Why? What did the Wells Fargo CEO in your mind do to deserve such treatment?
12/1/2011 3:26:15 PM
Mortgage and foreclosure fraud?
12/1/2011 3:40:49 PM
Wait, shouldn't the tea-party constituents who cried, "no bailouts" for "too big to fail" banks be outraged that those same banks (including wells fargo) have only gotten bigger since 2008?
12/1/2011 3:46:57 PM
^yeah they oppose bailouts. Yet they feel that businesses and individuals should have the freedom to make their own choices but face their consequences too. If you want to try to sell a 50k dollar prius, fine. If it doesnt sell, dont have the govt take my money to give it to you bc you were an idiot. Same with loans and individual piss poor choices.This sums up my thoughts on idiots these days. (except for the terrorist comparision)http://www.theblaze.com/stories/adam-carolla-breaks-down-occupy-movement-fking-self-entitled-monsters/Nails it. It is all ENVY.[Edited on December 1, 2011 at 3:51 PM. Reason : .]
12/1/2011 3:50:21 PM
At no point in his rambling, incoherent response was he even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone on this message board is now dumber for having listened to it. I award him no points, and may God have mercy on his soul.
12/1/2011 4:02:20 PM
^points for the BM reference. And he does make a point about envy and the mindset of these trophy kids waking up to reality.
12/1/2011 4:36:30 PM
I think he's projecting his own insecurities onto OWS, the guy is washed up. Its got to be tough to watch Jeff Dunham and that fat hispanic dude rake in money on Comedy Central specials while you've been relegated to podcasts
12/1/2011 5:28:17 PM
12/1/2011 5:56:12 PM
^yep and I remember those teaparties were in 2007 and 2008 mostly...you know around the time the bailouts were happening. Now why the OWS decided to do that in 2011....hahah, fits right in with the rest of their thinking.
12/1/2011 6:01:49 PM
What a hack. If you disagreed with the bailouts then, then you should be in favor of the concerns OWS is bringing up now.But since you perceive them as not being on your team, you dismiss them.And if I'm not mistaken, some of the original members of the tea party group support Occupy because they felt that their own cause was co-opted and misdirected by corporate interests.
12/1/2011 6:15:09 PM
haha. Im going to try to explain this to you. Yes both the teaparty and OWS oppose the bailouts. Nothing to dispute there. It is who they choose to go after that is mind boggling.So if I come to your house, take your money and your tv under the threat of violence. Then I go and give your money and things to my mother (who tells me she needs them.) You would then go and protest outside my mothers house instead of mine? When I am the one that is stealing your shit? Just makes no sense.These banks cannot TAKE your money or your property legally. Only the govt is "allowed" to do that. But many of these people like the idea of big govt, so they somehow give them a big pass in all this.
12/1/2011 6:29:34 PM
No they don't, you idiot.Most of these people are upset that the banks have merged with the government. It's that simple. If you can't see that, then you haven't been paying attention.
12/1/2011 6:40:40 PM
Sooooo.... you can only be mad at the financial industry, or you can only be mad at the government?Why can't you be mad at both, but recognize that your efforts might be better spent focusing on one or the other.
12/1/2011 6:42:07 PM
And even if you absolutely believed your own theory, (that you totally just created to satisfy your own sensibilities - even though it's completely false) it would still be a stupid semantic argument to get hung up on.Our banks have infested our government. It's as plain as day to see. Huge multi-national corporations own our politicians and financially back legislation that serves their interests at expense of the American voter.
12/1/2011 6:44:05 PM
So, honestly, does it really fucking matter where they protest? Does it really matter that they are targeting CEOs of corrupt financial institutions rather than the Senators who receive their financial backing? (by the way, they're targeting both, in case you're unaware).I don't understand the hang-up here. The protesters are astutely aware that certain politicians are receiving huge incentives by certain corporations (Youtube the Scott Walker mic-check if you want) and are connecting the fucking dots to realize that our politicians serve their corporate sponsors more than their constituents.So what would you have them do differently?
12/1/2011 6:50:58 PM
12/1/2011 7:05:25 PM
Soooo... What, exactly, will keep any of these banks/financial institutions from screwing up the economy again once the mostly toothless government finally loses all of it's teeth?
12/1/2011 7:17:20 PM
12/1/2011 7:24:42 PM
12/1/2011 7:28:45 PM
So that ONE reg caused the recession? Seriously?Btw, please dont take that I am in favor of NO GOVT regulation at all. You have to have a ref in every game to set the rules and enforce them. That should be the govts job, not picking winners and losers.We have moved well beyond that. Where the govt forces entire industries to do something, fucks them up, and people somehow call for MORE GOVT. haha. It really is sad.I know more about health care industry, but the history of govt in that and what is suggested to try now is unreal and never addresses the root of the problem.
12/1/2011 7:40:27 PM
12/1/2011 7:53:01 PM
12/1/2011 7:55:59 PM
12/1/2011 8:41:20 PM
12/1/2011 9:29:34 PM
Except for the fact that some of these banks have become so large that fighting them and enforcing the laws that we already have would require deep pockets, which the banks have, and the govt does not.And not to mention that the repeal of glass steagal allowed some of these banks to merge when they were previously forbidden to do so made them even bigger, with even deeper pockets.It was ILLEGAL for Citibank and Travelers Group to merge in 1998. It wasn't in 1999. Then they, along with other savings banks that merged with investment and securities banks (Bank of America, Merril Lynch, etc) shat all over us. So how would we go about prosecuting them when we legalized their previously illegal mergers?So I ask you, how can the government be an arbitrator and prosecutor in this case after it removed the regulations that legalized these mergers?It can't. Until these giant banks are broken up and forced to separate savings from securities, we'll continue to be served shit sandwiches every time they create new bubbles, exploit them, and then come crawling to us because their collapse would bring about a deeper depression.
