2/2/2009 9:49:24 AM
I dont fundamentally disagree with you. many of the pointy heads on wall street screwed the pooch because they were greedy fucks. in no way am I advocating the further lining of their pockets. our government, particularly Barney Frank, failed us miserably and unfortunately, we had to bail out some of them for our own good. not for theirs. I am not saying those individuals should be compensated. we elected d-nozzles like Frank, therefore we, as taxpayers, are also somewhat responsible for what happened. I am saying that we have to stop lumping the whole of "wall street" into the same "bonus outrage." lots of people on Wall Street deserve and are owed their compensation. lumping them in with the crooks is unfair and is a knee-jerk PR reaction. whining about some guys collecting their bonuses is exceedingly silly when the focus SHOULD be on the billions and billions of dollars disguised as a 'stimulus' package that is unnecessary spending at a time when our government has no money!
2/2/2009 9:56:28 AM
It must be a fierce internal conflict for a good Republican like yourself to want to keep free market and no regulation in place despite all the cronyism and borderline illegal activities that happens to make those guys rich.
2/2/2009 10:05:23 AM
2/2/2009 10:10:06 AM
did you even read what I said?you are implying that every single company, every single private entity on wall street is corrupt. I am saying that they are not. I am agreeing there are some who deserve absolutely nothing for what they have done, and still some more that probably deserve some sort of criminal charge.
2/2/2009 10:13:52 AM
2/2/2009 10:14:43 AM
2/2/2009 10:35:29 AM
2/2/2009 11:13:09 AM
2/2/2009 11:29:12 AM
2/2/2009 11:42:35 AM
2/2/2009 11:48:22 AM
2/2/2009 12:22:09 PM
2/2/2009 12:37:15 PM
2/2/2009 1:58:09 PM
2/2/2009 2:46:23 PM
let me know when something factual surfaces and I will be calling for criminal charges like anyone else. until then, I am more focused on what our government will do to prevent this in the future, as well as this 'stimulus' package than what shouldve been done about TARP. again, if someone is doing something ILLEGAL then they need to have their asses busted for it. if they are using that money frivolously then cancel anymore money being sent.however, you cant charge in after the fact bitching and whining about what happened 'behind closed doors' or 'intent' because the real world doesnt work on that and it wont hold up in any kind of court. you cant allow the government to make up laws as they go to suit public opinion.
2/2/2009 3:08:16 PM
Barack Obama does not care about white people.
2/2/2009 4:03:22 PM
back on track!
2/2/2009 4:57:52 PM
I know this is way off topic, but I found that Kanye West video. It is just as hard to watch as the Ms. South Carolina "The Iraq" video. I wonder who Kanye voted for?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIUzLpO1kxI&NR=1
2/2/2009 5:12:54 PM
2/2/2009 5:54:01 PM
In a discussion about ex post facto oversight of TARP, you make relevant points!
2/2/2009 9:11:56 PM
I find a delicious irony in jerkoffs who screamed about the necessity of a bailout right now! with no time for oversight or public debate now bitching and moaning about what happens when you hand out sackloads of cash with no strings attached.Surely your points are relevant here. Given the clarity of your prior wisdom.
2/2/2009 9:24:14 PM
I was never for a backstopping of all the toxic assets. The aftermath was there in Lehman what would happen to the markets if a big bank was allowed to just fail. A part of me thinks that maybe, if we would have just let it happen, the pain would have been steep and severe, but we'd already be talking about all the good banks that are left and now that the shit is out of the system we can get moving. However, that is an extremely scary proposition The Dow at 3-4000 , you're a fool or have no investments or obligations to not be bothered by that scenario. I have yet to find ANYONE in the blogosphere that has favored zero intervention by the central banks in these matters.So, I can't be too bothered by a group of folks that aren't economists by any means trusting the SoT and the Fed Reserve Head when they advise on situations saying things are urgent. And I am encouraged by them coming in well after the fact and demanding accountability on those tax dollars. The "we shouldn't have bailed them out in the first place" argument is dead in this context.
2/2/2009 9:47:23 PM
shit, double post[Edited on February 2, 2009 at 9:48 PM. Reason : .]
2/2/2009 9:48:19 PM
Credibility Check...
2/2/2009 10:02:53 PM
I'll admit, I've contemplated making the "Who is having buyers remorse on Obama?" thread for a week or so now...then I remember who he was running against and still consider myself lucky.
2/2/2009 10:04:38 PM
Yeah but mention it and you'll just be called out for "grasping at straws" or bringing up a "non-issue" and then the conversation will shift to how Palin wasn't fit to be vice-president and the state of the Republican party.
