9/24/2009 10:22:06 PM
9/24/2009 10:25:37 PM
9/25/2009 12:01:29 AM
9/25/2009 8:21:35 AM
^
9/25/2009 8:45:39 AM
First off, appologies and appreciation to LoneSnark. After doing some research, I found out that the book he recommended seems to be quite a popular book, and it looks interesting - although I don't think it necessarily supports his conclusions. From the Amazon page:
9/25/2009 9:28:29 AM
Bobo, your words imply to me that you misunderstand my position. As I said, the evidence suggests that bailouts and stimulus (that do not result in repudiation) do not lengthen recessions, they are just not worth the money because neither do they shorten them, although they may reduce the severity. What does seem to lengthen recessions is widespread changes to government policies such as taxation and regulation. And never before or since in American history has the tax and regulatory regime changed more on a year to year basis than during the Great Depression. WW2 ended the Depression by bringing an end to FDR's rampant experimentation. I recommend The Forgotten Man by Amity Shlaes, which spoke here at NCState about a year ago. And no, it does not take a conspiracy theory for politicians in Washington to want to seek power and spend money, especially on our most politically influential industries (I'm sure they would have never bailed out Microsoft or Walmart, both larger enterprises). To sum back up: the current recession is not and could not be another depression because neither FDR nor Hoover is in the white house. What we have is Obama which knows better than to start a trade war, jack up tax rates to 91%, or send people to prison for letting customers choose their own chickens. [Edited on September 25, 2009 at 10:36 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/25/2009 10:28:12 AM
He raises all the right questions but often his answers are absent or...lacking. Really lacking. His solution in this movie is apparently participatory democracy, which is fine and dandy, but much like extreme libertarianism which leaves you grasping for charity in times of catastrophe (which I'm sure people will disagree with because as well all know, the truly free market does not fail, ever), it's too subject to the irrationality of the electorate (which can be more damaging than any irrational market).I'm more of a welfare capitalist, but I appreciate him making people ask questions and think about why things are fucked up.
9/25/2009 10:32:57 AM
Michael Moore was interviewed on the Colbert Report on 9/23/09. Some excerpts:SC: "How is it evil sir?"Moore: "Because it is not a democratic system...Capitalism is the enemy of democracy because the people do not have a say in how this economy is run."SC: "you argue that things like Goldman Sacks have too much influence over this administration and and previous administration. Who then do you think should have that kind of influence?"Moore: "The people of this country. This is our government. This is our economy. They actually have elected representatives. In the Senate, 60 are democratic..."SC:"Is not capitalism a dangerous enemy to make? What if the free market decides it doesn't need a Michael Moore anymore? Who's going to keep you in baseball caps?"Moore: "As long as people keep going to my movies I get to keep making them. That's how it works."SC:"That's how this show works too."And thus Michael Moore himself justifies the moral foundation of capitalism. On the other hand, if Michael Moore gets his wish and the economy is run by the People's elected representatives, what happens if Sarah Palin wins the Presidency in 2016 and decides producing Michael Moore movies are not economically justifiable?[Edited on September 25, 2009 at 12:27 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/25/2009 12:25:53 PM
Something of interest I found out recently, the central planners in the Soviet Union set prices roughly in line with what they found in Western catalogs. Without free market guidelines, there would have been no way to price the goods produced in a command economy.
9/25/2009 2:14:54 PM
^ I'm pretty sure Moore is not in any way advocating a command economy.It seems he's arguing against the oligarchy that typically springs forth from un-checked free markets.^^ The people wouldn't let that happen... that's how democracy works. It's the same mechanism really as capitalism.
9/25/2009 2:19:46 PM
well, if he really was a communist, then we wouldn't be talking about a price system at all, now would we?actually, the premise behind socialism isn't worth, it's need. moot point there. when you have a massive government producing everything everyone buys, you could say it is state capitalism, which is just as bad as your worst communist nightmare b/c basically there is one store and you kinda have to go to it or die.back to moore and democracy, i'm going to venture to guess he's more of a local democracy guy. you know, local currency, co-ops, community garden, all that shit you see in carrboro, which is cool, but it's also nice to drive to Raleigh and go to IMAX.
9/25/2009 2:33:43 PM
moron, the people wouldn't let what happen? Electing Sarah Palin? Or letting whoever is elected circumvent the rights of the capitalist film industry to invest as they see fit?
9/25/2009 2:59:32 PM
^ probably both of those.
9/25/2009 3:03:00 PM
I stopped using this example because, well, it carries bad memories. But, fine. What happens when the people elect George Bush and he decides 'the people' shall not suffer the presence of Michael Moore movies?
9/25/2009 4:09:08 PM
9/25/2009 4:09:19 PM
^ But I don't see how that is harming the customers. The customers got a huge house they wanted, they just didn't get to keep it. And as you point out, the banks that did this are being punished (except for those that were bailed out, of course). No more punishment is necessary, since no fraud was involved. As such, just ignore it, they will lose their shirts and not do it again for a great while.
9/25/2009 4:22:24 PM
^The homeowner had their credit hurt. The other people in the neighborhood had their home values hurt.And the banks that didn't get bailed out are "punished," but they can still gouge the fuck out of their other customers with higher credit card fees and interest rates, more aggressive overdraft fees, etc...to make the money back that they lost through irresponsible practices. So other customers are hurt too.I don't believe people quite appreciate what happened here. The specifics are difficult to grasp, but people aren't even getting the big picture. Private and public leadership failed, and a foolish public followed them.This issue has crazy implications to me. I think we need to go back to college, find out what the fuck these people are learning, revisit some old ideas about what makes a person smart, educated, capable... We lowered some standards along the way, and as long as that meant some guy with a thick country accent and bad grammar had a better shot at a decent paying job to support his family, it was okay...but now it looks like we've lowered standards for positions that are really, really important. Some rich kid who styles himself as a self-made man and doesn't like books? RED FLAG, that guy isn't fit to run shit.
