It has passed263-171 [Edited on October 3, 2008 at 1:27 PM. Reason : .]
10/3/2008 1:26:01 PM
hello hyperinflation.
10/3/2008 1:28:44 PM
thank god we got a bailout.
10/3/2008 1:29:03 PM
inflation shouldnt be bad, that 700 billion dollars is only like 5-6% of our gdp or maybe less
10/3/2008 1:30:19 PM
after all the earmarks the bill will cost well over 800 billion. When all that money is created basically out of thin air, it has a huge effect.
10/3/2008 1:41:36 PM
Son of a bitch.
10/3/2008 1:47:34 PM
10/3/2008 1:49:22 PM
fuckme
10/3/2008 1:52:51 PM
ZOMG! the economy will take off right now!Oh wait, the Dow is up less than 100 points.Good to know we're buying our way into the shitter.
10/3/2008 2:02:32 PM
that is just knee-jerk nonsense. The economy is in the crapper right now, this rescue plan will mitigate further damage. Without it, the current recession will be much worse.
10/3/2008 2:06:10 PM
^^^^i don't disagree that the credit crunch is bad, i do however disagree that this bail out is a prudent way to handle it. its incredibly shortsighted and will cause more problems than it solves in the long run.just for shits and giggles, here are a few earmarks added to the second bill to help it slide through:
10/3/2008 2:08:10 PM
10/3/2008 2:10:27 PM
^sure isgiving a $500,000+ loan to someone who makes $40,000 a year is the definition of spending money you don't have.
10/3/2008 2:11:55 PM
''From the perspective of many people, including me, this is another thrift industry growing up around us,'' said Peter Wallison a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. ''If they fail, the government will have to step up and bail them out the way it stepped up and bailed out the thrift industry.'' - 1999Source: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9c0DE7DB153EF933A0575AC0A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
10/3/2008 2:12:07 PM
^^^^^Out of the ashes though...I'm starting to feel that things will get worse, but not worse enough where the gov. has to spend 30% of the entire budget to keep things stable. That's a LOT of money, and worse, it sets a bad precedent.If Cali has to cut its spending to make ends meet BFD, that's just how it has to be. Let them borrow money directly from the Fed.It's ridiculous though that they literally pulled 700 billion from their asses, then another 150 billion gets tacked on for more bullshit, and it's not clear how much it will help, and if such drastic measures are even needed.Who was it that said "for economists, the real world is a special case?" I have yet to see any hard numbers or statistics that indicate this bailout is truly needed.[Edited on October 3, 2008 at 2:13 PM. Reason : ]
10/3/2008 2:13:15 PM
Borrowing money from the Fed is exactly what this rescue plan amounts too. This rabid huey long economic populism will not get us out of the mess.
10/3/2008 2:16:09 PM
10/3/2008 2:19:47 PM
your analysis would be on par, if it had anything to do with the financial crisis.
10/3/2008 2:21:15 PM
^how about economist's analysis:http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=76231
10/3/2008 2:29:32 PM
good luck getting economist to agree with each other.
10/3/2008 2:31:25 PM
^which is why it is astounding that hundreds of prominent ones are in such agreement.do you have any idea what you're talking about?http://www.charlotteobserver.com/431/story/226799.html
10/3/2008 2:33:28 PM
the number of economists who signed that letter is par for the course.Again, the FDIC issue is just window dressing. It has nothing to do with the insolvency that is currently attached to Wachovia.
10/3/2008 2:42:22 PM
^Did you read the article? yes wachovia was in trouble regardless, but b/c of the silent run last friday, they would have been unable to open for normal, day-to-day business monday b/c of lack of capital. That fear based run was soley b/c of large investors getting down to the $100,000 insurance limit.had the limit been at $250,000, $500,000, or even $1,000,000 that would not have happened.also, I'd love to see some reputable sources backing your claims....I haven't even gotten that from the politicians who rammed this thing down american's throats[Edited on October 3, 2008 at 2:56 PM. Reason : .]
10/3/2008 2:54:10 PM
Unless that articles writer has the ability to see into the future by writing about a silent bank run (in the past tense none the less) the day before friday, those fears were not realized. As the bank was open on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week.
