8/17/2011 12:49:21 PM
The spending undertaken was far less than any liberal economist was saying would be necessary. As a result, we saw unemployment stabilize (rather than keep increasing, as it had been) and stall out as the spending dried up. The only people who thought the stimulus was actually what liberal and Keynesians thought necessary are conservatives, because as usually they don't even know what their opponents are saying, let alone how to refute it.
8/17/2011 1:25:40 PM
You know what we need? Another war...a big one. That would really get the economy going again!
8/17/2011 1:55:47 PM
^ Preferably with space aliens, according to Krugman. ^^ We spent enough to get the nation's debt downgraded and yet we find ourselves in the deepest and longest recession since the great depression, the previous time we tried to spend so much. I'm sorry, every shred of anecdotal evidence is against you. More debt is not going to fix a problem caused by excessive debt. The federal reserve needed to run the printing presses, no doubt, but government spending in no way facilitates that behavior.
8/17/2011 2:07:14 PM
8/17/2011 5:55:40 PM
8/17/2011 6:15:57 PM
Great article (minus his plug for Rick Perry, though not a favorable one by any means) by Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone discussing why progressives/the American left are way, way behind on monetary policy:
8/17/2011 7:03:18 PM
clearly, the way out of our economic stresses is to tax the poor:http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000039206
8/18/2011 12:20:17 PM
http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2011/08/18/how-washington-is-destroying-the-economy/?iid=HP_LNReasonable article by a reasonable analyst putting the blame squarely where it belongs (the Tea Party) and explaining how our problems are eminently solvable if the children in Washington would focus on solutions instead of just creating more problems.
8/18/2011 2:00:00 PM
He writes this:
8/18/2011 2:19:26 PM
What structural problems? None of those problems were problems until global investors decided to dump a bunch of money into the mortgage industry that was exploited by crooks. Crooks that were allowed to create a $2 trillion market of toxic securities by an administration that simply didn't care as long as everyone involved was making money. When that market eventually went boom in 2008 when those investors and crooks realized the jig was up and cashed out, the only thing that saved the rest of us from losing everything we had was the Fed. Now instead of actually tackling the problems that led to Fed having to save all our asses, the Tea Party wants to just destroy the whole system, put more money into the hands of the people that caused this mess in the first place, and sit back and hope they don't fuck us all over again. Yeah, that makes sense.Please don't try and rewrite history. I'm not a Fox News viewer, I actually paid attention to the events of the past 3 years.[Edited on August 18, 2011 at 3:13 PM. Reason : :]
8/18/2011 3:08:53 PM
8/18/2011 3:09:52 PM
8/18/2011 4:07:13 PM
Cool, and exactly which of those problems would have been solved by not raising the debt ceiling? Which of those problems would have been solved by defaulting on our debt? How could either of those things done anything but make things worse? How can you possibly say that the Tea Party wasn't culpable in hindering any progress towards fixing those problems by distracting us with a completely unnecessary fight over what has historically been a procedural vote. How can you say that the GOP as a whole wasn't culpable when all they've done since blacky mchussein osama has taken office is say "no" to every single attempt to actually tackle any of those issues?
8/18/2011 4:34:04 PM
8/18/2011 4:47:45 PM
8/18/2011 5:28:06 PM
For the most part, the GOP is just playing politics, but so are Democrats. Don't feed me this shit about cuts to future projected spending and tell me it's a cut. It's not a cut. Nothing was being cut from this year or next year, at least nothing in substantial amounts.Sooner or later, if we don't have serious reform, the government's hand will be forced and we'll get "draconian cuts," as they say. If politicians keep ignoring this reality so they can stay in office for another 2 or 4 years, then it will get ugly.
8/18/2011 5:34:24 PM
8/18/2011 6:19:45 PM
In this thread Str8Foolish proves that his username is not a misnomer."The Shitty Beatles, are they any good? " "They suck.""Ah, then it's not just a clever name."Seriously dude try reading a book not written by a Princeton economist sometime.[Edited on August 18, 2011 at 6:32 PM. Reason : a]
8/18/2011 6:31:21 PM
8/19/2011 7:23:57 AM
Unemployment isn't really a problem, its a symptom of our real problems.Putting people to imaginary work like Obama frequently does won't solve anything, If we addressed our structural problems the jobs would be there.The internet has created one of the biggest deflationary events in modern history because of the immense creative destruction. It's truly a beautiful thing, but its been hard on the lower class initially bc they are bearing the brunt of the job losses. On the flip side they should be enjoying savings on consumption from all the deflation. Unfortunately the sickos out there have decided to punish them by printing money to counter the deflation.So they are experiencing lost wages and higher prices simultaneously. The ultimate double whammy.And when you combine that with obamas oppression of the labor market, its really a triple whammy.
8/19/2011 8:22:25 AM
People wont have jobs wont be there until businesses create them.Businesses wont create jobs until there is increased consumer demand.There wont be increased consumer demand until people have jobs.Is it really so hard for you guys to see that more government spending is *exactly* what we need right now?
8/22/2011 1:10:17 PM
Government spending is nothing more than a transfer of money from those buying government bonds to those receiving government contracts. It has no impact what-so-ever upon consumer demand. What has stalled is not consumer demand. Consumer demand is higher today than it was before the recession. What is different today is that private investment is almost negative if you include depreciation, just as it was from 1929 to 1945.
8/22/2011 2:48:44 PM
8/22/2011 3:06:11 PM
8/22/2011 3:19:39 PM
8/22/2011 3:56:45 PM
8/22/2011 4:11:01 PM
Not an assumption at all. Corporations have been pulling in record profits the past few years http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/national/gdp/gdpnewsrelease.htmAnd companies are investing less than ever and sitting on massive capital reserveshttp://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/10/AR2011031005151.htmlAnother rundown on the situation: http://www.slate.com/id/2289619/It only seems like an assumption to you because you have no fucking idea what's going on and are projecting that cluelessness onto me.
8/24/2011 3:32:39 PM
8/24/2011 4:24:48 PM
8/25/2011 10:01:16 AM
8/25/2011 10:42:22 AM
8/26/2011 11:02:32 AM
8/29/2011 1:36:48 PM
bump
8/30/2011 10:43:04 AM
8/30/2011 4:01:18 PM