12/1/2011 10:02:13 PM
There were no insinuations or understanding of a bail out the past time around, and it didn't stop them.It's naive frankly to think that if given the opportunity again, bankers wouldn't drool at the short-term profits, despite long term consequences, as they did recently. This is human nature.
12/1/2011 10:10:54 PM
^^ So if the government can't even afford to successfully prosecute the current laws and regulations against the banks, what in the world makes you think that adding more laws and regulations will fix anything?^ So the history of the government bailing out corporations since the 70's set no implications of future bailouts?[Edited on December 1, 2011 at 10:54 PM. Reason : dsf]
12/1/2011 10:52:55 PM
You're mis-characterizing my argument. I'm saying that the repeal of key laws allowed banking giants to become virtually immune to prosecution.Most of these protesters don't want bigger government. They just want a representative government. They want a split between government and corporate interests. They don't want to continue down this path where giant monopolies own our politicians who then in turn draft legislation that squashes competition and actively fucks over the American voter.You guys keep coming in here and turning this debate into the tired small vs large government argument that's been had a million times over. And while that might be a worthwhile discussion worth having, it adds nothing to the discussion at hand. The size of the government is completely null and void when the government is fully controlled by corporate oligarchs. Sever the relationship between corporation and government, and THEN you can argue about the governments size.
12/1/2011 11:48:54 PM
This is pretty telling.
12/2/2011 12:37:45 AM
12/2/2011 1:44:35 AM
[citation needed]
12/2/2011 3:12:17 AM
At the time, most people supported the bank bailouts because not bailing out the banks would have resulted in the financial annihilation of millions of undeserving people. Yes, it was a very serious threat, the size of the banks coupled with their interconnectedness to the entire economy essentially made them analogous to a gigantic tumor that has a dozen major blood vessels passing through it.I don't believe the government should be in the business of bailing out any business, but when the failure of that business means the entire economy will take a hit such that millions of people will suffer for no fault of their own, it's more important to protect those innocent people than let calamity occur for the sake of ideological consistency. That's not how a moral society works, nor a meritocratic one. OWS's main complaint regarding that, and mine, is that after bailing out the banks we didn't break them up or even make a serious effort to revive the regulations that had kept them not-so-big in the past, just let them for the most part carry on with business as usual.To quote Adam Smith:
12/2/2011 1:23:12 PM
I feel like the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act was responsible for making the crash as widespread and as severe as it was; however, I would put more blame for the cause of the crash on the Commodity Futures Modernization Act.
12/2/2011 4:07:23 PM
12/2/2011 6:24:25 PM
12/2/2011 6:39:51 PM
12/2/2011 6:51:28 PM
12/2/2011 6:54:04 PM
12/2/2011 6:56:17 PM
12/2/2011 7:14:36 PM
Ron paul and OWS is last hope before bloodshed.
12/2/2011 11:29:24 PM
JesusHChrist is dead on. Additionally if this doesn't disturb you I don't know what will as it relates to these issues:http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-december-1-2011/america-s-next-tarp-model
12/3/2011 2:29:24 PM
12/3/2011 3:19:46 PM
12/3/2011 4:51:12 PM
12/3/2011 5:16:05 PM
12/3/2011 6:39:43 PM
^exactly.
12/3/2011 8:10:33 PM
Right, but I don't think that your friend was being forced by the government to give loans to poor people. The loans that banks were being forced to provide were required to be kept on file at those specific banks and those loans had lower rates of default than loans provided to the general population.Do you honestly believe that providing poor communities affordable housing had more of an impact on the economic collapse than, say, trillions of dollars in unregulated derivatives? 1) I don't think those poor peoples' homes would have amounted to very much.2) I don't think that contractors were clamoring to build brand-spanking-new houses for a bunch of poor people.
12/4/2011 12:09:37 AM
12/4/2011 7:48:49 AM
Pupils if you read the article and how much money the new "push" was YES it would make a difference. You are talking about MILLIONS of people who are now in the market due to govt intervention. That doesnt have an effect?Remember we were coming out of a recession (dot com bubble) and housing was where people were making money. It is no surprise everyone else jumped on. (just like other bubbles) Please dont think Im saying that banks, financials, or borrowers didnt play a role in the problem. They certainly did. I just talking about how it all got started. Like most problems govt creates they typically start with good intentions....then grows into a big fing mess. SS, Medicaid, Medicare, food stamps... Im sure when the idea of basic medical care for the poor was being kicked around they never dreamed it should cover luxuries. It is where we are though.^ I agree. Im not sure there is away to back off of the power washington has these days. Politicans love it, it makes them rich. Companies and organizations love it because it is far easier to have a politican change the rules to benefit you and hurt your competition vs actually competing in the market.[Edited on December 4, 2011 at 8:19 AM. Reason : .]
12/4/2011 8:15:12 AM
12/4/2011 9:57:12 AM