10/3/2008 2:57:37 PM
^yes it was, in large part b/c of the fdic involvement because of the run
10/3/2008 3:03:27 PM
so in other words, operating under the current FDIC threshold, the bank still managed to remain open despite the silent bank run. Meaning, rasing the FDIC threshold is merely window dressing on the current problem. Yes, it was a necessary step, but it is still window dressing.\reputable sources on what?[Edited on October 3, 2008 at 3:06 PM. Reason : .]
10/3/2008 3:06:01 PM
^No, if the insurance was higher, it wouldn't have happened in the first place....not to mention it would encourage people to put more money in the banks which would increase liquidity (if you remember people were content to invest at a loss in bonds just b/c it was safe).i'd just like to see some backing for your claims that this bloated bailout is a good idea by people other than politicians, who probably can't explain it themselves....I have yet to see any substantive defense of the plan from anyone...other than the theoretical gloom and doom defense.
10/3/2008 3:13:17 PM
10/3/2008 3:22:27 PM
10/3/2008 3:49:52 PM
you normal savings account isn't really an investment.Also, Sec. Paulsen is a person of rapport who supports this, along with Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke.
10/3/2008 3:54:11 PM
There have been a lot of references to socialism, but I think this is more relevant: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics_of_fascism
10/3/2008 4:08:30 PM
^Fascism is the most overused insult in the history of political insults, and it isn't even close to relevant to what is going on today.^^The correct answer is Warren Buffett[Edited on October 3, 2008 at 4:10 PM. Reason : 2]
10/3/2008 4:08:48 PM
I'm not trying to insult, and it is relevant.also: Warren Buffet has an awful lot of skin in the game with his recent private bailout of goldman sachs, I don't know that you can take his word. [Edited on October 3, 2008 at 4:17 PM. Reason : also]
10/3/2008 4:12:11 PM
Good point on Buffett.With the overuse of the word, Fascism has lost it's definition over time. I don't believe that it applies to today's economic crisis. It's just a blanket insult thrown at any political issue where emotions are involved.[Edited on October 3, 2008 at 4:35 PM. Reason : 2]
10/3/2008 4:33:27 PM
10/3/2008 4:45:02 PM
10/3/2008 5:53:21 PM
10/3/2008 11:19:18 PM
10/4/2008 1:04:56 AM
10/4/2008 9:50:28 AM
10/4/2008 11:26:20 AM
^^ excellent article
10/4/2008 6:07:56 PM
yeah...i for one didnt want this bailout to happen
10/4/2008 6:11:14 PM
With every passing year, moving to Canada is looking more and more attractive.
10/4/2008 8:18:21 PM
Sweet! No more tax on wooden arrows thanks to the Bail-Out!http://www.opencongress.org/bill/110-s3055/textWTF Is wrong with this country? Why did we have a tax on wooden arrows, what does shit like this do to the inefficiency of our tax code, and who makes this part of their constituent services.?]
10/5/2008 11:09:58 AM
^They've got to change unimportant tax codes some times, and if each one had it's own bill, Congress would be even more inefficient than it already is.
10/5/2008 1:05:12 PM
10/5/2008 1:10:00 PM
^^ Right, and I really have no problem with taking away a 10c tax on wooden arrows. My real issue is why there was a 10c tax on wooden arrows in the first place? I'd like to hear the back story on that one.^ Mortgages are backed by real property. In this case, the value of the money lent cannot be backed up by the value of the property. A debt backed by collateral worth less than the value of the debt isn't technically worthless, but it isn't a very good investment. What is flawed about that assumption?The issue is that banks cannot value the MBSs they hold on account of the fact that no one in the banking industry completely understands. Compound that with the fact that the housing bubble has popped and you wind up with what the market deems to be bad investments.So, while "technically" an MBS may posses some value, without a market interested in purchasing it, it is "practically" worthless. The government, in effect, created an artificial market for unwanted goods with the $700B bailout.]
10/5/2008 1:28:35 PM
Perhaps they wanted to discourage marketing bows/arrows to children because some of the dumber kids might hurt themselves.Then perhaps they realized writing that sort of thing into law is just silly.
10/5/2008 1:35:52 PM
what, gov't admitting that it shouldn't tell us how to run our lives? that's riduckulous
10/5/2008 1:41:09 PM
^^ No one other than a staunch traditionalist uses wooden arrows any more though. Speaking of which, time for me to go to the range.
10/5/2008 2:05:30 PM