what exactly does "freedom" have to do with the government taking our money and giving it to wall street banks?
9/22/2008 8:51:53 PM
Not just Wall St.World St., too.I just sent a token letter of appreciation to our Senators and my Congressman.From the bill:
9/22/2008 9:16:36 PM
this is craziness, if it is to be believedhttp://www.nypost.com/seven/09212008/business/almost_armageddon_130110.htm
9/22/2008 9:31:29 PM
^^ speaking of Francehttp://tbm.thebigmoney.com/articles/judgments/2008/09/21/henry-paulson-socialist
9/22/2008 9:37:32 PM
I bet hooksaw is kicking himself for this thread title right now
9/22/2008 9:45:33 PM
It's not so much a failure of the free market, as I see it, but an incompatibility with the way America works... A pro-regulation president and/or congress gets elected, and passes some act to regulate the economy... given that the economic world is constantly changing, it only makes sense that for said regulation to continue functioning properly, it will need follow-up regulation in response to market changes.The issue with this is made apparent when the "need" for re-regulation arises during the dominance of politicians who are against regulating the economy... Thus, shit -> fan. To me it seems like it's not free-market policies or socialist policies that are causing market issues, it is the American democratic system itself... Both policies seem totally viable so long as one is chosen and sees continuous use, rather than our country constantly switching between the two.I really don't know that much in-depth about the economy, but this is the way I see it as an outsider/"layman"...
9/22/2008 9:49:29 PM
Ron Paul: Dont Bail out Wall Streethttp://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/09/23/paul.bailout/index.html
9/23/2008 10:44:39 AM
nice to see Henry Paulson getting in on the lying http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/09/23/good-ideas-and-lies/
9/23/2008 3:51:04 PM
here's a blast from the pastFebraruy 27, 2008http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/27/business/27housing.html
9/23/2008 9:23:58 PM
I'm wondering why the MSM is lagging so far behind in their critiques of this plan?
9/23/2008 9:31:20 PM
the media is critiquing the plan via proxy of the candidates and Congress. It's on the front page of http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ and http://nytimes.com/ right now, at least
9/23/2008 9:51:17 PM
9/23/2008 10:51:40 PM
For literally no other reason than I told you so...
9/26/2008 11:22:55 AM
I'd love for ole failsaw to come back and try to talk his way out of this fail of a thread.
9/26/2008 11:33:09 AM
I'm actually more content that I pwnt the shit out of LoneSnark than kooksaw. My economic prowess must be recognized.
9/26/2008 11:36:16 AM
9/26/2008 1:43:32 PM
The impressive U.S. Economy
9/29/2008 4:00:15 PM
Impressive how the yields on US Treasuries can dip into the negatives...
9/29/2008 7:03:21 PM
GOOD NEWS JUST KEEPS ROLLING IN!
9/29/2008 7:23:31 PM
Are we still #1 in anything besides....-incarcerations rates in teh free world- gots are gun a plenty- and big tanks to- fat people- crazy religious right moonbats that believe the world *poof* appeared 10,000 years ago contrary to all scientific evidence- oil consumption- gun violence- SUV's- Shitty reality TV shows
9/29/2008 7:36:47 PM
that made no sense
9/29/2008 7:38:47 PM
10/6/2008 2:44:27 PM
Excerpt from September 27, 2006, letter from Rep. [Barney] Frank [D-MA; chairman of the House Financial Services Committee] to his Congressional colleagues:
10/7/2008 12:35:41 AM
really? To defend your position, you're pulling out quotes from 2 years ago? just give it up man.....not to mention, did you even read the quote? "Growth in GDP, aggregate national income, and productivity have all been strong "Those are hard numbers, and they were strong from 2001-2006 and a little further. The statement does not address, however, why they were strong, which we now know is because almost all the growth in the economy was based on bad debt and credit. and what the hell are you "sweet jesusing"? We have several other threads about the housing problems and we all agree there is plenty of blame to go around. you're reeling pretty hard, man
10/7/2008 7:42:57 AM
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2008/0918081gastax1.html?link=eaf
10/7/2008 9:55:31 AM
LOL at hooksawand us...fuck
10/7/2008 9:56:10 AM
IMStoned420, wealth is not the figures posted on wal-street. If gremlins ran into everyones pocket book and bank records and doubled the figures residing there, it would double the price of everything, including stock, but we would be no more wealthier than we were before. That is because wealth is not money, money is merely an arbitrary stand-in for wealth, which consists of real property. Americans are wealthy because of our houses, cars, boats, electronics, and factories. The current crises has not yet substantially impacted America's real wealth as evidenced by our still relatively low unemployment rate. As such, Americans are still producing the things people want, wealth, even if we are getting paid less cash for them due to a bout of deflation. To put it another way: if the price of your house or stock falls, it does not diminish the value of the house (having a comfortable place to live) or stock (partial ownership of a business), all it does is shift purchasing power from the current owner to the future seller. As such, every dollar lost by the current owner is a dollar gained by the next buyer. As the current owner and future buyer are almost always both Americans, it is a complete wash for Americans as a whole. To address the thread title, for a country going through a recession the U.S. Economy is still rather impressive. After all it has been through, much of it caused by bouts of regime uncertainty as managers purposefully hold onto bad investments in hopes of being able to sell them to Government agencies, slowing price corrections and threatenning firm survival in the process. But, all-in-all, the world economy has done remarkably well in historical terms. I guess Alan Greenspan was right when he said that the growing complexity of modern economic systems has made them more shock resistant.
