page 2 is crazy man, crazy
7/17/2005 10:19:04 PM
7/17/2005 10:22:41 PM
you knowthe "terrorists" do not have nuclear weaponsWHO YOU SCARED OF NOW?
7/17/2005 10:22:53 PM
BUT THE TERRORISTS HATE OUR FREEDOMS
7/17/2005 10:45:08 PM
7/17/2005 11:32:26 PM
his point wasn't that you can't draw correlations between two wars, his point was you can't say that you are allowed to draw comparisons from one war and not another.
7/17/2005 11:41:22 PM
7/18/2005 12:49:45 AM
economically, we are living outside our means right now, and this is thanks to chinese investment, they stop that, we are forced to stop spending and growing so fast.
7/18/2005 12:55:31 AM
they'll kill themselves with smog and acid rain before we have to worry too much.
7/18/2005 1:00:46 AM
7/18/2005 1:05:37 AM
You really have no idea when you type do you?
7/18/2005 5:55:04 PM
7/18/2005 6:38:48 PM
Because if China stop it's investment it would hurt the US economy, this would lead to fewer people investing in it, etc.
7/18/2005 6:40:28 PM
Because T-Bond values would be shit, the Dollar dropping like a Al-Qaeda Air 747, the government facing massive amounts of debt and no credit to borrow.Then you say "RAISE INTEREST RATES !!111!"Good Idea. Except you'd have to do this several times over a long period.Higher short term interest rates and devaluating dollar mean consumers won't be able to borrow excessively as they have up to this point and the "resiliant American Consumer" which kept the economy modest despite a tanking Tech sector will no longer have the capital to continue impulse buys. I don't have to draw picture for what happens after this.Furthermore, another caveat of higher short term interest rates would be that long term interest rates on mortages and big ticket loans would finally creep to the level they should be at now, and then take off like a rocket.Whats that mean for our current housing bubble? Doom and Gloom. You see sir, we are in fact in a wide and deep bucket of shit and poobahs in Washington are just now realizing this.[Edited on July 18, 2005 at 9:42 PM. Reason : .]
7/18/2005 9:41:53 PM
^It'll all be tied back to being Clinton's fault somehow.
7/18/2005 10:19:30 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/20/AR2005072000461_pf.html
7/20/2005 10:14:06 AM
10/4/2005 11:59:16 PM
Taiwan has failed to take its own defense seriously. As such, when the war comes America will be left floating at sea looking upon a wholely occupied island. Would we really launch an amphibious assault upon Taiwan to restore the Taiwanese Government which failed to put forth even the minimum effort towards self defense? Probably not. We'll pick up refugees, sue for restoration, make a motion on the Security Council (China will veto), and go home. Once the island is taken there is little we could do to take it back. Your real question is, what if Taiwan takes the necessary steps to survive long enough for our fleet to arrive, what then? Do we engage the Chinese? I would argue yes. The main reason being "We Can." With our technological superiority even one of our carrier groups could easily hold off the whole of the Chinese navy and airforce. This strategy would work simply because Taiwan is an island which we can easily isolate, allowing the Taiwanese to defeat any Chinese troops remaining on the Island.
10/5/2005 1:35:06 AM
waitgoogle tells me that taiwan is part of chinawhy would they have to invade it?
10/5/2005 9:17:35 AM
^^^I don't think we'll do shit. I don't think China will do that though, the current arrangement benefits them and they probably won't want to risk it. Of course, that won't always be the case, and then Taiwan is fucked.
10/5/2005 10:36:11 AM
I don't see the problem. If China stops loaning our government money it will just borrow from its citizens. If the dollar falls our citizens sure aren't going to be investing overseas, nor are they going to be purchasing Chinese goods. There is lots of money in America just lying around. At the right interest rate I'm sure the government could get ahold of it. That said, for the RNB to rise, wouldn't it have to break its relatively fixed exchange rate with the dollar?[Edited on October 5, 2005 at 11:11 AM. Reason : .]
10/5/2005 11:10:34 AM
CHINER
8/13/2019 4:11:00 PM
10/10
8/13/2019 11:25:12 PM