9/25/2009 5:17:12 PM
Michael Moore should be appointed as the fat bastard czar
9/25/2009 10:41:55 PM
really guys we've lost sight here is how these cooncakes are even getting floor time more often than salisburyboy. every singleone of their propsitions take the constitution and turn it into a shitty origami boat packed with faggots totting ak-47s that fire al gore green stamped bullets that kill only humans who work for a living
9/25/2009 11:15:11 PM
^^^ Do you know what Alan Greenspan said when he testified before congress (I kid you not!)?
9/25/2009 11:53:07 PM
9/26/2009 9:12:36 AM
hey guys...did you know that Michael Moore is...fat?
9/26/2009 10:00:49 AM
9/26/2009 10:35:58 AM
9/26/2009 12:28:35 PM
9/26/2009 12:47:42 PM
9/26/2009 1:46:05 PM
9/26/2009 5:12:10 PM
9/26/2009 7:11:00 PM
if only the gov't push for homeownership stopped at poor people, then you might have a point but, hey, I can cherry-pick sources, too. you are bitching at ME about being partisan? When apparently they only failure was that of "no regulation?" Really? shut the fuck up.Barack Obama could eat a baby on live television and you would be the first person in here to defend him for it.]
9/26/2009 7:34:54 PM
fail boat and bobo, where do banks get their money to loan? Do you feel the majority of thier money, esp during this period came from its customers?
9/26/2009 7:51:21 PM
9/26/2009 10:58:39 PM
9/26/2009 11:53:36 PM
9/27/2009 12:37:15 AM
I believe it's been pointed out numerous times that LoneSnark is a moron who is also full of shit.
9/27/2009 1:30:13 AM
^ isn’t that the definition of “economist”?
9/27/2009 1:47:37 AM
9/27/2009 9:06:45 AM
IMStoned420, care to explain how history 100% contradicts that statement? I didn't see any laws or rules from regulators restricting the practice. I only saw laws and rules reinforcing the practice in question. As such, your words are sufficiently obscure I think we deserve more elaboration.
9/27/2009 9:15:24 AM
9/27/2009 9:31:30 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/09/26/AR2009092602706.htmlI only read the first page, but it more or less contradicts your statement 100%.Please, stop applying the basic econ knowledge you know and what happened in the past as some sort of absolute truth about the current crisis. Just about everything you post now days can't be tested because its all "well, if the government wouldn't have done this, this would have happened, but we'll never know".^ If you have some sort of greater point to make, feel free to do it.
9/27/2009 12:01:24 PM
9/27/2009 2:46:27 PM
9/28/2009 2:44:03 AM
9/28/2009 10:38:59 AM
No, failboat, the article you list seems to support my position that regulators are at best no help whatsoever at dissuading bubbles. If you ignore everything the regulators did to puff up the bubble, your own evidence is conclusive that neither were they helpful in preventing it.
9/28/2009 11:40:09 AM
9/28/2009 7:30:59 PM
Here's the story, Mr. Snark. If you want to make your case, you have to go beyond the surface level. You are in college afterall. Yes, President Clinton wanted Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to work to get lower income people into houses, but before you start jumping up and down yelling, "See, see, it's all the government's fault.", you have to show how big of an effect that had on the overall crisis. Mr. Boat posted several articles showing that CRA the failure rates were no higher that other subprime loans - implying that the effect was relatively small. So prove him wrong, and statements like, "Is it really still your position that these government agents had nothing to do with this fiasco?", won't do it. Dig a little deeper. There is a big difference between "no" effect and 100% cause. Show the failure rates of those loans and how big of a share they were of the overall failures. Did it have a significant effect? Who knows? But, with a little work you might be able to find out, and even convince other people - but it's not going to happen with just exhortations, and surface level analysis.
9/28/2009 7:32:29 PM
But it was not my position that the CRA was 100% at fault. Bubbles happen. Irrational exuberance for <insert commodity here> happen. Try to remember, we had a dot-com bubble just nine years ago and in that bubble the government played almost no part. But, because government is so intertwined in the bubble commodity of this time around, housing, it was ready, willing, and eager to make things worse. Not because government is evil, but because government is made up of people which themselves posses animal spirits. Structurally speaking, a housing bubble will always be worse than a tech bubble, but not this bad. So, to be clear, we were going to have a housing bubble anyway. Some banks were going to go under because of it. What the government did with the its various machinations was make the bubble steeper and longer by exploding both the pool of borrowers and amount that could be lent. Not one action taken by the government was to curtail the bubble, all action fed to make it bigger. As such, yes, I can say that without government intervention the bubble would have been smaller and less painful to recover from. Even you recognize that the CRA had an effect, although you claim it was small, but it seems failboat seems to believe that with even more intervention by regulators the bubble would have been avoided, which is lunacy, since all the interventions they did do added to the problem, I think it safe to say all further interventions would also add to the problem.
9/29/2009 10:24:36 AM
9/29/2009 11:00:02 AM
9/29/2009 4:12:41 PM
What. . .what's that you say, LoneSnark?[Edited on September 29, 2009 at 4:28 PM. Reason : Some will never see it, man.]
9/29/2009 4:28:03 PM