8/1/2011 9:08:16 PM
I don't necessarily think that taxes should be raised, but the form of tax cut makes a difference. #2 and #3 encouraged people to put money into asset price bubbles. I would be more in favor of a form of tax cut that increases the probability that saved money fuels new productive activity rather than the growth of asset prices.
8/1/2011 9:52:12 PM
8/1/2011 10:01:35 PM
8/1/2011 10:01:50 PM
Revise your roll eyes
8/1/2011 10:14:40 PM
8/1/2011 11:40:40 PM
8/2/2011 1:51:10 AM
8/2/2011 2:36:43 PM
If you are going to tax capital gains then I think you must not be able to write off the interest you pay others.
8/2/2011 4:28:10 PM
I think the worst thing about this whole debate is the way it's framed. "Spending cuts" are never actually cuts - they're just reduced projected expenditures. Why would anyone in their right mind believe that the government would stick to these promises? Is anyone here convinced that, for the first time in history, politicians on the aggregate are going to draw a line in the sand and do what's right?Somehow, the American people are going to have to get real. Cable news and the government are in full on plunge protection mode, trying to instill a false sense of security to prevent bank runs.
8/2/2011 4:37:26 PM
Bank runs?This is why I never take you seriously.If the US government collapses and the dollar drastically drops valuewhy the hell would I run to the bank to get toilet paper?
8/2/2011 5:37:55 PM
That's not the order in which it would (or could) happen. You'd have bank runs before there was any kind of flight inflation, probably before there was even a collapse of the government. The point here is that the banking system is incredibly unstable right now. If it were not unstable, banks wouldn't need a persistent lifeline to stay afloat. Bank of America is a great example. They're in serious fucking trouble and the mainstream media isn't making a peep. Wonder why?
8/2/2011 6:12:19 PM
8/2/2011 7:10:44 PM
8/2/2011 7:26:19 PM
So, no specifics? No analysis of their book? No considering that absent the charge they took to get angry buyers of Countrywide bullshit out of their hair they made a 'profit'?The only way you can begin to know what shape they are in is if you knew the make-up of their asset portfolio...and well... .gov has made that impossible to know.Are you mayhaps saying they are dying because their stock price is struggling mightily?
8/2/2011 7:30:11 PM
You undoubtedly put more weight in stock price than I do. Some investors seem to think Bank of America isn't on the most stable ground though, which would explain the decline.
8/2/2011 7:34:35 PM
It's not that I put more weight in the stock price than you do. The point is it is a quantifiable metric. You offered nothing other than conjecture and hyperbole and the only reason I think you could make the statements you did is based on the stock price because that is about the only info you have...or, do you have other info you haven't presented?
8/2/2011 8:39:47 PM