10/7/2008 11:19:41 AM
10/7/2008 11:23:08 AM
10/7/2008 12:27:21 PM
10/7/2008 12:38:12 PM
10/7/2008 12:55:09 PM
This fucking sucks. My company is getting hammered, we were just told we wouldnt get merit review until later in 2009 due to cutbacks. Economy continues to sink. UGH[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 3:56 PM. Reason : - ]
10/7/2008 3:56:27 PM
Holy mother of shit LoneSnarkDid you finally go off the deep end?Because you've basically just made an argument this argument:Happiness = wealth DONT WORRY BE HAPPY!
10/7/2008 4:03:03 PM
Yeah, I can't even address LoneSnark's post because it's obvious he is not living on the same planet we are.The economy is bad.It's getting worse.It's gonna suck for a long time.It's not just the US either. The entire world is getting hammered. The capital markets are drying up. There will not be any worldwide economic growth for several years while all these companies are counting up how much they actually lost.The blame is on Wall Street. I read an article that said they were placing 20, 30, and in some cases even 50-1 credit to assets because everything was constantly growing. When one little hitch came in and their profits could no longer keep up with the ridiculous debt they were acquiring in order to keep buying stocks, the entire economy came crashing down. Considering they aren't supposed to be able to use credit to buy more than 2-1 assets, it boils down to Wall Street greed that got us into this. The housing market by itself might have been a short recession, but Wall Street exacerbated the problem with their aggressive tactics. Hedging bets on housing perpetually rising > Housing goes down > Profits no longer rise on Wall Street > Debts catch up to the profits they were making > People realize they can no longer ride the wave > SELL SELL SELL > Present time.People who got out at the top of the stock market made out like bandits. Others lost everything. Now there is no credit left to do anything because the entire credit industry was built on the stock market.
10/7/2008 4:25:32 PM
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE4964S420081007[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 4:35 PM. Reason : more moves]
10/7/2008 4:34:19 PM
LoneSnark's post is unintentionally funny because it borders on socialism.No the free market doesn't determine your wealth; as in, what the market says you're worth isn't what you're worthNo.What you say you are worth is what you are worth.
10/7/2008 4:43:32 PM
Without hooksaw's spin, everybody lost confidence in the market.Someone give the man $700 billion to start posting again.
10/7/2008 4:52:37 PM
Great post, LoneSnark. The haters here will never get it.
10/7/2008 5:11:09 PM
10/7/2008 7:31:38 PM
10/7/2008 7:44:05 PM
10/7/2008 11:06:08 PM
10/7/2008 11:19:34 PM
But you are trading one bad (the occurance of mass hysteria every decade or so) for one worse bad (the frequent occurance of planner hysteria every month or so). I see it in my own life. Today I love my new Phone, it is all the rage. But in a week or so the novelty will fade and I will latch onto something else, say a PS3. All human beings face this. Markets work by spreading out the planning process among thousands of firms and thus millions of people. As such, all people being different, some are in love with their cell phone, some with their PS3. As such, investing our own money, on average half of us will be pushing for new Phones and the rest for new PS3s. However, put the job of planning in the hands of a small cadre and you have sacrificed the averaging effect and therefore, when the questing arises whether society should make new Phones or PS3s, if no one in the room of ten planners likes playing games then those in society that would love more PS3s go without while too many new Phones get produced.[Edited on October 7, 2008 at 11:57 PM. Reason : .,.]
10/7/2008 11:55:40 PM
TWO WORDS BITCHESFUNDAMENTALLY STRONG
10/7/2008 11:56:16 PM
seriouslythat should have automatically disqualified him
10/7/2008 11:56:38 PM
10/8/2008 12:04:14 AM
10/8/2008 12:22:33 AM
10/8/2008 12:42:11 AM
As we continue talking past each other:You have still not solved the knowledge problem of time and place. As such, you will be lucky to get your $10k a year per capita. You will manage roughly what the Soviet Union managed when it was unable to depend upon resource exports to the capitalist world: starvation and despair. Not much has changed organizationally from the 80s.That said, focusing on necessities? What clap-trap is that? Only what we need is as I said, canned food, vitamins, warm coat, and a tent. What are you going to spend the remaining $9k of the $10k a year on? Not even the soviet union dared curtail luxury imports (wheat, eggs, meat, electronics, etc). The alternative, of course, is rather than distributing poverty as you would have us, bringing the sting of starvation to Europe's poor, we could distribute wealth by spreading the free economic system far and wide, and thus bring the glory of obesity to Africa's poor.But, again, as you have it: you would prefer all of us die early of mal-nutrition than allow Bill Gates a private jet. Such a wish is evil: Bill Gates consumption does not harm me; what matters is my own consumption. And the efficiency of capitalism allows Bill Gates his jet and me a vacation to Hawaii. [Edited on October 8, 2008 at 1:18 AM. Reason : .,.]
10/8/2008 1:12:28 AM
10/8/2008 1:25:34 AM