2/2/2009 10:06:01 PM
maybe after you get foreclosed on you can go sleep on the pretty new grass at the mall
2/2/2009 11:15:36 PM
2/2/2009 11:41:06 PM
There are probably many people out there that were in your same position 3-4 years ago that are kicking themselves for not getting in (and out) of the market. You now have the benefit of hindsight, but another 2-3 years could have passed before the values really started to come down.
2/2/2009 11:48:03 PM
I can't wait to see how many pages this thread will reach
2/3/2009 12:12:41 AM
2/3/2009 12:25:14 AM
How the hell is it hindsight when he saw 2 years ago that it was a bad time to buy?I did the same thing, actually, and refrained from buying when all of my peers were jumping on the house bandwagon. Now they all have houses that decreased in value at least 10%.They all followed the cliches about housing being good investments without realizing that the advice really depends on when you buy and when you sell.
2/3/2009 12:28:14 AM
^ Smoker was making 2 points:1) he didn't buy at the peak. That's good for him, and doens't require hindsight, except to confirm that he made a good decision2) but what about people who didn't necessarily buy at the peak, but in 2003, 2001, or even in the late 90s? They saw their wealth increase to high levels by 2005-7. So my question is - was everybody just stupid for not selling right at the peak? What if you have a family in a neighborhood you've been in for 10 years, you have kids in the neighborhood schools, and both parents have jobs near by. The value of their house goes to astronomical levels in 2006, i.e. they are "wealthy". Smoker contends they should have "preserved that wealth". How? Sell the house? Then what - move to a small town where houses are cheaper, get your kids into different schools, then find 2 new jobs? Sorry, just not gonna happen for 99% of people. That's what I meant by the "weath wasn't real", because if there is no reasonable way to cash in on the wealth, you might as well not have it at all.
2/3/2009 12:42:07 AM
^ in a sense, I think you're both right.Even the money you have now, that you directly worked hard for, could theoretically become worthless given certain situations.Since our money is not based off of anything material (aka the metals standard), it has no intrinsic value (and even basing it on gold technically is not innately valuable). It's really a bizarre system, if you think about it, and somewhat amazing that it even works.I can't see money sticking around for more than about another 100 years. I predict a socialist-esque worldwide "banking" system run by artificially intelligent computers.
2/3/2009 12:52:16 AM
^^Actually, I know several people who bought in 2001, recently sold for nearly 100% increase in value, and moved out to a cheaper area. Probably 10% of my coworkers have done this over the last 3 years.Believe it or not, not everyone is as tied down as you make it seem. Plenty are young singles, first time homebuyers, people with pre-school-aged kids, or empty-nesters. Honestly, I don't even think it is that rare for families -- why do you think RTP has so many carpetbaggers?--I would also say that people with higher income are probably more able to do this than lower income people, but I don't think low income people should be owning houses, anyway. That's why the bubble exists in the first place.[Edited on February 3, 2009 at 1:03 AM. Reason : .]
2/3/2009 1:00:05 AM
2/3/2009 1:05:43 AM
The problem isn't that low income people bought houses. The problem is that a lot of people bought houses they couldn't afford.
2/3/2009 7:25:31 AM
2/3/2009 8:54:57 AM
I should add that Obey isnt really affiliated with Obama other than being one of the principle architects of the bill that Obama is pushing...that may or may not have anything to do with Obama's 'credibility.'
2/3/2009 11:03:39 AM
2/3/2009 1:24:52 PM
^ I'm glad Daschle is out, for many reasons.
2/3/2009 5:18:00 PM
I liked what I saw of him on the Transition website videos. i just can't understand what is wrong with all the rich people and politicians who can't seem to follow the law.....
2/3/2009 5:50:57 PM
2/3/2009 6:28:08 PM
I do give Obama credit for being candid with Mrs. Couric about Daschle.
2/3/2009 6:36:44 PM
2/4/2009 12:47:55 AM
Back when I was in college, my mom was out in San Jose working and looking to buy a house. This a bit after the dot com burst, 2002 or so, and I distinctly remember looking at houses with her and my dad that were something along the lines of 2100 sq ft for 750,000$ + in less the ideal areas. She promptly moved back here.There should be a point when you're staring at a 40, 50 or 60 year mortage that you think to yourself: wait a second, I might not even live long enough to pay this off.
2/4/2009 1:58:39 AM
^^ i mean, obviously i can see that it happens, but I'm just amazed at how widespread it seems to be. Everybody I know, for example, does their taxes meticulously and doesn't want to get caught on the wrong side of the law for anything. But it just blows my mind that once you reach a certain level of wealth or power that you seeminly decide to just stop following the rules. Is it a conscious decision? Do they rationalize it? Do they turn their lives over to other people and claim plausible deniability when something goes wrong?
2/4/2009 9:03:44 AM
2/4/2009 9:53:39 AM
is this also the "first 100 days" thread? just for shits and giggles
2/4/2009 9:55:16 AM