on October 12, 2008 at 9:44 PM. Reason : arrows]
10/12/2008 9:43:31 PM
beginning of the global 9 day long end of the world partywas what i was referring to
10/12/2008 9:56:55 PM
hah, awesome...i'll bring the booze!
10/12/2008 10:04:03 PM
THE END OF DAYS!!1111OMG RELIGION
10/12/2008 10:18:56 PM
ibtl
10/13/2008 2:44:15 AM
bttt
11/29/2014 11:57:41 AM
a world war is the only way to press Ctrl Alt Delete on the world economy.
11/29/2014 10:43:46 PM
The Treaty of Versailles led to World War II. The Great Depression was just a contributing factor, and the main financial cog that led to a decline to which the war could start was not the Wall Street stock market crash in 1929 (it's incredibly parochial to think that the European economy in the 1920s revolved around New York) but instead the bankruptcy of Austrian bank CreditAnstalt in May 1931.The wars you see going on now are not tied to the global financial crisis, they're Middle Eastern in nature where the people in charge of those areas are rolling in money. The one potential conflict that could possibly be tied to the Global Financial Crisis is if Spain and Catalonia ever take up arms following Catalonia wanting to be independent and Spain not wanting them to be, in part due to Catalans seeing they're the rich part of the country subsidizing the poor parts after the Spanish economy collapsed because they're tied into a common currency with most of the rest of the European continent that created a massive boom and bust cycle in Spain.[Edited on November 30, 2014 at 11:39 PM. Reason : /]
11/30/2014 11:37:01 PM
2008 leads to ?what?
12/1/2014 11:13:13 AM
^ Leaders the world over attempting mass reinflation and not acknowledging the role of aging demographics in a lot of the first world on why they're heading toward deflation.
12/1/2014 11:30:32 AM