merbig, calm down, we're talking about socialism, not bailouts per-se. Bush did not acquire ownership of the airlines when he bailed them out, neither did Nixon and the others you reference. I guess I used the wrong word, bailout, when the concept I wanted was that of government sponsored enterprise. This is because no one expects the airlines to be bailed out again, unless terrorists strike again. If Delta declared bankruptcy tomorrow, no one would expect a bailout, so no one will lend delta more money than it can pay back. The same could not be said for a re-privatized AIG or Fannie/Freddy. Now, let me do your work for you. Bush did acquire ownership over the TSA. Real socialism at work. But it was not a diversification away from what government usual does, as the TSA is in the business of providing security. Well, GM provides cars, our government has never done that before.
7/11/2010 6:12:18 PM
^ I agree with you up to a point. Under the current administration, I agree that they will be allowed to borrow as much as they want. But what makes you think that it will happen when a new administration comes in (whether it be in 2 years or 6 years)? You speak as though there is no chance for these companies to come out from the government's umbrella.Take GM as an example. From what i have read and understood, is the government does plan to get rid GM. You act as though it could never happen, even though it has gone through heavy restructuring. And that when/if it does become independent from the government, it will still be propped up if it were to ever encounter financial problems in the future. I'm not saying that it wouldn't happen, I am saying that I really feel it depends on the administration in charge. I feel that depending on the next administration we get, if the companies are still government owned, we could see the companies sold off or made public again as companies no longer under government control. Maybe some of the other companies will be dissolved, sold off in pieces, I don't know. And I'm not rejecting your idea that they could just be held onto by the government, sucking money from us. They very well could be. But to say that it's a a bell that you cannot "un-ring," I think is premature, especially at this point. I feel that it's a baseless claim.Who knows? Maybe the companies will be nothing but a drain on our budget, maybe not. You say that these companies will never be self-sustaining. What evidence do you have of this? I'm not going to lie, I don't know much about the financial institutes since they were acquired, but I am hopeful of GM being self-sustaining. I think there are serious problem that have yet to be resolved with GM, but that's for another thread. And once GM is self-sustaining, when it is turning a profit, what makes you think that say in 20 years, GM is in financial trouble that the government will, without a doubt, swoop up and save the company again by making them a government sponsored company? They would probably get a bailout, which as I've shown, is nothing new, and from what I had learned when researching it, the government usually made money on the bailouts through interest.
7/11/2010 7:17:08 PM
7/11/2010 8:32:25 PM
So, even if the government were to not help a company it previously owned more than it would any other company, it would still be a government sponsored enterprise? Please. You know as well as I do that what you're saying is not definitive. It's nothing more than a belief you hold. And while you are entitled to your belief, it will never be more or less than just that.
7/11/2010 9:08:23 PM
I said my evidence. How I said it will be, it already is. These GSEs already have favored below market interest rates. The previous batch of GSEs worked exactly this way last time. You have no evidence as to why the future should radically change from how it works in both the present and the past. So, yes, I am going to continue believing my own lying eyes over your dreams for the future.
7/11/2010 10:11:36 PM
7/11/2010 10:21:13 PM
For Page 14:Meanwhile, back in the real world. . .Europeans Fear Crisis Threatens Liberal BenefitsMay 22, 2010
7/11/2010 10:27:28 PM
When the economy goes down anywhere it's the normal movements of the market, but when it happens in europe it's the big bad leftists right? Capitalism fails the entire world and for some reason it's the fault of those who criticize it.
7/11/2010 11:57:35 PM
^ Capitalism has not failed the world. And if you'd read the article, you'd see that it's a French lawyer, among many others, criticizing Europe's left-leaning policies, which according to his study and other indicators are failing.
7/12/2010 1:06:26 AM
Norway aint failin' yet...
7/12/2010 9:02:47 PM
Europe will be fine in the long run. Any place that is more capitalistic than America will do just fine. Markets will adjust, governments will slash spending, and business as usual will resume eventually.
7/12/2010 9:35:13 PM
7/12/2010 9:49:59 PM