Seems as though the banks are already starting to pay back a sizeable amount of the TARP money.
6/17/2009 8:34:14 PM
OH MY GAWRSH SOCIALISM
6/17/2009 8:39:49 PM
Awesome.Now if only it were possible for GM and Chrysler to pay back their money. The US govt will probably never see a dime. If they do I don't see it happening for at least six years.
6/17/2009 8:51:59 PM
because it's not like the government has lent a car company money before and gotten it back promptly or anything.
6/17/2009 9:05:32 PM
6/17/2009 9:13:08 PM
6/17/2009 9:23:27 PM
6/17/2009 9:46:51 PM
6/17/2009 9:58:55 PM
Maybe I'm just being too cynical.I do sincerely hope that every company that got money from the government can pay it back. I just see politics as a wholly corrupt business with shit like this happening too frequently (i.e. pork disguised as economic aid, a cultural project, or however the hell else they can spin it).
6/17/2009 10:01:20 PM
6/17/2009 11:37:21 PM
[Edited on June 17, 2009 at 11:38 PM. Reason : .]
6/17/2009 11:38:00 PM
^^ Scientists have polled the public, UAW workers, and GM engineers and have come up with this concept sketch:[Edited on June 18, 2009 at 12:35 AM. Reason : rs, i'm clearly tired]
6/18/2009 12:20:12 AM
Perhaps more foreign interests will buy the rest of our car companies.
6/18/2009 1:32:11 AM
6/18/2009 7:57:25 AM
6/18/2009 8:06:15 AM
1 step away.then 2 steps towards it via universal healthcare and the new financial regulations
6/18/2009 8:14:12 AM
I'm not the quickest of cats at the best of times, but why are universal health care and financial regulation bad ideas again?SIGNED,CURIOUS IN RALEIGH[Edited on June 18, 2009 at 8:35 AM. Reason : ,,,]
6/18/2009 8:16:59 AM
let's see. UH will destroy our healthcare system. the proposed financial regulation will severely damage our economy (even more) while giving more power to an unaccountable government entity
6/18/2009 8:20:01 AM
citation needed
6/18/2009 8:24:47 AM
6/18/2009 8:28:40 AM
6/18/2009 8:36:20 AM
6/18/2009 10:02:27 AM
yes, because Barney Frank has the power to do that! hacome on - if you're going to blame this entire crisis on banks lending to poor inner-city black folks, which seems to be what you're implying, at least spread the blame around to every President in the last 30 years, all of who have pushed for some form of "ownership society" (Bush II appears to be the most enthusiastic about this, from his 2001-2002 speeches) and all members of Congress for the same time period.Of course, if you're going to blame the whole crisis on loans to people who "couldn't pay them back", then maybe you should explain how loans specifically covered under the CRA have a no worse default rate than mortgages in general, or how mortgages in well-off areas in CA and FL (i.e. to "people who could pay back normal mortgages") are exploding faster than any inner city or poor areas of the country
6/18/2009 10:09:20 AM
^ it's because of corruption and shady practices in the banking industry that caused it, not poor people.Private sector isn't somehow magically less corrupt than any other human institution.
6/18/2009 10:24:29 AM
6/18/2009 10:24:42 AM
But you must answer why the regulation in question was removed: it wasn't because the libertarians of the world clamored for it. It was to clear the way to sell houses to people that should not buy them and George Bush and his ilk believed throwing more fuel on the housing fire was a good idea. This was a confluence of perfect storms, no one law caused it. But one thing is certain: changing back the laws you have in mind will not prevent or even delay the next catastrophy. No bank will sign broker contracts the same corrupt way for a long time.
6/18/2009 10:51:25 AM
6/18/2009 10:56:58 AM
I think we should start with the fact that he spelled catastrophe like a jackass.
6/18/2009 3:15:50 PM
One step further, two steps back kinda thing.
6/18/2009 3:24:12 PM
^^ What, I likes me a trophy. ^^^ ??? Investors got burned, they are not likely to need another lesson for awhile. By the time bank managers have forgotten this lesson, so will it have been forgotten by the government, which will scrap the regulation to make way for the sacred cow we call housing.One might argue that it is the law which makes the regulation deadly. If not for the law, then every now and then a single bank would forget the lesson and act stupid and get itself killed, re-teaching everyone the lesson. But because it is outlawed, then time passes until everyone has forgotten the lesson, so eventually when the law is changed back everyone rushes in and acts stupid, killing a large chunk of the banking sector in one go. Might it not be better to re-learn a small lesson every few years than learn a potentially civilization wrecking lesson every few decades? [Edited on June 18, 2009 at 3:52 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/18/2009 3:48:28 PM
6/18/2009 4:09:51 PM
bullshit. Those guys knew for a fact that the fed would bail their asses out if they got into any problems. In fact, if it weren't for the fed giving out loans left and right to people who cant afford them, then people dont default on their loans and credit default swaps aren't an issue.The problem here is that the average american does not understand how credit works. The solutions to the financial crisis are to educate the populace on how and when they should get credit and/or create rules that outright deny credit to those who aren't up to snuff.
6/18/2009 4:20:40 PM
6/18/2009 4:26:01 PM
6/18/2009 5:41:59 PM
6/18/2009 5:52:48 PM
6/18/2009 5:54:37 PM
Yeah, so? Busts under the current system don't automatically make any other system or your particular system better.
6/18/2009 5:57:54 PM
...Nor do they automatically make the unproven system worse or not worth consideration.If something is broken, what should we try to do? I for one would say "attempt to fix it", though you seem to support an answer of "maintain the status quo".That, or you maintain that the current system is not broken... which is laughable.[Edited on June 18, 2009 at 6:05 PM. Reason : .]
6/18/2009 6:01:55 PM
^^ sure they don't. But it's already been shown how massive the busts under the current system are. And, its also been shown the the current system makes the busts far more massive than they otherwise would have been, as LS has been pointing out. THAT is why this new regulation is bad, in addition to the disgusting part of the government being able to declare any business "too big to fail" and then start meddling with it. The latter is how this is a huge running leap towards socialism.
6/18/2009 7:05:13 PM
6/18/2009 7:12:42 PM
6/18/2009 7:16:30 PM
6/18/2009 7:18:47 PM
6/18/2009 7:21:43 PM
6/18/2009 7:26:42 PM
6/18/2009 7:32:43 PM
Dunno if it was that thread I made the statement, but unenforced regulation is = no regulation. For examples:
6/18/2009 7:35:50 PM
In what way was it unenforced?
6/18/2009 7:39:16 PM
6/18/2009 7:40:02 PM
6/18/2009 7:41:46 PM
set em up^ you keep saying that the "boom and bust cycle was worse before the Fed," but it really wasn't. Inflation was fairly non-existent. You had deflation at times, which can be a bad thing, but it mainly happened after times of high gov't spending (war) or after other major calamities. At best, the Fed lengthens the time between events, but it does so at the cost of an even larger final correction, which is what we should expect.]
6/18/2009 7:46:11 PM